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Lieut.-Col. Geo. D. Johnston, Deas' brigade, Polk's army corps, April 1, 1863. (942) Col. John C. Marrast in command, July 31st. (958) Lieuding regiment. Vol. XXIII, Part 2—(735) Assignment as above, April 1, 1863. (942, 959) Manigault's brigade, Withers' division, Polk's armII, Part 2—(735) Deas' brigade, Withers' division, Polk's army, April 1, 1863, Twenty-second and Twenty-fifth Alabama under Lieut.-Col. G. D. Metts, K. Vol. XXIII, Part 2—(735-959) Assignment as above, April 1, 1863, with Twenty-eighth Alabama under Col. J. C. Reid. Maj. J. N. Sain Stribling's battery at Hill's Point, Nansemond river, captured April 1 9, 1863. Vol. XIX, Part—(812) Medical director reports 4 killed, Twenty-sixth and Thirty-ninth, Col. H. D. Clayton commanding; April 1, 1863, Polk's corps, Bragg's army. (942) Under Lieut.-Col. N. N. Clemrdner's brigade, army of Tennessee. Vol. XXIII, Part 2—(735) April 1, 1863, Capt. James F. Nabers, in Deas' brigade, ar
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 28. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The correspondence of Gen. Robt. E. Lee. (search)
he gallant officer who made this compilation, Colonel William H. Palmer, formerly Chief of Staff of General A. P. Hill, has richly merited our gratitude.—Editor. Series I. Vol. XXV, part Ii—correspondence. Serial number 40. Chancellorsville. R. A. Lec, March 27th, 1863, page 687, to James A. Seddon, Secretary of War. His army not supplied with food. R. E. Lee, March 29th, 1863, page 691, to Seddon Scouts on duty ordered away by Department without his knowledge. R. E. Lee, April 1st, 1863, page 697, to General W. N. Pendleton.Tells him to have his artillery horses grazed and browsed in the absense of long forage. R. F. Lee, April 16, 1863, page 725, to President Davis.Unable to bring his army together for want of subsistence and forage. R. E. Lee, April 17, 1863, page 730, to Seddon. Army failing in health, because of insufficient rations—1/4 lb. bacon, 18 oz. flour, 10 lbs. rice, to each 100 men every third day. Will break down when called upon for exertion. R. E.<
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 30. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Treatment and exchange of prisoners. (search)
h, 1863, as follows- I have just returned from City Point, and have brought with me all my officers who have been held by the Confederates, and whom I send to City Point to-night. I have made the following declarations of exchanges: (1) All officers and enlisted men, and all persons, whatever may have been their classification or! character, who have been delivered at City Point up to the 6th of May, 1863. (2) All officers who have been captured and released on parole up to April 1st, 1863, wherever they may have been captured. Id., p. 559. See also p. 564. It seems that the Confederate Congress had refused to sustain Mr. Davis, in his suggested retaliatory measures about the treatment of officers to the extent he had recommended, and so exchanges went on with the result as just above reported, up to May 6th, 863, and with but few, if any, complaints against the Confederates of ill treatment to prisoners to that time. But how does the case stand, in this respect, a
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 31. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), History of Crenshaw Battery, (search)
862. Ballowe, R. T., private, March 14, 1862; transferred to Company A, 25th Virginia Battalion, November 25, 1863. Barbary, Perry, private, March 31, 1863. Barbary, James, private, March 31, 1863; dead. Blevens, Samuel, private, April 1, 1863. Coleman, James A., private, March 14, 1862. Caldwell, M. A., private, March 14, 1862; wounded at Gaines' Mill, June 27, 1862. Colquitt, Joseph H., private, March 14, 1862; served until surrender. Campbell, James H., private and cving, Taliaferro P., private, March 14, 1862; discharged May 18, 1864. Langford, Thomas S., private, March 14, 1862. Lynham, Edward N., private, March 14, 1862; wounded at Sharpsburg, Md., September 17, 1862. Langley, James, private, April 1, 1863. Mallory, R. H., corporal and sergeant, March 14, 1862; captured, June 28, 1863, and never exchanged. Meyer, Frederick, private, March 14, 1862. Mayo, John A., private, March 14, 1862. Mallory, Thomas J., private, March 14, 1862.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 34. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.33 (search)
spring he had a very respectable nucleus of a regiment of mounted men. Spats in Cold weather. As the long, cold winter wore away, despite the snow and cold there were occasional spats between the outposts, in which the Confederates fully held their own, and notably on one occasion, when a large raiding party came from Beverley to capture General Fontaine's force, the result of which was to leave fully one-third of their number. One dark, rainy night, at my father's, about the 1st of April, 1863, from the noise we were apprised that some mounted men were approaching the house. On listening I heard the click of a saber. The first thought was that it was the Yankee cavalry, We fixed to defend ourselves as quickly as possible, but instead of shooting the strangers began to halloo, and then we knew that they were not Yankees, and when they dismounted and came into the house it proved to be Colonel William L. Jackson, Major William P. Thompson and their colored servant man. This
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 35. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The Eleventh Kentucky Cavalry, C. S. A. From the Lexington, Ky. Herald, April 21, 1907. (search)
ejoined the regiment at Monticello, in Wayne County. At this time and place Colonel Chenault mustered into his regiment a company of men who had been recruited for it during the time it had been in Clinton and Wayne Counties. On March 19 Major McCreary crossed the Cumberland River in a horse-trough, with a few men, and marched two miles through the rain to capture a Federal picket. He took two men, and lost one of his own. After taking station in Kentucky on January 22, and up to April 1, 1863, a period of about sixty days, the regiment lost seventeen men by brain fever, among them Captain Willis F. Spahr and Lieutenant Charles H. Covington. In this disease of brain fever, the men were suddenly seized with intolerable pains in the back of the head; and, after suffering intensely for a few hours, they invariably died. A case of recovery from it was unknown. About this time General Pegram made an unsuccessful raid into Central Kentucky, going as far as Danville. He was bad
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 35. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Roster of the companies. (search)
me fifteen or twenty names short: Captain—Thomas Bronston Collins, wounded at Greasy Creek, Ky., May 9, 1863, escaped with Colonel A. R. Johnson at Buffington Island, Ohio, by swimming the Ohio river, afterwards went to Canada in the secret service of the Confederacy, and was one of the twenty Confederate soldiers who made the celebrated Bank Raid at St. Albans, Vt. First Lieutenant, J. F. Oldham; second lieutenants, R. J. Parks, C. H. Covington, died of brain fever at Albany, Ky., April 1, 1863; James H. Trevis. Sergeants—Ordnance, Joseph Collins; first, James Trevis, second, James Caldwell; third, Thomas Dejarnett; fourth, W. B. Benton; fifth, J. K. Sams. Corporals—First, J. T. Jones; second, R. Caldwell; third, A. G. Fife; fourth, Robert Miller. Farriers—James Miller, Thomas Oldham. Privates—John Asbell, John Benton, died at Monticello, Ky., March 25, 1863, of brain fever; Van Buren Benton, died in Camp Douglas, March 14, 1864, of smallpox; T. C. Broaddus, Geo
the horses, asses, cattle, sheep, and swine; and, also, one fifth of the profits made in the preceding calendar year by the feeding of swine, sheep, cattle, or mules; also, one fifth of each person's yearly income for the preceding calendar year, from all sources whatever, except from the sources hereinbefore described, and except from the interest on Confederate bonds, certificates, or Treasury notes: Provided, That said tax so levied and assessed, shall be due and payable on the first day of April, 1863; Provided further, That foreigners, resident within the Confederate States, shall not be required to pay, except from the aforesaid articles produced by, or for them, or from incomes or profits derived from business conducted by them within those State; nor shall any tax be levied upon the products of residents, where the total value of such products, during said year, is less than five hundred dollars, nor shall any tax be levied upon the income of residents, where the total value
ul efforts to plunder and cheat their own Government. The bill, Mr. Chairman, as a tax hill, is, in our legislation, somewhat novel in its character. It proposes simply and purely to levy an income tax a tax upon all the principal productions of the soil for the present year, and upon the income for the year from all sources, of every citizen of the Confederate States, private and public corporation, association or partnership, to the extent of one fifth part — to be paid by the 1st of April, 1863. There is a provision, however, which exempts from the payment of the tax all persons whose productions and incomes shall not amount to five hundred dollars, and an exception as to income from Confederate bonds and stocks. The Chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, in his opening address, has given notice to the House of his intention to offer an amendment to increase this exemption from five hundred to a thousand dollars. Mr. Lyon said he would support this amendment, for the r
rom and after the passage of this act. 5. From and after the transfer of the said troops, as provided for in the second section of this act, no claim shall be allowed for the payment of the officers and troops or otherwise, on account of said State troops, except in discharge of liabilities incurred prior thereto. 6. Such portion of said forces, including commissioned, non-commissioned officers and privates, as shall not be organized and transferred before the first day of April, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, according to the provisions of this act, shall receive no pay, clothing, rations, or other allowances for services thereafter. 7. This act shall be in force from its passage, and all acts and parts of acts inconsistent therewith are hereby repealed. On motion of Mr. Tomlin, the Committee on Courts were instructed to inquire into the expediency of requiring all railroad companies to receive matter for transportation by weight. Mr. Anderson, from the Commi