hide Matching Documents

Browsing named entities in The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 10: The Armies and the Leaders. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller). You can also browse the collection for R. E. Lee or search for R. E. Lee in all documents.

Your search returned 7 results in 3 document sections:

mmanded a brigade in the Sixth Army Corps until October, 1862, and a division until after the Chancellorsville campaign, when, as major-general of volunteers, he was at the head of the department of the Monongahela until Grant's operations against Lee and Richmond began. His commission of major-general of volunteers having expired, Brigadier-General Brooks was then in command of a division of the Eighteenth Army Corps, and on June 21, 1864, was put at the head of the Tenth Corps. He resigned , of New Mexico, famous Rocky Mountain Scout. Nebraska John M. Thayer, of Nebraska, an important division commander. New York Henry M. Judah, conspicuous during Morgan's raid of 1863. J. J. Bartlett received the arms of Lee's troops at Appomattox. Gustavus A. De Russy, who was brevetted for gallantry. Charles K. Graham led a brigade at Chancellorsville. N. Martin Curtis, promoted for gallantry at Fort Fisher. Romeyn B. Ayres, active as a division commander.
n Virginia. John D. Barry, Colonel of the 18th North Carolina regiment. William McRae led a North Carolina brigade in Lee's Army. William R. Cox led a North Carolina brigade in Ewell's Corps. R. Leventhorpe, defender of Fort Fisher. Lawrence S. Baker, Colonel of the 1st Cavalry. Thomas F. Toon led a North Carolina brigade in Lee's Army. John R. Cooke, engaged in Repelling Burnside at Fredericksburg. Rufus Barringer led a brigade of Cavalry in Virginia. Thomas L. Clingman led a North Carolina brigade in Lee's Army. Frericksburg, and Gettysburg, and with General Longstreet's Corps. He was engaged at the battle of Chickamauga, commanding a brigade in McLaws' Division of the Left Wing. Returning to the East he was and at the conclusion of the war he settled in Richmond, where he died in 1875. Major-General William Henry Fitzhugh Lee was born at Arlington, Virginia, May 31, 1837, the second son of General Robert E. Lee. For two years he served as second
ed J. Vaughn led a brigade in General Polk's Corps. Henry B. Davidson, led a brigade of Wheeler's Cavalry. Tyree H. Bell led a Cavalry command under Forrest. William McComb led a brigade in R. E. Lee's Army. Joseph B. Palmer led a brigade in General Polk's Corps. future manhood and noble womanhood. Whether the Southern people, under their changed conditions, may ever hope to witness another civilization which shall equal that which began with their Washington and ended with their Lee, it is certainly true that devotion to their glorious past is not only the surest guarantee of future progress and the holiest bond of unity, but is also the strongest claim they can present to the confidence and respect of the other sections of the Union. Referring to the new organization, General Gordon said: It is political in no sense, except so far as the word political is a synonym of the word patriotic. It is a brotherhood over which the genius of philanthropy and patriotism, of