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Col. O. M. Roberts, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 12.1, Alabama (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: August 23, 1864., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
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685, 900) Assignment as above, to December 31, 1863. No. 60—(1152) Mentioned by General Lee as having re-enlisted, February 10, 1864. No. 67—(1025) Perrin's brigade, Third corps, Lee's army of Northern Virginia, May, 1864. No. 88—(1127) Sanders' brigade, Lee's army, August 31, 1864. No. 89—(1190) Sanders' brigade, Mahone's division, Capt. Wilson L. Brewster in command of regiment, October 31, 1864. (1239) General Forney commanding brigade, Capt. Caleb W. Brewton in command of regimSanders' brigade, Mahone's division, Capt. Wilson L. Brewster in command of regiment, October 31, 1864. (1239) General Forney commanding brigade, Capt. Caleb W. Brewton in command of regiment, November 30. (1367) Capt. John F. Smith in command of regiment, December 31st. No. 95—(1273) Assignment as above, Maj. Lewis W. Johnson in command of regiment about April, 1865. No. 96—( 174) Colonel Forney in command of regiment, January 31, 1865. (1272) Forney's brigade, Lee's army, Lieut.-Col. Wm. F. Smith in command of regiment. The Eleventh Alabama infantry. The Eleventh Alabama infantry was organized at Lynchburg, Va., in 1861. It was distinguis
l Saunders, Alabama; Captain Spain, Adjutant-General of General Finnegan's brigade; Colonel Lamar, Florida. Colonels Council and Thomas, and Major Bell, are missing, but are supposed to be prisoners. Lieutenant Davis, commanding sharpshooters, Sanders's Alabama brigade, one of the most gallant spirits in the Army of Northern Virginia, was killed. He had just been recommended for the majority of his regiment, and would, doubtless, have received the promotion had he Nave lived. --Other brave and gallant spirits without rank, but full of patriotism and bravery, yielded up their lives on that ensanguined field; but, of them all, none was more beloved, or will be more regretted, than the gallant commander of the Alabama brigade, John C. C. Sanders; a thorough soldier and an officer without a superior, he was yet a gentleman and a patriot. Devoted to his duties, modest in deportment, of no unselfish disposition, it was literally true, that "none knew him but to love him, none-named him