Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for August 1st or search for August 1st in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Sick and wounded Confederate soldiers at Hagerstown and Williamsport. (search)
uly 17th. Corporal B. J. Catlett, 55th North Carolina regiment; wounded July 14th. Private J. H. Rowell, 42d Mississippi regiment; wounded July 14th; died August 1st. Sergeant J. M. Harley, 42d Mississippi regiment; wounded July 14th. Sergeant L. A. Moore, 11th Mississippi regiment; wounded July 14th. Private W. R. p; wounded July 5th. Private C. H. Steele, 1st Maryland battalion; wounded July 3d. Sergeant Thomas Blackistone, 1st Maryland battalion; wounded July 3; died August 1st. Private W. H. Brannon, Stuart's artillery; wounded August, 1862. Private W. H. Everett, 56th North Carolina regiment. Private W. Swaincot, Stuart's arti 59th Georgia regiment; wounded July 10th. Private Joseph Cain, 59th Georgia regiment. Private Simeon Willis, 59th Georgia regiment; wounded July 10th; died August 1st. Private D. M. Patterson, 45th North Carolina regiment; wounded June 19th. Private J. E. Bradderberry, Cam. artillery. Private M. Lettice, 10th Georgia re
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Judge William Brockenbrough. (search)
legislature in ascertaining a permanent site for the University and in organizing it, the executive was required to appoint, without delay, twenty-four discreet and intelligent persons, one for each senatorial district, who were to meet the first of August next, at the tavern in Rockfish Gap, on the Blue Ridge. Three-fourths of this Board of Commissioners for the University were necessary for the transaction of business. It was their high province to report to the next session of the legislatzing and governing the University. Governor James P. Preston duly made the appointment of such men as he and his advisers deemed well qualified for such a sacred and solemn trust, and this distinguished Board of Commissioners met on the first day of August, at the place designated, and that humble mountain inn was honored with the presence of one of the grandest and most dignified conclaves that ever met anywhere. Prof. George Tucker says, in his Life of Jefferson, that President James Mon