61; brigadier-general, September 20, 1864; died——. Valley District, 1864.
Fitzhugh Lee, first lieutenant, corps of cavalry, C. S. A., March 16, 1861; lieutenant-coecond Regiment, North Carolina Cavalry, and McGregor's Battery of Artillery, Fitzhugh Lee's Division, Army of Northern Virginia; division in June, 1864, composed of t
Thomas T. Munford, brigadier-general, assigned to duty as such by Major-General Fitzhugh Lee; colonel, Second Regiment, Virginia Cavalry, April 25, 1862.
Commah Regiments of Virginia Cavalry and Thirty-sixth Battalion Virginia Cavalry, Fitzhugh Lee's Division, A. N. Va.
John Pegram, captain corps of cavalry, C. S. A., Man Virginia State forces, 1861; division composed of the brigades of Hampton, Fitzhugh Lee and W. H. F. Lee; commanding Second Corps, A. N. V., at Chancellorsville; ccomposed of the First, Second, Third and Fourth Regiments, Virginia Cavalry, Fitzhugh Lee's Division, Army of Northern Virginia.
Henry Alexander Wise, brigadier-ge
as to Appomattox—through all the long years of civil strife—hemmed in by superior numbers, without shoes, without clothes, without medicine, without food, these are the men who kept their powder dry and their weapons bright by constant use, whom no odds could unnerve, and who were overpowered, but never knew defeat.
Who were these veterans?
From the Appomattox to the Monocacy, from the mountains to the sea, through the Valley campaign with Jackson, or in the Army of Northern Virginia with Lee, the slogan: This way, Mahone's Brigade!
guided the Petersburg boys to battle under the Stars and Bars, charging to victory, while all the world wondered.
And of him whose body rests in yonder vault, as in the headquarters tent of this great army of the dead, what should be said when we assemble in these after years to pay tribute to the hero soldiers of old Petersburg?
It is fitting to remember that, of all the great leaders of men which Virginia has produced, few have equaled, and fewe
, 175
Hunter's Raid in 1864, a Charge Through Harrisonburg, 95
Jackson, on State Rights, Andrew, 67
Jackson, Stonewall, where he fell, 201 the right arm of Lee, 295
Jefferson, Thomas. On Central Government and Universal Suffrage, 65
The foremost man of all whose influence has led men to govern themselves by spiritual, 200
Kentucky in 1788, 33
Kershaw, Gen. J. B., 23
Keysville Guards, 146 Roll of, 147
King, Col. H. H., 167
Lassiter, Charles T., Address of, 126
Lee, Gen. R. E. At Appomattox, 15 His self-denying greatness, 294 The quintessence of Virginia, 294 When a private soldier seized his bridle, 204
Lincoln, Abraham, His R. K., 109
Garnett, Robert S., 109 Killing of, 146
Heth. Henry. 109
Hill, Ambrose P., 109
Hunton, Eppa, 110
DeLagnel, Julius, 110
Lee Edwin G., 110
Lee, Fitzhugh, 110
Lee, Geo. W. Custis, 110
Lee, Robert E., 110
Lee, Wm. H. F., 111
Lilley. R. D., 111
Lomax. Lunsford L. 111
Long, Armistead L. 112
Magruder, J