Necrology. Public Health

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Necrology. Public Health 8. The birth and death of pain, a poem, by S. Weir Mitch¬ in California was unavailing and in obedience to a sentiment of ell, M.D., LL.D., Philadelphia. of his own he was carried to die in his old college room not The of Dr. J. C. Warren and William T. G. Morton portraits long after a speech made ata class reunion. His last residence are inserted, and as well an engraving showing the first public demonstration of surgical anesthesia, which occurred Oct. 16, was Newcastle, Delaware. 1846, and in which the portraits of those present are seen John P. Atwater, M.D., last surviving member of the class grouped about the patient (George Abbott), who is lying on the of 1834 at Yale College, died at his home in Poughkeepsie, on table at the where Morton has the anesthesia period completed 23. was born in 1813 at where his and the is just for the knife of Dr. Warren. The May He Carlisle, Pa., father, patient ready after his figures present are those of Drs. H. J. Bigelow, A. A. Gould, the Rev. Jeremiah Atwater, completing professional J. C. Warren, J. Mason Warren, W. T. G. Morton, Samuel studies, settled. In 1870 he removed to Poughkeepsie. Parkman, George Hayward and S. D. Townsend. Of these, Joel Washington Smith, M.D., Charles City, Iowa, June 6, J. C. Warren was at the time of surgery in the Med¬ professor 72 years. Dr. Smith was a member of the American ical Department of Harvard University ; J. Mason Warren and aged H. J. Bigelow afterward became such. Dr. Parkman was Medical Association, Iowa State Medical Society, Cedar murdered by Webster ; Dr. George Hayward was at the time Valley, and Wapsia Valley Medical Societies ; International Dr. the chief surgeon of the Massachusetts General Hospital ; Medical Congress, Philadelphia 1876, and Washington 1887 ; was then of Marine at Chel¬ Townsend surgeon the Hospital American Public Health Association, American Association for sea, having succeeded his father, Dr. David Townsend, in that capacity. the Advancemant of Science, etc. As a souvenir of one of the most interesting events of Alonzo D. Tagert, M. D., June 16, aged 53 years; gradu¬ modern medical history, the book will find a welcome in the ated in 1864 from Medical Department of the University of library of every progressive surgeon who is fortunate enough in his native State until when he to obtain it. Vermont. He practiced 1884, settled in Chicago and remained up to the time of his death. -Wm. Allison Todd, M.D., Chariton, Iowa, March 24, at NECROLOGY. one time president of the Iowa State Medical Society.-Isaac VanTyleGoltra, M.D., Springfield, 111., June 12,aged 77 years. William Thompson Lusk, M.D., born May 23, 1838, in Nor¬ -R. J. Goodman M.D., Sparks, Ga., June 16.-Victor S. wich, Conn., died of cerebral apoplexy at his residence in New Jourdon, M.D., St. Louis, June 13, aged 80 years.-Samuel York city, June 12. Having entered Yale College in 1859 he M. Martin, M.D., Greenfield, Ind., June 14, aged 55 years.- left it after his freshman year to enlist in the Union army but M. M. Powell, M.D., Collinsville, 111., June 19.-Nicholas in 1872 he received his honorary degree of A.M. from this insti¬ Schenkel, M.D., Allegheny, Pa., June 9, aged 40 years.-Asa tution and in 1893 that of LL.D. During the war he rose from F. Pattee, M.D., (instead of Asa F. Potter, Journal, p. 1202). the humble rank of private to that of Captain of the 79th Infan¬ try N. Y. Volunteers, otherwise "the Highlapders" from which regiment he was mustered out Feb. 28, 1863. He was gradu¬ PUBLIC HEALTH. ated from the Bellevue Hospital Medical College in 1864 and In N. J.— The health afterward pursued his studies in Heidelberg, Berlin, Edin¬ The Scarlet Fever Epidemic Plainfield, authorities, aided the physicians, are investigating the burgh, Paris, Vienna and Prague. Dr. Lusk won his reputa¬ by city sources of the which seems to have been of a mild tion from many been contributor and medical epidemic, pursuits, having to all of editor, lecturer and professor in the Long Island Hospital Med¬ form and found exist among classes the people. No- been in as ical College, the Harvard Medical School and the Bellevue Hos¬ favors have shown the general quarantine, and the has so far abated as to allow a few pital Medical College,a visiting and consulting physician of many a consequence epidemic of the schools to the summer vacation. hospitals and an active member of several scientific bodies. days opening previous His most enduring distinction in all likelihood is his treatise Draining New Jersey Marshes.—The reclamation of the Passaic on "TheScience and Art of Midwifery" (1880), which has been and Hackensack meadows is under discussion. The two are made familiar abroad in several languages. He leaves three about eighteen miles long, extending from Elizabeth to Hack¬ surface is daughters and two sons. ensack, and their width averages four miles. The Frederick J. McNulty, M.D., Georgetown Medical College in general five feet above low water level and a trifle above high or of 1860, died in Boston, Mass., June 14, at which date he was tide. The soil is either blue clay peat, the depth the from ten to Superintendent of the Austin Farm Insane Asylum. He was former ranging for the most part fifteen feet and less than born in Richmond, Va., in 1835 and was an officer with a record the depth of the latter being generally eight feet. of in of a service under four flags, to-wit, the United States, the Mr. C. C. Vermeule the State Geological Survey his- Confederate, the Chilian and the Cuban. Recovered from report discusses the relative cost of plans, and averages the wounds in battle, with a diplomatic training and an experience price at about $47 an acre. The accruing advantages to com¬ in Ludlow Street jail under bonds not to enter the Cuban army merce, manufacturing and agriculture would more than coun¬ he finally settled in Worcester, Mass., and in 1879 removed to terbalance the estimated outlay of $1,268,400. The health and Boston. He was a member of Camp Lee, Confederate Veter¬ welfare of the whole meadow district and contiguous territory, best a ans of Richmond and the Massachusetts Medical Society. it is suggested, can be promoted by single public Henry Loewenstein, M.D. University Giessen, Germany, authority planning to improve navigation and drain by the not 1857, for many years a police surgeon, died at his home in same work. The newspapers in their comments can forego Brooklyn, N. Y., June 10, aged -59 years. the tempting allusions to offensive odors, omnipresent malaria Samuel S. Troth, M.D., Jefferson, Philadelphia, 1849, died and "Jersey mosquitoes," but vote the proposition of redemp¬ in that city June 11. He was long a member of the Pennsyl¬ tion as feasible. vania Medical Society. A Yellow Fever Menace.—A San Francisco telegram to the George Kerr Edwards, M.D., son of a regular army sur¬ N. Y. Herald, dated June 13, reports the arrival of the City of geon, a Princeton graduate of class 1889, and an alumnus of Para flying the yellow flag. When one day out from Panama, the University of Pennsylvania, died in Princeton, N. J,, June a lady passenger died from yellow fever, and a few days there¬ 14. After attaining his medical degree he spent a year in hos¬ after the captain also succumbed. None of the twenty pas¬ pital work in Philadelphia and subsequently in the Johns sengers showed symptoms of the disease, but a quarantine was Hopkins Hospital. After nine months devotion to duty in the very properly ordered. Health officer Dr. Doty maintains 'latter institution tuberculosis manifested itself, since when in that a fever epidemic in New York is out of question and that his own words he kept "chasing health and hope." A sojourn the present menace, if such it may be called,, began on the Downloaded From: http://jama.jamanetwork.com/ by a University of Arizona Health Sciences Library User on 06/10/2015 Paul Pacific side of the Isthmus of Panama ; the cases originated Dubois, who was first asked to execute the monument, in two sailors who deserted a ship from Peru. On the the work has been intrusted to Falguière. Atlantic side of the Isthmus, where the Advance shipped her Explanation of the Variations in the Intracellular Secretion of cargo of feuit, there is no yellow fever. (Journal, p. 1202). Bile in the Liver.—Professor Browicz announces that he has The steamer Vigilancia, with eleven second-cabin passen¬ established a fact that explains his former announcement of gers, arrived at New York June 14 from Havana. These the peculiar differences in the chemic constitution of the bile were sent to Hoffman Island for observation. Owing to the secreted at one time by a liver cell in certain abnormal condi¬ sudden death of a Chinese passenger on board the Vigilancia, tions. He finds that there is a connecting system of delicate and the lack of a satisfactory history of the case, Health intranuclear and intraprotoplasmic passages in the chromatin Officer Doty decided to detain the steamer for disinfection. In of the nucleus of the hepatic cells, connecting closely with the the case of ships from Cuba, "white certificates" are used as intercellular biliary passages. This discovery shows that the permits to land in New York. The only class on board ship biliary passages commence in the nucleus, and also explains requiring surveillance are white passengers who may have con¬ the pathologic vacuolization in certain pathologic conditions.
Recommended publications
  • Music and the American Civil War
    “LIBERTY’S GREAT AUXILIARY”: MUSIC AND THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR by CHRISTIAN MCWHIRTER A DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of The University of Alabama TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA 2009 Copyright Christian McWhirter 2009 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ABSTRACT Music was almost omnipresent during the American Civil War. Soldiers, civilians, and slaves listened to and performed popular songs almost constantly. The heightened political and emotional climate of the war created a need for Americans to express themselves in a variety of ways, and music was one of the best. It did not require a high level of literacy and it could be performed in groups to ensure that the ideas embedded in each song immediately reached a large audience. Previous studies of Civil War music have focused on the music itself. Historians and musicologists have examined the types of songs published during the war and considered how they reflected the popular mood of northerners and southerners. This study utilizes the letters, diaries, memoirs, and newspapers of the 1860s to delve deeper and determine what roles music played in Civil War America. This study begins by examining the explosion of professional and amateur music that accompanied the onset of the Civil War. Of the songs produced by this explosion, the most popular and resonant were those that addressed the political causes of the war and were adopted as the rallying cries of northerners and southerners. All classes of Americans used songs in a variety of ways, and this study specifically examines the role of music on the home-front, in the armies, and among African Americans.
    [Show full text]
  • Former Fellows Biographical Index Part
    Former Fellows of The Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 – 2002 Biographical Index Part Two ISBN 0 902198 84 X Published July 2006 © The Royal Society of Edinburgh 22-26 George Street, Edinburgh, EH2 2PQ BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX OF FORMER FELLOWS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH 1783 – 2002 PART II K-Z C D Waterston and A Macmillan Shearer This is a print-out of the biographical index of over 4000 former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh as held on the Society’s computer system in October 2005. It lists former Fellows from the foundation of the Society in 1783 to October 2002. Most are deceased Fellows up to and including the list given in the RSE Directory 2003 (Session 2002-3) but some former Fellows who left the Society by resignation or were removed from the roll are still living. HISTORY OF THE PROJECT Information on the Fellowship has been kept by the Society in many ways – unpublished sources include Council and Committee Minutes, Card Indices, and correspondence; published sources such as Transactions, Proceedings, Year Books, Billets, Candidates Lists, etc. All have been examined by the compilers, who have found the Minutes, particularly Committee Minutes, to be of variable quality, and it is to be regretted that the Society’s holdings of published billets and candidates lists are incomplete. The late Professor Neil Campbell prepared from these sources a loose-leaf list of some 1500 Ordinary Fellows elected during the Society’s first hundred years. He listed name and forenames, title where applicable and national honours, profession or discipline, position held, some information on membership of the other societies, dates of birth, election to the Society and death or resignation from the Society and reference to a printed biography.
    [Show full text]
  • 1934-1935 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University
    '"'"JLJ'^:_-'i .j' *-*i7i in T.' "-. \ f .'/" ; Bulletin of Yale University New Haven 15 October 1935 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY if Entered as second-class matter, August 30,1906, at the'post ^ office at New Haven, Conn,, under the Act of Congress ofJ July 16, 1894, Acceptance for mailing at the special rate of postage pro- vided for in Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authonzed August 12, 1918. The BULLETIN, which is issued semimonthly, includes: 1. The University Catalogue. _ - - 2. The Reports of the President and Treasurer. s_ 3. The Catalogues of the several Schools. 4. The Alumni Directory and the Quinquennial Catalogue. 5. The Obituary Record. ; \ Bulletin of Yale University OBITUARY RECORD OF GRADUATES DECEASED DURING THE YEAR ENDING JULY i, 1935 INCLUDING THE RECORD OF A FEW WHO DIED PREVIOUSLY, HITHERTO UNREPORTED NUMBER 94 Thirty-second Series • Number Three New Haven • 15 October 1935 YALE UNIVERSITY OBITUARY RECORD* YALE COLLEGE Augustus Field Beard, B.A. 1857, Born May 11, 1833, in Norwalk, Conn. Died December 22,1934, in Norwalk, Conn. Father, Algernon Edwin Beard; a hat manufacturer and banker in South Norwalk; representative in State Legislature; son of Dr. Daniel Beard and Betsy (Field) Beard, of Oakham, Mass., and Stratford, Conn. Mother, Mary Esther (Mallory) Beard; daughter of Lewis and Ann (Seymour) Mallory, of Norwalk. Yale relatives include. James Beard (honorary M.A. 1754) (great-grandfather); and Dr. George M. Beard, *6i (cousin). Wilhston Academy. Entered with Class of 1856, joined Class of 1857 following year; on Spoon Committee; member Linoma, Sigma Delta, Kappa Sigma Theta, Alpha Delta Phi, and Scroll and Key.
    [Show full text]
  • Necrology. Public Health
    8. The birth and death of pain, a poem, by S. Weir Mitch¬ in California was unavailing and in obedience to a sentiment of ell, M.D., LL.D., Philadelphia. of his own he was carried to die in his old college room not The of Dr. J. C. Warren and William T. G. Morton portraits long after a speech made ata class reunion. His last residence are inserted, and as well an engraving showing the first public demonstration of surgical anesthesia, which occurred Oct. 16, was Newcastle, Delaware. 1846, and in which the portraits of those present are seen John P. Atwater, M.D., last surviving member of the class grouped about the patient (George Abbott), who is lying on the of 1834 at Yale College, died at his home in Poughkeepsie, on table at the where Morton has the anesthesia period completed 23. was born in 1813 at where his and the is just for the knife of Dr. Warren. The May He Carlisle, Pa., father, patient ready after his figures present are those of Drs. H. J. Bigelow, A. A. Gould, the Rev. Jeremiah Atwater, completing professional J. C. Warren, J. Mason Warren, W. T. G. Morton, Samuel studies, settled. In 1870 he removed to Poughkeepsie. Parkman, George Hayward and S. D. Townsend. Of these, Joel Washington Smith, M.D., Charles City, Iowa, June 6, J. C. Warren was at the time of surgery in the Med¬ professor 72 years. Dr. Smith was a member of the American ical Department of Harvard University ; J. Mason Warren and aged H.
    [Show full text]
  • UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Educating
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Educating Women Physicians of the World: International Students of the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1883-1911 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in History by Sarah Ross Pripas-Kapit 2015 © Copyright by Sarah Ross Pripas-Kapit 2015 ! ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Educating Women Physicians of the World: International Students of the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1883-1911 by Sarah Ross Pripas-Kapit Doctor of Philosophy in History Professor Ellen Carol Dubois, Chair This dissertation presents a comparative examination of a cohort of international students who attended the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania (WMCP) from the years 1883 to 1911. The dissertation consider how these women came to study medicine in the United States, their experiences in the U.S., and how they later practiced medicine in their home countries. The dissertation argues that the global dissemination of modern medicine, and the maintenance of U.S. imperial power, has been in part enabled by the willing cooperation of transnational intermediaries such as these women. However, the students’ lives were in large part shaped by changes within American medicine during this period, in which medical education was changing rapidly. Although students who attended the college in the 1880s and early 1890s were able to forge a space within the college that permitted forms of medicine other than Western allopathic medicine, later generations of students tended to be more beholden to the idea, then in its early development, that “scientific medicine” represented the only valid form of medicine.
    [Show full text]
  • Birth Pangs: Maternity, Medicine, and Feminine Delicacy in English Canada, 1867-1950
    Wilfrid Laurier University Scholars Commons @ Laurier Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive) 2016 Birth Pangs: Maternity, Medicine, and Feminine Delicacy in English Canada, 1867-1950 Whitney L. Wood Wilfrid Laurier University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd Part of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Commons Recommended Citation Wood, Whitney L., "Birth Pangs: Maternity, Medicine, and Feminine Delicacy in English Canada, 1867-1950" (2016). Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive). 1816. https://scholars.wlu.ca/etd/1816 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations (Comprehensive) by an authorized administrator of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BIRTH PANGS: MATERNITY, MEDICINE, AND FEMININE DELICACY IN ENGLISH CANADA, 1867-1950 by Whitney Wood Honours Bachelor of Arts (History) Lakehead University, 2009 Master of Arts (History) Lakehead University, 2010 A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History February 2016 Wilfrid Laurier University Waterloo, Ontario, Canada © Whitney Wood 2016 Abstract The pain women experience in giving birth is a universal, cross-cultural, biological reality. The ways women experienced these pains, as well as the ways they were perceived by physicians and depicted in wider medical discourses, however, are historically and culturally specific. In late nineteenth and early twentieth century English Canada – a key period in terms of both the medicalization of birth and the professionalization of obstetrics – the dominant medical perception of the female body held that white, middle-class, and urban-dwelling women were particularly “delicate” and sensitive to pain for a variety of reasons.
    [Show full text]
  • Would You Prosecute the War with Elder-Stalk Squirts, Charged with Rose Water?”
    Chapter Twenty-eight “Would You Prosecute the War with Elder-Stalk Squirts, Charged with Rose Water?”: The Soft War Turns Hard (July-September 1862) In the summer of 1862, public disenchantment with the Administration’s “fatal milk and water policy” intensified.1 “The stern sentiment of justice and of retribution which swells even to bursting in millions of American hearts today, must be vindicated,” declared a Cincinnati journalist on Independence Day. “The outraged sense and patience of a long suffering nation must be trifled with no longer.”2 Illinois Governor Richard Yates warned Lincoln that the “crisis of the war and our national existence is upon us. The time has come for the adoption of more decisive measures. Mild and conciliatory means have been tried in vain.”3 The “people are fast getting into the belief, that as quiet & moderate war measures have accomplished no good, that severe measures are now necessary, & if the rebels will not lay down their arms – that it is the duty of the Govt to smite them hip & thigh,” Lincoln’s friend David Davis observed.4 1 James B. Newcomer to Henry S. Lane, Reading, Pennsylvania, 11 July [1862], typed copy, Lane Papers, Indiana University; Mark Grimsley, The Hard Hand of War: Union Military Policy toward Southern Civilians, 1861-1865 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 67-95; Silvana R. Siddali, From Property to Person: Slavery and the Confiscation Acts, 1861-1862 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2005), 167-91. 2 Washington correspondence by Sigma, 4 July, Cincinnati Gazette, 7 July 1862. 3 Yates to Lincoln, Springfield, 11 July 1862, Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress.
    [Show full text]
  • Principles of Medical Climatology, Physiology, Ethology, Geo- Dents
    climates and in the rules of climatotherapy there is not the clinical index which is really a therapeutic index. The book is in on slightest bias or variation from what he conceives to be the printed large clear type, and is handsomely bound and truth of the case. The book is divided into three sections. heavy paper. The old system of dosage has been used. The Section 1 having five chapters devoted respectively to the work is elementary and will no doubt be useful to medical stu- principles of Medical Climatology, Physiology, Ethology, Geo- dents. But we question whether or not such books as this graphical distribution of diseases, and Classification of should be implicitly relied on even by students. For instance, Climates. page 38, the author says: "Pus when thick and clear is known Section 2 has an introduction and four chapters, viz., as healthy or laudable pus or living pus; when thin and watery, Phthisis, Forms of phthisis as influenced by climate, result of puriform or dead pus; when bloodstained, sanious gummy the treatment of phthisis by change of climate, forms of dis- pus and contagious pus in smallpox, gonorrhea and venereal ease other than phthisis as influenced by climate. ulcers." On reading such a paragraph one is apt to rub his Section 3 has an introduction and ten chapters, viz., North eyes and re\l=e"\xaminethe title page of the book to see if it is America, Eastern Climate, Southern Climate, Rocky Mountain really printed near the close of the nineteenth century. Climate, Pacific Slope Region, Mexico, South America, Europe, It must not be inferred that this hook is a systematized trea¬ Africa, Asia, Australasia and Island Climates.
    [Show full text]
  • Honor, Death, and Psychological Combat Trauma in the American Civil War
    “NO SACRIFICE IS TOO GREAT, SAVE THAT OF HONOR”: HONOR, DEATH, AND PSYCHOLOGICAL COMBAT TRAUMA IN THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR By C2009 Debra J. Sheffer B. S. Central Missouri State University, 1981 M.A. Central Missouri State University, 1986 Submitted to the Department of History and the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Committee Members: _____________________________ (Dr. Theodore A. Wilson: chair) ______________________________ (Dr. Roger Spiller) ______________________________ (Dr. Jonathan Earle) ______________________________ (Dr. Paul Kelton) ______________________________ (Dr. Brent Steele) Date defended:_April 8, 2009______ The Dissertation Committee for Debra J. Sheffer certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation. “NO SACRIFICE IS TOO GREAT, SAVE THAT OF HONOR”: HONOR, DEATH, AND PSYCHOLOGICAL COMBAT TRAUMA IN THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR Committee: ___________________________________ (Dr. Theodore A. Wilson: Chairperson) _________________________________ (Dr. Roger Spiller) _________________________________ (Dr. Jonathan Earle) _________________________________ (Dr. Paul Kelton) _________________________________ (Dr. Brent Steele) Date approved: _April 20, 2009_________ ii “NO SACRIFICE IS TOO GREAT, SAVE THAT OF HONOR”: HONOR, DEATH, AND PSYCHOLOGICAL COMBAT TRAUMA IN THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR By Debra J. Sheffer Ph.D., University of Kansas, 2009 Submitted to the Department of History and the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Abstract Examination of honor culture and attitudes toward death and dying found in letters, diaries, and newspapers – from the colonial and revolutionary period through the Civil War era – strongly suggests that Civil War soldiers did not suffer from psychological combat trauma.
    [Show full text]
  • Travels in the Confederate States Author Index
    Travels in the Confederate States Author Index Abbott, Allen O. Andrews, Eliza Frances. Prison Life in the South: at Richmond, Macon, The war-time journal of a Georgia girl, 1865- Savannah, Charleston, Columbia, Charlotte, Raleigh, 1865. Goldsborough, and Andersonville, during the years New York: D. Appleton and Company. 1908 1864 and 1865. Illustrated from contemporary photographs. New York: Harper & Brothers. 1865 Fiche: 5288-5297 Fiche: 550-558 Aten, Henry J. Adams, Francis Colburn. History of the Eighty-fifth regiment, Illinois The story of a trooper. volunteer infantry. New York: Dick & Fitzgerald. 1865 Hiawatha, Kan. 1901 With much of interest concerning the campaign on Comp. And pub. under the auspices of the the Peninsula, not before written. Regimental association. Fiche: 80932-80946 Fiche: 5298-5309 Adams, John Gregory Bishop. Austin, J.P. Reminiscences of the Nineteenth Massachusetts The blue and the gray: sketches of a portion of the regiment. unwritten history of the great American civil war, a Boston: Wright & Potter Printing Company. 1899 truthful narrative of adventure, with thrilling Fiche: 573-577 reminiscences of the great struggle on land and sea. Atlanta, Georgia, The Franklin Printing and Adamson, Augustus Pitt. Publishing Company. 1899 Brief history of the Thirtieth Georgia regiment. Fiche: 600a-600f Griffin, Georgia, The Mills Printing Company. 1912 Fiche: 3186-3188 Bacon, Alvin Q. Thrilling adventures of a pioneer boy (of the John Ambrose, Daniel Leib. M. Palmer, 14th Ill., regiment) while a prisoner of History of the Seventh regiment Illinois volunteer war. infantry, from its first muster into the U.S. service, [n.p.]. [18--?] April 25, 1861, to its final muster out, July 9, 1865.
    [Show full text]
  • The Civil War: the First Year
    The Civil War: The First Year Preface . xix Introduction . xxi Charleston Mercury : What Shall the South Carolina Legislature Do?, November 3, 1860 Calling a Secession Convention: November 1860 . 1 John G. Nicolay: Memoranda Regarding Abraham Lincoln, November 5– 6, 1860 “Alarms from the South”: Illinois, November 1860 . 5 New-York Daily Tribune : Going to Go, November 9, 1860 The Threat of Secession: November 1860 . 8 Jefferson Davis to Robert Barnwell Rhett Jr., November 10 , 1860 The Need for Southern Cooperation: November 1860 . 11 Benjamin Hill: Speech at Milledgeville, November 15 , 1860 Debating Secession: Georgia, November 1860 . 14 New York Daily News : The Right of States to Secede, November 16 , 1860 “States cannot exist disunited”: November 1860 . 34 Sam Houston to H. M. Watkins and Others, November 20 , 1860 “I am for the Union as it is”: Texas, November 1860 . 37 George Templeton Strong: Diary, November 20 , November 26 – December 1, 1860 “Our sore national sickness”: New York, November 1860 . 43 Edward Bates: Diary, November 22 , 1860 “This dangerous game”: Missouri, November 1860 . 48 William G. Brownlow to R. H. Appleton, November 29 , 1860 The “Wicked Spirit” of Secession: Tennessee, November 1860 . 49 Frederick Douglass: The Late Election, December 1860 Lincoln and Slavery: December 1860 . 57 ix x contents William T. Sherman to Thomas Ewing Sr. and to John Sherman, December 1, 1860 Secessionism in Louisiana: December 1860 . 63 James Buchanan: from the Annual Message to Congress, December 3, 1860 Washington, D.C., December 1860 . 67 J.D.B. DeBow: The Non-Slaveholders of the South, December 5, 1860 The Benefits of Slavery: December 1860 .
    [Show full text]
  • 1896-1897 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University
    OBITUARY RECORD OF GRADUATES OF fflE UHIYERSITY Deceased during the Academical Year ending in * June, 1897, Including the Record of a feiv who died previously, hitherto itnreported. t [PRFSEtfTED AT THE MEETING OF THE ALHIXI, JlffE 29th, 1S9T] [No 7 of Fourth Printed Series, and No 56 of the whole Recoid ] OBITUARY RECORD OF GRADUATES OF TALE UNIVERSITY f Deceased during the Academical year ending in JUNE, 1897, Including the Record of a few who died pieviously, hitherto unreported [PRESENTED AT THE MEETING OF THE ALUMNI, JUNE 29TH, 1897 ] . [No 7 of the Fourth Printed Series, and No 56 of the whole Recoid.] YALE COLLEGE (ACADEMICAL DEPARTMENT) 1825 WILLIAM HENRY MILLS, the youngest son of the Hon Isaac Mills (Y C 1786) and Abigail (Phelps) Mills, of New Haven, was born m this city on April 2Q, 1S05 He entered college in 1820, and spent the larger part of his course with the class which was graduated ID 1824. He studied law in the Yale Law School, and was admitted to the bar, but nevei practiced the profession His father being one of the owners of the temtoiv now occupied by the city of Sandusky, Ohio, he emigiated at an early date to that locality, where the lest of his life was spent, in charge of his large landed inteiests. He acquired the title of General by connection with the State militia He married on January 30, 1830, Miss Caro- line Hurd, who now survives him with then children, two sons and three (Jaughteis. In 1894 General Mills's health began to fail, and in April, 1895, he took up his residence with his younger son, also in Sandusky.
    [Show full text]