Category Archives: The Official Records

Reprise: The Official Records

When I first encountered the OR at the University of Texas undergraduate library, back in the early 1980s, I was amazed at how much shelf space it required. All one-hundred-twenty-eight volumes, including an index and an atlas. Sigh. Nowadays it’s … Continue reading

Posted in Confederate Veteran Magazine, The National Tribune, The Official Records | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Reprise: Why I believe Gen. Humphreys sat out the attack

If you only read the Official Records, you would have to assume that Gen. Benjamin Grubb Humphreys, who took over the Mississippi Brigade after Gen. William Barksdale’s death at Gettysburg, was in the vanguard of the brigade’s two regiments which … Continue reading

Posted in "Knoxville 1863", Confederate Veteran Magazine, Fort Sanders, Gen. Benjamin Grubb Humphreys, The Official Records | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

General Order 100: Code of Conduct

In the novel, some Confederate prisoners are killed in the Northwest Bastion. The killings are supported in the historical record by one cryptic sentence in Lieutenant Benjamin’s after-action report to General Burnside. The lieutenant, in describing the zeal of the … Continue reading

Posted in "Knoxville 1863", Samuel Nicoll Benjamin, The Northwest Bastion, The Official Records | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Why I believe Gen. Humphreys sat out the attack

If you only read the Official Records, you would have to assume that Gen. Benjamin Grubb Humphreys, who took over the Mississippi Brigade after Gen. William Barksdale’s death at Gettysburg, was in the vanguard of the brigade’s two regiments which … Continue reading

Posted in Confederate Veteran Magazine, Gen. Benjamin Grubb Humphreys, The Official Records | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Official Records

When I first encountered the OR at the University of Texas undergraduate library, back in the early 1980s, I was amazed at how much shelf space it required. All one-hundred-twenty-eight volumes, including an index and an atlas. Sigh. Nowadays it’s … Continue reading

Posted in Soldier data bases, The Official Records | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment