[21]
Fifteenth Virginia Infantry on the afternoon of the 16th of June, 1864, when the regiment, deployed as skirmishers, so gallantly drove the enemy out of and held the works on the Howlett-house line, and a statement of mine, in a previous newspaper article, giving my recollection of the affair, having been declared erroneous, I beg leave to submit the annexed extracts from letters from some of the participants in the skirmish to sustain my statement—namely, that I joined the skirmish line a few minutes before the advance, went with it through the woods and open field and into the works, performing all the duties of a commanding officer possible under the circumstances.
I had cause to be proud of my little regiment.
It was one of the best drilled and best disciplined in the Army of Northern Virginia, and on this particular afternoon got in some very pretty work of its own volition, notwithstanding the fact that it seems to have had three commanding officers, of whom that good, gallant, modest gentleman, J. D. Waid, captain of Company I, in all fairness deserves the greatest credit.
He deployed the regiment most admirably, made all the dispositions for the attack, and in good faith, ignorant of the presence of any commanding officer, conducted the charge, or, at least, so much of it as he could superintend and control, to a successful issue.
All honor to the gallant ‘Old Boy,’ and I have no doubt the result would have been the same had neither General Corse nor Colonel Morrison been present, for it was not the first time he had heard the singing of those ‘things’ (minies) which, innocently, he mistook for ‘bees’ at Malvern Hill.
The following extracts from letters of different persons engaged in the affair show how treacherous is the memory of man:
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chapter:
chapter 1.1
Arkansas
Post.
United Confederate
Veterans
.
Third Battery
of
Maryland Artillery
, C. S. A. Its history in brief, and its commanders.
Capture and Reoccupation of the
Howlett House
in
1864
.
chapter 1.6
The Confederate dead in
Stonewall Cemetery
,
Winchester, Va.
Memorial services,
June
6
,
1894
.
Company a,
Fifteenth Virginia Infantry
,
Confederate States
Army.
chapter 1.9chapter 1.10chapter 1.11
The
Bond
of heroism.
chapter 1.13chapter 1.14
How the
Confederacy
changed naval Warfare.
Address of
honorable
R.
T.
Bennett
, late
Colonel
13th North Carolina Infantry
, C. S. A.
chapter 1.17chapter 1.18chapter 1.19chapter 1.20
The prison experience of a Confederate soldier.
chapter 1.22chapter 1.23chapter 1.24
General
Hospitals
and Medical officers in charge, attached to the
Army of Tennessee
,
July
,
1864
.
chapter 1.26chapter 1.27chapter 1.28
A National Repository for the
Records
and Relics of the
Southern
cause, proposed by
Charles
Broadway
Rouss
, of New York.
Index.
section:
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Table of Contents:


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