Examples of Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson in the following topics:
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- The Confederate Army won at the Battle of Chancellorsville, but lost many troops, including General "Stonewall" Jackson.
- The victory was tempered by heavy casualties and the mortal wounding of Lieutenant General Thomas J.
- "Stonewall" Jackson by friendly fire, a devastation that Lee likened to, "losing [his] right arm."
- Just as seriously, he lost his most aggressive field commander, Stonewall Jackson.
- Stonewall Jackson on May 2, 1863.
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- Thomas J.
- "Stonewall" Jackson captured the Union supply depot at Manassas Junction, threatening Pope's line of communications with Washington, D.C.
- Withdrawing a few miles to the northwest, Jackson took up defensive positions on Stony Ridge.
- Pope became convinced that he had trapped Jackson and concentrated the bulk of his army against him.
- At noon, Longstreet arrived on the field from Thoroughfare Gap and took position on Jackson's right flank.
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- Johnston and benefited from the ingenious tactics of Colonel
Thomas J.
- Jackson.
- A brigade of
Virginians under a relatively unknown colonel from the Virginia Military
Institute, Thomas J.
- Jackson, stood their ground giving rise to Jackson’s
famous nickname, "Stonewall Jackson."
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- Some individual white people, such as a young teacher named Thomas J.
- Jackson (better known to history as "Stonewall Jackson") and another named Mary Smith Peake, chose to violate the laws and teach slaves to read.
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- Hayes took office determined to reform the system of civil service appointments, which had been based on the spoils system since Andrew Jackson was president.
- Logan asked Hayes to shut down the "star route" rings, a system of corrupt contract profiteering in the Postal Service, and to fire Second Assistant Postmaster-General Thomas J.
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- Jackson Brown, Jr., would maintain that we delude ourselves if we plead insufficient time.
- You have exactly the same number of hours per day that were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur, Michelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein."
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- Helen Hunt Jackson (1831–1885) — A Century of Dishonor, U.S. policy regarding Native Americans.
- The magazine's pool of writers were associated with the muckraker movement, such as Ray Stannard Baker, Burton J.
- Glavis, Will Irwin, J.M.
- Norcross, Charles Edward Russell), Everybody's Magazine (William Hard, Thomas William Lawson, Benjamin B.
- According to Fred J.