Johnston, Joseph E. (Joseph Eggleston), 1807-1891
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Johnston, Joseph E. (Joseph Eggleston), 1807-1891
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Johnston, Joseph E. (Joseph Eggleston), 1807-1891
Johnston, Joseph Eggleston, 1807-1891
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Johnston, Joseph Eggleston, 1807-1891
Johnston, Joseph Eggleston
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Johnston, Joseph Eggleston
Joseph E. Johnston
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Joseph E. Johnston
Johnston, Joseph E. 1807-1891
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Johnston, Joseph E. 1807-1891
Johnston, Joseph E.
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Johnston, Joseph E.
Joseph E. Johnston (Joseph Eggleston)
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Joseph E. Johnston (Joseph Eggleston)
Joseph Eggleston Johnston
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Joseph Eggleston Johnston
Johnston, Joseph E. General, (Joseph Eggleston), 1807-1891.
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Johnston, Joseph E. General, (Joseph Eggleston), 1807-1891.
Johnston, Joseph E.,d1807-1891.
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Johnston, Joseph E.,d1807-1891.
Joseph E. (Joseph Eggleston) Johnston
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Joseph E. (Joseph Eggleston) Johnston
ジョンストン, ジェー
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ジョンストン, ジェー
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Biographical History
Confederate general.
Benjamin Stoddert Ewell was born in Georgetown, D. C., 10 June 1810, the son of Thomas Ewell and Elizabeth Stoddert. He graduated from United States Military Academy and taught there. He taught at Hampden- Sydney College and at Washington College (now Washington and Lee University). In 1848, he was elected professor of mathematics and acting president of College of William and Mary and in 1854, became president. He was colonel of 32nd Virginia Infantry Regiment and later assistant adjutant-general to Joseph E. Johnston. He was president of William and Mary 1854-1888 and died 1894. He was the brother of Richard Stoddert Ewell, had another brother, William Stoddert, a sister Elizabeth S. Ewell and a daughter Elizabeth S. Ewell Scott.
Confederate army officer and U.S. representative from Virginia.
Joseph Eggleston Johnston, Confederate General. In May he assumed the command of the Confederate forces at Harpers Ferry. In Spring 1862, he commanded the Confederate forces defending the Yorktown Peninsula. In Nov. 1862, he was assigned to command of the Department of the West, and in Dec. 1863, the Army of the Tennessee. He capitulated to Sherman on Apr. 26, 1865. After the war Johnston represented Richmond, Va. in the House of Representatives, and was federal commissioner of railroads.
Confederate general, resident of Prince Edward County, Va.
Joseph E. Johnston was born in Prince Edward County, Va. on 3 February 1807. He graduated from the United States Military Academy and served in the Mexican War. He was an officer in the United States Army until resigning to join the Confederate States Army. After the Civil War, Johnston engaged in the insurance business, wrote articles and a book, served in the United States House of Representatives and as commissioner of railroads. He died 21 March 1891.
Joseph E. Johnston was a Confederate general.
William T. Sherman was a General in the Union Army during the Civil War. Joseph E. Johnston, a Confederate General, surrendered his command to Sherman in North Carolina, 1865.
Confederate brigadier general; 1861, commander of the Department of Northern Virginia.
Confederate general and first cousin of Valentine Wood Southall of Charlottesville, Va., [1793-1861], the father of the recipient Mary Martha Southall Brown, later Venable.
Joseph E. Johnston, U. S. military officer and Confederate general, was acting inspector-general at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas for the Utah expedition of 1858.
During this period Fort Leavenworth was the main depot and cavalry supply station for military posts in the West.
Joseph E. Johnston was born Feb. 3, 1807 near Farmville, Va. He was a Confederate general who never suffered a direct defeat during the American Civil War (1861-1865). His military effectiveness, though, was hindered by a long-standing feud with Jefferson Davis. When the Peninsular Campaign began in April 1862, Johnston withdrew to defend the capital at Richmond. Although objecting to the strategy prescribed by Davis, he fought well against the Union forces. Severely wounded at the Battle of Fair Oaks (Seven Pines) in May, he was replaced by General Robert E. Lee. He died on March 21, 1891 in Washington, D.C. Britannica Online Encyclopedia http://search.eb.com (Retrieved November 18, 2008)
Howell Cobb was born Spetember 7, 1815 in Jefferson County, Georgia. He was a Georgia politician who championed Southern unionism during the 1850s but then advocated immediate secession following the election of Abraham Lincoln. Cobb served in Congress from 1842 to 1851 and agina from 1855 to 1857; he supported the annexation of Texas, the war with Mexico, and the extension of slavery into the territories. But he broke with the most extreme proslavery Southerners when he advocated extending the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific, opposed the creation of a sectional political party, and supported the Compromise of 1850. He died in New York City on October 9, 1868. Britannica Online Encyclopedia http://search.eb.com (Retrieved November 18, 2008)
Robert William Hughes was born at Muddy Creek Plantation, Powhatan County, Va. in 1821. His parents died in 1822 and he was raised by Edward C. Carrington and Eliza Preston Carrington. He attended Caldwell Institute, Greensboro, N. C. and studied law in Fincastle, Va. He married Eliza M. Johnston, niece of Joseph E. Johnston and the adopted daughter and niece of John B. Floyd. Hughes' son was Robert Morton Hughes. Robert William Hughes was a newspaper editor and federal district attorney. Involved in post Civil War Republican Party politics, he was nominated for governor of Virginia and for Congress but did not win. He was appointed judge of the federal court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
Dictionary of American Biography
Robert Morton Hughes, an alumnus of the College of William and Mary, attended the University of Virginia Law School. He was the son of Robert William and Eliza M. (Johnston) Hughes. He practiced law in Norfolk, Virginia. Hughes was the president of the Virginia Bar Association; biographer of Joseph Eggleston Johnston; a member of the Virginia Board of Education; and served as a member and as rector of the Board of Visitors of the College of William and Mary.
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https://viaf.org/viaf/70404860
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86025574
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n86025574
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Atlanta Campaign, 1864
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