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Civil War letters from Edward P. Stone, chaplain of the 6th Vermont Regiment, and his brother John M. Stone, to family, November and December 1861. Also a letter from F.J. Hill, Saratoga Springs, N.Y., to Orson Putnam, Woodbury, Vt., May 28, 1861, saying that he attended the funeral of Col. Ellsworth and enclosing a piece of a Confederate flag "cut from the identical one captured at Alexandria."
John Marshall Stone -- Mississippi's Honorable and Longest Serving Governor chronicles his early life to his death. John M. Stone served as railroad agent, head mason, Civil War colonel, mayor, governor, and faithful friend, and his life inspired many. "Governor Stone is not a man of many words, what he says are full of meaning. Directly to the point and emphasized, simplicity and sincerity." The Iuka Reporter, October 24, 1889.
When seventeen-year-old Spark takes a summer job working at a secluded house in England, organizing journals that span centuries and all written in the same hand, she discovers her true connection to the people who live there and the trait that makes them unique.
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This first-of-its-kind reference book presents detailed information on the structure, composition and casualties of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia during its entire four year history, 1861-1865. Readers will know at a glance who commanded each unit, and when. Unit strengths and casualties are given for the Army's major campaigns. Meticulously compiled from the 128 volumes of the Official Records, this reliable source provides a comprehensive record of the Army's development, from its formation to its demise.
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