The Terror Tactics of Confederate General John Morgan
On 7 July 1863, three days after Vicksburg surrendered, Brig. Gen. John Hunt Morgan, CSA, attacked Union positions on the upper Ohio and captured Union steamers John T. McCombs and Alice Dean. He crossed the river at Brandenburg and raced east through southern Indiana and Ohio -- burning bridges, tearing up railroads, destroying Federal public property, and terrifying the countryside.
Read more about this topic: USS Naumkeag (1863)
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“No man dies for what he knows to be true. Men die for what they want to be true, for what some terror in their hearts tells them is not true.”
—Oscar Wilde (18541900)
“Figure a mans only good for one oath at a time. I took mine to the Confederate States of America.”
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“A poets object is not to tell what actually happened but what could or would happen either probably or inevitably.... For this reason poetry is something more scientific and serious than history, because poetry tends to give general truths while history gives particular facts.”
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A voice from heaven, following the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist.
“O, pluck was he to the backbone and clear grit through and through;
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