A sketch of Hoods Texas Brigade of the Virginia Army / by Joe Joskins ; a rebel in Co. "A," 5th Texas Vol [i.e. Volunteer], Hoods Texas Brigade, Fields Divission [sic], Longstreets Corps, Army Northern Virginia. [1865]

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A sketch of Hoods Texas Brigade of the Virginia Army / by Joe Joskins ; a rebel in Co. "A," 5th Texas Vol [i.e. Volunteer], Hoods Texas Brigade, Fields Divission [sic], Longstreets Corps, Army Northern Virginia. [1865]

242 p. ; 15 cm.

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Confederate States of America

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hz25g7 (corporateBody)

During the Civil War, the Confederate States of America issued their own currency notes. These circulated like cash, but were technically bills of credit. At the beginning of the war, they circulated widely, but by the end of the war they had lost nearly all their value. Many of the bills remained in private hands after the war and became collectible as memorabilia. Other bills, which the Union Army had confiscated, were in the hands of the United States War Department; it transferred them to th...

Confederate States of America. Army. Texas Brigade

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During the Civil War, Hood's Texas Brigade of the Confederate Army organized on October 22, 1861, in Richmond, Virginia, under the command of Brig. Gen. Louis T. Wigfall with the First, Fourth, and Fifth Texas Infantry Regiments. Several other regiments and companies were attached to the Brigade over the next year, with only the Third Arkansas Infantry staying until the end of the war. Col. John Bell Hood commanded the Fourth Texas Regiment until Wigfall resigned in Febr...

Joskins, Joe.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hr1jc0 (person)

Confederate States of America. Army. Texas Volunteer Infantry, 5th. Company A.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6453fbs (corporateBody)