USA > Tennessee > Shelby County > Memphis > The Old Guard in Gray. Researches in the Annals of the Confederate Historical Association. Sketches of Memphis veterans who upheld her standards in the war, and of other Confederate worthies.. > Part 10
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His regiment became very much depleted, and in the last year or two of the war was assigned with the Seventh and Eighth Kentucky Infantry to General N. B. Forrest to enable them to recruit. He was wounded at Jackson, Miss., from which his right hand and arm are yet paralyzed. He was paroled at Gainesville, Ala., in 1865, with Forrest's command. Colonel Holt and his son are practicing attorneys in this city. He has but three children-IIon. J. Pat. Holt, Misses Mamie and Marguerite Holt. He joined the Confederate Historical Association several years ago.
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JOHN M. HUBBARD.
HUBBARD, JOIIN MILTON, private in Company E, Seventh Tennessee Cavalry, is a native of Anson county, N. C. He was educated at Centenary College of Louisiana and Florence Wesleyan University. In 1858, the year of his grad- uation, he married Miss Lucy Hawkins of Florence, Ala., who in 1859 became the mother of Ernest M. Hubbard, for several years an officer of the Boatmen's Bank, St. Louis, Mo. Mr. Hubbard enlisted at Bolivar, Tenn., and was mustered into the service at Jackson on the 24th of May, 1861. He served under Chalmers, Armstrong, Van Dorn, Jackson and Forrest, and was paroled below Gainesville, Ala., on the 13th of May, 1865. Having prepared himself for the profession of teaching, he was already the successful principal of a good male school at Bolivar when he enlisted. He was opposed to secession and voted for Stephen A. Douglas in 1860, but
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like thousands of others in the South when war was flagrant, he went with his own people in their movement for separate independence. Though having little confidence in the suc- cess of the Confederacy after the disasters of 1863, every instinct of honor prompted him to stand by the cause to the sorrowful end.
Returning to Bolivar in 1865, he took up the work of teach- ing boys in the old academy. He has had a varied experi- ence in his profession, but has spent the last eight years as President of Stanford Female College, Ky., and of Howard Female College, Gallatin, Tenn., which latter position he has recently resigned.
In 1868 Mr. Hubbard married Miss Sallie Pybass of Boli- var, who became the mother of Eugene P. Hubbard and Arthur P. Hubbard, now residing in St. Louis in responsible positions. Having become a widower for the second time in 1887, Mr. Hubbard, in 1889, married Miss Mary MacAnally. a well-known teacher of Memphis, but at that time the pre- siding teacher of Marion Female Seminary in Alabama.
The subject of this sketch believes that duty faithfully per- formed is a quality of bravery. and as soldier and citizen has tried to live up to a fair standard, but he never did enjoy the presence of flying bullets or the proximity of the enemy. except when they were " running." Of the many exciting incidents in battle which he witnessed, and fiery charges of the Seventh Regiment in which he participated, there is not space here to speak, but he would be willing, if it were pos- sible, to have the very small number of the original Company E, who stood by the cause and lived to see the surrender, to bear witness to his record as a soldier.
HUHN, JOHN D., private Company C, Seventh Tennes- see Cavalry ; enlisted June 6, 1861 ; was promoted to adju- tant; served through the war with splendid courage and patience, and was paroled May 11, 1865.
HUMES, W. Y. C., was born at Abingdon, Va., and was a leading young lawyer in Memphis before the war. In April. 1861, was chosen as First Lieutenant of Bankhead's Battery
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of Light Artillery ; participated in the campaigns around Co- lumbus, Ky., under General Polk; was promoted to captain and placed in command of heavy artillery at Island No. 10; after a gallant defense he was captured there and confined many months in prison on Johnson's Island; was exchanged in the summer of 1862 and placed in command of a heavy battery at Mobile, Ala., but his superior abilities caused him soon to be called to the field, where he rose to the rank of major-general, and was distinguished as a cavalry leader with and under General Wheeler. After the surrender he returned to Memphis, and for a number of years had a very heavy and lucrative law practice; overwork may have shortened his days ; he died, leaving a wife (nee Elder) and several children. He joined this Association July 15, 1869.
HUNT, W. R., was born in Washington, Ga .; came to Memphis in 1858, when quite a young man, and engaged largely in planting. At the outbreak of the war he was given charge of the arsenal in Memphis under the Provisional Gov- ernment of Tennessee. After the State seceded, General Polk had him commissioned as lieutenant-colonel of artillery. After Fort Donelson fell the arsenal was located at Columbus, Miss., and after Corinth fell it was removed to Selma, Ala., Colonel Hunt still in charge. In 1863 he became chief of the mining and nitre bureau, and continued to the end to render invaluable services to the Confederacy in supplying the muni- tions of war. He was a firm, quiet man, of great earnestness and large executive ability ; handled large bodies of men easily without harshness, and was intensely Southern in his views. Atter he was paroled he returned to Memphis, where he had a large estate. He became a member of this Asso- ciation September 9, 1869, and died in 1872.
HUSKEY, W. H., private Company G, Second Virginia Infantry, Stonewall Jackson's Brigade ; enlisted on March 1, 1861; was wounded at Gettysburg and Cedar Run ; captured at Gettysburg July 4, 1863, and released February 21, 1864; paroled May 9, 1865. Admitted to C. II. A. June 11, 1895.
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HARRISON, B. P., enlisted as a private in Company A, Twentieth Tennessee, in May, 1861, and was paroled after the surrender. (Record incomplete.)
HAMBLET, J. G., was a private in Company B, Forrest's old regiment ; owing to his youth served twelve months be- fore he enlisted, in August. 1864; paroled May 11, 1865, at Gainesville, Ala. Joined this Association November 14, 1893.
HILLS, J. B., was a private in Company A, Fourth Ten- nessee Infantry. Previous to his enlistment in May, 1862, he had served in the same command at Columbus, Ky., Island No. 10 and ai Corinth without enrollment. He was never paroled, never discharged, and in his application for member- ship says : " I am still a Johnnie without an army to follow."
IVEY, A. J., Corporal Company A, Seventh Tennessee Cavalry ; enlisted July 20, 1861, and served until the sur- render at Gainesville, Ala., May 11, 1865.
JAMES, FRANK L., enlisted in service October 3, 1861; was Adjutant of the Twenty-second Louisiana Infantry ; pa- roled May 10, 1865. After the war he was city editor of the Appeal under General Albert Pike; became a physician, as he had already studied abroad, and afterward removed to St. Louis. Elected a member of this Association July 1, 1869.
JANUARY, W. W., enlisted January 15, 1864, as a private in Harvey's Scouts and served in General W. H. Jackson's Division. These scouts were not attached to any regiment ; paroled at Canton, Miss., April, 1865. Admitted to this As- sociation January 14, 1896.
JARNAGIN, JOHN HAMPTON, was born at Cleveland, Tenn., September 18, 1843. At the beginning of the war was living at Austin, Tunica county, Miss .; joined Confed- erate States Army May 21, 1861, as a private in the Young Guards, Captain John Cameron, Ninth Tennessee, Colonel Carroll; June 20, 1861, was transferred to Hindman's Legion ; June 10, 1861, made Second Corporal ; September, 1861, pro- moted to Fourth Sergeant ; was at the battle of Green River,
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Ky .; at Bowling Green when the Confederates were shelled out ; at Shiloh, Farmington, Perryville, Mumfordsville. Mur- freesboro, Tenn., Missionary Ridge, and in the general fights from Dalton to Atlanta; after the retreat from Atlanta was stationed at Griffin, Ga .; ordered from there to Augusta and camp near Augusta to help Colonel Leroy O. Bridewell in organizing troops to be forwarded to General Jos. E. John- ston in South Carolina, where he was until the surrender of General Johnston's army ; rode horseback to Meridian, Miss., and surrendered to Colonel Bertram, Twentieth Wisconsin, in May, 1865; thence on horseback home. He was commis- sioned captain and acting quartermaster February, 1863, and served on staff duty with General John S. Marmaduke and General Granberry. After the war engaged in cotton plant- ing in Bolivar county, Miss., and moved to Memphis, 1889. Joined the C. H. A. February 12, 1895.
JETT, DUNCAN FRIERSON, enlisted as a private in Company B, Fourth Tennessee, April 26, 1861 ; three months later was promoted to captain and A. C. S., and served as same, and as assistant district commissary, with headquarters at Atlanta, Macon and Augusta, Ga .; was paroled May 3, 1865, at Augusta. Admitted to this Association June 13, '94.
JOHNSON, A. W., First Lieutenant A. P. Hill's Artillery ; entered the service May, 1861 ; paroled May, 1865. Admitted to this Association, upon personal application, July 15, 1870.
JOHNSON, JOHN, enlisted as a private May, 1861, in the Sixth Tennessee Infantry; was discharged at Tupelo, Miss., in 1862; joined the Fourteenth Tennessee Cavalry in January, 1864, and surrendered at Gainesville, Ala., with Forrest's command, May, 1865.
JONES, D. C., Second Lieutenant of Artillery ; enlisted in Company A, Thirty-eighth Tennessee Infantry, August 15, 1861, and remained in the same company throughout the war; served with it in heavy and light artillery. After the battle of Shiloh this company, Captain JJ. W. Rice, was trans- ferred at Corinth to heavy artillery and remained in that branch of the service until the spring of 1864, when the com-
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mand was supplied with light artillery and assigned to Gen- eral Forrest's corps. In February, 1865, was transferred to heavy artillery again, sent to Mobile and remained there until the end of the war.
JONES, A. D., was a private in Logwood's Battalion; was captured near Gains Landing October 20, 1862; was seriously wounded at the battle of Belmont and afterward discharged on that account.
JONES, J. C., son of the late Governor James C. Jones ; joined the Confederate service in 1862, when he was quite young and just from school ; became first lieutenant of cav- alry and was assigned to duty with General W. H. Jackson's escort, with which he served to the end of the war. After- ward returned to Memphis and engaged in mercantile pur- suits for a time. He became partially paralyzed afterward and has since taught a select school for boys, for which work he has remarkable aptitudc.
JONES, PHIL. B .. was Adjutant of the Tenth Kentucky Cavalry, General John H. Morgan's Division; was captured at Buffington's Island, Ohio, May 26, 1862, and released from prison May 22, 1865. Admitted to this Association August 29,1893.
JONES, R. L., Corporal Company C, Fifty-first Tennessee Regiment ; enlisted May 5, 1862; was wounded severely at Chickamauga on September 19. 1863, and retired from the service by Dr. Frank Rice April 21, 1864, and did not recover from the wound until after the surrender.
JONES, RUSSELL, private Company I, Fifty-first Ten- nessee ; enlisted February 5, 1862. After the Kentucky cam- paign his health failed and he was detailed to work in the government shoe shops at Atlanta, Ga., and afterward was removed to Augusta; was at the fall of Savannah. [ The first captain of Company I was O. D. Weaver, who died at Knoxville and was succeeded by Captain Spivey, Colonel John Chester of Jackson commanding the regiment.] He was paroled May 5, 1865.
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J. V. JOHNSTON.
JOHNSTON, J. V., was born in Adair county, Ky., and removed to North Mississippi at an early age; was engaged in mercantile business with R. H. Vance at Hernando when the war begun ; enlisted in a company at that place known as the "Irrepressibles," under J. R. Chalmers as captain ; went to Pensacola in March, 1861; the company became part of the Ninth Mississippi Regiment, with Chalmers as colonel ; T. W. White was elected Captain of Company K, formerly the " Irrepressibles;" the regiment was composed of Missis- sippi companies mostly from the northern part of the State. Mr. Johnston's first real war experience was with this com- pany and regiment in a night attack, October 9, 1861, on Fort Pickens, Santa Rosa Island, or rather on Billy Wilson's reg- iment of New York jail birds and other toughs in tents a few hundred yards from the fort. The leaders of the intended sur- prise were General Richard H. Anderson in command, J. R.
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Chalmers in charge of the first regiment, J. Patton Ander- sou in charge of the second, and John K. Jackson in charge of the third; in all, about fifteen hundred men. The plan to capture the notorious Billy Wilson and his warriors of terri- ble repute, freshly recruited from Sing Sing and other prisons, was a failure, for the Zouaves fled to the fort, and Major Vog- das, with his regular troops, tried to intercept the Confeder- ates and cut them off from their boats; a short and spirited engagement took place, with considerable loss on both sides ; the Confederates got away with a loss of sixteen men, while the Federals were said to have lost more heavily. It was a foolhardy attack, but the experience gained was worth some- thing. Major Vogdas, the gallant commander of the Federal regulars, was captured by Colonel Chalmers and taken over to Pensacola, where he was paroled the next day.
At the expiration of Mr. Johnston's term of enlistment, which was for twelve months, he returned to Hernando and joined a company under Captain J. B. Morgan, which became a part of the famous Twenty - ninth Mississippi Regiment ; was appointed ordnance sergeant; was with the regiment, participating in every fight and never absent from duty a day, on down to Atlanta, where he was wounded and dis- abled on the 22d of July, 1864; was in the hospital at Griffin, Ga., and elsewhere for several months, and when able was assigned to duty under Captain W. P. Orne at Lauderdale Springs, Miss. ; was paroled at Grenada, Miss., May 19, 1865.
After the surrender, Mr. Johnston came to Memphis and resumed a partnership with Mr. R. H. Vance, which has been continued for more than thirty years. He was married in Kentucky a few years after the war; has an interesting fam- ily ; is a strict member of the Presbyterian Church, and has most strikingly illustrated the fact that a good Confederate soldier generally made a most exemplary and useful citizen. He became a member of the C. II. A. only recently.
JONES, JOE, private Company K, Second Alabama Cav- alry ; enlisted in 1862, served through the war, and was cap- tured at Montgomery, Ala., April, 1865.
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JORDAN, G. S., was Second Lieutenant in Company H, Thirteenth Tennessee Infantry; was discharged, but after- ward served in the Twelfth Tennessee; paroled May, 1865, at Gainesville, Ala.
JORDAN, J. P., First Sergeant Company H, Seventeenth Virginia Regiment ; enlisted April, 1861, and served through- out the war; was wounded twice at the battle of Frazier's Farm, Va .; captured there Juno 30, 1862, and released the following day ; was mentioned in special orders by General Pickett as one of four scouts who performed speciall; valu- able and heroic service; paroled April, 1865. Admitted to this Association October, 1394.
KEARNEY, J. R., private Company A, Pickett's Twenty- first Tennessee, enlisted May 16, 1861 ; paroled May, 1865. Recommended for membership in the Confederate Historical Association by A. R. Pope, B. F. Hawkins and M. T. Garvin. Admitted January 14, 1896.
KELLY, P. J., enlisted April, 1861, as a private in Com- pany H, Fifteenth Mississippi Regiment; was wounded at Shiloh ; paroled May 5, 1865.
KELLY, P. J., was born in County Clare, Ireland, June, 1842, and came to Memphis in 1858; enlisted May, 1861, in Company A, under Captain Shockey, Knox Walker's Second Tennessee Regiment ; went to Randolph, Fort Pillow and Columbus, and was in the battle of Belmont with the regi- ment ; went to Purdy and on down to Shiloh. in which battle he was wounded in the hand, losing two fingers. The regi- ment was consolidated with the Twenty-first Tennessee, and that became the Fifth Confederate under Colonel J. A. Smith. Mr. Kelly was at the battles of Farmington, Miss., and Perry- ville, Ky., and at the latter place was wounded in the thigh, which lamed him for life. He was discharged in 1863. After the war he married in Memphis, became a steamboat pilot and followed that calling for several years. Has three sons and a daughter ; one son is a lawyer and the others clerks-all well educated. He became a member of the Association many
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years ago; has belonged to Company A, Confederate Veterans, since its organization ; went to Chattanooga, Richmond and elsewhere, and is an active, enthusiastic member.
KENDALL, W. R., Orderly Sergeant Fourteenth Missis- sippi Regiment, enlisted May 29, 1861 ; was wounded at Fort Donelson, and afterward served in the Ninth Mississippi Cav- alry ; paroled May 10, 1865.
KENNEDY, A. E., enlisted April 18, 1861; was Sergeant Company A, Third Arkansas Regiment, Colonel Harrison commanding; served in the Army of Tennessee, and was pa- roled May 6, 1865.
KING, S. A., private Company I, First Confederate; shortly after the company was organized, it was put in H. Clay King's battalion, but later on was consolidated with two other com- panies from Wayne and Perry counties, and called the First Confederate ; paroled May 11, 1865. Admitted to the C. H. A. February 12, 1895.
KING, W. C., private Company D, Fourth Tennessee Reg- iment, enlisted May 15, 1861; was captured at Missionary Ridge in 1863 ; escaped October 30, 1864, but never succeeded in reaching his command or getting through the Federal lines, though making repeated efforts to do so.
KINGSBURY, WILLIAM L., First Sergeant Company G, Nineteenth Alabama Regiment, enlisted May, 1861; was wounded at Marietta, Ga., and captured by Wilson's raiders just before the surrender; paroled May, 1865. Admitted to C. H. A. May 4, 1895.
KIRBY, JOIIN A., enlisted as a private in the Fourth Tennessee Infantry, May 15, 1861; paroled at the close of the war. Proposed by J. E. Beasley and T. P. Adams for mem- bership in this Association and elected March 3, 1869. Since the war has been merchant and planter; married Miss Ann Eliza Brooks at Ridgeway, Shelby county, Tenn .; they have two children, Joseph and Agnes.
KNOX, R. L., born in Fayette county, Tenn. ; was gradu- ated in the medical department of the University at Nash-
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ville, and had just entered upon the practice of medicine at Early Grove, Marshall county, Mies., when the war began ; enlisted as a private in Company F. commanded by Captain Wm. Ivey, Seventeenth Mississippi Regiment of MeLaw's Division ; was in the first battle of Manassas and at Ball's Bluff, and in other engagements, serving as a private; was made assistant surgeon of the regiment in the latter part of 1862. After the battle of Gettysburg was left in charge of a hospital; remained six weeks and then was sent as a pris- oner to Fort MeHenry, Baltimore, where he was detained for five months. The ladies furnished him and other prisoners of his class with money to buy better food than furnished prisoners. The treatment was not harsh, aside from strict confinement. When exchanged he returned to his command and was with it until the surrender at Appomattox, where he was paroled. He immediately returned to Early Grove, re- sumed the practice of his profession and was thus actively engaged for fifteen years. He was married to Miss Fanny C. Steger of Fayette county, Tenn., came to Memphis in 1883, and has since practiced his profession in this city. Joined the C. H. A. February 12, 1889.
LAKE, WALTER S., enlisted September 26, 1863, W. F. Taylor's Company, General Jackson's escort; was with the Seventh Tennessee; was ordnance sergeant at the close of the war, and paroled at Gainesville, Ala., May 12, 1865.
LANDSTREET, EDWARD, was born in Baltimore, Md., August 26, 1844; enlisted in Company A, First Virginia Cav- valry, then commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel J. E. B. Stuart, September 15, 1861, when he was a mere boy. When Stuart was promoted to brigadier-general he detailed Edward Land- street as conrier, and he served with him and afterward under Fitzhugh Lee, Mosby and other noted leaders throughout the war. He was captured once, but escaped the same day ; was with General Lee's army at Appomattox, but escaped with the cavalry, and finally surrendered with Mosby's command at Winchester, Va., and was paroled by General Augur in May, 1865. After his return from the war he located in Bal-
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timore, became a member of the Historical Society of the Army and Navy of Maryland, and soon after his arrival in Memphis, in 1888, was elected a member of the Confederate Historical Association of Memphis, and was one of the first to join the organization known as Company A, Confederate Veterans ; was elected second lieutenant of said company in September, 1895, and as such attended reunion of U. C. V. at Richmond in June-July, 1896.
LAVENDER, G. W., enlisted as a private in Company H, Forty-first Tennessee, October 25, 1861 ; was captured at Fort Donelson and was exchanged ; put in all possible time in the service until the regiment disbanded, after the battle of Nash- ville, to go home. He could not get back, and was captured : was wounded at Marietta, Ga., and at New Hope Church.
LAWHON, H. C., Lieutenant in Company D, Faulkner's Twelfth Kentucky Cavalry ; enlisted May 15, 1861, and was elected Lieutenant at the reorganization at Tupelo, Miss. ;. was never absent, never wounded and never captured; was paroled May 16, 1865, at Columbus, Miss. Admitted to this. Association July 17, 1894.
LEVY, DANIEL SEESSEL, was born in Attweiler, Prus- sia, on the 22d of October, 1826, and is therefore the oldest active member of this Association. He came to the United States in 1850 and to Mississippi in 1853. and was a citizen of that State for thirty years. He was a merchant many years, and was postmaster at Skipwith in 1858-59. Enlisted April 1, 1862, as private in Cowan's Battery, First Regiment Mis- sissippi Artillery ; was in Featherstone's Brigade, Loring's Division, Army of Tennessee; was captured at Fort Blakely,. Ala., April 14, 1865. and released from prison at Vicksburg. Miss., on the 16th of May, 1865 ; came to Memphis in 1883. He was recommended on his application by Captain T. T. Cowan and Lieutenant G. F. Tompkins, and became a mem- ber of C. II. A. in 1884. Mr. Levy has been an enthusiastic worker in the Association, and a very active and efficient member of Company A, Confederate Veterans, although the. oldest man in the company.
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RICHARD P. LAKE.
LAKE, RICHARD P., born in Grenada, Miss., July 10, 1848; was the youngest of four brothers in the late war, and. although only seventeen years old at the surrender he had been elected and served as second lieutenant of three differ- ent companies, and toward the last especially performed impor- tant service generally expected of much older men. He first enlisted in a boy's company at home, regularly drilled and disciplined by Captain, afterward Colonel W. S. Statham, of the Fifteenth Mississippi Regiment. He was elected second lieutenant of this company, and duty of some importance was performed without getting far from home. The older members one by one went off to the war. In 1864 the young man having reached the mature age of sixteen years enlisted in Captain R. E. Wynne's company, Colonel E. S. Fisher's regiment, State militia, and was again elected second lieu- tenant, and saw some active service. Early in 1865 acted
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as assistant in the Adjutant-General's office of Colonel Dennis' Brigade State troops, but was soon elected to the time-hon- ored rank and position of second lieutenant in Captain G. P. Lake's company in Major H. C. Horton's battalion of cavalry. He was placed in charge of dismounted men, and went with them to Scooba, Miss., thence to Artesia, where he was in command of the dismounted men of his brigade and reported to Captain Virgil V. Moore of General Arm- strong's command. The general lost his brigade after the battle of Selma and was reorganizing the remnants and some new material. It was this new brigade to which Lieutenant Lake was attached when he was surrendered in the field at Columbus, Miss., where he had been ordered to obtain paroles for his battalion. This was his last service. He has his par- ole yet, which he cherishes highly. Older men of his com- mand desired him to lead them across the Mississippi river. to fight it out over there, but he reasoned that as the Confed- erates had failed on this side they would soon be exhausted on another field, so the project was abandoned. After the war Mr. Lake applied himself vigorously and successfully to business. He became a director and vice-president of the Mississippi & Tennessee Railroad Company, and continued as such until the road was bought by the Illinois Central a few years ago. He was a banker, merchant, planter, and general insurance agent. Was married in 1878 and has a grown son as large as himself. Removed to Memphis as a wider field for his energies and capital in 1894, where he and his wife soon became identified with the social life as well as business interests of the city. He soon became a member of this Association and of Company A, Confederate Veterans. He attended the Confederate reunion at Richmond with his com- pany in June-July, 1896, and was appointed in Special Orders No. 5 as aid-de-camp with the rank of colonel on the staff of Gen. Stephen D. Lee, commanding the Army of Tennessee Department, U. C. V., and served in that capacity.
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