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
Jefferson Davis 833 7 Browse Search
United States (United States) 442 0 Browse Search
Baltimore, Md. (Maryland, United States) 353 11 Browse Search
U. S. Grant 296 2 Browse Search
Maryland (Maryland, United States) 254 0 Browse Search
William T. Sherman 209 7 Browse Search
Robert E. Lee 160 0 Browse Search
A. Lincoln 156 0 Browse Search
Abraham Lincoln 142 0 Browse Search
C. C. Lee 140 2 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.

Found 82 total hits in 25 results.

1 2 3
Baltimore, Md., sun, December, 1901.] How General Jeb. Stuart lost his life in Recapturing a borrowed Maryland Battery. Shortly after midnight I received the following from General Jeb Stuart, who was then at Taylorsville, a mile and a half disock A. M., 1864. To Colonel B. T. Johnson: Colonel,—General Stuart directs me to say that he would be glad to obtain one is interposed between the enemy and Hanover Junction. General Stuart will return the battery as soon as the present emergenhey had orders to start at 12 o'clock to-night (over). General Stuart is now moving down the Telegraph road, and desires youing this request I rode at once to Taylorsville to see General Stuart. He was lying flat on his back, his head on a saddle, army in guns, horses, harness, and men, and that I wanted Stuart to be very careful of the one I sent him, which was the pis. During the morning I received the following from General Stuart, which was, I think, the last word he ever wrote, for
d down the Pamunkey to New Kent. Shortly after midnight I received the following from General Jeb Stuart, who was then at Taylorsville, a mile and a half distant, with the cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia: Military dispatch. May 11th, 2:30 o'clock A. M., 1864. To Colonel B. T. Johnson: Colonel,—General Stuart directs me to say that he would be glad to obtain one of your light batteries to assist him to-day, as he is short of artillery. Our cavalry is interposed between ridges. During the morning I received the following from General Stuart, which was, I think, the last word he ever wrote, for he was killed that afternoon at Yellow Tavern in a charge to protect my battery: headquarters Sixth cavalry corps, May 11, 9 A. M. Colonel,—As the enemy may double back from this direction to Verdon, as above, you will oblige me very much by so arranging it as that I may get the information in time to turn upon them before they get away. Be sure to barricade the
December, 1901 AD (search for this): chapter 1.25
A striking War incident. [from the Baltimore, Md., sun, December, 1901.] How General Jeb. Stuart lost his life in Recapturing a borrowed Maryland Battery. General Bradley T. Johnson, the distinguished Maryland exCon-federate, writes to the Sun as follows, giving some hitherto unpublished military dispatches connected with the operations of Maryland troops in the battles around Richmond in 1864: Among your collection of unpublished military dispatches you may include these two, which have never been printed. In October, 1863, I was ordered by General Lee to assemble the Maryland Line, then in separate commands in the Army of Northern Virginia—except the Latrobe Battery, which was with the Army of the Southwest —at Hanover Junction, to guard the five long, high bridges there, over the North Anna, the South Anna, and the Middle river, all within a mile or two of each other, and which were vital for Lee's communication with the Valley, with Richmond, and thence the whole Sou
October, 1863 AD (search for this): chapter 1.25
Baltimore, Md., sun, December, 1901.] How General Jeb. Stuart lost his life in Recapturing a borrowed Maryland Battery. General Bradley T. Johnson, the distinguished Maryland exCon-federate, writes to the Sun as follows, giving some hitherto unpublished military dispatches connected with the operations of Maryland troops in the battles around Richmond in 1864: Among your collection of unpublished military dispatches you may include these two, which have never been printed. In October, 1863, I was ordered by General Lee to assemble the Maryland Line, then in separate commands in the Army of Northern Virginia—except the Latrobe Battery, which was with the Army of the Southwest —at Hanover Junction, to guard the five long, high bridges there, over the North Anna, the South Anna, and the Middle river, all within a mile or two of each other, and which were vital for Lee's communication with the Valley, with Richmond, and thence the whole South. I there collected the Second M
attery. General Bradley T. Johnson, the distinguished Maryland exCon-federate, writes to the Sun as follows, giving some hitherto unpublished military dispatches connected with the operations of Maryland troops in the battles around Richmond in 1864: Among your collection of unpublished military dispatches you may include these two, which have never been printed. In October, 1863, I was ordered by General Lee to assemble the Maryland Line, then in separate commands in the Army of Northernent. Shortly after midnight I received the following from General Jeb Stuart, who was then at Taylorsville, a mile and a half distant, with the cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia: Military dispatch. May 11th, 2:30 o'clock A. M., 1864. To Colonel B. T. Johnson: Colonel,—General Stuart directs me to say that he would be glad to obtain one of your light batteries to assist him to-day, as he is short of artillery. Our cavalry is interposed between the enemy and Hanover Juncti
1 2 3