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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 4 0 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
w-citizens and countrymen. Foraging will forthwith cease, and when necessity or long marches compel the taking of forage and provisions, or any kind of private property, compensation will be made on the spot; or when the disbursing officers are not provided with funds, vouchers will be given in proper form, payable at the nearest military depot. By order of Major-General W. T. Sherman. (Signed) L. M. Levton, A. A. G. (Signed) Archer Anderson, Lt. Col. and A. A. G. Edwin La Fayette Hobson. [from the Richmond, Va., dispatch, November 17, 1901.] A Glowing tribute from an old commander. To the Editor of the Dispatch: The Dispatch of the 10th of November announced the sudden death in your city of Colonel Edwin L. Hobson. Having been intimately associated with him during the war between the States, I ask leave to speak of him through the columns of your most excellent paper. The Fifth Alabama Regiment was organized in the spring of 1861, with Robert E
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.33 (search)
Edwin La Fayette Hobson. [from the Richmond, Va., dispatch, November 17, 1901.] A Glowing tribute from an old commander. To the Editor of the Dispatch: The Dispatch of the 10th of November announced the sudden death in your city of Colonel Edwin L. Hobson. Having been intimately associated with him during the war between the States, I ask leave to speak of him through the columns of your most excellent paper. The Fifth Alabama Regiment was organized in the spring of 1861, with Robert E. Rodes, late Captain of the Warrior Guards, of Tuscaloosa, as its Colonel, and Edwin L. Hobson one of its subordinate officers. Very soon it was sent to Centreville, near Manassas, where it was organized into a brigade with the Sixth, Twelfth and Twenty-sixth Alabama regiments, and the Twelfth Mississippi, under the command of Robert E. Rodes, who had just been made a brigadier-general. The brigade, thus constituted, did effective service in the vicinity of Manassas, was consp