hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 6. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 6 2 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 33. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: December 27, 1864., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 10 results in 4 document sections:

Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 6. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Report of General S. McGowan of battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Courthouse. (search)
berty to place three regiments on that side. The Twelfth (Colonel J. L. Miller) on the extreme right; on his left the Rifles (Lieutenant-Colonel McDuffie Miller); on the left of the road the Thirteenth (Colonel Brockman); and the Fourteenth (Colonel Brown) on the extreme left. In this order we pressed through the dense undergrowth, and, passing over the line of General Heth, which was lying down, charged the enemy and drove him some distance--four or five hundred yards--the whole extent of ouCaptain W. A. Kelly and Lieutenant W. R. Tharin, of the First; Lieutenant W. B. White and Captain Stover, of the Twelfth; Captain J. Y. McFall and Lieutenant W. J. Rook, of the Thirteenth; Captain G. W. Culbertson, Lieutenant J. M. Miller, Lieutenant E. Brown, Captain E. Cowan and Captain J. M. McCarly, of the Fourteenth; Captain L. Rogers, Captain R. S. Cheshire, Lieutenant L. T. Reeder, Lieutenant A. Sinclair and Lieutenant-Colonel G. McD. Miller, of the Rifles, wounded. In all these operat
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 6. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Wilderness. (search)
berty to place three regiments on that side. The Twelfth (Colonel J. L. Miller) on the extreme right; on his left the Rifles (Lieutenant-Colonel McDuffie Miller); on the left of the road the Thirteenth (Colonel Brockman); and the Fourteenth (Colonel Brown) on the extreme left. In this order we pressed through the dense undergrowth, and, passing over the line of General Heth, which was lying down, charged the enemy and drove him some distance--four or five hundred yards--the whole extent of ouCaptain W. A. Kelly and Lieutenant W. R. Tharin, of the First; Lieutenant W. B. White and Captain Stover, of the Twelfth; Captain J. Y. McFall and Lieutenant W. J. Rook, of the Thirteenth; Captain G. W. Culbertson, Lieutenant J. M. Miller, Lieutenant E. Brown, Captain E. Cowan and Captain J. M. McCarly, of the Fourteenth; Captain L. Rogers, Captain R. S. Cheshire, Lieutenant L. T. Reeder, Lieutenant A. Sinclair and Lieutenant-Colonel G. McD. Miller, of the Rifles, wounded. In all these operat
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 33. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The Twelfth Alabama Infantry, Confederate States Army. (search)
orktown, killed at Seven Pines; A. E. Hewlett. Second Lieutenant J. D. Graham. Elected from ranks second lieutenant after Seven Pines, resigned after Sharpsburg, died near Huntsville. Second Lieutenant J. D. Spain. Wounded and disabled at Sharpsburg. Second Lieutenant J. S. Brittain. Resigned. Died after the war near Decatur, Ala. Second Lieutenant David Sams. Killed November 19, 1864, in the Valley of Virginia. The following members of this company were killed in battle: E. Brown, Seven Pines. Dock Bishop, at Gettysburg. Tom Dunn, at Seven Pines. William Harris, at Seven Pines. J. Hamilton, at Boonsboro. F. M. Hamilton, at Spotsylvania. Lud Hall, at Boonsboro. Wm. Halbrooks, at Gaines Mill. Sam Heflin, at Seven Pines. Wyatt Martin, at Snicker's Gap. Dick Priddy, at Seven Pines. Carrol Ryan, at Gettysburg. Jas. Ryan, died of wounds in Richmond hospital. Nath. Smith, at Seven Pines. Jourdan Waid, at Seven Pines. The following
's California mining stocks in consideration of aiding to make him a candidate for the Presidency. But the evidence of the General gave a contradiction to all that. He went into a very minute history of his mining operations in California; explained the embarrassments of the Mariposa estate, and admitted transferring twenty-five thousand shares to Messrs. Opdyke, Ketcham & Hoey in regular course of business. Hon. Thomas C. Fields, lawyer; Philip Tillinghast, commission merchant, and E. Brown, machinist, gave testimony touching Mr. Opdyke's gun factory, his charges to the city for property destroyed by the mob; but nothing especially new or interesting was developed, when the court adjourned till to-morrow. The exchange of prisoners. The exchange of prisoners, which has ceased at Charleston, is to commence in James river in a day or two. A letter from Annapolis, Maryland, says: Colonel Mulford leaves in the New York, on Tuesday next, for Richmond, via James rive