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Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 7. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones).
Found 16,728 total hits in 4,301 results.
July (search for this): chapter 1.1
1865 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
1862 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
Jackson's Valley campaign of 1862.
Address delivered before the Virginia division, A. N. V., October 31st, 1878, by Colonel William Allan, late Chief of Ordnance, Second ( Stonewall ) corps, A. N. V.
[Published by unanimous request of the association].
After the disastrous termination of Braddock's campaign against Fo enough for the recovery of West Virginia, important advantages seemed within reach.
The forces and positions of the enemy opposed to Jackson at the beginning of 1862 were as follows: General Banks, commanding the Fifth corps of McClellan's army, with headquarters at Frederick, Maryland, had 16,000 effective men,
General Bank ely granted.
The Confederate force was in this way reduced to about four thousand men, exclusive of militia.
With the 1st of March opened the great campaign of 1862 in Virginia, in which Jackson was to bear so prominent a part.
In other sections of the Confederacy fortune favored the Federal cause, and the Union armies were o
1756 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
Jackson's Valley campaign of 1862.
Address delivered before the Virginia division, A. N. V., October 31st, 1878, by Colonel William Allan, late Chief of Ordnance, Second ( Stonewall ) corps, A. N. V.
[Published by unanimous request of the association].
After the disastrous termination of Braddock's campaign against Fort Duquesne, in the summer of 1756, Colonel George Washington, to whom was entrusted the duty of protecting the Alleghany frontier of Virginia from the French and Indians, established himself at Winchester, in the lower Shenandoah Valley, as the point from which he could best protect the district assigned to him. Here he subsequently built Fort Loudoun, and made it the base of his operations.
A grass-grown mound, marking the site of one of the bastions of the old fort, and Loudoun street, the name of the principal thoroughfare of the town, remain to recall an important chapter in Colonial history.
It was this old town that Major-General T. J. Jackson enter
December (search for this): chapter 1.1
November (search for this): chapter 1.1
April (search for this): chapter 1.1
24 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
June (search for this): chapter 1.1
Jefferson Davis (search for this): chapter 1.1