Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment was established at Corinth, Mississippi, in May, 1861, and mustered at Lynchburg, Virginia. Company A, the "University Greys" consisted of almost the entire student body of the University of Mississippi. This reduced enrollment at the university to such a low level that the university closed for the ...
The stained glass window in Ventress Hall dedicated to the University Grays. Oxford, Mississippi Corporal L. Purnell of Co. I, 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment. The University Greys (or Grays) were Company A of the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War.
The 11th Mississippi Infantry Statue is a Gettysburg Battlefield memorial commemorating a Confederate regiment with a bronze sculpture of a flagbearer of the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment. [ 3 ] History
The 11th Infantry Regiment is a regiment in the United States Army. In 2007, the 11th Infantry was reflagged as the 199th Infantry Brigade, as part of the "Transformation of the US Army" effort. Today, the 11th Infantry Regiment is part of the Army's regimental system and is the primary regiment to which many Infantry School units are aligned.
11th Louisiana Infantry Regiment (Confederate) 11th Michigan Infantry Regiment (Reorganized) 11th Minnesota Infantry Regiment; 11th Mississippi Infantry Monument; 11th New Hampshire Infantry Regiment; 11th Texas Cavalry Regiment; 11th Texas Field Battery; 11th Virginia Cavalry Regiment; 11th Virginia Infantry Regiment; 11th Wisconsin Infantry ...
10th Massachusetts Infantry Monument South Sedgewick Avenue: J. K. Newell, designer Melzar Hunt Mosman, sculptor Chester Granite Company 1885 MN 113-B 11th Massachusetts Infantry Monument Emmitsburg Road
The Confederate Monument was installed on the University of Mississippi campus in Oxford, Mississippi in 1906 memorializing Company A of the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, the University Greys, occasionally referred to as University Grays.
He served in Joseph R. Davis’s Brigade as a commanding officer in the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment. [9] He was wounded four times during his service and the final injury was on March 25, 1865, during his last battle in Petersburg, Virginia , causing his right arm to be amputated and he was captured whilst recovering.