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Johnston   /dʒˈɑnstən/   Listen
Johnston

noun
1.
Confederate general in the American Civil War; led the Confederate troops in the West (1807-1891).  Synonyms: J. E. Johnston, Joseph Eggleston Johnston.



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"Johnston" Quotes from Famous Books



... the politics of the day. He asserted that politics had come to mean nothing but the art of rising in the world. He contrasted the absence of any principles with the state of the national mind during the stormy days of the seventeenth century. This gives the pith of Johnston's political prejudices. He hated Whigs blindly from his cradle; but he justified his hatred on the ground that they were now all "bottomless Whigs," that is to say, that pierce where you would, you ...
— Samuel Johnson • Leslie Stephen

... purpose the new member had thus ventured to take the floor, was known at the moment of his rising by only two other members,—George Johnston, the member for Fairfax, and John Fleming, the member for Cumberland. But the measureless audacity of his purpose, as being nothing less than that of assuming the leadership of the House, and of dictating the policy of Virginia in this stupendous ...
— Patrick Henry • Moses Coit Tyler

... dynamite. Now, what has been done with Johnston, that conductor who turned in three dollars as the total cash collections ...
— The Taming of Red Butte Western • Francis Lynde

... find Iztaccihuatl classed among the active volcanos in Johnston's Physical Atlas, and supposed at first that a crater had really been found. But it is likely to be only a mistake, caused by the name of "Volcan" being given to both mountains by the Mexicans, who used the word ...
— Anahuac • Edward Burnett Tylor

... composed of descendants of English Tories or of the Loyalists of 1783, who belonged to the Anglican Church, and were opposed to popular government. Two men were now becoming most prominent in politics. One of these was Mr. James William Johnston, the son of a Georgia Loyalist, an able lawyer, gifted with a persuasive tongue which chimed most harmoniously with the views of Sir Colin. On the other side was Mr. Joseph Howe, the son of a Loyalist printer of Boston, who had no such aristocratic connections as Mr. ...
— Canada under British Rule 1760-1900 • John G. Bourinot


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