Tag Archives: North Carolina
“Let this miserable war be ended,” May 2, 1862
Oxford [North Carolina] May 2nd 1862 My dearest husband I have felt so satisfied this week with the general management of things in this “Confederacy” that I have not been disposed to do anything but quarrel – very much … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Albemarle Guards, Bethel Regiment, burning of Norfolk Navy Yard 1862, Caroline Matilda Hicks Skinner, Catherine Skinner Lassiter, Civil War Norfolk Virginia, Company A 1st North Carolina State Troops, Confederate Army, Daily Richmond Examiner, Edenton North Carolina, Eliza Fisk Skinner, fall of New Orleans, fall of Norfolk 1862, General Bragg, General Wool, James K. Marshall, Jefferson Davis, John A. McDowell, John Avery Benbury, Mansfield Lovell, Maria Harwood Beale, Mathew Whittaker Ransom, Montford Sidney Stokes, North Carolina, Oxford North Carolina, Peninsula Campaign, Sophie W. Hicks, Tristrim Lowther Skinner, Zebulon Vance
Comments Off on “Let this miserable war be ended,” May 2, 1862
Camp at Fair Oaks, June 5, 1862
Camp on last Saturday’s battlefield – June 5th 1862 My dearest Wife I know that you have felt very anxious about me on account of not hearing from me since mine of Sunday morning[1], but I recollect having written you … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged 1860 slave list, 1st Regiment North Carolina Troops, Albemarle Guards, Battle of Fair Oaks, Battle of Seven Pines, Benjamin S. Skinner, Colonel Gaston Meares, documentary editing, Drury's Bluff, Edenton, Eliza Fisk Skinner, Francis Wayland Bond, General Blanchard, General Holmes, General Joseph E. Johnston, General Longstreet, General McClellan, General McGruder, John Avery Benbury, June 3 1862, Lemuel Benbury, Longstreet, Mary Maillard, North Carolina, Peninsula Campaign, Petersburg, picket duty, primary source, Ripley's Brigade, Robert E. Lee, Seven Days Battles, Skinner family Edenton, slave lists, The Civil War Letters of Tristrim Lowther Skinner 1861-1862, Tristrim Lowther Skinner
Comments Off on Camp at Fair Oaks, June 5, 1862