Early. 9 of the Richmond Defenses; Special Order No. Thirty-third Cavalry battalion (transferred to Seventeenth Cavalry): Armesy, Thomas D. , major. Microfilm reels C452453.Contains the papers of four generations of the Cocke family of Virginia. Mss2C15273b.Contains letters, 18611862, from John William Campbell (18411862) of Company D of the 13th Virginia Infantry Regiment to Joseph W. Anderson and Mary Lunny (Campbell) Roberts (18361904) concerning camp life in northern Virginia (particularly the building of winter quarters), sickness in the unit, and a review of the regiment conducted by Joseph E. Johnston. Confederate States of America, Miscellaneous Papers, 18621865. Mss12:1862 October 31:7 oversize.A muster roll, 31 October31 December 1862, of Company H of the 13th Virginia Cavalry Regiment. Virginia Reserves. Dyers/Sifakis Compendium Info: Included are descriptions of the battlefield of immediately following the first battle of Bull Run, fighting near Big Sewell Mountain in September 1861, and his regiment's participation in the Peninsula, Maryland, and Fredericksburg campaigns. Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link. Included in the brief record of his military service is an account of his wounding in a cavalry fight near Mitchell's Shop on 9 May 1864. 287 items. Emil Sturmfels received authority from the War Department, August 2, 1861, to recruit this battalion. Microfilm reels B1012.Contains the papers of members of the Carrington family of Charlotte County. Mss5:1C3685:1.Recollections, entitled "From Yorktown to Williamsburg," written by John Taylor Chappell (18451915), formerly a member of Company A of the 10th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, concerning his experiences during the siege of Yorktown and at the battle of Williamsburg. Confederate States War Department, Bureau of Conscription, Letter, 1864. Mss1C6264a.This collection contains the papers of the Cloyd family of Montgomery and Pulaski counties. Some of the reports and letters are printed in the Official Records, ser. In volumes kept during the war years (1861, 1863, and 1864), Cobb describes the initial reaction in the county to secession, the enlistment of local men in the Confederate army, his own involvement with the local Home Guard unit, military events (particularly cavalry operations during the Petersburg campaign), food shortages and rising prices, and his changing attitudes toward the Confederate cause (volumes 16, 17, and 18). Cary Family Papers, 18441968. Mss2C8425b.Contains the papers of George J. Crafts and includes a letter, 16 December 1863, to Crafts, while serving as an assistant quartermaster in the Confederate Department of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, ordering him to transport men and cargo to Fort Johnson and Fort Sumter, S.C. Craig, John Anthony, Letter, 1864. The unit sustained heavy losses at the Battle of Cedar Creek and surrendered at Appomattox Court House with 10 officers and 52 men. 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. Confederate States Army, 13th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Roster, compiled ca. Claiborne Family Papers, 17391938. We are happy to exchange information with other researchers. Units of the Confederate States Army" by Joseph H. Crute, Jr. contains no history for this unit.[1]. Confederate States Army, 12th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Muster Roll, 1861. #48, Adjutant and Inspector General's Office. 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). 1 item. 1 item. 1 volume. Virginia 13th Infantry Reserves Battalion, Company B (Confederate) Casualties. Photocopy. Mss2C6677a.A letter, 15 May 1863, from William Henry Coit of the South Carolina Palmetto Light Artillery Battery to his family describing, in detail, the death of his brother, George Coit, during the Suffolk campaign, and the use of artillery and breastworks. Also, contain the correspondence of John Rogers Cooke with John G. Cooke (concerning John G. Cooke's recollections of the treatment he received as a civilian by Union troops during the Fredericksburg Campaign), Rachel Wilt (Herzog) Cooke (regarding the secession of Virginia and the situation at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in April 1861), Robert Edward Lee (concerning orders for Cooke to prepare his troops to move on Lee's command during the Bristoe Campaign in October 1863), James Longstreet (regarding Longstreet's effort to reform his scattered corps in mid-May 1863), Flora (Cooke) Stuart ([1836#8211;1923] concerning Cooke's service in the Confederate Army as chief of artillery of the Aquia District in the fall of 1861, and his role in action near Petersburg, Va., in December 1864), and Jeb Stuart (concerning cavalry actions near Fredericksburg, Va., in February 1863, U.S. Army troop movements near New Bern, N.C., and Stuart's Horse Artillery under John Pelham [1838#8211;1863]) (Section 2); and military commissions, 1861 and 1865, of Philip St. George Cooke in the U.S. Army (Section 4). Find the perfect first national drill stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Confederate States Army, 15th Virginia Cavalry Regiment, Muster Roll, n.d. Typescript copy. Photocopies. Microfilm reel C453.This collection contains the papers of members of the Cogbill family of Mecklenburg County. Photocopies. 1829] requesting Powell Conrad to use tin to manufacture canister for the Confederate artillery) (section 18). 4 items. Carneal, Lafayette J., Papers, 18621864. Companies in this Regiment with the Counties of Origin [edit | edit source] Men often enlisted in a company recruited in the counties where they lived though not always. Mss2C6565b.Letters, 18611862, written by James Lindsay Coghill (18351862) while serving in the 90th Regiment of Virginia Militia and the 50th Virginia Infantry Regiment, to his wife, Mary Jane (Tucker) Coghill (of Pedlar Mills). 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). Cleary, William Walter, Diary, 18621864. 1 item. 24 items. Also in the collection are two passes, 12 February 1862, issued to James Chisholm at Manassas by the Confederate Quartermaster's Department permitting him to travel to and from Richmond aboard the Orange and Alexandria and the Virginia Central Railroad. During December it contained 3 officers and 87 men. In letters to Jennie Hill (Caldwell) Corson (18441899), William Corson describes, in detail, incidents of camp life (including daily duties, entertainments, and drill) and his participation in the October 1862 cavalry raid into Pennsylvania and the Peninsula, Bristoe, Petersburg, and 1864 Shenandoah Valley campaigns. 16, 1864: Card 5 3rd Sergeant, 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves, 6th Battalion Reserves Bland enlisted in the 11th Virginia Reserve Battalion at Giles Court House on 5/6/64 in Giles county, Virginia. Volume also contains information on Companies B and D, 13th Battalion, Virginia Reserves; Smyth County militia units; hospitals; veterans; pensions; African Included in Mary Corbin's correspondence are letters, 18621865, from her husband, Lemuel Armistead Corbin (18241907), regarding rumors of Union advances in the Shenandoah Valley in the spring of 1862 and his service in the 43d Virginia Cavalry Battalion. Confederate States Treasury Department, Lighthouse Bureau, Letter, 1861. Cobb, Daniel William, Diary, 18431872. Coke, John O., Correspondence, 18631864. Mss12:1862 November 20:1.The discharge, 1862, issued by the General Hospital in Farmville to James Hannock Lee (18441865) of the 22d Virginia Infantry Battalion. 74.This collection consists of a microfilm copy of a diary, 15 June 186225 April 1864, kept by William Walter Cleary (18311897) while employed as a clerk in the Second Auditor's Office of the Confederate Treasury Department in Richmond. 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. //-->. JAVASCRIPT IS DISABLED. Harrison Township, Michigan, United States. 2 398 Saltville. Photocopy. ca. . 6 items. The letter includes a newspaper clipping advising Virginia Hanes Chamberlayne of the prisoner of war status of Francis Chamberlayne. Confederate States Army, Department of Richmond, Special Orders, 1865. Typescript copy. 22 pp. Confederate States Army, Department of Northern Virginia, Discharge, 1862. Microfilm reels C499500.Contains the papers of three generations of the Comfort family of Virginia. 1 p. Photocopy. Included is a list, ca. Mss5:1C5476:1.A photocopy of a typed transcript of a memoir, entitled "The History of My Life," written by George Clark (18461925) of Spotsylvania County concerning, in part, his service in the Fredericksburg Artillery Battery at the battles of the Wilderness, Spotsylvania Court House, and North Anna and in the Petersburg campaign. . Confederate States Army, Department of the Potomac, Cavalry, Discharge, 1861. Microfilm reel C225.This collection contains papers relating to the Falmouth operations of the tobacco merchant William Cuninghame & Co., of Glasgow, Scotland. 0 74 149. Carlton, Cornelius Hart, Diary, 18641869. Confederate States Army, Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia, Order, n.d. 1 p. Mss12:1863 August 7:1.An order, 7 August [1863? 1862. Siege of Petersburg Battles29: Siege of Petersburg Documents Which Mention This Unit: Tagged as: Mss5:1C1974:2.A typed transcript of a diary, [?] Records Facebook Precarious Individuals and Organizations List (Reproduced Snapshot) Oct. 12 2021 5:13p.m. Chamberlayne Family Papers, 18211938. 1890. 1 item. The largest section within the collection consists of the correspondence of David Comfort III (18371873), a teacher and Presbyterian minister. (section 27); Confederate Subsistence Department records, 18611862, consisting of correspondence, accounts, requisitions, receipts, and invoices for supplies for the Confederate Army of the Potomac (section 44); a letter, 4 January 1863, from Catharine Thom (1816?1886) to Mary Anna Claiborne discussing the damage to her Fredericksburg home and a nearby church suffered during the battle of Fredericksburg; and letters, 1863, from Mary Thom (d. 1894) to Mary Anna Claiborne concerning the fighting in the town of Fredericksburg during the battle and the use of a church as a Union hospital after the battle (section 46). 1 item. The diary, printed in the 3 April 1935 issue of the Richmond News Leader, offers a detailed account of the evacuation fire and the subsequent occupation of the city by Union troops. It was organized and mustered into service for the war, June 3, 1864. 1830?] Compiled Service Record: Card 1 Private, Company G, 13th Battalion Virginia Reserves, 6th Battalion Reserves Appears on a muster roll for Sept. & Oct., 1864 Correspondents in the letterbook include John Stevens Bowen (18301863), Francis Marion Cockrell (18341915), and Martin Edwin Green (18151863). 8 Ancestors. 1 item. Mss1C2468b.This collection consists primarily of the papers of two brothers, John William Carter (18371879) and Henry Clay Carter (18411931), of Appomattox County. Confederate States Army, Department of Henrico, papers, 18611864. 28 items. 2 pp. Microfilm reel C593.This enrolling book, 19 March 18636 February 1864, kept by Charles Parkhill (b. 2 pp. 1 volume. Mss3C9154a. 1 p. Mss12:1863 January 5:1.Special Order No. Mss12:1864 December 24:1.A copy of special order no. Chenoweth, Joseph Hart, Papers, 18571862. Confederate Historical Association, Memphis, Tenn., Memorial. 167 items. 1, 48: pt. 1st Batt., Reserves. Mss1C6944a. Included in the memoir is a brief account of Carson's service in Company F of the 37th Virginia Infantry Regiment at the battles of Rich Mountain and Cheat Mountain and in the 1862 Shenandoah Valley campaign. . 256, 1864, detailing John T. Hicks for duty as a shoemaker (a6); an account, 1862, with Sarah Timberlake of Clarke County for two tons of hay (a7); a letterbook, 1722 November 1861, from the Confederate Engineer's Office concerning Joseph E. Johnston, John Clifford Pemberton, and African-American laborers in the Confederate army (a8); a circular, 1864, from the Department of Richmond concerning furloughs (a9); an undated draft of a resolution by the Confederate Congress announcing the defeat of Union forces and expressing appreciation to Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia (a10); and a parole, 1865, issued at Appomattox Court House to Edward Garlick Gwathmey (18391931) of the Fredericksburg Artillery (a11). 1st Battalion, Virginia Reserves (Confederate) 1st Battalion Reserves was organized during May, 1864, with nine companies. 2,940 items. Completed the Joint & Combined Warfighting School. 2nd Battalion Kentucky Cavalry, Major Jacob T. Cassell. 1842) assuring them of his safe condition while imprisoned at Fort Delaware, Del., and Johnson's Island, Ohio; and an affidavit and a pass, 1865, concerning John Thompson's having taken the oath of allegiance and granting him permission to travel to Kentucky (section 5). Confederate States War Department, Letter, 1861. 18270. Letters, 18621865, of William Henry Cocke (18321865) of the 9th Virginia Infantry Regiment offer descriptions of camp life and his unit's participation in the battles of Malvern Hill, Antietam, and Gettysburg and the Suffolk campaign (section 1). Microfilm reel C593.The letterbooks, 4 January6 March 1863, of the 59th Virginia Infantry Regiment contain official letters and reports written by William Barksdale Tabb (18401874) and the regimental adjutant J. S. Hood (d. 1865) concerning scouting operations of the unit in New Kent County. 17 items. Mss12:1864:4.This collection contains receipts, 20 May30 September 1864, for hay and corn received by members of the 2d Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia while at Spotsylvania Court House and in the Shenandoah Valley. 1 item. Mss4C22144a1.A certificate, 26 October 1864, issued to John Roy Baylor (18211897) of Caroline County by the county Enrolling Office for the impressment of two slaves. Carter, Thomas Henry, Correspondence, 1898. Confederate States Army, Discharge, 1862. Also in the collection are letters from various individuals including David Holmes Conrad (concerning the effect of the war on his family and on Winchester in general in the spring of 1861 and the death of two of his sons at the first battle of Bull Run); Powell Conrad (describing the raising of Confederate troops in Winchester in May 1861); and A. W. MacDonald ([b. Mss1C8184a.This collection contains the wartime correspondence, 18611865, of William Clark Corson (18371895) of Company G of the 3d Virginia Cavalry Regiment. 1 item. robert smith 6th va res bn, Confederate States Army, Anderson's Brigade, Order Book, 1862. The report is printed in the Official Records, ser. Confederate States Army, 1st Virginia Engineers Regiment, Letterbook, 1864. Carrington Family Papers, 18621863. Carrington Family Papers, 17811939. Also included is a reminiscence by Judge Robert White of West Virginia, chairman of the association's executive committee, concerning a skirmish at Harmon's Hill preceding the battle of Waynesboro on 2 March 1865 (box 14). 5 items. 1st (Wheat's) Special Battalion, Infantry (Louisiana Tigers) 3rd Battalion, Infantry (became the 15th Infantry) 4th Battalion, Infantry; 5th Battalion, Infantry (became the 21st Infantry) 6th Battalion, Infantry (became the 20th Infantry) 7th Battalion, Infantry; 8th Battalion, Infantry (became the 8th Heavy Artillery) 9th Battalion, Infantry Of particular note are his more detailed descriptions of his experiences as a member of the Charlottesville Artillery Battery in the battles of Port Republic, Malvern Hill, and Chancellorsville. 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). Commander Image, First Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army4, Second Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army6, Third Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army8, Fourth Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army10, Fifth Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army12, Sixth Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army14, Seventh Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army16,17, Eighth Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army21,22, Ninth Offensive Order of Battle:Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army26,27. Typescript. Mss12:1863:1 oversize. Civil War materials consist primarily of letters from John Hampden Chamberlayne (18381882) of the Purcell, Crenshaw, and Davidson Artillery batteries to his mother, Martha Burwell (Dabney) Chamberlayne (18021883), concerning Joseph E. Johnston's recuperation in Richmond following his wounding at the battle of Seven Pines, Martha Chamberlayne's experiences in the city in 1862, Ham Chamberlayne's life while a prisoner at Johnson's Island, Ohio, and Point Lookout, Md., following his capture at the battle of Gettysburg, the battle of the Wilderness, skirmishes near Hanover Junction, Meadow Bridge, and Gaines' Mill in May-June 1864, and Chamberlayne's experiences around Petersburg in the fall of 1864 (section 4). Colonel Henry L. GILTNER. 16 items. Also in the collection is the official correspondence of William Whitehurst Old (18401911) concerning his duties as assistant quartermaster of the battalion. The collection includes a one-volume typescript copy of the three diaries. Confederate States War Department, Surgeon General's Department, Letter, 1865. In great detail, Cox records incidents of his daily life in prison including observations on the weather, the exchange and release of fellow prisoners, the presence of disease, and news concerning the war in Virginia. HQ, Army Reserve Careers Group 85 Chamberlin Street, Bldg 6579 Fort Knox, Kentucky 40121-5107 Find your local ARCC.. Find your local CMO.. Find the CMO Team on S1 NET. Microfilm reel C592.Order Book, 10 February24 May 1863, containing general orders and circulars issued by John Clifford Pemberton. Coit, William Henry, Letter, 1863. Included on the rolls are remarks concerning the companies' activities from the battle of Chancellorsville through their march into Pennsylvania.