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  1. Charles Russell Lowell III (January 2, 1835 – October 20, 1864) was a railroad executive, foundryman, and General in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He was mortally wounded at the Battle of Cedar Creek and was mourned by a number of leading generals.

  2. Charles Lowell (15 August 1782 – 20 January 1861) was a Unitarian minister and a son of judge John Lowell, as well as the father of James Russell Lowell and Robert Traill Spence Lowell.

  3. 18 de abr. de 2017 · The tragic consequences of the Fugitive Slave Act are made vivid by the Rev. Charles Lowells horror at the suffering of James Hamlet, a free man who was captured and sold back into slavery.

  4. 22 de mar. de 2005 · About. Nature of Sacrifice: Biography of Charles Russell Lowell Jr. In partnership with: Boston Athenaeum. The world advances by impossibilities achieved, Charles Lowell insisted in 1854 when, as valedictorian, he spoke at his Harvard graduation just two weeks after Boston had enforced the Fugitive Slave Law, returning Anthony Burns into slavery.

  5. Charles Russell Lowell, Jr., was a US Army cavalry commander killed at the Battle of Cedar Creek in 1864. A monument in Middletown, Virginia, commemorates his sacrifice. He was promoted from colonel to brigadier general posthumously after the battle.

  6. The unique persona of Charles Russell Lowell, a gifted Union cavalry officer from Massachusetts, inspired a series of memorials in his honor, ranging from famous monuments to obscure frontier forts. Each in its way sought to perpetuate the memory of Lowell, a shining presence who was mortally wounded at the Battle of Cedar Creek, Virginia, in ...

  7. The Colonel is hit! This unwelcome utterance opened the last act of Colonel Charles Russell Lowells short life. In the midst of the chaos which is combat, Lowell had been mortally wounded at the Battle of Cedar Creek on October 19th, 1864–he would die early the next day.