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Does anyone have a copy of Volume 25, Southern Historical Society Papers? I can't seem to get a copy of this one. I need the sketch of the 38th North Carolina which is included in this volume.
Thanks in advance,
[SIZE="2"][FONT="Georgia"]Matt Reardon[/FONT][/SIZE]
[FONT="Trebuchet MS"]"River Rat Mess"[/FONT]
8th Connecticut Volunteers
[B]Executive Director
New England Civil War Museum
Rockville, Connecticut
[url]www.newenglandcivilwarmuseum.com[/url][/B]
Do you want the manuscripts at Chapel Hill, such as Flowers, George W. "The Thirty eighth N.C. Regiment, Its History in the Civil War..." Southern Hist Soc Papers or Hokes papers, or Clark's history from ca.1900?
1837-1869
English Archival Material 5 items.
Record of the activities and personnel of the 38th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, C.S.A., kept by Hoke while he served as its colonel, January 1862-June 1864, in Virginia; accounts of a blacksmith shop in Lincoln County, N.C., 1837-1850; miscellaneous accounts of W. J. Hoke; and a merchandise daybook of H. C. Hamilton. Also included is a letter from Capt....
Thes above mss. are maintained at UNC-Chapel Hill.
The following item is at UNC-Wilmington:
William J. Hoke Captain's Commission,
1850.
Description: 1 item (photocopied)
Language: English
Abstract: Photocopy of Confederate Soldier, William J. Hoke's Captain's commission in the Southern Guards, Rifle Company attached to the 70th Regiment.
Bio/History: William J. Hoke was commissioned a Captain of the Southern Guards, a rifle company attached to the Seventieth Regiment, "NCM" on Dec. 11, 1850. His commission was signed by N.C. Governor Charles Manly and his private secretary, Andrew J. Terrill. Hoke resided in Lincoln County, NC, where he enlisted at age 35 on April 25, 1861. He was appointed captain to rank from his date of enlistment and joined the "Lincoln Guards," also referred to as the "Star Guards," and the "Southern Stars." Upon being mustered into state service they became "Co. K of the 1st Regt. of N.C. Infantry." On April 24, 1862, Captain Hoke became Colonel of the 38th Regiment of N.C. Troops. The 38th became part of Pender's Brigade which formed the 6th of the "Light Division" commanded by A.P. Hill. Hoke was wounded in several battles and after Spotsylvania in 1864 was declared disabled for field service and was appointed to command the post at Charlotte, N.C. until the end of the war.
This work also appears to deal with the 38th NCT and is at the State Library of North Carolina:
The five Martin brothers' experiences in the Civil War
Wilmer D Martin
1990s
English Book 94 leaves : ill., maps ; 28 cm.
[North Carolina? : s.n.,
Wilmer Dale Martin, compiler/editor, attempts to place his grandfather, Thomas Alfred Martin, into the chronology of the Civil War, using excerpts from the latter's autobiography.
These are at Duke University:
Patterson-Cavin family papers,
Cavin family.; Patterson family.
1809-1896
English Archival Material 214 items.
Family correspondence, deeds, and financial papers, of the Petterson and Cavin families of Iredell and Alexander counties, N.C. Includes letters from members of the families who had moved to Alabama, South Carolina, and Tennessee discussing local conditions and family matters. Other subjects include camp life in the Confederate Army in Virginia and North Carolina, the 33nd, 38th, and 56th Regiments of North Carolina Volunteers, and politics in the 1830s.
This guy was an orderly sergeant in Company C, 38th NCT and his diary is also at UNC-Chapel Hill:
A.J. McIntire diaries,
A J McIntire
1864-1868
English Archival Material 3 items.
Two volumes of McIntire's diaries and a typed transcription of the earlier volume. The first diary, written between January and June 1864, contains brief daily entries on weather conditions, notable visitors, the shooting of deserters, and the May 1864 Battle of the Wilderness. McIntire's movements immediately after the completion of the first diary and end of the war are unclear....
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