Without any formal orders to retreat, what was left of the several organizations yielded — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
Towards four o’clock, the rebels felt strong enough to take the offensive. — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
Lincoln’s speech excited and sustained the enthusiasm of his audience to the end. — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
The curious defiled past him, after squeezing the presidential fingers into the room — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
Senator douglas was very small, not over four and a half feet height, and there was a noticeable — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
I therefore shared fully the intense chagrin of the new york and other state delegations when — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
I had not got over the prejudice against lincoln with which my personal contact with him in 1858 imbued me. — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
As he kept me talking for over half an hour, I flattered myself that what I had to say interested him. — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
No one felt it more than the president. I saw him repeatedly, and he fairly groaned — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
He appeared every night, like myself, at about nine o’clock, in the office of mr. Tyler — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard
General sherman looked upon journalists as a nuisance and a danger at headquarters and — Ferdinand Heinrich Gustav Hilgard