Include the correspondence of Philip St. George Cooke with Edward Bates ([1793#8211;1869] concerning Cooke's assignment to command regular troops in the U.S. Army in 1861), William H. Collins (regarding Cooke's wartime reputation as presented in articles published by Century Magazine>), Rachel Wilt (Herzog) Cooke (concerning Philip Cooke's criticism of the leadership and strategy of the U.S. Army of the Potomac during the Seven Days' Battles), L. C. Dumas (regarding Cooke's complaint concerning the inclusion in a volume of the Army Official Records of a letter written during the Civil War by Fitz-John Porter to George Brinton McClellan recommending Cooke's removal from command of the cavalry of the U.S. Army of the Potomac), Abraham Lincoln (concerning a request by Cooke in November 1861 for an appointment to brigadier general in the U.S. Army), Wesley Merritt (regarding Cooke's abilities as a cavalry commander), and William Tecumseh Sherman (concerning Sherman's cavalry tactics during the Atlanta Campaign and Sherman's response to a postwar article written about the battle of Shiloh) (Section 1). Mss2C8297b.This small collection includes a letter, 16 October 1862, from Edward Denton Cottrell (18421878) of the 10th Virginia Cavalry Regiment offering a detailed description of his participation in J. E. B. Stuart's raid on Chambersburg, Pa. Cox, E. L., Diary, 18641865. Noyes served in this capacity following his capture at the first battle of Bull Run. Also in the Subsistence Department records are provision returns for the Fluvanna, Nelson, Powhatan, and Staunton Hill artillery batteries. Mss12:1862 October 31:7 oversize.A muster roll, 31 October31 December 1862, of Company H of the 13th Virginia Cavalry Regiment. Also included is a commission, 21 September 1861, of Chamberlayne as a captain in the 4th Cavalry Regiment of Virginia Militia (section 4); and letters, 1861, written to Garland Hanes by his son Henry C. Hanes ([d. 1861] of the 4th Virginia Cavalry, concerning a cavalry skirmish at Fairfax Court House on 1 June and the death in that skirmish of John Quincy Marr [18251861]) and John Grattan Cabell ([18171896] describing the death of Henry C. Hanes in a cavalry skirmish in late June) (Section 10). W. F. Baxter of Company A of the 35th Battalion Virginia Cavalry for temporary duty with the War Department. Confederate States Army, 21st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1861. 1911 by Catlett Fitzhugh Conway (18401929) of Green County. Contract: Amentum: February 2020 - July 2021. Commander (s . 111 items. Mss4C7608a.This collection contains receipts, certificates, and warrants for payment from the Confederate Treasury Department. Mss1C6264a.This collection contains the papers of the Cloyd family of Montgomery and Pulaski counties. 922 items. 6 items. Militia.". 1st Battalion Mississippi Marine Brigade Cavalry. 43 items. Correspondents in the letterbook include John Stevens Bowen (18301863), Francis Marion Cockrell (18341915), and Martin Edwin Green (18151863). 1890. However if you are unsure which company your ancestor was in, try the company recruited in his county first. Mss1C3194a.Contains the papers of the Cazenove and related Minor and Plummer families of Virginia. Confederate States War Department, Adjutant and Inspector General's Office, Special Orders, 1863. 36 items. Also included is a brief sketch of his service in Company A of the 10th Virginia Cavalry Regiment during the siege of Yorktown and at the battle of Williamsburg.
Vidar Hole on LinkedIn: #virginiaclass #ssn #ssn790 #highnorth # 1, 40: pt. 18270. 4th Kentucky Cavalry, Captain William D. Ray. Mss1C6771a.This collection contains the papers of Beverly Mosby Coleman (18991993) mostly concerning his grandfather, John S. Mosby (18331916). 1862. Lieutenant Colonel Walker was promoted to colonel . Jan 2016 - Jul 20215 years 7 months. 1 item. Photocopies. Mss2C3627b.This collection contains letters, 18621864, from Chester F. Channell (18411864) of Company D of the 24th Iowa Infantry Regiment of the Union army, Department of the Gulf, to his family concerning camp life in Arkansas and in Iowa. 1 item. The battalion along with the 2ndInfantry Division reduced to zero. 1st Regulars 5th7th9th 21st 22nd 23rd 26th 30th Sharpshooter 45th, 1st 2nd3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th, 20th 21st 22nd 23rd 24th 25th 26th, 1st 2nd 8th 14th 15th 17th 27th, Albemarle Alexandria Alleghany Amherst, Amherst-Nelson Ashby Horse Artillery Ashland, Bath Bedford Bowyers-Johnsons Caroline, Charlottesville Horse Artillery Chesterfield, Crenshaw Dabney Danville Danville Ringold, DixieFauquier 1st Fluvanna 2nd Fluvanna, Giles Goochland Goochland Turner Halifax, King William Lewisburg Long Island Loudoun, Lowreys Louisa Morris Lunenburg Lynchburg, Lynchburg Lee Lynchburg Beauregard Rifles, Mathews Middlesex Monroe Nelson Newtown, Norfolk Norfolk Blues Page-Shenandoah, Peninsula Petersburg Petersburg Horse Artillery, 1st Richmond Howitzers2nd Richmond Howitzers, 3rd Richmond Howitzers Richmond Johnson, Salem Flying Artillery Stafford Staunton, Staunton Horse Artillery Stuart Horse Artillery, 2nd Stuart Horse Artillery Surry Turner. 14, 12 March 1865, issued to Zachary Taylor Chenoweth (18491893) of the 18th Virginia Cavalry Regiment granting him a furlough. Mss4C7607a2.A blank commission, 1861, from President Jefferson Davis authorizing privateering activities. Beauregard's address is printed in the Official Records, ser.
13th Virginia Infantry Regiment - Wikipedia Infantry Regiment. 1 volume. 8 Ancestors. Section 1 consists of letters, 18611865, from Carter to his wife, Susan Elizabeth (Roy) Carter (18331902), in which he offers interesting commentary on life in the Confederate army throughout the war, descriptions of military operations (including the battles of Malvern Hill, South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania Court House, and Cedar Creek and the Peninsula and Gettysburg campaigns), and his candid opinions of Confederate commanders (including Pierre G. T. Beauregard, Jubal A. Mss7:3E621C6695:1.A typescript copy of an undated reminiscence, entitled "A Story of the Confederate War," by Hannah (Lide) Coker concerning the death of her son, Charles W. Coker of Company M of the 8th South Carolina Infantry Regiment, at the battle of Malvern Hill, and her experiences while nursing her son James L. Coker of Company E (2nd) of the 6th South Carolina Infantry Regiment in Confederate and Union hospitals in Tennessee following his wounding in a fight on Lookout Mountain on 28 October 1863.
Ephraim Osborne (1846-1864) - Find a Grave Memorial 13th Virginia Infantry Regiment - The Civil War in the East Commanding Officer, 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment This undated copy was made by Creed Henry Harper, a member of the unit. USA. 9 pp. 344 items. A room was added to the C.M.I. Cushwa, Daniel G., Papers, 18501891. Typescript copy. Civil War items consist of a letter, 21 June 1861, from Robert Selden Garnett to Muscoe Russell Hunter Garnett (18211864) regarding Muscoe Garnett's request to serve on his staff (folder 18); letters, 1861, to Robert S. Garnett from Michael G. Harman concerning troops, equipment, and food collected by Harman for Garnett, and from Daniel Ruggles reporting on the landing of a large Union force in Stafford County and asking for reinforcements; orders, 1861, signed by Robert S. Garnett, concerning the assignment of Confederate artillery batteries, the spending of public money, and the assignment of an agent at Suffolk to purchase supplies for newly arriving troops (folder 19); a letter, 14 August 1861, to the relatives of Robert S. Garnett from J. W. Gordon of New York describing Garnett's death (folder 20); a typescript copy of Richard Brooke Garnett's official report, 30 March 1862, of the battle of Kernstown (folder 23); letters, 1865, from Robert Mercer Taliaferro Hunter (18091887) to Andrew Johnson and William Henry Seward (18011872) concerning Hunter's request for a pardon (folder 30); and a letter, 18 July 1863, from Elliot Johnston (b. Galleries, Caf, & Store open; Library closed. Photocopy of typescript.
Confederate Military Records, 1859-1996 - Library of Virginia 1 item. Mss10: no.
Re: 6TH Battalion Res. Com. C. Virginia Confederate States Army, 24th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Petition, ca. 1st Battalion Kentucky Rifles, Captain Peter M. Everett. Conway, William Buchanan, Memoir, 1908. 1 item. In great detail, Cox records incidents of his daily life in prison including observations on the weather, the exchange and release of fellow prisoners, the presence of disease, and news concerning the war in Virginia. 47 items. Clark, Meriwether Lewis, Letter, 1865. Confederate States Commissioner, Agreement, 1861. The roll includes names, physical descriptions, occupations, and enlistment information for the members of Company I. Confederate States Army, 13th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1862.
War of the Rebellion: Serial 078 Page 0741 Chapter LI - eHISTORY Muster Out: Disbanded on April 12, 1865.3, Commander(s): In 1999, after completion of the Basic Officers Course and the Infantry Officers Course . Note: Known as the 13th Virginia Reserves Battalion until February 27, 1865. Carter, Thomas Henry, Correspondence, 1898. Camp Chase papers, 18621863. Mss12:1863 December 7:1.General Order No. Carrington Family Papers, 17441940. Letters, 18621863, to family from George Coiner's brother, Martin Diller Coiner (18431863) of the 52d Virginia Infantry Regiment, offer descriptions of an execution of Confederate deserters, of the Second Bull Run campaign (including J. E. B. Stuart's raid on Catlett's Station), of camp life in February 1863, of the battle of Chancellorsville, and of the march into Pennsylvania in June 1863 (section 3).
Company - Fold3 Mss12:1862 March 13:1.General Order No. Officially designated as the 11th Battalion Virginia Reserves on February 27, 1865. Confederate States Army, District of the Gulf, Order, 1865. Carter, Thomas Henry, Papers, 18611896. The unit sustained heavy losses at the Battle of Cedar Creek and surrendered at Appomattox Court House with 10 officers and 52 men. Civil War materials include a letter, 19 September 1863, from Charles Landon Carter Minor (18351903), while a member of Samuel Jones's staff, to Launcelot Minor Blackford (18371914) concerning Minor's hatred of Yankees, military operations near Abingdon, his fears for the safety of his wife (who is with him in the field), and his experiences while on a raid at Wytheville (section 3), and a letter, 28 April 1862, from Robert E. Lee to Charles Minor's wife, Frances Ansley (Cazenove) Minor (18391884), regarding her husband's efforts to gain appointment as a staff officer (section 4). 2 pp. 1 item. Virginia Heavy Artillery. Cocke Family Papers, 17941981. Redesignated the 6th Virginia Reserves Battalion on February 27, 1865. Mss5:1C7745:119. Civil War materials consist primarily of letters from John Hampden Chamberlayne (18381882) of the Purcell, Crenshaw, and Davidson Artillery batteries to his mother, Martha Burwell (Dabney) Chamberlayne (18021883), concerning Joseph E. Johnston's recuperation in Richmond following his wounding at the battle of Seven Pines, Martha Chamberlayne's experiences in the city in 1862, Ham Chamberlayne's life while a prisoner at Johnson's Island, Ohio, and Point Lookout, Md., following his capture at the battle of Gettysburg, the battle of the Wilderness, skirmishes near Hanover Junction, Meadow Bridge, and Gaines' Mill in May-June 1864, and Chamberlayne's experiences around Petersburg in the fall of 1864 (section 4). There are payrolls from April 1862 for thirty-seven Tidewater Virginia & North Carolina units. (section 27); Confederate Subsistence Department records, 18611862, consisting of correspondence, accounts, requisitions, receipts, and invoices for supplies for the Confederate Army of the Potomac (section 44); a letter, 4 January 1863, from Catharine Thom (1816?1886) to Mary Anna Claiborne discussing the damage to her Fredericksburg home and a nearby church suffered during the battle of Fredericksburg; and letters, 1863, from Mary Thom (d. 1894) to Mary Anna Claiborne concerning the fighting in the town of Fredericksburg during the battle and the use of a church as a Union hospital after the battle (section 46). Confederate States Treasury Department, Miscellaneous Papers, 1863. . Crafts, George J., Papers, 18561866. 1 item. Coke, John O., Correspondence, 18631864. 1 item. Confederate States of Army, Discharges, 1862. Entries discuss mostly family news and social events but also include brief descriptions of the atmosphere in Richmond after the fall of Fort Sumter, news of military events such as the battles of Big Bethel, Va., and Fort Donelson, Tenn., and the ongoing struggle between Union and Confederate forces in Missouri. 124 items. Mss2C4629b.This collection contains the papers of the Christian family of Richmond. Chamberlayne Family Papers, 18611957. 3. 2 items. Mss3C9154a. Included are the names, enlistment information, and pay records for each soldier. Dyers/Sifakis Compendium Info:
Virginia Regimental History Series (3 book series) Kindle Edition 2nd Battalion Kentucky Rifles, Captain John T. Williams. Civil War-related materials in the Claiborne family papers include letters, 18601863, of Judith Carter (Lewis) McGuire (17941882) to her daughter, Mary Anna (McGuire) Claiborne (18191864), describing the effect of the war on the family (section 22); letters, 1862, from Virginius Howard Claiborne (18331897) to Herbert A. Claiborne regarding Virginius's duties in the army and Confederate attacks on Baton Rouge, La. Confederate States Treasury Department, Receipts, 1864. Mss12:1861:6 oversize.A postwar muster roll for Company C of the 61st Virginia Infantry Regiment. All Rights Reserved. 1 item. The correspondence includes letters to Confederate Secretary of War James Alexander Seddon (18151880) and Adjutant and Inspector General Samuel Cooper seeking the release of Confederate prisoners incarcerated at Castle Thunder (sections 12); correspondence of John Henry Winder, commander of the Department of Henrico, regarding the disposition of individual prisoners' cases (section 3); official letters to and from Confederate officers in the Department of Henrico concerning the transfer and receipt of prisoners (sections 410); and letters from Union and Confederate prisoners kept at Belle Isle, Libby Prison, and Castle Thunder, presenting their cases and pleading for release (section 11). The collection includes a one-volume typescript copy of the three diaries. 1st Reg., Artillery. As part of its commemoration, Marine . 1 item. Mss7:1W8317:1.A photocopy of a memorial, 1908, presented by the Confederate Historical Association in Memphis, Tenn., concerning service of Frederick Wolf (18351908) in Company I of the 15th Tennessee Infantry Regiment. Mss12:1864:5.This volume, kept by Edgar Mantlebert Crutchfield (18401896), contains a roll of Company F of the 43d Virginia Cavalry Regiment and a list of uniform jackets distributed to members of the unit. 2 volumes. Clarke Family Papers, 18151938. Confederate States Army, 30th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1862. Typescript copy. The bulk of the collection consists of letters, 18611865, from Chamberlayne to family members describing, in great detail, camp life, the state of morale in the Confederate army throughout the war, and the following military engagements: the Romney, 1862 Maryland, Fredericksburg, and Petersburg campaigns and the battles of Cedar Mountain, Second Bull Run, and Chancellorsville (section 1). We are happy to exchange information with other researchers. 2nd Regiment 4th Regiment Halifax Battery Southside Battery United Artillery. Mss2En366a1.A letter, 8 August 1864, to Robert Emmett English (18461922) of the Second Auditor's Office concerning a leave of absence. Mss1C5503a.Contains primarily genealogical materials compiled by Arthur Bell Clarke (18541923) of Richmond.
U.S. Civil War Regimental Histories in the Library of Congress Confederate States Army, 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Record Book, 1864. Materials include the morning report for the unit for May 1863; an ordnance stores list, 1863, for Company A; proceedings, 1863, of a board of survey on commissary stores at Battery No. (March & April 1-2, 1865). Confederate States Army, 5th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Muster Rolls, 18611862. Mss12:1863:3.The Descriptive Roll of Company I of the 11th Va. Cavalry Regiment. B. Lyon Company, 1912. Written by William Price Palmer (18211896), the 1st Company's second commander, the summary includes descriptions of an action at Fairfax Court House and the battles of First Bull Run and Ball's Bluff. 256, 1864, detailing John T. Hicks for duty as a shoemaker (a6); an account, 1862, with Sarah Timberlake of Clarke County for two tons of hay (a7); a letterbook, 1722 November 1861, from the Confederate Engineer's Office concerning Joseph E. Johnston, John Clifford Pemberton, and African-American laborers in the Confederate army (a8); a circular, 1864, from the Department of Richmond concerning furloughs (a9); an undated draft of a resolution by the Confederate Congress announcing the defeat of Union forces and expressing appreciation to Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia (a10); and a parole, 1865, issued at Appomattox Court House to Edward Garlick Gwathmey (18391931) of the Fredericksburg Artillery (a11). Redesignated as the 6th Infantry Battalion Reserves on February 27, 1865, per S.O. Mss1C3552c. Mss1C7752a.Contains the papers of Giles Buckner Cooke (18381937), Confederate staff officer and Episcopal clergyman. Bland enlisted in the 11th Virginia Reserve Battalion at Giles Court House on 5/6/64 in Giles county, Virginia.
PDF PRIMARY SOURCES Quarterly Report of Newly - Library of Virginia 1 item. 1st Batt., Reserves. Also in the order book are equipment inventories, general orders relating to the battery, and a copy of Pierre G. T. Beauregard's farewell address to the Confederate Army of the Potomac.