hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
R. E. Lee 358 0 Browse Search
James Longstreet 283 3 Browse Search
J. E. B. Stuart 196 0 Browse Search
R. S. Ewell 190 2 Browse Search
Robert Edward Lee 139 9 Browse Search
United States (United States) 124 0 Browse Search
A. P. Hill 108 8 Browse Search
Stonewall Jackson 107 1 Browse Search
W. W. Kirkland 95 1 Browse Search
Robert F. Hoke 94 2 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 23. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.

Found 63 total hits in 35 results.

1 2 3 4
Mecklenburg (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
istant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Men F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.n F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.
Chowan River (United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
n Lieutenant-Colonel Owens was elected Colonel of the Fifty-third. At the same time, May 6th, Captain E. A. Ross, of Company A, was promoted to the majority. The regiment, therefore, went into service early in May among the troops for the defence of Wilmington with the following organization: Colonel Collett Leventhorpe, Lieutenant-Colonel W. J. Martin, Major Egbert A. Ross, Surgeon John Wilson, Assistant-Surgeon J. Parks McCombs, Assistant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.
Davidson College (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
e the sketch more readable, the writer offers in advance the apology that at the close of the war his diaries and private letters to his family were destroyed by a Federal raiding party. As a consequence he has had to rely mainly on the Rebellion Record-very incomplete on the Confederate side-and on the recollection of the few members of the regiment with whom he has been able to confer. If his old comrades who detect material errors in this record will send report of the same to him at Davidson, N C., so that they may be corrected in the proposed volume of sketches, he will be grateful for the favor. The Eleventh North Carolina Regiment was the successor of the First North Carolina Volunteers, the Bethel Regiment. This latter was mustered into service for six months, and upon its disbandment was re-organized for the war as the Eleventh Regiment, North Carolina troops. It was composed in considerable degree of the material of the Bethel Regiment. The reorganization took pla
Orange, N. J. (New Jersey, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
n Lieutenant-Colonel Owens was elected Colonel of the Fifty-third. At the same time, May 6th, Captain E. A. Ross, of Company A, was promoted to the majority. The regiment, therefore, went into service early in May among the troops for the defence of Wilmington with the following organization: Colonel Collett Leventhorpe, Lieutenant-Colonel W. J. Martin, Major Egbert A. Ross, Surgeon John Wilson, Assistant-Surgeon J. Parks McCombs, Assistant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
n able to confer. If his old comrades who detect material errors in this record will send report of the same to him at Davidson, N C., so that they may be corrected in the proposed volume of sketches, he will be grateful for the favor. The Eleventh North Carolina Regiment was the successor of the First North Carolina Volunteers, the Bethel Regiment. This latter was mustered into service for six months, and upon its disbandment was re-organized for the war as the Eleventh Regiment, North Carolina troops. It was composed in considerable degree of the material of the Bethel Regiment. The reorganization took place at Camp Mangum, near Raleigh, March 31, 1862, by the election of C. Leventhorpe, Colonel; W. A. Owens, Lieutenant-Colonel, and W. A. Eliason, Major. Major Eliason was at the same time elected to the Lieutenant-Colonelcy of the Forty-ninth, and accepted it, and Captain W. J. Martin, of the Twenty-eighth, was elected Major in his stead, and was promoted Lieutenant-Colon
Appomattox, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
The Eleventh North Carolina Regiment. The successor of the first N. C. Volunteers (the Bethel Regiment). Its history from its organization, March 31, 1862, to the surrender at Appomattox, Va., April 9, 1865, by Colonel W. J. Martin, Davidson College, N. C. For any inaccuracies or omissions in the statement of facts, and for the absence of anecdotic incidents which would have made the sketch more readable, the writer offers in advance the apology that at the close of the war his diaries and private letters to his family were destroyed by a Federal raiding party. As a consequence he has had to rely mainly on the Rebellion Record-very incomplete on the Confederate side-and on the recollection of the few members of the regiment with whom he has been able to confer. If his old comrades who detect material errors in this record will send report of the same to him at Davidson, N C., so that they may be corrected in the proposed volume of sketches, he will be grateful for the
Bertie (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.5
n Lieutenant-Colonel Owens was elected Colonel of the Fifty-third. At the same time, May 6th, Captain E. A. Ross, of Company A, was promoted to the majority. The regiment, therefore, went into service early in May among the troops for the defence of Wilmington with the following organization: Colonel Collett Leventhorpe, Lieutenant-Colonel W. J. Martin, Major Egbert A. Ross, Surgeon John Wilson, Assistant-Surgeon J. Parks McCombs, Assistant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.
M. D. Armfield (search for this): chapter 1.5
n Lieutenant-Colonel Owens was elected Colonel of the Fifty-third. At the same time, May 6th, Captain E. A. Ross, of Company A, was promoted to the majority. The regiment, therefore, went into service early in May among the troops for the defence of Wilmington with the following organization: Colonel Collett Leventhorpe, Lieutenant-Colonel W. J. Martin, Major Egbert A. Ross, Surgeon John Wilson, Assistant-Surgeon J. Parks McCombs, Assistant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.
n Lieutenant-Colonel Owens was elected Colonel of the Fifty-third. At the same time, May 6th, Captain E. A. Ross, of Company A, was promoted to the majority. The regiment, therefore, went into service early in May among the troops for the defence of Wilmington with the following organization: Colonel Collett Leventhorpe, Lieutenant-Colonel W. J. Martin, Major Egbert A. Ross, Surgeon John Wilson, Assistant-Surgeon J. Parks McCombs, Assistant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captain A. S. Haynes, Company I, Lincoln; Captain J. M. Young, Company K, Buncombe.
J. Parks McCombs (search for this): chapter 1.5
elected Major in his stead, and was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel May 6th, when Lieutenant-Colonel Owens was elected Colonel of the Fifty-third. At the same time, May 6th, Captain E. A. Ross, of Company A, was promoted to the majority. The regiment, therefore, went into service early in May among the troops for the defence of Wilmington with the following organization: Colonel Collett Leventhorpe, Lieutenant-Colonel W. J. Martin, Major Egbert A. Ross, Surgeon John Wilson, Assistant-Surgeon J. Parks McCombs, Assistant-Quartermaster John N. Tate, Assistant-Commissary of Subsistence Pat J. Lowrie, Adjutant H. C. Lucas, Chaplain A. S. Smith, Captain W. L. Hand, Company A, Mecklenburg; Captain M. D. Armfield, Company B, Burke; Captain F. W. Bird, Company C, Bertie; Captain C. S. Brown, Company D, Burke; Captain J. S. A. Nichols, Company E, Mecklenburg; Captain E. A. Small, Company F, Chowan; Captain J. A. Jennings, Company G, Orange; Captain W. L. Grier, Company H, Mecklenburg; Captai
1 2 3 4