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“It Rushed Into the Fight with Its Well
IRISH BRIGADE Edited by Robert McLernon IRISH BRIGADE “…It Rushed Into The Fight With Its Well-known Gallantry…” I often find tributes to the courage and gallantry of the Irish Brigade in combat. William F. Fox Regimental Losses In The Civil War (1889) Page 118: “The Irish Brigade was, probably, the best known of any brigade organization, it having made an unusual reputation for dash and gallantry. The remarkable precision of its evolutions under fire; its desperate attack on the impregnable wall at Marye’s Heights; its never failing promptness on every field, and its long continuous service, made for it a name inseparable from the history of the war.” Joseph G. Bilby Remember Fontenoy! Introduction: “It was, many said, the best brigade in the Army of the Potomac. Some said it was the best brigade in the whole Union army and perhaps the best infantry brigade on either side in the American Civil War. Others, with the perspective of history, have come to believe it may have been the best infantry brigade that ever was.” William F. Fox Final Report on the Battlefield of Gettysburg – New York at Gettysburg, p. 485: “It would be impossible to write the history of the Army of the Potomac without giving the highest of praise to the gallant Irish Brigade.” “Their deeds will be remembered in song and in story so long as the history of our country is read. Irishmen everywhere have reason to be proud of the Irish Brigade.” Speech of Col. James D. Brady, 63rd New York “The Irish Brigade’s loss of 961 soldiers killed or mortally wounded in action was exceeded by only two other brigades in the Union army.” Fox “Regimental Losses” The other two were the Vermont Brigade, and the Iron Brigade. -
VOL. XLIII, NO. 8 Michigan Regimental Round Table Newsletter—Page 1 August 2003
VOL. XLIII, NO. 8 Michigan Regimental Round Table Newsletter—Page 1 August 2003 "It wasn't like a battle at all…it was more like Indian warfare," remembered John McClure, a young private in the 14th Indiana Infantry. "I hid behind a tree and looked out. Across the way…was a rebel aiming at me. I put my hat on a stick…and stuck it out from behind the tree-as bait. Then I saw him peep out of the thicket and I shot him. It was the first time I'd ever seen the man I'd killed, and it was an awful feeling." This deadly incident, on May 5, 1864, was only one of such commonplace bloody episodes that occurred in the bitter struggle known as the Wilderness. Beginning in 1864 North and South stood in weary stalemate. All of the Federal victories from the previous year, including Gettysburg and Vicksburg, had seriously weakened the Confederacy, but, it remained bowed, not broken. For the North to win the war, now starting its fourth year, the Confederate armies must be crushed. The South, conversely, had one final hope: stymie the North's plans and count upon a war-weary Northern home front to force the conflict to the peace table. Now in early May of 1864, the two most notable titans of the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee, were about to come face-to-face in a final showdown to determine the war's outcome. Grant, whose roller coaster career had nearly ended on several occasions, was given the revitalized rank of Lieutenant General by President Lincoln, and the amazingly difficult task of besting the Army of Northern Virginia, something his predecessors had found nigh impossible. -
Farmington Town Clerks and Their Times CT
/-i-?f /{/C/•'{'> \-OtXcx FARMINGTON TOWN CLERKS' AND THEIR TIMES Of this book there have been printed four hundred copies of which this is Number':3.^^-^ ii t:? » — — '* • * ^I ■ * % ^ ^ '\ --^lAniy,-. 'tS Icn^^o-. P.^'^S-.;ivl''/^ ' jCc kii.iAUiM.i::'i.c^ heUoxYj- ike 'rrp^Kf^' 'S> ^" ■ tCboai-e/i loiliem-ion. /AG i-oo- X^tf.r ^(i^e- ^ fee ^ ^' X' fywtne^r //^Y ^^ •pLOjSf^'. xrKa^--YOttS h) ^'''ir ^'ty^^—'y'^^'^'nff/lt-nS'Sv'Z ^•'tmtrrv^^t oi- ine sj?>ft''*''»^'. ^ ^Z' pia6t'>oi/t Je^>^'^kk,p^« •-ptW:•^o^e^on. ff i:^(-{^ '{^(' £ef'j Mtrtidif^'lp ^n. ^AtLe-. p'?rtS-/' »vr ^ - -l-A-CS ^2y»tj Aoen.'. -ini Jriiriinx.^ U aU.C.'ite ■ /('iiij oik-etr- qx'ttu-.Sf^ ax\<^-%KCi(^:/^sff-S it/irAi a Ar- -p£i't-;i'^i^^»o'>^' ^ Ckiiit tuuif. \^tCc '•■- - f r*«f- ( - ~jr ^ ^ fl # • / -j-^ wteriftrx i*iri[£ ^ •■}\n^defm. bctC\f~ ! ^ ''Jo V^l?"'"'".-, bj^ati—. Af" •t;a/ZE ' o-'~" * J^"'";.-' / " •' '. -/a'c £ettde'. tif ■/'***^ AttrL <yf> ■ ♦ '-y /i -i-/.r ytd^n US ^f^J£2r^kc^ .y i i . J/ ♦/ /- ^...•_Z/x /_Z «^«>a h<?v!l ^I "W .£* cf Uifn > ' wtA:;, tti>j Ac A»t'- ^^/'is»«-5' ih'entfj^A hit'T-: Sf/n "-yiCCyi ^ /v/iLtt— i-it- iv'-^' *;.i * '"' :^, . ■ I 'tuLir^h.- (J'ARMINGTON TOWN GLERKR AND THEIR TIMES ■JS M (1645-1940) •UAH - L MH--VV-- • fSiJ-iJAr ,•.. .. .■: RSk''^. V ■ T BY MABEL S. H URLBURT A'y*: ■ . i;.'.-^ :- = ' ^ J-^'^.- V«^- a ^'/ s^apA of record dated 1650, of the agreement of distribution of land to the Tunxis Indians. -
See 1887/1888 Catalogue (Pdf Images 85-96)
FORTY-FOURTH Annual Catalogue OF THE OFFICERS, FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF THE fi uir^ j] mitt For the A cademic Y ear 1887- Annual Commencement, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1888. NOTRE DAME, INDIANA: SCHOLASTIC PRESS. 1888. am # # A pa® n m ■ y $,j FORTY-FOURTH Annual Catalogue OF THE OFFICERS, FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF THE of Afftrc jjirmr, J J a For the A cademic Y ear 1887-88. Annual Commencement, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1888. NOTRE DAME, INDIANA: SCHOLASTIC PRESS. 1888 . & Index Board of Trustees.....................................................................................................................3 Officers of the University ...................................................................................................4 F a c u lt y .........................................................................................................................................5 P r o sp e c t u s ..............................................................................................................................10 University of Notre Dame—Main and Ancillary Buildings—Surroundings—Accessibility —Discipline—General Remarks. E x p en ses.................................................................................................................................... 21 P rogramme of St u d ie s :— Preparatory Department ...............................................................................................22 Collegiate Department — Classical C ourse............................................................28 Elective Studies -
Pdf Images 95-108
ANNUAL CATALOGUE iOF THEa UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME Notre Dame, Indiana. • • • • 1896-1897. FIFTY-THIRD Annual Catalogue OF THE University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana. 1896- 1897. T h e U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s.- NOTRE DAME, IND. M AR^. Board of Trustees VERY REV. WILLIAM CORBY, C. S. C., P r e s i d e n t . REV. DANIEL E. HUDSON, C. S. C., V ic e -P r e s i d e n t . REV. ANDREW MORRISSEY, C. S. C., C h a n c e l l o r . REV. JAMES J. FRENCH, C. S. C., S e c r e t a r y . BRO. EDWARD, C. S. C., T r e a s u r e r . 4 U n iv e r s it y o f N o t r e D a m e . Officers of the University REV. ANDREW MORRISSEY, C. S. C., P r e s i d e n t . REV. JAMES J. FRENCH, C. S C., V ic e -P r e s id e n t and D ir e c t o r o f S t u d ie s . REV. MARTIN J. REGAN, C. S. C., P r e f e c t o f D i s c ip l in e . BRO. PAUL, C. S. C., S e c r e t a r y . BRO. JOSEPH, C. S. C., A s sist a n t S e c r e t a r y . -
Notre Dame Directory, 1936
DIRECTORY o f Faculty and Students UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME 1936-1937 THE UNIVERSITY PRESS NOTRE DAME, INDIANA NOVEMBER, 1936 OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Rev. John F. O’Hara, C.S.C............. President Rev. J . Hugh O’Donnell, C.S.C ......................................Vice-President Rev. J. Leonard Carrico, C.S.C Director of Studies Rev. Francis J . Boland, C.S.C........................ Prefect of Discipline Rev. James D. Trahey, C.S.C.........Assistant Prefect of Discipline Mr. Robert H. McAuliffe ................ Assistant Prefect of Discipline Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, C'.S.C .......................... Prefect of Religion Rev. Joseph J. Corcoran, C.S.C Assistant Prefect of Religion Mr. Robert B. Riordan ........................................................... R egistrar Mr. Kenneth A. Oliver ................................................................ Secretary Brother Engelbert, C.S.C ............................................................T reasurer Mr. Francis W. Lloyd ............................................................ Comptroller Brother Gabriel, C.S.C ..................................................................... Auditor RECTORS OF RESIDENCE HALLS Rev. Henry G. Glueckert, C.S.C .......................................... Alumni Hall Rev. John F. Farley, C.S.C. Sarin Hall Rev. George J. Marr, C.S.C...................................................W alsh Hall Rev. Francis P. Cavanaugh, C.S.C ...................................... Dillon Hall Rev. Peter P. Forrestal, C.S.C. Howard Hall Rev. Joseph A. Muckenthalor, -
A Defense of the 63Rd New York State Volunteer Regiment of the Irish Brigade Patricia Vaticano
University of Richmond UR Scholarship Repository Master's Theses Student Research 5-2008 A defense of the 63rd New York State Volunteer Regiment of the Irish Brigade Patricia Vaticano Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/masters-theses Recommended Citation Vaticano, Patricia, "A defense of the 63rd New York State Volunteer Regiment of the Irish Brigade" (2008). Master's Theses. Paper 703. This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Research at UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A DEFENSE OF THE 63RD NEW YORK STATE VOLUNTEER REGIMENT OF THE IRISH BRIGADE By PATRICIA VATICANO Master of Arts in History University of Richmond 2008 Dr. Robert C. Kenzer, Thesis Director During the American Civil War, New York State’s irrepressible Irish Brigade was alternately composed of a number of infantry regiments hailing both from within New York City and from within and without the state, not all of them Irish, or even predominantly so. The Brigade’s core structure, however, remained constant throughout the war years and consisted of three all-Irish volunteer regiments with names corresponding to fighting units made famous in the annuals of Ireland’s history: the 69th, the 88th, and the 63rd. The 69th, or Fighting 69th, having won praise and homage for its actions at First Bull Run, was designated the First Regiment of the Brigade and went on to even greater glory in the Civil War and every American war thereafter. -
From the President …
GRAND ARMY SCOUT Newsletter of the GAR Civil War Museum & Library Spring 2018 Where the Civil War comes alive! From the President …. Our Annual Meeting Each September the Grand Army of the Republic Civil BOARD OF DIRECTORS War Museum and Library holds its annual meeting. It is President HUGH BOYLE a meeting for the membership. It is at that time when Executive Director board members are elected, the museum status is HUGH BOYLE Vice President - Programs stated, such as the financial report. Accomplishments ANTHONY WASKIE, PH.D. Treasurer - Curator are reported and future plans and projects are offered. HERB KAUFMAN Secretary It is also at time for the members to voice the hopes for MARY ANN HARTNER the museum. It is the most important meeting of the Board Emeritus MARGARET E. ATKINSON th year. This year the meeting is on September 30 , the last Sunday of the WALT LAFTY – Research Administrator JOE PERRY – Librarian month. We ask all our membership to attend. MICHAEL E. PETER KATHLEEN M. SMITH – Membership, Special Events There are three board spots up for election. Herb Kaufman and Joe BOARD OF ADVISORS Perry, current board members have chosen to be in the election EDWIN BEARSS ALBERT EL process. Due to the untimely death of Teo Monteiro there is an open DR. GARY GROVE spot for the board. This is an election process and all spots are up for DR. ALLEN C. GUELZO election. Any member of the museum can be nominated by another ROBERT E. HANRAHAN, JR. LEON KING, ESQ. member, and that can be done by submitting a name to myself at JAMES M. -
Ihe University of Notre Dame Alumni Association
The Archives of The University of Notre Dame 607 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 574-631-6448 [email protected] Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus Vol. 38, No. 3 SEPTEMBER, 1960 NEWS: •NOTRE oOUR BELOVED C.^RDIN.A.L OTIAR.\ DIES WE HAVE A NEW PRELATE- DAME BISHOP-ELECT MENDEZ •ALUMNUS FIRST NOTRE D.-\ME PILGRIMAGE TO EUROPE FEATURES: NOTRE DAME MEN OF SCIENCE NICK LAMBER'IO. REPORTER FATHERS AND SONS AT NOTRE DAME DEPARTMENTS: THE WHITE HOUSE June 7, 1960 COMMENCEMENT Dear Father Heshurgh: 1960: UNIVERSAL NOTRE § DAME NIGHT Now that I am hack in Washington I want to try to tell you hov/ deeply appreciative I am of the honor REUNIONS the University of Notre Daire did me in conferring upon me, on Sunday, an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. I am particularly touched hy the sentiments EDITORIAL: BUSINESS set forth in the citation that you presented to me; I ST.VrESMEN AND A hope I shall alv/ays he worthy of the generosity of NEW LIBRARY those statements. As I am sure you know, I enjoyed greatly heing v/ith you and seeing the splendid young people that comprise YOU, THE ALUMNI — the Senior Class and the entire student hody. It was PART I a privilege, too, to meet so many of the memhers of SELF-STUDY SUR\'EY OF THE your faculty and to see at first hand the operation of 1960 REUNION CLASSES one of our finest and most distinguished Universities. I congratulate you on the great contribution you are making to our country. -
Pdf Images 93-106
An n u al Ca t a lo g u e or THE U n iv e r s it y <*■ No tre Dam e . Notre Dame , Indiana . 1 5 9 5 - 1 5 9 6 . /fnrxaetl @ettaIogae oi? the ; nivepsita or I^otpe Ban? I^otpe Same, Indiana. 1895 - 1896 . THE UNIVERSITY PRESS: NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. 1896. Mar'^ Board of Trustees. V e r y R e v . WILLIAM CORBY, C. S. C., P r e s i d e n t . Rev. DANIEL J. SPIIvBARD, C. S. C., V i c e -P r e s i d e n t . REV. ANDREW MORRISSEY, C. S. C., C h a n c e l l o r . R e v . JOHN A. ZAHM, C. S. C., S e c r e t a r y . BRO. EDWARD, C. S. C., TREASURER. U n iv e r s it y o f N o t r e D a m e . Officers of the University. REV. ANDREW MORRISSEY, C. S. C., P r e s i d e n t . REV. JAMES J. FRENCH, C. S. C., V i c e -P r e s i d e n t a n d D i r e c t o r o f S t u d i e s . REV. MARTIN J. REGAN, C. S. C., P r e f e c t o f D i s c i p l i n e . PRO. PAUL, C. S. C., S e c r e t a r y . -
1880-1881 Catalouge University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame Law School NDLScholarship Bulletins of Information Law School History Fall 1880 1880-1881 Catalouge University of Notre Dame Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/bulletins Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation University of Notre Dame, "1880-1881 Catalouge" (1880). Bulletins of Information. 88. https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/bulletins/88 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School History at NDLScholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Bulletins of Information by an authorized administrator of NDLScholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THIRTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL CATALOGUE O F TH E OFFICERS, FACULTY AND STUDENTS O F TH E 0 f m i r $ t i a m e , I2T3DIA.2<rA., For the Academic Year 1880-81. * * ok ^mtual ^6iuineittement> THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1881. N *O T E E XLALMZ-E, T3STT).: SCnOLASTIC PBBSS. 1881. ~<;../' cl_. ·t;~,,,:~~:=~-- b -----:- ~- -- - ~-=-=:-===::;:-;;·::-: - - . - - -. - ,.,,•• ,_n ec ~~,@~u~Q;I'c?mc/ (MAIN B,UILDING) ERECTED AUG.I~7!3. DEDICATED SEPT 8THI879 m m t m m . ffliyiMll"1 71 I f , W. <1:. Vl-i. Hi, . i ;:.y : . m j ji, jftw'''' ,„o'' THIRTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL CATALOGUE OF TH E OFFICERS, FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF TH E I3<TDIYY2srYY. For the Academic Year 1880-81. Annual ^tuiuneiircmcnf, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1881. U O T E B =D_A_:M==EL I AT ZD,: SCHOLASTIC PRESS. 1881. ' VERY REV. EDWARD BORIN, (3. B.C., P r e s id e n t . VERY REV. ALEXIS GRANGER, (3. B. (3., V ic e -P r e s id e n t . -
Father William Corby, C.S.C
Father William Corby, C.S.C. On July 2nd, 1863, the Battle of Gettysburg was entering it’s pivotal second day. The Confederates were pushing on both flanks of the Union Line. An unauthorized advance exposed a salient in the Union Line which the Confederates were quick to seize upon. One of the areas of fiercest fighting has come down to history as the Wheat Field. Union Commander George Meade had ordered the area to be reinforced, and among those units that where to enter this maelstrom was the Irish Brigade. The Irish Brigade was a brigade in name only. Originally composed of 5 regiments and 3000 men, the brigades heroism at the battles of Fair Oaks, Seven Days, Malvern Hill, Antietam, Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville had reduced its total numbers now to less than a single regiment of 600 men. Once again the Brigade was going to where the fighting was thickest. As they prepared to move off, their Chaplin Fr. William Corby C.S.C hastily mounted a boulder wearing his purple stole and said he would offer the men absolution. As one the men of the brigade knelt and lowered their flags as Fr. Corby pronounced the blessing. The entire surrounding second corps irrespective of their own faith fell silent as they watched this scene, even General Hancock, Absolution at Gettysburg by Brad Schmehl commanding the II Corps, removed his hat and bowed his head. As Fr. Corby’s last words faded away, the veterans of Irish Brigade moved off to battle, 198 of their depleted number never to return.