Browsing named entities in Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans). You can also browse the collection for Eason or search for Eason in all documents.

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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), Additional Sketches Illustrating the services of officers and Privates and patriotic citizens of South Carolina. (search)
ville, and just beyond Appomattox Court House on the night preceding the surrender. Lieutenant Welch was paroled with the command of Gen. W. H. F. Lee, and then returning to Charleston, he embarked two years later in the wholesale fruit and produce trade, in which he has been quite successful. Two brothers of the foregoing were in the Confederate service: William H. Welch, orderly-sergeant of the Rutledge Mounted Riflemen, Seventh South Carolina cavalry, and now one of the firm of Welch & Eason, Charleston, who was captured in the fight on Darbytown road, October 7, 1864, and confined at Point Lookout until near the close of the war; and Samuel B. Welch, now in business at San Francisco, Cal., who served with the Hampton legion in 1865, at the age of seventeen years. William Hawkins Welch William Hawkins Welch, of Charleston, a veteran of the Seventh cavalry, was born in 1845, at Philadelphia, then the temporary home of his father, Samuel B. Welch, a native of Charleston. Th