Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 30. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for A. P. Hill or search for A. P. Hill in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 30. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point, N. Y., [from the Richmond, Va., Dispatch, March 30, April 6, 27, and May 12, 1902.] (search)
aker. 1535. Born North Carolina. Appointed North Carolina. 42. Brigadier-General, July 23, 1863. Commanding Second Military District, Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia. 1862. Joseph C. Ives. 1540. Born New York. Appointed Connecticut. 5. Colonel, Aide-de-Camp to President of Confederate States, Richmond, Va. George B. Anderson. 1545. Born North Carolina. Appointed North Carolina. 1o. Brigadier-General, June 9, 1862. Commanding brigade, D. H. Hill's Division, Second Corps, Army of Northern Virginia. Mortally wounded September 17, 1862, at Sharpsburg; died October 16, 1862, at Raleigh, N. C. Henry Deveuve. 1547. Born Louisiana. Appointed New Jersey. 12. Captain, Engineer officer to Major-General Loring, First Corps, Army of Mississippi. George B. Cosby.* 1552. Born Kentucky. Appointed Kentucky. 17. Brigadier-General, January 20, 1863. Commanding brigade of cavalry, Stephen D. Lee's Division, Department of Alabam
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 30. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Treatment and exchange of prisoners. (search)
mprehend, its fearful and unutterable iniquity. It would seem that the concentrated madness of earth and hell had found its final lodgment in the breasts of those who had inaugurated the rebellion, and controlled the policy of the Confederate Government, and that the prison at Andersonville had been selected for the most terrible human sacrifice which the world had ever seen. It is true that the statement made by Mr. Blaine was denied, and its falsity fully shown by both Mr. Davis and Senator Hill, of Georgia; and the report of the Committee of the Federal Congress, and an equally slanderous and partisan publication entitled Narration of Sufferings in Rebel Military Prisons (with hideous looking skeleton illustrations of alleged victims), issued by the United States Sanitary Commission in 1864, were fully answered by a counter report of a committee of the Confederate Congress. And it is also true that in 1876, the Rev. John Wm. Jones, D. D., who was then editing the Southern Hist
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 30. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Narrative of events and observations connected with the wounding of General T. J. (Stonewall) Jackson. (search)
ill's Division was sent to the front. General Lane, with the leading brigade of Hill's Division, came up in rear of my guns and halted, withdrawing to the edge of the woods. General Hill seeing his brigades not moving, sent forward his Adjutant-General, Lieutenant-Colonel Palmer, to know the cause of the delay. General Lane, inempt to form my line in the dark, under such a fire and in such woods. Tell General Hill I believe the enemy is simply responding to our guns. If he will order our Just as Lane had established his line and come up to the pike in search of General Hill for orders, up rode General Jackson, who said to Lane: Push ahead, General L, General Lane at once rode to the right of his brigade to move it forward. Colonel Hill, commanding the right regiment, the Seventh North Carolina, asked Lane to wais right flank and must find out what it was. Lane said: Send down and see. Colonel Hill at once sent Lieutenant Emack and four men in the direction of the noise. H