Thomas Bragg was the Confederate attorney general had expressed many doubts about the wisdom of secession. He was a former Whig Party member and the national politics that broke up the Whigs, Bragg saw as a problem. He was sure that the South's rebellion was far too risky to take. Yet, he was loyal and accepted his appointment to the attorney general's position in Davis' cabinet.
The Rogues - 1964 Grave Doubts 1-28 was released on: USA: 28 March 1965
The Closer - 2005 Grave Doubts 3-2 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:12 USA:TV-14
I do not think his grave was moved. If so, it was not moved very far. He was given a more elaborate grave stone some 50 years after he died. He died during the Civil War and considered a traitor by the North, since he served in the Confederate Congress.
C.S.A. is an abbreviation that could be found on a military grave from the American Civil War era. It usually stands for the Confederate States of America.
The Closer - 2005 Grave Doubts - 3.2 was released on: USA: 25 June 2007 Germany: 9 April 2008 Japan: 16 August 2008 Hungary: 3 October 2008 Netherlands: 31 January 2009
He laid in his grave
It was only late in the US Civil War that Confederate President Jefferson Davis appointed Lieutenant General Robert E. Lee as what can be considered to be the general in chief of the Confederate military forces. Prior to that, Davis himself acted as the South's general in chief. Most historians believe this was grave error by Davis. Davis was much to involved with the daily operations of the war. The South would have been better served if he had filled the position as the Confederate Congress had authorized.
"Grave doubt" is defined as “a judge's state of mind when the matter is so evenly balanced that he feels himself in virtual equipoise as to the harmlessness of the error."
General Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general during the American Civil War, is buried in Lexington, Virginia. His burial site is located at the Washington and Lee University campus, where he served as president after the war. Lee's grave has become a significant historical site, attracting visitors interested in Civil War history and his legacy.
massive retalliation yo:)
According to a grave marker located in Columbus, Mississippi, Mrs. Canant was a Confederate volunteer nurse who was killed at the Battle of Shiloh. Her marker reads: " Mrs. Canant, Vol. Nurse, CSA."”See Sources and related links for details.
Many of the Titanic victims are buried in the Halifax Cemetery in Halifax,Nova Scotia,Canada. There are a couple of rows of them.