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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 8. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 26 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 8. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for J. L. Gordon or search for J. L. Gordon in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 8. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Literary notices. (search)
coming year. The South Atlantic, published at Wilmington, N. C., by Mrs. Cicero W. Harris, editor and proprietor, is a very well conducted and creditable Magazine, which we should be glad to see in every home and library of the land. The contents of the December number (we have not yet received the January number) are: Carmelita (continued), W. H. Babcock; Who was Robin Adair?--------; Athens to Trieste, W. C. Johnstone; Trial of Titus Oates, John W. Snyder; Unreturning — A Poem, J. L. Gordon; Notes on Southern Literature,--------; Thiers (continued), Th. von. Jasmund; His Only Love, A. L. Bassett; A Legend of the Roanoke — A Poem, P. Copeland; Editorial — The American Cyclopaedia; Recent Literature — Babcock's Poem's, Petals, Hand Book of Church Terms. In Notes on Southern Literature the writer could not, of course, make any complete catalogue of the books that have been written by Southern men since the war, yet one is surprised to find omitted from the list given Rev.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 8. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), General Lee to the rear --the incident with Harris' Mississippi brigade. (search)
k a grave injustice. I have no doubt if General Gordon's attention was called to this publicationront on the afternoon of the 10th of May, when Gordon and others urged General Lee to retire from thf the 13th to the rifle pits constructed under Gordon's supervision, while the battle was raging a spotsylvania Courthouse on the 12th of May with Gordon's division; and on the same morning with Harriosition of the night before. The scene with Gordon's division. Gordon soon arranged the left oGordon soon arranged the left of his division to make an effort to recapture the lines by driving the enemy back with his right. Age, the scene of the 6th of May was repeated. Gordon pointed to his Georgians and Virginians, who hepting their promise to drive the enemy back. Gordon, carrying the colors, led them forward in a heident ever occurred, replied briefly, Yes; General Gordon was the General --alluding thus concisely ent of the early morning of the 12th, when General Gordon led the charge, passing over the similar o[2 more...]