| William Henry Ferris - History - 1913 - 572 pages
...and their charred bones sold for souvenirs. "Under these conditions who can blame them if they did 'stand together in a determination to resist the detection of the guilty?' If the few who may know should become backdoor tattlers and betray their comradcs they would bring... | |
| William Henry Ferris - African Americans - 1913 - 568 pages
...and their charred bones sold for souvenirs. "Under these conditions who can blame them if they did 'stand together in a determination to resist the detection of the guilty?" If the few who may know should become backdoor tattlers and betray their comrades they would bring... | |
| Law reports, digests, etc - 1908 - 1052 pages
...reasonable to believe they knew concerning the riot, and concluded that "they (said enlisted men) appeared to stand together in a determination to resist the detection of the guilty." Upon the submission and approval of this report, an order was issued by the President's direction on... | |
| John Downing Weaver - Brownsville (Tex.) - 1992 - 344 pages
...served honest and faithful for the government . . ." General Garlington was sympathetic but unyielding. "They appear to stand together in a determination...they should stand together when the penalty falls," he declared in his report, and recommended that all the men be discharged without honor, including... | |
| Garna L. Christian, Garna L.. Christian - Race discrimination - 1995 - 260 pages
.... . . will incur this extreme penalty." As justification for such harsh action, Garlington argued, "They appear to stand together in a determination...they should stand together when the penalty falls." 35 Roosevelt's dismissal order, signed on November 4 and published the following day, widened the scope... | |
| John Downing Weaver - History - 1997 - 308 pages
...Brownsville soldiers, each of whom had sworn to his innocence, would ever be charged, tried, and convicted. "They appear to stand together in a determination...they should stand together when the penalty falls," the president had decided, as though the appearance of guilt could replace all reasonable doubt. The... | |
| United States - 1908 - 974 pages
...investigation, beyond reasonable doubt, that the firing into the houses of the citizens of Brownsville, wliile the inhabitants thereof were pursuing their peaceful...together when the penalty falls. A forceful lesson snould be given to the Army at large, and especially to the noncommissioned officers, that their duty... | |
| United States - 1908 - 796 pages
...reasonable to believe they knew concerning the riot, and concluded that " they (said enlisted men) appeared to stand together in a determination to resist the detection of the guilty." Upon the submission and approval of this report an order was issued by the President's direction on... | |
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