Skip to content

Manuscripts

U. S. Military Telegraph. Strictly private

1 of 287


You might also be interested in

  • Image not available

    U. S. Military Telegraph. Strictly private

    Manuscripts

    282 pages; 36 x 22 cm. Title from cover. There is no spine label. There are no telegrams between May 22 and January 1 1863. Abraham Lincoln is author of many of the telegrams. No separate dates for "sent" or "received" only one date. Approximately 513 telegrams, 12 of which are partially or completely crossed out. P. 26, 47, and 275-276 are blank.

    EC 4

  • Image not available

    United States Military Telegraph Ledgers (EC 1-21)

    Manuscripts

    The collection is made up mostly of items related to Eckert's duties as part of the United States Military Telegraph Office during the Civil War, including 35 volumes of telegram ledgers containing roughly 16,000 telegrams from 1862 to 1866. These include telegrams both still in code and decoded (the sent messages are ciphered; the received telegrams are mostly decoded).

    mssEC

  • Image not available

    United States Military Telegraph Code Books (EC 36-67)

    Manuscripts

    The collection is made up mostly of items related to Eckert's duties as part of the United States Military Telegraph Office during the Civil War, including 35 volumes of telegram ledgers containing roughly 16,000 telegrams from 1862 to 1866. These include telegrams both still in code and decoded (the sent messages are ciphered; the received telegrams are mostly decoded).

    mssEC

  • Image not available

    United States Military Telegraph Miscellaneous Ledgers (EC 68-72)

    Manuscripts

    The collection is made up mostly of items related to Eckert's duties as part of the United States Military Telegraph Office during the Civil War, including 35 volumes of telegram ledgers containing roughly 16,000 telegrams from 1862 to 1866. These include telegrams both still in code and decoded (the sent messages are ciphered; the received telegrams are mostly decoded).

    mssEC