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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 41 total hits in 20 results.
Warrenton (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 63
United States (United States) (search for this): chapter 63
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
Fredericksburg, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 63
Robinson's River (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 63
H. H. Walker (search for this): chapter 63
Pettigrew (search for this): chapter 63
C. W. Field (search for this): chapter 63
R. E. Lee (search for this): chapter 63
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
Posey (search for this): chapter 63
H. Heth (search for this): chapter 63