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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 19. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 1 1 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 19. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.13 (search)
al, let me have one of your regiments, stating that part of his line had given away. To which General Terry replied: You can have two, thinking that the men might just as well be in action as to remain where they were then halted, exposed as they were. After a second's pause, General Terry added, General Gracie, let your men lie down, and let me have the front. To which Gracie replied: Very well; you are entitled to it. Mr. E. T. Witherby, of the Twenty-fifth Massachusetts, now of Shelby, Alabama, in a letter to me writes that, in conversation with Lieutenant-Colonel Troy, of the Sixtieth Alabama, he was informed that while the Sixtieth was lying down east of the road some troops passed them and went into the road ahead, and these troops, he afterwards learned, were Kemper's men. The old First Advances. Colonel R. L. Maury, commanding the Twenty-fourth Virginia (who was severely wounded in that fight) says that General Gracie came to him, desiring his support, saying, as