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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 26. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 26. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for John D. Hun or search for John D. Hun in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 26. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), They honor a former foe. [from the Richmond, Va., times, Sunday, Feb'y 5, 1899.] (search)
aw again the glory in the banner of the free. What more can you ask than that he came clearly to see and to recognize the right? Then the bugler sounded Taps, the soloist veteran sang Only Waiting. Colonel J. Payson Bradley, of the Governor's staff, extended the sympathy of the Commonwealth to the State of Virginia, the birthplace of the dead soldier, and the casket was borne out between the ranks of the white-haired veterans. With them, arm in arm, marched two Confederate soldiers—John D. Hun, adjutant in General Forrest's division of the Seventh Tennessee Cavalry, and Carl G. Monroe, regimental orderly in the First Virginia Cavalry, under Colonel Ezra Warren, the famous Black Horse Cavalry at the battle of Bull Run. Members of twenty-one Massachusetts posts, one Connecticut and one Maine post marched as escort to the grave. The pall-bearers were Captain E. C. McFarland, Arthur Hooper, G. W. Brooks, Ira B. Goodrich, John W. Small, and Paul H Kendricken, all of Post 113. I