18 research outputs found
Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, (14 May 1864. 9am-5pm)
Report on Confederate and Union troop movements around Ballen\u27s and Green\u27s Fordhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1036/thumbnail.jp
Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston (13 May 1864. 5:40pm)
Union troops move along railroad to rear of Gen. Wheeler\u27s left flank; Wheeler withdraws along Resaca Road.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1017/thumbnail.jp
Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, (14 May 1864. 10:10am)
Report on skirmishes along Dalton and Resaca Roadshttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1033/thumbnail.jp
Maj. Gen. Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston (14 May 1864. 1:30pm)
A report on Union attacks against Confederate lineshttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1034/thumbnail.jp
Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, (14 May 1864. 9am-5pm)
Report on Confederate and Union troop movements around Ballen\u27s and Green\u27s Fordhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1036/thumbnail.jp
Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston (13 May 1864. 4:35pm)
Confederate troops fall backhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1018/thumbnail.jp
Maj.Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston (14 May 1864. 12:25am)
Reporting skirmishes along lines with Union soldiers.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1032/thumbnail.jp
Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston (14 May 1864. 1pm)
Report of Union troops on Resaca roadhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1031/thumbnail.jp
Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler to Gen. Joseph E. Johnston (14 May 1864. 3:50pm)
Report of Union troops movement and inquiries into their actions.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_milrec/1035/thumbnail.jp
Letter from S. B. M. Young Brigadier General, Santiago, Cuba, to Adjutant General, June 29, 1898
This is an item from the William Crawford Gorgas Papers. This collection includes material created by and written about Gorgas, as well as material created by Gorgas' family members. His diaries and journals illuminate his life and work for the U.S. Army as a surgeon and span the years he worked in Cuba and Panama. The collection includes official reports and other documents Gorgas wrote and collected, as well as articles and other publications written about Gorgas and his work in sanitation and disease prevention, particularly yellow fever. Correspondence, articles, and other items document the numerous awards and tributes Gorgas received during his life and memorials after his death in 1920. In addition to William Crawford Gorgas material, the collection includes other material belonging to Gorgas family members including Marie Gorgas and their daughter, Aileen Gorgas Wrightson. In 1924, his widow Marie Gorgas published William Crawford Gorgas: His Life and Work. This collection includes manuscripts, galley proofs, and published versions of her work