@nabierx: im just super proud of him #twentyfivetwentyone #baekyijin #namjoohyuk #kdrama #netflix

ale <3
ale <3
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Region: IT
Saturday 11 June 2022 14:14:25 GMT
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gurku_u
Gurku :
The casting for baek yi Jin IS SO PERFECT
2022-06-11 14:35:06
4331
johuraah
johura :
his development throughout the show was depicted so well
2022-06-11 14:52:18
4179
idktho420
◡̈ :
the transitionn i love this
2022-06-11 18:40:40
0
raheeq_fr
Raحeeq. :
in love with him
2022-06-11 14:25:09
2125
lcvnley
. :
baek yi-jin will always be one of my comfort characters- he deserves the world
2022-06-11 19:29:12
905
offbrandbbb
offbrandbbb :
I miss this show so much
2022-06-11 14:27:52
1158
theestofzuiger
thirsa :
your 2521 edits are always the best <3
2022-06-11 14:23:59
343
beomguvs
kim ! :
this drama will always make me cry
2022-06-12 00:44:34
93
bunnywsd
:3 :
sobbing so hard right now
2022-06-12 04:13:43
0
phangamode
numpun🍹 :
Ur edits are so gooddddd
2022-06-11 16:17:38
73
kdramasgf
❥ 𝓴𝓲𝓶 :
i love him so much im super proud of him.
2022-06-11 14:40:46
163
zoro123.4
prabin rai :
drama name ??
2022-06-12 03:49:16
2
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Two-minute video  Lieutenant Stott sought out the body of his captain on the field of Buena Vista and (knowing only that Capt. Zabriskie's brother was a surgeon on Gen. Taylor's Staff), furnished coffins, both lead and wood, at his own personal expense, and every facility for transporting them. He had the body decently interred in camp, with the usual military honors, and had it disinterred when returning home, at the expiration of his term of service. Lieut. Col. Warren, of the 1st Illinois Regiment, obtained the Company's consent to permit Capt. Zabriskie's corpse to be conveyed to Hackensack, N. J. and Lt. Stott accompanied it on its final journey. The mortal remains of Capt. Jacob W. Zabriskie reached Philadelphia on July 20, 1847, and, on the following day, were escorted to the steamer John Stevens, by military guard under command of Major Fritz. Arriving in New Brunswick, N. J., at about 1 p.m., Captain Moore, Grand Marshal, and the Neilson Guards, escorted the casket to City Hall, attended by the faculty and students of Rutgers College, and by a large number of citizens and strangers. Minute guns fired a salute. On the morning of July 22nd, Capt. Fisher of the steamboat Raritan, conveyed the remains to Pier No. 1, East River, accompanied by Capt. Moore and a detachment of twenty-three Neilson Guards, together with a military committee of the Lafayette Fusiliers. At 4 p.m., a solemn parade under command of General Storms escorted Capt. Zabriskie's coffin from the Battery to the steamer Frank at the foot of Canal Street.. The Lafayette Fusiliers formed the guard of honor, followed in procession by German Hussars, German Horse Guards, the New La Fayette Guards, the Washington Guard and Rifle Rangers, the Mayors and Councilmen of Brooklyn, New York and Jersey City, and a large concourse of citizens. The Lafayette Horse Guards fired minute guns from the Battery, as bells throughout the city chimed, and flags flew at half mast. As the boat approached Bull's Ferry, Lieut. William Palmer and Capt. Thomas Milne fired minute guns at the ferry landing and from the bluffs of Fort Lee. Ashore, John I. Mumford, Esq., speaking on behalf of the New York committee, placed the remains in charge of the committee of Bergen County, with a short speech. He said:
Two-minute video Lieutenant Stott sought out the body of his captain on the field of Buena Vista and (knowing only that Capt. Zabriskie's brother was a surgeon on Gen. Taylor's Staff), furnished coffins, both lead and wood, at his own personal expense, and every facility for transporting them. He had the body decently interred in camp, with the usual military honors, and had it disinterred when returning home, at the expiration of his term of service. Lieut. Col. Warren, of the 1st Illinois Regiment, obtained the Company's consent to permit Capt. Zabriskie's corpse to be conveyed to Hackensack, N. J. and Lt. Stott accompanied it on its final journey. The mortal remains of Capt. Jacob W. Zabriskie reached Philadelphia on July 20, 1847, and, on the following day, were escorted to the steamer John Stevens, by military guard under command of Major Fritz. Arriving in New Brunswick, N. J., at about 1 p.m., Captain Moore, Grand Marshal, and the Neilson Guards, escorted the casket to City Hall, attended by the faculty and students of Rutgers College, and by a large number of citizens and strangers. Minute guns fired a salute. On the morning of July 22nd, Capt. Fisher of the steamboat Raritan, conveyed the remains to Pier No. 1, East River, accompanied by Capt. Moore and a detachment of twenty-three Neilson Guards, together with a military committee of the Lafayette Fusiliers. At 4 p.m., a solemn parade under command of General Storms escorted Capt. Zabriskie's coffin from the Battery to the steamer Frank at the foot of Canal Street.. The Lafayette Fusiliers formed the guard of honor, followed in procession by German Hussars, German Horse Guards, the New La Fayette Guards, the Washington Guard and Rifle Rangers, the Mayors and Councilmen of Brooklyn, New York and Jersey City, and a large concourse of citizens. The Lafayette Horse Guards fired minute guns from the Battery, as bells throughout the city chimed, and flags flew at half mast. As the boat approached Bull's Ferry, Lieut. William Palmer and Capt. Thomas Milne fired minute guns at the ferry landing and from the bluffs of Fort Lee. Ashore, John I. Mumford, Esq., speaking on behalf of the New York committee, placed the remains in charge of the committee of Bergen County, with a short speech. He said: "He to whose memory we of New York are now called to evince what sentiments animate us at the moment we are about to deliver over his remains to his nearer and dearer friends, was a soldier by hereditary right, being the grandson of one of those who achieved our independence, of one from whose early teachings he not only learned the duties of a soldier, but from the inspiration of whose example he imbibed that large patriotism - that absorbing love of liberty, the ardor of which no circle of relations, however affectionate - no troop of friends however devoted or endeared - could for a moment repress; and hence, we find him among the foremost in rallying around the standard of his country, a body of volunteers like himself, and hastening to the field of duty and honor. RIP Captain Zabriskie 🇺🇸🫡 ℹ️ Bergen County Historical Society, Dutch First Reformed Church, Hackensack, NJ. #history #mexicanamericanwar #americanhistory #gravestone #gravetok #hackensacknj #reels

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