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). 886 items. Mss12:1864 February 28:1 oversize.A muster roll, 28 February30 April 1864, of Company A of the 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment recorded at Adam's Run, S.C. Confederate States Army, 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1864. 1 item. Commanding Officer, 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment Other correspondents in this section include Benjamin F. Butler (concerning Butler's policy toward Southern refugees, the naval blockade, and Colonel Cary's concern for his library at Hampton Academy, where he had taught before the war), daughter Elizabeth Earle "Lizzie" (Cary) Daniel (of New Kent County; letter of 9 July 1861 discusses Cary's promotion and his inability to remove his servants from Hampton), A. G. Dickinson (concerning a photograph of John B. Magruder and Magruder's service in Texas during the Civil War), Thomas Ellett (of Richmond, concerning the reinterment of Jefferson Davis), Benjamin S. Ewell (concerning the safety of Hampton), Henry Heth (of Washington, D.C., concerning his inability to ride a horse at an upcoming Confederate reunion because of illness), John Bell Hood (of New Orleans, concerning his banking work after the Civil War), George A. Magruder, Jr. (regarding a citizen's desire to reclaim slaves from Fort Monroe), John B. Magruder (concerning the Yorktown campaign), Robert Northen (of Richmond, concerning Northen's experiences in the Confederate army), Charles Broadway Rouss (concerning a reception at the Museum of the Confederacy), G. William Semple (of Richmond, concerning Semple's appointment as General Magruder's medical director), Agnes Harwood Marshall Taliaferro (of Annandale, concerning Southern women), Peyton Wise (of Richmond, concerning a Confederate veteran stranded in North Carolina with no money), and the George E. Pickett Camp of United Confederate Veterans (containing an application form and meeting information). 245 items. 36 items. Virginia Civil War Confederate Units 9th through 31st Confederate States Army, 4th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Rolls, 1863. 1 item. 11 items. Bland enlisted in the 11th Virginia Reserve Battalion at Giles Court House on 5/6/64 in Giles county, Virginia. Confederate States War Department, Surgeon General's Department, Muster Roll, 1863. 1st Battalion Kentucky Rifles, Captain Peter M. Everett. Belsches was appointed major. Chamberlayne Family Papers, 18211938. Learn about current events in historical perspective on our Origins site. 1 volume. 4 items. Mss12:1863:3.The Descriptive Roll of Company I of the 11th Va. Cavalry Regiment. Signed by T. G. Carmichael, surgeon in charge of the hospital. Mss2C6663b.This collection consists primarily of the wartime letters of two members of the Coiner family of Virginia. Photocopy of typescript. 1 item. 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). Cottrell Family Papers, 18061862. 5 items. The letters, written by soldiers captured at the battles of Mill Springs, Fort Donelson, Shiloh, and New Madrid (Island No. Microfilm reel C584.This collection consists of correspondence, 18621863, of Confederate prisoners of war incarcerated at Camp Chase near Columbus, Ohio. Isaac Bland 11th Virginia Battalion Reserves | Researching Your Civil Confederate States Army, Quartermaster's Department, Account, 1863. Confederate States Army, Department of Henrico, papers, 18611864. Traditionally, the third fold in some flag-folding ceremonies honors and remembers veterans for their sacrifice in defending their country and promoting peace in the world. (Letter of 10 October 1861 includes a message from their father, Ezra Cadwallader.). Serial 078 Page 0742 KY., SW. VA., TENN., MISS., ALA., AND N. GA. Chapter LI. 637 items. Mss12:1862 January 1:1.A copy of a handwritten certificate, 1 January 1862, issued to William S. Noyes of the 5th Maine Infantry Regiment, for his "efficient and faithful" discharge of his duties as hospital steward at prison hospitals in Richmond. The men were from the counties of Cumberland, New Hanover, Beaufort, Orange, Craven, and Wake. Microfilm reel C593.This volume, 1864, primarily consists of lists of arms and equipment distributed to the members of Company D of the 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment. 13th Virginia Infantry 23rd Virginia Infantry 32nd Virginia Infantry 42nd Virginia Infantry Confederate States Army, 5th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Muster Rolls, 18611862. 2 items. Confederate States Army, 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1864. I shall give no instructions in answer to General Morgan's telegram, but submit his movements to your discretion and control. Mss12:1861:10.This roster, covering 18611865, includes the name and rank of each member of Company C of the 53d Virginia Infantry Regiment. The 13th Virginia Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment raised in central and western Virginia for service in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Mss5:1C3685:2.Recollections, written by John Taylor Chappell (18451915), concerning primarily his experiences while serving in Company H of the 23d Virginia Infantry Regiment during the Confederate retreat following the battle of Rich Mountain. Chappell, John Taylor, Poem, 1865. Harrison Township, Michigan, United States. Wartime materials include passes, 18641865, issued by the Confederate army to William Wood Crump (18191897), while serving as assistant secretary of the Confederate Treasury, permitting him to travel freely throughout Virginia and the rest of the Confederacy; a railroad pass, 2 September 1864, issued to Crump; a printed copy of General Order No. Cravens, Addison, Affidavit, 1863. Microfilm reels B1012.Contains the papers of members of the Carrington family of Charlotte County. ca. 1898, presented to the Court of Henry County by surviving members of Company H of the 24th Virginia Infantry Regiment to have the company roster recorded in the county records. 15 items. 2 pp. 1848] concerning the Confederate defense of Fort Gregg near Petersburg on 2 April 1865), Thomas Charles Cheney ([b. 9 of the Richmond Defenses; Special Order No.
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