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J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army 4 2 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army. You can also browse the collection for A. D. Cohen or search for A. D. Cohen in all documents.

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J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Chapter 6: hospital work. (search)
l. Rev. J. E. McSparran reports four conversions in the hospitals at Lynchburg, and many seriously and anxiously inquiring the way of life. Rev. J. E. Martin reports sixteen conversions in the Chimborazo Hospital, Richmond. He has found only twelve men who could not read, and they were mostly foreigners. One young man was very anxious to learn to read. I procured a spelling-book, and in a few days he learned so as to be able to read the Bible. He has since professed conversion. Rev. A. D. Cohen writes from the camp near Goldsboroa, North Carolina, to the Biblical Recorder. I have more opportunity to do good than at any other time of my pastoral life. Every tent is the habitation of a family of from six to eight men, each one of whom feels constrained to pay at least respectful attention to the kind counsel and good advice of their chaplain. Rev. J. H. Campbell, army evangelist, Georgia, relates the following incident: Noticing on the cars a soldier who looked sick and sad
J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Chapter 9: State of religion in 1861-62. (search)
On one occasion the general told him of several prominent officers who were sick, and urged him to go and converse with them on personal religion just as he would with the humblest private, adding that it was sad to see so many officers regardless of their eternal interests. . . . A. E. D. The chaplain of the Ninth Georgia Regiment, in a letter from Richmond, July 8, to his parents, says: We have a delightful religious revival progressing in our camps—in our regiment especially. Rev. A. D. Cohen, chaplain of the Forty-sixth North Carolina Regiment, writes: . . . At 4 o'clock we had another meeting. Our dear visiting brother preached a very appropriate sermon, very short, but comprehensive. I made a few remarks, and invited all who felt their need of a Saviour to manifest it by kneeling. Now, dear brother, I know that your heart: would have been filled with gratitude, and your eyes would have run rivulets of tears of joy, to have seen so many of our brave and dauntless sol
J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Roster of chaplains, army of Northern Virginia. (search)
Geo. D. Armstrong; Rev. J. Wm. Jones. Fifth Alabama Battalion (Provost Guard). Heth's Division. McRae's Brigade. Eleventh North Carolina. Twenty-sixth North Carolina. A. N. Wells. Forty-fourth North Carolina. R. S. Webb. Forty-seventh North Carolina. W. S. Lacy. Heth's Division—Continued. Fifty-second North Carolina. Rev. Mr. Sanford; J. M. Cline. Cook's Brigade. Fifteenth North Carolina. S. W. Howerton. Twenty-seventh North Carolina. Forty-sixth North Carolina. A. D. Cohen. Forty-eighth North Carolina. C. Plyler. Davis's Brigade. Second Mississippi. Eleventh Mississippi. Forty-second Mississippi. T. D. Witherspoon. Fifty-fifth North Carolina. Twenty-sixth Mississippi. M. B. Chapman. First Battalion. Archer's (Old) Brigade and Walkers (Old) Brigade. First Tennessee. W. T. Helm. Seventh Tennessee. Rev. Mr. Harris. Fourteenth Tennessee. J. E. King. Forty-fourth Tennessee. Twenty-third Tennessee. Sixty-third Tennessee. Fortieth Virginia. Geo