yes
Fight.
Jesse James rode with Quantrill's Raiders, a paramilitary guerilla group of Confederate sympathizers who pillaged and killed along the Kansas and Missouri border towns. After learning his trade with Quantrill, he and his brother along with their cousins continued in this occupation after the war. They specialized in banks and trains.
John Pope was a career soldier and served with the army Topographical Engineers.
During the US Civil War James Longstreet was a general in the Confederate Army.
James Ewell Brown Stuart was a career soldier. He served in the US Army from the time of his graduation from West Point in 1854 until the beginning of the US Civil War in 1861. He then served the Confederacy until his death on May 12, 1864 at the Battle of Yellow Tavern, Virginia.
The book, The Journal Of James Edmond Pease, A Civil War Union Soldier, was written by Jim Murphy. The book is about a 16 yr old soldier.
Jesse James' mother, Zerelda Cole James, lived in several places throughout her life, primarily in Missouri. After the Civil War, she settled in the town of Kearney, Missouri, where she raised her children, including Jesse and Frank James. Her home life was marked by the tumult of the times, as her family faced hardships and conflicts stemming from the war and its aftermath.
James Garfield.
The book "Jesse Bowman: A Union Boy's War Story" is set during the American Civil War. It follows the story of Jesse Bowman, a young Union soldier, as he navigates the challenges and hardships of war. The setting includes battlefields, military camps, and the social and political climate of the Civil War era.
Yes, he was. He and his brother were so-called "Bushwhackers," men sympathetic to the cause of the Confederacy, who engaged in guerrilla warfare during the period from 1861-1865. Jesse James participated in a number of attacks against Union soldier; some of these attacks were quite brutal, most notably the Centralia (Missouri) Massacre in 1864, in which 24 unarmed Union men were captured and then executed.
'Reb' is a three letter word for a civil war soldier.
Davis served as Secretary of War in the administration of President Franklin Pierce. He was also a senator representing he state of Mississippi, and a professional soldier.