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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 37. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 2 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 37. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.8 (search)
Memorials to men who fell at Spotsylvania. From Richmond, Va., Times-dispatch, May 13, 1909. Monuments are unveiled at Bloody Angle and Salem Church—Tributes paid by North and South to victims of famous battles. Fredericksburg, Va., May 13, 1909. A memorial tablet on the battlefield of Bloody Angle and a monument at Salem Church in memory of the New Jersey volunteers who fell on the battlefields of Spotsylvania county in the Civil War were unveiled to-day. Colonel E. C. MasMay 13, 1909. A memorial tablet on the battlefield of Bloody Angle and a monument at Salem Church in memory of the New Jersey volunteers who fell on the battlefields of Spotsylvania county in the Civil War were unveiled to-day. Colonel E. C. Massey, representing Governor Swanson, delivered the address of welcome at the tablet unveiling. General Joseph Plume then transferred the memorial to the State of New Jersey, and Governor Fort, of that State, made a speech accepting and transferring it again to the Fifteenth New Jersey Volunteer Veterans' Association. An address on behalf of the latter body was delivered by Theodore F. Swayze, of Washington, D. C. Similar addresses of presentation and acceptance were made at the unveiling of the