Colonel Steele served as the Executive Officer for Battalion Landing Team 1/4 from 2012 to 2014 and completed a WESTPAC deployment in support of the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU). Mss4C76085a1.A letter, 1 August 1864, to Secretary of the Treasury George Alfred Trenholm (18061876), concerning the extension of an exemption from military service for G. W. Butler, a former teller in the Treasury Department. Confederate States Army, 53d Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, n.d. 3 pp. Mss5:1C7697:1.Consists of a photocopy of a typescript of a memoir, 1908, written by William Buchanan Conway (18451920) of Madison County, concerning his early life and his service in Company C of the 4th Virginia Cavalry Regiment. Typescript copy. Chappell, John Taylor, Recollections, ca. Army Reserve Component CBRN Units - United States Army Mss12:1864 August 31:1 oversize.A muster roll, 31 August30 October 1864, for Company G (1st) of the 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment. Cadwallader, John N. (18391876), Papers, 18601892. Claiborne, John Herbert, Papers, 18611865. Confederate States Army, Anderson's Brigade, Order Book, 1862. Confederate States Army, 9th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Muster Roll, 18621865. iii, 772821 and ser. Tomlin's Battalion Virginia Infantry: University Battalion Virginia Infantry: Virginia Military . samuel m. wallace 11th va res bn, Next post: NP: June 13, 1864 Philadelphia Inquirer: Interesting from the White House, Subscribe to The Siege of Petersburg Online RSS Feed, Papers of the Military Historical Society of Massachusetts, Minor Events, Scouts, Actions and Skirmishes, The Beefsteak Raid (September 14-17, 1864), The Battle of Fort Stedman (March 25, 1865), Nafziger Civil War Petersburg Campaign Orbats (OOBs), GBACW: The Battle of New Market Heights by Scot Rohrer, 150 Years Ago Today at Petersburg: February 27, 1865, The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia, Battle of New Market Heights Memorial and Education Association, Fort Wiki: Defenses of Richmond and Petersburg, Interpretive Challenges (Emmanuel Dabney), Commander: Lieutenant Colonel Samuel M. Wallace (? The papers consist of a copy of a letter, 12 January 1862, from Chenoweth to his mother, Nancy Ann (Hart) Chenoweth of Beverly, Randolph County (now W.Va.), concerning religious sentiments; a copy of a diary, 29 May9 June 1862, kept by Chenoweth during the battles of Cross Keys and Port Republic; and a copy of an undated memoir by Joseph F. Harding concerning Joseph Chenoweth's service in the 31st Virginia at the battles of McDowell, Cross Keys, and Port Republic. The correspondence of Martha Elizabeth Coons (18391863) includes letters, 18621863, from Frank Alexander Coons (18461912), Lemuel Corbin, and Mary Ann B. Mss12:1864 November 5:1.A letter, 5 November 1864, concerning charges brought against three members of Company D of the 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment for the loss of ordnance stores in fighting east of Richmond in the fall of 1864. Mss2C3558b.This collection contains the papers of several generations of the Chamberlayne family of Virginia. 24 volumes. 36 items. 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. Confederate States Army, 13th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Roster, compiled ca. The correspondence of Henry Wilkins Coons (18411862) of the 4th Virginia Cavalry Regiment includes a letter, 22 November 1861, to Winfield Scott Coons (18151889) describing camp life, and letters, 1862, to Mary Corbin regarding cavalry operations during the Peninsula campaign, the Seven Days' battles, and the first battle of Bull Run (section 19). Included are letters to Cabell from A. H. McLaws concerning the relief from command of Lafayette McLaws by James Longstreet in December 1863; from Preston M. Quarles (18311863) regarding Cabell's promotion to lieutenant colonel in September 1861; from George Wythe Randolph (18181867) concerning ammunition and training for Cabell's battery while serving on the Peninsula in 1861; and from Robert Augustus Stiles (18361905) informing Cabell of orders reorganizing artillery batteries in his battalion before the battle of the Wilderness, and offering reasons why Cabell will not be promoted to brigadier general in March 1865 (section 18). The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Civil War. Mss2C2359b.This small collection consists of a portion of a letter, 24 July 1863, from an unidentified Confederate soldier in which he describes, in detail, his participation in the battle of Champion's Hill, Miss., and the Vicksburg campaign, and a letter, 15 October 1864, from James McDowell Carrington (18381911) of the Charlottesville Artillery Battery to his mother, Eliza Henry (Preston) Carrington (17961877), discussing the general military situation in Virginia in October 1862. Mss12:1865 April 21:1.A handwritten copy of the order, 21 April 1865, issued by John S. Mosby (18331916) disbanding the 43d Virginia Cavalry Battalion. Confederate States Army, Quartermaster's Department, Account, 1863. 1803?) Mss12:1864 December:1 oversize.A return, December 1864, for provisions secured and distributed in the Mountain District in North Carolina. Civil War items in the collection relate primarily to service of Henry Coalter Cabell (1820-1889) as commander of a battalion of artillery and later as commander of artillery in Lafayette McLaws's Division of the Army of Northern Virginia. Mss4C7e.This collection primarily concerns the 20th Virginia Heavy Artillery Battalion. Confederate States Army, Department of Henrico, papers, 18611864. Also, includes tables of ordnance supplies of the brigade. Typescript. 245 items. Confederate States Army, 43d Virginia Cavalry Battalion, Roll Book, 18641865. [2] The original Companies B and E enlisted only for 6 months, the others for one year. 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. 13th Battalion, Virginia Reserves (Confederate) FamilySearch 1, 2. Mss2R1867a1.The parole, 10 April 1865, issued to William T. Ratcliffe of Company F of the 3d Virginia Cavalry Regiment at Appomattox Court House. 1 item. Cochran, Catherine Mary Powell (Noland), Memoir, n.d. 2 volumes. Email Us! 1 p. Mss12:1863 October 1:1.An extract of Special Order No. The correspondence of Julia Ann (Cooley) Price (18311916) includes a letter, 12 May 1863, to her sister-in-law, Caroline (Higgins) Cooley, concerning, in part, the death of Thomas J. Jackson, and letters, 1864, from her cousin, John T. Cooley, describing the execution of Confederate deserters and his service in the 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment during the 1864 Shenandoah Valley campaign (section 6). 1862. 1 item. crosses the Lower Peninsula from Empire to Harrisville . 2 pp. 1st Battalion Kentucky Cavalry, Lieutenant Colonel R. A. Alston. Cox, Leroy Wesley, Memoirs, 1934. 5 items. Casey, William Thomas, Papers, 18611864. 1840) of Richmond written on board a transport, in which Coles describes Confederate artillery fire against Union troops on Roanoke Island, N.C. Coles was killed the next day in the battle of Roanoke Island. Cabell Family Papers, 17741941. 28 items. 1 item. Items include a letter, 18 March 1865, from Carter to William Nelson (18081892) concerning the reorganization of the artillery of the 2d Corps; the Appomattox parole, 1865, of Carter and fifty-eight members of the artillery of the Army of Northern Virginia; and a handwritten copy, 1865, of General Order No. Companies (batteries) are listed separately as they rarely fought as a unit; they are also listed under artillery batteries (above). 9 pp. A few more units USMCR circa 1951-66 25th Special Infantry Company, Huntington, West Virginia C Battery 2nd 155mm Gun Battalion, Texarkana, Texas (it would see that some units were spread out all over the place, as seen in the earlier post, 2nd 155mm Gun Battalion was located in Miami, so these type of Reserve Battalions may have had elements far apart) of Company B of the 1st Virginia Cavalry Regiment. Mss2C2468c.This collection contains materials relating to service of Thomas Henry Carter (18311908) in the 2d Corps Artillery of the Army of Northern Virginia. Confederate States Army, 21st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Descriptive Roll, 1861. Mss12:1864:3. This page has been viewed 2,199 times (0 via redirect). Sicily-Rome American Cemetery, Nettuno, Italy - Burial Records, Surnames H Other wartime items include letters from William Lowther Jackson (discussing Union troop movements in the Shenandoah Valley in 1865); Lunsford Lindsay Lomax (concerning Confederate troops movements in the Valley in the fall of 1864); Hunter Holmes McGuire ([18351900] regarding food supplied to a hospital in Winchester in 1861); James D. Robison (noting the supply of whiskey for Confederate wounded); and James Alexander Seddon ([18151880] concerning the commission of William Shelton as second lieutenant of Company H of the 58th Virginia Infantry Regiment) (section 19). 14, 13 March 1862, placing Robert E. Lee in command of military operations of the armies of the Confederacy. Mss2C4175b.An agreement, 1883, of C. F. Chelf, as representative of Smith & Chelf of Culpeper County, with C. B. Hank regarding a claim against the United States government for cotton destroyed at East Macon, Ga., in 1864. A separate finding aid for this collection is available in the Society's library. Mss2C4476b.This collection contains the papers of two members of the Chisholm family of Hanover County. Photocopies. We are happy to exchange information with other researchers. Mss2D7206a1.Special orders, 18 March 1865, authorized by Richard Stoddert Ewell, granting leave to J. M. Dooley of Company I of the 22d Virginia Infantry Regiment. . Also in the Subsistence Department records are provision returns for the Fluvanna, Nelson, Powhatan, and Staunton Hill artillery batteries. The correspondence of Mary Dillard (Coons) Corbin (18381910) of North Cliff, Culpeper County, consists primarily of letters to and from friends and family members describing life in the county during the war, Union activities in the region, and news of military events near Richmond in 1862 (section 10). 1st Reg., Artillery. Of particular note are her descriptions of the following military operations: the first and second battles of Bull Run, the Bermuda Hundred campaign, the 1864 Shenandoah Valley campaign, and the Petersburg campaign. Microfilm reel C584.This collection contains materials concerning the service of John Hampden Chamberlayne (18381882) in the 21st Virginia Infantry Regiment and in the Purcell, Crenshaw, and Davidson Virginia Artillery batteries. Ephraim is the bother of 2 other Civil . Cocke Family Papers, 17421976. 47 items. Chapman, William Henry, Letter, 1887. A letter, 2 February 1862, from William J. Chisholm (b. 1 item. Confederate States Army, 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Record Book, 1864. 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. Comfort Family Papers, 18481900. Untitled Document [www.ranger95.com] Letters, 18621863, to family from George Coiner's brother, Martin Diller Coiner (18431863) of the 52d Virginia Infantry Regiment, offer descriptions of an execution of Confederate deserters, of the Second Bull Run campaign (including J. E. B. Stuart's raid on Catlett's Station), of camp life in February 1863, of the battle of Chancellorsville, and of the march into Pennsylvania in June 1863 (section 3). Microfilm reel C589.This collection contains the correspondence, 18571865, of John Overton Collins (1833?1911) of Fluvanna County. 1 item. Confederate States Army, 59th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Letterbooks, 1863. Mss1C3194a.Contains the papers of the Cazenove and related Minor and Plummer families of Virginia. Virginia Civil War Confederate Reserve Units FamilySearch Mss1C7637a. Companies. 1830?] Entries in the diary discuss family news, Cleary's journey through Kentucky and Tennessee in the fall of 1862, the Richmond Bread Riots in March 1863, local reaction to George Stoneman's cavalry raid on Richmond in May 1863 (34 May 1863), his brief service in Company D of the 3d Infantry, Local Defense Troops, the arrival of Confederate wounded following battle of Chancellorsville, and news of the Vicksburg and Gettysburg campaigns. Materials include the morning report for the unit for May 1863; an ordnance stores list, 1863, for Company A; proceedings, 1863, of a board of survey on commissary stores at Battery No. Beauregard's address is printed in the Official Records, ser. Mss9:3E470.2C7723:1.This collection contains a published copy of a diary, 218 April 1865, kept by Lelian M. Cook (b. Also included is a newspaper clipping of Jefferson Davis's inaugural address. 2 volumes. 1, 2 Muster Out: Disbanded on April 12, 1865. At the end of that year, their service was extended for the duration of the war. Chenoweth, Joseph Hart, Papers, 18571862. 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. Mss2C6775b.This small collection contains tax-in-kind receipts, 18641865, for agricultural products received from Ethelbert Algernon Coleman (18121892) of Halifax County. Officially designated as the 11th Battalion Virginia Reserves on February 27, 1865.1,2 Confederate States Army, Richmond Howitzers, 1st Company, Muster Roll, n.d. 118 pp. Mss1C3552a. If any information is missing, Incorrect or you want to add Information then Send us an of the 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves; organized and mustered into C. S. service June 3, 1864 for the war. 1 item. 64 items. Mss1C8184a.This collection contains the wartime correspondence, 18611865, of William Clark Corson (18371895) of Company G of the 3d Virginia Cavalry Regiment. Mss12:1864 December 24:1.A copy of special order no. 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). 11 items. Clark, George, Memoir, 1920. Mss4C7b.This collection contains the printed title pages of books submitted for copyright. 1 item. Redesignated as the 6th Infantry Battalion Reserves on February 27, 1865, per S.O. 13th Virginia Infantry Regiment - The Civil War in the East The men were from the counties of Cumberland, New Hanover, Beaufort, Orange, Craven, and Wake. Included on the roll are remarks concerning the service record of each soldier. Mss12:1862:2.A muster roll, 18621865, of Company H of the 9th Virginia Cavalry Regiment. Mss12:1863 December 31:2 oversize.A muster roll, 31 December 186330 April 1864, for Company C of the 36th Virginia Infantry Regiment. Chamberlayne Family Papers, 18211938. Photocopy. Muster Out: Disbanded April 12, 1865.3, Commander(s): Mss2St833a1.A discharge, 24 June 1861, issued to Waddy Street at the Cavalry Camp of Instruction, Ashland. Most of the general orders report the findings of various courts martial. 1 volume. 13th Virginia Infantry 23rd Virginia Infantry 32nd Virginia Infantry 42nd Virginia Infantry Also in the collection are miscellaneous records of Castle Thunder, Libby Prison, Winder General Hospital, Soldiers' Home, and General Hospitals No. Other items in the collection include research papers, speeches, and newspaper articles, 18991983, concerning John S. Mosby, compiled by Beverly M. Coleman (section 5); correspondence and research papers, 19211983, of Beverly Coleman concerning other prominent Confederate leaders (section 6); a letter, 19 July 1862, from J. E. B. Stuart to Thomas J. Jackson praising the skill of John S. Mosby (18331916) as a scout; and letters, 1880, from Henry Brainerd McClellan (18401904) to W. H. F. Lee concerning the battle of Gettysburg (section 8). Mss2J3844a1.An affidavit, 11 September 1863, attesting to the qualifications of Joseph A. Jeffries to be a hospital steward at Second Division Hospital No. 9. Former to joining Federal in 2002, she was a principal with which BOUND. Local Defense It was proposed to recruit a battalion of artillery for E. D. Baker's Brigade; and Capt. Clark, Meriwether Lewis, Letter, 1865. This section is a part of a larger collection of Charlotte County records. Virginia Regiments, Batteries and Battalions - The Civil War in the East Mss2C1538b.This collection consists primarily of wartime letters to Virginia Eppes (Dance) Campbell (18311918) from her husband, William Addison Campbell (18291896) of the Powhatan Artillery Battery, describing camp life in Orange County in 1863 and near Chaffin's Bluff in 1865 and his experiences preaching to units in the Army of Northern Virginia (b15); and from her brother, Willis Jefferson Dance (18211887) of the Powhatan Artillery, concerning camp life near Centreville, in 1861, the Seven Days' battles, and an engagement near Rappahannock Station in 1863 (b610). Virginia Reserves. Mss1C2358h.This collection contains the papers of the Carrington family of Charlotte and Prince Edward counties. Civil War materials include a diary, 1 January31 December 1863, kept in Richmond by Herbert Augustine Claiborne (18191902), with brief entries on the weather, news of battles and skirmishes and sessions of Congress, and rumors of troop movements (section 4); a letter, 8 June 1861, from James William Claiborne (18251906) of the 12th Virginia Infantry Regiment to his brother, Herbert A. Claiborne, concerning James's duties as regimental physician and news of fighting around Hampton and Newport News (section 5); and a notebook, 7 June 18613 April 1862, kept by Herbert A. Claiborne in Richmond while serving in the Confederate Commissary Department, containing the following information: daily rations allowed per soldier, prices of food, beef allotted to different camps around the city, rations for prisoners, and an estimate of rations needed for 2,000 patients at Chimborazo Hospital (section 6). Coiner Family Papers, 18621986. 4th Annual Information Awards Dinner Recognize Superior Performance in 1 volume. Chappell, John Taylor, Recollection, 1908. Mss12:1865 May 7:1.The order, 7 May 1865, issued by Dabney Herndon Maury surrendering forces under his command to the Union army. 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. Other items relating to David Comfort's experiences during the war include a discharge, 1861, from service in the 20th Virginia Infantry Regiment, a medical exemption, 1863, for tuberculosis, a commission, 1864, to serve as a member of the Thomas County, Ga., soldiers' relief committee, and an oath of allegiance, 1865, to the United States (section 5). 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). Mss3C3815a728743.Contains affidavits and petitions, 1862, to the Charlotte County Board of Exemptions requesting exemption from service in the Confederate army (section 136). February 26. Photocopy of typescript. Letters written to Comfort by friends and family discuss aspects of the war. The order is signed by Lee's aide, Walter Herron Taylor (18381916). The correspondence of Henry Alexander Carrington (18321885) of the 18th Virginia Infantry Regiment includes letters, 18621864, to his wife, Charlotte Elizabeth (Cullen) Carrington, concerning camp life in northern Virginia in 1861, the suicide of Philip St. George Cocke, the first battle of Bull Run, general war news, the battle of Williamsburg, a recommendation for his promotion by George Edward Pickett, rumors regarding Union desertions following the Emancipation Proclamation, the Suffolk and Bermuda Hundred campaigns, and Carrington's arrival at Point Lookout, Md., as a prisoner of war; a letter, 18 September 1863, to Maria Louisa (Dabney) Carrington (18251902) regarding his life as a prisoner at Johnson's Island, Ohio; a letter, 23 May 1864, from Montgomery Dent Corse praising the conduct of Eppa Hunton's brigade; a letter, 19 March 1864, from Eppa Hunton concerning the reorganization of his brigade and Carrington's return from prison in the North; letters, 1863, from Clement Carrington Read (18051872) of Montreal, Canada, offering assistance to Carrington while a prisoner of war at Johnson's Island, Ohio; and a letter, 23 December 1862, from Robert Enoch Withers (18211907) discussing the battle of Fredericksburg and the price of food items in Danville (section 9). ), Commander:None listed. 1824) to Elizabeth (Taylor) Bliss Dandridge concerning the death of Richard B. Garnett at the battle of Gettysburg (folder 38). Microfilm reel B13.Consists of the papers of members of the Conrad family of Winchester. Dyers/Sifakis Compendium Info: Civil War items include a handwritten copy of an affidavit, 11 February 1863, of George Edward Pickett regarding qualities as a soldier of Henry Alexander Carrington (18321885), and a Richmond Dispatch extra, 4 March 1861, containing a copy of Abraham Lincoln's first inaugural address (section 13).
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