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The Daily Dispatch: August 10, 1861., [Electronic resource] 5 1 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Paroles of the Army of Northern Virginia. (search)
. Anderson, Capt. Co. F, 3d Arkansas Regiment. J. D. Pickens, 1st Lt. Co. E, 3d Arkansas Regiment. R. M. Stribling, 1st Lt. Co. F, 3d Arkansas Regiment. J. I. Miles, 2d Lt. Co. H and Ass't Adj't Regiment. Thos. P. Brewen, 2d Lt. Co. K, 3d Arkansas Regiment. J. L. Meel, 2d Lt. Co. G, 3d Arkansas Regiment. [64] Third Arkansas Regiment. Co. A. 2d Sergeant H. A. Ralph, Private J. S. Banks, Private J. C. Bull, C. A. Harrold, Jas. Day, S. S. Johnson, J. B. Geddie, J. D. Kelley, W. E. Gregory, J. A. Kelley, W. C. Hannah, G. Y. Mock, H. N. Morris, G. W. Smith, W. A. Moore, S. F. Stevens, Wash. Parks, G. L. Wright. Co. B. 1st Sergeant R E. McMurray, 5th Sergeant H. B. Lindsay, Private J. P. Hughes, J. F. Ketchins, Private Jas. Reid, S. D. Cobb, N. J. Fuller, Daniel Senn. Co. C. 1st Sergeant W. E. Conly, 1st Corporal Chas. W. Jeter, Private Robt. S. Rust, John A. Fergurson, B. F. Glossup, W. L. Law, Private Jas. T. Barden,
ruth by the narrow-minded Puritans of the North. A complete refutation of all such nonsense we find in the Petersburg Express, communicated to that paper by Mr. J. D. Kelley, of the Montgomery Guards. Richard Dunne, a member of the New York Sixty-Ninth, writes to Mr. Kelley as follows: Centreville, Aug. 6, 1861. Sir Mr. Kelley as follows: Centreville, Aug. 6, 1861. Sir Having voluntarily become a prisoner of the Southern Confederacy, for the purpose of alleviating, as far as it is in my power, the sufferings of the wounded of the U. S. soldiers, prisoners at Centreville, and mainly induced to do so in consequence of some of the Northern doctors leaving their post. I feel myself called upon to ime. At all events, his conduct since the battle speaks well for his manliness. He has, we believe, arrived in Richmond with other prisoners, and we willingly give him the benefit of the foregoing publication. Mr. Kelley, in his letter to the Express, hopes "that some efforts may be made to procure this soldier leave on parole"