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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 30. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 28 total hits in 16 results.
Lynchburg (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.41
Meadow Mills (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.41
Recollections of Cedar Creek and Fisher's Hill, October 19th, 1864.
[See article by Captain Samuel D. Buck, Ante p. 104.]
I have just read Captain S. D. Buck's account of the Cedar Creek fight.
I was there.
I wish he could have described the conduct of General Early's Indian orderly, who seemed to have gone wild when we broke the enemy's front and everything was stampeding.
That Indian rode pell-mell into the fleeing Yankees, driving them to the rear, when one of them, bolder and cooler than the rest, after he had thrown down his gun and started to the rear, seeing the Indian pass on, deliberately wheeled, picked up his gun and shot the Indian dead.
My battalion was located on and to the right of the turnpike.
At our final stand, when Sheridan made his attack and broke Gordon and then pressed down on Ramseur, I fought them with the guns I had on the pike until the two battle lines seemed to close together in deadly strife.
Poor General Ramseur was there mortally w
Fishers Hill (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 1.41
Recollections of Cedar Creek and Fisher's Hill, October 19th, 1864.
[See article by Captain Samuel D. Buck, Ante p. 104.]
I have just read Captain S. D. Buck's account of the Cedar Creek fight.
I was there.
I wish he could have described the conduct of General Early's Indian orderly, who seemed to have gone wild when we broke the enemy's front and everything was stampeding.
That Indian rode pell-mell into the fleeing Yankees, driving them to the rear, when one of them, bolder an e impulsive men, and not knowing that they were Yankees, called out: D— you, what are you halting me for?
The Yank replied, with his pistol right in the Captain's face, who, discovering his mistake, bade the Yank good-night.
I was also at Fisher's Hill when the Yankees pressed me so hard that they caught Lieutenant Spalding, of Cooper's Battery, with a caisson, and where poor Sandy Pendleton, of Early's staff was shot.
He had collected about one hundred men, covering my flank, to let me ou
Marcellus N. Moorman (search for this): chapter 1.41
William N. Pendleton (search for this): chapter 1.41
Spalding (search for this): chapter 1.41
Jubal A. Early (search for this): chapter 1.41
James E. B. Stuart (search for this): chapter 1.41
Philip Sheridan (search for this): chapter 1.41
James F. Cooper (search for this): chapter 1.41

