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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 34. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), First battle of Manassas. (search)
laced so near the Federal lines. But, they had to concede that the Maryland regiment took, occupied and held (July 2 and 3) the place where their monument stands. Indeed, the bloody charge on July 3 was made at a distance beyond it. This Maryland monument, erected in 1886, stands to-day the only Confederate monument on the battlefield of Gettysburg. Colonel Peters and Captain Lemmon buried almost side by side. Private Lemmon received deserved promotion. Years after the war, General William H. Payne, on whose staff he had served, paid him a sly compliment. Lemmon, he said, I sometimes didn't know whether you were on my staff or I on yours. George Lemmon was a true type of a Maryland soldier and gentleman, and was as intelligent as he was brave. He was destined to die while traveling and aproaching the old Manassas battlefields. He died on the fortieth aniversary of the death of my father—which resulted from service in the Confederate Army—Colonel George Peters, commanding t
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 34. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.29 (search)
Major Paul Revere, Colonel Ward and others also attained distinction. Mississippi sent Barksdale and Featherston to the House of Representatives and made Captain A. G. Brown, of the Eighteenth, first Governor and then United States Senator. The gallant Captain Ball, of the Chesterfield Troop, became Colonel of the Fifteenth Virginia Cavalry, and achieved distinction as an officer, and Lieutenant Wooldridge, of the same troop, became Colonel of the Fourth Cavalry, and proved a worthy successor of Wickham, Randolph and Payne, one of the most distinguished cavalry commands in our service, of which our friend Judge Keith, was the adjutant, and there were many others whose names we do not now recall. And the grand old hero of the battle, General Eppa Hunton, having served his people with marked ability and most faithfully, in the highest offices within their gift, still lives, we rejoice to say, crowned with honors, blessed in fortune and family, and with troops of loving friends.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 34. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.39 (search)
rt Lambert, dead. W. A. Mays, wounded on picket duty. W. H. Magruder. F. B. Magruder, wounded at Chancellorsville. B. F. Maiden. Edward McCready, killed First Manassas. H. H. McCready, lieutenant; wounded at Chancellorsville; killed Payne's farm. Robert McCready; died from wounds Wilderness, 1864. W. F. Moore, killed Spotsylvania, 1864. J. M. Morris; dead; Samuel Neff, killed Kernstown. T. C. Oaks. Bedford Overbay. John Parrish, killed at Payne's farm. J. T. Payne's farm. J. T. Palmer; dead. Matthew Prater; dead. Martin Roane, lost two fingers at Chancellorsville; dead. James Roark; dead. J. H. Romans, killed First Manassas. Samuel Reedy. A. O. Sanders, wounded below Richmond. A. T. Sanders; died since the war. William Sanders, died during the war. Jesse Seay. Benjamin Sexton, died from wounds, Second Manassas. F. H. Sexton, died in prison. M. Sexton, killed Gettysburg. Sexton, wounded. C. C. Snider, died from wounds. T. C.