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1. England for the Confederate States of America
2. brother, Irvine, sailed on the Confederate raiders Nashville, Alabama, and Shenandoah
3. Three weeks later, Confederate secretary of the navy,
4. Mallory, ordered Bulloch to go abroad to secure ships and military supplies and to build a Confederate navy that could prey on Union shipping
5. the Confederate States of America and the British government
6. aware of the activities going on with the Confederates, and both were relentless in their efforts to upset the Confederate applecart
7. with adequate arms and ammunition as a Confederate cruiser
8. to hunt her down was no insignificant service to the Confederate cause
9. Confederate cruisers and the damage they had caused
10. The Alabama and the Florida, along with the many other Confederate gunboats were known to be out there somewhere
11. sun was setting in the west, he wondered if a Confederate cruiser was on the horizon
12. The old man’s wife sat at one corner of the fireplace and a son, sixteen years old and dressed in Confederate Army uniform, sat
13. visit the Confederate Navy headquarters in Richmond and
14. as a Lieutenant in the Confederate States of America Navy
15. the Confederate Army into retreat and disarray
16. After his commissioning by the Confederate Navy, things started
17. It was a complete Confederate victory, but a costly one
18. Florida was lowered and the Confederate flag was sent up
19. that all prisoners were treated fairly by Captain Maffitt, and this was the case with all of the Confederate cruiser commanders
20. There were 51,112 casualties, 23,049 Union and 28,063 Confederate
21. arrival there, the Confederate government purchased the
22. Captain Bullock, the chief Confederate agent, would have nothing to do
23. a new Confederate cruiser, which, of course, was why he was
24. Morris, who would carry on with the Confederate cruiser mission of
25. these Confederate cruisers had developed a fear among Yankee
26. States, and before it was all over, the Confederate Navy had
27. Back in England, life for a Confederate sailor was not the normal life you would find anywhere
28. It was so quiet for a Confederate in England that it was almost unbearable
29. There were Confederate sailors in England
30. into the fight on the Confederate side, and they established a
31. This was a rule strictly enforced by the Confederate officials in England in order to
32. Confederate Flag Officer Samuel Barron who offered his consent
33. Navy, and later became a Confederate Navy officer, acting as a
34. Barron then joined the Confederate
35. Enclosed in the above letter was a memo from the Confederate
36. At that time, he did not know it, but soon he would soon have the only major Confederate cruiser
37. This put the Florida out of commission for the Confederacy and left the South with one less Confederate
38. At that point, Lieutenant Waddell had command of the only Confederate
39. initiated by Confederate Secretary of the Navy Stephen R
40. The Sea King would be the last cruiser Bulloch would buy, and she was the last hope of the Confederate Navy
41. Aboard the Laurel were a number of Confederate officers and seamen, some of whom had seen
42. As soon as the Laurel got under way, the Confederate officers and seamen got together, introduced themselves to each other,
43. Of course, this was planned to take place during the next year when Waddell’s Confederate cruiser was scheduled to
44. commissioned as the CSS Shenandoah of the Confederate States of America Navy
45. There, he informed them of the changed character of the Sea King, read his commission to them to convert the steamer Sea King into the Confederate cruiser CSS
46. He then pictured to them a brilliant and dashing cruise, and asked them to join the service of the Confederate
47. mainly due to the threat from Confederate cruisers
48. Confederate States of America and ordered him to get his papers
49. the Confederate officer escorting him, “I tell you what, Maty,
50. Confederate cruiser to accomplish, and one that was ultimately
1. His ship was way out in deep space, a region inconveniently between the Empire, the Rotham Republic, and the Polarian Confederated States, and mostly ignored by the major powers
2. It was the prearranged plan of the confederated Pharisees, scribes, Sadducees, and Herodians to fill up the entire day with these entangling questions, hoping thereby to discredit Jesus before the people and at the same time effectively to prevent his having any time for the proclamation of his disturbing teachings
3. Roughly half of the 653 members of the Confederated Pyrotechnics Guild work in military ordnance, and wouldn’t know a Roman candle from a hole in the ground
4. What, sir, was the object of that law? To defend against a conspiracy, I may properly term it—against the lawless violence of confederated associations, a vast property
5. But legislating as we are for a confederated Republic, it is worse than idle not to regard the character, situation, and interest of the people, in the several sections of the Union; and I ask gentlemen who are so ardent in the war, whose bosoms seem to glow with patriotic fire, is it just and fair to abandon the internal taxes and impose so much of the burden of the war upon the people of the Northern and Eastern States, the majority of whom are known to be opposed to it; whose hearts and souls are not in the business; who are driven, and dragged, and forced into a war, in which they will go with you no further, nor any longer, than a patriotic obedience to the constitution and laws of the country requires; a war which they consider unwise, impolitic, inexpedient, and ruinous; a war which must annihilate their commerce; that commerce to which they owe their rapid progress in population, in the arts of civilized life, in knowledge, in literature, in all that adorns and makes society valuable and interesting? From this people, in such a war, you have little to expect
1. aware of the activities going on with the Confederates, and both were relentless in their efforts to upset the Confederate applecart
2. Confederates got the upper hand and the Union forces panicked
3. By this time, the Confederates were too tired to chase
4. Confederates fired on Fort Sumter in April 1861, which was the
5. the brink of being routed by the Confederates
6. Confederates remaining in New Orleans determined that the ram
7. command, but when the Confederates began to overwhelm the
8. Confederates this time and opened the door for General William
9. the Confederates wanted to do to increase their fleet of cruisers
10. built by English shipbuilding firms for the Confederates in 1863, and the Confederates hoped they would be ready for service in
11. seized, and the hope of their use by the Confederates vanished
12. Kearsarge, and he realized that he would now be commanding one of two major cruisers for the Confederates, the other being
13. This also meant that the Confederates had only one cruiser of
14. Confederates did at least treat all unarmed prisoners with utmost respect, always
15. Confederates were running out of soldiers and ammunition, and
16. States, the Confederates were on the verge of defeat
17. initial success by the Confederates who succeeded in taking
18. numbers counterattacked and forced the Confederates to retreat
19. that the Confederates had lost the war when they crossed the
20. It would have provided a way for the Confederates to take advantage of the disruption
21. The Confederates were still a very real threat, and they would likely be less inclined to surrender to conditions
22. feeling among all people in the North to capture and punish all of those Confederates who they thought were behind the
23. that the CSS Shenandoah was even in the Pacific Ocean, and certainly, no whaling captain ever expected the Confederates to
24. each other in preventing the Confederates from gaining a
25. Confederates, and this turned out to be a bonus for Captain
26. show off this knowledge to the Confederates
27. No lives were lost due to the actions of the Confederates, only property, and the only reason that some of the whaleships
28. was over and that the Confederates had surrendered
29. Lincoln’s vision of forgiveness also influenced the lives of three significant leaders who had joined with the Confederates during
30. good fortune, particularly those who did lose their ships to the Confederates
31. What Obama and confederates have not the slightest hope of ever understanding
32. By any measure, the Confederacy and Confederates (excluding the many southerners forced to fight against their will) were simply traitors
33. Yet when federal facility after facility was seized by Confederates, and they formed and declared their new government, Buchanan still did nothing
34. The Body Count: At least 50,000 deaths in the five years following the Civil War, Blacks, anti racist whites, and Mexicans in Texas all murdered by white supremacists, mostly ex Confederates, with a body count over a dozen times higher than that of Al Qaeda and its affiliates
35. His second act was to declare the matter of Blacks voting was to be left to states, now to come back under the control of pardoned Confederates
36. ) The Confederates were being handed back much of what they had lost
37. British, Confederates, Germans, North Koreans, or Iraqis
38. Southern Unionists who stayed loyal to the United States and did not commit treason as Confederates did
39. Cass later resigned from Buchanan's administration because of his objection to Buchanan favoring Confederates
40. For both of the above to happen, former Confederates and white supremacist terrorists had to be punished, not pardoned
41. Together that would be at least more than 400,000 Union veterans, armed, trained, in place for the long term defending their land base, and not willing to tolerate the violence of white supremacist terrorists, the former Confederates they had just fought
42. Sherman had enough men that he could send one part of his army north, his troops defeat the Confederates in Tennessee, and still march through Georgia almost unopposed
43. confederacy and peace with you, and that we might be registered your confederates and friends
44. confederates throughout all their dominion, 25 The people of the Jews shall help them, as the time shall be appointed, with all their
45. others of our confederates and friends, in these wars: 15 For we have help from Heaven that succours us, so as we are delivered from
46. the Romans had called the Jews their friends and confederates and brothers; and that they had entertained the ambassadors of Simon
47. Romans to king Ptoleme, greeting: 17 The Jews' ambassadors, our friends and confederates, came to us to renew the old friendship
48. 9 And when men saw they were overcome, and saw others that were not overpowered, those who were beaten came to Genun, took refuge with him, and he made them his confederates
49. He was either a southerner or had acquired a slight accent and toleration for Confederates during his years spent in VA
50. 9 And when men saw they were overcome and saw others that were not overpowered those who were beaten came to Genun took refuge with him and he made them his confederates