Colonel James R. Hagood's Memoirs of the First South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry: In the Confederate War for Independence
Civil War memoir and regimental history written prior to 1870 by James R. Hagood re his service as one of the youngest colonels in the Army of the Confederate States of America in Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia, and South Carolina. Hagood's relatives, chiefly his nephew, Johnson Hagood (1873-1948), edited and reworked this memoir, ca. 1928 and 1944.; Confederate Army officer. He was born in Barnwell, S.C., the son of Dr. James O'Hear Hagood and Indiana M. Allen Hagood. In 1862 he and a group of Citadel cadets formed themselves into a company of cavalry called the Cadet Rangers, which afterwards became Troop F, 6th South Carolina Cavalry. Hagood later transferred into the 1st South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry. Hagood was mortally injured in a railroad accident shortly after the war.And an additional entry from the July 1, 1884 edition of the Watchman and Southron of Sumter,
"1143466195"
Colonel James R. Hagood's Memoirs of the First South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry: In the Confederate War for Independence
Civil War memoir and regimental history written prior to 1870 by James R. Hagood re his service as one of the youngest colonels in the Army of the Confederate States of America in Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia, and South Carolina. Hagood's relatives, chiefly his nephew, Johnson Hagood (1873-1948), edited and reworked this memoir, ca. 1928 and 1944.; Confederate Army officer. He was born in Barnwell, S.C., the son of Dr. James O'Hear Hagood and Indiana M. Allen Hagood. In 1862 he and a group of Citadel cadets formed themselves into a company of cavalry called the Cadet Rangers, which afterwards became Troop F, 6th South Carolina Cavalry. Hagood later transferred into the 1st South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry. Hagood was mortally injured in a railroad accident shortly after the war.And an additional entry from the July 1, 1884 edition of the Watchman and Southron of Sumter,
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Colonel James R. Hagood's Memoirs of the First South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry: In the Confederate War for Independence

Colonel James R. Hagood's Memoirs of the First South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry: In the Confederate War for Independence

by Doug Foxworth
Colonel James R. Hagood's Memoirs of the First South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry: In the Confederate War for Independence

Colonel James R. Hagood's Memoirs of the First South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry: In the Confederate War for Independence

by Doug Foxworth

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Overview

Civil War memoir and regimental history written prior to 1870 by James R. Hagood re his service as one of the youngest colonels in the Army of the Confederate States of America in Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia, and South Carolina. Hagood's relatives, chiefly his nephew, Johnson Hagood (1873-1948), edited and reworked this memoir, ca. 1928 and 1944.; Confederate Army officer. He was born in Barnwell, S.C., the son of Dr. James O'Hear Hagood and Indiana M. Allen Hagood. In 1862 he and a group of Citadel cadets formed themselves into a company of cavalry called the Cadet Rangers, which afterwards became Troop F, 6th South Carolina Cavalry. Hagood later transferred into the 1st South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry. Hagood was mortally injured in a railroad accident shortly after the war.And an additional entry from the July 1, 1884 edition of the Watchman and Southron of Sumter,

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161096437
Publisher: Amazon Book Marketing Pros
Publication date: 05/09/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

James R. Hagood's (1844-1870) Civil War memoir and regimental history written prior to 1870 by James R. Hagood re his service as one of the youngest colonels in the Army of the Confederate States of America in Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia, and South Carolina. Hagood's relatives, chiefly his nephew, Johnson Hagood (1873–1948), edited and reworked this memoir between ca. 1928 and 1944 as a Confederate Army officer. He was born in Barnwell, S.C., the son of Dr. James O'Hear Hagood and Indiana M. Allen Hagood. In 1862, he and a group of Citadel cadets formed themselves into a company of cavalry called the Cadet Rangers, which afterwards became Troop F, 6th South Carolina Cavalry. Hagood later transferred to the 1st South Carolina Regiment of Volunteer Infantry. Hagood was mortally injured in a railroad accident shortly after the war.
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