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O'Neal's 26th Alabama

"The Little Regiment that Did"
by Tod L. Molesworth
Please note!!!
It's time to start the painful process of changing my e-mail!!!
It is now - - Drummer41st@worldnet.att.net
(810) 324-6119
updated April 8, 2002
Photos of
Captain Sydney Binion Smith, Company E
Captain James Stacy McCoy, Company B (mortally wounded at Malvern Hill)
Lt. Col William Russell Smith, Staff
Lewis J. Jones, Company I & Andersonville section
Ransom T. Powell, 10th W. Virginia, Co. I and Andersonville
1st Lt. Robert Cleveland Rector, Company D
Beautiful wartime photo of Pvt. James Hudson, Company K!!!

Reunion II is in the works!!!
Stacy Coats is currently working on the 2nd 26th Alabama reunion!!!  The tentative time is late April 2004.  She could use some help from you out there.
Her e-mail is chevy2nova68@hotmail.com and her home number is (205) 391-5651.  Please give her a call if you are interested in helping put together another great reunion.
 

"The Little Regiment that Did"
The Book!
hopefully I'll have the darn thing done by the next reunion!!!
After a lot of prodding by quite a few people, Clark Rye and Doyle Jones to name a few, I am now working on a printable version of this website.  I'm making quite a bit of headway and I'm adding quite a bit of additional information provided by descendants.  It should be ready by this summer so if there is any additional information out there please drop me a line.
The book will be much more detailed with casualty lists for each battle, at least what I can find.  Photos will be added as they come in and it will have much more letters that I have on this site.  Anybody that has provided photos please drop me a line giving me permission to use them please!!!

I really need help from locals down in Alabama!!!  Somebody please look in the local archives, libraries and newspaper offices and see if there are any "old soldiers reunion" photographs that they ran in the early 1900's with members of the 26th Alabama.
 

(8)

    This flag is an Army of Northern Virginia, 3rd wool bunting issue.  Flags of this issue were manufactured at the Richmond Depot between July 1862 and May 1864.  On April 20, 1863, Colonel Edward Asbury O'Neal, 26th Alabama Infantry forwarded the regiment's old battle flag to the Governor of Alabama stating "The government having issued to this Regiment a new flag, we respectfully ask that the old one may be deposited in Archives of the State."  Their new flag was captured at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863.  This flag depicted was issued to the regiment after the Gettysburg campaign and carried by them for the remainder of the war.
        Following the surrender of the 26th Alabama Infantry at Greensborough, North Carolina in April, 1865 the servant of Dr. Hayes, Brigade surgeon and former regimental surgeon, wrapped the flag around his body and slipped through the Federal lines, thus saving the flag.  How long the flag remained with Dr. Hayes is unknown, however, by September 21, 1900 it was in the possession of O'Neal's wife.
        The date of donation to the Alabama Department of History is unknown, however, director Marie Bankhead Owen stated in an August 1943 letter that she accepted the donation of the flag from Mrs. Syden O'Neal Dudley.  The date of donation must post date former ADAH director Dr. Thomas Owen's death on March 25, 1920 as he was the one who originally requested the donation in November 1903 from Mr. A. M. O'Neal.

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     Welcome to 26th Alabama Web Site 

     My name is Tod Molesworth, a Yankee by birth and Southerner by heart and some ancestry who was born in Yale, Michigan and now live 7 miles from there in the booming metropolis of Avoca (400 people).  I'm descended from William Molesworth, a drummer of the 41st Regiment of Foot in the British Army that took Fort Detroit in the War of 1812; Peter Shipe, a Virginian that was a baggagemaster for George Washington and who received a land grant in Knox County, Tennessee; Isom P. Alley, a slave owner also from Knox County; the Wintermute, Chrysler, Kilmer and Anger Clans, Loyalist's from Pennsylvania and New York who fought for Butler's Ranger's and settled near Ft. Erie, Ontario, Canada after the Revolution, Levi Hoopengarner, who was captured at the Battle of Mark's Mills, Arkansas in March, 1864 as a member of Company D, 43rd Indiana and spent 10 months in Camp Ford, Tyler, Texas and Joseph L. Benight, a member of Company E, 85th Indiana Infantry.
    Having no genealogical connection to this Regiment, my attachment to it began when I was bedridden in the Spring of 1996 and out of cabin fever I started looking for common Regiments in the big battles for Southern Independence.  The 26th Alabama Regiment kind of jumped out at me because it was both at Shiloh then all the big battles in the East.  Of course, after I started researching, I found that the 26th Alabama that was at Shiloh was not the same Regiment and that Regiments designation was eventually changed to the 50th Alabama and is now called the 26/50th Alabama (Coltart's).
    Very little information was available from one common source, so through hundreds of hours of research of National Archive microfilms, the Alabama Department of History files, Official Reports (OR's), local genealogists, historians, pension files and descendants contacted on line,  I have compiled as about a thorough account as possible until I get some help from sources that were unaware of my project.  There will be additions and corrections as this page becomes known and other ancestors contact me.  If you are a descendant, please, contact me just to say hello and possibly let me know more.  Mistakes will be made due to the confusion of the 26/50th and interpreting handwriting so please let me know (nicely) of these mistakes.  I know I've misspelled some names but in a lot of cases I'm at the mercy of the Archive transcribes.
    Descendants, if you have a wartime or post war photograph of any of these men I would truly love to add it to the site.  I've found references of Captain E. M. Leech (Co. K) and Pvt. William Terrell (Co. H) having photographs with Captain Leech's still around in 1911.   Where are these photos!!!  If you have any copies of letters home or even reminiscences from the soldier, widow, children or even grandchildren, I would to see them and if possible, include at least excerpts of them. If you see an ancestor that I don't have a place and date of birth, no date of death, discharge, pardon or pension information in their biographies and know more about them, please let me know.

Regimental Background

    This Regiment fought throughout the War for Southern Independence.  Formally accepted into the Confederate Army in Tuscumbia, Alabama in December of 1861, it used the 10 Company 3rd Alabama Battalion as a nucleus.  Men were recruited mainly from Marion and Fayette Counties with a few from Walker, Winston, Tuscaloosa (Co. G) and Jefferson Counties.  The names of the towns in Northwest Alabama bear witness to the roots of the Regiment as they bear the names of troops who served, and died, in the War for Southern Independence.  Names like Glasgow Corner, Wigington, Guin, Bankston, Belk, Hamilton, Goddard, Barnesville, Stewart and Berry.  While I've always heard of how much shorter men were during these times, I was quite shocked to see many instances of these farm boys approaching and surpassing 6 feet in height!  So they weren't only giants in courage but giants in stature as well.
   This proud regiment was in the brigade (1200 men) that held up Meade's Division in rearguard action at Frosttown Road Gorge in the Battle of Boonesboro (South Mountain) as well as hold "Bloody Lane" while vastly outnumbered three days later at Sharpsburg.  It was also one of the first regiments to breech the works at Chancellorsville on Stonewall Jackson's brilliant flank attack on May 2, 1863 and obtained further glory the next day by charging and taking the breastworks twice only in conjunction with the 5th Alabama and having to fall back due to lack of support.  When they were finally re-enforced they again charged and took the breastworks for the final time.  By the end of that battle the Regiment was under command of a 1st Lt. Miles Izates Taylor, Company H PHOTO!
    After the officer corps was decimated at Chancellorsville, the regiment again suffered at Gettysburg and were very small in number when detailed to transport one of the first group of prisoners to the new Prison Camp near Sumter, Georgia on February 15, 1864.  While the camp was called Andersonville and will forever live unjustly in infamy in Northern eyes, I've found and am tracking down references from survivors stating the integrity of men of the 26th Alabama (four so far including the Powell letter).  They were temporarily assigned there for three months to build up their strength and rest and the Federal men were actually sad to see them go!  They were then assigned to the Army of Tennessee for the rest of the war and were again badly hurt at Peachtree Creek, Georgia and Franklin, Tennessee.  The 26th Alabama finished the war with very few members left in the ranks (31 with 16 original (1861/2) members), but luckily quite a few lived through the experience of being a prisoner of war or the horror of the hospitals of the time to give us some historical references through the Alabama Department of History.  Even better were the far sighted soldiers and their loved ones that kept letters to home that were later donated to institutions that freely give permission to place these letters in a non-profit site like this with very little hassle. I think this is very important so that everybody can read and appreciate what these men and their families went through during this horrible war.  If they are kept in a vault and lofty charges attempted to be collected then they will rot without being appreciated or finally brought out of hiding by somebody (unlike myself) with the money and means to do so, a heck of a chance to take!  My thanks to the Alabama Department of History, The University of Oklahoma and University of Michigan (home of the Wolverines!!)
    Through my research I've found requisitions for Tower Rifles (Enfields) and .58 caliber Enfield ammunition.  There are survivors accounts and Official Reports to the effect that there was a Corps of sharpshooters, with one survivor stating this corps was made up out of members of each Company and armed with Whitworth's.  More than likely the members were picked through a shooting competition.  I've found records of requisitions for Sharps Rifles in 1863 but unfortunately I've failed to find any reference to Whitworth's, the "holy grail" of modern arms collectors.  I've also found reference to 69 caliber Buck and Ball ammunition.
    With the confusion of two Regiments with the same designation in the beginning of the war I have extensive information as well as full muster rolls of the members of the 26th/50th compiled for cross referencing.  Feel free to contact me with questions and information about this Regiment also.
    My thanks to RootsWeb for hosting this site for free.  My labor of love grew to quite an unruly child that would have been really hard to handle myself!!  They have given excellent support and deserve any donations you could possibly give for their free genealogical sites that they host!


 


Photo taken in Hamilton, Alabama (by chance, where our reunion will be) on July 24, 1929.
Standing from the right                                                Seated, left to right
    S. M. Davis                                                                    B. Felkings
    Steve Lindsey                                                                 M. D. Shelton (Company B)
    Judge H. M. Bell                                                           W. M. Alright
    W. H. Edwards                                                              T. W. Terrell (Company H)
    W. G. Fowler (2nd Sgt., Co. C)                                      E. F. Franks (26/50th Alabama)
                                                                                         T. H. H. Lalley
Photo courtesy of Johnny M. Bull, great grandson to Mathew Downs Shelton, Company B bbull@ficom.net

Letter from T. R. Caldwell to Miles I. Taylor dated July 19, 1909 from Amory, Mississippi

Dear Sir, Friend and Comrad,

    I received yours of the 13th last night.  Was rejoiced to hear from you.  I attended the reunion at Memphis.  Saw a number of friends and comrads & talked about you but could hear nothing.  I knew you had gone to Texas but knew nothing after that.  I met Captain Vandiver on the 24th of June at the laying of the cornerstone of the Masonic Building at Caladonia, Miss.  He is well and lives at Caledonia, Miss.  Capt Sanders and Leech died last summer.  I have been attending the reunion of our Regiment for 5 years over in Ala.  Capt. C. Leech was President and I was Vice President of the organization.  At this reunion I met many of the Regiment.  Capt. Turner and O'Neal among many others.  We had some big times you may bet.  Since the death of so many I expect the organization will be abandoned.  I am yet in good health & my wife.  But she has been a cripple from a fall for more than a year.  I fear she will never walk any more.  We have 5 children, 3 boys and 2 girls.  2 married 2 at home and one in the U. S. Army & has been for 12 years.  Brother John died 20 years ago.  His family, 2 boys & 2 girls all married and doing well.  Alex Thompson died 8 years ago.  Our comrades are getting off pretty fast.  I got a letter from Thad Halviston last year.  He was wanting to make proof so that he could get a pension.  He is in California.  Has a good big family & I expect hard circumstances.  I have done fairly well since the war.  I own 2100 acres of land that is worth from 10 to 30 dollars per acre and stock.  I am out of debt.  My rent brings me about 1,000 per year.  I am a member of the legislature now and one term before this.  I have lived a happy life up to now.  I have a fine crop this year but to take the State of Miss.  It will not be over 40 or 50 percent at best.  I have a nephew near Athens, Texas, W. R. Caldwell.  Wish you could see him & let him know who you are.  He would enjoy your aquaintence & association.  He has called on me twice on his trips to Georgia.  If you ever get out this way call on me.  You can stop off at Amory, Miss. on the Frisco.  I live 5 miles out and have nice fruits and fishing grounds.  You will be payed for your visit if you enjoy these things.  I will close for the present.  Will be glad to get a long letter from you & will answer any questions or enquires made if I can.  With best wishes for you and yours, I remain your friend to command.

T. R. Caldwell
Amory, Miss.

                 A "maneuvering" guide to this site

Blue writing  This is for reference when the 26th Alabama or the
                     Brigade or Division in which the 26th Alabama was
                     assigned are referenced in the Official Reports.

Maroon writing These are either my comments or additional information
                        that I have found through my research.

Red writing  These are either links within the page or to other sites

GenealogistNames for the enlisted personnel are listed
                        alphabetically (somewhat) in each company but the
                        non-coms and officers are listed by rank.

The first Heroes to lay down their lives in battle
  Fort Donelson, Tennessee, February 15, 1862

Pvt. Daniel Newton Ford, Co. I (Company A, 3rd Alabama Batt.)
Pvt. Benjamin F. Arndale, Co. I (Company A, 3rd Alabama Batt.)
Pvt. Joseph F. Maddox, Co. I (Company A, 3rd Alabama Batt.)
Pvt. Lewis S. Wimberly, Co. I (Company A, 3rd Alabama Batt.)

                "A Battle is Hell ,
        a defeat, the worst thing in the world,
        and a victory the next worse"
                                            Dow Junior
                                                                                                         Ballenger letters
                                                                                                                                                                Schoff Collections
                                                                                                                                                                Clements Library
                                                                                                                                                                University of Michigan

List of Engagements
Muster List
Company A
Company B
Company C
Company D
Company E
Company F
Company G
Company H
Company I
Company K
Headquarters Staff
 my favorite "links"

alabama department of archives and history
   Museum of the Confederacy
  Ken Jones, Civil War Historian - e-mail kjones@tarleton.edu
point lookout POW Organization
Sons of the Confederacy, Savage/Goodner Camp

ENGAGEMENTS & ASSIGNMENTS (8)
 

            Battle            Description          text          date

Fort Henry, Tenn.
(Bombardment & Evacuation)
Approximately 83 men from A & C Companies, Third Alabama Battalion (I & K of 26th) OR's
 order
February 6, 1862
Battle of Fort Donelson First casualties of the 26th Alabama OR's
Casualties
February 15, 1862
Fort Donelson, Tennessee
Surrender of
OR's February 16, 1862
Yorktown, Virginia Siege and Evacuation letter April - May, 1862
    Battle at Dam #1 April 16, 1862
General Tilghman's command Fort Henry                                        Mid January, 1862
                                                                                                         February 6, 1862

General Pillow's command Fort Donelson                                        February 6-16, 1862
    "Left Wing" General Bushrod Johnson
        "Drakes Brigade" Colonel Drake
 "Third Alabama Battalion" (elements of Co's I & K, 26th Alabama, Major Garvin)

"Left of Position" (Maj. Gen. D. H. Hill)
    Rains' Division (Brig. Gen. C. J. Rains)
         26th Alabama (Col. Edward A. O'Neal)
            Requisition for "straw for men to sleep on, many sick from sleeping on ground"
                390 non coms and men by Col. O'Neal at Yorktown    April 2, 1862
             (The last time, on record, that the 26th mustered over 300 men, I've seen references
                             that the 26th had over 300 at Gettysburg but I haven't found records to support that and
                             I would highly doubt it after their terrible losses at Chancellorsville in May).
            "Forces within the post of Yorktown"  26th Alabama - 283  April 30, 1862
          *Rains reprimanded for using land mines in evacuation, land mines were
                    deemed ungentlemanly by General Johnston.
 
 

Williamsburg, Virginia Battle May 5, 1862
Seven Pines Battle report May 31-June 1, 1862
Army of Northern Virginia (Major General Thomas J. Jackson) Early June, 1862
    Maj. General Daniel H. Hills Division
        First Brigade (Brig. General Robert E. Rodes) "Alabama Brigade"
            26th Alabama (Col. Edward A. O'Neal)
                with 3rd, 5th, 6th and 12th Alabama Regiments
 
Seven Days Battle June 25-July 1, 1862
Gaines Mill Battle report
casualties
June 27, 1862
White Oak Swamp Action report June 30, 1862
Malvern Hill Battle report
casualties
letter
July 1, 1862
Boonesboro
(South Mountain) in Maryland
Battle report
letter
casualties
September 14, 1862
Sharpsburg (Antietam) in Maryland Battle report September 17, 1862
Shephardstown Ford, West Virginia Action September 20, 1862
Louden, Faquier and Rappahannock Counties, Virginia Actions October 26-November 10, 1862
Fredericksburg, Virginia Battle December 12-15, 1862
Chancellorsville, Virginia Battle reports
casualties
May 2-3, 1863

Organization of command during the Battle of Chancellorsville
    D. H. Hill's Division (Brig. Gen. R. E. Rodes, 2. Brig Gen. S. D. Ramsuer)
        Rodes Brigade (Brig. Gen. R. E. Rodes, 2. Col. E. A. O'Neal, 3. Col. J. M. Hall)
            26th Alabama (Col. E. A. O'Neal, (2)Lt. Col. John S. Garvin, (3)1st Lt. M. J. Taylor)
 

Gettysburg Battle reports
Ballenger letter
July 1-3, 1863
Manassas Gap Retreat July 5-24, 1863
Kelly's Ford, Virginia Skirmishes July 31-August 1, 1863
Brandy Station Action August 1, 1863
Organization of Command during Battle at Gettysburg
    Army of Virginia (Gen. Robert E. Lee)
        Second Army Corps (Lt. Gen. Richard S. Ewell)
            Rodes Division (Maj. Gen. Robert E. Rodes)
                Rodes' Brigade (Col. Edward A. O'Neal)
                    26th Alabama (Lt. Col. John C. Goodgame, temporarily from 12th Alabama)

Organization of Command until detached to Alabama in February, 1864
    Army of Northern Virginia (Gen. Robert E. Lee)
        Second Army Corps (Lt. Gen. Richard S. Ewell)
            Rodes' Division (Maj. Gen. Robert E. Rodes)
                Battle's Brigade (Brig. Gen. Cullin A. Battle)
                    26th Alabama (Col. Edward A. O'Neal)
 

Bristoe Station Campaign Battle October 9-22, 1862
Mine Run Campaign
Payne's Farm
Battles report Nov. 26-Dec. 2, 1862
November 27, 1863
Brigade re-enlisted for duration of war Joint resolution               January, 1864

Sixty-first Alabama ordered to relieve twenty-sixth Alabama  Feb. 12th, 1864

ordered to furnish guards to convey prisoners  (order)       Feb. 15th, 1864
                to Fort Sumter, GA (Andersonville).  Interesting note:  A Colonel O'Neal is depicted in Ted
                Turner's "Andersonville" telling Union soldiers that they will be released if they decide to
                fight for the  South. (letter from Andersonville survivor) (letter from Lt. Col. Garvin)

Andersonville

 Ordered to join Army of Tennessee, Genl. Joseph Johnston         June 7, 1864
        Jumble of orders relating to this posting

Army of Mississippi (Major General Wm. H. Loring)                June 30, 1864
    Walthall's Division (Major General Edward C. Walthall)
        Second (Cantey's) Brigade (Colonel Edward A. O'Neal)
            26th Alabama (Major David F. Bryan) along with 17th, 29th Alabama & 37th Miss.

Johnston succeeded by John B. Hood                                       July 18, 1864

Army of Mississippi re-organized into Army of Tennessee, John B. Hood    July 29, 1864
    Stewart's Corp (Lt. General Alexander P. Stewart)
        Walthall's Division (Major-General Edward C. Walthall)
            Cantey's Brigade (Col. Edward A. O'Neal)
                26th Alabama (Captain James W. White) August 31, 1864 Division returns
 

Georgia  Campaign June 1
September 8,
1864
New Hope Church Battle
June 1, 1864
Kennesaw Mountain Actions
June 20-26, 1864
Kennesaw Mountain Battle report June 27, 1864
Nickajack Creek Battle July 2-5, 1864
Chattahoochie River Battle July 5-17, 1864
Peachtree Creek Battle report July 20, 1864
Bald Hill Assault July 22, 1864
Seige of Atlanta Defensive July 23-Aug. 25, 1864
    Ezra Church Battle report July 28, 1864
Jonesboro Battle Aug. 31-Sept. 1, 1864
Brigadier General Charles M. Shelley, recently appointed to that rank, is assigned
to the command of Cantey's Brigade by command of General Hood    October 2, 1864
 
Northern Georgia & Alabama September 29
November 3, 1864
Decauter, Alabama Seige October 26-29, 1864
Spring Hill, Tennessee Battle November 29, 1864
Franklin, Tennessee Battle reports
Div. Casualties
November 30, 1864
Nashville, Tennessee Battle report December 15-16, 1864
Retreat from Tennessee December 17-28, 1864
transferred to North Carolina                                                January, 1865

26th Alabama consolidated with the 1st, 16th & 45th
and formed the 1st regiment Alabama Infantry                          April 9th, 1865

Surrender
Bennett's House, Durham Station, North Carolina
                                                                     April 26th, 1865

OLD SOLDIERS REUNION  held in early 1900's at Ebenizer Methodist Church, Fernbank, Alabama
photo courtesy of Mearl Sims, descendant of John Fleming (top row, fourth from right)

Bottom left to right: John Curry, Bob Franks, Rueben Todd "Co. K", Jack Wilson, Mr. Holloway, Aaron Godfrey "Co. D", Johnny E. Lavender "3rd Texas Cavalry", and William Lavender.

Top left to right: Wm. Gray "Co. B", Jeff Atkins, Black Smith, Balaam Smith, Big Bill Smith "Co. K", Jay Guin "Co. D", John Fleming "Co. K", Rev. Beatty "staff", John R. Jones "Co. K", Duff Holcomb "Co. H".

Camp of Instruction at Tuscumbia, Alabama
Letters courtesy of Ann Lusk, Huntsville, Alabama

    Thanks to these letters from John Washington Stanford to his wife Nancy, we now have an idea of how bad the various illnesses hit the 26th in Tuscumbia.  Most of these men, being rural farm boys, never were exposed to the kind of close conditions with this many men in their lives.  They were exposed to various diseases for the first time, especially measles and they were hit hard!  The following are all excerpts of letters from J. W. Stanford.

November 28, 1861
    I had the measles when I left home, but did not know it till I got here.  I took them bad enough the first night I got here bad enough to be very sick.  I went to the Hospital the next morning, and has been here ever since.  But I am about well and doing very well.  I hope when this letter  gets to hand that you and family will be in good health and doint well.  I am very well satisfied.  We are getting along finely.  All of Captain White's Company is all up but James Dickinson and a small fellow by the name of John Moore.  Dickinson has the typhoid fever but I think he is getting better.  All this Regiment are getting well of the measles.- - - - -When I had the measles I never done a thing but drink ginger tea, and drank whiskey moderately and I done better than any of the rest that took medicine.

January 8, 1862
  The health of the Regiment is not very good, though it is better than it was some back.  There are not very many measles in the Regiment now.  Colds and pnuemonia is the most common complaint now.  John Spradlin, Henry Hughes, W. C. Bradford, W. T. Terrell, James Clour, Thomas Webb and H. R. McGuire and some others are very sick in our company.  Sergeant W. W. Purnell hs been right sick but is now on the mend.

January 18, 1862
    I am in tolerable good health but not well.  I feel as well or better than I did when I left home.  I have no news of importance to wright to you  We have rite smart of sickness here at this time and some very bad cases.  There is something over one hundred men sick in this Regiment and very near all complaining.  The most of our Company is improving.  There is twelve of fifteen of our men in the hospital.

January 26, 1862
    J. Mathews is mighty sick was taken very suddenly and is very low.  Send his folks word by the first chance.  There aren't but 14 of our company to go on dress parade.

January 29, 1862
    We have a great deal of sickness here at this time but I hope it won't remain so long.  Jay Mathews is getting better I think.  There is not more dangerous cases I don't think.  James Dickinson is right sick but not so bad as he was before.

February 5, 1862
    The health of Regiment is not good.  There is one hundred & three sick in the hospital, seventeen of our company.  Jay Mathews is better, thought the other day he would not live.

    p.s. We have just had an old time riding Benj. Pace on a rail for stealing shoes and marched him through town and sent him home.  (I thought I'd just add that as there is no other place to put it and I have no record of this Benj. Pace)

February 11, 1862
    The health of our Regiment better than has been.

Forts' Henry and Donelson
    Sent to W. R. Smith from W. W. Mackall, assistant Adjutant-General January 18, 1862 (36)

COLONEL: Fort Henry, on the Tennessee River, is attacked.  General Johnston directs you to move all the efficient men of your regiment by railway to the crossing of the Tennessee and thence to Fort Henry.

Captain David Bryan placed a requisition for arms from Fort Henry on January 27, 1862

How close was the remainder of the 26th in joining Garvin?
    excerpts of letter from Captain James S. McCoy, Co. B, to his wife (February 5, 1862)
         James Stacy McCoy Collection, M390, Box 1163.01, Folder 1, Western History Collections, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK.
        My Dear Companion,

            ---We all was formed in lines.  The Col. told all of us tomorrow at 12 o'clock we would depart to Ft. Henry.  There has been a fight there recently.---
          ----Some 7 or 8 men are sick in the Hospital, we will leave here and when they get well they will be sent on to us.  I will not right a long letter tonight to you tonight but when I get to Ft. Henry I will write a long letter to you and give you a full detail of things in general.
          ----Direct your letters to Capt J. S. McCoy, 21 Regt. Ala. Vol., Ft. Henry, Tenn.

        They were to leave for Ft. Henry the day it fell!!!!
Excerpts of letter from John W. Stanford to his wife Nancy dated January 29, 1862
Letter courtesy of Ann Lusk, Huntsville, AL.

- - - -I think that we will be ordered to Fort Henry in a few days.  Those other companys (Cos. I & K) is going to stay there and I think Col. Smith will carry the balance of us there in a few days.  He got a letter from there stating that we could get 30,100 armes if we would come.

Fort Henry
        excerpts of the report from Colonel A. Heiman, Tenth Tennessee Regiment(36)
        In the absense of General Tilghman, who is a prisoner in the hands of the enemy, being next in command of his division, it becomes my duty, and I have the honor, to submit to you the following report in regard to the bombard-
ment and surrender of Fort Henry and the subsequent retreat of it's garrison to Fort Donelson.
        The armament of the fort consisted of ten 32-pounders, two 42-pounders, two 12-pounders, one 24-pounder rifled gun, and one 10-inch columbiad.  The garrison consisted of my regiment, Tenth Tennessee, under command of Lt. Col. MacGavock; the Fourth Mississippi, Colonel Drake; two companies of the Third Alabama Battalion, MajorGarvin; a company of artillery, commanded by Captain Taylor; one company of Forrest's Cavalry, Captain  Millner; and 40 mounted men, acting Captain Milton, stationed as picket and rocket guard at Bailey's Landing
3 miles below the fort; Captain Culbertson's light battery (four 6-pounders and one 6-pounder rifled gun), amounting in all to an aggregate of 1,885 men.
        With the exception of the Tenth Tennessee and the Fourth Mississippi these were all new troops, who had just entered the service.  They were not drilled, were badly equipped, and very indifferently armed with shot-guns and Tennessee rifles.
        On the morning of the 4th of February, at 4:30 o'clock, the sentinal at our 3 gun battery announced a rocket signal from the picket at Bailey's Landing.  Shortly after daylight pickets from both sides of the river reported a large fleet coming up, and the smoke from several gunboats now became visable over the island.  I directed Colonel Drake to send two companies of his regiment and a section of Culbertson's battery to the rifle pits for the defense of Dover Rd, about three quarters of a mile from the fort, while Major Garvin occupied the rifle pits across the road leading to Bailey's Landing.
        About 12 o'clock five gunboats came in sight in the main channel.  All the troops, except the heavy artillery force, were marched out of range of the enemy's guns.  At about 1 o'clock the gunboats opened fire with shell and shot, which was immediately returned by our rifled gun and columbiad.  Their shot fell in and around the fort.  Some of their shells fell a quarter of mile beyond the fort, showing superior range to our own.  None of the shells which fell in the fort exploded, and but one man was wounded.  I reported the result to General Tilghman, and that the enemy was landing a large force and that additional transports were arriving.  As it was later ascertained, General Grant had 12,000 men between the fort and Bailey's Landing, and General Smith 6,000 men on the oppisite side of the river.
        On the 6th of February at 11 o'clock the gunboats made their appearance in the chute, seven in number, and formed in line of battle 2 mile from the fort.  General Tilghman ordered the troops to be marched out of range of the enemy's guns.  None were permitted to remain in the fort but those on duty with the artillery, who were under the command of Captain Taylor.
        General Tilghman, with his staff, took position at the center battery, to observe the movements of the gunboats and direct the firing of our batteries.   The enemy opened fire with shot and shell, which was returned by our columbiad and 24-pounder rifled gun until they came within range of the lighter guns, when the whole eleven guns bearing on the river opened fire.  The enemy's practice improved as they advanced.  The firing on both side was without a moment's intermission.  This fearful cannonading had lasted now over an hour and it was evident the fort could not hold out much longer.
        The flag was hauled down and firing ceased.  I returned in person immediately to the fort for further orders.  General Tilghman informed me that he had surrendered, believing it his duty to do so, as every military man would see the impossibility of holding the fort against such fearful odds, and stating to me that I was not included in the surrender as I was not in the fort at the time the flag was struck, and directed me to continue the retreat, according to orders, to Fort Donelson by the upper road, having gained all the time necessary for a safe retreat.
        About 3 miles from the fort our rear was attacked by the enemy's calvary.  Their fire was returned hand-
somely by Colonel Gee and Major Garvin.  Major Lee of the Fifteenth Arkansas, and Captain Leech, of the Alabama Battalion, were surrounded and made prisoners.  We sustained no other losses.

Fort Donelson
   Report from General Bushrod Johnson dated March 4, 1862(36)

        SIR: Between the hours of 11 and 12 p.m, on February 6th, I received at Nashville, Tenn., a telegraphic dispatch of same date from Major W. W. Mackall, assistant adjutant general to General A. S. Johnston, commanding the Western Department of C. S. Army, ordering me to take instant command of Fort Donelson.
        Upon my arrival, on the night of February 7th, I found at the fort the troops which under Col. A. Heiman, had reached there during the previous night from Fort Henry, consisting of; (listed above).
        On February 9th, however, General Pillow arrived and assumed command, and having disposed of the forces for the defense of the place, assigned me to the command of the left wing, consisting at that time of;
        Colonel A. Heiman's brigade
        Colonel Davidson's brigade
        Colonel Drake's brigade: Fourth Regiment Mississippi Volunteers, Major Adair; Fifteenth Regiment Arkansas Volunteers, Colonel Gee; two companies of Twenty-sixth Regiment Alabama Volunteers, Major Garvin; Tennessee Battalion, Colonel Browder.
        A part of Col. Heiman's brigade was posted on the most elevated point on our left wing, and on it was made the first attack on my command at about 12 m. on February 13th.  The enemy's infantry, supported by artillery, made two assaults, the second one after being re-inforced, and were both times gallantly repulsed with the period of two hours.  During this attack and until night most of the left wing was exposed to the fire of sharpshooters and of field artillery.
        During February 14th the main attack was made with enemy's gunboats on our water battteries, which, being on the right wing, did not effect my command.
        Between 12 and 1 a.m. on February 15th it was resolved, in council, convened by General Floyd, to attack the enemy's strong position on his right, while General Buckner should assault the enemy on the Wynn's Ferry road.  By this attack it was proposed to roll the enemy's right wing back on his left, and at least to cut a way for troops to retreat and save our army from capitulation.  A rallying point, far beyond the enemy's lines was designated, and all the plans were skillfully and minutely adjusted.
        At early dawn the head of the column moved, under the orders of General Pillow, who led them, and very soon engaged the enemy with small arms.
        The left brigade, commanded by Colonel Drake, I placed in position, forming a handsome line, and pressed it forward to the attack.  Colonel Drake's brigade, under its very gallant, steady, and efficient commander, moved almost constantly under my eye, and, when necessary, at my command.  It moved in admirable order, preserving in a perfect manner a regular, well connected line, almost constantly under fire, driving the enemy slowly from hill to hill until about 1 p.m., when we reached a position nearly opposite the center of the left wing of our trenches.  Here, observing the enemy in force in front and no troops supporting us on our right,  I sent an aide to ask for re-enforcements, and received an order to report in person to the commanding general.  It was ordered this brigade should for a time be displayed before the enemy.  Very soon I found the enemy had advanced and engaged this brigade.  I directed Colonel Forrest (Nathan Bedford) with a portion of his cavalry, to give aid to Colonel Drake, if necessary and practicible.  Colonel Forrest soon returned and reported to me that he had advised Colonel Drake to fall back.  Yet the enemy were finally driven back in gallant style by the brigade with heavy loss to them and without the loss of single man on our side (I've found some).  Having nearly exhausted his ammunition, Colonel Drake fell back with his brigade into the rifle pits.  Thus ended the conflict on February 15th.
        The left wing remained in the trenches until between 1 and 2 a.m. on the 16th, when, having received orders from the commanding general, I drew out the whole of my command with a view to cut our way through the enemy's right and retreat.  The left wing was duly paraded in column of regiments by 3 a.m.  After awaiting some time for orders I sent my aide to report my command ready to move, and received a written communication from General Buckner to the effect that the command had devolved upon him, and directing me to await further orders.  Shortly afterwards, I repaired to the general's headquarters, and there learned that surrender of our forces was proposed and I was directed to communicate with enemy's pickets and to request that our forces should not be fired upon.

Casualties of Fort Donelson through research
       Present              Wounded         Killed Feb. 15      Died of wounds*   *Died in prison
              #82                 2                  4                 4               16
*Died of wounds not counted with wounded, died in prison includes exchanged ill and died later.
#I have found 82 and have found a requisition by Major David Bryan for 80 cartridge boxes and belts, slings and waist belts and plates dated January 21, 1862 in Fort Henry.

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excerpt of letter from John W. Stanford to his wife Nancy enroute to Richmond, Virginia
Letter courtesy of Ann Lusk, Huntsville, AL.

March 6, 1862, Abbingdon, Virginia
    We was five days landing here and we have been here 6 days but we leave here tonight or this evening.  Brother James has got themselves on in the hospital and we will leave him here until he gets well.  Him and 10 more of our boys.

Yorktown
excerpts of letter to David Ballenger from Captain Isaac Sanders dated April 26, 1862
Schoff Collections, Clements Library, University of Michigan

Most Worthy Friend,
            Glad to hear from you, but sorry to hear you are so unwell.  Hope you will soon get able to come and be with us, for I, and all the rest, want to see you, and to have your assistance, for now is a trying times with us.  There are a great many sick in our Company.  F. T. Welburn has come to us some weeks ago, and we were glad to see him.
           David, we never got into the war until we came to Yorktown.  The Yankees are in shot of us on land and water every day and night.  They throw bombs and balls at us, some of them weighing 120 lbs.  They fall into our camp, but have not killed any that I know of.
            The 26th Regiment lay under heavy bombardment for five hours, and the next day the right wing took two or three rounds with their muskets at the Yankees.  Don't know the result.  It was across a creek and we could not cross to see what was done.  We are on the right wing.  I have command of the 2nd Division, that is, our place or letter, is changed to "D".  We have new field officers.  Colonel O'Neal, from Florence, Alabama, is our Commander.
            Our boys all stand it very well and are anxious for the fight to come off, and, David, it will be the bloodiest fight that has been in the Confederate States.
                                                                                            Yours in the best of love and friendship,
                                                                                            Captain I. H. Sanders

(p.s. on document from Colonel O'Neal to Gen. H. Baylor, Richmond, Dated May 1, 1862)
        p.s The Yankees shelled us furiously last night but hurt no one.
 

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Seven Pines (May 31st - June 1st, 1862)
  Excerpts of the report by Brigadier-General G. J. Rains, Commanding (36)

  Pursuant to the instructions of Major-General Hill, on the field of battle, Brigadier-General Rodes' brigade being actively engaged with an overpowering mass of the enemy, with the two right regiments of my command, soon followed by the third and part of the fourth, we penetrated the woods, to take the enemy in rear and drive him from his batteries, now playing with fearful effect upon our troops.  We found ourselves in a swamp, but pressed on with alacrity until we had gained the rear of the enemy.  Here we halted, directed by kind Providence, exactly at the right place, where I made a change of front by a wheel in the thicket, and advancing found ourselves facing the foe.  Some of our men had fired on what I was afraid to be some of our own troops, but it proved otherwise from the dead bodies we passed, and the enemy must have been firing there upon one another.  As soon as we reached the edge of the thicket, seeing the enemy in front, I ordered the fire.  For a moment it ran along the line, not fairly yet in position, and was then followed by a long, loud, and continued roll of musketry for full fifteen min-
utes without cessation.  I had heard many a volley before, but never one so prolonged and continuous.
                We evidently were unexpected there, were near at hand to the foe, and struck them like an avalanche.  Their shot and cannon balls came like hail into the bushes around us, but men lay close to the ground and only rose up on the knee to fire.  The enemy were in great force before us, at least ten to one, and increasing by reinforcement, and at their fire about 100 of our men broke to the rear, but happening to be just there I easily rallied them, and they fought like heroes, and more than redeemed the act of momentary panic.
                All acquitted themselves well, and when we emerged from the woods and swept through the desolated camp of the enemy, amid their dead and wounded, their property lying everywhere around, not one article was taken by the men, who maintained their ranks like true soldiers and ultimately passed the night in line of battle with out fire or light in another part of the woods, ready to receive and check the enemy should he advance, also taking a number of prisoners.
                My brigade was again called upon the next day to resist the enemy actively engaged out of view with another part of our army, but I presume he had enough of the fight and carnage for once and not appear.
                Our loss in the battle was more than one-seventh of the whole brigade, and of these very few not killed or wounded, and I regret being obliged to report Col. E. A. O'Neal, Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment, badly injured by a cannon slug, which killed his adjutant (Edmond Pendleton Major).
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Seven Days (June 25th - July 1st, 1862)
  Relevant Excerpts of report by Brigadier-General Robert E. Rodes, July 19, 1862 (36)

Gaines Mill (Cold Harbor) June 27, 1862

        I have the honor to make the following report of the operations of my brigade, composed of the Third, Fifth, Sixth, Twelfth, and Twenty-Sixth Alabama Regiments, and Carter's Battery, making an aggregate of about 1,460 men, from the evening of June 26th to that of June 28 last:
       In common with the other brigades of Maj. Gen. D. H. Hill, mine took position on the Mechanicsville turnpike on the morning of June 26.  We lay there until late in the afternoon, when we moved across the Chickahominy, taking position in the between Mechanicsville and the Chickahominy.
        Next morning, following the preceding brigades of the division, we came under heavy artillery fire at New Cold Harbor, when we were ordered to take shelter for a time at this point.  We were subjected to a heavy fire for half hour or more, but lost only two men, Lt. Ramsey and a private of the Fifth Alabama.  I sent out two from my staff to communicate with the major-general commanding, but in moving forward in person communicated with him myself, and under his order moved forward in line of battle to the support of General Garland in contemplated attack upon the enemy's battery to the left of Old Cold Harbor.  Before the attack was made, however, the position of both Garland's brigade and mine was changed, both brigades being wheeled on Garland's left to the rear.  Then we were ordered forward by Major-General Jackson to attack the enemy in front of New Cold Harbor, coming into the fight on the left of his troops.  In crossing an almost impenetrable swamp to get into action great confusion ensued, from the fact that at the same point several brigades were crossing at the same time, and upon emerging from the swamp and striking the field beyond three of my regiments, the Fifth, Twelfth, and  Twenty-sixth, were found on the left and behind, and the Sixth and Third Alabama on the right of Anderson's brigade, which was in front of us.
       The brigades of Generals Anderson and Garland having in the mean time, with three of my regiments, been brought into some sort of alignment, were ordered to charge.  The charge was intended to be general.  the whole line having a moment before paused and hesitated, nearly if not the whole of the left of the division, as far as one in my position could see, broke and retreated in apparent confusion.  I thought the whole of the brigade on the left of mine as well as my three regiments  were involved in it.  I found, however, that the confusion before spoken of on the left of the line had not been general;  that my three first-named regiments had continued the charge, and had successfully and almost alone beaten back two large bodies of the enemy on the top of the hill, besides taking a battery of the enemy directly in our front.  The Fifth, which took the battery, was sustained in this portion of the charge by the Twenty-sixth only, the Twelfth, in some confusion, having shifted to the left late in the evening and joined the troops which came up on the left of Hill's division.
        All the regiments and regimental officers acted handsomely, but the Fifth and Twenty-sixth  were especially distinguished for their great courage.  I feel no troops ever acted better than they did on this occasion.  Men and officers all acted nobly.
        Col. C. C. Pegues, of the Fifth, wound desperately in the charge and has since died.  Upon falling he called the next officer in command to him, Major Hobson, and told him that the Fifth has always been in the advance, and that was his last wish that it should then go ahead and no regiment to pass it.  Major Hobson gallantly carried out his wishes, and led the regiment on constantly ahead of all others of the division except the Twenty-sixth, which kept, under its brave colonel (O'Neal), steadily with it.

Gaines Mill, Virginia(36)                          June 27, 1862

Regiment                     killed       wounded      total
3rd Alabama            2         14        16
5th Alabama          21         45        66
6th Alabama            3         15       18
12th Alabama            1         11       12
26th Alabama            4         28       32 

White Oak Swamp                                                  June 30, 1862
    Excerpts of report from Major-General D. H. Hill, command of his Division(36)

    Jackson's command, my division leading, passed Savage Station early in the morning of the 30th instant, and followed the line of the Yankee retreat toward White Oak Creek.  We picked up about 1,000 prisoners and so many arms, that I detached the Fourth and Fifth North Carolina Regiments to take charge of both.
    At White Oak Creek we found the bridge destroyed and the Yankee forces drawn up on the other side.  Twenty-six guns from my division and five from Whitings division opened a sudden and unexpected fire upon the Yankee batteries and infantry.  A feeble response was attempted, but silenced in a few minutes.  Munford's cavalry and my skirmishers crossed over, but the Yankees got some guns under cover of a wood which commanded the bridge, and the cavalry was compelled to turn back.  The skirmishers staid over all day and night.  We attempted no further crossing that day.  The hospitals and a large number of sick and wounded at White Oak Creek fell into our hands.  Major-Generals Longstreet and A. P. Hill attacked the Yankees in flank at Frazier's Farm (Glendale), some 2 miles distant in advance of us that day, and a corresponding vigorous attack by Major-General Huger on their rear must have resulted most disastrously to them.  The obstacles he met, which prevented his advance, may have been of a character not to be overcome.  I do not know and cannot judge of them.  The bridge being repaired, Jackson's command crossed over, Brigadier-General Whiting's division leading, and effected a junction with General Lee near a church a few miles from Malvern Hill.  Whiting's Division was turned off the road to the left at the foot of this hill and mine to the right.  We had to advance across an open field and ford a creek before getting under cover of the woods.  We were in full view while effecting these objects, and suffered heavily from the Yankee artillery.
 

Malvern Hill, Virginia                                            July 1, 1862
Excerpts of report from Col. John B. Gordon, 6th Alabama, commanding Rodes' Brigade(36)

  On the evening of 28th ultimo the command of the brigade was turned over to me by Brigadier-General Rodes, his physical prostration forcing him to retire.
    At 3 a.m. Monday, June 30, the brigade was put in motion, crossing the Chickahominy at Grapevine Bridge, and halted during the afternoon an night on the Williamsburg road near White Oak Creek.  Here one regiment (the Twelfth Alabama) was sent across the creek as picket, and was next day ordered back to Richmond in charge of prisoners.
    Continuing the pursuit of the enemy, on July 1, we were halted near Malvern Hill.  As ordered by Major-General hill, I formed the brigade in line of battle on the right of the division, and threw out a portion of the Third Alabama as skirmishers covering the right flank.  Remaining in this position for two hours, I received an order to move immediately forward.  Ordering the Third Alabama to call in it's skirmishers, and by a rapid forward movement to join the brigade, I moved on.  The enemy's batteries were distant about 1 mile and the ground intervening exceedingly rough.  Passing across an open meadow and up a precipitous hill through dense woods, one of the regiments of General Anderson's brigade (Colonel Tew) reported to me as having lost it's brigade.  Forming it upon the left of this brigade, I moved forward, halting when near the open field in which the enemy had stationed his batteries.  I here sent forward Capt. H. A. Whiting, assistant adjutant-general, to ascertain the respective positions of the Confederate and Federal batteries.  Upon his report I half-wheeled the brigade to the left, and moving forward placed it under cover of a low hill, in sight of the enemy's batteries, to await orders, with the Twenty-sixth Alabama on the right and the fifth Alabama next on the right, both immediately in rear of the position occupied by our batteries.  The Twenty-sixth Alabama and the right wing of the Fifth were suffering from the enemy's artillery fire directed at our batteries.  I therefore at once moved these portions of the brigade by the left flank in rear of the Third Alabama, which I had previously brought into line.  This was my position when Major-General Hill gave me the order to charge the batteries in our front, distant 700 or 800 yards across an open field.  I ordered Capt. H. A. Whiting to bring the Twenty-sixth Alabama and the right wing of the Fifth Alabama as rapidly as possible into line.  The whole ground in front of the Twenty-sixth, Fifth, and Third Alabama Regiments was swept by the fire of the artillery, which had, in rapid succession, silenced two Confederate batteries in our front.  As there was no artillery to attract the enemy's attention, his batteries from the beginning, and his infantry finally, poured a most destructive fire upon my ranks.
    Never was the courage of troops more severely tried and heroically exhibited than in this charge.  They moved on under this terrible fire, breaking and driving off the first line of infantry, until within a little over 200 yards of the batteries.  Here the canister and musketry mowed down my already thinned ranks so rapidly that it became impossible to advance without support, and had it been possible to reach the batteries, I have high authority to back my own judgment that it would have been at the sacrifice of the entire command.  I therefore ordered the men to lie down and open fire, and immediately sent back to notify Major-General Hill of my position and to ask him to send up support.  A brigade was sent forward, but failed to reach my line.  The troops sent up from another division on the right had already fallen back, and refused to rally under the efforts made by Captain Whiting, assistant adjutant-general, and myself.  Nearly one-half of the brigade had been killed or wounded, leaving me about 600 men able to load and fire.  With the enemy's batteries and heavy lines of infantry concentrating their fire on my ranks it was folly, without immediate and steady support, to hold the brigade longer in this position.  I therefore ordered it to fall back.
    There were many exhibitions of individual heroism, but, I must call special attention to gallant conduct of Col. E. A. O'Neal, of the Twenty-sixth Alabama----------

                                                                         J. B. Gordon
                                                                    Colonel, Commanding Rodes' Brigade

Battle of Malvern Hill(36)                            July 1, 1862

Regiment               killed   wounded    total
3rd Alabama         37       163        200
5th Alabama         26        61         87
6th Alabama         15        29         44
12th Alabama         ---        ---        ----
26th Alabama *         13        73         86
*26th Alabama had 218 men present for Malvern Hill according to Gordon's Report.

    218     at Malvern Hill
    + 9     casualties at White Oak Swamp
    +32    casualties at Gaines Mill
   259     estimated strength before Seven Days
   127     casualties of 26th Alabama in Seven Days according to report from Medical Director
    49% casualties in Regiment from Seven Days Campaign

Seven Days a summary
Excerpts of report from Major-General D. H. Hill, command of Division (36)
    The actual loss in battle was, in my opinion, greater on our side that on that of the Yankees, though most person's differ with me.  The advantage in position, range, caliber, and number of guns was with them.  The prestige of victory and the enthusiasm inspired by it were with us.  Their masses, too, were so compact that shot, shell, and ball could hardly fail to accomplish a noble work.
    My division was employed during the week after the battle in gathering up arms and accoutrements, burying our own and the Yankee dead, and removing the wounded of both armies.  We then returned to our old camp near Richmond, with much cause for gratitude to the Author of all good for raising the siege of that city and crowning our arms with glorious success.
    The following list of killed and wounded will show that we lost 4,000 out of a little less than 10,000 taken into the field.

Excerpts of letter from John W. Stanford, Co. H. to his wife Nancy dated July 13, 1862
letter courtesy of Ann Lusk, Huntsville, AL.
    I will try and tell you the some of the times in the recent battle.  Thy commenst on Friday about until Tuesday.  We drove them before us like hogs.  They fell back 30 miles until they come to their gunboats.  We taken all their guns and provisions, wagons and horses and clothing and all they had besides 10,000 prisoners.  They have fell back to Yorktown.  They can't stand the Ala boys a charging their batterys.  With a shout our brigade had taken all their large batterys.  Our brigade was 5 Ala Regiments.  There was the 6th Ala, 12 Ala, 5 Ala, 3 Ala and the 26 Ala commanded by General Rhodes.  They went into the fight with 828 men and came out with 418 besides all the rest killed and wounded.  Our Regiment is all killed and wounded but 110.  It is cut to pieces.  There is nobody killed that you know but James Armstrong (thanks to this letter I now know what happened to this man) and I don't think that there will be anymore fighting here soon.
    Private Stanford contacted measles in Tuscumbia but actually didn't come down with them until he arrived in Virginia.  While recovering from them he contracted typhoid and was hospitalized from when he arrived in Virginia up till this letter.  His brother James died in Chimbarazo Hospital on May 10, 1862.  John died in Staunton, Virginia of pnuemonia on December 29, 1862 and is buried in Thornrose Cemetery in Staunton.

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Battle of Boonesborough (South Mountain)    September 14, 1862
  Relevant excerpts from report of Brigadier-General Robert E. Rodes(36)

        I have the honor herewith to report the operations of this brigade during the actions of September 14th in Maryland.
        On the morning of the 14th my brigade relieved Anderson's about half a mile west of Boonesborough.  Toward noon it was ordered to follow Ripley's brigade to the top of the South Mountain.  Overtaking Ripley's brigade on the mountain, it was halted, and immediately reported to Major General Hill.  After looking over the field of battle, I was ordered by Major General Hill to take position on the ridge immediately to the left of the gap through which the main road runs (Frosttown Gorge, Turner's gap).  Remaining there three quarters of an hour, part of the time under artillery fire, and throwing our scouts and skirmishers to the left and front, I was then ordered to occupy another bare hill about three quarters of a mile still farther to the left.  The whole brigade was moved to that hill, crossing, in doing so, a deep gorge which separated the hills.  This movement left a wide interval between the right of my brigade, which in it's last position rested in the gorge, and the balance of the division, which being reported to General Hill, together with the fact that no troops supported the battery on the first mentioned ridge, by his order I sent back one of my regiments (the Twelfth Alabama) to support the battery.  By this time the enemy's line of battle was pretty well developed and in full view.  It became evident that he intended to attack with a line covering both ridges and the gorge before mentioned, and extending some half a mile to my left.  I had, immediately after my arrival on the extreme left, discovered that the the hill there was accessible to artillery, and that a good road, passing by the left of said hill from the enemy's line, continued immediately in my rear and entered the main road about half a mile west of the gap.  Under these circumstances, I sent for artillery, and determined upon the only plan by which the enemy could be prevented from immediately obtaining possession of said road, and thus marching entirely in our rear without difficulty, and that was to extend my line as far as I could to the left, to let the right rest in the gorge, still, and to send to my superiors for reinforcements to continue the line from my right to the gap on the main road, an interval of three-quarters of mile at least.  Having thrown out skirmishers along the whole front and to the left, they very soon became engaged with the enemy's skirmishers.
       This was about 3 p. m. and it was perfectly evident then that my force of about 1,200 muskets was opposed to one which outflanked mine on either side by at least half a mile.  I thought the enemy's force opposed to my brigade was least a division.  In a short time the firing became steady along the whole line, the enemy advancing very slowly.  The danger of his possessing the top of the left hill, and thus being in my rear, became so imminent that I had to cause my left regiment (6th Alabama) to move further left.  By this time the enemy, though gallantly met by all four of the regiments with me, had penetrated between them, and had begun to swing their extreme right around toward my rear, making for the head of the gorge, up the bottom and sides of which the whole force, except the Sixth Alabama, had to retreat, if at all.
        The Twenty-sixth Alabama, which had been placed on my right, was by this time completely demoralized; it's Colonel (O'Neal) was wounded, and the men mingled in utter confusion with some South Carolina stragglers on the summit of the hill, who stated that their brigade had been compelled to give way, and had retired.  Notwithstanding this, if true, left my rear entirely exposed to give again (I had not time or means to examine the worth of their statements).The Twenty-sixth was isolated with no friendly troops on either flank within sight of each other.  The Twenty-sixth was the far right Regiment with the 5th Alabama out of sight to their left.  The Twenty-sixth was fighting portions of the 12th, 13th and 7th Pennsylvania Reserve Regiments.  The 12th head-on, the 13th on the left flank while also engaging the 5th Alabama's right flank, and the 7th came in a little later and hit their unprotected right flank.  According to Lt. James Silas Odom of Company K, there were only 3 left in his company at the end of the battle.  This would take into account also that most of the company at that time were just getting exchanged from their capture at Fort Donelson.
        My loss up to this time had been heavy in all the regiments except the Twelfth Alabama.  The enemy by this time were nearly  on top of the highest peak, and were pushing on, when Gordon's Regiment , unexpectedly to them, opened fire on their front and checked them.  The last stand was so disastrous to the enemy that it attracted the attention of the stragglers, even many of whom Colonel Battle and I had been endeavoring to organize, and who were just then on the flank of that portion of the enemy engaged with Gordon, and for a few minutes they kept up a brisk enfilading fire upon the enemy.  Finding his fire turning from Gordon upon them, and that another body of Federal troops were advancing upon them they speedily fell back.  It was now so dark that it was difficult to distinguish objects at short musket range, and both parties ceased firing.  Directing Colonel Gordon to move his regiment to his right and to the rear, so as to cover the gap, I endeavored to gather up stragglers form the other regiments.  Colonel Battle still held together a handful of his men.  These, together with the remnants of the Twelfth, Fifth, and Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiments, were assembled at the gap, and were speedily placed alongside of Gordon's regiment, which by this time had arrived in the road ascending the mountain from the gap forming a line on the edge of the woods parallel to and about 200 yards from the main road.  This position we held till 11 o'clock at night, when we were ordered to take the Sharpsburg road and to stop at Keedysville, which we did.  We had rested about an hour, when I was ordered to proceed to Sharpsburg with all the force under my command--Colquitt's brigade and mine--to drive out a cavalry force reported to be there.
In this engagement my loss was as follows:

 excerpts of report of  Major General D. H. Hill (36)

        Should the truth ever be known, the battle of South Mountain, as far as my division was concerned, will be regarded as one of the most remarkable and creditable of the war.  The division had marched all the way from Richmond, and the straggling had been enormous in consequence of heavy marches, deficient commissariat, want of shoes, and insufficient officers.  Owing to these combined causes, the division numbered less than 5,000 men the morning of September 14, and had five roads to guard, extending over a space of as many miles.  This small force successfully resisted, without support, for eight hours, the whole Yankee army, and when its supports were beaten, still held the roads, so that our retreat was effected without the loss of a gun, wagon, or an ambulance.  Rodes' brigade immortalized itself-----.

Battle of Sharpsburg (Antietam) (36)

    On the 15th, after resting on the heights south of Sharpsburg long enough to get a scanty meal and to gather stragglers, we moved back through that place to the advanced position in the center of the line of battle before the town.  Here, subsisting on green corn mainly and under an occasional artillery fire, we lay until the morning of the 17th, when began the engagement of September 17.  The fight opened early, on the left, but my brigade was not engaged until late in the forenoon.  About 9 o'clock I was ordered to move to the left and front to assist Ripley, Colquitt, and McRae, who had already engaged the enemy, and I had hardly begun the movement before it was evident that the two latter had met with a reverse and that the best service I could render them on the field generally would be to form a line in rear of them and endeavor to rally them before attacking or being attacked.  Major-General Hill held the same view, for at this moment I received an order from him to halt and form a battle line in the hollow of an old and narrow road just beyond the orchard, and with my left about 150 yards from and east of the Hagerstown Road.  In a short time a small portion of Colquitt's brigade formed on my left, and I assumed the command of it.  This brought my left to the Hagerstown Road.  General Anderson's brigade, occupying the same road, had closed up on my right.
    A short time after my brigade assumed it's new position, and while the men were busy improving their position by piling rails along their front, the enemy deployed in our front in three beautiful lines, all vastly outstretching ours, and commenced to advance steadily.  Unfortunately, no artillery opposed them in their advance.  Carter's battery had been sent to take position in rear, by me, when I abandoned my first position, because he was left without support, and because my own position had not then been fully determined.  Three pieces, which occupied a fine position immediately on my front, abandoned it immediately after the enemy's skirmishers opened on them.  The enemy came to the crest of the hill overlooking my position, and for five minutes bravely stood telling fire, however.  In this position, receiving an order from General Longstreet to do so, I endeavored to charge them with my brigade and that portion of Colquitt's which was on my immediate left.  (After researching this battle, I've come to the conclusion that the 26th was positioned the furthest left and attached to Colquitt's right).  The charge failed, mainly because the Sixth Alabama Regiment, not hearing the command, did not move forward with the others, and because Colquitt's men did not advance far enough.  That part of the brigade which moved forward found themselves in an exposed position, and , being outnumbered and unsustained, fell back before I could, by personal effort, which was duly made, get the Sixth Alabama to move.  Hastening back to the left, I arrived just in time to prevent the men from falling back to the rear of the road we had just occupied.  It became evident to me then that an attack by us must, to be successful, be made by the whole of Anderson's brigade, mine, Colquitt's, and any troops that had arrived on Anderson's right.  My whole force at this moment did not amount to over 700 men--most probably not to that number.
    -----Returning toward the brigade, I met Lt. Col. J. N. Lightfoot, of the Sixth Alabama, looking for me.  Upon his telling me that the right wing of his regiment was being subjected to a terrible enfilading fire, which the enemy were enable to deliver by reason of their gaining somewhat on Anderson, and that he had a few men left in that wing, I ordered him to hasten back, and to throw his right wing back out of the old road referred to.  Instead of executing the order, he moved briskly to the rear of the regiment and gave the command, "Sixth Alabama, about face, forward march."  Major Hobson, of the Fifth, seeing this asked him if the order was intended for the whole brigade, he replied "Yes," and thereupon the Fifth, and immediately the other troops on their left, retreated.  I did not see their retrograde movement until it was too late for me to rally them.  -------As I turned toward the brigade, I was struck heavily by a piece of shell on my thigh.  At first I thought the wound serious, but, finding, upon examination, that it was slight, I again turned toward the brigade, when I discovered it, without visible cause to me, retreating in confusion.  I hastened to intercept it at the Hagerstown Road.  I found, though, that, with the exception of a few men from the Twenty-sixth, Twelfth, and Third, and few under Major Hobson, not more than 40 in all, the brigade had completely disappeared from this portion of the field.  This small number, together with some Mississippians and North Carolinians, making in all about 150 men, I rallied and stationed behind a small ridge leading from the Hagerstown road eastward toward the orchard before spoken of, and about 150 yards in rear of my last position.
    It is proper for me to mention here that this force, with some slight additions, was afterward led through the orchard against the enemy by General D. H. Hill, and did good service, the general himself handling a musket in the fight.

Excerpts of letter from John W. Stanford (Co H. to wife Nancy dated November 12, 1862
letter courtesy of Ann Lusk, Huntsville, AL.
    --- We have gone a very long and tiresome march even to the state of Maryland.  In that state our first encounter Boone's Gap on the 14th of Sept. and at Sharpsburg on the 17th.  In the two battles we lost several good men out of our company to wit Sam'l Brown (mortally wounded at South Mountain), H. L. Tucker (Henry Leverett Tucker was thought to have been killed at South Mountain after being gutshot but was captured and survived, was exchanged and hospitalized and didn't rejoin the Regiment until late December, 1862), W. Miller(only reference I have of this man), James Roberson (KIA South Mountain) and J. C. Weaver (KIA at Sharpsburg).  Many others wounded and some taken prisoner that has been exchanged and now with us.  After the battle on the 17th we retreated back across the Potomac at Shephardstown and since that time we have been tearing up railroads and moving from point to point and are now at Middletown, VA.
    It is unknown to us how long we will stay here for we are under fighting orders all the time.  Our Regiment was thrown out on picket a few days at Manasas Gap and our pickets was attacked by the enemy which was repulsed but eight of our men was cut off for one or two days but all returned to the Regiment except a man by the name of Dobbins (James H. Dobbins, Co. G) who thought deserted and went to the Yankees (he did).  Our Regiment is now in good health and is with us and notwithstanding the hardships and privations that they endured they are still in good health.  We are expecting a battle in this section of country every day but we hope that this campaign will end with another battle but if it must the the 26th is the last Regiment that is known to falter or shrink from anything.  My health for the last five weeks is some better that it has been heretofore.  I am now gaining flesh some.
    John Washington Stanford died December 29, 1862 of pnuemonia in a Staunton, Virginia Hospital and is buried in the Thornrose Cemetery there.

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Mine Run Campaign
Excerpts of report from Lt. Col. John S. Garvin, Twenty-sixth Alabama (January 22, 1864) (36)

    On November 26, 1863, the regiment went into line of battle at the breastworks in front of Morton's Ford.  Soon after (about noon) it was ordered to relieve the Twelfth Alabama regiment on picket at Tobacco Stick Ford.  It remained on picket until near 12 p.m. when it was relieved and the brigade took up the line of march toward Locust Grove, for a short time supporting Johnson's division to the right of Broad Run, I believe.  At this point the regiment was again placed on picket to guard the blind fords on the run, near the residence of Mr. Rhodes.  It was soon after relieved, and the brigade continued the march toward Locust Grove, and went, into line of battle near this place on the evening of November 27 ultimo.
    We continued in line, throwing up temporary breastworks, until the morning of the 28th, at 4 a.m., when we were moved to Mine Run, occupying the crest of the ridge to the left of the Brock road, in a very exposed position.  The regiment was employed on November 28, 29, and 30, in throwing up breastworks and otherwise strengthening their position, subjected occasionally to a cannonade of the enemy, with no casualties, only one shell striking the breastworks, fortunately doing no damage.
    On December 1, the enemy again opened upon our position with their artillery, but with no effect, as far as this regiment is concerned.  WE remained in this position until the morning of December 3, when we were moved by the right flank some 2 miles along the breastworks, and had just taken our position when the enemy were reported as in full retreat.  The brigade started in pursuit, and continued it within a few miles of Germanna Ford, without, however, overtaking the enemy, he having crossed the river.  The brigade then returned to the old camp near Morton's Ford, where it arrived on December 4.
    Being in no active engagement, there were no casualties in the regiment worthy of reporting; but I cannot close this report without bearing testimony to the patience and endurance of the officers and men of my command.  They occupied a position in the open field on the crest of the ridge which exposed them to the cold winds and very inclement weather, and, being poorly clad, suffered very much from exposure.  For twenty-four hours or more they had no rations, but they bore all without a murmur, only anxious to meet and hurl back the invading foe.  Much of the sickness now in camp may justly be attributed to their exposure on that field.
 

letter dated September 30, 1894 from R. T. Powell (16)(8)
     drummer from Company I, 10th W. Virginia Infantry to Alabama Governor Thomas G. Jones

Marietta, Ohio  September 30th, 1894

To his Excellency,
The Governor of Alabama

Dear Sir:
        During the war of the Rebellion in January 1864 I was taken a prisoner of war and about Feb. 1864 I was taken to Andersonville, GA. where I was confined until Sept. 1864.  In a few weeks after I reached Andersonville, Lewis Jones, a private of the 26th Alabama secured permission to take me on the outside of the prison on condition that I would beat the drum for the 26th Alabama on "guard mount" dress parade & while they would remain at Andersonville on duty.  Mr. Jones took me to the camp of the 26th and explained to me the conditions on which I would be put on "Parole of Honor" and given certain liberties.  I refused to accept the conditions and Lewis Jones gave me something to eat and put me back in the stockade explaining to me that he had no authority to keep me out only on condition to which I have referred.  They soon succeeded in getting a good drummer and fifer out of the stockade that did the work I refused to do.  I was a small boy having enlisted when I was four feet in height and only thirteen years of age.  In a short time Lewis Jones came to the stockade and took me out and made another proposition to me.  He said he had secured permission to take me out of the stockade and that he was responsible for my safe keeping.  He took me to the camp of the 26th Ala. and I slept and ate with him, and he took me hunting and fishing a time or two.  I do not recollect his company, (it's Co. "I") but there were five in his mess and I made six.  We ate together, and I had nothing to do but behave myself and not run away.  He was very kind to me and said he interested himself in my behalf on account of me being a mere child and that seeing me a prisoner of war had aroused the tender feelings of his heart.  In that mess of six was a brother of Lewis Jones who was a Lieut. in the company to which Lewis belonged.  In a few weeks the 26 Ala. was ordered in to active service again and during all the time until they took their departure I staid in camp with Lewis Jones and he treated me, and cared for me, as if I were his own child.  Before they left he went to Captain Wirz, the commandant of the prison, and arranged for him to keep me at his office and run errands, and not put me back in the stockade.  I staid with Capt. Wirx a good while, but one day he flew into a rage and put me back into the stockade.  When I tell you that I went into Andersonville with nineteen of my company and I was the only one to reach home alive you will readily see how Lewis Jones saved my life.  The better treatment at Wirz's office and the kind treatment from Lewis Jones, and it was all due to the efforts of Lewis Jones, built me up in health so that I was able to live through it.  Lewis Jones saved my life.
        When you were in Marietta, Ohio a few years ago, returning a flag, you were at the home of Genl. Rufus R. Dawes of that city.  I was relating this incident to Genl. Dawes recently and he said it would not surprise him to learn that the Lieut. Jones to whom I have referred was none other than the present Governor of the State of Alabama, and he urged me to write you a letter to ascertain if you are Lieut. Jones of the 26 Ala. and where my friend Lewis Jones can be located.  I have never seen or heard of Lewis Jones since he waved good bye to me on the cars at Andersonville Station.  He may be in heaven long ago for no other place would be fitted for his generous soul.  Although I have always intended to try to locate him this is the first effort that I have made in that direction.  Do me the kindness to favor me with a reply and I will very highly appreciate it.  I am 45 years of age I was a private and drummer in Company "I" 10 W. Va. Vol. Inft.

very truly yours,  R. T. Powell
    Governor Thomas Goode Jones was not the Lt. of Company I, he was in another Regiment.  Lewis James Jones' widow Sarah Elizabeth Jones applied for pension in Lee County, Mississippi in 1913 and 1924.  Clark sent me the first copy of the letter and brought my attention to it.  I never would have found it as it wasn't in the 26th Alabama file but instead in the file of Governor Jones.  I've been contacted by the great-grandson of Lewis, Doyle Jones of Midland, Texas and he was quite excited by this letter as he was unaware of this act of kindness by his great-grandfather.  I've also sent for the pension file of Mr. Powell from the National Archives so hopefully I can track down a descendant of his.  Anybody see where this is going?  Doyle Jones has said he would go to a reunion when the time comes!
 

letter to Major General Elzey from Brigadier General Jno. H. Winder dated February 15, 1864
thr following are from the "Civil War CD-Rom" Guild Press of Indiana, Inc. www.guildpress.com
     General: I am instructed by the adjuctant and Inspector General to say the Colonel O'Neals regiment will furnish the guard necessary to convey the prisoners to Camp Sumter, GA.  They will be forwarded in squads of about 400, and one company will be required for each detachment.  When the railroad company can be heard from I will notify you of the time at which the first can be started.

SPECIAL ORDERS NO. 36/XII dated February 12, 1864.
    Colonel Swanson's regiment of Alabama volunteers (Sixty-first Alabama) is assigned to duty with and will form a part of Brigadier-General Battle's brigade, to relieve Colonel O'Neals regiment of the same brigade.

orders relating and leading up to posting with Army of Tennessee

(1)Maj. Gen Samuel Jones from S. Cooper, Adjuctant and Inspector General, Richmond, dated May 14, 1864.
      You will order the Twelfth and Eighteenth Georgia Battalions, the Tenth and Nineteenth South Carolina Regiments, Forty-seventh and Fifty-fifth Georgia Regiments, if they have arrived from Dalton, to proceed immediately by railroad to Richmond.  The Fifty-sixth Georgia and Twenty-sixth Alabama, now at Andersonville, and Twentieth South Carolina Regiment, Colonel Keitt, if it has not yet gone to Dalton, will also be sent.  The movement must be made with the greatest possible expedition.

(2)Maj. Gen Howell Cobb from S. Cooper, Adjuctant and Inspector General, Richmond, dated May 15, 1864.
    Order the Fifty-sixth Georgia Regiment and Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment, Colonel O'Neal, to proceed immediately by railroad to Richmond.  They must move promptly.

(3)Maj. Gen J. F. Gilmer, commanding Savannah, GA. from Sam Jones, Major Gen. Charleston, SC. May 17.
    The following telegram just received: (copy of letter #1)
        Give immediately the necessary orders for the movement of the troops mentioned above that are in your district, and order Col. R. H. Anderson to proceed immediately with his regiment to relieve the Thirty-second Georgia Regiment, Colonel Harrison's.  Acknowledge receipt of this telegraph.

(4)General S. Cooper from Sam Jones, Charleston, South Carolina dated May 22, 1864.
    General Cobb reports that theTwenty-sixth Alabama Regiment had left Andersonville for Montgomery before orders for it to go to Richmond reached him.  There are less that 100 men of the Fifty-fifth Georgia Regiment at Andersonville, and says it is of vital importance that they remain there.  Nothing heard of the Forty-seventh and Fifty-sixth Georgia Regiments: presume they are with General Johnston.

(6)Brigadier-General Pillow, Selma, AL. from S. D. Lee, Major General, Meridain, MS. dated May 21, 1864.
    Order Colonel O'Neal to proceed at once with his regiment to Richmond, Virginia, and report to General Cooper.  Order Ball's regiment to Selma.  No troops can be got from Mobile.

SPECIAL ORDERS NO. 132/IX, Jno. Withers, assistant Adjuctant-General, Richmond, VA. dated June 7, 1864.
    IX. so much of paragraph XVII, Special Orders, No. 113 as refers to the Twenty-sixth Regiment AlabamaVolunteers, is hereby revoked.  Colonel O'Neal will report with his regiment to General Joseph E. Johnston, commanding Army of Tennessee, at Marietta, GA.
This is after the 26th had already fought at New Hope Church.

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letter from Lt. Col. Garvin to Col. Withers dated March 1, 1864.
(Andersonville, Sumter County, GA.)
Dear Col.

        By orders from the Adj. General's office while we were enroute for Meridian, MS, this regiment was temporarily detailed as a prison guard for the garrison at this place.  It is the wish of the officers and men of the regiment that this detail be made permanent.  And you would lay us under renewed obligations by using your influence with the department to have it made permanent.
        The regiment, you are aware, has been decimated by the casualties of battle.  It has won for itself some enviable fame upon almost every battle field in VA.  It needs recruiting now more than any other regiment from the State of Alabama.  It certainly has as many claim for a little respite from active service in the field as any other regiment and the situation here is particularly favorable to it's being easliy recruited if it is permanantly located here for awhile.  As soon as it's ranks are filled it is the desire of all to return to the Army of Northern Virginia, where all our honors have been won.  By being detached here this can be done any time without any interference with this army in the field.
        It is here our duties will be sworn and arduous, but at the same time this posting is one which will catch those chaps at home who wish to avoid this war.  After thesekinds are netted we will be ready again for the field.
        Hoping that you will lay this matter before the department and secure for us a permanent detail at this post, (as we are on the grounds) before other arrangements are made I remain,

                                                                                                             Jno. S. Garvin
                                                                                                             Lt. Col.
                                                                                                                            Commanding Regt.

letter to the Alabama legislature from General Robert E. Lee dated January 31, 1864 (36)

Hon. Thomas J. Foster and Others.

    Gentleman:  I have had the honor to receive you letter of the 26th instant, calling my attention to the resolutions of the Alabama Legislature, requesting the transfer of the Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment to that State.
    I have had occasion to present my views to the honorable Secretary of War upon the subject of these resolutions on the 5th of January.  This regiment has done most excellent service and is worthy of any compliment which the State may bestow upon it.  I do not see how the good of the service can be promoted by detaching this regiment, thus breaking up a veteran brigade which has just set the glorious example in this army of re-enlisting for the war.  If it is proposed to sent the regiment back home to recruit and return to the same brigade, the same proposition is applicable to many other regiments which have undergone like hardships and been equally reduced in the same bloody conflicts.  It is clear that this policy cannot be instituted in the army with the enemy in force in our front.  I cannot recommend the transfer of this regiment, unless one equally good is sent beforehand to take it's place.
    If Colonel O'Neal desires duty in some other army I will interpose no objection.  I regret that he feels injustice has been done him here.  I have a just appreciation of his gallantry and worth.  I recommended another officer to the command of the brigade because I believed him better qualified to perform the duties of the position.  General Rodes' whole division acted at Chancellorsville with distinguished gallantry, and that officer owes his promotion to General jackson's observation of his skill and conduct, and you will see in my report of that battle that on of his dying messages to me was to the effect that General Rodes should be promoted major general and his promotion should date from May 2.  He has commanded his division with success and ability, and I am gratified to state that his division has re-enlisted for the war, Battle's brigade, of Alabama, having set the example.  Instead of raising new brigades, I think it would be far better to recruit to the fullest number those brigades whose whole conduct is worthy of the admiration of their countrymen.
    Most respectfully yours, &c.,

                                                                                 R. E. Lee
 

JOINT RESOLUTION of thanks to the Alabama troops who have re-enlisted for the war (36)
           Approved February 6, 1864 by the Congress of the Confederate States of America

    Whereas the Alabama troops composing the brigade commanded by Brig. Gen. Cullen A. Battle, in the Army of Northern Virginia, volunteered in the service of the Confederate States in the early part of the year 1861, upon the first call for troops for the defense of Virginia, have participated in every battle fought by that army from the battle of Seven Pines to that of Gettysburg, always winning by their gallantry and devotion deserved praise and honor, an now, after enduring for nearly three years the hardships and dangers of active military service, have re-enlisted for the war:  Therefore,
    Resolved by the Congress of the Confederate States of America, That the thanks of Congress are due, and are hereby cordially tendered, to the Alabama troops, who, by their renewing the offer of their services to the country for the war in advance of any legislative action, have shown a spirit undaunted, a heroic determination to battle ever until the independence of their country is established, and a consecration to the cause of liberty worthy of imitation by their comrades.
    Resolved, That the President be requested to communicate a copy of these resolutions to the commander and troops of said brigade, as an evidence of the grateful appreciation by Congress of their fortitude and heroism during the trials and dangers of past services and of their late act of patriotism, confirming the faith and reassuring the hope of the patriot.

Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia
Col. Edward A. O'Neal, Twenty-sixth Alabama Infantry, commanding Cantey's Brigade (36)
   In obedience to circular order of the 30th of June I have the honor to submit the following report of the operations of the troops of this brigade on the 27th of June, the day the enemy assaulted our lines.
    The enemy attempted to charge our line of skirmishers, commanded by Capt. Sid. B. Smith, but did not succeed in approaching more than from 30 to 100 yards, and were handsomely driven back.
    In this affair we had none killed and but 8 wounded.  The loss of the enemy compared with ours was heavy, at least 40 or 50.
    Captain Smith, his officers and men, behaved with great gallantry, and firmly held their line.  This was the only attempt to carry our line, and since this effort but little fighting has occurred except shelling the line of pickets.      Enclosed I send you a list of casualties since we have been in line of battle on this mountain*.
    I am, captain, very respectfully, your obedient servant.

                                                                                     E. A. O'Neal Col. commanding Brigade
    *I've found this casualty list and there were no casualties from the 26th Alabama on the list for this battle on the 27th but I've found casualties on June 24, according to various official reports and books there were various skirmishes around Kennesaw Mountain leading up to the big Battle.

list of engagements

Peachtree Creek, Georgia
Col. Edward A. O'Neal, Twenty-sixth Alabama Infantry, commanding Cantey's Brigade (36)
   CAPTAIN: In obedience to orders from division headquarters, I submit the following report of the part taken by this brigade in the engagement of the 20th instant, on Peach Tree Creek:
    The brigade was formed in rear of the trenches to the right of the Pace's Ferry road, the Thirty-seventh Mississippi, Col. O. S. Holland, on the right; the Twenty-ninth Alabama Regiment, Col. John F. Conoley, on the left; the Seventeenth Alabama, Maj. T. J. Burnett, the right center; the first corps of sharpshooters, Capt. Sid. B. Smith, left center, and the Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment, Maj. D. F. Bryan, the center.  We moved by the right of companies, and having advanced about half a mile, the brigade was temporarily halted near the church and ordered into line, which order was promptly obeyed.  The line being formed, the command forward was given, and we advanced a short distance quietly, when our pickets became hotly engaged, I gave them the command to charge the enemy, and continue to forward and drive every obstacle before them, which order was obeyed with a cheer, driving in a heavy line of skirmishers and one line of battle.  The ground over which we advanced was very rough and the bushes and undergrowth dense and tangled, yet the line was well formed and advanced in good order, except on the left, where, from some misapprehension, some one gave the the command "guide left", which threw the Twenty-ninth Alabama Regiment too far to the left, and left too much ground for the sharpshooters and Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment to cover, attenuating their line almost to a skirmish line.  We continued to push forward, driving the enemy before us, and advance to within a short distance of some works the enemy had thrown up, having passed a line to our right some hundred yards.  This line was crescent-formed, which fact was not discovered till we emerged from the dense wood into an open field.  The Thirty-seventh Mississippi and the three right companies of the Seventeenth Alabama Regiment had swung around by a right wheel to face this line in the field, and had commenced a heave and telling fire on it, when it was discovered we were not supported by the troops on our right, who had failed from some cause to come up, and that we were being flanked and enfiladed by a battery.  In danger of being flanked and captured the brigade fell back, not if very good order, but was soon rallied and formed, when a second charge was made, aided by the Twenty-fourth South Carolina Regiment Lt. Col. Jones commanding, and the second corps of sharpshooters, Capt. W. H. Lindsey, Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment; but being unsupported were compelled again to fall back and take another position, where we remained till ordered back to the position in the trenches which we had left in the morning.  We drove the enemy nearly a mile, captured some of his works, and had punished him severely, and were executing the order of the major-general to kill or capture everything in our front, when from the cause above stated we were compelled to fall back.
    In justice of the brigade which I for the first time had the honor to command in battle, and to the other troops of this division.  I must say, that if the whole of our line* had pressed forward with the same energy and determination which the troops of this division did, we would have carried the day and driven the enemy in confusion across the creek.
    I regret to state that Lieut. Samuel H. Moore, acting assistant adjutant-general, and Lieut. Thomas S. O'Brien, assistant inspector-general, were captured.  They were experienced, energetic, efficient, and gallant officers, and that their capture is a serious loss to this brigade.
    We captured a number of prisoners (293), including several officers, a list of whom has already been sent in.  Enclosed I send you a list of casualties, which shows our loss to be 279 killed, wounded, and missing.
    I am captain, very respectfully, your obedient servant,

                                                                                     E. A. O'Neal Colonel, Commanding Brigade

   There were 26th Alabama members captured on July 22, I can only find the attack on Bald Hill, from which the Federals were shelling Atlanta.  This is the wrong Corps (Hardees) so there is some confusion.  This was an unsuccessful attack to take this hill.

list of engagements

Ezra Church, Georgia
Col. Edward A. O'Neal, Twenty-sixth Alabama Infantry, commanding Cantey's Brigade (36)
   In obedience to orders from division headquarters, I have the honor to submit the following brief report of the operations of this brigade in the engagement of the 28th of July at the Poor-House, on the Lick Skillet road.
    The brigade was moved from a position in reserve in rear of the trenches on the morning of the 28th, and after a somewhat fatiguing march, the weather belong excessively hot, arrived at the scene of conflict about 1 o'clock, where it was halted and formed on the left of the road in rear of a line of battle, then engaged, preparatory to a forward movement.  The Thirty-seventh Mississippi, Maj. S. H. Tarral commanding, on the right; the battalion of sharpshooters, under command of Capt. A. L. O'Brien, on the left; the Twenty-sixth Alabama, Maj. D. F. Bryan, in the center, and Seventeenth Alabama, Maj. T. J. Burnett, and the Twenty-ninth Alabama, under Capt. J. A. Foster, the right and left center.  About 2 p.m. the command to advance was given and the brigade moved forward in perfect order through an open field, exposed at every step to fire of the enemy, who were posted on the crest of a hill sheltered by a skirt of dense woods.  The advance was continued some 300 yards, and until we passed down and across the declivity intervening between the open field and the position occupied by the enemy, when the fire became so hot and galling the men sought shelter behind a fence, from which they opened on him a heavy fire along the whole line.  Besides the protection which the hill and woods afforded him the enemy had some slight and hastily constructed field works.  For more than two hours the sanguinary conflict raged with great fury and slaughter, and finding it impossible to dislodge him from his position, I sent to the major general commanding for assistance.  General Quarles was ordered up.  He obeyed the order with alacrity.  His troops came up in splendid style, and at once opened on the enemy a heavy fire; but even with this additional force it was found impossible to break his line, although at one time some parts of our line gained a footing in forty or fifty yards of the enemy.  The regimental commanders having informed me that their ammunition was exhausted, the brigade was ordered back to the point from which it had advanced, and ammunition distributed to the men shortly afterward.  General Quarles was compelled to fall back, and the command of the corps having devolved on the major-general, in consequence of the wounding of General Stewart, General Quarles took command of the division, and I was ordered by him to move to the left some 300 or 400 yards, where line of battle was formed, and where we remained till night, when we fell back to the trenches and bivouacked for the night.
    During the engagement the Thirty-seventh Mississippi and the right wing of the Seventeenth Alabama became somewhat detached from the brigade in consequence of the woods on our right, and also in part owing to the wounding of Major Burnett, who fell early in the action severely wounded, and who was the only field officer present with his regiment.
    During the whole of the sanguinary conflict the officers (field and line) and the men, with some exceptions, behaved with the coolness and intrepidity of veterans, and held their ground with a steady and stubborn courage worthy of the highest admiration, and I trust it will not be deemed invidious to say what truth demands should be stated, that if the troops on the right of our division* had moved forward and kept pace with our line of battle, the enemy would have been driven from his position, if not routed.
    Enclosed I send you a list of casualties, which is large for the number engaged.
    Among the slain we have to mourn the loss of some valuable officers.  Captain Ragland, Seventeenth Alabama, and Captain Hanna, Twenty-ninth Alabama Regiment, two gallant and meritorious officers, are among the killed.  I cannot close this report with acknowledging my obligations to Capt. S. B. Smith, of the Twenty-sixth Alabama Regiment, and Capt. J. F. Tate, Seventeenth Alabama Regiment, and Sergeant-Major Banks, who were acting on my staff in the absence of the regular staff.  Each behaved with gallantry, and faithfully performed his duties.  I am, captain, very respectfully, your obedient servant.

                                                             E. A. O'Neal Colonel, Commanding Brigade

*It has been insinuated that the lack of support is due to the bitterness of another general about being passed over for promotion to the head of the Army of Tennessee.  Remember, the two battles above are shortly after General Hood took command of the Army.

Excerpts of report of Major-General E. C. Walthall, commanding Division (36)

    On the morning of the 28th of July I moved my command to a point on the Lick Skillet road just in rear of our line of works, and soon after Lieutenant-General Stewart had indicated to me where to halt, and parted from me to ride our on the Lick Skillet road, a messenger from him came to direct me to move rapidly out on the road to a point near the Poor-House, where Lieutenant-General Lee's troops were engaged and where I would receive orders.  My command was promptly put into motion, left in front, and soon was halted nearly opposite Ezra Church and a line formed for attack by Lieutenant-General Stewart's order, the left resting on the road by which I had moved out, and the right slightly thrown forward not far from the Poor-House.  Reynold's Brigade was on the right and Cantey's on the left, while Brigadier-General Quarles was directed to remain in reserve neat the road and to watch closely the left flank.  These dispositions made, and after being informed that my right would be protected by troops of another command, I moved forward shortly after 2 o'clock and attacked the enemy with orders to drive him to Ezra Church.  I found him in strong position and large force on a hill a short distance in front, and failed to dislodge him after a vigorous and persistent effort, in which I lost 152 officers and nearly 1,000 men, considerably over one-third of my force.  The enemy occupied a line of great natural strength, and had thrown up temporary works for their protection.  As far as trees and undergrowth would permit us to see beyond my left, his line deflected to protect his right flank, extended, and soon after my command became engaged it was discovered by Brigadier-general Reynolds, commanding the right brigade, that there were no troops connected with him on the right, and he deployed two companies to cover the wooded space between him and the nearest brigade of Lee's Corps, some distance to his right.

Excerpts of Surg. John Moore, U. S. Army, Medical Director (36)
    On the 28th, while getting into the new position, the rebels made a very determined attack on the Fifteenth Army Corps, which formed the right of our line.  An attack, three or four times renewed, and lasting about five hours, resulted in a repulse to the enemy at all points, with 650 killed and about 5,000 wounded.  During the engagement our troops threw up barricades, and were thus protected very much.  Number of wounded, 540--mostly of the Fifteenth Corps.  All the wounded, including 80 rebels, were in the division hospitals before 12 o'clock at night.  The hospitals were first established within less than half a mile of our line of battle, but, being in range of enemy shells, had to be removed farther to the rear.  Three days after the battle--known as that of Ezra Church--all the wounded were sent to the corps hospitals in Marietta, fifteen miles distant.

List of engagements

Nashville (December 15-16, 1864)
Excerpt of same report of Major-General Walthall (36)

    At 3 p.m. December 1, we moved across the Harpeth River to the right of Franklin, and the next morning at daylight went forward on the pike toward Nashville, and when in a few miles of the city turned across the the Granny White pike, where we bivouacked, with skirmishers in front.  Here we remained till the 4th, and then, our skirmish line having been pressed up as near the enemy's position as possible, my command was put in line near Gales' house, on the left of the Granny White pike and in the center of the corps.  This line, after being entrenched, was abandoned on the night of the 10th and another adopted, and on the morning of the 15th my troops, then on the extreme left, were withdrawn to the neighborhood of Compton's house and there put in bivouac, and the space vacated filled by Major General Loring extending to the left to the Hillsborough pike.
    I had been previously directed from time to time to furnish fatigue parties to work on some detached enclosed works, being constructed under the supervision of engineer officers of the corps, on a range of high points, whose general direction was nearly that of the Hillsborough pike, running back in rear of the left of the line.  Lieutenant General Stewart informed me that it was the design of the general commanding, in the event of attack, to man these works with detachments of 100 men, with artillery, to resist any effort that might be made to turn the left flank of the army.  Between some of these points there were considerable intervals; in one case as much as 1,200 yards or more.  Soon after my command was withdrawn from the main line it became evident that the enemy were preparing for attack in heavy force, and I received orders from the lieutentant-general commanding to man the two redoubts farthest from the main line, putting two pieces of artillery in that on the extreme left, there being four, under Captain Lumsden, already in the other.  He further directed me to put my troops in position behind a stone fence along the Hillsborough pike, and to instruct the officers commanding in the redoubts to hold their position at all hazards.  One hundred men from Quarles' brigade were ordered into the redoubts on the extreme left and a like number from Cantey's into the other.  When my command got into position it stood at right angles to the main line of the army, with Brigadier- General Reynolds on the right, Brigadier-General Shelley on the left, and in the center Quarles' brigade, commanded by Brig. Gen. George D. Johnson, who, after its proper commander had been disabled, had been assigned to it by my request.
--- About 11 o'clock the enemy, exposing a large force in my front, concentrated a heavy artillery fire on the redoubt in front of my left, and after keeping it up for about an hour, with great damage to force within, moved upon it with a heavy body of infantry, enveloped the base of the hill, and by assault carried the position, which ws well defended.  Information having reached me that a force was moving up the Hillsborough pike, I communicated it to Lieutenant-General Stewart, who was near me at the moment, and, under his orders, Ectors brigade was went down near Compton's house to hold the pike for the protection of my left flank.  In a few moments after the first redoubt was taken the force in the second was overwhelmed by the enemy's infantry, and Ectors brigade, in position on the pike in its rear, was forced to withdraw.  In doing so, a body of the enemy being now between it an the left of Cantey's brigade, it was cut off from my command, and posted, by order of General Hood, on a hill some distance to my left, which the enemy late in the day mad an ineffectual effort to carry.  When these redoubts were taken the enemy moved up in my front and shelled by troops heavily.  He made no assault on my position, but threw a force across the pike into the woods near Compton's house and threatened my left.  I detached Brigadier General Reynolds with his brigade from my right, filling his place by extending the other two, and sent his to oppose this force.  With his left connected to Cantey's brigade he formed his line diagonally across the woods, his left refused, and deployed his command to lengthen his front his front, as the enemy extended his lines still farther to our left.  I sent Major D. W. Sanders, Major General French's assistant adjutant general, who had been serving with me during the day, to the lieutenant-general commanding to advise him of the situation of my line, and to say that unless Reynolds was supported he could not hold the enemy back with his attenuated line.  He replied that he had already applied for troops to put on my left, who were reported on the way.  Troops came, but the enemy was not checked.  Reynolds bravely resisting, was forced back, and it was with difficulty I withdrew my other two brigades to prevent their capture by the large force he had been opposing, which moved up in their rear.  About dark, when the troops of the corps had been collected on the right of the Granny White pike, Brigadier-General Sears' brigade, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Shotwell, numbering no more that 150 men, was temporarily attached to my command.
    My right rested on the Granny White pike, and my left connected with Bate's division, on the slope of a high wooded hill near it's foot, which Ectors brigade occupied the evening before.  Brigadier-General Johnston, commanding Quarles' brigade, was on the right, and next line Brigadier-General Shelley, commanding Cantey's brigade, and Reynolds' between him and Sears', which occupied the left.  At 12 noon I was directed to order Colonel Coleman, with his brigade, to report to the commanding general, and at 3:15 p.m., to send Brigadier-General Reynolds, with his command, to Lieutanant-General Stewart, to be employed in opposing a force which had gained the rear of our left.  These brigades, both of which were afterward enabled to reach the Franklin pike, were not under my orders again during the day.  By 4 o'clock a line was distinctly visible on the hills in our rear, covering much of our corps, which was the center in the army line.  About this time the force in my front moved upon my position, but there was no spirit in the assault, and it was promptly repulsed without difficulty, but the hill to my left just hen was carried, and to save any part of my command an immediate withdrawal was necessary.  Everywhere within my view the disorder was great and general, but it was inevitable, the surroundings considered.  At Brentwood, on the Franklin pike, the commanding general, seconded by officers from various commands, endeavored to gather up the fragments of his broken forces.  The effort was attended with but partial success.  Some time after dark we moved toward Franklin, arriving there about 3 o'clock the following morning.

Where was the 26th at the end?
Not at Bentonville as previously reported, following is what I base this on.(36)

Report of Maj. Gen. Edward C. Walthall, C. S. A. of operations of March 19, 1865.
  I respectfully submit the following report of the part taken by the command in the action near Bentonville, N.C.  Early in the morning of the 19th of March, with Reynolds' and Quarles' brigades, (no Walthall's) I followed Loring's Division to the point, about two miles and half from the village of Bentonville, selected for the line of battle.---

Message from General B. T. Beauregard to General Robert E. Lee, dated April 2, 1865.
Greensborough, N. C. 6:55 p.m.
    General Lee,
        Enemy reported to have left Wilkesborough to cross Yadkin at Shallow Ford and contiguous fords.  Three brigades of returned men, commanded by Featherstone, Shelley, and Govan, are now here; also two batteries.  Have ordered three batteries from Hillsborough to Danville.  Enemy will probably move on this place and Piedmont Railroad or on to Danville, keeping north of Dan River.

Message from Gen. B. T. Beauregard to President Jefferson Davis in Danville, VA. April 4, 1865
    His excellency President Davis:
    (care of General H. H. Walker, Danville, VA.)
    See telegrams of yesterday and to-day to General Walker.  I consider railroad from Chester to Danville safe at present.  Will send today 600 more men to latter point.  Twenty-five hundred more could be sent, if absolutely needed, but they are returned men of various commands in Army of Tennessee, temporarily stopped and organized here.

Message from Gen. B. T. Beauregard to General Johnston in Smithfield N. C. April 5, 1865
    Scouts report enemy 4,000 strong, with four pieces of artillery, Stoneman commanding; left Mount Airy on 3rd instant in direction of Wytheville, crossing at Fancy Gap.  I have ordered troops to Smithfield.  Shelley's brigade is at Danville.

Message from Gen. B. T. Beauregard to General Johnston in Smithfield, N.C. April 6, 1865.
    Danville is not yet free from danger.  Shelley's brigade and Colonel Wheeler's regiment Calvary are still required there.  Everything else has left here to join you.  Ferguson's brigade has orders to report to Danville in place of General Wheeler's cavalry.

Message from John B. Sale, Assistant Adjutant-General to Brig. Gen. L. S. Baker, April 6, 1865.
        GENERAL; The commanding general directs me to inform you that from sources not doubted, though not official, we learn here that after severe fighting on Sunday last before Richmond (on our right) the enemy succeeded in breaking our lines and forcing us to uncover the capital.  The immediate evacuation of the city by us followed.  Particulars are not yet known here.  The President and cabinet are in Danville.- - - - Rumors say General Lee is between Richmond and Danville, but we have no information on the subject.

Message from General E. C. Walthall dated April 8, 1865.
    Brigadier-General Shelley is still behind, and has with him, I am informed, 350 or 400 men of my division.  Loring's men are all supposed to have come up.

Message from Colonel and Inspector General E. J. Harvie to Lt. Gen. Stewart dated April 8, 1865.
    GENERAL; General Shelley, with his brigade, was ordered to Danville several days ago.  Do not wait for him; it may a week or more before he joins the army.

Message from Major General Cheatham dated April 8, 1865.
    I learned that the Thirty-seventh Georgia Regiment, 150 strong, is behind with General Shelley.

Order sent to Headquarters, Army of Tennessee near Smithfield, N. C. April 9, 1865.
    I.The Army of Tennessee will be organized as follows:
        Hardee's Corps: Cheatham's division, Brown's (late Cleburne's) division, Hoke's division.
       Stewart's Corps:  Loring's division, Walthall's (late McLaws') division, Anderson's (late Taliaferro's) division.
       Lee's Corps:  Hill's division, Stevenson's division.
    II.  Brown's Division will be composed of the reorganized brigades of Govan and J. A. Smith.
       Lorings division will be composed of the following brigades, constituted as indicated:
       Featherstones' Brigade:  The regiments now under Brigadier-General Featherstone; the Arkansas
                    Regiment formed of Reynolds' brigade, Thirty-seventh Mississippi Regiment.
       Lowry's Brigade:  The troops now in Adams' brigade, Twelfth Louisiana Regiment of Scott's Brigade.
       Shelley's Brigade: The Alabama regiments now in Scott's Brigade; First Alabama Regiment, now in
                    Quarles' Brigade; Forty-fifth, Thirty-third, and Sixteenth Regiments, now in Lowry's Brigade;
                    Seventeenth, Twenty-sixth, and Twenty-ninth Alabama Regiments, now with Brig. Gen. Shelley.

Message sent to President Davis from Major-General L. L. Lomax. dated April 12, 1865.
    No news from the front.  Secretary of War left yesterday evening--troops will leave this evening for Greensborough.  Enemy's cavalry reported in Henry County.  General Shelley will command troops leaving here unless ordered to contrary.  My force, 100 men, sent to the Valley.  Upon consultation with governor, I should like to join them.  Am ranking cavalry officer in Virginia and can collect the three divisions.  But few cavalry surrendered, Fitz Lee did not.

THE END
    Report of Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman
    General Grant not only approved, but urged me to accept, and I appointed a meeting at our former place at noon of the 26th, the very hour fixed for the renewal of hostilities.  General Johnston was delayed by an accident to his train, but at 2 p.m. arrived.  We then con-suited, concluded, and signed the final terms of capitulation.  These were taken by me back to Raleigh, submitted to General Grant, and met his immediate approval and signature.  General Johnston was not even aware of the presence of General Grant in Raleigh at the time.

Rebel flag's history not pegged to slavery
by Walter Williams and printed in syndication in the Detroit Free Press, November 29, 1999 (printed in entirety)

    Surely, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's leadership can't really believe that blacks have reached a point where we can now focus attention and expend resources on social fine-tuning.
    The NAACP has done just that with a proclamation that calls for boycotts and economic sanctions against South Carolina, demanding that the Confederate Battle Flag flying over the Capital Dome of the Southern state be removed.
    It must be ignorance, an ignorance I once shared.  The NAACP crowd sees the Confederate battle flag as a flag of slavery.  If that's so, the U.S. flag is even more so.  Slavery thrived under the U.S. flag from 1776 to 1865, while under the Confederate flag a mere four years.
    The birth of both flags had little or nothing to with slavery.  Both flags saw their birth in a violent and proud struggle for independence and self-governance.  However, if one sees the Civil War solely or chiefly as a struggle for slavery, then it's natural to resent the Confederate battle flag.
    The idea that President Abraham Lincoln waged war against the South to abolish slavery is fiction.  Here's an oft-repeated sentiment by Lincoln:  "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the states where it exists".
    A more plausible source of North-South antagonism is suggested in an 1831 speech by South Carolina Sen. John C. Calhoun when he said, "Stripped of all it's covering, the naked question is whether ours is a federal or consolidated government; a constitutional or absolute one; a government resting solidly on the basis of the sovereignty of the States, or on the unrestrained will of a majority."
    A significant source of Southern discontent was the tariffs Congress enacted to protect Northern manufacturing interests.  Referring to those tariffs, Calhoun said, "The North has adopted a system of revenue and disbursements in which an undue proportion of the burden of taxation has been imposed on the South."
    Black slaves and free blacks were among the men who fought and died heroically for the cause of the Confederacy.  The soldiers did not fight to preserve slavery.  They fought because their homeland was attacked and fought in the hope that the future would be better and they'd be rewarded for their patriotism.
    If the NAACP leadership has to commit resources to issues surrounding the Confederacy, I'd like to see to it that black Confederate soldiers are memorialized and honored.
    Walter Williams is an economics professor at George Mason University.  Please write to him and thank him for this forthright editorial at:  Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA.  90045.
What's New



 
   Robert E. Lee    Stonewall Jackson     Joseph Johnston     Samuel B. Hood


 
    John B. Gordon
All Photos above courtesy of the National Archives


 

     Out of 1,111 known members of the 26th Alabama:
            360 are known to have died                                                      32%
            93 finished the war in prison or on furlough after being released
             2 escaped from a prisoner of war camp
           10 joined U. S. service
           146 are known to have been discharged or resigned.
           39 are known to have deserted
          387 have some records but I don't know what happened to them.

Thank You
If there is no reference by a name then I found it on the Web, obtained it from Alabama Department of History or through personal research of pension files, National Achive Microfilms, personal letters obtained through University of Michigan and the University of Oklahoma.
(1) Michael R. Cobb,  descendant (Cobb's, Cos. A & C) MCBB1@aol.com
(2) Christina K. Glover, descendant (Dowdle's, Co. F)  lotsospots@home.com
(3) Joan (Hall) Kunkel, descendant (Hall's, Co. H) JOJOJK@aol.com
(4) John M. Coski at Museum of the Confederacy library@moc.org
(5) Jo Dempsey Suddith descendant (Howton's, Co. A) ramal@fayette.net
(6)Patricia Buck, Point Lookout POW Orgainization, plpow@erols.com.  IF YOUR ANCESTOR WAS HELD
                        AT POINT LOOKOUT PRISON, THIS SITE IS FOR YOU!!!  I have fatality list!  LINK
(7) David Ballenger Letters.  Great Reading, very articulate officer.  clements.library@umich.edu
(8) ADAH
(9) Jerry Robertson, Local Geneologist and descendant (Hankins, Co. D)
(10) Sabra Sudberry, Lamar County Geneologist and also descendant (Keller, Co. K)-- j.ssud@sonet.net
(11) Conley Ballenger, descendant (Ballengers, Co. D)
(12) Jerry Welch, descendant (Welch, Co. A)Aldine@swbell.net
(13) Mearl Sims, descendant (Fleming, Co. K) merlbett@ebicom.net
(14) Paul Goree, family geneologist (Goree, Co G.)
(15) Mark Keenum, descendant (Keenum's, Co's. C and F) mkeenum@erols.com
(16) Clark Rye, descendant (Rye's, Co. B)WA4PLY@aol.com
(17) Richard B. Davis, descendant (Reed, Co. K) eagle6@apex.net
(18) Michael Lee Busby, descendant (Marshall's, Wimberly's Co. I) MBusby3237@aol.com
(19) Carlisle Barracks U. S. Army Military History Institute
(20) Jack McCormack, Irish Collection, U. S. Army Military History Institute
(21) Bill F. Dillon, Sr. descendant (Mansell, Co. E) bill@texhoma.net
(22) Jerry Stillman, descendant (Stillman's Co's B & K) stillman@jrwent.com
(23) Kerri Walters, descendant (Pyron's, McKay's Co. H) KerriCW@aol.com
(24) Bob Quinn, descendant (Simon Harris, Co. C) bquinn@harris.com
(25) Paul Wright, descendant (Wright's, Stuckey's, Co. B) w1937@mindspring.com
(26) Buddy Brock, descendant (Brock's, Co. E.) cbrock@esc11.net
(27) Dallas Johnson, descendant (Johnson's, Cos. A & H) dallasjohnson@americanpioneers.com
(28) John McKay, descendant (McKay's, Co. H.) firetche@stc.net
(29) "Behind the Old Brick Wall" Published by the Lynchburg Committee,"The Bookstore" BooksVa@aol.com
(30) Gary Stevens, descendant (Wheeler's Co. A, Ayres', Co. D) GStev72818@aol.com
(31) Men in Gray Internments, Virginia, Thomas M. Spratt,  Iberian Publishing
(32) Gettysburg Descendant Bulletin Board
(33) Deborah Bass-Frazier, descendant (Howton's Co. A), dabf@zebra.net
(34) Heath Gerbige, descendant (Hyche's, Co G.) hgerbig@HiWAAY.net
(35) Janie Spencer, descendant (Guin's, Co. D and I) dwspence@ibm.net
(36) The Civil War CD-ROM, Guild Press, Inc.  www.guildpress.com (317) 848-6421 very valuable tool!
(37) Jimmie Sue Page, descendant (Edmonds, Co. A) jimmie@sonet.net
(38) Jimmie D. Martin, descendant (Martin's, Co. H)
(39) SCV Confederate Veteran Magazine, May-June 1992
(40) Stacy Coats, descendant (Guin's, Co. I) chevy2nova68@hotmail.com
(41) Jeff Farquhar, descendant (Farquhar's, Co. A) jefffarq@aol.com
(42) Gerald Born, descendant (Frasier, Co. H)
(43) Doyle D. Jones, descendant, (Jones', Co. I)
(44) Mark L. Buckley, descendant (Hankins, Maddox, Co. D)
Johnny M. Bull, descendant, (Shelton's, Co. B.)
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