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Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for R. E. Lee or search for R. E. Lee in all documents.
Your search returned 37 results in 12 document sections:
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Further details of the death of General A. P. Hill . (search)
[5 more...]
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Wolseley 's tribute to Lee and Jackson . (search)
Wolseley's tribute to Lee and Jackson.
The great English soldier, Sir Garnet Joseph Wolseley, who is regarded by competent judges as standing at the very head of his profession, wrote last December to an accomplished lady of Mobile, Ala., now residing in New York, a letter worth preserving in our records as the calm, unpredjudiced estimate of a distinguished foreign soldier.
We give it in full as follows:
war office, London, 8th December, 1883.
My Dear Miss S.,—I am very gratefulon your side of the Atlantic.
I have only known two heroes in my life, and General R. E. Lee is one of them, so you can well understand how I value one of his letters.
I believe that when time has calmed down the angry passions of the North, General Lee will be accepted in the United States as the greatest General you have ever had, and second as a patriot only to Washington himself.
Stonewall Jackson, I only knew slightly, his name will live forever also in American history when that of Mr.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Is the
Eclectic history of the(search)United States a proper book to use in our schools?
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Editorial paragraph. (search)
Editorial paragraph.
the R. E. Lee camp Fair opened in Richmond on the night of the 14th of May under the most flattering and promising auspices.
We have no space to describe the brilliant occasion—the beautiful decorations, the piles of useful and fancy articles sent with liberal hand from all parts of the country, the crowd which packed the large armory hall, the speeches of Corporal Tanner, of New York, and General Wade Hampton, of South Carolina, the appearance of Lee Camp Confederate Veterans, and Phil. Kearney Post, G. A. R., marching in fraternal ranks, and many other features too numerous to mention—but we will only say that the opening was a sure prophecy that the Fair will prove a grand success and add handsomely to the fund already in hand towards establishing here in Richmond a Home for disabled and needy Confederate soldiers of every State.
The following letters, selected from a large number received, coming from representative men of opposite sides well expre
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Military operations of General Beauregard . (search)
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Letter from General Lee to President Davis . (search)
Letter from General Lee to President Davis.
headquarters army of Northern Virginia, July 29, 1863. His Excellency Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States.
Mr. President,—Your letter of the 21st instant has been received, and I am much obliged to you for the suggestions it contains.
As soon as I receive an official account of the casualties in the army it will be forwarded.
The list of our wounded and missing I know will be large.
Many of the first could not be moved and had to be left behind.
The latter will be swelled by the stragglers, who commenced, on crossing the Potomac, to stray from the line of march, and were intercepted by the enemy's cavalry and armed citizens, notwithstanding every effort which was made to prevent it. Our people are so little liable to control that it is difficult to get them to follow any course not in accordance with their inclinations The day after the last battle at Gettysburg, on sending back the train with the wounded it
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Letters from General Lee to President Davis on September , 1863 . (search)
the situationin
Letters from General Lee to President Davis on the situation in September, 1863.
headquarters army of Northern Virginia, September 14, 1863. His Excellency Jefferson Davis, President Confederate States, Richmond:
Mr. President. My letter of this morning will have informed you of the crossing of the Rappahannock by the cavalry of General Meade's army, and of the retirement of ours to the Rapidan.
The enemy's cavalry so greatly outnumbers ours, and is generally accompanied by so large a force of infantry in its operations, that it must always force ours back.
I advanced last night to the Rapidan, a portion of Early's and Anderson's divisions, and arrested the further progress of the enemy.
I have just returned from an examination of the enemy's cavalry on the Rapidan.
It seems to consist of their entire force, three divisions, with horse-artillery, and, as far as I can judge, is the advance of General Meade's army.
All the cavalry have been withdrawn from the lower Rap
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Two anecdotes of General Lee . (search)
Two anecdotes of General Lee. By Walter B. Barker.
The life and character of so noble a man as General Robert E. Lee is a theme that none but our greatest minds should discuss in public or in private but with your permission the writer, who held an humble position on the staff of Brigadier-General Jos. R. Davis, of Mississippi, (nephew of Jefferson Davis), in the Army of Northern Virginia, will relate two little incidents which happened at the Battle of the Wilderness:
On the eve of the 5th of May General Lee, with General Stuart, rode to the front, where Stuart's cavalry had encountered the advance of the Federal army.
As they rode through the infantry, then awaiting orders, passing a farm-house, three young ladies stood at the gate of the residence, holding a package, which from his gallantry, or good looks, or both, they entrusted to Capt. E. P. Thompson (nephew of Jake Thompson, and now a Mississippi editor), of General Davis's staff, with the request that he deliver the
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Reminiscences of cavalry operations. (search)
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 95 (search)