Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. 20 de jun. de 2018 · Alabama: 90,000. Tennessee: 115,000. James McPherson broke down the geographical distribution of Confederate soldiers even further in his book For Cause and Comrades: State / Estimated % of all Confederate Soldiers: Virginia 14%. North Carolina 15%. Tennessee 12%. South Carolina 6%. Georgia 11%.

  2. Facts, information and articles about Confederate Army during The Civil War. Confederate Army summary: The Confederate Army was the army of the Confederate States of America during The Civil War.In 1860, shortly after the election of Abraham Lincoln, southern states began seceding from the union.On February 8, 1861, delegates from Southern states adopted the Provisional Constitution of the ...

  3. Gone for a soldier : the Civil War memoirs of Private Alfred Bellard : from the Alec Thomas Archives / edited by David Herbert Donald — 1st ed. — Boston ... Berry Benson s Civil War book : memoirs of a Confederate scout and sharp¬ shooter / edited by Susan Williams Benson. — Athens : University of Georgia Press, [1962], — 203 p. : ill ...

  4. 6 de feb. de 2024 · This collection is a part of RG 109, War Department Collection of Confederate Records and is National Archive Microfilm Publication M322. Index courtesy of www.fold3.com (previously Footnote.com). Service records were kept for each Confederate soldier.

  5. 5 de feb. de 2021 · SUMMARY. Approximately 155,000 Virginia men served in Confederate forces during the American Civil War (1861–1865). Another 32,000 served in Union forces; most of these came from the counties that today comprise the state of West Virginia, while a number of West Virginia troops were recruited from the neighboring states of Ohio and Pennsylvania.

  6. 16 de nov. de 2012 · Confederate enlistment rolls are virtually non-existent. The average Civil War soldier was 26 years old, weighing 143 pounds and standing 5'8" tall. (Library of Congress) Muster rolls, generated every few months by commanding officers, list soldiers in their respective units as "present" or "absent." This gives a kind of ...

  7. Confederate soldiers believed they had a duty to God and their generals. Duty was not an abstract theory to a southerner living in the Antebellum and Civil War South but a reality tightly bound up with a widely accepted concept of honor. Furthermore, trench warfare favored the defense and augmented the psychology of the battle line, making the ...