Mss12:1862 October 31:16 oversize.The muster rolls, 31 October 186230 June 1863, of Companies A, C, D, E, F, and H of the 33d Virginia Infantry Regiment. Clark, George, Memoir, 1920. 1 volume. There are payrolls from April 1862 for thirty-seven Tidewater Virginia & North Carolina units. Cooke, Giles Buckner, Diary, 18611865. A separate finding aid for this collection is available in the Society's library. Cocke Family Papers, 17941981. Mss1C3154a.This collection contains the papers of the Cave family of Montebello, Orange County. 1st Infantry, Mississippi Marine Brigade. 5 items. 11 items. Mss5:1C6433:12. 24 items. Specific engagements described include the brigade's fight with the Union navy at Grand Gulf and the unit's participation in the battle of Port Gibson, Miss. I fear, however, such disposition of his force at this time would not be expedient, and certainly not unless it meet the approval of your judgment, and the substitution of some other force in Southwestern Virginia could be provided. Units of the Confederate States Army" by Joseph H. Crute, Jr. contains no history for this unit.[1]. Mss1C6264a.This collection contains the papers of the Cloyd family of Montgomery and Pulaski counties. 888 items. Infantry Regiment, labeled with each soldier's name, rank, and unit, with links to revealing documents about each soldier. Confederate States Customs Administration, District and Port of New Orleans, Clearance Papers, 1862. of the 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves; organized and mustered into C. S. service June 3, 1864 for the war. Mss4C7608a.This collection contains receipts, certificates, and warrants for payment from the Confederate Treasury Department. The correspondence, May-June 1861, of Harrison Henry Cocke (17941873), while serving in the Confederate navy, concerns his role in commanding naval defenses on the James River (section 5). Mss2C8557a1.An affidavit, 15 December 1863, concerning the enlistment of Addison Cravens (b. Included are the names, enlistment information, and pay records for each soldier. Confederate States Army, 33d Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Rolls, 18621863. //-->. Also in the collection is a letter, 1877, to Philip St. George Cooke (18091895) from the Comte de Paris (18381894) concerning Cooke's cavalry charge at the battle of Gaines' Mill. 1 p. Photocopy. Conrad, Holmes, Papers, 18121950. Cooke Family Papers, 18231953. Confederate States Treasury Department, Letter, 1864. Mss2R1867a1.The parole, 10 April 1865, issued to William T. Ratcliffe of Company F of the 3d Virginia Cavalry Regiment at Appomattox Court House. Richmond,Virginia23220, Galleries, Store, & Caf daily 10:00 am-5:00 pm 3 items. ???? 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Smith. Virginia Historical Society, 428 N Arthur Ashe Boulevard 16, 27 March 1865, allowing the transportation of cotton and tobacco to areas outside the Confederacy (section 6); and a letter, 28 March 1865, from George Alfred Trenholm (18061876), as Confederate secretary of the treasury, to the presidents of banks of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, regarding the recently passed act concerning the raising of coin by the government for the use of purchasing supplies for the army (section 16). Letters written to Comfort by friends and family discuss aspects of the war. Note: Known as the 13th Virginia Reserves Battalion until February 27, 1865. Also in the order book are equipment inventories, general orders relating to the battery, and a copy of Pierre G. T. Beauregard's farewell address to the Confederate Army of the Potomac. 186 items. Traditionally, the third fold in some flag-folding ceremonies honors and remembers veterans for their sacrifice in defending their country and promoting peace in the world. In great detail, Cox records incidents of his daily life in prison including observations on the weather, the exchange and release of fellow prisoners, the presence of disease, and news concerning the war in Virginia. Mss1C774c.This collection consists primarily of materials relating to the Civil War service of John Rogers Cooke (18331891) as colonel of the 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment and as a brigadier general in the Army of Northern Virginia. Included are brief descriptions of his service in Company D (2nd) of the 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment in western Virginia (now W.Va.) and North Carolina in 1861 and in Petersburg in 1864. "the Mescalero Apaches walked 130 mi to the reservation . Confederate States Army, 59th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Letterbooks, 1863. 2,950 items. of Blackstone while in Richmond. (November & December 1864), Lieutenant Colonel Robert Smith (February 1865), Commander:None listed. W. F. Baxter of Company A of the 35th Battalion Virginia Cavalry for temporary duty with the War Department. Confederate States Army, Department of Henrico, Papers, 18631865. 38th Light Artillery Battalion: Company A , Company B , Company C , Company D . Serial 078 Page 0742 KY., SW. VA., TENN., MISS., ALA., AND N. GA. Chapter LI. Also in the collection are letters to prisoners from family and friends that concern family news, describe efforts to gain release for prisoners, and offer religious comfort. Confederate States Army, 3d Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Pass, 1865. Enjoy exciting benefits and explore new exhibitions year-round. Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company B (Confederate) Casualties. Confederate States Army, Department of Northern Virginia, Medical Director, General Orders, 1862. 1 volume. Mss4C76075a12.Includes a glass plate negative copy of a letter, 15 November 1864, concerning the appointment of John Langbourne Williams (18311915) of Richmond as an agent to purchase United States currency (a1), and a letter, 18 March 1864, from Alexander Robert Lawton to Sewall L. Fremont (1823?1886), chief engineer and superintendent of the Wilmington & Weldon Railroad, offering an explanation for the temporary discontinuance of passenger and non-military freight trains on that rail line. Mss12:1863:1 oversize. 1 item. Carrington Family Papers, 17611954. 334 items. Photocopy. 761 items. Cooke Family Papers, 18351878. Mss12:1863 March 12:1.A printed copy of an unnumbered general order, 12 March 1863, from J. E. B. Stuart commending John S. Mosby (18331916) on his capture of Edwin Henry Stoughton and several other Union soldiers at Fairfax Court House. Typescript copy. Mss9:3E470.2C7723:1.This collection contains a published copy of a diary, 218 April 1865, kept by Lelian M. Cook (b. Mss2C3683a1.A poem, 1865, written by John Taylor Chappell (18451915) while serving aboard the CSS Virginia concerning Chappell and two friends, Robert Rankin and "Paul.". 95 items. a cellist 's preparatory motion for pizzicato is larger and slower than that of a violinist . Casey, William Thomas, Papers, 18611864. Chamberlayne Family Papers, 18351921. iii, 772821 and ser. Topics include general and specific military news from Charlotte County, Va., and northern Georgia in 1864, the effect of war on the population in northern Georgia (draft laws and civilian care of Confederate wounded), and comments on the Confederate cause in general (section 4). It was organized as the 13th Virginia Reserves Battalion on June 3, 1864 and redesignated the 6th Virginia Reserves Battalion on February 27, 1865. Compiled Service Record: Card 1 Private, Company G, 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves, 6th Battalion Reserves Appears on a muster roll for Sept. & Oct., 1864 Confederate States Army, Department of Richmond, Special Orders, 1865. In the evening moved to Camp Blair at Fairfax station with the Newtown Artillery and the 10th Virginia Infantry. 13th Battalion, Virginia Reserves (Confederate) Organized in 1864. The 6th Reserves were later reorganized and designated the 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves. 1 p. Mss12:1863 October 1:1.An extract of Special Order No. Thirteenth . Companies in this Regiment with the Counties of Origin [edit | edit source] Men often enlisted in a company recruited in the counties where they lived though not always. Mss5:1C5476:1.A photocopy of a typed transcript of a memoir, entitled "The History of My Life," written by George Clark (18461925) of Spotsylvania County concerning, in part, his service in the Fredericksburg Artillery Battery at the battles of the Wilderness, Spotsylvania Court House, and North Anna and in the Petersburg campaign. The correspondence of Martha Elizabeth Coons (18391863) includes letters, 18621863, from Frank Alexander Coons (18461912), Lemuel Corbin, and Mary Ann B. Mss12:1863 August 11:1.Letterbook, 11 August 186316 February 1865, kept in Dublin, Va., and Lewisburg, W. Va., containing copies of letters written by E. C. Gordon (while serving as ordnance officer of the 1st Brigade of the Confederate Army of Southwestern Virginia) concerning the status of ordnance supplies (i.e., rifles and ammunition) in the brigade. Mss12:1861:7.This handwritten copy of a roster of Company A of the 43d North Carolina Infantry Regiment includes the names and brief service records of the members of the unit, a list of those who surrendered at Appomattox Court House, total casualty figures, and a brief history of the company's organization in 1861. 6th Battalion, Reserves (13th Battalion, Reserves; Smith's Battalion, Reserves) 6th Infantry Regiment: 7th (1st Nitre) Infantry Battalion Local Defense: 7th Infantry Gibson's Company: 7th Battalion, Reserves (5th Battalion, Valley Reserves) . Signed by T. G. Carmichael, surgeon in charge of the hospital. 1, 51: pt. Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company A (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company B (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company C (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company D (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company E (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company F (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company F&S (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company G (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company H (Confederate), Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company I (Confederate). CAVALRY. . 1 item. 104 items. 2 items. of Company B of the 1st Virginia Cavalry Regiment. July 23. 1 item. The 13th Virginia completed its organization during the summer of 1861 with men from Winchester and Culpeper, Orange, Louisa, and Hampshire counties, and one company from Maryland. Christian, Ann Webster (Gordon), Diary, 18601867. Poplicola , consul in 352 BC ; as praetor in 350 he commanded the reserves during the war against the Gauls . Cosby Family Papers, 18591916. A list of published U.S. Civil War regimental histories for Confederate forces from Virginia in the Library of Congress online catalog . 110th infantry regiment rosterboss buck feeder leg kit. Confederate States Army, 17th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Rolls, 1861. The letter includes a newspaper clipping advising Virginia Hanes Chamberlayne of the prisoner of war status of Francis Chamberlayne. MAIL: PO Box 7311, Richmond, Virginia 23221. 1 item. Mss1C2358d. Confederate States Army, 17th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, n.d. 24 pp. 1832) to Katy [?] Commander (s . Mss12:1864 November 29:1.Special requisition (no. Upon completion of Officer Candidate School and graduation from North Georgia College, he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant. Civil War materials include a letter, 19 September 1863, from Charles Landon Carter Minor (18351903), while a member of Samuel Jones's staff, to Launcelot Minor Blackford (18371914) concerning Minor's hatred of Yankees, military operations near Abingdon, his fears for the safety of his wife (who is with him in the field), and his experiences while on a raid at Wytheville (section 3), and a letter, 28 April 1862, from Robert E. Lee to Charles Minor's wife, Frances Ansley (Cazenove) Minor (18391884), regarding her husband's efforts to gain appointment as a staff officer (section 4). Microfilm reel C593.This order book contains general and special orders, 26 April28 May 1862, issued by Joseph Reid Anderson to troops under his command in Caroline, Spotsylvania, and Hanover counties. Please enable JavaScript on your browser to best view this site. Cook, Lelian M., Diary, 1865. . Colonel Hill was promoted to brigadier general. 3 items. Microfilm reels C238240.This collection contains the multi-volume diary of a Southampton County planter, Daniel William Cobb (18111872). 1836?) Mss12:1861 August 31:1 oversize.A muster roll, 31 August1 November 1861, containing the names, enlistment information, and pay records for the members of Company E of the 21st Virginia Infantry Regiment. Mss3C7608a. Mss12:1863 April 30:12 oversize.Muster rolls, 30 April30 June 1863, for Companies D and H of the 4th Virginia Infantry Regiment completed while in Pennsylvania during the Gettysburg campaign. Photocopy. . The recollection is entitled "A Christmas Salute.". Section 4 contains postwar letters of John S. Mosby with the following correspondents: William Henry Fitzhugh Lee (concerning the battles of First and Second Bull Run), Lunsford Lindsay Lomax (discussing the movements of Confederate troops in June 1863 before the battle of Gettysburg), William Henry Payne ([18301904] concerning events leading up to the battle of Gettysburg), John Codman Ropes ([18361899] concerning J. E. B. Stuart's role in the Gettysburg campaign), and Marcus Joseph Wright ([18311922] discussing J. E. B. Stuart, James Longstreet, and the Gettysburg campaign). 1842) assuring them of his safe condition while imprisoned at Fort Delaware, Del., and Johnson's Island, Ohio; and an affidavit and a pass, 1865, concerning John Thompson's having taken the oath of allegiance and granting him permission to travel to Kentucky (section 5). Research Library open Monday-Saturday, 10:00 am-5:00 pm, EMAIL: Info@VirginiaHistory.org Abstract from tabular statement of troops serving in the Department of Western Virginia and East Tennessee, Brigadier General John H. Morgan commanding, August 1, 1864; headquarters Abingdon, Va. Command Effective Aggregate Aggregate Remarks. Mss5:1C9228:1.This collection contains a photocopy of a typed transcript of a diary, 3 May 186015 June 1863, kept by Samuella (Hart) Curd of Richmond, Va., and Fulton, Mo. 1 item. 1 p. Mss12:1862 April 12:1.Official copy of General Order No. 1 item. Virginia: 13th Infantry Battalion Reserves FIELD AND STAFF ASSIGNMENTS BATTLES COMPANIES OTHER UNIT INFO If any information is missing, Incorrect or you want to add Information then Send us an . Confederate States Army, 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Record Book, 1864. 167 items. 1 item. emailE=('webguru' + '@' + emailE) 1 item. 1 item. Mss2C6799a1.A touching letter, 7 February 1862, from Roberts Coles (18381862) of the 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment to Jane Cary Fairfax (b. However if you are unsure which company your ancestor was in, try the company recruited in his county first. 1st (Wheat's) Special Battalion, Infantry (Louisiana Tigers) 3rd Battalion, Infantry (became the 15th Infantry) 4th Battalion, Infantry; 5th Battalion, Infantry (became the 21st Infantry) 6th Battalion, Infantry (became the 20th Infantry) 7th Battalion, Infantry; 8th Battalion, Infantry (became the 8th Heavy Artillery) 9th Battalion, Infantry 6 items. Chappell, John Taylor, Poem, 1865. Mss3C9154a. 1 p. Mss12:1863 January 24:1.Special Order No. The collection includes a bound volume of typed transcripts of Casey's letters. The order is signed by Samuel Cooper, Confederate adjutant and inspector general. Also of note are letters, 1864, to Collins's wife from Confederate officials concerning her efforts to obtain a prisoner of war exchange for him, and her attempt to draw his pay while he remained a prisoner. 5 items. ], issued by William Henry Chase Whiting concerning the use of the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad. Staunton River Bridge: Lt. In 1999, after completion of the Basic Officers Course and the Infantry Officers Course . 1 p. Mss12:1863 June 15:1.Special Order No. 3 items. 9 of the Richmond Defenses; Special Order No. Mss5:1C4626:1.Kept by Ann Webster (Gordon) Christian (18371894) of Richmond, this diary, 1 January 18601 May 1867, contains entries concerning her religious life and her visits to educational institutions and friends and family in Virginia and Mississippi. Carter, Robert G., Papers, 19001934. Belsches was appointed major. Muster In: Organized August 13, 1864 with six companies. 1 at Danville. 6th Battalion, Virginia Reserves (Confederate), Companies in this Regiment with the Counties of Origin, Beginning United States Civil War Research, The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=6th_Battalion,_Virginia_Reserves_(Confederate)&oldid=4196009, Virginia - Military - Civil War, 1861-1865. 1 item. However if you are unsure which company your ancestor was in, try the company recruited in his county first. Mss12:1865 March 12:1.Special Order No. Confederate States Army, Walker's Brigade, Special Order, 1864. Items include an account, 1865, for the service of George Ainsley Barksdale (18351910) paid by the Quartermaster's Department (a1); an account, 1864, of funds received by Samuel Cooper from George A. Barksdale (a2); a letter, 1863, from John Randolph Chambliss (18091875) to President Jefferson Davis concerning the impressment slaves to work on fortifications (photocopy) (a3); a receipt, 1864, from J. L. Agurs of the 6th South Carolina Infantry Regiment for 5,000 lbs. Army Reserve Component CBRN Units Little Rock, AR Ft Lawton, WA Far Rockaway, NY Wilmington, DE East Point, GA 476th CBRN BN 349th CBRN CO (Seattle, WA) 323rd CBRN CO (Sioux Falls, SD) 334th CBRN CO (Mt. Microfilm reels C452453.Contains the papers of four generations of the Cocke family of Virginia. Confederate States Army, Provost Marshal, Pass, 1865. Confederate States Army, Department of Northern Virginia, General Orders, 1863. in 19201921 by the R. E. Lee Camp No. Mss2C3675a1.A letter, 27 August 1887, from William Henry Chapman (18401929) to James Longstreet concerning the Dixie (Page County) Artillery Battery at the second battle of Bull Run. In nineteen volumes, Cooke describes daily duties and events throughout the war as an officer on the staffs of Philip St. George Cocke, Pierre G. T. Beauregard, Braxton Bragg, Samuel Jones, William Montgomery Gardner, Thomas Jordan (18191895), and Robert E. Lee. Civil War items consist of a letter, 21 June 1861, from Robert Selden Garnett to Muscoe Russell Hunter Garnett (18211864) regarding Muscoe Garnett's request to serve on his staff (folder 18); letters, 1861, to Robert S. Garnett from Michael G. Harman concerning troops, equipment, and food collected by Harman for Garnett, and from Daniel Ruggles reporting on the landing of a large Union force in Stafford County and asking for reinforcements; orders, 1861, signed by Robert S. Garnett, concerning the assignment of Confederate artillery batteries, the spending of public money, and the assignment of an agent at Suffolk to purchase supplies for newly arriving troops (folder 19); a letter, 14 August 1861, to the relatives of Robert S. Garnett from J. W. Gordon of New York describing Garnett's death (folder 20); a typescript copy of Richard Brooke Garnett's official report, 30 March 1862, of the battle of Kernstown (folder 23); letters, 1865, from Robert Mercer Taliaferro Hunter (18091887) to Andrew Johnson and William Henry Seward (18011872) concerning Hunter's request for a pardon (folder 30); and a letter, 18 July 1863, from Elliot Johnston (b. These lists are undated, but were created sometime between 1904 and 1918. Typescript copies of both volumes are available. Confederate States Army, Richmond Howitzers, 2d Company, Records, 18631864. Noyes served in this capacity following his capture at the first battle of Bull Run. Photocopy. Confederate States Army, 11th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Descriptive Roll, 1863. Mss2C8203b.Contains the papers of the Cosby family of Powhatan. 1833) of the Morris Artillery to Ann Chisholm concerns camp life and the Furlough and Bounty Act of 1862. The correspondence of Holmes Conrad (18401915) includes letters, 18611864, to and from his mother, Elizabeth Whiting (Powell) Conrad (18091872), concerning camp life as a member of the 1st and the 11th Virginia cavalry regiments, news of Thomas J. Jackson's troops at Romney (now W.Va.), and rumors regarding the possibility of Union attacks in the Winchester area; letters, 18611864, to and from his father, Robert Young Conrad (18051875), regarding Jackson's effect on the citizens of Winchester, rumors of Union advances in the region, a cavalry skirmish near Falls Church in August 1861, and camp life in winter quarters; and a letter, 2 January 1865, from Thomas Lafayette Rosser requesting Samuel Cooper to appoint Holmes Conrad assistant adjutant and inspector general on Rosser's staff (section 2). Mss2C2467b.This collection contains materials generated and collected by Robert G. Carter concerning the war in Virginia. 1 item. 13th Battalion, North Carolina Light Artillery Overview: 13th Artillery Battalion was organized in December, 1863, with six companies. Also included is a reminiscence by Judge Robert White of West Virginia, chairman of the association's executive committee, concerning a skirmish at Harmon's Hill preceding the battle of Waynesboro on 2 March 1865 (box 14). Letters also make frequent reference to religious subjects. 9, made by V. Latrobe, and currency issued by the Confederacy (1864) and North Carolina (1862) (section 5). Also included are descriptions of the chaotic atmosphere in Richmond during the evacuation fire and of northern reactions to Abraham Lincoln's assassination. Muster Out: Disbanded on April 12, 1865.3, Commander(s): Crump Family Papers, 18001930. Mss1C3552a. Able to lead joint planning efforts . 24, 24 January 1863, to Williamson C. Jones of Company J of the 40th Virginia Infantry Regiment concerning the arrest of absentees and the procurement of conscripts and volunteers. Carter, Thomas Henry, Correspondence, 1898. Dodson 3rd Regiment, Virginia Light Artillery (Local Defense) Confederate Virginia Barth Dodson 5th Regiment, Virginia Cavalry Confederate Virginia Included here are Cooke's commissions, 18611862, in the Confederate army as lieutenant colonel and brigadier general; a letter, 1865, of tribute presented to Cooke by members of his brigade following the surrender at Appomattox; and Cooke's parole, 1865, issued at Appomattox Court House. Crafts, George J., Papers, 18561866. Cogbill Family Papers, 18521889. Mss12:1862 January 1:1.A copy of a handwritten certificate, 1 January 1862, issued to William S. Noyes of the 5th Maine Infantry Regiment, for his "efficient and faithful" discharge of his duties as hospital steward at prison hospitals in Richmond. This page was last edited on 23 February 2018, at 15:47. Mss4C76062a1.The order, 20 May 1863, transferring James West Pegram (18391881) from the James River Squadron to duty in Charleston, S.C. Confederate States President, Commission, 1861. 16 items. The battalion along with the 2ndInfantry Division reduced to zero. Anna supported the Union initially and thought it was too much to give up simply to continue the system of slavery; she later sewed shirts for her brothers and made knapsacks at 8 cents a piece. 1824) to Elizabeth (Taylor) Bliss Dandridge concerning the death of Richard B. Garnett at the battle of Gettysburg (folder 38). Included in the collection is a letter, 13 January 1862, from William Fauntleroy Cocke (18361863) of the 18th Virginia Infantry Regiment to his brother, John Preston Cocke (18451917), discussing family news and describing life in winter quarters near Centreville (box 5). Civil War items in the collection relate primarily to service of Henry Coalter Cabell (18201889) as commander of a battalion of artillery and later as commander of artillery in Lafayette McLaws's Division of the Army of Northern Virginia. 1 volume. Of particular note is a letter, 10 February 1864, in which Casey asks a family member to try to catch a deserter and to send Casey a certificate proving the capture in return for which Casey will receive a fifteen-day furlough. Later it was involved in the Knoxville . Mss2En366a1.A letter, 8 August 1864, to Robert Emmett English (18461922) of the Second Auditor's Office concerning a leave of absence. Confederate States Army, 60th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Pay Record, 1863. The correspondence of Harriet Boswell (Alexander) Caperton (18201899) includes a letter, 15 May 1864, from a Union officer, John Lawrence Botsford (d. 1898), notifying her that a guard will be posted to protect her property; letters, 1861, from her son, John Caperton (18441867), concerning his life in camp at the Hermitage Fair Grounds in Richmond; a letter, 9 April 1865, from Harriet Caperton to her son John discussing the fall of Richmond and the Confederate cause in general; and letters, 18611862, from Harriet Caperton to her sister, Sarah Ann (Caperton) Preston (18261908), regarding the secession crisis and the general course of the war (section 6). 28th Pennsylvania Infantry. Chappelear, Amanda Virginia (Edmonds), Papers, 18571960. The typescript petition includes the names of the members of the company and information regarding those wounded or killed during the war. It was proposed to recruit a battalion of artillery for E. D. Baker's Brigade; and Capt. 141, 10 July26 August 1863, assigning enlistees to their units; and a listing, 7 November 18635 July 1864, of horses and equipment, including valuations, belonging to individual soldiers. Mss4C7607a3.A commission, 14 May 1863, appointing George Tarry Sinclair (18161885) a commander in the provisional navy. Confederate States Army, 53d Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, n.d. 3 pp. Chappell, John Taylor, Recollections, ca. A faded letter, dated 8 February 1863, apparently concerns Clayton's request for a transfer and that his servant, Othello, be sent to camp; another nearly illegible letter, dated 14 March 1863, apparently concerns his request for a transfer, the upcoming gubernatorial election, and the explosion at the Richmond Ordnance Laboratory the previous day. 1900, written by Francis Chamberlayne concerning his service in Company I of the 4th Virginia Cavalry Regiment and includes his service in Richmond and in northern Virginia in 1861, camp life, and the first battle of Bull Run. Chamberlayne Family Papers, 18211938. Cleary, William Walter, Diary, 18621864. In volumes kept during the war years (1861, 1863, and 1864), Cobb describes the initial reaction in the county to secession, the enlistment of local men in the Confederate army, his own involvement with the local Home Guard unit, military events (particularly cavalry operations during the Petersburg campaign), food shortages and rising prices, and his changing attitudes toward the Confederate cause (volumes 16, 17, and 18). Mss12:1861 May 3:1. 17 items. 1 p. Mss12:1863 November 29:1.General Order No. The document is signed by Confederate prison officials. Also included is an abstract describing the company's formation and service in 1861. 1 item. of Company E of the 35th Virginia Cavalry Battalion. Mss5:5C8895:12.This collection consists of commonplace books, 18611864, kept by Gilmer W. Crutchfield (b. 8 items. Included are descriptions of Conolly's voyage aboard the Confederate blockade runner CSS Owl and his visits to Fayetteville, Raleigh, and Greensboro, N.C., Richmond and Petersburg, Va., and Philadelphia, Pa. Confederate States Army, 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 18631864. Mss1C774b.Items in this small collection relate primarily to the military service of John Rogers Cooke (18331891). Elizabeth was born March 23, 1823 and died August 11, 1904 Ephraim enlisted in Company B, Virginia 6th Battalion Virginia Reserves on April 16, 1864 for the duration of the war. 1,360 items. As part of its commemoration, Marine . Cummings, Wilber F. (18351895), Letters, 1863. Conrad, Holmes, Papers, 17941959. Section 2 contains memoirs, ca. In this collection , biographical sketches, correspondence, and speeches given at the Institute upon the presentation of portraits of some forty-one Confederate soldiers and officers to the Lee Camp gallery include reminiscences of the military service of those individuals (boxes 1314). Mss12:1861 April 19:1 oversize.A muster roll, 19 April30 June 1861, for the Field and Staff of the 12th Virginia Infantry Regiment. [2] The original Companies B and E enlisted only for 6 months, the others for one year. Copyright 2023 Fold3 by Ancestry. Confederate States Army, 24th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Petition, ca. 13th Battalion Light Artillery, Company D. Fort Caswell: Colonel T.M.Jones 1st Battalion North Carolina (3 cos) 1848] concerning the Confederate defense of Fort Gregg near Petersburg on 2 April 1865), Thomas Charles Cheney ([b. 174 items. Confederate States President, Commission, 1863. Carlton, Cornelius Hart, Diary, 18641869. 14, 12 April 1862, praising the conduct of Elcon Jones of Company K of the 17th Virginia Infantry Regiment at the battle of New Madrid, Miss., while serving on detached duty with the Signal Corps. ii, 600-01. 1 item. Isaac Bland and his teenage sons W. Bland and J. Organization of troops in the Department of Western Virginia and East Tennessee, Brigadier General John H. Morgan commanding, August 1, 1864. Mss5:1C3685:1.Recollections, entitled "From Yorktown to Williamsburg," written by John Taylor Chappell (18451915), formerly a member of Company A of the 10th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, concerning his experiences during the siege of Yorktown and at the battle of Williamsburg. Mss4C7d oversize.This collection contains drawings of bridges, batteries, and ordnance in Virginia received for approval by Jeremy Francis Gilmer (18181883). Curd, Samuella (Hart), Diary, 18601863. Amentum. Redesignated as the 6th Infantry Battalion Reserves on February 27, 1865, per S.O. Confederate States Army, 1st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1861. 3. Early (discussing the treatment of Union-sympathizing southerners in Winchester); Mary L. Fendall (concerning Robert Young Conrad's arrest and imprisonment at Fort McHenry, Md., in 1864); John Daniel Imboden (asking Conrad for Winchester civilian aid in arresting rowdy Confederate soldiers); Thomas J. Jackson (complaining about the conduct of Jackson's army while stationed in Winchester); Edwin McMasters Stanton (attesting to the loyalty to the United States of the Winchester Home Manufacturing Company); and Doctor Wynne (regarding Robert Conrad's wife's involvement in manufacturing clothing and bedding for the Winchester hospitals) (section 16).