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1Author:  Karl Baedeker (Firm)Requires cookie*
 Title:  Paris and Northern France  
 Published:  2004 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Modern English collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
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2Author:  Jack George S.Requires cookie*
 Title:  History of Roanoke County  
 Published:  2004 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Modern English collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: By GEORGE S. JACK This is to certify that Lieutenant C. C. Taliaferro was a member of Company "C," Captain Brad Brown, of the Battalion of Scouts, Guides, and Couriers, that was attached to the Headquarters of the Army of Northern Virginia, then under the command of General Robert E. Lee. He rendered faithful service as a scout and courier, often accompanying the General and members of his Staff on the field of battle, and was with me on the tenth day of May 1864, in the hottest of the fight on that day and the successful charge made by our troops to recover portion of our line seized on one side of what is known now as "Bloody Angle," near Spottsylvania Court House. He was wounded in the army that afternoon, but in due time returned to duty, and was paroled at Appomattox.
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3Author:  Wied Maximilian Prinz von 1782-1867Requires cookie*
 Title:  Travels in the Interior of North America  
 Published:  2004 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Modern English collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: "New Orleans, June 6, 1838.—The southern parts of the United States, particularly Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana, are as healthy as can be wished; there has been no appearance of the yellow fever, and even at the Havannah only a few isolated cases have occurred. During the autumn, winter, and spring, the small-pox has carried off many victims among the Whites, and thousands of the Indians; but it has now wholly disappeared in the territory of the Union, in consequence of a general vaccination of persons of all ages. On the other hand, we have, from the trading posts on the western frontier of the Missouri, the most frightful accounts of the ravages of the small-pox among the Indians. The destroying angel has visited the unfortunate sons of the wilderness with terrors never before known, and has converted the extensive hunting grounds, as well as the peaceful settlements of those tribes, into desolate and boundless cemeteries. The number of the victims within a few months is estimated at 30,000, and the pestilence is still spreading. The warlike spirit which but lately animated the several Indian tribes, and but a few months ago gave reason to apprehend the breaking-out of a sanguinary war, is broken. The mighty warriors are now the prey of the greedy wolves of the prairie, and the few survivors, in mute despair, throw themselves on the pity of the Whites, who, however, can do but little to help them. The vast preparations for the protection of the western frontier are superfluous: another arm has undertaken the defence of the white inhabitants of the frontier; and the funereal torch, that lights the red man to his dreary grave, has become the auspicious star of the advancing settler, and of the roving trader of the white race. Voyages to North America are become everyday occurrences, and little more is to be related of them than that you met and saluted ships, had fine or stormy weather, and the like; here, therefore, we shall merely say that our party embarked at Helvoetsluys, on board an American ship, on the 17th of May, in the evening, and on the 24th saw Land's End, Cornwall, vanish in the misty distance, and bade farewell to Europe.
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