Remarks of
Captain
John
Lamb
on
March
24
,
1899
, at
Richmond, Virginia
, in the
Hall
of
R.
E.
Lee
Camp,
no. 1
, C. V. In accepting, on behalf of the
Camp
, the portrait of
General
Thomas
T.
Munford
,
C. S. Cavalry
.
The
Second Manassas
campaign.
The
Maryland campaign
.
From the
Valley
to
Fredericksburg
.
Reorganization of the
Cavalry
.
From
Fredericksburg
,
1862
, to the end of the
Gettysburg campaign
,
July
31
,
1863
.
The Wilderness campaign.
The
Valley
campaign.
The causes of the war [from the
Sunday News
,
Charleston, S. C.
,
November
28
,
1897
.]
An able paper read by
Julian
L.
Wells
before
Camp Moultrie
, sons of Confederate Veterans,
page 1
page 2
page 3
page 4
page 5
page 6
page 7
page 8
page 9
page 10
page 11
page 12
page 13
page 14
A political bargain.
page 15
The
assumption bill.
Liberal construction.
page 16
State rights declared.
page 17
Resistance to the embargo.
page 18
page 19
The war of
1812
.
page 20
page 21
State rights in
New England
.
New England
's
Treason
in
1809
.
page 22
New England
's spirit.
page 23
The
battle of New Orleans
.
page 24
Secession in
1812
-
15
.
page 25
page 26
The Missouri Compromise.
page 27
Slavery Constitutional.
page 28
Calhoun
's bill of Wrongs.
page 29
Webster
for secession.
Hatred of the
South
.
page 30
Nullification.
page 31
The Dred Scott Decision.
Buchanan
against force.
page 32
chapter 1.10
The famous
Pickett
charge
page 33
page 34
Seminary Ridge
.
page 35
page 36
The
color guard
.
After the battle.
page 37
Lee
's words.
page 38
Those present.
Officers killed and died from wounds.
Non-commissioned officers and
Privates
.
page 39
page 40
General remarks
.
Joseph
Wheeler
.
Interesting incidents in the journey southward of
President
Davis
.
page 41
[Copy.]
page 42
chapter 1.12
Arms issued between
Oct.
1
,
1859
, and
Oct.
1
,
1863
.
page 43
page 44
Remaining on hand in the
Virginia armory
on the
1st
October
,
1863
.
page 45
chapter 1.13
With his reply.
page 46
page 47
Northern Army.
Mr.
Lee
's reply to his critics.
page 48
page 49
page 50
Parole list of Engineer troops,
Army of Northern Virginia
, surrendered at
Appomattox C. H.
,
April
9th
,
1865
.
Field and staff.
page 51
Non-commissioned staff.
First Regiment
.
Company
a
.
page 52
Company
B
.
Company
C
.
Company
D
.
page 53
Company
E
.
Company
F
.
Company
G
.
page 54
Company
H
.
Company
I
Company
K
.
Second Regiment
.
Company
G
.
Company
H
.
page 55
section c.1.14.51
page 56
Company
a
Company
B
Company
C
.
Company
D
.
Company
E
.
Company
F
.
Company
G
.
Company
H
Company
I
.
page 57
Casualties
Second Regiment
.
Company
H
.
Company
G
.
Total casualties.
chapter 1.15
Desertion of
Lieutenant
D.
W.
Glenney
,
U. S. N.
, in
1863
.
page 58
page 59
page 60
page 61
page 62
page 63
page 64
page 65
page 66
Enclosure.
page 67
chapter 1.16
Bridges that were burned.
page 68
page 69
page 70
page 71
page 72
chapter 1.17
chapter 1.18
Pope
's retreat to the
Capitol
.
page 73
page 74
page 75
page 76
page 77
page 78
page 79
page 80
page 81
page 82
page 83
page 84
page 85
page 86
page 87
page 88
Battle begins.
The figures of losses.
chapter 1.19
Mrs.
Gordon
on the firing line.
page 89
page 90
page 91
page 92
page 93
chapter 1.20
Why
John
Wilkes
Booth
shot
Lincoln
.
chapter 1.22
Mr.
John
Witherspoon
Dubose
Reviews
the failure of Confederate diplomacy.
page 94
page 95
page 96
page 97
page 98
page 99
page 100
page 101
page 102
page 103
Four
Ememies of the
South
.
The
Queen
follows
Albert
's prejudices.
page 104
The Tories were with us.
page 105
The
Rhett
scheme.
page 106
Calhoun
trusted
Davis
.
page 107
Rhett
,
Yancey
and
Wigfall
.
page 108
Yancey
's fruitless mission.
Mason
and
Slidell
.
page 109
Tories Welcomed
Mason
.
The blockade inefficient.
page 110
Slidell
and
Napoleon
.
page 111
The blockade twice broken.
Pressing need for firearms.
page 112
Cotton obligations.
page 113
Two hundred and fifty thousand
Union
Hessians.
The South Borrows
$15,000,000
.
page 114
Private
Blockaders
.
page 115
Gettysburg
and
Vicksburg
.
Other Confederate agents.
page 116
A midnight charge [from the times-dispatch,
May
16
,
1904
.]
He proposed to advance on the enemy's Camp at
Yellow Tavern
.
page 117
page 118
page 119
page 120
page 121
The
battle of Shiloh
[from the New Orleans, la,
Picayune
,
Sept.
,
25
,
1904
.]
Preliminaries to the battle.
page 122
page 123
page 124
page 125
page 126
page 127
page 128
page 129
The battle.
page 130
The Shiloh National military
Park
.
page 131
page 132
page 133
The
National cemetery
.
Presentation of the portrait of
Lieut.-General
Wade
Hampton
,
C. S. Cavalry
, [from the times-dispatch,
September
16
,
1904
.]
Addresses of
Colonel
W.
W.
Finney
and
Ex-Governor
Charles
T.
O'Ferrall
.
page 134
page 135
The presentation address.
page 136
page 137
page 138
page 139
page 140
Colonel
O'Ferrall
accepting.
page 141
Without a peer.
page 142
General
Eppa
Hunton
at the
battle of Bull Run
,
July
21
,
1861
.
Southern women in the
Civil
war. [from the
New Orleans, la.
,
Picayune
,
June
12
,
1904
.]
What they did for wounded and suffering soldiers.
page 143
page 144
page 145
page 146
page 147
page 148
page 149
page 150
chapter 1.28
A life filled with noble deeds and faithful service.
page 151
page 152
page 153
page 154
page 155
page 156
chapter 1.29
Confederate Naval Cadets.
page 157
page 158
page 159
The Confederate Treasury.
page 160
The coin.
page 161
page 162
Biographical.
page 163
chapter 1.30
Historical fact vs. Fiction.
page 164
page 165
page 166
page 167
page 168
General
Hampton
.
Midnight conference.
Vance
's anger.
chapter 1.31
Meetings with him in
London
in
1873
—his Unfailing kindness to
Americans
.
page 169
page 170
page 171
page 172
page 173
chapter 1.32
The original Rebel yell.
page 174
page 175
The Pulaski Guards.
Address of
General
Stephen
D.
Lee
, [from the
Richmond, Va.
, News-leader,
June
14
,
1934
.]
Tennessee
gave
115,000
.
page 176
page 177
page 178
page 179
page 180
Prosperity is assured.
page 181
Revelation to the world.
Their last Commission.
page 182
The
battle of Gettysburg
, [from the times-dispatch,
April
10
,
1904
.]
Accounts of
Colonel
Rawley
Martin
and
Captain
John
Holmes
Smith
.
page 183
page 184
Colonel
Rawley
Martin
's account.
page 185
page 186
page 187
page 188
page 189
Their nerve.
The alignment.
A solemn moment.
The advance.
The critical moment.
Where was
Pickett
.
Instances of courage.
After the charge.
Captain
John
Holmes
Smith
's account.
Signal guns.
page 190
Longstreet
's presence.
page 191
Up the
Hill
.
At the works.
page 192
Big foot
Walker
.
Wait for
twenty minutes
.
page 193
Getting away.
page 194
Wounded.
Personal.
page 195
Confederate States
' flags.
(from our regular Correspondent.)
page 196
page 197
page 198
page 199
page 200
Virginia
flags.
chapter 1.38
section c.1.38.137
page 201
page 202
page 203
page 204
page 205
page 206
page 207
page 208
page 209
page 210
General
Lee
in front of
Pegram
's Brigade
.
Steady, front!
Come back
General
Lee
.
Cease firing.
Ammunition running low—some University Youths take a hand.
An informal truce and Trading with the enemy.
A Glimpse of
General
Ewell
.
Running into the enemy.
The Sulphurous Canopy.
Account of
Dr.
William
W.
Smith
.
page 211
page 212
page 213
page 214
Waiting for the charge.
Trouble ahead.
General
R.
E.
Lee
appears.
Lee
to the rear.
Lees
eyes upon them.
Incidents.
page 215
chapter 1.39
Steel breast plates
chapter 1.41
The
Sixth Corps
remote from the. Early morning attack.
page 216
page 217
page 218
page 219
page 220
page 221
page 222
page 223
page 224
page 225
page 226
page 227
page 228
page 229
page 230
How Appearances Deceived General
Gordon
.
page 231
What the casualty lists indicate.
The
Gap
in the
Confederate
line.
page 232
The Federal Cavalry and the panic in
Gordon
's Division
.
page 233
The great Cavalry force of
Sheridan
the obstacle to our continuous advance.
page 234
Lomaxs
Cavalry Division
about; and
Custer
's and
Merritt
's divisions
present advance.
page 235
page 236
The mistake of
General
Gordon
in moving his Division to the left of the line.
There is the man entitled to your cheers.
page 237
page 238
General
Lee
's high estimate of
General
Early
.
page 239
The
Fredericksburg artillery
,
Captain
Edward
S.
Marye
, [from the times-dispatch,
January
8
,
1905
.]
First
appearance of the
Confederate States
flag with
White
field.
page 240
page 241
page 242
The
ironclad
ram
Virginia
-
Confederate States
Navy, [from the
Richmond, Va.
, News-leader,
April
1
,
1904
.]
Story of her launching and Accomplishments.
page 243
page 244
page 245
page 246
page 247
page 248
page 249
Story of the fight.
Determined to destroy her.
Believed they were traitors.
chapter 1.44
chapter 1.45
Memorial day address by
Major
Graham
Daves
, at
Raleigh, N. C.
,
May
10
,
1901
.
page 250
page 251
page 252
page 253
page 254
page 255
page 256
page 257
page 258
page 259
page 260
page 261
page 262
page 263
page 264
page 265
page 266
page 267
page 268
page 269
page 270
page 271
page 272
page 273
page 274
page 275
page 276
page 277
The address.
page 278
page 279
page 280
page 281
page 282
page 283
page 284
page 285
page 286
page 287
page 288
page 289
page 290
page 291
page 292
page 293
page 294
page 295
page 296
page 297
page 298
The election of
Lincoln
.
Forts held by Federal troops.
Governor
of
North Carolina
.
chapter 1.46
Sherman
's expedition from
Vicksburg
to
Meridian
,
Feb.
3
, to
March
6
,
1864
[from the
New Orleans, la.
,
Picayune
,
July
27
,
1904
.]
The Shenandoah
.
Captain
James
I.
Waddell
.
page 299
page 300
page 301
page 302
page 303
page 304
page 305
page 306
page 307
page 308
page 309
page 310
page 311
page 312
page 313
page 314
page 315
page 316
page 317
page 318
page 319
page 320
Purchase of the
sea
King
.
page 321
Wanted Dare-Devils.
page 322
Brave man.
page 323
Do or die.
page 324
News of the surrender.
page 325
Without a government.
page 326
The
ship
Disarmed
.
Sailed for
England
.
page 327
page 328
Safe in the
Mersey
.
chapter 1.49
chapter 1.50
Prevarication of
General
Miles
.
page 329
page 330
page 331
page 332
page 333
page 334
page 335
page 336
page 337
page 338
Other
prisoners
depart.
page 339
Miles on the scene.
Unnecessary sentinels.
page 340
For humiliation only.
page 341
Broke his health.
Mr.
Davis
's statement.
page 342
Miles's Pitiful plea.
The press to the rescue.
page 343
Military orders Condemned.
page 344
A case in Point.
Congress appealed to.
page 345
The parole.
Miles' reward.
page 346
chapter 1.51
The achievements of the
Virginia
.
page 347
page 348
page 349
page 350
page 351
page 352
page 353
page 354
chapter 1.52
Lenient terms of
General
Grant
.
page 355
page 356
page 357
page 358
page 359
page 360
page 361
page 362
page 363
chapter 1.53
Defence of
President
Davis
.
page 364
page 365
page 366
page 367
page 368
page 369
page 370
page 371
The lost chapter in Confederate history.
Prison life of
Jefferson
Davis
.
Index.