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Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps Book

Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps
Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps, Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran, Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps has a rating of 3.5 stars
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Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps, Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran, Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps
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  • Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps
  • Written by author Thomas W. Hyde
  • Published by University of South Carolina Press, August 2005
  • Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran
  • Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran
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Authors

List of Illustrationsxi
Series Editor's Prefacexiii
Introductionxv
Preface to the 1894 Editionxxxix
Chapter I1
Signs of the Coming Conflict
Chicago in 1860
Abraham Lincoln, President Elect
The Seventy-five Thousand Call
Chapter II11
Bull Run
Recruiting for the 7th Maine
In Camp at Augusta
Election of Officers
Start for the Front
Chapter III19
Lunch in Faneuil Hall
War Rumors
Hostile Baltimore
John Barleycorn our Worst Enemy
The Romance of War
Chapter IV24
A Rebel Spy
Camp Fare
First Visit to Washington
Death of Colonel Marshall
Kalorama Hill
Crossing into Virginia
Chapter V30
Camp Griffin
Opossum Soup
Irish Volunteers
First Independent Command
Chapter VI35
The Grand Review
Start for the Peninsula
Advance on Yorktown
A Night Alarm
Under Fire First Time
Chapter VII43
Hard Tack, Mud, and Rain
Building Corduroy Roads
A Picket Fight
Old Generals and Young Volunteers
Estimate of McClellan
Chapter VIII48
Buried Torpedoes
The Battle of Williamsburg
Hancock's Bayonet Charge
McClellan's Speech
Chapter IX54
An Episode in the Enemy's Country
Old Madeira
The White House
Skirmish at Mechanicsville
No McDowell
Chapter X60
A Grim Rebel
Custer's First Skirmish
Fair Oaks
In the Hospital
Malaria
Chapter XI66
Lee strikes our Right
Gaines's Mill
Holding our own
Fight at Garnett's Hill
An Anxious Night
Chapter XII71
Savage Station
White Oak Swamp
Rout of the Germans
Vermonters mark Time to the Shell Fire
Chapter XIII76
Malvern Hill
Stealing the General's Dinner
To Harrison's Landing
Chapter XIV81
Fitz-John Porter
A Mule disappears in Mud
Home again
Second Bull Run
Death of Sam Fessenden
Chapter XV87
Chantilly
Glorious Deaths of Kearny and Stevens
Falstaff's Army
The Gallant Swede
My Maryland
Chapter XVI92
Crampton's Gap
Picket on the Mountain
First Charge at Antietam
The Germans redeemed
Fine Sharpshooting
Chapter XVII99
Charging an Army
Reaching the Farthest Point in the Enemy's Lines
Vain Heroism
"Rally, Boys, to save the Major!"
Applause from the Vermonters
Rebel Reports
Chapter XVIII108
Under Arrest
Welcomed to Maine again
A Winter at Home
Miss the Battle of Fredericksburg
Chapter XIX115
Back in the Field
General Franklin
"Baldy" Smith
In Clover at last
General Sedgwick
Chapter XX120
Reorganizing the Army
A Military Pageant
Getting ready for the Assault
A Southern Marksman
A Government Contract
Chapter XXI127
Storming Marye's Heights
Salem Church
An Ill-Boding Night
Lee attacks with Three to One, and is beaten off
Over the River again
A Movable Bed
Chapter XXII135
Fame of the Sixth Corps as bright as ever
Guarding Southern Homes
Whitworth Bolts
Hooker relieved
Chapter XXIII141
To Taneytown for Orders
Council of War in Meade's Tent
Seventy-Mile Ride
The Corps up the Baltimore Pike
Chapter XXIV146
Longstreet's Magnificent Attack
The Corps directed toward the Heavy Firing
Up Little Round Top
Gloomy Rumors
Chapter XXV151
Farnsworth's Charge
Two Hundred and Ten Cannon dealing Death
Pickett's Charge
A Carnival of Death
Sabre Flashes in the Dust Clouds
Chapter XXVI158
The Morning after Gettysburg
Our Capua
Mount Misery
The Funkstown Traitress
The General's Forbearance
Chapter XXVII164
Across the Potomac
Rebel Maidens of Warrenton
After Mosby
A Loving-Cup with "Jeb" Stuart
A Brilliant Feat at Rappahannock Station
Chapter XXVIII172
A Virginia Mansion of the Olden Time
A British Contingent
Locust Grove
Mine Run
Back to Camp, cold and disgusted
Chapter XXIX178
Our Winter City
Ball Rooms of the Camp
Romantic Ride across Hazel Run
Enter Grant and Sheridan
Torbert's Horse
Chapter XXX182
Over the Rapidan
Orders for Meade
Alternate Victory and Success in the Wilderness
Scouting round the Enemy
A Good Samaritan
Chapter XXXI191
Down the Road to Spottsylvania
Destructive Sharp-shooting
Sedgwick's Death
In Memoriam
Chapter XXXII196
Upton's Assault
Hancock's Assault
The Bloodiest Fight of the War
Chapter XXXIII203
A Woodland Fortress
"How long, O Lord, how long!"
A Cure for the Goitre
The Battle of Massaponax Church
General Mackenzie
Dr. Fiske
Chapter XXXIV208
Carbine Fire
In the Lines at Cold Harbor
Photographed in Action
Useless Assaults
A Flag of Truce at Midnight
Chapter XXXV214
Naval Hospitalities
Mr. Lincoln
Mahone flanks us
Chapter XXXVI221
Back to Washington
Early on the War Path
The President under Fire
Ragged and Footsore Veterans meet
Honors divided, but Washington saved
Chapter XXXVII225
Return to the Regiment
The Snow Bivouac
Sheridan takes Command
Narrow Escapes
Muster out of the 7th Maine
Chapter XXXVIII233
The First Maine Veterans
Lose Sheridan's Ride
Perils of the Valley
A Brigade by Inversion
A Land of Milk and Honey
Chapter XXXIX238
Box Cars with Fireplaces
Our Dutch Gap Canal
A Star Chamber
Picket Attacks
Chapter XL243
Gordon's Attack at Hare's Hill
We attack in our Front
Under the Fire of Thirty Cannon
Our Vandalism
Chapter XLI249
The Wedge Assault
A Camp Fire guides to Victory
The Lines pierced
Death of A. P. Hill
Veterans take Colors, while Substitutes run
Chapter XLII256
Attack on Lee's Headquarters
General Lee heads our Opponents
Taking a Battery
The Spires of Petersburg
Penrose wounded
Chapter XLIII261
Moses Owen
Pushing on after Lee
Under Sheridan's Eye at Sailor's Creek
The Surrender at last
Wild Rejoicing
Refused a Sight of the Rebel Army
Chapter XLIV266
Lincoln's Assassination
Occupy Danville
Army Journalism
The Grand Review
Home at last
Index271


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Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps, Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran, Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps

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Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps, Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran, Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps

Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps

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Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps, Thomas W. Hyde, a native of Maine who rose rapidly through the Union ranks and eventually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Antietam, published his portrait of the Army of the Potomac in 1894. More than a mere personal remembran, Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps

Following the Greek Cross: Or, Memories of the Sixth Army Corps

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