Grinnan, Cornelia.

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Albert Taylor Bledsoe (1809-1877), a Confederate official, editor, and author, was the first-born son of Moses Ousley and Sophia Childress Taylor. A fellow student of Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee at West Point Military Academy in 1830, Bledsoe performed military duty at western Indian forts. After graduating from Kenyon College in Ohio, he taught mathematics and French at Kenyon and later Miami University. He practiced law for ten years in Springfield, Illinois from 1838-48 but returned to teaching mathematics from 1848-54 at the University of Mississippi and from 1854-61 at the University of Virginia. Commissioned a colonel in the Confederate army in 1861, he later became assistant secretary of war. President Jefferson Davis send Bledsoe to London to investigate historical problems involved in the issues between the North and the South and hoped he could influence English public opinion. In 1867, he founded and edited the Southern Review in Baltimore, Maryland, until his death.

From the description of Letter: Fredericksburg, Virginia, to the Duke of Argyll, Inverary Castle, Scotland, 1863 September 12. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 145407803

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