USA > Tennessee > History of the Twentieth Tennessee regiment volunteer infantry, C.S.A > Part 42
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WHEN THE LAST ONE PASSES AWAY. This poem was written by Beverly R. Dudley, after the war. When the last bright ray of sunshine Beams around the hoary head, Of our last Confederate veteran, ' Ere his final hymn is read ; When we see the last one shrouded, In his tattered suit of gray, How our hearts will flood with sadness, As he's softly borne away.
Close beside his bier we'll gather To proclaim a last farewell, To our last Confederate veteran, ' Ere they toll his funeral-knell. And we'll ponder o'er the parting, And we'll wonder at the way, Death has swallowed up in victory Every one that wore the gray.
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SONGS OF THE SOUTH 505
Then we'll bear our last old soldier To a quiet place of rest ; And we'll guard his mound of verdure As an eagle shields her nest ; And we'll deck his grave with violets, And we'll keep it green each day ; And we'll carve upon his headboard, " Lieth here the last old gray."
Sad, ah, sad, will be our Southland, When we have no veteran gray. Dark, oh, dark, will be the morning, When the last one's passed away. Clouds will dim each peaceful voyage When his quietude they view ; And when parting all will echo: " Honored sir, adieu, adieu."
Shrouded in a mist of sorrow, As a Cupid's parting lay ; Will be each Southern valley, When the last one's passed away. Close around each hill and mountain, And around each cabin door, Will be linked a chain of memory, As was never linked before.
And through every field of clover, And among the golden grain, And along the battle breastworks, Where her fairest sons were slain; Will be monuments of memory, While 'neath every bank of clay, Myriads of leaden missiles, To remind us of our gray. .
We shall love to teach our children Of our heroes who are dead; Of the battle-scars they carried, Marching to a soldier's tread;
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HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH TENNESSEE REGIMENT
Of their loyal hearts so tender, All aglow in truth's array, And the many recollections Of the " boys " who wore the gray.
And so long as time speeds onward, And there is a Heaven of love, God will watch the silent sentinels, Sleeping - from the world above. And He'll guard the sacred memory Of the old Confederate gray ; Throughout time's eternal pages - When the last one's passed away.
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THE FIRST RE-UNION.
On the second Thursday in September, 1877, the Twentieth Tennessee held its first re-union in McCavock's Grove, near Franklin, Tenn. About two hundred members of the regiment were present, together with a vast concourse of the citizens of Franklin and the adjacent section, estimated at between 6,000 and 7,000 people.
The first speaker on this occasion was the former surgeon of the regiment, Dr. Deering J. Roberts, who on being introduced delivered the following address, summarizing the history of the regiment, which was published in the Nashville Daily American of the next day.
" Felow-comrades of the past, ladies and gentlemen : Permit me to preface my remarks by begging your kind indulgence for one who is more given to practice than to preaching. More than fifteen years ago the Twentieth Tennessee Regiment, in company with the rest of Crittenden's command, marched out from its encampment at Mill Springs, to meet the enemy, and one of the most sanguinary struggles that history has to record took place - an engagement memorable to all of us as being the forerunner of all the disaster, sorrow, and trouble that afterward overspread our grand old Commonwealth. You of the Twentieth, with your comrades, marched to the battle on that day in high spirits, colors flying, and hearts beating tumultously wild with that excitement that only brave men can feel. Many, for the first time, were to hear the terrific roar of the enemy's artillery, the murderous whistling of the minnie bullet; to behold for the first time in battle array the invaders of our country ; to contend in a struggle for life with their fellow-beings. How manfully the Twentieth stood its ground, history has already recorded. How bravely they fought on that occasion, became a household word throughout the land. Overpowered by an enemy superior both in numbers and equipments, they contested every foot of the ground, made charge after charge, until over half their number lay dead or wounded on the field, and then stubbornly and sul- lenly falling back to their encampments. Look at them again during those fearful days that succeeded, when stern necessity
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508 HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH TENNESSEE REGIMENT
has demanded, and in obedience to their orders, behold them on their first retreat from Middle Tennessee, leaving behind them mothers, fathers, sisters, wives, homes, everything that man holds dear. Their hearts cannot but be sad, their minds enveloped in gloom; but without a murmur of disapprobation, they leave all to give their hearty support, their strong right hand, aye, even their lives if necessary, to sustain the government they were assisting to erect.
Behold them on the eventful field of Shiloh. From 8 o'clock on the morning of the first day till night had spread her sable pall over the field of the dead and dying on the second and most fatal day of that sanguinary engagement, right nobly did they sustain their already brightening reputation, having a large pro- portion of their officers and men killed and wounded; their grand old patriarchal Colonel, captured, and his two gallant sons dead on the field. See them again, in the poisonous swamps around Vicksburg, for months under the continual cannonading of the fleets above, and below that fated city, until the shriek of the terrific shell became as familiar as the nightly hum of the mosquito. And at Baton Rouge, while dashing through the Federal encampment, did the bright sun on the 5th of August, 1862, gild their colors with new honors, as they drove the boys in blue through the streets of the little town, over the river's bank, right down to the water's edge, where they cowered in terror under the powerful guns of their fleet.
At Murfreesboro, again, we see this little band, its ranks be- coming thinned by disease and death, in the attack on the center on Wednesday evening, when Hollister, Cator, and their com- rades gave up all for your sake and mine, and went to join that gallant band led by Peyton and E. Shields, on whose muster-roll was subsequently added the names of L. Greenfield and others whom I know are ineffaceably enshrined in more hearts than are here to-day; and in the hottest of that ever-to-be-remembered charge of the day following of the gallant Breckinridge on Friday, when Bragg was a good dog, but hold-fast would have been better. At Hoover's Gap the ground was reddened with their best blood. Claybrooke, Callender, and others here laid down their lives for what they believed right. On the second
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THE FIRST RA-UNION
retreat from Middle Tennessee, a great portion of the time in the post of honor bringing up the rear of our army, skirmishing with the enemy's advance, they are once more forced to leave their homes.
On Chickamauga's deathly banks, what colors are those now rushing forward in the headlong charge; now resisting an im- petuous attack of the enemy, stubbornly holding them at bay ; now being driven sullenly back, fighting and dealing death at every step? Yet, again, with a rush and a yell, forward is now the cry, and forward is the watch-word as they dash madly and impetuously over the enemy's breast-works. Surely that peculiar . but beautiful flag is the one presented to this gallant command by one of Kentucky's most noble and gifted daughters. That white and crimson silk once enveloped the fair form of one of Kentucky's fairest maidens, when she plighted her troth at the altar with the noble soldier, statesman, and patriot, who himself knew that it could but receive additional honor in the hands in which she placed it. Look at their record at Mission Ridge. There they have left a name that will live through years to come. I quote from General Bragg's official report : " To Bate's brig- ade (of which this command was an integral part) is due the credit of having saved the Army of Tennessee from total rout and destruction." Again see them, after having been twice forci- bly expelled from their homes, exiled from the land they loved so well, driven from point to point, their bodies scarred and bruised, their colors tattered and torn, but never dishonored; the beardless boy of two years ago now transformed into the robust soldier, the middle-aged man, the lines of care and thought deepened by his own and his country's trials - for more than one hundred miles of North Georgia's rugged soil did they con- tend every inch of the way; toiling and delving by night and fighting by day, hastily snatching a mouthful of the hastily pre- pared and meagre food in occasional momentary lulls of the incessant skirmishing from Dalton to Atlanta, culminating in the brilliant charge on the twenty-second of July, when General McPherson fell and his followers recoiled from the living breast- works formed in part by this command; and at Jonesboro, on the 3Ist of August, last but most fearful of all the engagements
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HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH TENNESSEE REGIMENT
from Dalton down. Leonidas and his Spartans in the rocky de- file of Thermopyla deserved not greater fame than did Hardee and his little corps when they measured swords with the whole of Sherman's grand army. From early morn till past mid-day did these heroes contend in a hand to hand struggle with a nu- merical opposition of more than ten to one; and when give way they did, it was not to superior valor, but to mere brutal weight, were they forced to succumb, and not then, until the point for which they strove so hard was accomplished. The other two corps d'armee and the Georgia militia were enabled to escape from the net the wily Sherman was weaving around them; and was so severely punished by the nettle Hardee that he thought within his grasp, that he gave Hood ample time, without further molestation to put his troops in order and mature his future plans. Here fell my old school-mate " Bob " Allison, he with whom I conned my "Liber Primus " and " Cæsar's Commen- taries." Only a private in Company C, yet he was a man in every sense of the word. No cenotaph could be raised too high to honor the names of such as he. One of the bravest of the brave - the truest of the true. Here also we lost our gallant major, John F. Guthrie, and if I am not becoming wearisome, I hope you will permit me to read you an extract from a little sheet that I know is familiar to some of you.
Here Dr. Roberts read an obituary published in the Chattanooga Rebel, printed at that time (Sept. 9, 1864) at Griffin, Ga., eulo- gizing this gallant officer and Christian gentleman, who, starting out as a private in Company B, had, at the time of his death, atained the rank of major of this heroic command.
But, to continue, shall we follow the lame Texan in his weary march through North Georgia and Alabama, across the Ten- nessee, until we find them on this hallowed ground? It is un- necessary for me to mention, surely in this historic locality, the brilliant action that here occurred on the last day of November, 1864. The very walls of the houses of your beautiful little town know that part of history only too well. Was the Twentieth here? The soil of these grand old hills can exclaim with one accord: " We were moistened with some of its best blood." The gallant " Todd Carter," my old mess-mate, whose spicy communications
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THE FIRST RE-UNION
in the Southern press under the nom de plume of " Mint Julep," was rapidly making fame in the field of literature, here breathed his last in his father's house, under his own roof tree that he had so successfully assisted to wrest from the occupancy of the enemy. Fit companion for the heroic souls of Cleburne, Strahl, and others of that stamp, he accompanied them on their last journey to receive the reward meted out to them from the hand of their Creator. And Bill Shy, noble spirit, who was ever the reverse of his name on the field of battle, though elsewhere as modest as a girl, he, too, in the trenches in front of our Capital city, on the 15th of December following, although then the colonel commanding this gallant wreck, with his hand tightly clasped on a fallen soldier's musket, closed his eyes on the terrible storm that was again to envelop his home in its last dark embrace. For the third and last time had this sorely-tried little band to turn their backs on their homes and everything that man holds dear, this time leaving their boy commander, whose trio of stars they had assisted to enwreath with a general's rank, a captive in the hands of the enemy, severely wounded by the stroke of a sabre on that imposing brow, that marred not his physical appearance in after life, but I sadly fear had much to do in shattering that wonderful intellect under whose powerful impulse the boy-soldier had attained a general's command. Think, if you please, of the manly, aye, the peerless form, the matchless courage and un- varying coolness, under the hottest fire, of one of Tennessee's bravest sons. Think of him in subsequent affliction, and hear him, as excitedly he walks the wards of an asylum, in maddened frenzy exclaim :-
"I'm adrift on life's ocean, and wildly I sweep Aimless and helmless, its fathomless deep;
The wild wind assails me, it threatningly storms - The clouds roll round me in hideous forms."
But let us draw the veil on that sad picture - too sad for the joy and jesting of this occasion - and follow me one step farther. Again crossing the Tennessee River, in obedience to orders and what they considerd their duty, across the little remnant of territory left to our Confederacy, through Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, to an obscure little hamlet in the old North State,
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HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH TENNESSEE REGIMENT
that grand old State that claims to be the mother of Tennessee, at Bentonville, after Lee's surrender and the fall of Richmond, was the last despairing blow struck by the shattered remnant of the Army of Tennessee and the Twentieth Regiment. I have followed rapidly the steps of this command in its gigantic strug- gle; looking on its shifting scenes, its varying fortunes. My aim has been to draw but an outline of the mighty wrestle. Of this great American Revolution the world will always doubtless differ in their views; parties will hold opposing opinions, and during the life-time of the present generation, those opinions will be colored by partisan feeling. What men will not differ about, however - what all will agree upon - is the reluctance with which these men of Middle Tennessee entered upon the struggle, and the constancy and courage which they brought to the long, bitter, and terrible ordeal. Right or wrong, they were brave, were they not? Ask their desolated fields, their vacant firesides, their broken hearts. Prostrate, panting, bleeding at every pore, they were faithful to the last in the defense of their principles, and rather than yield those principles, dear as their heart's blood, they bared their bosoms for four years of destroying war. Before that dread and sombre tribunal they dared all, risked all, suffered all - and lost all? No! Their stainless escutcheon is still left them, and their broken swords, which no taint of bad faith or dishonor ever tarnished.
On the 26th day of April, 1865, the soldiers of the Twentieth stretched the hand of friendship to the foe they had fought so long. In accordance with the terms of the military convention entered into on that day between Gen. Jos. E. Johnston and Gen- eral Sherman they took a solemn obligation not to take up arms against the United States Government, and were permitted to return to their homes, not to be disturbed by the United States authorities so long as they observed said obligation and obeyed the laws in force where they might reside. How that agreement has been observed by both parties I leave you to decide. One lesson which we may learn from the past is, that no uprising of a great people is wholly based on falsehood or delusion. Their errors are, at most, but half truths, and the opposing parties in the conflict are never either wholly in the wrong. The gallant
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THE FIRST RE-UNION
knights in the fable, who fought about the shield, one side of which was of silver and one of gold, were both right, but neither could see the side the other saw until they met after the strife. So in our civil war, the North fought for a united country, from ocean to ocean from the lakes to the Gulf, and shed its blood to oppose the right of secession. So far as the South was con- cerned, the question of negro slavery was but an incident of the strife. The great principle of individualism which asserts itself in local self-government, and which in a republic like ours must be jealously guarded as the bulwark of our liberties, was the mainspring of Southern valor. Nor was the precious blood shed in its defense poured out in vain. The doctrine of State rights, under the Constitution, which seemed in danger of being forgotten, is once more in the ascendant, guiding the policy of the government and transforming political parties. "War," says Dean Paul Ritcher, "is the moulting time of humanity." The eagle, when shedding his plumage is sick and his pinions droop, but when his time is over he plumes his wings for a higher flight. This each one of you must feel to-day is the attitude of our common country as it enters a new era of its existence, and to this consummation every act of sacrifice and self-devotion, all the patriotic blood shed on our battle-fields, whether by the wear- ers of the blue or the gray, has contributed.
And now, to these ladies here, permit me to assure you from my inmost heart that the debt of gratitude incurred whilst I had the honor to be with you in those sad closing days of '64, can never be repaid. Day after day I witnessed the fair daughters of Williamson bending o'er the rude couches extemporized for our wounded, and whether the sufferer was from the far away everglades of the land of flowers, or the pine ridge or sandy savannahs of Georgia, those fair hands ministered as tenderly, lovingly, and impartially as to the wounded scion that sprang from these historic blue-grass hills and dales. . They treated them all as brothers, as brothers who had fallen in their defense.
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INDEX.
PAGE
"A," History of Company 75
Anderson, Capt. Robt. D., Biography 440
Anderson, Capt. Robt. D., Illustration facing page 161
Arkansas Ram, Construction of. 217
Arkansas Ram, Loss of 221
Author's Note.
182
" B," History of Company 81
Barboursville, Battle of. 192
Bate, Maj .- Gen. Wm. B., Biography 375
Bate, Maj .- Gen. Wm. B., Illustration facing page 9
Bate's Report of the Battle of Chickamauga. 283
Bate's Report of the Battle of Hoover's Gap. 255
Bate's Report of the Battle of Missionary Ridge. 296
Batey, Wm., Biography. 437
Batey, Wm., Illustration facing page. I2I
Baton Rouge, Battle of. 220
Battle, Adjutant Joel A., Jr. 21I
Battle, Col. Joel A., Biography 386
Battle, Col. Joel A., Illustration facing page 185
Battle Above the Clouds.
305
Battle of Chickamauga 268
Bentonville, Battle of. 355
Bethpage Bridge, Battle of. 261
Bonnie Blue Flag 492
Bragg's Army at Chattanooga, Number of. 294
Bragg's Army at Chickamauga 278
Bragg's Army at Murfreesboro.
241
Bragg's Order for the Battle of Chickamauga 267
Breckinridge, General John C., Biography. . 373
Breckinridge, Gen. John C., Illustration facing page 4I
Brothers, Lt. Wm. E., Biography. . 435
Brothers, Lt. Wm. E., Illustration facing page. 145
Brown, Gen. Jno. C., Statement of as to Springhill.
234
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516 HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH TENNESSEE REGIMENT
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"C," History of Company 94
Causes of the War Between the States. 9
Cavalry Raids during Winter and Spring of 1863 .. 245
Cheatham's Statement as to Springhill. 330
Chickamauga, Battle of. 268
Claybrooke, Major Fred, Biography of. 40I
Claybrooke, Major Fred, Illustration facing page 233
Claybrooke, Major Fred, Gallantry of. 234
Conscript Act. 214
"Conscripted, Smith, Conscripted " 500
Cooper, Jas. L., Biography. 425
Cooper, Jas. L., Illustration facing page.
97
Crosthwaite, Bromfield. 434
Crosthwaite, Bromfield, Illustration facing page 153
Crosthwaite, Frank B., Biography 433
Crosthwaite, Frank B., Illustration facing page. 153
Crosthwaite, Shelton, Biography. 434
Crosthwaite, Shelton, Illustration facing page 153
" D," History of Company. 103
Dallas, Battle of.
313
Dalton and Atlanta Campaign 308
Dead Angle.
317
Dedication 3
"Dixie " 490
Duffy, Major Patrick, Biography. 400
Duffy, Major Patrick, Illustration facing page 329
Duffy, Major Patrick, On the March. 191
"E," History of Company. III
Ewin, Capt. Wm. G., Biography 412
Ewin, Capt. Wm. E., Illustration facing page 249
"F," History of Company 152
First Reunion. 507
Franklin, Battle of. 338 Fuqua, A. L., M. D., Biography 439 Fuqua, A. L., M D., Illustration facing page. 177
"G," History of Company. 158
" Goober Peas ".
500
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Gooch, Lt .- Col. Jno. S., Biography. PAGE.
399
Gooch, Lt .- Col. Jno. S., Illustration facing page. I13 Guthrie, Maj. Jno. F., Biography 404
Guthrie, Maj. Jno. F., Illustration facing page. 265
" H," History of Company. 164
Hamilton, W. A., Biography 438
Hamilton, W. A., Illustration facing page. 121
Harris, Gov. Isham G., Account of Springhill 333
Hartman, J., Biography 438
Hartman J., Illustration facing page. 129
Hartsville, Capture of by Gen. Jno. H. Morgan 225 Hill, Jno. R., Illustration facing page 145 Hill, Wm. H., Biography 415 Hill, Wm. H., Illustration facing page. 297
" Home-Spun Dress"
497
Hood's Army Crosses the Tennessee River
329
Hood, Gen. Jno. B., takes Command of the Army of Tennessee. 319
Hoover's Gap, Battle of.
255
How the War was Waged by the Federals 445
" I," History of Company
173
" I'm Conscripted, Smith, Conscripted. 500 . Irwin, Lt. A. J., Biography 434
" Jacket of Gray "
502
Jobe, D. S., Biography. 429 Johnson, Gen. Albert Sidney, Battle Order of. 205
Johnson, Capt. Chas. S., Biography 416
Johnson, Capt. Chas. S., Illustration facing page 81
Johnson, Timothy, Biography 422
Johnson, Timothy, Illustration facing page. 81
Johnston, Gen. Joseph E., takes Command of the Army of Tennessee. 307 Johnston, Gen. Joseph E., Again in Command of the Army of Tennessee. 355 Jonesboro, Battle of. 324
"K," History of Company
178
Kennesaw Mountain, Battle of.
315
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PAGE.
King, David G., Biography. 423
King, David G., Illustration facing page 281
Knobb's Farm, Battle of. 316
"Land Without Ruins" 473
Lee, Gen. R. E., Order of. 464
Losses in Confederate Regiments 364
Losses in Federal Regiments. 362
" Lorena "
494
Lucas, Maj. H. Clay, Biography 407
McMurray, Lt. W. J., Illustration facing page 345
McMurray, W. J., M. D., Biography
417
McMurray, W. J., M. D., Illustration Frontispiece
McPherson, Death of General.
321
Matlock, Philip N., M. D., Biography. 426
Matlock, Philip N., M. D., Illustration facing page. 105
Memorable Wars of the World. 361
Mill Springs, Battle of. 200
Milroy, Order of. 452
Missionary Ridge, Battle of. 275
Murfreesboro, Arrival of the Regiment at 223
Murfreesboro, Battle of. 226
Myers, Letter of Thos. J. 457
Nashville, Battle of .. 346
Neal, Ralph J., Biography 436
Neal, Ralph J., Illustration facing page. 121
New Hope Church, Battle of. 314
Note, Author's.
182
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Overall's Creek, Engagement at. 343
O'Hara, Colonel Theo., Speech of
250
Peachtree Creek, Battle of
320
Peyton, Lieutenant Jas. W., Biography
432
Preface
5
Preston's Brigade. 233
Polk, Lieutenant-General Leonidas, Death of. 314
Polk, Lieutenant-General Leonidas, Statement of, 272
Regiment, Reorganization of.
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INDEX 519
PAGE.
Regimental Flag.
190 Regimental Flag, Presented by Mrs. Breckinridge 250
Regimental History. 187 Regimental Staff. 187 507 Re-Union, Our First
Resaca, Battle of. 309
Ridley, Captain B. L.,. 359 Ridley, Captain B. L., Illustration facing page 3.13 Ridley, J. K. P., Biography. 438
Ridley, J. K. P., Illustration facing page. I21
Ridley, Captain Wm. T., Biography. 150
Ridley, Capt. Wm. T., Illustration facing page .. 137
Roberts, Albert, Biography 408
Roberts, Albert, Illustration facing page. 73
Roberts, Deering J., M. D., Biography 442
Roberts, Deering J., M. D., Illustration facing page 5
Rosecrans' Army, Strength of .. 263
Rosecrans' Army Crosses the Tennessee River 265
Robinson, A. J., Illustration facing page. 129
Sanders, Lieutenant M. M., 43I
Schade, Letter of Louis 481
Seaborn, Captain B. C.,
Secession, Right of Justified by Northern Testimony 59
439
Shiloh, Battle of. 208
Shy, Colonel W. M., Biography. 397
Shy, Colonel W. M., Illustration facing page 217
Shields, Evan, Illustration facing page. 153
Smith, General Thos. B., Biography 393
Smith, General Thos. B., Illustration facing page 201
Smithson, Captain P. G., Biography 428
"Somebody's Darling" 503
Songs of the South 490 South, To the Youth of. 474
"Southern Soldier Boy" 498
Spring Hill, General Cheatham's Account of. 330
Statham's Brigade.
208
Statham, Death of Colonel W. S.,.
217
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HISTORY OF THE TWENTIETH TENNESSEE REGIMENT
PAGE.
Stewart, Lieutenant-General Alex. P., Biography. 371 Stewart, Lieutenant-General Alex. P., Illustration fac- ing page. 25
Surrender of General Joseph E. Johnston's Army 358
Tennesseans, Final Reorganization of. 357
Thomas, Adjutant Jas. W., Biography 424 Thomas, Adjutant Jas. W., Illustration facing page 313
Tullahoma Campaign. 250
Utoy Creek, Battle of.
323
Vicksburg, Arrival of Regiment at. 215
Walden, Samuel, Biography 437
"When the Last One Passes Away". 504
Wild Cat, Battle of 193
Stewart, Lieutenant-General Alex. P., Biography. 371
Williams, Lieutenant Thos. G., Illustration facing page. 89 Wolf, Henry, Illustration facing page 297
Youth of the South, To the 474
Zollicoffer, General Felix K., Biography 380 Zollicoffer, General Felix K., Illustration facing page .. 55 Zollicoffer, General Felix K., Brigade of. 199
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