Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_M - Military Units Union
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 106    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Military Units Union:     more books (23)
  1. [Burial lists of members of Union and Confederate military units by Sherman Lee Pompey, 1971
  2. TENNESSEANS IN THE CIVIL WAR:A Military History of Confederate and Union Units with Available Rosters of Personnel.
  3. Tennesseans in the Civil War, Part I: A Military History of the Confederate and Union Units With Available Rosters of Personnel by Tennessee Historical Commission, 1964-06
  4. Tennesseans in the Civil War: A Military History of Confederate and Union Units With Available Rosters of Personnel (Tennesseans in the Civil War) by Tennessee Historical, 1981-08
  5. Combat in the East: Experiences of German tactical and logistical units in Russia (Foreign military studies) by Fritz Wentzell, 1952
  6. The Union blues: A brief history of the corps and its life by William Holland Samson, 1912
  7. Il-2 Shturmovik Guards Units of World War 2 (Combat Aircraft) by Oleg Rastrenin, 2008-03-18
  8. Armored Units of the Russian Civil War: Red Army (New Vanguard) by David Bullock, 2006-04-25
  9. Luftwaffe Fighter Units: Russia 1941-1945 (Osprey Airwar 11) by Christopher Shores, 1978-07-15
  10. The German Fighter Units over Russia: A Pictorial History of the Pilots and Aircraft by Werner Held, 1990-07
  11. The Antagonists: A Comparative Combat Assessment of the Soviet and American Soldier (Contributions in Military Studies) by Richard A. Gabriel, 1984-01-24
  12. Armored Units of the Russian Civil War: White and Allied (New Vanguard) by David Bullock, 2003-12-17
  13. Soviet armor tactics in World War II: The tactics of the armored units of the Red Army from individual vehicles to company according to the combat regulations of February 1944 by Charles C Sharp, 1999
  14. Supply of partisan units during the war 1941/45 by D Karov, 1947

61. United States, Civil War Regimental Histories Index, Ohio - Oregon
union Regimental Histories, States, Ohio Oregon. INDEX OF REGIMENTAL HISTORIES ARTILLERY, CAVALRY, INFANTRY, AND OTHER units, OHIO - OREGON
http://www.tarleton.edu/~kjones/USoh-or.html
INDEX OF REGIMENTAL HISTORIES: ARTILLERY, CAVALRY, INFANTRY, AND OTHER UNITS, OHIO - OREGON
Alabama - Indiana
Iowa - Louisiana Maine - New Jersey New Mexico - North Carolina ... Rhode Island - Wisconsin
OHIO
Ohio General Information
Ohio Artillery
(All of the Ohio artillery batteries have web pages at Ohio Civil War Artillery . Those pages, with capsule histories from Frederick H. Dyer's A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion , ARE NOT re-indexed below.)

62. Military & Pension Records For Union Civil War Veterans
How To Order military Pension Records for union Civil War Veterans from However, if you use the index and look up the unit that your ancestor served
http://www.oz.net/~cyndihow/pensions.htm
By Cyndi Howells This site may be freely linked to but not duplicated in any fashion without my consent.
Background and title banner graphics property of Cyndi Howells.
Table of Contents
  • My First Success Story
    Many times the beginning of any part of a genealogist's research will start with a family story. My search for a Union Civil War veteran began with my third great-grandfather, Xerxes Knox . I had a copy of a letter, written by his youngest son in 1963, to my grandmother. In it he stated simply that his father was a Civil War veteran, along with the date of birth and date of death for his father. Not much to go on, but then I hadn't yet found out about the wonderful treasure-trove of information that was waiting for me in a musty-old file in Washington, DC. On a visit to the National Archives branch in Seattle, I had spent the entire day searching for various ancestors and had no luck locating anyone in any of the places they were supposed to be. I had a half-hour to kill before closing and thought I would explore the back room. There was a tall filing cabinet filled with rolls of microfilm called the General Index to Pension Files, 1866 to 1934.
  • 63. Union Army Units With Rikers Or Hart Island Ties
    New York City Correction Department union Army units With Rikers or Hart Island Ties.
    http://www.correctionhistory.org/civilwar/units/rikers&hartcwunits.html
    var MenuLinkedBy='AllWebMenus [2]', awmBN='526'; awmAltUrl=''; Terms as used here:
    muster in =
    assemblying to start service.
    muster out =
    assembly ending service.
    ship out =
    sent elsewhere.
    Click above image for menu of CW-related presentations on our correction history site. Terms as used here:
    unit presence =
    activity other than muster.
    individual presence = not necessarily entire unit. possible presence = records unclear. UNION MILITARY UNITS WITH RIKERS ISLAND CONNECTIONS Unit Number, Name Alternate Name Connection Other details 9th NYSV Inf. Zouaves 1st Reg muster in in 5/15/61, ship out 6/5/61 36th NYSV Washington Volunteers muster in in 6/23/61. ship out 7/12/61. 62nd NYSV Inf. Anderson Zouaves muster in in 6/30/1861. ship out 8/21/861. 52nd NYSV unit presence 8/3/1861 to 11/5/1861 6th NYSV Governor’s Guard unit presence 76th NYSV Cortland County Reg. muster in 162 NYSV Inf. 3rd Metropolitan Guards muster in in, beginning 8/22/62. ship out 10/24/62 131st NYSV 1st Metropolitan Guards muster in 173rd NYSV 4th Metropolitan Guards muster in 174th NYSV formerly 5th Metropolitan Guards muster in in: Oct. 15 to Nov. 13, 1862. ship out: 12/7/62. Consolidated with 162nd Feb. 17, 1864

    64. Confederate Records At The TNGenWeb Site
    Tennessee, the last state to secede from the union, seceded on May 17, 1861. For each Tennessee Confederate military Unit, Lindsley published a list of
    http://www.tngenweb.org/civilwar/misc/confedrec.html
    "All that I am and all that I have is at the service of my country."
    Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson 1861
    Tennessee, the last state to secede from the Union, seceded on May 17, 1861. She was the first state to be re-admitted to the Union on July 24, 1866. During the Civil War, she supplied over 190,000 men to the Confederate Cause. Below is a description and list of records pertaining to Tennessee Confederate Veterans that are currently available at the Tennessee and the Civil War Site CONFEDERATE CAVALRY UNITS
    • Taken from Tennesseans in the Civil War this section gives a descriptive history of the Tennessee Confederate Cavalry Units.
    CONFEDERATE ARTILLERY UNITS
    • Taken from Tennesseans in the Civil War this section gives a descriptive history of the Tennessee Confederate Artillery Units.
    CONFEDERATE INFANTRY UNITS
    • Taken from Tennesseans in the Civil War this section gives a descriptive history of the Tennessee Confederate infantry Units.
    TENNESSEANS IN THE CIVIL WAR
    • Links to ALL the military units in Tennesseans in the Civil War.

    65. Union Army - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    The union Army was composed of numerous units, mostly divided into departments, which were organized geographically, and armies, which assumed geographical
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Army
    Union Army
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    The 21st Michigan Infantry, a company of Sherman's veterans. The Union Army refers to the United States Army during the American Civil War . The Union Army is also known as the Northern Army or the Federal Army
    Contents

    66. Andrzej Paczkowski. Poland, The Enemy Nation
    On 27 May the Red Army forced several Home Army units to lay down their arms. The Soviet union s way of proceeding here – cooperation on a local level
    http://www.warsawuprising.com/paper/nkvd.htm
    Andrzej Paczkowski. Poland, the "Enemy Nation", pp. 372-375, in Black Book of Communism. Crimes, Terror, Repression. Harvard University Press, London, 1999. print version exit
    The NKVD Against the Home Army (Armia Krajowa) During the night of 4-5 January 1944, the first Red Army tanks crossed the Polish-Soviet border established in 1921. In reality this border was recognized neither by Moscow nor by the Western powers, and following the revelation of the Katyn massacres katyn , the Soviet Union had broken all diplomatic links with the legal Polish government-in-exile in London on the pretext that the Poles had demanded an international inquiry by the Red Cross, a demand that by chance coincided with a similar request by the German authorities. The Polish resistance assumed that as the front approached, the Home Army, would mobilize the population and begin to fight the Germans, and that the Red Army would come to its defense. The operation was code-named Tempest (Burza). The first skirmishes took place in late March 1944, in Volhynia, where the partisan division of the Home Army fought alongside Soviet units. On 27 May the Red Army forced several Home Army units to lay down their arms. Consequently, most of the Home Army had to fight their way through German lines back to Poland . On 1 August 1944 the commanders of the Home Army began an uprising in Warsaw , knowing that Soviet military commanders were planning to launch an all-out attack on German positions in Warsaw on 8 August. Stalin halted the offensive on the Vistula River , which had already been crossed to the south of Warsaw , and allowed the Germans to crush the rebellion, which lasted until 2 October.

    67. Camp Nelson Union Army Base Overview
    Camp Nelson was a very large union Army base which was in operation from 1863 to In terms of significance, in addition to the crucial military role it
    http://www.users.kih.net/~dparker/nelson/nelson.htm
    Camp Nelson
    Overview "Sir, the scouts report that the following lie ahead.
    What are your orders?"
    Advance to more on Camp Nelson ...
    Regiments at Camp Nelson
    Significance of Camp Nelson Send the men to ...
    Reenactment Unit Overview
    Real First Cavalry, CSA
    Real
    ...
    Retreat to the 1st Kentucky Home Encampment
    Send a dispatch to: 1st Kentucky Adjutant
    Camp Nelson was a very large Union Army base which was in operation from 1863 to 1865. It was located about five miles south of the town of Nicholasville, Ky., and served several major functions.
    • It was a recruit training camp for newly mustered in regiments.
    • It was a major supply head, receiving stores by rail and then sending them to armies in the field by wagon train. It was the major supply depot for armies operating in central and southern Kentucky, eastern Tennessee, and western Virginia.
    • It was a major medical facility, receiving sick and wounded transported from the field.
    • It was a strongly armed fort, and served as both a defensive anchor against potential attack into Kentucky (it was, in fact, established as a response to Bragg's invasion of Kentucky in 1862) and as a base of military operations sending troops into the field on military actions.
    • It contained a large African-American "refugee" camp consisting mostly of families of black soldiers who came with them when the mustered into the army.

    68. 1st Kentucky Cavalry Reenactment Group
    military ORGANIZATION. (Under Construction). Return to Contents at TOP union army reenactment unit for this historic site.
    http://www.users.kih.net/~dparker/unit/unit.htm
    **This Area last updated: January 26, 1998 **
    Overview of the
    War Between the States Reenactors
    "Sir, the scouts report that the following lie ahead.
    What are your orders?"
    Advance to more information on the First Kentucky Reenactors ...
    Photos
    The War Horse Newsletter 1998 Schedule
    Winter Meeting
    Send the men to ...
    Real
    First Cavalry, CSA
    Real First Cavalry, USA ...
    Retreat to the 1st Kentucky Home Encampment
    Send a dispatch to: 1st Kentucky Adjutant
    CONTENTS
    Introduction
    Members

    Military Organization

    Associations
    ...
    Contact Information
    INTRODUCTION
    • 1st Kentucky Cavalry, CSAthe first regiment of volunteer cavalry troopers to be organized for the Confederacy. 1st Kentucky Cavalry, USAthe first regiment of volunteer cavalry troopers to be organized for the Union. Horse-drawn Union artillery (six horse hitch, limber, 1841 6 pdr. cannon) (1st Kentucky Artillery, Battery E) Horse-drawn Confederate artillery (six horse hitch, limber, 1841 6 pdr. cannon) (generic impression)
    Additionally, other members of the unit portray various civilians from this period, including children, upper class ladies, and everyday women.

    69. Red Army: Information From Answers.com
    Red Army This article is about the armed forces of the Soviet union . Soviet Army units which had liberated the countries of Eastern Europe from German
    http://www.answers.com/topic/red-army
    showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Red Army Wikipedia Red Army
    This article is about the armed forces of the Soviet Union . See Red Army Faction for the German militant group; Japanese Red Army for the Japanese militant group; and People's Liberation Army for the Chinese Red Army.
    Red Army flag The short forms Red Army and RKKA refer to the "Workers' and Peasants' Red Army" R aboche- K rest'yanskaya K rasnaya A rmiya in Russian ), the armed forces organised by the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War in . This organisation became the army of the Soviet Union after its establishment in Red " refers to the blood shed by the working class in its struggle against capitalism. Although it was officially known as the Soviet Army from , the term Red Army is commonly used in the West to refer to the Soviet military after that date, i.e., during the Cold War
    Early history
    The Council of People's Commissars set up the Red Army by decree on January 15 Old Style January 28 ), basing it on the already-existing

    70. History Of The Soviet Union: Information From Answers.com
    History of the Soviet union History of Russia series Early East Slavs Kievan Rus Volga The demoralized Russian Army suffered severe military setbacks,
    http://www.answers.com/topic/history-of-the-soviet-union-1
    showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping History of the Soviet Union Wikipedia History of the Soviet Union
    History of Russia

    series Early East Slavs Kievan Rus' Volga Bulgaria Khazaria ... Civil War Soviet Union Military history Russian Federation
    Contents 1 The Russian Revolution
    2 The Russian Civil War

    3 The Polish-Soviet War

    4 Creation of the USSR
    ...
    5 The New Economic Policy

    Continued on other pages
    6 Stalinist industrialization

    7 Collectivization
    8 The Great Patriotic War 9 The Cold War ... 15 Post-Soviet States
    The Russian Revolution
    Main article: Russian Revolution During World War I Tsarist Russia experienced famine and economic collapse. The demoralized Russian Army suffered severe military setbacks, and many soldiers deserted the front lines. Dissatisfaction with the monarchy and its policy of continuing the war grew. Tsar Nicholas II abdicated in February of A provisional government was installed, led first by Prince Georgy Yevgenyevich Lvov , then by Aleksandr Kerensky , but it maintained its commitment to the war. The provisional government failed to enact land reforms demanded by the

    71. Civil War Units - Union Army
    Regular union Army. Many of the men in these units may have been socalled galvanized Yankees who originally served on the Confederate side,
    http://ralphinla.rootsweb.com/cwunitu.htm
    Civil War Units - Union Army
    by Ralph Clark
    Frederick H. Dyer, "A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion - Compiled and Arranged from Official Records of the Federal and Confederate Armies, Reports of the Adjutant Generals of the Several States, the Army Registers and Other Reliable Documents and Sources, Part III - Regimental Histories" (Reprint, Dayton, OH: The National Historical Society in cooperation with The Press of Morningside Bookshop, 1979, orig. pub. 1908), is a prime source of regimental history for Union forces. If your local library doesn't have it, nag, nag, nag. Skip to Regiments of the Regular Union Army Skip to Regiments of Union Volunteers from the states: Indiana Iowa Kentucky Maine ... Tennessee
    Regular Union Army
    Many of the men in these units may have been so-called "galvanized Yankees" who originally served on the Confederate side, and took an oath of allegiance to the Union to avoid confinement as a prisoner of war. U.S. Coastal Artillery Batteries I haven't been able to find anything about these units. They're not included in Volume 3 of Dyer's Compendium. The references below are taken from National Archives Microfilm Series T-288 General Index to Pension Files 1861 - 1934
      42, 53, and 57 Cos. - Charlie C. Arrowood.

    72. Old Huntsville Magazine : Confederate Units Of Madison County
    While Madison County provided no units for the invading union army, a few local residents did enlist in the Northern forces. White unionists mainly went
    http://www.oldhuntsville.com/p538.htm
    Old Huntsville Magazine
    Click Here To Return To Main Page
    Confederate Units of Madison County Huntsville and Madison County did not rush eagerly into secession in 1861. In fact, the county elected two cooperationist delegates who voted against secession at the January 1861 Alabama Secession Convention. Nevertheless, when war came both the city and county promptly rallied to the defense of their
    State. Madison County provided 10 infantry companies, 8 cavalry companies, and one artillery battery to the Confederate Army. At least two more infantry companies had been formed in 1861, but were disbanded because Alabama could not accept any more troops at that time. In addition, six Confederate home guard units existed from mid-1861 to early 1862, when the Union Army seized the city. This total of 27 Confederate units is impressive when
    one remembers that Huntsville and Madison County were occupied by the Union Army for nearly half of the four years of war. The Confederate draft was rarely enforced in Madison County, which means that almost all these men were volunteers.
    While Madison County provided no units for the invading Union army, a few local residents did enlist in the Northern forces. White Unionists mainly went into the 1st Alabama Cavalry Regiment (US), which was composed largely of men from Winston and Walker Counties. Black Union volunteers and draftees principally were assigned to the 106th U. S. Infantry (Colored), a regiment of only four companies which was organized at Decatur in March

    73. M
    soviet russia (19171923) and early flags of russia in the soviet union (1923-1954) military hospitals second military hospital unit flag (japan)
    http://www.flag.de/FOTW/flags/keywordm.html
    M
    List of keywords beginning with M
    Last modified:
    Keywords: web index keywords
    Links: FOTW homepage search write us mirrors
    Keywords beginning with a b c d ...
    city of munich (bavaria, germany)
    m
    house flags of argentine shipping companies house flags of portuguese shipping companies (d-l) house flags of uruguayan shipping companies march 26th movement, uruguay ...
    march 26th movement, uruguay
    ma'ale eiron
    local council of ma'ale eiron (israel)
    ma'ale ephraim
    local council of ma'ale ephraim (israel, west bank occupied territories)
    ma'ale yosef
    regional council of ma'ale yosef (israel)
    ma'aleh edumim
    municipality of ma'aleh edumim (israel, west bank occupied territories)
    ma'alot-tarshiha
    municipality of ma'alot-tarshiha (israel)
    ma'atz
    public works department (israel)
    ma
    presidential standards 1931-1939 (spain)
    maanid
    maanid flag late 17th century (historical flags, lebanon)
    maardu
    maardu linn (harjumaa, estonia)
    maarkdal
    maarkdal (municipality, province of east flanders, belgium)
    maarn
    maarn (the netherlands)
    maarssen
    maarssen (the netherlands)
    maas
    yachting clubs (the netherlands) [m]
    maasbracht
    maasbracht (the netherlands)
    maasbree
    maasbree (the netherlands)
    maasdonk
    maasdonk (the netherlands)
    maasdriel
    maasdriel (the netherlands)
    maaseik
    clickable map of maaseik arr. (limburg, belgium)

    74. OHS - Archives/Library - Selected Military Records Available At OHS
    Compiled from official records and includes a list of union army, and state militia Regiments are listed in numerical order by type of military unit.
    http://www.ohiohistory.org/resource/archlib/military.html
    Legislative Update Our History Vision 2000 Board of Trustees ... MEMBERSHIP
    Selected Military Records Available at OHS
    Primary Source Materials
    Government Records (Archives of State, County, etc.)
    Adjutant General of Ohio Records State Archives
    Not indexed. Records series contain a variety of source materials such as ledgers, muster rolls, telegrams, and correspondence. Most concern the Civil War, but there are also series relating to the Ohio National Guard, the Spanish American War, and World War I. Census, Special Veteran's (1890)
    Census of surviving Union veterans of the Civil War or their widows, listing service information, any service-connected disability, and current address. Index available for these counties only: Gallia, Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton.
    Microfilm roll# GR603-619 Graves Registration File
    Includes most veterans buried in Ohio, regardless of state of service, through 1967. May include date and place of birth and death, cause of death, and next of kin. Surnames are listed alphabetically.

    75. Index Union Army Uniforms And Insignia Of The Civil War
    Index to union Army Uniforms and Insignia of the Civil War. military Uniforms in America The Long Endure The Civil War Period 18521867 (Book)
    http://www.members.tripod.com/~howardlanham/trueindexlinks.html
    setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod 40 Yr Old Virgin Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
    Union Army Uniforms and Insignia of the Civil War
    Index to the Links and Supplemental Discussions Related to the 1861 U.S. Army Uniform Regulations
    Compiled by Dr. Howard G. Lanham
    Looking for Something? Click on the link and go to the page mentioning the item.
    A

    76. Generalizations Regarding The U. S. Army Uniform Of The Civil War
    union Uniforms. The uniform worn by the US Army during the Civil War of During certain periods individual units of the Regular Army may have been
    http://www.members.tripod.com/~howardlanham/general.html
    setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Dating Search Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
    Generalizations regarding the U. S. Army Uniform of the Civil War
    By Dr. Howard G. Lanham
    The uniform worn by the U.S. Army during the Civil War of 1861-1865 developed over a long period of time and is the result of many different traditions and influences. The most notable feature of the uniform coat was its dark blue color. The tradition of the Army wearing blue dates from the Revolutionary War when many of the American units wore blue. During certain periods individual units of the Regular Army may have been uniformed in other colors, even bandsmen in red, but blue predominated. The tradition carries forward until today when the Army dress uniform is still dark blue in color. The notion of a soldier wearing a uniform that served to camouflage him would have been very foreign to the thinking of period military officers. Conventional military tactics involved maneuver of massed men on open ground in full view of the enemy and soldiers were expected to be brave under fire. Many officers believed that field fortifications robbed men of their will to fight aggressively and forbade their men to build them. By the later part of the war casualties taught otherwise and the field works at Petersburg were every bit as sophisticated as those of the First World War. However, it was not until the Spanish-American War that the Army adopted uniforms of a khaki color that had some camouflage value.

    77. Celebrating Soviet Heroes, Remembering Soviet Monsters - Council On Foreign Rela
    For the next two years, the Soviet union s raw materials helped fuel the Nazi war The best Red Army units were foolishly positioned on the unfortified
    http://www.cfr.org/pub8095/max_boot/celebrating_soviet_heroes_remembering_soviet
    @import url(/css/main.css); Why does this page look this way? It appears that you are using either an older, classic Web browser or a hand-held device that allows you to view our content but may not work with every feature of our site. If you are using an older browser, please upgrade for the best experience. Welcome to CFR. Skip to section navigation Skip to content Home FAQs ... Advanced Search Navigation
    Op-Ed
    • Related Materials
      See Also Russian Fed. Foreign Policy History
      Celebrating Soviet Heroes, Remembering Soviet Monsters
      Author: Max Boot May 12, 2005 Los Angeles Times Goose-stepping soldiers. Hammers and sickles. That was some spectacle in Red Square to commemorate the 60th anniversary of V-E Day. Like his communist predecessors, Russian President Vladimir V. Putin isn't shy about claiming for his country an outsized share of the credit for defeating Nazi Germany. No one can gainsay the sacrifices of the Soviet people. I should know. Both of my grandfathers served in the Soviet armed forces and survived the war. They were lucky. At least 25 million Soviet citizens perished, while the United States and the British empire together lost "just" 700,000.

    78. SUVCW--Grand Army Of The Republic
    By the end of the Civil War, units had become less homogeneous, Coming along a bit later, the Daughters of union Veterans of the Civil War,
    http://suvcw.org/gar.htm
    Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
    Brief History
    of the
    Grand Army of the Republic
    In early 1866 the United States of Americanow securely one nation againwas waking to the reality of recovery from war, and this had been a much different war. In previous conflicts the care of the veteran warrior was the province of the family or the community. Soldiers then were friends, relatives and neighbors who went off to fightuntil the next planting or harvest. It was a community adventure and their fighting unit had a community flavor. By the end of the Civil War, units had become less homogeneous, men from different communities and even different states were forced together by the exigencies of battle where new friendships and lasting trust was forged. With the advances in the care and movement of the wounded, many who would have surely died in earlier wars returned home to be cared for by a community structure weary from a protracted war and now also faced with the needs of widows and orphans. Veterans needed jobs, including a whole new group of veteransthe colored soldier and his entire, newly freed, family. It was often more than the fragile fabric of communities could bear. State and federal leaders from President Lincoln down had promised to care for "those who have borne the burden, his widows and orphans," but they had little knowledge of how to accomplish the task. There was also little political pressure to see that the promises were kept.

    79. SOS, Missouri - State Archives Military Records
    Missouri military records available at the Missouri State Archives is summarized below. This database is an index to the microfilm of the union Provost
    http://www.sos.mo.gov/archives/resources/military.asp
    Missouri Secretary of State, Robin Carnahan
    Skip to: Site Content
    Searc
    h Site ... Research Room :: Military Records
    Research Room
    Military Records
    The archives holds many military records of Missourians who served in domestic and foreign wars between 1812 and World War I. These records primarily consist of individual service cards. In some cases other information is available, such as payrolls, muster and descriptive rolls, reports, orders, and reparation claims. Missouri military records available at the Missouri State Archives is summarized below. Search the Soldiers Database: War of 1812-World War I War of 1812 Alphabetical file containing information from muster rolls and military bounty land records reflecting, in most cases, period of service, place of muster-in, county of residence, and amount of payment for service. No family or personal descriptive information. Indian Wars - Blackhawk, Seminole, Osage, 1832-1838

    80. Labor-Management Relations
    109 or 145 only when there is a military unit on the range, are as follows The union proposes to conduct work shops, town meetings, unit meetings
    http://www.opm.gov/lmr/fsip/index98/assign.html

    ASSIGNING EMPLOYEES/WORK
    Department of the Army, Headquarters 10th Mountain Division and Fort Drum, Fort Drum, New York and Local 400, American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO , Case No. 97 FSIP 94, January 2, 1998 (Release No. 405). The AGENCY proposed the following: Section 6 When assigning work, supervisors will take into consideration environmental conditions, such as extreme heat or cold and availability of utilities (electricity, heat) required to do the work, and will make appropriate accommodations. If Employees cannot reasonably be accommodated as necessary to perform gainful work, they may be released on administrative leave. Section 8 The employees who perform duties which are vital to medical facilities, public safety, national defense or other work exigencies may be designated as Emergency Essential personnel. These Employees may be required to report for duty despite delay or closures or to remain at work when directed to so and may be disciplined if they fail to make reasonable efforts to report for duty. Designations of emergency essential Employees will be forwarded to the Union prior to the proposed effective date. The UNION proposed the following: Section 6 A. When assigning work, supervisors will take into consideration environmental conditions such as extreme heat or cold and the availability of utilities (electricity, phones, water) required to do the work, and will make appropriate accommodation. If Employees cannot reasonable be accommodated as necessary to perform the functions of their job, they may be released on administrative leave. A decision must be made within two (2) hours of the time the complaint is given to management. Before administrative excusal may be granted, it must be established by the Employer that the conditions are such as to actually prevent working.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 106    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter