| Edward Alfred Pollard - 1865 - 454 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded, and his own, and all...mountains, when the very movement abandoned to his unmolested use the better and more practicable route half the length, on the south side of the river.... | |
| Edward Alfred Pollard - 1866 - 782 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded and his own and all...mountains, when the very movement abandoned to his unmolested use the better and more practicable route of half the length on the south side of the river... | |
| Edward Alfred Pollard - 1866 - 1314 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded, and his own, and all...the trophies and supplies we had won. All this was tp be risked and given up, for what? to gain the enemy's rear and cut him off from his depot of supplies,... | |
| Edward Alfred Pollard - 1867 - 776 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded and his own and all...mountains, when the very movement abandoned to his unmolested use the better and more practicable route of half the length on the south side of the river... | |
| Frank Moore - 1867 - 868 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded and his own, and all...supplies we had won. All this was to be risked and given np for what ? To gain the enemy's rear and cut him off from his depot of supplies by the route over... | |
| Edward Alfred Pollard - 1868 - 804 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded and his own and all...supplies by the route over the mountains, when the vary movement abandoned to his unmolested use the better and more practicable route of half the length... | |
| John Basil Turchin - 1888 - 366 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded and his own, and all...and supplies we had won. All this was to be risked for what? To gain the enemy's rear and cut him off from his depot of supplies by the route over the... | |
| Edward Alfred Pollard - 1890 - 800 pages
...men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battle-field, with thousands of our wounded and his own and all...mountains, when the very movement abandoned to his unmolested use the better and more practicable route of half the length on the south side of the river... | |
| Henry Van Boynton - 1895 - 342 pages
...and nearly, if not quite, a third of the artillery horses on the field had been lost. The rail-- road bridges, too, had been destroyed to a point south...mountains, when the very movement abandoned to his unmolested use the better and more practicable route, of half the length, on the south side of the... | |
| Charles Eugene Belknap - 1899 - 498 pages
...to men or animals. It also left open to the enemy, at a distance of only ten miles, our battlefield, with thousands of our wounded and his own, and all the trophies and supplies we bad won. All this was to be risked and given up for what? To gain the enemy's rear and cut him off... | |
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