Railroads, control of Federal, 148; and food scarcity in South, 369; deterioration and inadequacy of Southern, 370374, 414; destroyed by Sherman, 405.
Reynolds, J. F., Gainess Mill, 137; and removal of McClellan, 181; and succession to McClellan, 183; and succession to Burnside, 209; Chancellorsville, 219; and succession to Hooker, 224, 233; Gettysburg, killed, 233.
Ropes, J. C., on Bull Run, 45; on Fort Donelson, 91; on succession to McClellan, 183.
Rosecrans, W. S., displaces Buell, 179; Stones River, 199, 200; inaction, 292; manuvres Bragg out of Tennessee, 293; Chickamauga, 293295; at Chattanooga, 295, 296; relieved, 296.
Russell, Earl, on recognition of Confederate belligerency, 65; and Trent affair, 74; and Alabama,263, 266; and intervention, 268271; and Gladstones indiscreet speech, 270; stops the Alexandra,279; and Laird rams, 279284; and Mason, 285, 286.
Russell, Lord John. See Russell, Earl.
Russell, W. H., on unanimity of South, belief in Southern success, 28; on Federal army, 36; on British attitude, 67; on Trent affair, 81.
Schofield, J. M., commands army of the Ohio, 314; sent to Thomas, 399; retreat, Franklin, 409, 412; and succession to Thomas, 410; joins Sherman in North Carolina, 427.
Schurz, Carl, on Lincolns influence, 155; on election of 1862, 176; on conditions after Fredericksburg, 187; on army under Hooker, 210, 211; on Howard, 213; at Chancellorsville, 216; on Meade at Gettysburg, 234.
Scott, T. A., as Assistant Secretary of War, 84n.; on public apathy, 329.
Scott, Winfield, and Fort Sumter, 10; and isolation of Washington, 21; on effect of blockade, 32; and Bull Run, 37, 42; and habeas corpus, 48; retires, 61.
Secession, attitude of Charleston, 1; of South Carolina, 2; of other Cotton States, 5; of Border States, 20, 2426; regret for the Union, 29.