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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 35. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 67 total hits in 39 results.
September 17th (search for this): chapter 1.68
September 16th, 1862 AD (search for this): chapter 1.68
September 17th, 1862 AD (search for this): chapter 1.68
Thirty-Second Virginia Infantry at Sharpsburg.
From the Times-dispatch, September 30 1906
Graphic story of work done on one of the bloodiest Fields—Forty-five per cent Lost—Shot at from behind a stone Fence—Samples of personal courage.
Editor Times—Dispatch:
Sir,—On December 10, 1905, you published in the Confederate Column an acount of the part the 15th Virginia Regiment took in that awful battle of Sharpsburg on September 17, 1862.
It was written by that noble and gallant gentleman, Colonel E. M. Morrison.
The hope was then expressed that some soldier who was there would do for the 32nd Virginia Regiment what Colonel Morrison had done for the 15th Virginia.
I have waited for nearly one year to see if some one more competent than I would respond, but so far I have seen no account of the 32nd Virginia, and the old regiment was there, and did her full duty, having lost 45 per cent. in killed and wounded.
If our noble Colonel Edgar Bunn Montague, Lieutenant-Co
December, 1862 AD (search for this): chapter 1.68
December 10th, 1905 AD (search for this): chapter 1.68
Thirty-Second Virginia Infantry at Sharpsburg.
From the Times-dispatch, September 30 1906
Graphic story of work done on one of the bloodiest Fields—Forty-five per cent Lost—Shot at from behind a stone Fence—Samples of personal courage.
Editor Times—Dispatch:
Sir,—On December 10, 1905, you published in the Confederate Column an acount of the part the 15th Virginia Regiment took in that awful battle of Sharpsburg on September 17, 1862.
It was written by that noble and gallant gentleman, Colonel E. M. Morrison.
The hope was then expressed that some soldier who was there would do for the 32nd Virginia Regiment what Colonel Morrison had done for the 15th Virginia.
I have waited for nearly one year to see if some one more competent than I would respond, but so far I have seen no account of the 32nd Virginia, and the old regiment was there, and did her full duty, having lost 45 per cent. in killed and wounded.
If our noble Colonel Edgar Bunn Montague, Lieutenant-C
September 30th, 1906 AD (search for this): chapter 1.68
Thirty-Second Virginia Infantry at Sharpsburg.
From the Times-dispatch, September 30 1906
Graphic story of work done on one of the bloodiest Fields—Forty-five per cent Lost—Shot at from behind a stone Fence—Samples of personal courage.
Editor Times—Dispatch:
Sir,—On December 10, 1905, you published in the Confederate Column an acount of the part the 15th Virginia Regiment took in that awful battle of Sharpsburg on September 17, 1862.
It was written by that noble and gallant gentleman, Colonel E. M. Morrison.
The hope was then expressed that some soldier who was there would do for the 32nd Virginia Regiment what Colonel Morrison had done for the 15th Virginia.
I have waited for nearly one year to see if some one more competent than I would respond, but so far I have seen no account of the 32nd Virginia, and the old regiment was there, and did her full duty, having lost 45 per cent. in killed and wounded.
If our noble Colonel Edgar Bunn Montague, Lieutenant-C
Samuel Armistead (search for this): chapter 1.68
William Barksdale (search for this): chapter 1.68
Joseph V. Bidgood (search for this): chapter 1.68
Boteler (search for this): chapter 1.68