General Beauregard was a Southern general.
He was a General for the Confederacy during the Civil War. He was also involved in the Mex-American War. Actually, Pierre Gustave Toutant-Beauregard was the general who fired on Ft. Sumter, the action that started the Civil War. From Louisiana, Beauregard was a West Point graduate. A member of the engineer corps, he was sent to Mexico and fought with distinction at many of the major battles of the Mexican War. He resigned his commission with the Army of the United States in February of 1861. After capturing Ft. Sumter, Beauregard went on to command at the First Battle of Manassas (Bull Run), at Shiloh and at Petersburg, Virginia. He was in charge of the defense of Charleston, S.C. and the Military District of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. He commanded the forces in South Carolina and Georgia that were trying to stop Sherman on his March to the Sea and was joint commander with Joe Johnston against Sherman in North Carolina, where they finally surrendered their forces to Sherman in April of 1865.
(South) Joseph E. Johnston Robert E.Lee T.J. "Stonewall" Jackson P.G.T. Beauregard Braxton Bragg Bedford Forrest (North) U.S. Grant W.T. Sherman George Thomas George McLellan George Meade Phil Sheridan
The Battle of Fort Sumter, 12 April 1861, was the first combat of the Civil War in the United States. The fort, which was in Federal hands, was bombarded by Confederate artilley under the command of Pierre Beauregard. The fort's commander, Major Anderson surrendered after 30 hours of artillery barage. There was one fatality.
Robert E. Lee, J. E. B. Stuart, Joseph Johnson, Stonewall Jackson, P. G. T. Beauregard, Nathan Bedford Forrest, James Longstreet, George Pickett, John S. Mosby, Patrick Clebourne, John Bell Hood, Albert Johston, John C. Breckenridge, Ambrose Hill, John Morgan, Braxton Bragg, William Barksdale, Jubal Early, Richard Ewell, Lewis Armistead, Admiral Semmes are the most well known. There are a half dozen, or more, others not as well known.
The Confederacy Jefferson Davis P.G.T Beauregard Joseph E. Johnston Robert E. Lee THE UNION Abraham Lincoln Winfield Scoot George B. Mc Cellan Henry Wager Halleck
The cast of Pierre of the North - 1914 includes: Thomas Commerford Eleanor Kahn as The Child Richard Travers as Pierre Vignault
He was a General for the Confederacy during the Civil War. He was also involved in the Mex-American War. Actually, Pierre Gustave Toutant-Beauregard was the general who fired on Ft. Sumter, the action that started the Civil War. From Louisiana, Beauregard was a West Point graduate. A member of the engineer corps, he was sent to Mexico and fought with distinction at many of the major battles of the Mexican War. He resigned his commission with the Army of the United States in February of 1861. After capturing Ft. Sumter, Beauregard went on to command at the First Battle of Manassas (Bull Run), at Shiloh and at Petersburg, Virginia. He was in charge of the defense of Charleston, S.C. and the Military District of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. He commanded the forces in South Carolina and Georgia that were trying to stop Sherman on his March to the Sea and was joint commander with Joe Johnston against Sherman in North Carolina, where they finally surrendered their forces to Sherman in April of 1865.
The city of Pierre is IN South Dakota.
north daokota
Pierre is the capital city in the U.S. state of South Dakota.
Pierre Duchaussois has written: 'The Grey Nuns in the far north (1867-1917)'
The cast of Pierre of the North - 1913 includes: Hobart Bosworth as Pierre Dorothy Davenport as Mary McKenzie Al Ernest Garcia as Baptiste Herbert Rawlinson James Robert Chandler
Pierre Collings died on December 21, 1937, in North Hollywood, California, USA of pneumonia.
Lamont Pierre was born on November 14, 1983, in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, USA.
Bill Pierre has written: 'North Island main trunk' -- subject(s): History, Railroads
The capital of North Dakota is Bismarck, and the capital of South Dakota is Pierre.
Pierre Tetreault has written: 'An investigation of possible constraints for the definition of the l988 North American height network'