Mosby's Men"This book does not purport to be a history of Mosby's command, in the sense of being a full and accurate account of its operations. It is a narrative of what the writer saw of the men and their doings"--Preface. |
From inside the book
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Page 22
... rushing into sight , he took in the situation . He knew that a long , hard chase was before him . But as he turned his horse for the start he concluded he would offer a suggestion to his pursuers not to crowd him too unceremoniously ...
... rushing into sight , he took in the situation . He knew that a long , hard chase was before him . But as he turned his horse for the start he concluded he would offer a suggestion to his pursuers not to crowd him too unceremoniously ...
Page 60
... The Yankees could not distinguish our numbers , and I am sure that , as in obedience to Chapman's orders to charge them , we rushed through those bushes , shoot- ing and yelling like Modoc Indians , while our mounted 60 Mosby's Men.
... The Yankees could not distinguish our numbers , and I am sure that , as in obedience to Chapman's orders to charge them , we rushed through those bushes , shoot- ing and yelling like Modoc Indians , while our mounted 60 Mosby's Men.
Page 62
... rushing through the bushes Phil Lee thought to impress them by whooping out at intervals in his fog- horn voice , " Hurrah for Imboden ! " The ruse may have accomplished what he intended , but it brought on him a characteristic ...
... rushing through the bushes Phil Lee thought to impress them by whooping out at intervals in his fog- horn voice , " Hurrah for Imboden ! " The ruse may have accomplished what he intended , but it brought on him a characteristic ...
Page 80
... rushed toward it in order to board it , but the engineer , who did not lose his head for a moment , succeeded in getting his train under way , and we were disgusted to see it move off before we got up to it . But you ought to have seen ...
... rushed toward it in order to board it , but the engineer , who did not lose his head for a moment , succeeded in getting his train under way , and we were disgusted to see it move off before we got up to it . But you ought to have seen ...
Page 105
... rushing on to bag their game . When they got well into the woods the fugitives suddenly regained their nerve and wheeled squarely about in the faces of their pursuers , while others of our men pressed on each of their flanks . This was ...
... rushing on to bag their game . When they got well into the woods the fugitives suddenly regained their nerve and wheeled squarely about in the faces of their pursuers , while others of our men pressed on each of their flanks . This was ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adamstown Aldie Berryville Blazer bluff boys brought bushes camp Captain captured carbineers cavalry charge Charley Colonel Mosby column command Company comrades creek crossed dark dashed desperate Dulany's Eighth Illinois enemy eyes Federal fell fence fight fire flank followed Forty-third Battalion friends Front Royal gotten Greenback raid halted Harper's Ferry Harry Hatcher heard heart hill horse hundred yards infantry Jim Sinclair John killed knew Lieutenant Cole Little River turnpike Loudoun Loudoun County Middleburg miles morning Mosby's Confederacy mountain mounted moved nerve never night officer old field party passed picket pike pistol Point of Rocks Potomac pretty prisoners promptly Purcellville pursuers raid Ranger reached Rectortown regiment revolver ride river road rode rushed scouts seemed sent sharpshooters Shenandoah Shenandoah River shot side sight Sinnott soldier soon squad thing thought tion took town turned turnpike Upperville Valley wagon Warrenton wounded Yankees
Popular passages
Page 118 - ... Having learned that a man by the name of Marshall was recruiting a company in the vicinity of Ashby's Gap, and that they were to organize on the 25th, I proceeded to their reported rendezvous, near White Post, and completely surprised them, getting Marshall and four of his men, and capturing all of his papers. In another affair below Front Royal I left eight of his murderers to keep company with some that (were) left by General Custer...
Page 128 - Two of Captain Blazer's men came in this morning — Privates Harris and Johnson. They report that Mosby with 300 men attacked Blazer near Kabletown yesterday about u o'clock. They say that the entire command, with the exception of themselves, was captured or killed. I have ordered Major Congdon with 300 Twelfth Pennsylvania cavalry to Kabletown to bury dead and take care of wounded, if any, and report all facts he can learn. I shall immediately furnish report as soon as received.
Page 150 - We followed the road to the top of a hill on the edge of the town and saw the streets filled with blue-coated cavalry.
Page 140 - During my absence from my command, the enemy captured six of my men near Front Royal. These were immediately hanged by order and in the presence of General Custer. They also hung another lately in Rappahannock. It is my purpose to hang an equal number of Custer's men whenever I capture them.
Page 140 - I have directed Colonel Mosby, through his adjutant, to hang an equal number of Custer's men in retaliation for those executed by him.
Page 19 - There was another movement with which we were not altogether unfamiliar, an order technically known as the "skedaddle," but I never heard the command given. The Rangers seemed to know instinctively when that movement was appropriate, and never waited for the word...
Page 70 - But they gave us a hearty welcome and we had no reason to suspect that the larder was low. Often have I recalled with gratitude and something of regret the sweetly cooked and daintily served ham and eggs and richly browned cornbread which that day greeted our keen appetites. One of the sons of the family stood watch for us on the neighboring hill, and we ate, and baited our horses and rested in peace.
Page 20 - You see when the Yankees broke they would always run in a bunch, and all we had to do was to follow and pick them up. . . . But when we found it necessary to leave the scene of action, each man worked out his own salvation and 'struck for home and fireside
Page 66 - Here we were, a half-dozen foolish boys, forty miles from our comrades, surrounded on all sides by enemies — military and noncombatant — and liable at any moment to stir up a hornet's nest. Should our leader and guide fall in a night skirmish, or by any chance become separated from us, the brightest prospect that awaited us would be to ride humbly into the nearest camp, and take our chances as being received and treated as prisoners of war.
Page 63 - About daybreak one morning in the summer of 1864, Bush Underwood aroused me from my slumbers, with an invitation to go with him on a scout about the neighborhood of Georgetown. We had gone into camp near Thoroughfare Gap late the night before, after which I had been on picket for a couple of hours, so I felt very little like...