hide Matching Documents

Browsing named entities in Maj. Jed. Hotchkiss, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 3, Virginia (ed. Clement Anselm Evans). You can also browse the collection for Jackson (Tennessee, United States) or search for Jackson (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 11 results in 2 document sections:

rds, in the rear of Early's and Longstreet's brigades, and Jackson's to the left, between Blackburn's and Mitchell's fords, cn by that of the Confederates. About 7 Beauregard ordered Jackson's brigade, the nearest reserve force, to move with Imbodenite sides of Imboden's battery (which he had borrowed from Jackson's brigade), in full view of Evans' contention on the oppos Virginia, ordered up from Cocke's brigade on Bull run, on Jackson's left, and the Seventh Georgia still farther to the left.also been called up from Cocke, were placed in the rear of Jackson's right to oppose any attack from the direction of the store severely punished by the steady fire of the musketry of Jackson's men and of those on his right and left; especially was tto the orders of their chiefs. The medical director of Jackson's brigade, Dr. Hunter McGuire, says in a recent memorial: While dressing his (Jackson's) wounded hand at the First Manassas, at the field hospital of the brigade near the Lewis h
North Fork of the Potomac, on the road leading northwest from Franklin. William L. Jackson's brigade, with headquarters at the Warm Springs, picketed the line of Jackson's river, at Hightown and points to the south of that, Cheat mountain, on the Staunton and Parkersburg turnpike, near the Big Spring beyond Marlinton, and points ifor Dublin Depot in southwest Virginia, and McCausland's came to Fishersville, en route to its winter quarters in Alleghany and Greenbrier counties. On the 20th, Jackson's cavalry came, from toward Gordonsville, on its way to winter quarters in Bath and adjacent counties. On the 22d the Federal cavalry captured Early's picket at o their homes, and of deserters and skulkers that were coming out of their holes. The cavalry from Grant's army reached Lynchburg on the 13th. The remnants of Jackson's and Lomax's divisions of cavalry, that had retired to the Valley, disbanded at Buchanan, on the 15th, until the 1st of May. On the 17th it was learned that Gen