William Waud (wɔ:d) (1832 – November 10, 1878) was an English-born architect and illustrator, notable for the sketches he made as an artist correspondent...
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Waud (1837–1889), English cricketer Daryl Waud (born 1993), Canadian football defensive lineman William Waud (1832–1878), English-American artist and illustrator...
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Alfred Rudolph Waud (Pronounced: /wɔːd/; October 2, 1828 – April 6, 1891) was an American artist and illustrator, born and raised in London, England. He...
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William Tecumseh Sherman (/tɪˈkʌmsə/ tih-KUM-sə; February 8, 1820 – February 14, 1891) was an American soldier, businessman, educator, and author. He...
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Mosler, and the brothers Alfred and William Waud.[citation needed] Beginning in 1863 until his death in 1892, George William Curtis, one of the founders of...
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William Conway (c. 1802 – November 30, 1865) was a United States Navy quartermaster born in Camden, Maine. At the surrender of Pensacola Navy Yard (also...
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small salient known as Fort Gilmer. David Birney's brother, Brig. Gen. William Birney, led a brigade of U.S. Colored Troops against Fort Gregg south of...
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Their efforts were supported by the Confederate States Army. Lieutenant William Alexander of the 21st Alabama Infantry Regiment was assigned to oversee...
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series C89 "The First Vote" by William Waud, Harpers Weekly Nov. 16, 1867 Archived 2014-02-02 at the Wayback Machine William C. Harris, With Charity for...
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the same thing. William Simpson was an artist-correspondent who sent artwork to London from the front during the Crimean War. Alfred Waud was an American...
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review Hesseltine, William B. (1930). Civil War Prisons: A Study in War Psychology. Ohio State University Press. Hesseltine, William B. (1935). "The Propaganda...
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was done by enslaved persons. Its construction was supervised by Colonel William H. Chase of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. During the American Civil...
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Louisiana State University Press, 1968. First published in 1901. Harris, William C. The Day of the Carpetbagger: Republican Reconstruction in Mississippi...
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McClellan (D) – 97,837 (51.7%) William Augustus Newell (R) – 85,094 (44.9%) The Mexican War Diary of George B. McClellan (William Starr Myers, Editor). Princeton:...
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Paters Hudson; and commissioned there on 29 August 1862, with Commander William Rogers Taylor in command. Housatonic was one of four sister ships which...
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colleagues at this time included Frank Bellew and the brothers Alfred and William Waud. Eytinge and his group of friends frequented Charles Pfaff's beer cellar...
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Benjamin Butler (section Execution of William Mumford)
surrounding New Orleans. Butler censored New Orleans newspapers. When William Seymour, the editor of the New-Orleans Commercial Bulletin, asked Butler...
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Destruction of Housatonic; sketch by war artist William Waud...
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first colonel, John H. Oberteuffer Sr. was the lieutenant colonel, and William Candidus was the major. Ten companies were mustered in on January 8, 1862...
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Methodist ministers—including Garrison Frazier, Ulysses L. Houston, and William Gaines—in what would later be called the "Savannah Colloquy" at the house...
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patented by William Walthall, Merchant, 26 July 1656, land "Lying and being in the county of Henrico, on the north side of Appomatuck River." William Walthall's...
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William Henry Seward (/ˈsuːərd/; May 16, 1801 – October 10, 1872) was an American politician who served as United States Secretary of State from 1861...
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Manning, Emile Masson, Samuel Worcester Rowse, William Wade, Alfred Waud, William Waud. By 1859, M.M. Ballou published several additional periodicals: The...
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Once an important center of affluence and culture in colonial Prince William Parish (roughly analogous to modern-day Hampton County), McPhersonville...
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William Buel Franklin (February 27, 1823 – March 8, 1903) was a career United States Army officer and a Union Army general in the American Civil War....
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town was destroyed during occupation by Union forces under Major General William T. Sherman during the Carolinas Campaign in the last months of the war...
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Regiment. Soon after he left, the wealthy widow Annie Sharpe Waud. and her daughter Irene Winifred Waud came to live at the house. Annie sold the property in...
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Rights Division until the Civil Rights Act of 1957. "The First Vote" by William Waud Archived February 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Harpers Weekly Nov...
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Northern Virginia's Third Corps, principally the division of Brig. Gen. William Mahone. The inconclusive battle left the Weldon Railroad temporarily in...
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Daryl Waud (born August 24, 1993) is a former Canadian football defensive lineman & currently a professional lacrosse player for the Philadelphia Wings...
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