In the first quarter of the century, on the hills which stand above the Ohio River, but in different States of the Union, were born two children, destined, to all appearance, to lives of narrow interests and thankless toil. They were the sons of poor parents, without influence or expectations; their native villages, deep in the solitudes of the West, and remote from the promise and possibilities of great cities, offered no road to fortune. In the days before the railway, escape from the wilderness, except for those with long purses, was very difficult; and for those who remained, if their means were small, the farm and the store were the only occupations. But a farmer without capital was little better than a hired hand; trade was confined to the petty dealings of a country market; and although thrift and energy, even under such depressing conditions, might eventually win a competence, the most ardent ambition could hardly hope for more. Never was an obscure existence more irretrievably marked out than for these children of the Ohio; and yet, before either had grown grey, the names of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, and of Stonewall Jackson, Lieutenant-General in the Confederate Army, were household words in both America and Europe. Descendants of the pioneers, those hardy borderers, half soldiers and half farmers, who held and reclaimed, through long years of Indian warfare, the valleys and prairies of the West, they inherited the best attributes of a frank and valiant race. Simple yet wise, strong yet gentle, they were gifted with all the qualities which make leaders of men. Actuated by the highest principles, they both ennobled the cause for which they fought; and while the opposition of such kindred natures adds to the dramatic interest of the Civil War, the career of the great soldier, although a theme perhaps less generally attractive, may be followed as profitably as that of the great statesmen. Providence dealt with them very differently. The one was struck down by a mortal wound before his task was well begun; his life, to all human seeming, was given in vain, and his name will ever be associated with the mournful memories of a lost cause and a vanished army. The other, ere he fell beneath the assassin’s stroke, had seen the abundant fruits of his mighty labours; his sun set in a cloudless sky. And yet the resemblance between them is very close. Both dared Jackson, in one respect, was more fortunate than Lincoln. Although born to poverty, he came of a Virginia family which was neither unknown nor undistinguished, and as showing the influences which went to form his character, its history and traditions may be briefly related.
亞歷山大大帝
"More than one hundred fifty years after General Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, the writings of these two remarkable men continue to spark interest in the Civil War.
In this Special Library Collector's Edition, Historian James W. Edwards has combined the essential elements of Grant's biography with detailed letters written to his family during his tenure, then concluding with all his State of the Union ...
An account of the lives of the commissioned officers during America's war of secession. Including a remarkable collection of photographs of historical and personal memorabilia.
The bloody conflict of North against South told through the stories of its great battles. Illustrated with collections of some of the rarest Civil War historical artificats.
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Mark S. Watson , U.S. Army in World War II , subseries : The War Department : Chief of Staff ; Pre - War Plans and Preparations ( Washington , D.C .: Office of the Chief of Military History ( OCMH ) , GPO , 1950 ) , pp . 132–36 . 32.
... 65 , 137-8 , 146–7 , 158 , 181 , Phillips , Admiral Sir Tom , 62 226 Pilar River , 77 Pearson , Drew , 42 Pogue ... 28 Pongani , 112 Perryville , 3 Popondetta , 114 Pershing , General John J. , 11-12 , 16–20 , 23-4 , Port Moresby ...
We Remember Him As Alexander The Great&Epic In Scope And Magisterial In Tone, Steve Pressfield S Breathtaking Novel Tells The Story Of This Legendary Colossus Of The Ancient World Who Was Driven And Ultimately Undone By His Insatiable Lust ...
The sound of artillery and musket came down from the west as Warren's corps bucked across the North Anna on hastily improvised pontoons . Lee was furious — though he himself had made the error in judgment — and stormed at Hill ...