Mexican- American War and the Civil War.
Stonewall Jackson was a Virginian and his state had voted Confederate. At the time, he was an instructor at the Virginia Military Institute.
stonewall jackson
No, Seven Pines was where General Joseph E. Johnston was badly wounded and out of the fight for many months, to be replaced by Robert E. Lee. Stonewall was killed at Chancellorsville, possibly assassinated, in an incident of which there are so many versions that it can sound suspicious.
Thomas Stonewall Jackson had fought on the Confederacy, or the South.
He did not refuse. Thomas was not happy with this choice of battle, but that is what happens in a war. Can't pick the days you fight. He believed that it was God's will that they fight on Sunday.
The union
Stonewall Jackson was a Virginian and his state had voted Confederate. At the time, he was an instructor at the Virginia Military Institute.
The U.S Civil War.
No. Grant was conducting operations in Tennessee and Mississippi until July 1863. Stonewall was with Lee in the Army of Northern Virginia until he was killed in May 1863.
The Mexican War, and the American Civil War.
stonewall jackson
Thomas J "Stonewall" Jackson commanded a corps in Lee's Army of Northern Virginia.
No, Seven Pines was where General Joseph E. Johnston was badly wounded and out of the fight for many months, to be replaced by Robert E. Lee. Stonewall was killed at Chancellorsville, possibly assassinated, in an incident of which there are so many versions that it can sound suspicious.
Thomas Stonewall Jackson had fought on the Confederacy, or the South.
He did not refuse. Thomas was not happy with this choice of battle, but that is what happens in a war. Can't pick the days you fight. He believed that it was God's will that they fight on Sunday.
Yes - a quick and nimble mover, though less effective after the death of Stonewall Jackson, who was a vital part of the unbeatable Lee-Jackson partnership. He was also a psychological soldier, who would wrong-foot the enemy by refusing to fight on a field chosen by them.
Stonewall Jackson was an active member of the Confederate forces from the earliest battles in Virginia until he was accidentally killed by his own troops in a confused exchange of fire with Union soldiers. He fought on the Confederate side!