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General James Longstreet, From Manassas to Appomattox, Chapter 19: battle of Sharpsburg, or Antietam (continued). (search)
, Col. P. F. Stevens; Macbeth (S. C.) Art., Capt. R. Boyce. Artillery :--Washington (La.) Artillery, Col. J. B. Walton; 1st Co., Capt. C. W. Squires; 2d Co., Capt. J. B. Richardson; 3d Co., Capt. M. B. Miller; 4th Co., Capt. B. F. Eshleman. Lee's Battalion, Col. S. D. Lee; Ashland (Va.) Art., Capt. P. Woolfolk, Jr.; Bedford (Va.) Art., Capt. T. C. Jordan; Brooks (S. C.) Art., Lieut. William Elliott; Eubank's (Va.) battery, Capt. J. L. Eubank; Madison (La.) Light Art., Capt. (X. V. Moody; Parker's (Va.) battery, Capt. W. W. Parker. Jackson's Corps, Major-General Thomas J. Jackson. Ewell's Division, Brig.-Gen. A. R. Lawton, Brig.-Gen. Jubal A. Early:--Lawton's Brigade, Col. M. Douglass, Maj. J. H. Lowe, Col. John H. Lamar; 13th and 26th Ga., 31st Ga., Lieut.-Col. J. T. Crowder; 38th, 60th, and 61st Ga. Early's Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Jubal A. Early, Col. William Smith; 13th Va., Capt. F. V. Winston; 25th, 31st, and 44th Va.; 49th Va., Col. William Smith ; 52d( Va., Col. M. G. Harma
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2., The opposing forces at the Second Bull Run. August 16th-September 2d, 1862. (search)
Battery (Macbeth Art'y), Capt. R. Boyce. Brigade loss: k, 133; w, 593; n, 8 = 734. artillery: Washington (La.) Artillery, Col. John B. Walton: 1st Company, Capt. C. W. Squires; 2d Company, Capt. J. B. Richardson; 3d Company, Capt. M. B. Miller; 4th Company, Capt. B. F. Eshleman. Loss: k, 9; w, 23=32. Lee's Battalion, Col. Stephen D. Lee: Va. Battery, Capt. J. L. Eubank; Va. Battery (Grimes's), Lieut. Thomas J. Oakham; Va. Battery (Bedford Art'y), Capt. T. C. Jordan; Va., Battery, Capt. W. W. Parker; S. C. Battery (Rhett's) Lieut. William Elliott; Va. Battery, Capt. J. S. Taylor. Loss: w, 6. Miscellaneous: Va. Battery (Huger's),-----; Va. Battery (Leake's),-----; La. Battery (Donaldsonville Art'y),-----; Va. Battery (Moorman's)-----; Va. Battery (Loudoun Art'y), Capt. A. L. Rogers; Va. Battery (Fauquier Art'y), Capt. R. M. Stribling. left wing, or Jackson's Corps, Maj.-Gen. Thomas J. Jackson. Staff loss: w, 1. first (Jackson's) division, Brig.-Gen. William B. Taliaferro (
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2., The opposing forces in the Maryland campaign. (search)
, Col. J. B. Walton: 1st Co., Capt. C. W. Squires; 2d Co., Capt. J. B. Richardson ; 3d Co., Capt. M. B. Miller; 4th Co., Capt. B. F. Eshleman. Loss (in campaign): k, 4; w, 28; m, 2, = 34. Lee's Battalion, Col. S. D. Lee: Va. Battery (Ashland Art'y), Capt. Pichegru Woolfolk, Jr.; Va. Battery (Bedford Art'y), Capt. T. C. Jordan; S. C. Battery (Brooks's Art'y), Lieut. William Elliott; Va. Battery, Capt. J. L. Eubank; La. Battery (Madison Light Art'y), Capt. Geo. V. Moody; Va. Battery, Capt. W. W. Parker. Loss (in the campaign): k, 11; w, 75 = 86. Jackson's command, Maj.-Gen. T. J. Jackson. Ewell's division, Brig.-Gen. A. R. Lawton (w), Brig.-Gen. Jubal A. Early. Staff loss: Antietam w, 2. Lawton's Brigade, Col. M. Douglass (k), Maj. J. H. Lowe, Col. John H. Lamar: 13th Ga.,----; 26th Ga.,----; 31st Ga., Lieut.-Col. J. T. Crowder; 38th Ga.,----; 60th Ga.,----; 61st Ga., Col. John H. Lamar. Brigade loss: Antietam, k, 106; w, 440; in, 21 = 567. Shepherdstown, w, 7. Early's B
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Petersburg and Richmond: December 31st, 1864. (search)
ol. S. M. Boykin; 3d S. C. Batt'n, Lieut.-Col. W. G. Rice. artillery, Brig.-Gen. W. N. Pendleton commanded the artillery of the army. Brig.-Gen. E. P. Alexander. Cabell's Battalion, Col. H. C. Cabell: Va. Battery, Capt. R. M. Anderson; Ga. Battery, Lieut. Morgan Callaway; Ga. Battery, Capt. H. H. Carlton; N. C. Battery, Capt. Basil C. Manly. Huger's Battalion, Lieut.-Col. F. Huger: S. C. Battery, Capt. W. W. Fickling; La. Battery (Moody's), Lieut. J. C. Parkinson; Va. Battery, Capt. W. W. Parker; Va. Battery, Capt. John D. Smith; Va. Battery, Capt. O. B. Taylor; Va. Battery, Lieut. James Woolfolk. Hardaway's Battalion (detached from the Second Corps), Lieut.-Col. R. A. Hardaway: Va. Battery, Capt. Willis J. Dance; Va. Battery, Capt. Archibald Graham; Va. Battery, Capt. Charles B. Griffin; Va. Battery, Capt. B. H. Smith, Jr. Haskell's Battalion, Maj. John C. Haskell: N. C. Battery, Capt. H. G. Flanner; N. C. Battery, Capt. John A. Ramsay; S. C. Battery, Capt. H. R. Garden; Va.
Edward Porter Alexander, Military memoirs of a Confederate: a critical narrative, Chapter 23: the fall of 1864 (search)
in the column, and took up a fairly good position behind the North Fork of the Appomattox River. To our left the enemy was still extending his lines, and some of my battery commanders were anxious to expend on them some of the ammunition they had hauled so far, for the firing had not yet ceased. But I knew that Lee would not approve an unnecessary shot, and not one was fired from our line. The last cannon shot was fired from Gordon's lines under orders to cease firing, conveyed by Maj. W. W. Parker of Huger's battalion. It was fired by a section under command of Lt. Wright of Clutter's battery. The battery was one of McIntosh's battalion of the 3d corps and was commanded by Lt. McIntosh, a brother of Col. McIntosh. When the truce in our rear was for the time arranged, Lee returned to our front and stopped in an apple orchard a hundred yards or so in advance of our line where I had some fence rails piled under a tree to make him a seat. Within two days this tree was cut d
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.14 (search)
, Lieutenant William H. Weisiger, and other members; Cobb Legion of Georgia. Parker's Battery. Alexander's Battalion Artillery, Longstreet's Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, was represented by Parker's Battery, carrying with it banners representing the battalion and each of the six batteries composing the battalion, to-wit: Parker's, Jordan's, Moody's, Taylor's, Rhett's and Woolfolk's. On these banners were the names of the seventeen pitched battles in which they were engaged. At the hs of the battalion, to-wit: General E. P. Alexander, Colonel Frank Huger, Major W. W. Parker, and Captain John Haskill, adjutant of the battalion. The battery following the field officers was Parker's Battery, composed of the following: Captain J. Thompson Brown, Lieutenant J. C. Parkinson, First-Sergeant Thomas L. Alfriend, andRoyall, Silas Stubbs, P. B. Scherer, Spencer Wooldridge, Samuel P. Weisiger. Parker's Battery was followed by Woolfolk's Battery, represented by Lieutenants Willam
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Index. (search)
S. P., Surgeon-General, 15; death of, 61. Morris Island, S. C., C. S. Prisoners under fire on, 34. Mower, Gen. 74. Myers, Col. A. C., death of, 61. Negro, The, 24; as an Element of Discord, 93. Newton, Rev. John B., 356. Nisbet, Colonel R. B, 76. North Carolina Troops at the Dedication of the Lee Monument, 269. Nullification, 93. Old Dominion Guard from La., 54. Osterhaus, General, 73. Otey Battery Association, Roster of, 280. Palmer, D. D., Rev. B. M. 355. Parker's Battery, Roster of, 282. Pedregal, Battle of, 318, 363. Pegram's Battalion Association, Roster of, 278. Perry, General E. A., Death of, 61. Petersburg, Va., 14; Seige of, 331; Soldiers' Monument at, Unveiling of etc., 388. Pickett's Division at the Dedication of the Lee Monument, 280. Population of the United States-relative increase of the white and black races, 25. Porcher, A. B., M. D., F. Peyre, 12. Porter, Admiral D. D., 349. Prisoner's Guard Reversed, The, 17
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The prison experience of a Confederate soldier. (search)
Confederate States Army, who were prisoners from August 16th, 1864, to March 4th, 1865, and for six weeks on Morris Island, by Federal effort, were under fire from Confederate batteries. By Abram Fulkerson, late Colonel Sixty-third Tennessee Infantry, Army of Northern Virginia. The writer of the following unvarnished tale is a prominent citizen of Virginia, who has honorably served the State in her Councils. There was no more gallant officer in the Confederate Army than he. With Dr. W. W. Parker, late Major of Artillery, C. S. A., in July last, he served as Commissioner for Virginia, to locate the positions of Virginia troops at the battle of Chickamauga. We would not now set down aught in malice, and in the justice of history, alone, present here these truthful details. A list of the companions of Colonel Fulkerson, who shared his hardships and his hazards on Morris Island, under the fire of their own comrades in arms, is given in Vol. XVII, Southern Historical Society
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.27 (search)
er, General George H. Stuart, Dr. Stuart McGuire, Colonel William H. Palmer, Colonel Charles S. Venable, Colonel Walter H. Taylor, Colonel Hilary P. Jones, Colonel Thomas H. Carter, Colonel Morton Marye, Colonel F. M. Boykin, Colonel E. M. Henry, Colonel F. M. Parker, Colonel H. Kyd Douglass, Colonel L. D. Starke, Colonel W. E. Cutshaw, Colonel John B. Cary, Colonel J. P. Minetree, Colonel A. W. Starke, Major John W. Daniel, Major R. Taylor Scott, Major J. B. Hill, Major W. J. Johnson, Major W. W. Parker, Major A. W. Garber, Captain Thomas Tabb, Captain John Cussons, Captain E. J. Levy, Captain Charles U. Williams, Captain J. W. Pegram, Mr. John Chamblin, Mr. H. Clay Chamblin, Judge George L. Christian, Mr. Charles L. Todd, Major N. V. Randolph, Hon. J. Taylor Ellyson, Mr. William H. Curtis, Rev. Frank Stringfellow, Mr. W. J. Binford, Mr. L. B. Vaughan, Mr. J. E. B. Stuart, Mr. Joseph Bryan, Mr. Carlton McCarthy, Mr. Robert S. Bosher, Mr. C. V. Meredith, Mr. Joseph B. Welsh, Mr. Norvel
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 23. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), How the Southern soldiers kept House during the war. (search)
diers kept House during the war. The experience of Dr. W. W. Parker, Major of artillery, Confederate States army. Did noo his once numerous readers than is our excellent friend Dr. Parker to the good people of Richmond and its vicinity. In his tenderly refers, will, we are assured, vote him sweet. Dr. Parker is as gentle as he is ever brave. Recently a distinguhed minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, of which Dr. Parker is a truly consistent member, felt constrained to preachrred to was directly induced by some fond expressions of Dr. Parker. Encountering our excellent friend on the highway, we eory; that I never tried to kiss her! A year or so ago Dr. Parker paid us a visit in our time-worn house in which he spenten place in this dedicated City of Monuments.—Ed.] Dr. W. W. Parker's recent address before Pickett Camp on How I Kept Hos all the time, in consideration of my treating my own Dr. Parker's historic cow, which supplied milk for the battery and