You probably mean Robert E. Lee.
He was a regular US officer, whom Lincoln wanted to appoint as an army commander and likely future General-in-Chief.
Lee said he would have to wait to see whether his home-state of Virginia voted Confederate - which he hoped it wouldn't, as he disapproved of secession.
However, the vote went that way, and Lee resigned to join the Confederates.
Robert E Lee
the general who commanded American forces in South Vietnam.
Henderson Field was the airfield on Guadalcanal used by United States Marine, Navy and Army forces in the war in the South Pacific. I was named for Marine Major Lofton Henderson, commanding officer of VMSB-241 who was killed in action at the Battle of Midway.
The South had a significant advantage early in the war due to the high fraction of experienced senior officers from the South who chose to side with their native states. Almost 1/3 of the military officers of the US Army resigned their commissions to join the South and the percentage was even higher among the more senior officers of the Army. It could be argued that most of the best commanders in the US Army were from the South. Even the most capable Northern generals were only considered average compared to the brilliance of some of those commanding the Confederate forces. Note that the President of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis was a graduate of the US Military Academy. Early in the war a higher fraction of the Confederate rank and file soldiers had previous military experience than the Union forces. These advantages were a major factor in the many early successes of the Confederate forces. As the war continued, Northern commanders gained more experience and improved in skill while the South lost many of those highly skilled military leaders as battlefield casualties. By the end of the war, due to attrition, the advantage had shifted in favor of the Union forces; although the South probably still had the better top commanders, the North had significantly more soldiers and the experience gap in the enlisted men had been closed.
Gen. Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard for the South and Major Robert Anderson for the Union.
Robert E Lee
You probably mean Robert E. Lee. He was a regular US officer, whom Lincoln wanted to appoint as an army commander and likely future General-in-Chief. Lee said he would have to wait to see whether his home-state of Virginia voted Confederate - which he hoped it wouldn't, as he disapproved of secession. However, the vote went that way, and Lee resigned to join the Confederates.
USA Gen's Harkins, Westmoreland, Abrams.
Robert E. Lee
Albert Sydney Johnson died in battle at Shiloh. Joseph E. Johnston received a wound at the Battle of Seven Pines that put him out of commission. Davis asked his military advisor, Robert E. Lee, to take command of the forces fighting in Virginia. After Winfield Scott offered him command of the Union forces, Lee had resigned his commission in the U.S. Army at the onset of the war, because he did not relish the idea of fighting against his native state, after Virginia seceded from the Union.
Robert E. Lee
Robert E. Lee
Pierre Gustave Toutant de Beauregard was commanding the South in the Battle at Fort Sumter. Beauregard had received permission from Jefferson Davis to assault Fort Sumter.
There is neither a Loyalty Island nor an east Loyalty Island in Australia. The Loyalty Islands are east to Australia. The Loyalty Islands are Lifou, Mare and another one in the South Pacific - but they are not a part of Australia.
The commander of the British forces in the south was Benedict Arnold. He led his forces during the 1780s.
Robert Edward Lee for the South(Confederacy) and George Gordon Meade for the North(Union).
The General in command of the of the British forces in the South was General Cornwallis