chapter 1.1
The battlefields of
Virginia
.
Chancellorsville
.
page 1
page 2
page 3
Saturday
,
May
2nd
.
page 4
page 5
page 6
page 7
page 8
Extracts.
page 9
What
General
Lee
has said.
page 10
page 11
page 12
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page 15
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page 18
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page 27
Prison reminiscences.
The sick and wounded.
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page 34
Adjutant
J.
F.
Crocker
.
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page 47
Exchanged.
page 48
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page 50
page 51
An address before the ladies' memorial Association.
The address of
Hon.
John
Lamb
.
Our heroes who fell in the struggle.
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page 65
Private
soldiers and sailors.
page 66
The women of the
South
.
page 67
A land without ruins.
A parting word for his old comrades.
page 68
chapter 1.6
Prison points.
page 69
page 70
page 71
page 72
page 73
page 74
Historical memorial of the
Charlotte Cavalry
.
section c.1.7.14
page 75
page 76
page 77
section c.1.7.15
With
Gen.
Loring
,
section c.1.7.17
page 78
Under
Gen.
Jno.
Echols
.
1864
.
under
Gen.
Jno.
McCausland
, opposing
Gen.
Hunter
in
his advance on
Lynchburg
.
section c.1.7.20
page 79
page 80
page 81
section c.1.7.21
E.
E.
Bouldin
,
formerly
Captain
Charlotte
Cavalry
,
Company B
,
14th Virginia Cavalry
, C. S. A.
chapter 1.8
Major
Drewry
's letter.
page 82
page 83
page 84
page 85
Sergeant
Manns
account.
page 86
page 87
page 88
page 89
page 90
page 91
page 92
page 93
page 94
page 95
page 96
page 97
page 98
Townsend
's Diary—
January
–
May
,
1865
.
Some war history never published.
Mr.
Davis
's Version of it.
page 99
page 100
page 101
page 102
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page 105
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page 108
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page 112
page 113
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page 117
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page 119
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page 121
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page 125
page 126
page 127
page 128
Council of war
at
Centreville
.
page 129
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page 131
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page 133
page 134
page 135
page 136
page 137
page 138
page 139
page 140
page 141
page 142
page 143
chapter 1.11
section c.1.11.27
page 144
page 145
page 146
Sketch of the
Portsmouth
Light Artillery
.
page 147
Men who took part in battle of
Craney Island
,
June
22
,
1813
.
page 148
Men who served in Company,
1861
-
65
.
page 149
Historical address of the former commander of
Grimes Battery
.
The patriotism of peace.
Yankee
gunboat
Smith Briggs.
from the Times-dispatch,
March
18
,
1906
, and
July
15
,
1906
.
Mr.
Thomas
' reply.
page 150
page 151
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page 158
page 159
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page 161
page 162
page 163
page 164
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page 168
page 169
A red-hot Rebel.
First battle of Manassas
.
Hairbreadth escape.
page 170
page 171
Splendid charge by Confederates.
page 172
Carnage was awful.
page 173
Private
Swishers
Rashness
fatal.
Falling from ranks perilous.
Smith
left for dead: Elzey Succeeds him.
page 174
Elzey
,
Blucher
of the day.
page 175
Smith
's Brigade
saved the day.
Stonewall
Jackson
's way.
page 176
Cononel
Johnson
the
Star Solider
.
Heroic
Captain
Murray
and his men.
page 177
page 178
The only Confederate monument at
Gettysburg
.
Colonel
Peters
and
Captain
Lemmon
buried almost side by side.
The
Dahlgren
raid.
chapter 1.17
Mrs.
Eggleston
's address.
page 179
page 180
page 181
page 182
page 183
page 184
page 185
page 186
page 187
page 188
page 189
page 190
page 191
page 192
page 193
page 194
section c.1.17.47
page 195
page 196
page 197
page 198
page 199
Thinness of Earlys force.
Enemy deceived by Strategy.
Preparing for the assault.
Moving in position for the morrow's battle.
Struck enemy's left.
That
Rebel Yell.
Back to
Richmond
.
chapter 1.18
Scouting in the dark.
page 200
page 201
Passed Halltown Unawares.
Things looked ugly.
page 202
Enemy's picket and a Captive.
First
glimpse of
Jackson
.
page 203
Reconnoitering the enemy.
Another interview with
Jackson
.
page 204
drive in the
Federal
picket.
page 205
chapter 1.19
chapter 1.20
chapter 1.21
Received reinforcements.
page 206
page 207
page 208
page 209
page 210
page 211
page 212
page 213
page 214
Orders issued.
page 215
page 216
page 217
Retreat down Valley.
Had terrible time.
Remarkable character.
chapter 1.22
Bushrod
Rust
writes.
page 218
page 219
page 220
General
Funkhouser
's letter.
page 221
Last man killed in Civil war. (Anderson Cor. Indianapolis News.)
William
Smith
,
Governor
of
Virginia
, and
Major-General
C. S. Army
, hero and patriot.
Ceremonies incident thereon.
page 222
Address of
Judge
James
Keith
.
Fellow-citizens of the
Commonwealth
of
Virginia
.
page 223
page 224
page 225
page 226
page 227
page 228
page 229
page 230
Unveiling of the
State
.
Address of
Governor
Swanson
accepting.
page 231
page 232
page 233
page 234
page 235
Monument inscriptions.
page 236
Second
face:
Third
face:
page 237
Fourth
face:
page 238
chapter 1.25
Our country
and our homes.
page 239
page 240
page 241
page 242
chapter 1.26
Attacked from ambush.
page 243
page 244
A sight of
General
Lee
.
page 245
The fight near
Farmville
.
page 246
Thin gray line at
Appomattox
.
page 247
General
Lee
appears.
page 248
Gives full record.
chapter 1.28
chapter 1.29
The Prelude.
page 249
page 250
page 251
page 252
page 253
page 254
page 255
page 256
page 257
The
Seventh Brigade
.
page 258
The battle came.
page 259
page 260
The key of the battle-field.
page 261
Hunton
's report
page 262
page 263
Remarkable event of war.
page 264
The Richmond Howitzers.
page 265
The hero of
Ball's Bluff
.
page 266
page 267
page 268
A volunteer expedition.
page 269
White
brevetted
General.
page 270
Numbers engaged in the battle.
A complete vindication.
Explanations of the disaster.
page 271
page 272
Who to blame for the disaster.
page 273
page 274
chapter 1.30
A Confederate hero.
page 275
William
Todd
Robins
.
page 276
page 277
Roll of brave men.
Company I
,
Thirteenth Regiment
of
Virginia Cavalry
.
page 278
Officers.
Privates
.
page 279
chapter 1.32
Remarkable body.
page 280
page 281
Lincolns proclamation.
page 282
page 283
McClellans plans.
page 284
page 285
His instructions.
page 286
Circumstances of disaster.
page 287
Porterfield
given command.
page 288
page 289
Asleep when attacked.
Tells of the attack.
page 290
page 291
Brought about confusion.
page 292
Virginians
' heavy losses.
page 293
chapter 1.33
What had been done.
page 294
page 295
page 296
page 297
Prosperity short lived.
page 298
page 299
page 300
Spats in Cold weather.
page 301
page 302
page 303
Threw the scouts off.
page 304
Met at
Hightown
.
page 305
page 306
Work ahead of them.
page 307
page 308
Neither killed nor wounded.
page 309
page 310
Results of the raid.
page 311
page 312
List of
Virginia
chaplains,
Army of Northern Virginia
.
First Army Corps
.
page 313
Second Army Corps
.
page 314
Third Army Corps
.
Lieutenant-General
A.
P.
Hill
.
Fourth Corps
.
page 315
General
R.
H.
Anderson
.
chapter 1.35
Her last challenge and why she was destroyed.
page 316
page 317
The torch applied.
page 318
Description of the ship.
page 319
page 320
Second
day's fight.
page 321
page 322
Going it alone.
Jones
was Criticised unjustly.
page 323
page 324
From the other side.
page 325
page 326
chapter 1.36
Pickett
's charge at
Gettysburg
.
page 327
page 328
The Post of honor,
July
Ist.
page 329
The tempest at
.
Pandemonium.
page 330
page 331
Remember old
Virginia
.
page 332
Don't crowd, boys
—pretty hot—
perfectly Rediculous.
page 333
page 334
Unknown private who fell beyond.
page 335
chapter 1.37
Our advance from
Appomattox
.
page 336
page 337
page 338
page 339
page 340
page 341
page 342
page 343
page 344
page 345
page 346
page 347
page 348
page 349
page 350
page 351
page 352
chapter 1.38
chapter 1.39
chapter 1.40
Location of the guns.
page 353
page 354
page 355
page 356
page 357
page 358
page 359
page 360
page 361
page 362
page 363
page 364
Another
Fitz
Lee
.
The
Second
to the front.
page 365
Colonel
Allen
's report.
page 366
Specially mentioned.
page 367
Colonel
Cummings
's account.
page 368
page 369
page 370
page 371
The charge of the
Thirty-Third
was Violation of orders.
Retaking of the
Artillery
by the
Brigade
.
The Berkeley
brothers from the
Richmond
News-leader,
January
21
,
1907
.
Famous for its heroism.
page 372
After lead for bullets.
Index.