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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 7. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 12.89 (search)
e the 173. This fact shows the closeness of the contending forces. Stuart and Pelham, his Chief of Artillery, were accidentally at Culpeper.Courthouse, in attendanc a court-martial as witnesses, their quarters being in rear of Fredericksburg. Pelham was in the act of getting on the cars to return to his camp, when, hearing therhimself joined me on the field, though the former did not assume command. Yes! Pelham fell at Kelleysville — a blue-eyed, light haired boy, a graduate of West Point ing courage that ever distinguished him. An old farmer in Maryland, looking at Pelham's beardless face, girlish smile and slender figure, said to General Stuart, Canl duty of announcing to the division its irreparable loss in the death of Major John Pelham, commanding the horse artillery. He fell mortally wounded in the battle he First's fatal Italian campaign against Charles the Fifth. Sleep on, gallant Pelham, and may your spirit look through the vista to the everlasting hills, bathed in