Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 24. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for J. B. Magruder or search for J. B. Magruder in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 24. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.3 (search)
, until our independence is won and conceded. On May 5th General J. B. Magruder issued an address to his soldiers announcing Lee's surrende May 12th, the day the news of Johnston's capitulation reached General Magruder at Houston, he went by train to Galveston, assembled the forcebomb-proof positions, as they were called. Dissatisfaction with Magruder. There was also dissatisfaction among the men regarding some of their superiors, extending even to the general officers. General Magruder's headquarters were at Houston, and for many months before the finaders share all the hardships and privations with their men. General Magruder was popular with most of the officers and with some of the pris the Mississippi river, where I believed Generals E. K. Smith and Magruder would continue to uphold our cause. Taylor, then a lieutenant-g to Mexico, among them Governors Clark and Murrah, Generals Smith, Magruder, Walker, Hardeman and Bee, who were joined there by Generals Price
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 24. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Wounded at Williamsburg, Va. (search)
se left in the hospital after the battle of May 6, 1862. Williamsburg, Va., June 29, 1896. To the Editor of the Dispatsch: In view of the fact that there may be some members of each of the commands to which these comrades belonged, who are in ignorance of their fate and would be glad of this information, I send you for publication a list of those who were left wounded in Williamsburg, after the battle here on May 5, 1862. These names have been kindly furnished to and preserved by Magruder-Ewell Camp Confederate Veterans. H. T. Jones. List of the wounded Confederate soldiers left in the Baptist Church Hospital, at Williamsburg, Va., after the battle on the 5th of May, 1862. William M. Richardson, lieutenant Company B, 17th Regiment, Virginia Infantry; died May 29, 1862, at Rev. T. M. Ambler's. Buried in the Episcopal churchyard; afterwards removed by friends. William L. Rector, Company C, 11th Virginia Infantry; died May —, 1862. James Keating, Company G, 17th
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 24. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The laying of the corner-stone of the monument to President Jefferson Davis, (search)
, 73. Lee to the rear, Accounts of the incident, 79. Lee, General Stephen D., 111; Oration by, at the laying of the corner-stone of the Jefferson Davis Monument, 366. Lee, Colonel, of the 37th North Carolina Regiment, killed, 329. Lewis, Richard, Sketch of, 223. Lewis, Major, R. Bird, 217. Louisianians, Patriotism of; 43. McAlpine, Major Charles R., 98. McAlpine, Newton, 98. McClellan, General, Geo. B., 295. McClellan, Major H. B., 216. McCreery, John Van Law, 110. Magruder, General John B., 43. Manassas, Battle of, 330 Marshall, Colonel, James, killed, 186. Maple Leaf, Capture of the Federal Steamer, 165. Mayer, R. B., 59. Mayo, Colonel Robert M., 184. Mechanicsville, Battle of, 329. Meredith, Jaquelin Marshall, 187. Mexican War, The, 59. Miller, H. J., 171. Mine Run, Battle of, 101, 336. Minor, Lieutenant Robert D., 91. Mission Ridge, Battle of, 95. Monroe, General Thomas B., 58. Morgan, General, John, Famous Raid of, 194.