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James D. Porter, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.1, Tennessee (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 31 3 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in James D. Porter, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.1, Tennessee (ed. Clement Anselm Evans). You can also browse the collection for William Brimage Bate or search for William Brimage Bate in all documents.

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rt, promoted to major-general, commanded a division of Buckner's corps that was mainly composed of Tennesseeans. The Seventeenth, Lieut.-Col. Watt W. Floyd; Twenty-third, Col. R. H. Keeble; Twenty-fifth, Lieut.-Col. R. B. Snowden, and Forty-fourth, Lieut.-Col. John L. McEwen, Jr., constituted Bushrod R. Johnson's brigade of this division, under Col. John S. Fulton. The Fifteenth and Thirty-seventh, Col. R. C. Tyler, and Twentieth, Col. Thomas B. Smith, made up half of the brigade of Gen. William B. Bate. The Eighteenth, Col. Joseph B. Palmer; Twenty-sixth, Col. John M. Lillard; Thirty-second, Col. Edmund C. Cook; Forty-fifth, Col. Anderson Searcy, and Twenty-third battalion, Maj. Tazewell W. Newman, formed Gen. John C. Brown's brigade. Capt. J. W. Clark's cavalry company was escort to General Buckner. William Preston's division of the same corps (Buckner's) included the Sixty-third regiment, Lieut.-Col. Abraham Fulkerson, in Gracie's brigade and the battery of Capt. Edmund D. Ba
, with headquarters at Macon. Major-General William Brimage Bate Major-General William Brimageense against the war being waged upon them, and Bate entered the military forces as a private. He wtil nightfall. According to Rosecrans' report, Bate delayed his army at this point thirty-six hoursfollowed by the gallant Clayton and indomitable Bate, pressing on beyond the Chattanooga road and dr had their horses killed—the second lost by General Bate that morning. In the evening he again leders were captured. The military service of General Bate was closed in the spring of 1865, with the f Southern manhood were still with him, and General Bate speedily gained a lucrative practice and hoing disaster until captured. Two others of General Bate's brigade commanders, Major Lash and Gen. Hson, shared his fate as a prisoner of war. General Bate, in his report, said of Smith that he bore of the Southwest until, on the promotion of General Bate, he was made brigadier-general. At Mission[6 more...]