Browse Items (216 total)
- Collection: Postwar North Carolina
Sort by:
Testimony of Josiah Turner Jr.
Josiah Turner Jr. was a high profile witness called upon by the Board of Managers and the prosecution during Gov. Holden’s impeachment. Born and raised in the town of Hillsboro in Orange County, he was a lawyer and editor that had been living in…
Testimony of William J. Murray in Holden's Impeachment Trial, 1871
William J. Murray was called upon by the Board of Managers in the prosecution of Gov. Holden regarding any matters of insurrection in Alamance County. William J. Murray was brother of Albert Murray, the sheriff and William himself served as deputy…
Tags: postwar
Amnesty Petition of Thomas G. Walton, July 13, 1865
Former Colonel of the Home Guard of the 8th Regiment, Thomas Walton, went to great lengths to explain his opposition to secession before the outbreak of hostilities. Walton explained that he had been an active member of the Whig Party, and had worked…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Theophelius H. Holmes, June 6, 1865
Former Confederate General Theophelius Holmes had been educated at West Point and resigned his commission in the US Army to serve the Confederacy. Thus, he was excluded under the third, fifth and eighth provisions of Johnson's Amnesty Proclamation of…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Robert D. Johnston, September 1, 1865
As a brigadier general, Robert Johnston commanded an infantry company under Beauregard at the Battle of Manassas, and was excluded from amnesty under the third provision. Johnston explained that he acted on a sense of duty because he believed North…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Henry E. Coleman, August 3, 1865
As much as former Colonel Henry Coleman worked to gain amnesty, he worked to gain sympathy. Coleman explained that he was a veteran of the battles of Gettysburg, Wilderness, Spotsylvania and others. He explained "I am very greatly wounded in so much…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Joseph W. Alexander, June 13, 1865
Former Confederate navy officer and Naval Academy graduate Joseph Alexander attempted to show in his amnesty petition that he was raised to believe that his primary allegiance was to his state. Inasmuch, he portrayed his participation in the…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Robert Vance, July 1865
Robert Vance was excluded under the third provision of Andrew Johnson's Amnesty Proclamation of 1865, and served as a brigadier general during the war. Vance endeavored to show that before Lincoln's call for troops to "suppress the insurrectionary…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Daniel Harvey Hill, July 1865
Daniel Harvey (D.H.) Hill found himself excluded from Presidential amnesty due to the fact that he had been educated at West Point, and served as Major General in the Confederate Army. Hill highlighted the fact that he had received commendation for…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Amnesty Petition of Richard B. Lee, June 12, 1865
Richard B. Lee was excluded from amnesty due to the fact that he resigned his commission in the US Army and went on to serve as Lieutenant Colonel in the Confederate Army. Lee underscored his meritorious service in the US Army prior to the Civil War,…
Tags: Amnesty, Military Authority, Officers, Veterans
Featured Item
David Blight, Race and Reunion (2001)

In his award-winning book, Race and Reunion, David Blight, a historian at Yale University, examines how Americans remembered the Civil War from the…