+ Reply to Thread
Page 2 of 5
FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 LastLast
Results 26 to 50 of 107

Thread: This date 1865 with the Army of Tennessee

  1. #26
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default early Alabama railroads

    Cheatham’s Corps and probably other commands in the Army of Tennessee utilized the Confederate railroad system for much of their transport from Mississippi to North Carolina in 1865. This is an extract from internet sources describing the railroad through Selma.

    This 104-mile road had been started before the war as a connection in the Montgomery to Vicksburg route. With the Memphis & Charleston RR very vulnerable to being broken at Memphis or on the Tennessee River, it was critical for the South to create a second rail route across the lower Confederacy. This line was part of the solution, but lacked two sections -- 5 miles on the Tombigbee River and the 45 miles from Selma to Montgomery, filled in by the steamboats on the Alabama River. Except for the Tombigbee bridge, the road was completed in December 1862.

    The road was chartered in 1850 and was intended to connect Selma, Alabama with the Mississippi state line. The Selma to Uniontown portion was completed before the war, but resources to finish the work were unavailable to the state or railroad.
    Because it was a link in providing a cross-Confederacy railroad, it was made a high-priority project by the Confederate government and rail was provided by stripping lesser lines. The road was completed to *******n in December 1862 -- except for the lack of a bridge over the Tombigbee River. The gap forced the unloading of cars at Demopolis for a steamboat ride to McDowell's Bluff and reloading of the cars.

    The gap between Selma and Montgomery, not a part of the Alabama & Mississippi Rivers, but part of the urgently needed trans-Confederacy line, also remained and was handled with another steamboat ride.

    The name was changed to the Selma & *******n Railroad in 1864.

  2. #27
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default crossing the Tombigbee

    The crossing of the Tombigbee River, as evidenced by the following letter was a major challenge for the Army of Tennessee. The bridge came too late in the game to be of any help.

    Engineer Bureau, March 28, 1864

    Special authority was obtained more than a month since to construct the bridge over the Tombigbee River, near Demopolis, and Maj. Minor Meriwether placed in charge. Major M.'s reputation for skill and efficiency induces me to believe that everything will be done that can be to secure the prompt completion of the bridge.

    Owing to the size of the river and the character of the freshets, however, the undertaking is one of such magnitude that in the present limited mechanical resources of the Confederacy it can scarcely be accomplished before midsummer.

    A. L. Rives,
    Lieutenant-Colonel, etc.

  3. #28
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default moving on

    January 30, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Selma, Alabama

    February 1, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Montgomery, Alabama. It took three days for Cheatham’s Corps to travel from Montgomery to Macon, a distance of ---- miles via railroad.

    From the History of the 33rd Mississippi:

    On 1 Feb. 1865 the regiment was ordered to take the cars to Mobile, Alabama. The few men remaining in Featherston's Brigade knew they were heading to the Carolinas and would be up against their old nemeses, Gen. William T. Sherman. For many Confederate soldiers it was just too much. Desertions became frequent and soldiers proclaimed their own decision about the fate of the Confederate States of America by removing themselves from the war and going home.

  4. #29
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 1, 1865 Looking at the other side of the line for a moment
    we find Sherman’s army split at two locations this day. The right wing
    was at Pocotaligo, Georgia forty miles north of Savannah and the
    left wing at Robertsville, Georgia twenty miles west of Pocotaligo.
    Both divisions started north for Columbia, SC on their route to
    Goldsboro, NC.

  5. #30
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default railroads path to the east and home

    Railroads in Alabama and Georgia 1865

    The letter below shows the attention paid by Confederate command to the railroad situation in middle Alabama. This route was to become the vehicle by which the Army of Tennessee was able to escape the oncoming siege of James Harrison Wilson in late winter of 1864-65.

    Headquarters Department, &c.
    Montgomery, July 27, 1864

    Maj. George Whitfield
    Assistant Quartermaster, Montgomery, Ala.

    Major,

    I desire that you will, in the event of its becoming necessary in order to complete the Montgomery and West Point road, proceed at once to transfer the iron from the road between Uniontown and Newbern { from the Selma & *******n RR} to Montgomery. In executing this duty you will not only conform strictly to the laws regulating such impressments, but use every effort to secure the rights and feelings of the gentlemen interested in the road. Do not omit to explain to them that the necessity is immediate and imperative, which calls on them to make this sacrifice for the public safety.

    Yours, Very respectfully,
    D. H. Maury
    Major-General, Commanding

    P. S.--I have dispatched General Hood inquiring whether he can procure any iron from Georgia. In case he can, it will not be necessary for you to remove any of the Newbern road. You will ascertain that on applying to Major Jones, commanding here. In the event of your services not being necessary to remove the Newbern iron, you will proceed at once to the break in the road near Notasulga and superintend the repairing of the road. Please press it forward with all of your energy.


    Selma, October 20, 1864

  6. #31
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    Lieut. Gen. R. Taylor, Comdg. Dept. Alabama, Mississippi, and East Louisiana

    General,

    I have read the letter of the president of Alabama & Tennessee Rivers Railroad and the indorsement thereon of General Beauregard, directing the extension of that road from Blue Mountain{, Ala.} to Jacksonville{, Ala., about 20 miles}. The only sources from which iron can be obtained for this purpose are the Gainesville branch {ie, the Mississippi, Gainesville & Tuscaloosa Railroad in Mississippi}, the New Berne branch {of the Alabama & Mississippi Rivers Railroad}, and the Marion branch {of the Cahaba, Marion & Greensboro Railroad}, of Alabama. Of these the Gainesville branch is the only one the Secretary of War has authorized me to remove. The iron will have to be brought by steamers down the Tombigbee River about 50 miles to Demopolis and carried by rail an average of 210 miles. If taken from the New Berne or Marion branch it will have to be carried about 170 miles, and an order from the commanding general given for their removal. To execute the work with dispatch will require two locomotives and thirty cars devoted exclusively to the work, and one of the locomotives must be capable of drawing twenty car-loads of iron, or it will require three locomotives. These must be subtracted from the present transportation of the road engaged in the carriage of army supplies. Can they be spared? The attempt to remove any of the three branches will probably be enjoined (the Gainesville branch least likely in this case), in which event we must await the process of dissolving it before the courts or take it by military force. The Secretary of War has decided that the general commanding is the judge of the necessity in such cases, and with him rests the seizure by force. These branches, especially the New Berne and Marion, penetrate a country which contributes large supplies of grain and meat to the Army, and unless the necessity is imperious, the removal may cause more danger than benefit. The labor for the execution of this work and the teams for hauling cross-ties will have to be impressed. I found it exceedingly difficult to hire labor, even at the most extravagant rates, for the railroad work near Demopolis, and the impressment of labor since the late heavy drafts from Mobile and other points has become doubly difficult. The distance from Blue Mountain to Gadsden, the point to which the supplies are hauled by wagon, is about twenty-seven miles, and from Jacksonville about twenty-two miles, a difference of only five miles. The question arises whether, in considering all these facts, the movement of our Army in that direction are not of such a transitory character and the necessity so temporary and the advantages so slight, comparatively, as to render the undertaking inexpedient at this time.

    I make these suggestions, general with great difficulty and respect, believing that they may not have occurred to General Beauregard. If you so order, I will proceed immediately with the work and execute it as rapidly as possible, giving my most earnest attention to its early completion. The Government will have to advance the money to pay for the work and iron, the company not having the means to do it, and the cost be retained from transportation accounts due from the Government to the company. This is ample to reimburse the Government, but the funds for the labor will be required in advance. The iron can be paid for in Richmond. I shall require about $25,000 to start with for contingencies. Can the quartermaster here supply it?

    Very respectfully, yours
    Minor Meriwether
    Lieutenant-Colonel of Engineers

  7. #32
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default gaps in the rail

    By the year 1865, the railroad extended east from Montgomery to West Point, Georgia near the AL-GA state line. At Auburn, Alabama the line split, going northeast to Atlanta and east to Columbus and Macon. The route from Montgomery to Columbus to Macon included Chehaw Station, Notasulga, Loachappka, Opchlika, Auburn, Girard, Columbus, Butler, Fort Valley and on to Macon. The northern route going near Atlanta was from Auburn to West Point to Grantville to Newnan to Eat Point and then south to Griffin, Barnesville and on to Macon.
    Which one of these routes was used by the Army of Tennessee. Maybe both, I don’t know at this point in time, but I’m still digging!
    The railroad from Selma to Montgomery was not completed until 1870 so a march was necessary for that connection. This was costing valuable time, but could not be avoided.

  8. #33
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default Fort Tyler

    Assembling at Fort Tyler
    The fort was commanded by Brig. Gen. Robert C. Tyler. When notified of the imminent approach of the Federals, Tyler assembled a small group of approximately 120 Confederates inside the fort composed of soldiers on leave, hospital aides, and local boys.¹ (Note there are varying accounts of the number of Confederate soldiers that fought within the fort and in the town of West Point. These range from 120 to 265) They manned the earthen fort and named it in honor of their General.² The fort, built 18 months earlier, contained three artillery pieces: a 32-pounder which was placed on the southeast corner of the fort, and two 12-pound Parrot guns, one of which was placed on the southwest corner and another on the northwest corner. Numerous stories and folklore abound concerning that Easter Sunday. Most notable are stories of young boys wanting to help in the battle. One such story is about "Major" Anderson.
    Once in West Point, the fight started early, 10-11 a.m., and it went on 'til dusk. The Union cavalrymen commanded by Col. Oscar LaGrange easily circumvented the fort and took a river bridge, but they couldn't feel secure with Tyler's 32-pound cannon aimed at their backs.³

  9. #34
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default movn' on to Macon

    It's 1865 now and Sherman has already crossed this path on his destructive way to Savannah and his army is now crawling it's way up the coast into central South Carolina leaving great peril in their path. This last remnant of the western Confederate fighting force, tired and bloodied from their vacation in Tennessee are looking for one more piece of William Tecumseh Sherman before they call it quits and head back to the farms from whence they came.

    February 5, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Macon, Georgia

    The city of Macon was in a relatively protected location and had a strong link to the railroad system in the southern states. Wounded Confederates could be easily transported here because of the rail access as was the case when Whitfield Monroe Parker was wounded in nearby Atlanta on August 9, 1864. The old city fairgrounds served as a prison location and scarce gold reserves were sent to Macon for safe storage. The Findley Iron Works is said to have built eighty 1,500 - pound cannon between 1862 and 1864. General William Sherman’s “March to the Sea" managed to miss Macon and its arsenal. Governor Joseph E. Brown decided to move the capital to Macon, to keep the state's records safe from yankee destruction. A legislature was seated in the old city hall from February 15 until March 11, 1865. Macon was finally captured by General James H. Wilson at the end of the Civil War. Two armies, same road.

  10. #35
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default Milledgeville

    February 7, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Milledgeville, Georgia

    Milledgeville, Georgia

    Milledgeville was the capital of Georgia from 1803-1868. The city was occupied Nov. 22-25, 1864 by Gen. Sherman’s army’s left wing, which came together here briefly from Eatonton and Shady Dale to cross the Oconee River. The governor’s mansion located at 120 St. Clark Street , was built in 1838. During the brief occupation General Sherman “slept in his bedroll on the floor of this historic home, from which the furnishings had been evacuated to Macon along with Gov. Joe Brown. Brown was later arrested at this site in May 1865.” Sherman’s men blew up the Milledgeville arsenal, but left the State Capitol building standing, “if only to serve as an amusement park for the rowdy soldiers. They ransacked the State documents, littering them throughout the building, while spitting tobacco upon the floor. For some fun, the men called a mock session of congress to order, and debated the merits of whiskey while consuming mass quantities of it. They then took the liberty of revoking Georgia's secession from the Union, and wrote up articles proclaiming Georgia's allegiance to the United States.” An internet source says that one of the most interesting locally occupied sites was St. Stephens Episcopal Church. The story is that the Federal army stabled their horses inside, leaving still visible hoofprints under the original wooden pews. The men also reportedly poured molasses down the pipes of the church organ, to "sweeten the sound." Although the organ has been replaced, the memory of disrespect remains.”

    The Army of Tennessee was not taking a scenic tour in February, 1865. They were hell bent on doing battle with William Tecumseh Sherman’s army. The survival of the Confederacy was at stake. Whitfield Parker likely thought more about his often painful wounds than he pondered the long-term survival of the Confederacy. One of General Sherman’s parrot guns had brought the discomfort which was to last a lifetime. He wouldn’t have minded returning the favor. The chance would come in North Carolina.

  11. #36
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default Feb 8, 1865

    February 8, 1865 Augusta, Georgia

    Enemy cut railroad to Charleston yesterday morning near Blacksville. Lee’s Corps is in position on the South Fork of the Edisto, protecting the approaches to Columbia. Head of Cheatham’s Corps arrived here last night. McLaw’s Division is at or about Branchville. I shall leave here tomorrow for Columbia – G.T. Beaugregard, Gen.

  12. #37
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default Augusta

    Augusta, Georgia

    Augusta’s contribution to the war was the Confederate government financed Powder Works, a large facility very quickly erected on the Augusta Canal by ordnance expert George Washington Rains. Under his supervision this plant made nearly 3 million pounds of superior gunpowder for Confederate use.

    The following was written by Richard J. Lentz and has been extracted from The Civil War in Georgia, An Illustrated Travelers Guide:

    Augusta, like Columbus and Macon, played an important role as a fall line industrial, transportation, and trade center for the Confederacy during the Civil War. Augusta was the location of the Confederacy's Powder Works Factory, which supplied the Southern states with badly needed explosive powder. Cotton is what shaped and supported Augusta in the antebellum and post Civil War years, giving its citizens wealth and importance. Although no battle was fought here and Gen. W.T. Sherman’s men didn't march through its streets on their way to the sea, much Civil War history is to be found in the Garden City. Augusta, the birthplace of "Fighting" Joe Wheeler, supplied many fighting men to the cause. Five hospitals were located here. Augusta is the second oldest city in Georgia, established in 1736 by Gen. James E. Oglethorpe as an Indian trading post on the Savannah River. It was the state's capital from 1785-95, and many of Georgia's historical "firsts" happened in Augusta. The oldest railroad in Georgia continuously operating under its original charter, the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company, carried more than 100,000 Confederate soldiers to their homes without charge after the War.

  13. #38
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default more powder in Augusta

    Augusta Canal, Confederate Powder Works

    A 168-foot obelisk chimney is all that remains from the Confederate Powder Works, which is the only permanent structure begun and completed by the Confederate government. The Powder Works Factory was the second largest munitions factory in the world during the Civil War, consisting of 26 buildings which stretched two miles down the first level of the Augusta Canal. In July 1861, President Jefferson Davis ordered West Point-trained engineer, Col. George Washington Rains to select a place for a gunpowder plant, and Rains selected Augusta. The munitions factory operated under Rains from 1862 until April 18, 1865, manufacturing 2,750,000 pounds of gunpowder of the highest quality then made from saltpeter smuggled through the Federal blockade from India via England. Rains was known to boast that no battle was lost for want of gunpowder. The factory also produced cannons, cartridges, percussion caps, grenades, and signal rockets. Churches donated their bells, and local women donated their lead window weights to be melted into bullets. Other war industries along the canal produced pistols, uniforms, shoes, bedding, hospital supplies, baked goods, and gun and horse harnesses. The city bought the dilapidated powder works from the U.S. government in 1872 and tore down the mills to make way for new industries. Col. Rains, then a professor of chemistry and pharmacy at the Medical College of Georgia, appeared before the city council requesting that "at least the noble obelisk be allowed to remain forever as a fitting monument to the dead heroes who sleep on the unnumbered battlefields of the South." Large stone tablets on the base of the chimney pay tribute to the fallen Confederacy and Rains, who "under almost insuperable difficulties erected, and successfully operated these powder works — a bulwark of the beleaguered Confederacy."

  14. #39
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 9, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Augusta, Georgia

    February 11, 1865

    From the History of the 33rd Mississippi:

    From Mobile the 33rd Mississippi ferried across Mobile Bay to the Tensas River and on up to the railroad at Tensas, Alabama. From there they took the cars through Pollard and Montgomery, Alabama, over to Columbus, Georgia and there on to Macon and Milledgeville, Georgia, where they got off and marched to Augusta, Georgia. They arrived on 11 February 1865. Within two days the men of Featherston's Brigade were ordered to march northward to Graniteville, South Carolina. They were in poor condition for a march and the column stretched for miles over the bad country roads.

  15. #40
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 15, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps left Augusta toward
    Baushetts Mills

    February 16, 1865 2:30 p.m.
    Enemy commenced shelling city this morning. He is apparently moving up Saluda River. Our forces occupy south bank of that stream and Congaree. – G.T. Beaugregard, Gen.

    Feb 16, 1865 6:00 p.m.

    Enemy has forced a passage across the Saluda River above Columbia. I will endeavor to prevent him from crossing the Broad, but my forces here are so small it is doubtful whether I can prevent it. Columbia will soon have to be evacuated – G.T. Beaugregard, Gen.

  16. #41
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 18, 1865 Sherman’s force entered Columbia, South Carolina

    February 19, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Newberry, South Carolina

    February 20, 1865

    Sherman departed Columbia, SC in route to
    Fayetteville, NC with the right wing going through Cheraw, SC and the
    left wing through Lancaster and Sneedsboro, SC. Cheraw was a
    storage facility for arms, powder and for personal property of
    displaced Charleston residents, hoping to save their furniture and
    gold from the invading army. It didn’t work.

  17. #42
    Private (25+ posts) bama_belle's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    In the Heart of Dixie
    Posts
    106

    Default

    Larry,

    Please continue to post this. I am enjoying reading what you have done here so far.

    belle
    4th Alabama Infantry, Co. F., Law's Brigade and 79th New York "Highlanders"

  18. #43
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    Bama Belle,

    Thanks very much for taking time to respond. That gives me strength? Welcome, by the way to the board. There are some very knowledgeable and helpful folks lurking around here. I noticed in your information a reference to the 4th Alabama and Laws Brigade. My wife had ancestors in the 15th Alabama and 51st Georgia who were also, as you probably know, in the Army of Northern Virginia. Hershel Glenn with the 15th was captured at Antietam and swapped soon afterward. He served until Appamattox. James Whaley with the 51st was captured at Gettysburg, July 2 and spent the remainder of the war at Fort Delaware. Both lived after the war in Dale County, Alabama and were from Quitman Co. Ga and Pike Co. Al before service. If you have read many of my postings here, you will see that I have very limited knowledge of the actual routes/s? of the Army of Tennessee on their trek east from Mississippi in the winter of 1865. Any corrections or additions you could make, or anyone you know who could help with detail, would be greatly appreciated!

  19. #44
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default February moves on....

    February 21, 1865

    From the History of the 33rd Mississippi:

    On 21 February 1865 Loring's Division was ordered to move north of the Saluda River to near Newberry, South Carolina. The command situation in this Confederate Army of Tennessee was in disarray during all of this time. Gen. J. B. Hood had resigned and Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard had no central command authority and was not able to pull together the scattered Confederate forces which stretched from Texas to North Carolina and was unable to put together a coherent defense against Gen. Sherman.

  20. #45
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 22, 1865

    Gen. Robert E. Lee ordered Gen. Joseph Johnston to
    assume command of the Army of Tennessee and all troops in the
    Departments of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

    The same day Feb 22, Union Force under Maj. Gustavus Schnitzer commanding the 2nd Iowa Cavalry returned to Eastport, Mississippi from the capture of Russellville, Alabama and reported that Brig. Gen. Roddey left Mt.
    Hope, Alabama, on February 20, 1865, to join Maj. Gen. N.B. Forrest
    at Tuscaloosa, Alabama. – as per Gene Cantrell of Sherman, TX in
    his 1996 History of the 5th Alabama CSA.

  21. #46
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 23, 1865

    From the History of the 33rd Mississippi:

    On 23 February 1865 Gen. Joe Johnston was again appointed to head up the Army of Tennessee. Featherston's Brigade soldiered on, leaving Newberry, S.C., on the 23rd for a train ride to Pomoria, S.C.. From there they hiked to Unionville, S.C., and remained there until 3 March 1865.

  22. #47
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 25, 1865
    Charlotte, N.C. February 25, 1865 --1:15 p.m.

    General R.E. Lee,
    Richmond, Va.:

    General Roddey reports from near Moulton, Ala., that enemy at Huntsville is reported collecting supplied for an early move on Selma via Tuscaloosa. Timbers are being delivered at Decatur for railroad bridge. Fourth Army Corps, Wood's, is encamped about Huntsville. Force there and at Stevenson estimated at 10,000 to 18,000 infantry.

    G.T. BEAUREGARD.

  23. #48
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    February 26, 1865

    Cheatham’s Corps in Pomaria, South Carolina

    From Edward Ball in Slaves in the Family, Random House, NY 2001:

    “a band of soldiers in blue uniforms arrived on the lawn at Limerick.
    The federal troops told the slaves they were free….”

  24. #49
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default A third star for Nat Forrest

    February 28, 1865

    N.B. Forrest received his commission as a Lieutenant General. That same day General Beauregard orders Brig. Gen. P.D. Roddey to report to Lieut. Gen. Richard Taylor for orders, but keep Beauregard advised of enemy movements.

  25. #50
    Captain (5000+ posts) larry_cockerham's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Nashville
    Posts
    6,968

    Default

    March 1, 1865

    Headquarters Mar 1, 1865 General Robert E. Lee wrote:

    General Johnston reports that Hardee’s infantry, without artillery or wagons, has reached Cheraw. No information of progress of Stewart or Cheatham. The enemy has been stationary for a few days. Our Calvary on their right think he is moving upon Florence or Cheraw; that on his left suppose he is advancing on Cheraw or Charlotte – R.E. Lee

    March 2, 1865 Cheatham’s Corps in Unionville, South Carolina

+ Reply to Thread
Page 2 of 5
FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts