June 8 1862 Sunday
First Battle of Chattanooga, TN (CWSAC Limited Battle – Union Victory)
Battle of Cross Keys, VA (CWSAC Major Battle – Confederate Victory)
Peninsula Campaign
Jackson‘s Shenandoah Valley Campaign
Arizona Territory. Martial law was declared in the Arizona Territory.
California. Skirmish at Fawn Prairie near Lascombe’s (or Liscombe’s) Hill.
Kentucky. Union Brigadier-General James Abram Garfield marched with his brigade from the area of the Big Sandy River into Kentucky.
Mississippi. USS Wissahickon and USS Itasca continued to shell Confederate batteries at Grand Gulf.
Missouri. Reconnaissance to Waverly began.
North Carolina. USS Penobscot, Lieutenant John M B Clitz, burned the schooner Sereta, which was found aground and deserted off Shallotte Inlet.
North Carolina. USS Commodore Perry, USS Shawsheen, and USS Ceres made an expedition up the Roanoke River carrying an army force. They came under rifle fire from Confederate troops on the banks for two hours. The force landed unopposed at Hamilton and captured the steamer Wilson.
South Carolina. A skirmish at John’s Island near Secessionville resulted in a Union withdrawal to Legareville. Skirmish on James Island.
Chattanooga, Tennessee. The Union bombardment of Confederate troops near Chattanooga by Union Brigadier-General James Scott Negley’s division continued until noon. The Confederates replied but the fire of the inexperienced gunners was uncoordinated and undisciplined. (CWSAC Limited Battle Union Victory)
Virginia. Skirmishes at Muddy Creek near Palestine and near Big Bend.
Virginia. Skirmish at Fair Oaks.
Virginia. Union Major-General Irvin McDowell was given new orders for his future operations. He was ordered to resume his advance in the direction of Richmond to assist Major-General George Brinton McClellan in his Peninsula Campaign. This was a reversal of his previous instructions to support operations in the Shenandoah Valley.
Port Republic, Virginia. The Union brigade of Colonel Samuel Sprigg Carroll (4th Brigade of Brigadier-General James Shields’ division), supported by a cavalry regiment and an artillery battery, approached the town of Port Republic at about 9 am. They scattered the Confederate pickets, forded the South River, and rushed into the town. They surprised Major-General Thomas Jonathan Jackson and his staff. Jackson’s headquarters staff raced down the main street and across the bridge, narrowly eluding capture (three members of his staff were captured, Colonel Stapleton Crutchfield, Lieutenant Edward Willis, and Dr Hunter McGuire). Carroll deployed one gun aimed at the bridge and brought up another. Jackson directed the defence, ordering Captain William Poague’s battery to unlimber on the north bank. Captain James McD Carrington brought up a gun from the vicinity of Madison Hall to rake the Main Street. Colonel Samuel V Fulkerson led his brigade in a charge across the bridge, where the gun at the opposite end was firing on them with canister shot, to drive the Union cavalry out of the town. Carroll retreated in confusion, losing his two guns before his infantry could come within range. Three Confederate batteries unlimbered on the bluffs east of Port Republic on the north bank of the South Fork and fired on the retreating Federals. Carroll retired several miles north on the Luray Road. Jackson stationed Brigadier-General William Booth Taliaferro’s brigade in Port Republic and positioned the Stonewall Brigade near Bogota with the artillery to prevent any further surprises.
As Union Major-General John Charles Frémont was approaching Port republic from the northwest, Confederate Major-General Thomas Jonathan Jackson faced enemies on two fronts. The Union commanders could not coordinate their attacks as the bridges over the South Fork Shenandoah north of Port Republic had been destroyed on Jackson’s orders. Jackson assigned Major-General Richard Stoddert Ewell’s division with 6,500 men the mission to block Frémont at Cross Keys while he and the rest of his command attacked Shields’ advance guard at Port Republic.
Union Colonel Gustave P Cluseret’s brigade was Frémont’s vanguard as he renewed his advance from the vicinity of Harrisonburg. After driving away the Confederate skirmishers, Cluseret reached and deployed his right flank along the Keezletown Road near Union Church. One by one, the Union brigades came into line: Brigadier-General Robert Cumming Schenck on Cluseret’s right, Brigadier-General Robert Huston Milroy on his left, and Brigadier-General Julius Stahel on the far left, his left flank near Congers Creek. Brigadier-General Henry Bohlen’s and Colonel John A Koltes’ brigades were held in reserve near the centre of the line. A regiment of Union cavalry moved south on the road to secure the right flank. Batteries were brought to the front.
Ewell deployed his division behind Mill Creek, with Brigadier-General Isaac Ridgeway Trimble’s brigade on the right across the Port Republic Road, and Brigadier-General Arnold Elzey’s in the centre along the high bluffs. Ewell concentrated his four batteries at the centre of the line. As Union troops deployed along the Keezletown Road, Trimble advanced his brigade a quarter of a mile to Victory Hill and deployed Courtney’s (Latimer’s) battery on a hill to his left supported by the 21st North Carolina Infantry. The 15th Alabama Infantry, which had been skirmishing near Union Church, rejoined the brigade. Trimble held his regiments out of sight behind the crest of the hill. Frémont determined to advance his battle line with the evident intention of enveloping the Confederate position, assumed to be behind Mill Creek. This manoeuvre required an elaborate right wheel. Stahel’s brigade on the far left had the farthest distance to cover and advanced first. Milroy moved forward on Stahel’s right and rear. Union batteries were advanced with infantry lines south of Keezletown Road and engaged Confederate batteries. Stahel appeared oblivious to Trimble’s advanced position. His battle line passed down into the valley, crossed the run and began climbing Victory Hill. At a distance of sixty paces, Trimble’s infantry stood up and delivered a devastating volley. Stahel’s brigade recoiled in confusion with heavy casualties. The Union brigade regrouped on the height opposite Victory Hill but made no effort to renew their assault. Stahel did not renew his attack but brought up a battery (Buell’s) to support his position. Trimble moved the 15th Alabama Infantry by the right flank and up a ravine to get on the battery’s left.
In the meantime, Ewell sent two regiments (13th Virginia Infantry and 25th Virginia Infantry) along the ridge to Trimble’s right, attracting a severe fire from the Union battery. With a shout, the 15th Alabama emerged from their ravine and began to climb the hill toward the battery, precipitating a melee. Trimble advanced his other two regiments (16th Mississippi Infantry on the left and 21st Georgia Infantry on the right) from their position on Victory Hill, forcing back the Union line. The Union battery limbered hastily and withdrew, saving its guns. A Union regiment counterattacked briefly, striking the left flank of the 16th Mississippi, but was forced back in desperate fighting. Trimble continued advancing up the ravine on the Confederate right, outflanking successive Union positions.
In the meantime, Milroy advanced on Stahel’s right, supported by artillery. Milroy’s line came within rifle-musket range of the Confederate centre behind Mill Creek and opened fire. Union batteries continued to engage Confederate batteries in an artillery duel. Bohlen advanced on the far Union left to stiffen Stahel’s crumbling defence. Milroy’s left flank was endangered by Stahel’s retreat, and Frémont ordered him to withdraw. Jackson brought Brigadier-General Richard Taylor’s brigade forward to support Ewell if needed, but Taylor remained in reserve on the Port Republic Road near the Dunker Church.
Seemingly paralysed by the decimation of Stahel’s brigade on his left, Frémont was unable to mount a coordinated attack. He ordered Schenck’s brigade forward to find the Confederate left flank south of Union Church. Ewell reinforced his left with elements of Elzey’s brigade. Severe firing erupted along the line but quickly died down. Confederate brigade commanders Elzey and Brigadier-General George Hume Steuart were wounded in this exchange. Frémont withdrew his force to Keezletown Road, placing his artillery on the heights to his rear (Oak Ridge). Artillery firing continued. At dusk, Trimble pushed his battle line forward to within a quarter mile of the Union position, anticipating a night assault. Confederate accounts describe the Union soldiers going into camp, lighting fires, and making coffee, but Ewell ordered Trimble to withdraw without making the attack.
Union losses were reported at 664 (or 14 killed, 443 wounded, 127 missing) from about 12,000 engaged and Confederate at 287 (or 41 killed, 232 wounded, 15 missing. (CWSAC Major Battle – Confederate Victory)
ORDER OF BATTLE: CROSS KEYS, VA
Union Mountain Department: Major-General John Charles Frémont
Blenker’s Division, (Mountain): Brigadier-General Louis Blenker
1st Brigade, Blenker’s Division, (Mountain): Brigadier-General Julius Stahel
2nd Brigade, Blenker’s Division, (Mountain): Colonel John A Koltes
3rd Brigade, Blenker’s Division, (Mountain): Brigadier-General Henry Bohlen
Cluseret’s Independent Brigade, (Mountain): Colonel Gustave Paul Cluseret
Milroy’s Independent Brigade, (Mountain): Brigadier-General Robert Huston Milroy
Schenck’s Brigade Independent Brigade, (Mountain): Brigadier-General Robert Cumming Schenck
Union Department of the Rappahannock: Major-General Irvin McDowell
1st Division, (Rappahannock): Brigadier-General James Shields
4th Brigade, 1st Division, (Rappahannock): Colonel Samuel Sprigg Carroll
Cavalry Brigade, (Rappahannock): Brigadier-General George Dashiell Bayard temporarily assigned to Mountain Department
Confederate Department Of Northern Virginia: General Robert Edward Lee
District of the Valley: Major-General Thomas Jonathan Jackson
Army of the Valley: Major-General Thomas Jonathan Jackson
Ewell’s Division, (Valley): Major-General Richard Stoddert Ewell
2nd (Steuart’s) Brigade, Ewell’s Division, (Valley): Brigadier-General George Hume Steuart
4th (Elzey’s) Brigade, Ewell’s Division, (Valley): Brigadier-General Arnold Elzey
7th (Trimble’s) Brigade, Ewell’s Division, (Valley): Brigadier-General Isaac Ridgway Trimble
8th (Taylor’s) Brigade, Ewell’s Division, (Valley): Brigadier-General Richard Taylor
Jackson’s Division, (Valley): Major-General Thomas Jonathan Jackson
2nd (Taliaferro’s) Brigade, Jackson’s Division, (Valley): Brigadier-General William Booth Taliaferro
Cavalry Brigade, (Valley): Colonel Thomas T Munford
Union Organisation
USA: The areas of Eastern Kentucky and eastern Tennessee were transferred from the Mountain Department to the Department (Military Division) of the Mississippi.
USA: The parts of Virginia west of the road running from Williamsport to Martinsburg, Winchester, Strasburg, Harrisonville, Staunton and then south to the Blue Ridge Mountains were transferred from the Department of the Shenandoah to the Mountain Department.
USA: The Piedmont region and the Bull Run Mountains of Virginia were transferred from the Department of the Rappahannock to the Department of the Shenandoah.
USA: The District of the Valley of the Big Sandy River was discontinued.
Commander in Chief: President Abraham Lincoln
Vice-President: Hannibal Hamlin
Secretary of War: Edwin McMasters Stanton
Secretary of the Navy: Gideon Welles
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron: Louis Malesherbes Goldsborough
South Atlantic Blockading Squadron: Samuel Francis Du Pont
West Gulf Blockading Squadron: David Glasgow Farragut
East Gulf Blockading Squadron: James Lawrence Lardner
Pacific Squadron: Charles H Bell
Western Gunboat Flotilla: Charles Henry Davis
Potomac Flotilla: Robert Harris Wyman
Chairman of the War Board: Ethan Allen Hitchcock
Department of the Mississippi: Henry Wager Halleck
- District of West Tennessee: Ulysses Simpson Grant
- Army of West Tennessee: Ulysses Simpson Grant
- District of the Mississippi: Isaac Ferdinand Quinby
- Army of the Mississippi: John Pope
- District of the Ohio: Don Carlos Buell
- Army of the Ohio: Don Carlos Buell
- District of Cairo: William Kerley Strong
- Sub-District of Columbus: Isaac Ferdinand Quinby
Department of the Missouri: Henry Wager Halleck
- District of Missouri: John McAllister Schofield
- District of Southwest Missouri: Egbert Benson Brown
- Army of the Southwest: Samuel Ryan Curtis
- District of Northwest Missouri: vacant
Department of the Gulf: Benjamin Franklin Butler
- Army of the Gulf: Benjamin Franklin Butler
Department of Kansas: James Gilpatrick Blunt
Middle Department: John Adams Dix interim John Ellis Wool awaited
- District of the Eastern Shore of Maryland: Henry Hayes Lockwood
Mountain Department: John Charles Frémont
- Cheat Mountain District: Thomas Maley Harris
- Railroad District: Benjamin Franklin Kelley
- District of the Kanawha: Jacob Dolson Cox
- District of the Gap: Samuel Powhatan Carter
Department of New Mexico: Edward Richard Sprigg Canby
- Central and Northern District of New Mexico: Benjamin Stone Roberts
Department of New York: Edward Denison Morgan
Department of North Carolina: Ambrose Everett Burnside
Department of the Pacific: George Wright
- District of the Humboldt: Francis James Lippitt
- District of Oregon: Justis Steinburger
- District of Southern California: George Washington Bowie
Department of the Potomac: George Brinton McClellan
- Army of the Potomac: George Brinton McClellan
- II Corps Potomac: Edwin Vose Sumner
- III Corps Potomac: Samuel Peter Heintzelman
- IV Corps Potomac: Erasmus Darwin Keyes
- V Corps Potomac: Fitz John Porter
- VI Corps Potomac: William Buel Franklin
Department of the Rappahannock: Irvin McDowell
- Military District of Washington: James Samuel Wadsworth
Department of the Shenandoah: Nathaniel Prentiss Banks
Department of the South: David Hunter
- Northern District of the South: Henry Washington Benham
- Southern District of the South: John Milton Brannan
- Western District of the South: Lewis Golding Arnold
Department of Texas: Vacant
Department of Virginia: John Ellis Wool interim John Adams Dix awaited
Confederate Organisation
Commander in Chief: President Jefferson Finis Davis
Vice-President: Alexander Hamilton Stephens
Secretary of War: George Wythe Randolph
Secretary of the Navy: Stephen Russell Mallory
Military Adviser to the President: Vacant
Department No 1: Mansfield Lovell
Department of Alabama and West Florida: John Horace Forney temporary
- Army of Mobile: William L Powell
Department of Middle and Eastern Florida: Joseph Finegan
Department of East Tennessee: Edmund Kirby Smith
- Army of East Tennessee: Edmund Kirby Smith
Department of Henrico: John Henry Winder
Department of North Carolina: James Green Martin
- District of Cape Fear: Samuel Gibbs French
- District of Pamlico: Robert Ransom temporary
- District of Roanoke Island: Henry Marchmore Shaw
Department of Northern Virginia: Robert Edward Lee
- District of Aquia: Gustavus Woodson Smith
- Army of Northern Virginia: Robert Edward Lee
- Right Wing Northern Virginia: James Longstreet
- Left Wing Northern Virginia: Gustavus Woodson Smith
- Reserve Northern Virginia: John Bankhead Magruder
- Valley District: Thomas Jonathan Jackson
- Army of the Valley: Thomas Jonathan Jackson
Department of South Carolina and Georgia: John Clifford Pemberton
- District of Georgia: Alexander Robert Lawton
- District of South Carolina: Roswell Sabine Ripley
- 1st Sub-District of South Carolina: Arthur Middleton Manigault.
- 2nd Sub-District of South Carolina: Hugh Weedon Mercer
- 3rd Sub-District of South Carolina: William Stephen Walker
- 4th Sub-District of South Carolina: Thomas Fenwick Drayton
Department of Southwestern Virginia: William Wing Loring
- District of Abingdon: Humphrey Marshall
Trans-Mississippi Department: Paul Octave Hébert temporary
- District of Arkansas: Thomas Carmichael Hindman
- District of Eastern Texas and Western Louisiana: Paul Octave Hébert
- Sub-District of Houston: George M Flournoy
- Western District of Texas: Henry Eustace McCullough
- Eastern Sub-District of Western Texas: Xavier Blanchard Debray
- Sub-District of the Rio Grande: Hamilton Prioleau Bee
- Trans-Mississippi District: Thomas Carmichael Hindman
- District of Arizona: Henry Hopkins Sibley
- District of Indian Territory: Douglas Hancock Cooper
- Defences of Pass Cavallo: John W Glenn
Western Department: Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard
- District of North Alabama: Daniel Ruggles
- District of Southern Mississippi and Eastern Louisiana: Earl Van Dorn
- Army of Mississippi: Braxton Bragg
- I Corps Mississippi: Leonidas Polk
- II Corps Mississippi: Samuel Jones
- III Corps Mississippi: William Joseph Hardee
- Reserve Corps Mississippi: John Cabell Breckinridge
- Army of the West: Earl Van Dorn
Forces in Richmond: Charles Dimmock
Union Generals
Note: Italics, awaiting confirmation of the commission
Major-General USA
George Brinton McClellan
John Charles Frémont
Henry Wager Halleck
John Ellis Wool
Major-General USV
Asterisk indicates concurrently Brigadier-General USA
John Adams Dix
Nathaniel Prentiss Banks
Benjamin Franklin Butler
David Hunter
Edwin Denison Morgan
Ethan Allen Hitchcock
Ulysses Simpson Grant
Irvin McDowell*
Ambrose Everett Burnside
William Starke Rosecrans*
Don Carlos Buell
John Pope
Samuel Ryan Curtis
Franz Sigel
John Alexander McClernand
Lewis Wallace
Ormsby McKnight Mitchel
Cassius Marcellus Clay
George Henry Thomas
George Cadwalader
William Tecumseh Sherman
Edward Otho Cresap Ord
Edwin Vose Sumner*
Samuel Peter Heintzelman
Erasmus Darwin Keyes
Joseph Hooker
Silas Casey
Brigadier-General USA
Brackets indicates concurrently Major-General USV
William Selby Harney
(Edwin Vose Sumner)
Joseph King Fenno Mansfield
(Irvin McDowell)
Robert Anderson
(William Starke Rosecrans)
Philip St George Cooke
Brigadier-General USV
Andrew Porter
Fitz-John Porter
William Buel Franklin
Charles Pomeroy Stone
Thomas West Sherman
George Archibald McCall
William Reading Montgomery
Philip Kearny
John Wolcott Phelps
Charles Smith Hamilton
Darius Nash Couch
Rufus King
Jacob Dolson Cox
Stephen Augustus Hurlbut
Robert Cumming Schenck
Benjamin Mayberry Prentiss
Benjamin Franklin Kelley
Alpheus Starkey Williams
Israel Bush Richardson
James Cooper
James Brewerton Ricketts
Orlando Bolivar Willcox
Michael Corcoran
Henry Hayes Lockwood
Louis Blenker
Henry Warner Slocum
James Samuel Wadsworth
John James Peck
George Webb Morell
John Henry Martindale
Samuel Davis Sturgis
George Stoneman
Henry Washington Benham
William Farrar Smith
James William Denver
Egbert Ludovicus Vielé
James Shields
John Fulton Reynolds
William Farquhar Barry
John Joseph Abercrombie
John Sedgwick
Lawrence Pike Graham
George Gordon Meade
Abram Duryée
Alexander McDowell McCook
Oliver Otis Howard
Eleazar Arthur Paine
Daniel Edgar Sickles
Charles Davis Jameson
Ebenezer Dumont
Robert Huston Milroy
Willis Arnold Gorman
Daniel Butterfield
Horatio Gouverneur Wright
William Nelson
William Thomas Ward
John Gross Barnard
Innis Newton Palmer
Seth Williams
John Newton
Winfield Scott Hancock
Thomas Leonidas Crittenden
George Wright
Isaac Ingalls Stevens
Thomas Williams
George Sykes
William Henry French
William Thomas Harbaugh Brooks
John Milton Brannan
William Wallace Burns
John Porter Hatch
David Sloane Stanley
William Kerley Strong
Albin Francisco Schoepf
Lovell Harrison Rousseau
James Scott Negley
Thomas John Wood
Richard W Johnson
Adolph Wilhelm August Friedrich Von Steinwehr
Joseph Bennett Plummer
John Gray Foster
George Washington Cullum
Jeremiah Tilford Boyle
Christopher Columbus Augur
Schuyler Hamilton
Jesse Lee Reno
George Washington Morgan
Julius Stahel
John McAllister Schofield
Thomas Jefferson McKean
John Grubb Parke
Zealous Bates Tower
Jefferson Columbus Davis
James Henry Lane
John McAuley Palmer
James Abram Garfield
Lewis Golding Arnold
Frederick Steele
William Scott Ketchum
Abner Doubleday
John Wynn Davidson
Napoleon Jackson Tecumseh Dana
David Bell Birney
Thomas Francis Meagher
Henry Morris Naglee
Andrew Johnson
James Gallant Spears
Eugene Asa Carr
Thomas Alfred Davies
Daniel Tyler
William Hemsley Emory
Andrew Jackson Smith
Marsena Rudolph Patrick
Isaac Ferdinand Quinby
Hiram Gregory Berry
Orris Sanford Ferry
Daniel Phineas Woodbury
Henry Moses Judah
Richard James Oglesby
John Cook
John McArthur
Robert Latimer McCook
Jacob Gartner Lauman
Horatio Phillips Van Cleve
John Alexander Logan
Speed Smith Fry
Alexander Asboth
James Craig
Mahlon Dickerson Manson
Gordon Granger
Edward Richard Sprigg Canby
Grenville Mellen Dodge
Robert Byington Mitchell
James Gilpatrick Blunt
Francis Engle Patterson
Quincy Adams Gillmore
Amiel Weeks Whipple
Cuvier Grover
George Lucas Hartsuff
Rufus Saxton
Benjamin Alvord
Napoleon Bonaparte Buford
William Sooy Smith
Nathan Kimball
Charles Devens
James Henry Van Alen
Carl Schurz
Samuel Wylie Crawford
Henry Walton Wessells
Milo Smith Hascall
Leonard Fulton Ross
John White Geary
Alfred Howe Terry
Andrew Atkinson Humphreys
James Henry Carleton
Absalom Baird
John Cleveland Robinson
Truman Seymour
George Dashiell Bayard
Henry Prince
Abram Sanders Piatt
Thomas Turpin Crittenden
Maximilian Weber
Pleasant Adam Hackleman
Jeremiah Cutler Sullivan
Alvin Peterson Hovey
James Clifford Veatch
William Plummer Benton
Henry Bohlen
John Curtis Caldwell
Isaac Peace Rodman
Neal S Dow
George Sears Greene
Samuel Powhatan Carter
John Gibbon
George William Taylor
Erastus Barnard Tyler
James Birdseye McPherson
Brigadier-General USA (Staff)
Montgomery Cunningham Meigs (Quartermaster-General)
Henry Knox Craig
Lorenzo Thomas (Adjutant-General)
James Wolfe Ripley (Ordnance)
William Alexander Hammond (Surgeon-General)
Confederate Generals
Note: Italics, awaiting confirmation of the commission
General ACSA/PACS
Samuel Cooper
Robert Edward Lee
Joseph Eggleston Johnston
Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard
Braxton Bragg
Major-General PACS
Leonidas Polk
Earl Van Dorn
Gustavus Woodson Smith
Theophilus Hunter Holmes
William Joseph Hardee
Benjamin Huger
James Longstreet
John Bankhead Magruder
Mansfield Lovell
Thomas Jonathan Jackson
Edmund Kirby Smith
George Bibb Crittenden
John Clifford Pemberton
Richard Stoddert Ewell
William Wing Loring
Sterling Price
Benjamin Franklin Cheatham
Samuel Jones
John Porter McCown
Daniel Harvey Hill
Jones Mitchell Withers
Thomas Carmichael Hindman
John Cabell Breckinridge
Lafayette McLaws
Ambrose Powell Hill
Brigadier-General PACS
Alexander Robert Lawton
Charles Clark
John Buchanan Floyd
Henry Alexander Wise
David Rumph Jones
Henry Hopkins Sibley
John Henry Winder
Richard Caswell Gatlin
Daniel Smith Donelson
Richard Heron Anderson
Robert Augustus Toombs
Arnold Elzey
William Henry Chase Whiting
Jubal Anderson Early
Isaac Ridgeway Trimble
Daniel Ruggles
Roswell Sabine Ripley
Albert Pike
Paul Octave Hébert
Joseph Reid Anderson
Simon Bolivar Buckner
Albert Gallatin Blanchard
Gabriel James Rains
James Ewell Brown Stuart
Thomas Fenwick Drayton
Lloyd Tilghman
Nathan George Evans
Cadmus Marcellus Wilcox
Robert Emmett Rodes
Richard Taylor
James Heyward Trapier
Samuel Gibbs French
William Henry Carroll
Hugh Weedon Mercer
Humphrey Marshall
Richard Griffith
Alexander Peter Stewart
William Montgomery Gardner
Richard Brooke Garnett
William Mahone
Lawrence O’Bryan Branch
Edward Johnson
Maxcy Gregg
Raleigh Edward Colston
Henry Heth
Johnson Kelly Duncan
Sterling Alexander Martin Wood
John George Walker
John King Jackson
George Edward Pickett
Bushrod Rust Johnson
James Patton Anderson
Howell Cobb
George Wythe Randolph
Joseph Brevard Kershaw
James Ronald Chalmers
James Johnston Pettigrew
Carter Littlepage Stevenson
Daniel Leadbetter
William Whann Mackall
Charles Sidney Winder
Robert Ransom
John Bell Hood
Daniel Marsh Frost
Winfield Scott Featherston
Thomas James Churchill
William Booth Taliaferro
Albert Rust
Patrick Ronayne Cleburne
Samuel Bell Maxey
Hamilton Prioleau Bee
James Morrison Hawes
George Hume Steuart
William Duncan Smith
James Edwin Slaughter
Charles William Field
John Horace Forney
Paul Jones Semmes
Lucius Marshall Walker
Seth Maxwell Barton
Dabney Herndon Maury
John Bordenave Villepigue
Henry Eustace McCullough
John Stevens Bowen
Benjamin Hardin Helm
John Selden Roane
States Rights Gist
William Nelson Pendleton
Lewis Addison Armistead
Joseph Finegan
Martin Luther Smith
Franklin Gardner
William Nelson Rector Beall
Thomas Jordan
William Preston
Roger Atkinson Pryor
Henry Little
John Echols
George Earl Maney
Jean Jacques Alfred Alexandre Mouton
John Stuart Williams
James Green Martin
Thomas Lanier Clingman
Wade Hampton
Daniel Weisiger Adams
Louis Hébert
Samuel Garland
John Creed Moore
Ambrose Ransom Wright
James Lawson Kemper
James Jay Archer