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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)
esbyterian 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 Henderty, is a native of Georgia, born in DeKalb county, February 5, 1843. He is the son of John McCulloch, a native of Edinburgh, Scotland, who became a planter in Georgia and married Mary Crowley, a native of that State. Mr. McCulloch enlisted, May 31ities he entered upon the study of medicine, and was graduated at the Royal college of physicians and surgeons, at Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1870. In 1884 he made his home at Greenville where he now enjoys an extensive practice. He holds the rank ofous skirmishes which attended the retreat to Appomattox. Returning home after the close of hostilities he went to Edinburgh, Scotland, in the fall of 1866, and remained there until the summer of 1868 as a student in the Edinburgh university. Since
Col. J. Stoddard Johnston, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 9.1, Kentucky (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Biographical (search)
curred June 9, 1884, at Danville, Illinois. Brigadier-General George B. Cosby Brigadier-General George B. Cosby was born in Kentucky, and from that State was appointed to the United States military academy on September 1, 1848. On July 1, 1852, he graduated and entered the army as brevet second-lieutenant of mounted riflemen. For one year thereafter he served at the Carlisle, Pa., cavalry school for practice, and the next year was on frontier duty at Fort Ewell, Fort Merritt and Edinburgh, Tex., having become full second-lieutenant September 16, 1853. During 1854 he was a great deal of the time on scouting duty, and on the 9th of May of that year was severely wounded in a skirmish with the Comanche Indians near Lake Trinidad. Subsequently he was on garrison duty at Fort Clark, Tex., and at Jefferson Barracks, Mo. He was assistant instructor of cavalry at the military academy 1855-57, next was on duty in Texas, and May 13, 1859, was again engaged against the Comanche Indians