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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 23. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 18 0 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 23. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Historical sketch of the Rockbridge artillery, C. S. Army, by a member of the famous battery. (search)
Several officers and men were slightly wounded, among them Lieutenant Brockenbrough, Sergeant Jordan, and James P. Smith, whose arm was bruis was not relieved of command of this battery till the 23d. Lieutenant Brockenbrough being absent by reason of his wound, the company was in command of Lieutenant McLaughlin till the 10th August, when Lieutenant Brockenbrough returned and took command, but resigned to take effect on tJohn W. Jordan, Jr, Henry R. Paine, James M. Garnett, Willoughby N. Brockenbrough, David E. Moore, Jr. Artificers. John B. Craig, ledge, discharged June 10th, by order General Winder. Willoughby N. Brockenbrough, transferred May 26th to Baltimore artillery, by order G Boteler, Charles P. *Boteler, Henry Boyd, E. Holmes Brockenbrough, J. Bowyer Brockenbrough, Willoughby N. Brooke, PendletonBrockenbrough, Willoughby N. Brooke, Pendleton Brown, Henry C. Brown, John L. Brown, John M. *Brown, John M., Jr. Brown, William M. Bryan, Edward *Bumpass, William N.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 23. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.19 (search)
Fourteenth Tennessee Regiments. Pettigrew's Brigade—Eleventh, Twenty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Fifty-second North Carolina Regiments. Davis' Brigade—Second, Eleventh, and Forty-second Mississippi, and Fifty-fifth North Carolina Regiments. Brockenbrough's Brigade—-Fortieth, Forty-seventh, and Fifty-fifth Regiments, and the Twenty-second Virginia Battalion. Pender's Division—Scales' Brigade—Thirteenth, Sixteenth, Twenty-second, Thirty-fourth, and Thirty-ninth North Carolina Regiments Lane'er's was made the directing brigade of the line of battle. Beyond the Stone wall. All these troops, numbering not more than 14,000, had, with the exception of Pickett's Division, been heavily engaged in the battle of the first of July. Brockenbrough's and Davis's Brigades, with absolutely no supports on the left or rear, unable to stand the tempest of shot and shell, gave way first. Pettigrew's Brigade dashed on, and, when within a short distance of the stone wall, a flanking column