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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: May 16, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for James Mercer Green or search for James Mercer Green in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), General Hospitals and Medical officers in charge, attached to the Army of Tennessee, July, 1864. (search)
S. P. Moore Hospital, Surgeon Benjamin Franklin. Direction Hospital, Surgeon Randal M. Lytle. Price Hospital, Surgeon Lewis C. Pynchon. Quintard Hospital, Surgeon S. V. D. Hill. Zzzla Grange, Georgia —G. H. Evans, Senior Surgeon in charge. Cannon Hospital, Surgeon L. W. Tuttle. Shillary Hospital. Olin Hospital, Surgeon Ira Willaims. Law Hospital, Surgeon Alexander Erskine. St. Mary's Hospital, Surgeon J. M. Henson, Senior Surgeon G. H. Evans. Zzzmacon, Georgia —James Mercer Green, Surgeon in charge. Floyd Home Hospital, Surgeon E. J. Roch. Blind School Hospital, Surgeons George F. Cooper and Paine Lee. City Hall Hospital, Surgeons L. L. Saunders and A. H. Lecaud. Stout Hospital, Theodore Parker, Surgeon. Ocmulgu Hospital, Surgeon Stanford E. Chaille. Depot Hospital, Senior Surgeon M. W. King. Convalescent Camp, C. Lewellyn Hunter, Jr., Acting Assistant Surgeon. Institute Hospital, D. C. O'Keefe. Zzzmadison, Georgia —J. R. Bratton, Senior<
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.26 (search)
asses, including two corps that never fired a gun. Jackson's Division, under J. R. Jones, and Ewell's Division, under Lawton, were nearly annihilated by the tremendous assault of Sumner's and Hooker's Corps. Jones was wounded; Starke, succeeding him, was killed; Lawton was wounded, and Early, succeeding him, found but little more than his own brigade left in fighting shape. Assisted by Grigsby and some 300 men of Jackson's Division, he, with his brigade, repulsed one assault, when suddenly Green's Federal Division penetrated our lines and appeared on his right flank. Promptly facing his men by flank to meet it, and marching behind a rocky ledge, he repelled these intruders, and then, reinforcements arriving, he joined them and beat back Sumner's Corps. Zzzfredericksburg and Chancellorsville. It was a splendid scene when the fog lifted December 13, 1862, and revealed on the plains of Fredericksburg, in martial array, Burnside's army of 100,000 men and 200 guns confronting the