Confederate Military History
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Оглавление
Daniel Harvey Hill. Confederate Military History
CONTENTS:
North Carolina. Preface
Chapter 1:
Chapter 2
Chapter 3:
Chapter 4:
Chapter 5:
Chapter 6:
Chapter 7:
Chapter 8:
Chapter 9:
Chapter 10:
Chapter 11:
Chapter 12:
Chapter 13:
Chapter 14:
Chapter 15:
Chapter 16:
Chapter 17:
Chapter 18:
Biographical
Brigadier-General George Burgwyn Anderson
Brigadier-General Lawrence S. Baker
Brigadier-General Rufus Barringer
Brigadier-General Lawrence O'Brian Branch
Brigadier-General Thomas Lanier Clingman
Brigadier-General John R. Cooke
Brigadier-General William Ruffin Cox
Brigadier-General Junius Daniel
Brigadier-General Richard C. Gatlin
Major-General Jeremy Francis Gilmer
Brigadier-General Archibald C. Godwin
Brigadier-General James B. Gordon
Major-General Bryan Grimes
Major-General Robert F. Hoke
Brigadier-General Robert D. Johnston
Brigadier-General W. W. Kirkland
Brigadier-General James H. Lane
Brigadier-General Collett Leventhorpe
Brigadier-General William G. Lewis
Brigadier-General William MacRae
Brigadier-General James Green Martin
Major-General William Dorsey Pender
Brigadier-General James Johnston Pettigrew
Brigadier-General Gabriel J. Rains
Major-General Stephen Dodson Ramseur
Brigadier-General Matthew Whittaker Ransom
Major-General Robert Ransom
Brigadier-General William Paul Roberts
Brigadier-General Alfred Moore Scales
Brigadier-General Robert B. Vance
Major-General William Henry Chase Whiting
Отрывок из книги
Confederate Military History Volume 4
North Carolina
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These two reports establish the fact that there was pursuit and not abandonment. Colonel Magruder further says, 11 ‘It was not thought prudent to leave Yorktown exposed any longer. I therefore occupied the ground with cavalry, and marched the remainder of my force to Yorktown.’ So evidently the position was not abandoned while ‘Warren was yet on the ground.’ The Confederate loss in this precursor of many bloody fields was 1 killed and 11 wounded; the Federal loss was 18 killed and 53 wounded.
In the South this little victory over a vastly superior force awakened the wildest enthusiasm, for it was thought to indicate the future and final success of the cause for which its people were battling.
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