Confederate military history; a library of Confederate States history . udgins, W. Smith,Benthall, Albertson, T. E. Gibbs, R. M. C. Kennedy, S. , Russell, Hazlehurst, Fogartie, Turner, Bohan-non, Atchinson, Brockenton, Rasler, E. W. Skirmer,Burr, Parsons, Paschall, Battle, Turner, Cohoon, Hart,E. P. Winder, Green, Fitzgerald, Golden, Seymour,Sneed, Oliviera, Brown, Selden, Bragdon, E. W. Jordan,Jenkins, C. Hunter, P. M. Baker, W. B. Littlepage,Simpson, Keen, Foster, Spraggins, Haynie, Bronson. CONFEDERATE MILITARY HISTORY. 115 OFFICERS OF THE CONFEDERATE STATES MARINE CQRPS. Colonel Co


Confederate military history; a library of Confederate States history . udgins, W. Smith,Benthall, Albertson, T. E. Gibbs, R. M. C. Kennedy, S. , Russell, Hazlehurst, Fogartie, Turner, Bohan-non, Atchinson, Brockenton, Rasler, E. W. Skirmer,Burr, Parsons, Paschall, Battle, Turner, Cohoon, Hart,E. P. Winder, Green, Fitzgerald, Golden, Seymour,Sneed, Oliviera, Brown, Selden, Bragdon, E. W. Jordan,Jenkins, C. Hunter, P. M. Baker, W. B. Littlepage,Simpson, Keen, Foster, Spraggins, Haynie, Bronson. CONFEDERATE MILITARY HISTORY. 115 OFFICERS OF THE CONFEDERATE STATES MARINE CQRPS. Colonel Commandant Lloyd J. Beall; H. ; Maj. George H. Terrett; Paymaster, Major Alli-son; Adjutant, Maj. Israel Greene; Quartermaster, ^ S. Taylor. Captains J. D. Simms, Tattnall, Hays,Holmes, Thorns, Van Benthuysen, Meiere, Wilson. FirstLieutenants Sayre, Howell, Henderson, Raney, , Thurston, Cameron, MacRae. Second Lieuten-ants Bradford, Venable, Graves, H. M. Doak, Berr>,Neufville, Brent, Murdoch, Roberts, Rapier. il&i^??;:.. J. WILLAM JONES, D. D. THE MORALE OF THE CONFEDERATE ARMY BY J. William Jones, D. D. THE MORALE OF THE CONFEDERATEARMIES. ENTHUSIASM OF ALL CLASSES FOR THE SOUTHERNCAUSE —COLLEGE STUDENTS IN THE FRONT-GREAT CAMPAIGNS AND VALOROUS —HUMANITY TOWARD THE ENEMV-RELir,-ION IN THE CAMP —INCIDENTS OF PERSONALHEROISM—THE VETERAN IN CIVIL LIFE. IN his testimony before the committee on the con-duct of the war, Major-General Hooker—Fij^jhtinjjJoe he was affectionately and appropriately calledby his men—uses this remarkable and emphatic lan-guage: Our artiller}- had always been superior to that ofthe rebels, as was also our infantry, except in disci-pline, and that, for reasons not necessary to mcntioa,never did equal Lees army. With a rank and file vastlyinferior to our own, intellectually and physically, thatarmy had, by discipline alone, acquired a character forsteadiness and efficiency unsurpassed, in my


Size: 1514px × 1649px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidconfederatem, bookyear1899