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Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 5 1 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 16. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 3 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: October 21, 1861., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 7: (search)
command of Capt. C. W. McCreary. Lieut.-Col. W. D. Simpson commanded the Fourteenth, and Capt. James Perrin the Rifles. The losses in Gregg's brigade at Ox Hill were reported as follows: Orr's Rifles, 5 killed, 25 wounded, total 30; First South Carolina, 1 killed, 7 wounded, total 8; Twelfth, 1 killed, o wounded, total 11; Thirteenth, 5 killed, 24 wounded, total 29; Fourteenth, 3 killed, 23 wounded, total 26; total, 15 killed, 89 wounded. Lieut. W. C. Leppard, of the Thirteenth, and Adjt. W. C. Buchanan, of the Twelfth, were killed on the field after being distinguished in the action. Captain West and Lieutenant Youngblood of the Fourteenth, and Lieutenant Jenkins of the Rifles, were wounded. We call the battle of Ox Hill a battle with Pope's rear guard, for such it was. Though his army was in position to give battle to General Lee on the 2d of September, his forces were arranged so as to secure his retreat, and this he actually made on the night of the 1st and the morning of the
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Additional Sketches Illustrating the services of officers and Privates and patriotic citizens of South Carolina. (search)
ing the attempt of the Federal fleet to destroy her while running the Vicksburg batteries, and Took a conspicuous part in repelling the attack of the Essex and Queen of the West. Subsequently he was transferred to the ram Baltic, at Mobile, Admiral Buchanan's flagship prior to the completion of the Tennessee, and thence he was ordered abroad in charge of a detachment of naval officers who were to go on duty on one of the vessels then building in England. But these were seized by the British go Major Julian Mitchell Major Julian Mitchell, of Charleston, was born on Edisto island, Charleston county, and educated at Charleston college, graduating in 1855 with first honors. He was appointed secretary of legation to Russia, by President Buchanan, and returned from that post just after the secession of South Carolina and before the bombardment of Fort Sumter. Upon his arrival he entered the army as an aide on the staff of Gen. R. S. Ripley, and accompanying the latter to Virginia w
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 16. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Heroes of the old Camden District, South Carolina, 1776-1861. an Address to the Survivors of Fairfield county, delivered at Winnsboro, S. C., September 1,1888. (search)
uished himself. It was the Twelfth which drove out the New England brigade, which, under Grover, had penetrated our lines by a charge second only to that of Pickett's division at Gettysburg. In this battle the brigade had nine out of eleven field-officers killed and wounded, and 619 out of 1,500 men carried into action. Colonel Barnes and Major McCorkle were among the wounded. The Twelfth regiment lost 145—killed, 24, and wounded, 121. A few evenings after, at Ox Hill, its adjutant, W. C. Buchanan, was killed and eleven men wounded. In an address delivered by me before the survivors of the Twelfth regiment at Walhalla, S. C., on Gregg's brigade at Manassas (see Southern Historical Society Papers, Vol. XIII, p. 1), it is stated that the First South Carolina volunteers was guided into the action by Lieutenant Fellows, of the Thirteenth. I am assured by Captain J. A. Hinnant, of the Twelfth, that the statement is a mistake, that it was he who did so, and I make this correction a
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 16. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Index. (search)
Leroy, 66, 289. Brown, Bailey, 83. Brown, Col., 96. Brown, Lt. F. B., 169, 171. Brown, Gen. John C., 374. Brown, Gov. Joseph E., 269, 274. Brown, Joseph M., 365. Brown, Capt., J. Mike, 15. Brown, Lt.-Col., 174, 176. Brown, Sergeant P. A. H., 91. Brown's Trial, John, its impartiality and decorum vindicated, 357. Brown, Lt., Wm., 277. Bryan's Loyalists, 10. Bryan, Major, 162, 167 Bryan, Capt., Pliny, 95. Buchanan, Admiral F., 273, 286. Buchanan, Lt. J. S., 59. Buchanan, Adj't W. C., 20. Buck Head Guards, 15 Buckner, Gen. S. B., 274, 368. Buell, Gen., 305, 316, 317. Buford, Col. A., 5, 11, 17, 32. Buist, Capt., 404. Bullock's Creek, 13. Bullock, Col. W. F., 218. Bull Run, 94. Bull's Gap, Tenn., Engagement at, 62, 65. Burch, Lt. John C., 352. Burgess, Capt. Joseph C., 168. Burger, Lt. Samuel J., 143, 192. Burgoyne, Gen., John, 9. Burke, Lt., Edmund, 92. Burks, Lt. James L., 60. Burn, O. J., 175. Burnside, Gen. A. E., 31. Burroughs' B
, and Italians, and from these chiefly the choir was formed. They sung the Marseillaise as I never heard it before; and they sung other admirable pieces, among them the Italian National Hymn, the Zou-Zou's, and the Star Spangled Banner. Such a concert would create a sensation and hold an audience anywhere." Consuls appointed. Jahazal Sherman, Prince Edward's Island; Alex. V. Lyons, of Virginia, Cyprus; Amasa Mason, of N. Y., Guayaquil; James H. Coulter, of Ohio, Montevideo; W. C. Buchanan, of Pennsylvania, Guatemala; Thomas C. Miller, of Michigan, St. Marc, Hayti — salary $1,500, with privilege of trade. The Consulate was created under the new act. Alex'r. Thompson, of New York, has been appointed Marshal to the Constantinople Consulate, and John G. Willoughby, United States Consul to Swatow. Failures and suspensions. The Boston Commercial Bulletin's list of business changes in the United States gives seven failures and suspensions in Boston, five in New York, f