Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Robert Charles Tyler (December 4, 1832 – April 16, 1865) was a Confederate Brigadier General during the American Civil War. He was the last general killed in the conflict. He commanded the 15th Tennessee Infantry at Belmont and Shiloh, and then led the 15th-37th Consolidated Tennessee Infantry into battle at Chickamauga.
The following Confederate States Army units and commanders fought in the Battle of Shiloh of the American Civil War. The Union order of battle is shown separately. Order of battle compiled from the army organization during the battle. [1] [2] Confederate Army of the Mississippi as organized during the Battle of Shiloh
Charles Johnson, a son of President Andrew Johnson who enlisted as assistant surgeon in the 10th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry in the Fall of 1862 [1] The 10th Tennessee Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Originally recruited and designated as the 1st Middle Tennessee Infantry ...
An unassigned infantry force was the 47th Tennessee Infantry Regiment, which arrived at the battle on April 7. [25] Most of the Confederate troops did not have combat experience, and regiments were smaller than normal. [57] Bragg's Second Corps was the largest of four corps, although it was smaller than the normal size.
Mexican–American War: colonel, 3rd Tennessee Infantry. Major general, Tennessee militia. Wounded at Shiloh, Ezra Church. Hood charged he allowed Union troops to escape from Spring Hill, Tennessee, in November 1864. Historians such as Ezra J. Warner side with Cheatham. Chesnut, James Jr. Brigadier general rank, nom: April 23, 1864 conf: June 9 ...
Bushrod Rust Johnson (October 7, 1817 – September 12, 1880) was a Confederate general in the American Civil War and an officer in the United States Army.As a university professor he had been active in the state militias of Kentucky and Tennessee and on the outbreak of hostilities he sided with the South, despite having been born in the North into a family of abolitionist Quakers.
The next letter from Levi Coman is dated April 29, 1862. Coman, along with the 76th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, marched with their division from the camp at Pittsburg Landing toward Purdy, Tennessee.
With Tennessee's Ordinance of Secession and the outbreak of the Civil War, Smith enlisted in the Confederate Army in the 20th Tennessee Infantry Regiment and was elected a second lieutenant. [1] He first saw combat action at the Battle of Mill Springs in January 1862, and in April of that same year participated in the Battle of Shiloh.