Shenandoah eBook

Bronson Howard
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about Shenandoah.

Shenandoah eBook

Bronson Howard
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about Shenandoah.

ROBERT ELLINGHAM.—­Act I. Full Evening Dress.—­Act 2.  Confederate
Colonel:  Infantry, 1864.  Active Service.—­Act 4.  Citizen; afternoon. 
Prince Albert (Gray).

EDWARD THORNTON.—­Act I. Riding, but not present English Cut.—­Act 2.  First, Confederate Captain of Cavalry.  Active Service.  Second costume, same, in shirt sleeves and without hat or cap.

HARDWICK.—­Uniform of Confederate Surgeon, 1864.  Active Service.

CORPORAL DUNN.—­Uniform of rank, Cavalry, U.S.  Vol., 1864.  Active
Service.

BENSON.—­Uniform of 2nd Corporal, Cavalry, U.S.  Vol., 1864.  Active
Service.

LIEUTENANT OF INFANTRY.—­Uniform of rank, U.S.  Vol., 1864.  Active
Service.

MRS. HAVERILL.—­Act I. Full evening ball dress.—­Act 4.  Mourning, but not too deep.

GERTRUDE ELLINGHAM.—­Act I. Riding habit.—­Act 2.  First costume, afternoon at home; simple enough for the South during war.  Second costume, picturesque and not conventional dress and hat for riding.—­Act 3.  First costume of Act 2, or similar.—­Act 4.  Neat travelling costume.

MADELINE WEST.—­Act I. Full evening ball dress.—­Act 2.  Pretty afternoon costume.—­Act 3.  Same or walking.—­Act 4.  Afternoon costume at home.

JENNY BUCKTHORN.—­Act 2.  Pretty afternoon costume, with military cut, trimmings and general air.—­Act 3.  Same.—­Act 4.  Afternoon costume at home.

MRS. EDITH HAVERILL.—­Young widow’s costume.

OLD MARGERY.—­Neat old family servant.

JANNETTE.—­Young servant.

FOR PROGRAMME

In ACT I, just before the opening of the war, HAVERILL is a Colonel in the Regular Army.  KERCHIVAL WEST and ROBERT ELLINGHAM are Lieutenants in his regiment, having been classmates at West Point.

ACT I.

CHARLESTON HARBOUR IN 1861.  AFTER THE BALL.

The citizens of Charleston knew almost the exact hour at which the attack on Fort Sumter would begin, and they gathered in the gray twilight of the morning to view the bombardment as a spectacle.—­NICOLAY, Campaigns of the Civil War, Vol.  I.

“I shall open fire in one hour.”—­BEAUREGARD’S last message to MAJOR ANDERSON. Sent at 3:20 A.M., April 12, 1861.

ACTS II.  AND III.

The Union Army, under General Sheridan, and the Confederate Army, under General Early, were encamped facing each other about twenty miles south of Winchester, on Cedar Creek. * * * General Sheridan was called to Washington.  Soon after he left, a startling despatch was taken by our own Signal Officers from the Confederate Signal Station on Three Top Mountain.—­POND, Camp.  Civ.  War, Vol.  XI.

On the morning of October 19th, the Union Army was taken completely by surprise.  Thoburn’s position was swept in an instant.  Gordon burst suddenly upon the left flank.  The men who escaped capture streamed through the camps along the road to Winchester.—­POND, supra.

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Shenandoah from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.