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  1. farmer, college president. Samuel Jones (December 17, 1819 – July 31, 1887) was a major general in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. At the midpoint of the war, he commanded the Department of Western Virginia, defending the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad and the vital salt mines. Later he commanded the district of ...

  2. Bandera de batalla confederada. · 1.082.119 soldados que sirvieron en total. El Ejército de los Estados Confederados de América ( Army of the Confederate States of America —ACSA—, en inglés ), también llamado Ejército Confederado o simplemente Ejército del Sur, fue la fuerza militar terrestre de los Estados Confederados de América ...

  3. The Confederate States dollar was first issued just before the outbreak of the American Civil War by the newly formed Confederacy. It was not backed by hard assets, but simply by a promise to pay the bearer after the war, on the prospect of Southern victory and independence. As the Civil War progressed and victory for the South seemed less and ...

  4. Partisan Ranger Act. The Partisan Ranger Act was passed on April 21, 1862, by the Confederate Congress. It was intended as a stimulus for recruitment of irregulars for service into the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. The Confederate leadership, like the Union leadership, later opposed the use of unconventional warfare out of ...

  5. In late 1861 the 1st Georgia Cavalry assembled at Rome, Georgia, and was mustered into the Confederate States Army on May 28, 1862. Sent to Tennessee it served in the Department of East Tennessee, until assigned to the Army of Tennessee. For the duration of the civil war it switched between these two for numerous times; the only change being a ...

  6. Seal of the Confederate States. The Seal of the Confederate States was used to authenticate certain documents issued by the federal government of the Confederate States of America. [1] The phrase is used both for the physical seal itself (which was kept by the Confederate Secretary of State ), and more generally for the design impressed upon it.

  7. At the beginning of the civil war the ranks and rank insignias for the fledgling Confederate States Army had to be developed while the volunteer forces of the individual states that formed the Confederacy made up their own ranks and insignias. They usually were similar or influenced by both their own militia traditions and those used by the ...