Microfilm reels C586589.The papers of Herbert Augustine Claiborne (18191902) of Richmond account for more than two-thirds of this collection. 28 items. Emil Sturmfels received authority from the War Department, August 2, 1861, to recruit this battalion. 1 volume. Confederate States Army, 24th Virginia Infantry Regiment, Petition, ca. Civil War items include a letter, 22 October 1861, from Eliza Henry (Preston) Carrington (17961877) to her brother, Paul Sydenham Carrington (17981866), concerning her need to sell all of her slaves because of financial insecurity; undated notes of Paul Carrington regarding the death of his son, Edgar Wirt Carrington (18351862) of the 38th Virginia Infantry Regiment, at the battle of Seven Pines (section 4); letters, 18611862, from Andrew Reid Venable (18301913) of Company K of the 3d Virginia Cavalry Regiment to his wife, Louisa Cabell (Carrington) Venable (18371902), discussing camp life and skirmishes during the Peninsula campaign (section 10); letters to Adaline Mayo Carrington (18391915) from William Allan Carrington (18301866) concerning his service as a Confederate surgeon at Richardson's and Dooley's Hospital in Richmond in 1862, the death of his brother, Abram Cabell Carrington of Company D of the 18th Virginia Infantry Regiment, at the battle of Frazier's Farm, and the possible parole of sick Union prisoners of war to alleviate the expense of care; a letter, 19 March 1896, to Adaline Carrington from Charles Clifton Penick (18431914) concerning Edgar Wirt Carrington's death at the battle of Seven Pines; and an undated letter from Adaline Carrington to Mrs. Rice regarding Mrs. Rice's son's part in the battle of Rich Mountain (section 11). I fear, however, such disposition of his force at this time would not be expedient, and certainly not unless it meet the approval of your judgment, and the substitution of some other force in Southwestern Virginia could be provided. Other items in the collection include Cooke's amnesty oath, 1865, and several 1863 Confederate bonds (section 2); an undated newspaper article containing a printed 1862 letter by Joseph C. Webb offering a detailed description of the experience of the 27th North Carolina at the battle of Antietam (section 3); an undated map of the battle of Fredericksburg, showing, among other things, the location of Cooke's wounding, and a sketch, 1862, of the Holly Shelter Creek, N.C., vicinity (section 4); and a handwritten copy of General Order No. 124 items. Mss2C4215b.Contains the papers of Joseph Hart Chenoweth (18371862) of the 31st Virginia Infantry Regiment. Chappell, John Taylor, Poem, 1865. 1840?) Confederate States Army, 1st Virginia Reserve Infantry Battalion, Muster Roll, 1864. ), Commander:None listed. 6 items. 1 p. Mss12:1862 June 21:1.A handwritten copy of General Order No. Confederate States Army, 51st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Record Book, 1864. Mss2C8557a1.An affidavit, 15 December 1863, concerning the enlistment of Addison Cravens (b. Confederate States Treasury Department, Miscellaneous Papers, 1863. Confederate States Army, 31st Virginia Infantry Regiment, Morning Report, 1863. 1 item. 1, 51: pt. 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. Conolly's diary chronicles his journey from the Bahamas to the coast of North Carolina and up through Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, and finally back to Ireland. 111 items. Please contact us using the Contact button in the menu at the top of the screen. Kept by Rufus James Woolwine (18401908), the record book also includes casualty lists for the battles of New Market and Third Winchester, and a brief diary of the regiments participation in the battles of New Market, Totopotomoy Creek, Cold Harbor, and Lynchburg. Confederate States Army, Department of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, General Order, 1863. Confederate States of Army, Discharges, 1862. Infantry Regiment. This page has been viewed 1,409 times (0 via redirect). Included are brief descriptions of his service in Company D (2nd) of the 46th Virginia Infantry Regiment in western Virginia (now W.Va.) and North Carolina in 1861 and in Petersburg in 1864. The order bears an inscription and signature of Stuart. Also included is a detailed physical description of Crawford and the amount of money owed him by the Confederate government for his clothing expenses. 1890. Correspondents include Eugene Blackford ([18391908] regarding charges against Blackford for misconduct during the battle of Cedar Creek); Anne Willing (Page) Carter ([18151891] concerning George B. McClellan and Carter's acceptance of the position of chief of artillery to Daniel Harvey Hill); Charles Shirley Carter ([18401922] concerning Thomas Carter's wound received at the battle of Antietam); R. H. Fitzhugh (regarding the gift of a horse to Carter); Armistead Lindsay Long (discussing the transfer of artillery from the Army of the Valley to the Army of Northern Virginia in January 1865); Samuel Johnston Cramer Moore ([18261908] requesting Carter to appear at Jubal Early's quarters); Robert Powel Page ([18461930] concerning Carter's postwar request for information on the operations of Confederate artillery at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865 and a detailed reminiscence of the retreat to Appomattox); James Wylie Ratchford ([18401910] regarding Carter's request to go to Richmond and secure artillery horses); Robert Emmett Rodes (concerning Daniel Harvey Hill's departure from the Army of Northern Virginia in March 1863); E. Worthen (briefly mentioning the arrival of the King William Artillery Battery at Richmond); and an unidentified author (describing events surrounding the surrender at Appomattox Court House). The correspondence of Elizabeth Whiting (Powell) Conrad (18091872) includes letters to and from the following individuals: Anne Addison (Carr) Conrad (regarding news, 18611862, of family members in the Confederate army); David Holmes Conrad (concerning the death of Powell Conrad from typhoid fever and the imprisonment of Robert Young Conrad); Powell Conrad (describing life and the preparations for war at Harpers Ferry in April 1861); [?] Microfilm reel C593.This order book contains general and special orders, 26 April28 May 1862, issued by Joseph Reid Anderson to troops under his command in Caroline, Spotsylvania, and Hanover counties. 1 reel. Mss2C4476b.This collection contains the papers of two members of the Chisholm family of Hanover County. 1 p. Mss12:1863 January 24:1.Special Order No. The 13thTransportation Battalion was first activated on 20 June 1957 under the 2ndInfantry Division at Fort Richardson, Alaska. 2nd Battalion Kentucky Cavalry, Major Jacob T. Cassell. ca. Officially designated as the 11th Battalion Virginia Reserves on February 27, 1865. 1 item. Confederate States Army, Jackson's Virginia Cavalry Battalion, Order, 1864. 316, 24 December 1864, issued by authority of Robert E. Lee concerning the movement of Henry Harrison Walker's brigade (the 40th, 47th, and 55th Virginia infantry regiments and the 22d Virginia Infantry Battalion) from Petersburg to the north side of the James River. Early's Shenandoah Valley campaign, and his hopes regarding his release from Fort McHenry in November 1864; and a letter, 20 March 1862, to Alpheus Starkey Williams concerning the confiscation of two of Conrad's slaves, with notes describing his confrontation with Williams and Nathaniel Prentiss Banks over the matter (section 5). Mss12:1862 January 1:1.A copy of a handwritten certificate, 1 January 1862, issued to William S. Noyes of the 5th Maine Infantry Regiment, for his "efficient and faithful" discharge of his duties as hospital steward at prison hospitals in Richmond. 1 item. 1 item. Mss1C7637b.Contains the papers of members of the Conrad family of Winchester. Siege of Petersburg Battles29: Siege of Petersburg Documents Which Mention This Unit: Tagged as: 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) 1 item. crosses the Lower Peninsula from Empire to Harrisville . 2 pp. Norfolk, Virginia. Mss1C2358d. 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? (March & April 1-2, 1865). Photocopies. 1 item. 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). 1 p. Photocopy. Mss1C7345a. 110 items. 1,360 items. 18 items. Confederate States War Department, Bureau of Conscription, Enrolling Book, 18631864.