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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 58 total hits in 19 results.
July 2nd, 1863 AD (search for this): chapter 1.20
Hampton's duel on the battle-field at Gettysburg with a Federal soldier.
[from the Atlanta, Ga., Constitution, June 1, 1894.]
In the breaking dawn of July 2, 1863, 4,000 cavalrymen sat in silence upon their horses on the extreme left of the Confederate battle line at Gettysburg.
The field in their front was curtained with a heavy mist, as if kindly nature had sought to veil the appalling traces of the tragedy there enacted.
It had been sown with shot and bladed thick with steel on the previous afternoon, and the harvest of death was ungathered, lying in winnows along the ghastly furrows that had been cut by the red ploughshare of war. The infantry line stretched far away to the right, and their gray uniforms, blending with the hazy atmosphere, gave them a very shadowy appearance.
Many of the regiments were indeed but shadows of what they had been at noon on the preceding day. Some were in line without even one commissioned officer, and others with but the normal strength
September 14th, 1893 AD (search for this): chapter 1.20
June 1st, 1894 AD (search for this): chapter 1.20
Hampton's duel on the battle-field at Gettysburg with a Federal soldier.
[from the Atlanta, Ga., Constitution, June 1, 1894.]
In the breaking dawn of July 2, 1863, 4,000 cavalrymen sat in silence upon their horses on the extreme left of the Confederate battle line at Gettysburg.
The field in their front was curtained with a heavy mist, as if kindly nature had sought to veil the appalling traces of the tragedy there enacted.
It had been sown with shot and bladed thick with steel on the previous afternoon, and the harvest of death was ungathered, lying in winnows along the ghastly furrows that had been cut by the red ploughshare of war. The infantry line stretched far away to the right, and their gray uniforms, blending with the hazy atmosphere, gave them a very shadowy appearance.
Many of the regiments were indeed but shadows of what they had been at noon on the preceding day. Some were in line without even one commissioned officer, and others with but the normal strength
H. C. Albright (search for this): chapter 1.20
Henry K. Burgwyn (search for this): chapter 1.20
Zzzcavalry Commander (search for this): chapter 1.20
Frank Hampton (search for this): chapter 1.20
Wade Hampton (search for this): chapter 1.20
[6 more...]
T. J. Mackey (search for this): chapter 1.20
Frank Pearson (search for this): chapter 1.20