1 item. Samuel M. Wallace (February 1865). Mss2C4175b.An agreement, 1883, of C. F. Chelf, as representative of Smith & Chelf of Culpeper County, with C. B. Hank regarding a claim against the United States government for cotton destroyed at East Macon, Ga., in 1864. Mss1C6458c. Infantry Regiment (The National Archives): View, Print Copy & Save Original Compiled service records of Confederate soldiers of the ??? Mss12:1865 May 7:1.The order, 7 May 1865, issued by Dabney Herndon Maury surrendering forces under his command to the Union army. Microfilm reel C589.This collection contains the correspondence, 18571865, of John Overton Collins (1833?1911) of Fluvanna County. 1890. Confederate States Army, Engineer's Office, Topographical Department, Drawings, 18611865. Of note are three diaries, 8 June 18626 February 1867, kept by Amanda Chappelear with entries concerning war news from Fauquier County and northern Virginia, visits from Confederate soldiers and southern travelers, encounters with Union soldiers encamped at Belle Grove, and information on the activities of the 43d Virginia Cavalry Battalion (sections 24). Lieutenant Colonel Robert Smith Colonel Hill was promoted to brigadier general. The correspondence of Harriet Boswell (Alexander) Caperton (18201899) includes a letter, 15 May 1864, from a Union officer, John Lawrence Botsford (d. 1898), notifying her that a guard will be posted to protect her property; letters, 1861, from her son, John Caperton (18441867), concerning his life in camp at the Hermitage Fair Grounds in Richmond; a letter, 9 April 1865, from Harriet Caperton to her son John discussing the fall of Richmond and the Confederate cause in general; and letters, 18611862, from Harriet Caperton to her sister, Sarah Ann (Caperton) Preston (18261908), regarding the secession crisis and the general course of the war (section 6). Also in the Subsistence Department records are provision returns for the Fluvanna, Nelson, Powhatan, and Staunton Hill artillery batteries. Mss2C4629b.This collection contains the papers of the Christian family of Richmond. Photocopy. Correspondents include Eugene Blackford ([18391908] regarding charges against Blackford for misconduct during the battle of Cedar Creek); Anne Willing (Page) Carter ([18151891] concerning George B. McClellan and Carter's acceptance of the position of chief of artillery to Daniel Harvey Hill); Charles Shirley Carter ([18401922] concerning Thomas Carter's wound received at the battle of Antietam); R. H. Fitzhugh (regarding the gift of a horse to Carter); Armistead Lindsay Long (discussing the transfer of artillery from the Army of the Valley to the Army of Northern Virginia in January 1865); Samuel Johnston Cramer Moore ([18261908] requesting Carter to appear at Jubal Early's quarters); Robert Powel Page ([18461930] concerning Carter's postwar request for information on the operations of Confederate artillery at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865 and a detailed reminiscence of the retreat to Appomattox); James Wylie Ratchford ([18401910] regarding Carter's request to go to Richmond and secure artillery horses); Robert Emmett Rodes (concerning Daniel Harvey Hill's departure from the Army of Northern Virginia in March 1863); E. Worthen (briefly mentioning the arrival of the King William Artillery Battery at Richmond); and an unidentified author (describing events surrounding the surrender at Appomattox Court House).
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