Browsing named entities in Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans). You can also browse the collection for Henderson (Kentucky, United States) or search for Henderson (Kentucky, United States) in all documents.

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Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Additional Sketches Illustrating the services of officers and Privates and patriotic citizens of South Carolina. (search)
t Point Lookout followed and he did not regain his liberty until April, 1865. Returning to his home in Mississippi he resumed his studies and in 1871 was graduated at the university of Mississippi. After teaching school for one year he entered the Presbyterian theological seminary at Columbia, where he was graduated in 1875. He then studied at the university of Edinburgh, Scotland, and returning to America about a year later found his first field of labor as pastor of three churches, in Henderson and Transylvania counties, N. C. In December, 1877, he was called to the Memorial church at New Orleans, and in July, 1888, he was elected to his present position as chaplain and professor of mental and moral philosophy at the South Carolina college. Captain John Floyd, a prosperous planter, an exmerchant, and in his early manhood a gallant Confederate soldier who fought for the South in Virginia, Maryland, Mississippi and Florida, was born in Darlington county, S. C., January 20, 1836