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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Petersburg and Richmond: December 31st, 1864. (search)
n, Lieut.-Col. Luther J. Glenn; Phillips Ga. Legion, Lieut.-Col. Joseph Hamilton. Humphreys's Brigade, Brig.-Gen. B. G. Humphreys: 13th Miss., Lieut.-Col. A. G. O'Brien; 17th Miss., Capt. J. C. Cochran; 18th Miss., Lieut.-Col. William H. Luse; 21st Miss., Col. D. N. Moody. Bryan's Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Goode Bryan: 10th Ga., Col. Willis C. Holt; 50th Ga., Col. P. McGlashan; 51st Ga., Lieut.-Col. James Dickey; 53d Ga., Col. J. P. Simms. Conner's Brigade, Brig.-Gen. James Conner: 2d S. C., Col. J. D. Kennedy; 3d S. C., Lieut.-Col. R. C. Moffett; 7th S. C., Capt. E. J. Goggans; 8th S. C., Col. J. W. Henagan; 15th S. C., Col. J. B. Davis; 20th S. C., Col. S. M. Boykin; 3d S. C. Batt'n, Lieut.-Col. W. G. Rice. artillery, Brig.-Gen. W. N. Pendleton commanded the artillery of the army. Brig.-Gen. E. P. Alexander. Cabell's Battalion, Col. H. C. Cabell: Va. Battery, Capt. R. M. Anderson; Ga. Battery, Lieut. Morgan Callaway; Ga. Battery, Capt. H. H. Carlton; N. C. Battery, Capt. Basil C.
A Roster of General Officers , Heads of Departments, Senators, Representatives , Military Organizations, &c., &c., in Confederate Service during the War between the States. (ed. Charles C. Jones, Jr. Late Lieut. Colonel of Artillery, C. S. A.), Brigadier-Generals of the Confederate States Army, alphabetically arranged. (search)
the 5th Kentucky and the 65th Georgia regiments; subsequently in command of a division in Wheeler's corps, composed of the brigades of Allen, Dibrell and Hannon. 244Kemper, J. L.VirginiaGen. R. E. LeeJune 3, 1862.June 3, 1862.Sept. 30, 1862. Promoted Major-General March 1, 1864; brigade composed of the 1st, 3d, 7th, 11th and 17th Virginia regiments, Pickett's division, Longstreet's corps, Army of Northern Virginia; for a time the 24th Virginia regiment was attached to this brigade. 245Kennedy, J. D.S. Carolina Dec. 22, 1864.Dec. 22, 1864.  Brigade composed of the 2d, 3d, 7th, 8th, 15th, and 20th South Carolina regiments and James' 3d South Carolina battalion, Longstreet's corps, Army of Northern Virginia. 246Kershaw, J. B.S. CarolinaGen. J. E. JohnstonFeb. 15, 1862.Feb. 13, 1862.Feb. 13, 1862. Promoted Major-General May 18, 1864; brigade composed of the 2d, 3d, 7th, 8th, 15th and 20th South Carolina regiments, McLaws' division, Longstreet's corps, Army of Northern Virginia. 247Kin
1stLouisianaBattalionZouavesLt. Col. Coppens   2dLouisianaBattalionInfantryMajor Wheat   3dLouisianaBattalionInfantry  Afterwards changed to 15th regiment. 4thLouisianaBattalionInfantryLt. Col. J. McEnery   5thLouisianaBattalionInfantryLt. Col. Kennedy   6thLouisianaBattalionInfantryLt. Col. C. H. Morrison   1stMarylandRegimentInfantryCol. B. T. Johnson Promoted Brigadier-General. It is believed that the State of Maryland gave to the military service of the Confederacy about fifteen thh CarolinaReg.---1st South Carolina VolunteersInfantryCol. F. W. KilpatrickJan. 31, 1863.  Col. Johnson Hagood Promoted Brigadier-General. Col. T. J. Glover   Col. Jas. Hagood   3dSouth CarolinaReg.---2d South Carolina VolunteersInfantryCol. J. D. KennedyMay 13, 1862.  Col. J. B. Kershaw Promoted Major-General. Col. Wm. Wallace   4thSouth CarolinaReg.---3d South Carolina VolunteersInfantryCol. Jas. D. NanceMay 14, 1862.  Col. J. H. Williams   5thSouth CarolinaReg.---4
J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Chapter 13: results of the work and proofs of its genuineness (search)
ory as 'twas told to him, and inviting corrections. As such a deed should be recorded in the rigid simplicity of actual truth, I take the liberty of sending you for publication an accurate account of a transaction every feature of which is indelibly impressed upon my memory. Very truly yours, J. B. Kershaw. Richard Kirkland was the son of John Kirkland, an estimable citizen of Kershaw county, a plain, substantial farmer of the olden time. In 1861 he entered, as a private, Captain J. D. Kennedy's Company (E) of the Second South Carolina Volunteers, in which company he was a sergeant in December, 1862. The day after the sanguinary battle of Fredericksburg, Kershaw's Brigade occupied the road at the foot of Marye's hill and. the ground about Marye's house, the scene of their desperate defence of the day before. One hundred and fifty yards in front of the road, the stone-facing of which constituted the famous stone wall, lay Syke's Division of Regulars, United States Army,
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 20: (search)
allant charge by Butler's division, Lieut. Thomas Preston Hampton, aide-de-camp, fell mortally wounded, and Lieut. Wade Hampton, of the general's staff, was severely wounded. Lieutenant-Colonel Jeffords was killed at the head of his regiment, the Fifth South Carolina, and Maj. T. G. Barker, division adjutant-general, was dangerously wounded. The gallant Captain Hart lost a leg while fighting his guns close up to the enemy. Kershaw's brigade, under Gen. James Conner, and later under Colonel Kennedy, served gallantly under Early in the Shenandoah valley. At the battle of Cedar Creek, October 19th, a day of victory and disaster, the brigade suffered a loss of 205. Maj. James M. Goggin, subsequently commanding, reported the gallant service of Lieut. Y. J. Pope and Cadet E. P. Harllee, both wounded; of De Saussure Burrows, killed; of Couriers Crumley and Templeton, of the brave Capt. B. M. Whitener, who fell in command of the battalion of sharpshooters; of Maj. B. R. Clyburn, who lo
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 21: (search)
omitable spirit remained, and the people of the Carolinas were cheered by their approach. On the 28th, Gen. Wade Hampton reported for duty in defense of his State, soon after was given command of Butler's and Young's (Iverson's) cavalry divisions, and later of all the cavalry in the Carolinas. Conner's brigade, from the army of Northern Virginia, arrived in this month, and on the 31st, General Hardee's army was organized as follows: McLaws' division, composed of Conner's brigade, Colonel Kennedy; the Georgia brigade (reserves) of Col. John C. Fiser; the Georgia brigade of Col. G. P. Harrison, including a detachment of the First South Carolina cavalry; Col. W. M. Hardy's North Carolina brigade; another brigade of Georgia reserves, and six batteries of artillery. Taliaferro's division, composed of Brig.-Gen. Stephen Elliott's brigade—parts of First and Second artillery, serving as infantry, under Lieut.-Col. J. A. Yates; First cavalry, State cadets, and a company of the siege
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 3 (search)
-Colonel L. J. Glenn. Bryan's brigade. Tenth Georgia, Colonel W. C. Holt. Fiftieth Georgia, Colonel P. McGlashan. Fifty-first Georgia, Colonel E. Ball. Fifty-third Georgia, Colonel James P. Simms. Humphrey's brigade. Thirteenth Mississippi, Lieutenant-Colonel A. G. O'Brien. Seventeenth Mississippi, Captain J. C. Cochran. Eighteenth Mississippi, Colonel T. M. Griffin. Twenty-first Mississippi, Colonel D. N. Moody. Kershaw's [old] brigade. Second South Carolina, Colonel J. D. Kennedy. Third South Garolina, Colonel W. D. Rutherford. Seventh South Carolina, Captain E. J. Goggans. Eighth South Carolina, Colonel J. W. Henagan. Fifteenth South Carolina, Colonel J. B. Davis. Twentieth South Carolina, Colonel S. M. Boykin. Third South Carolina Battalion, Lieutenant-[Colonel] W. G. Rice. Second army corps. see organization of the army of the Valley District August 20th and 31st, as shown by inspection reports. Notes(b) to (i) refer to that organization.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Lee's Lieutenants. (search)
homas Harrison, Waco, Tex. J. M. Hawes, Kentucky. Edward Higgins, Norfolk, Va. George B. Hodge, Kentucky. William J. Hoke, North Carolina. Alfred Iverson, Florida. J. D. Imboden, Southwest Virginia. Alfred E. Jackson, Nashville, Tenn. Henry R. Jackson, Savannah, Ga. William H. Jackson, Nashville, Tenn. Bradley T. Johnson, Baltimore, Md. George D. Johnston, Charleston, S. C. Robert D. Johnston, Birmingham, Ala. Thomas Jordan, New York. A. R. Johnson, Texas. J. D. Kennedy, Camden, S. C. William H. King, Austin, Tex. William W. Kirkland, New York. James H. Lane, Auburn, Ala. A. R. Lawton, Savannah, Ga. T. M. Logan, Richmond, Va. A. L. Long, Charlottesville, Va. Robert Lowry, Jackson, Miss. Walter B. Lane, Texas. Joseph H. Lewis, Kentucky. W. G. Lewis, North Carolina. William McComb, Gordonsville, Va. Samuel McGowan, Abbeville, S. C. John T. Morgan, United States Senate. T. T. Munford, Lynchburg, Va. H. B. Mabry, Texas. W. W.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 20. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.4 (search)
law, Montgomery, Alabama. Eppa Hunton, United States Senate. William P. Hardeman, Austin, Texas. N. H. Harris, Mississippi. Edward Higgins, Norfolk, Virginia. George B. Hodge, Kentucky. J. D. Imboden, Damacus, Virginia. Henry R. Jackson, Savannah, Georgia. William H. Jackson, Nashville, Tennessee. Bradley T. Johnson, Baltimore, Maryland. George D. Johnson, Civil Service Commissioner. Washington, D. C. Robert D. Johnson, Birmingham, Alabama. A. R. Johnson, Texas. J. D. Kennedy, Camden, South Carolina. William H. King, Austin, Texas. William W. Kirkland, New York. James H. Lane, Auburn, Alabama. A. R. Lawton, Savannah, Georgia. T. M. Logan, Richmond, Virginia. Robert Lowry, Jackson, Mississippi. Joseph H. Lewis, Kentucky. W. G. Lewis, Tarboro, North Carolina. William McComb, Gordonsville, Virginia. Samuel McGowan, Abbeville, South Carolina. John T. Morgan, United States Senate. T. T. Munford, Lynchburg, Virginia. George Maney, Nashville.
332, 342, 346; IV., 84, 197, 224, 226, 233, 238. Kelly store, near Suffolk, Va. , II., 330. Kelly's Battery, Confederate, I, 352. Kelly's Infantry, Confederate, I., 350. Kellysville, battle of, IX., 83. Kemper, J. L., II., 264; X., 115. Kenesaw Mountains, Ga.: III., 103, 117, 120 seq., 122, 216, 218, 248, 322. Kenly, J. R., X., 211. Kennebec,, U. S. S., VI., 190, 204. 21, 251. Kenedy, Capt. attempts to burn New York City, VIII., 302. Kennedy, J. D., X., 285. Kennon, B., VI., 191, 192. Kensfick, I., VII., 135. Kensington,, U. S. S., VI., 316. Kentucky: I., 178 seq., 218; VIII., 76; Morgan raids in, VIII., 18; army, roads of, VIII., 36, 76; enlistment on both sides, VIII., 103; military operations in. X., 88. Kentucky troops, Confederate: Cavalry: Morgan's, I., 358, 362. Infantry: First, I., 356; Second, I., 358; Fourth, X., 156 Fifth, I., 356; Eighth, I., 358; X., 156. Kentucky troops. Union: Arti
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