General HancockD. Appleton, 1894 - 332 頁 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 56 筆
第 頁
... FREDERICKSBURG . V. - CHANCELLORSVILLE VI . GETTYSBURG . THE FIRST DAY . VII . - GETTYSBURG . - THE SECOND DAY VIII . - GETTYSBURG . - THE THIRD DAY IX . - AFTER GETTYSBURG X. - THE WILDERNESS . - FIRST DAY . XI . THE WILDERNESS ...
... FREDERICKSBURG . V. - CHANCELLORSVILLE VI . GETTYSBURG . THE FIRST DAY . VII . - GETTYSBURG . - THE SECOND DAY VIII . - GETTYSBURG . - THE THIRD DAY IX . - AFTER GETTYSBURG X. - THE WILDERNESS . - FIRST DAY . XI . THE WILDERNESS ...
第 頁
... Fredericksburg , December 13 , 1862 FACING PAGE · 63 Chancellorsville , May 3 , 1863 , Morning The Battlefield of Gettysburg Portrait of General James Longstreet . 84 109 183 " 9 " The Salient at Spottsylvania . Reams's Station , August ...
... Fredericksburg , December 13 , 1862 FACING PAGE · 63 Chancellorsville , May 3 , 1863 , Morning The Battlefield of Gettysburg Portrait of General James Longstreet . 84 109 183 " 9 " The Salient at Spottsylvania . Reams's Station , August ...
第 30 頁
... Fredericksburg and Gettysburg and the Salient at Spottsylvania testify . While he was not a master of the science of logis- tics , like Meade and Humphreys , he could conduct a long march over bad roads , with artillery and trains ...
... Fredericksburg and Gettysburg and the Salient at Spottsylvania testify . While he was not a master of the science of logis- tics , like Meade and Humphreys , he could conduct a long march over bad roads , with artillery and trains ...
第 31 頁
... Fredericksburg or Gettysburg , or bore himself more knightly and heroically in danger and hard- ship , in weariness and wounds ; yet Hancock was perhaps the greatest hand at " papers " the army ever knew . It is usual to make flings at ...
... Fredericksburg or Gettysburg , or bore himself more knightly and heroically in danger and hard- ship , in weariness and wounds ; yet Hancock was perhaps the greatest hand at " papers " the army ever knew . It is usual to make flings at ...
第 52 頁
... each other without a collision ; and during the following night Lee , his army and his trains intact , recrossed the Potomac into Virginia . CHAPTER IV . FREDERICKSBURG . On the 19th of September 52 GENERAL HANCOCK .
... each other without a collision ; and during the following night Lee , his army and his trains intact , recrossed the Potomac into Virginia . CHAPTER IV . FREDERICKSBURG . On the 19th of September 52 GENERAL HANCOCK .
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常見字詞
action advance afternoon arrived artillery assault attack Barlow's division battery Birney Birney's brigade brought Burnside camp campaign captured cavalry Cemetery Hill Cemetery Ridge Chancellorsville cock Cold Harbor Colonel column command Confederate cross Culp's Hill directed driven Eleventh Corps enemy enemy's eral field Fifth Corps fight fire flank force forward Fredericksburg front gallant Gettysburg Gibbon Grant ground guns Hancock headquarters Hooker Howard's hundred infantry intrenchments July killed Lee's lieutenant line of battle Little Round Top Longstreet losses mand Meade Meade's ment miles military morning Mott's division move movement night Ninth Corps numbers o'clock occupied officers Petersburg plank road position Potomac railroad ranks Rappahannock re-enforcements Reams's Reams's Station rear regiments retreat Richmond Ridge river Round Top Second Corps Seminary Ridge sent side Sixth Corps skirmish soldiers Spottsylvania staff Third Corps thousand tion troops Union army victory Warren Wilderness Winfield Scott Hancock wounded