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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 32. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 120 total hits in 29 results.
Childsburg (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.30
Raleigh (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.30
Governor Z. B. Vance.
[from the times-dispatch, May 8, 1904.]
Story of the last days of the Confederacy in North Carolina.
Historical fact vs. Fiction.
How injustice was done this gallant war executive.
The story told by my friend, Major A. B. Stronach, in his interesting narrative of a Boy Rear Guard, in the Raleigh, N. C., Post, of April 17, 1894, of the attempt on the part of certain patriotic?
citizens to persuade Governor Vance, our great war Governor, to be false to his oath of office, and surrender to General Sherman this city and State upon his entrance into the former on the morning of the 13th of April, 1865, has a sequel!
Perhaps I am one of the few now living who can furnish the data from which the future biographer of that great man may correct history.
The appointment by Governor Vance of a commission to negotiate with General Sherman terms for the surrender of this city, that would save it from the fate of Columbia, had preceded the efforts t
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.30
Governor Z. B. Vance.
[from the times-dispatch, May 8, 1904.]
Story of the last days of the Confederacy in North Carolina.
Historical fact vs. Fiction.
How injustice was done this gallant war executive.
The story told by my friend, Major A. B. Stronach, in his interesting narrative of a Boy Rear Guard, in the Raleigh, N. C., Post, of April 17, 1894, of the attempt on the part of certain patriotic?
citizens to persuade Governor Vance, our great war Governor, to be false to his oath of office, and surrender to General Sherman this city and State upon his entrance into the former on the morning of the 13th of April, 1865, has a sequel!
Perhaps I am one of the few now living who can furnish the data from which the future biographer of that great man may correct history.
The appointment by Governor Vance of a commission to negotiate with General Sherman terms for the surrender of this city, that would save it from the fate of Columbia, had preceded the efforts t
Chapel Hill, N. C. (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.30
Haw River (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.30
M. C. Butler (search for this): chapter 1.30
Sherman (search for this): chapter 1.30
Swain (search for this): chapter 1.30
Joseph E. Johnston (search for this): chapter 1.30
A. B. Stronach (search for this): chapter 1.30
Governor Z. B. Vance.
[from the times-dispatch, May 8, 1904.]
Story of the last days of the Confederacy in North Carolina.
Historical fact vs. Fiction.
How injustice was done this gallant war executive.
The story told by my friend, Major A. B. Stronach, in his interesting narrative of a Boy Rear Guard, in the Raleigh, N. C., Post, of April 17, 1894, of the attempt on the part of certain patriotic?
citizens to persuade Governor Vance, our great war Governor, to be false to his oath of office, and surrender to General Sherman this city and State upon his entrance into the former on the morning of the 13th of April, 1865, has a sequel!
Perhaps I am one of the few now living who can furnish the data from which the future biographer of that great man may correct history.
The appointment by Governor Vance of a commission to negotiate with General Sherman terms for the surrender of this city, that would save it from the fate of Columbia, had preceded the efforts t