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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 1. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Review of Bates ' battle of Gettysburg . (search)
May, 1863.
May, 1
The One Hundred and Thirteenth Ohio is at Franklin.
Colonel Wilcox has resigned; Lieutenant-Colonel Mitchell will succeed to the colonelcy.
I rode over the battle-field with the latter this afternoon.
May, 4
Two men from Breckenridge's command strayed into our lines to-day.
May, 7
Colonels Hobart, Taylor, Nicholas, and Captain Nevin spent the afternoon with me.
The intelligence from Hooker's army is contradictory and unintelligible.
We hope it was successful, and yet find little beside the headlines in the telegraphic column to sustain that hope.
The German regiments are said to have behaved badly.
This is, probably, an error.
Germans, as a rule, are reliable soldiers.
This, I think, is Carl Schurz's first battle; an unfortunate beginning for him.
May, 9
The arrest of Vallandingham, we learn from the newspapers, is creating a great deal of excitement in the North.
I am pleased to see the authorities commencing at the root and not
The Annals of the Civil War Written by Leading Participants North and South (ed. Alexander Kelly McClure), The Exchange of prisoners. (search)
The Annals of the Civil War Written by Leading Participants North and South (ed. Alexander Kelly McClure), General Stuart in camp and field. (search)
The Annals of the Civil War Written by Leading Participants North and South (ed. Alexander Kelly McClure), The career of General A. P. Hill . (search)
May, 1863.
1st may, 1863 (Friday).
I called on General Scurry, and found him suffering from severe ophthalmia.
When I presented General Magruder's letter, he insisted that I should come and live with him so long as I remained here.
He also telegraphed to Galveston for a steamer to take me there and back.
We dined at 4 P. M.: the party consisted of Colonel and Judge Terrill (a clever and agreeable man), Colonel Pyron, Captain Wharton, quartermaster-general, Major Watkins (a handsome fellow, and hero of the Sabine Pass affair), and Colonel Cook, commanding the artillery at Galveston (late of the U. S. navy, who enjoys the reputation of being a zealous Methodist preacher and a daring officer). The latter told me he could hardly understand how I could be an Englishman, as I pronounced my h's all right.
General Scurry himself is very amusing, and is an admirable mimic.
His numerous anecdotes of the war were very interesting.
In peace times he is a lawyer.
He was a volunte
J. B. Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary, chapter 27 (search)
Xxvi.
May, 1863
Lee snuffs a battle in the breeze.
Hooker's army supposed to be 100,000 men.
Lee's perhaps 55,000 efficient.
I am planting potatoes.
part of Longstreet's army gone up.
enemy makes a raid.
great victory at Chancellorville.
hot weather.
our poor wounded coming in streams, in ambulances and on foot.
Hooker has lost the game.
message from the enemy.
they ask of Lee permission to bury their dead.
granted, of course.
Hooker fortifying.
food getting scarce again.
Gen. Lee's thanks to the army.
crowds of prisoners coming in.
Lieut.
Gen. Jackson dead.
Hooker's raiders hooked a great many horses.
enemy demand 500,000 more men.
Beauregard complains that so many of his troops are taken to Mississippi.
enemy at Jackson, Miss.
strawberries.
R. Tyler.
my cherries are coming on finely.
Ewell and Hill appointed lieutenant-generals.
President seems to doubt Beauregard's veracity.- Hon. D. M. Lewis cuts his wheat to morrow, may 28th.
Johnston says
John G. Nicolay, A Short Life of Abraham Lincoln, condensed from Nicolay and Hayes' Abraham Lincoln: A History, Chapter 32 . (search)
Varina Davis, Jefferson Davis: Ex-President of the Confederate States of America, A Memoir by his Wife, Volume 2, Chapter 38 : Gettysburg . (search)
Chapter 38: Gettysburg.
In the month of May, 1863, General R. E. Lee's army rested near Fredericksburg, while the Federal army under General Hooker occupied their old camps across the Rappahannock.
Early in the month of June, finding that the Federal commander was not disposed again to cross swords with him, for the purpose of drawing him away from Virginia, so that her people might raise and gather their crops, Lee began a movement that culminated in the battle of Gettysburg.
Ewell's corps was sent on in advance, and at Winchester routed and put to flight the enemy under General Milroy, capturing 4,000 prisoners and their small-arms, 2S pieces of artillery, 300 wagons and their horses, and large amounts of ordnance, commissary, and quartermaster stores; then crossing the Potomac, he passed through Maryland and into Pennsylvania.
Headquarters, Army of Northern Virginia, Chambersburg, Pa., June 27, 1863.
General orders, no. 73.
The Commanding General has observed wi