I believe with the short research I've done, and after analyzing it all, that JEB Stuart was indeed a confederate.
No, Sir. He was a Confederate cavalry leader.
ANSWER Confederate General James Ewell Brown Stuart
JEB is actually a contraction of James Ewell Brown the full name of the Confederate cavalry commander Jeb Stuart.
Yes, Confederate General Jeb Stuart owned slaves. Historical records indicate that he had several enslaved individuals who worked on his estate and in his household. Stuart's ownership of slaves was not uncommon among Southern gentry at the time, reflecting the broader societal norms and economic structures of the antebellum South.
Jeb Stuart - writer - was born in 1956.
Jeb did not support the Union. He was a Confederate general.
No, Sir. He was a Confederate cavalry leader.
JEB Stuart.
In early battles around Richmond, Stuart guided Jackson's corps into position on the left flank and later led the attack that drove Gen. George B. McClellan back from the gates of the Confederate capitol. Source: "Jeb Stuart and the Confederate Defeat at Gettysburg" by Robinson.
ANSWER Confederate General James Ewell Brown Stuart
JEB is actually a contraction of James Ewell Brown the full name of the Confederate cavalry commander Jeb Stuart.
James Ewell Brown "Jeb" Stuart (February 6, 1833 – May 12, 1864) was an American soldier from Virginia and a Confederate States Army general during the American Civil War.
I believe it was Jeb Stuart, confederate cavalry officer who scouted a great deal for General Lee
union cavalry was under John Buford confederate cavalry was under Jeb Stuart, although they were not present for much of the battle, much to the detriment of the confederates.
This small battle took place in Virginia on October 13, 1863. It was a Union victory and Confederate General JEB Stuart escaped capture by hiding in a ravine.
Jeb Stuart Rosebrook goes by Stuart.
On July 3, 1863, four artillery shots by JEB Stuart's batteries were to inform General Robert E. Lee that Stuart's cavalry was in place for its assault on Union defenses.