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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 34. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.17 (search)
who cried surrender. If you ask me to explain this, my answer is because we knew we were right, our cause was just, and now, once more, welcome, dear Daughters. From the Times-Dispatch, November 11th, 1906. The great battle at Cedar Creek. In some respects one of the most remarkable of the war. Early's Thin gray line. Story told by one who was desperately wounded in the fight. Editor of the Times-Dispatch: Sir,—I send you herewith a picturesque and interesting account of Godwin's Brigade, Ramseur's Division, Second Corps, at the battle of Cedar Creek, October 19, 1864. It is a soldier's tale, relating events as he saw them. It is by Captain Clarence R. Hatton, adjutant-general of the brigade, who received a wound in the neck as his brigade was charging, which would, in all likelihood, have killed anybody but a hardy soldier, such as he was. General John B. Gordon, in his reminiscenses, which often erroneously refer to General Early, justly reminds his readers