Rare Books
Sketch of the Entrenched Lines in the Immediate Front of Petersburg
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Map of the Railway Lines converging at Washington, D.C
Rare Books
A table lists distances from Washington, D.C. to various major points. Sub map: Map of the Washington Alexandria and Georgetown Railroad. Table of distances from Washington D.C. "Compiled from the most authentic sources Under the direction of Silas Seymour, C.E. 1864." "Compiled and drawn by J.J.R. Croes and T. B. Samo, Civ. Engrs.." Prime meridian: GM. Relief: hachures. Graphic Scale: Miles. Projection: Plane. Printing Process: Lithography. Other Features: Sub-maps Vignettes. Verso Text: HL sticker: 128070.
128070
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Sketch of the entrenched lines in the immediate front of Petersburg, Virginia : surveyed under the direction of N. Michler, Major of Engrs., Bvt. Col.; U.S.A
Rare Books
Publisher transcription from cover. Large scale map of Civil War entrenchments. Prime meridian: GM. Relief: no. Graphic Scale: Miles. Projection: Plane. Printing Process: Lithography.
46383
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Elizabeth P. Hincks diary
Manuscripts
Mrs. Hincks commenced her diary on June 12, 1868, upon advice of General E. R. S. Canby's wife who told her that she wished she had kept a diary during her travels as an army wife. The first portion of the diary recaps the events since the Hincks' wedding till June of 1868. The remainder covers the family's trip to New York, Boston, Cambridge, Bangor, and Buckport, Me., Col. Hinck's hometown, in the summer and late fall of 1868. Mrs. Hincks recounted her daily life -- reading, sewing, shopping, paying visits, attending theater and lectures in Boston and New York, (including an exhibit of Frederick Church's Niagara). There are also accounts of a Republican meeting and parade in Bangor that featured her husband along with Daniel Sickles and James Harrison Wilson as guests of honor, public appearances and speaking engagement of Edward W. Hincks who was campaigning for Benjamin F. Butler, and the election day of 1868 in Boston. The last portion of the diary, from the late November on, describe the return to Goldsboro, passing the battlefields of Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Petersburg, and the life in camp.
mssHM 69808