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J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Roster of chaplains, army of Northern Virginia. (search)
gade. First S. Carolina. Geo. T. T. Williams. Fifth South Carolina. J. N. Craig. Sixth South Carolina. W. E. Boggs. Second Rifles. W. E. Walters. Sharpshooters. Jas. McDowell. Anderson's Brigade. Eighth Georgia. W. C. Dunlap. Seventh Georgia. Rev. Mr. Stokes. Ninth Georgia. H. Allen Tupper; J. C. Byrnham; A. B. Campbell. Eleventh Georgia. W. A. Simmons. Fifty-ninth Georgia. Benning's Brigade. Fifteenth Georgia. W. F. Robertson. Second Georgia. Seventeenth Georgia. Rev. Mr. Hudson. Twentieth Georgia. Gregg's Brigade. First Texas. I. R. Vick. Fourth Texas. Fifth Texas. Third Arkansas. G. E. Butler. Law's Brigade. Fourth Alabama. Robt. Frazier. Fifteenth Alabama. Forty-fourth Alabama. W. G. Perry. Forty-eighth Alabama. Rev. Mr. Price. Pickett's Division Steuart's Brigade. Ninth Virginia. J. W. Walkup; G. W. Easter. Thirty-eighth Virginia. R. W. Cridlin; Rev. Mr. Cosby. Fifty-third Virginia. W. S. Penick; P. H. Fontaine; Rev. Mr. Colton
J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Appendix no. 2: the work of grace in other armies of the Confederacy. (search)
n Atlanta. He was very efficient in furnishing the troops with religious readinga zealous laborer in the vineyard of Christ. Rev. Captain Charles H. Dunham, formerly of the Tennessee Conference, but a gallant officer in the Forty-eighth Tennessee Regiment for three years, and Rev. Lieutenant Cornelius Hardin, Thirty-fifth Mississippi Regiment, recently ordained by Bishop Paine, were both mortally wounded on Kenesaw Mountain, and died full of faith and the Holy Ghost, in Marietta. Rev. Mr. Hudson, chaplain Sixth Texas Cavalry, a faithful and useful man in the army, and much beloved by his soldiers, was mortally wounded near Newnan, July 30, while in the discharge of his duty as chaplain. I have preached but few times during the month, as the soldiers are either moving or confronting the enemy in the trenches almost daily. While General Roddy's command remained here I preached nightly to his soldiers, who seemed very eager to hear the words of life. The attendance and attent