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The Men of Co. A 14th Infantry Regiment
Captain ------------ William Ingram Carter
-------------------- Charles M. Stuckey

1st Lieutenant ----- Robert Commander
-------------------- Nathan B. Mims
-------------------- John W. Harrell
-------------------- John E. Andrews

2nd Lieutenant ----- J. Henry Andrews
-------------------- Sidney Carter
-------------------- Addison M. Scarborough

Sergeant ----------- Alex F. Stuckey
-------------------- Samuel C. DuBose
-------------------- William B. Howell
-------------------- S. Mack Huggins
-------------------- W.J. Andrews
-------------------- John Morgan Carter
-------------------- John W. Jones

Corporals ---------- Gabriel C. Windham
-------------------- Theodore L. Carter
-------------------- John S. Bell
-------------------- John H. Land
-------------------- James A. Howell
-------------------- Thaddeus Patrick Raines
-------------------- J. Morgan Carter
-------------------- John W. Dubose
-------------------- William J. Andrews
-------------------- Edgar M. Ham
-------------------- William A. Gowdy
-------------------- Charles J. Andrews
-------------------- Richard Daniel Carter
-------------------- W. Caleb Christmas
-------------------- Samuel Robinson

Alexander, Bill M.
Alexander, John Wesley
Amerson, J.A.
Amerson, James - Killed at Gaines Mill.
Amerson, John D. - Died of disease at Camp Winder.
Amerson, W. Cooper
Anderson, James
Andrews, John E. (or John O.)
Andrews, R.E.
Andrews, Reddin - Died of disease at Columbia, SC.
Atkinson, James W.
Baker, Christopher C. - Died of disease, November 7, 1862, in Va.
Baker, Evander - Killed at Gettysburg.
Baker, Ellis J. - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Bass, Jesse - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Beasly, Joseph F. - Killed at Chancellorsville.
Bell, Ephraim - Died of disease near Culpepper, Va.
Bell, J.S.
Bell, R.W.
Bell, W. Nipper
Blume, John H.
Board, William H. - Died of disease at Camp Gregg.
Board, Stephen S.
Carter, Giles - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Commander, James E. - Died of Disease at Petersburg.
Commander, Joseph G. - Died of wounds received at Gettysburg.
Darity, J.
Deese, John - Died of disease near Winchester.
Dougherty, James (Dority ?) - Died of disease at Lynchburg, Va.
Dubose, A.S.
Dubose, Andrew E.
Dubose, Edward P.
Dubose, Emory W.
Dubose, Julius J. - Died of disease at Camp Butler.
Dubose, S.C.
Emerson, J.
Fields, Augustus A.
Fields, Calvin
Fields, P. Columbus - Died of wounds received at Gettysburg.
Fields, Ransom J.
Garner, Wesley
Garner, William - Killed at Ox Ford.
Haguewood, W. Henry (Hagood?)
Haguewood, Whitfield (Hagood?)
Haigler, Joshua
Ham, E.M.
Ham, James A. - Died of disease at Potaligo, SC.
Hancock, John - Killed at Gaines Mill.
Harris, J.C.G.
Harris, Theodore J.
Hooten, Samuel C. - Died of disease at Potaligo, SC.
Hudson, Evan
Hudson, Thomas G.
Huggins, Hillary L. - Wounded at Spotsylvania.
Huggins, Samuel S.
Hurse, J. Edmond
Hurse, Simeon
Hunt, J.E.
Ivey, Joel
Jones, James W. - Killed at Gettysburg.
Jones, Joshua W.
Jordan, Noah
Kilpatrick, Elias F.
Knotts, Elisha
Large, Francis Marion
Layton, James
Lucas, Joseph
Marx, Jacob
McClendon, Simeon A. - Transferred to McIntosh's Battery.
McCoy, Robert
McKay, Robert - Died of disease at Camp Butler.
Mims, David J.
Mims, James P.
Mims, J.W.
Mims, Peter
Mims, Robert M.
Mims, William W. - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Moore, William J.
Mox, G.
Norris, James R.
Oxendine, Warren (or Warner) - Killed at Spotsylvania.
Parnell, George W.
Parnell, Harman G. - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Parnell, J. Ellis
Parnell, James H. - Killed at Ox Ford.
Parnell, J. Robert
Parnell, W. Capers

Raines, Thaddeus Patrick
Wounded at:
Shepardstown Ford 9-20-1862
minne ball in Hip
Deep Bottom 7-28-1864
left hand, amputated 3 fingers
Five Forks 4-2-1865
arm

Randolph, Addison
Reynolds, A.
Reynolds, Elijah
Reynolds, William Chapel - Killed at Gettysburg.
Robinson, Samuel
Rose, John A.
Sanders, William - Died of disease at Richmond, Va.
Scaff, James J.
Scaff, Riley - Died of disease near Petersburg, Va.
Scarborough, George P. - Wounded at Petersburg.
Scoffield, J.I.
Severance, Elias J.
Severance, George W.
Severance, Joshua J.W. - Killed near Petersburg, Va.
Severance, Joseph
Severance, Paul A.
Skinner, James R. - Died of disease at Chimborazo hospital.
Smith, Reddick K.
Smith, Richard
Stedham, L.D.
Stedham, S.D.
Stuckey, John W. - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Thomas, Robert E. - Transferred to Company 'F', 8th Infantry.
Truett, James A. - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Truett, John D. - Killed at Gettysburg.
Walker, F.M.
Walker, J.T.
Walker, Marion - Killed at Ox Ford.
Watford, A.M.
Watford, J. Nelson
Watford, J.R.
Watford, John
Watford, Mitchell - Wounded at Wilderness, Va.
Watford, Moses
Welch, Richard - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Wilder, James T.
Wilkins, John
Wilson, R.K.
Wilson, Robert L.
Windham, C. McKibben
Windham, E.
Windham, H.L. (or H.J.)
Windham, John P.
Windham, Moses G. - Died April 17, 1863 at Camp Gregg.
Wisdom, James P.
Woodford, P.R.
Wright, Elias
Wright, John - Wounded at Gettysburg.
Wright, Pinkney - Died of disease at Camp Gregg.


South Carolina State Flag
Asked by the Revolutionary Council of Safety in the fall of 1775 to design a flag for the use of South Carolina troops, Col. William Moultrie chose a blue which matched the color of their uniforms and a crescent which reproduced the silver emblem worn on the front of their caps. The palmetto tree was added later to represent Moultrie's heroic defense of the palmetto-log fort on Sullivan's Island against the attack of the British fleet on June 28, 1776.
 



South Carolina Statehouse Cam, just not the same anymore


General Maxcy Gregg
Birth: Aug. 1, 1814
Death: Dec. 15, 1862

Brigadier General, CSA, Civil War. Fought in the Mexican War. Commissioned as Brigadier General on December 14,1861. Fought in the following Civil War battles: Cedar Mountain, Second Bull Run (Manassas), Harpers Ferry, and Antietam (Sharpsburg). Gregg was mortally wounded during the battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia, December 13, 1862.
Cause of death: Killed in battle

Buried at Elmwood Cemetary
Columbia, South Carolina


In Memorium (1962-2000)
Thaddeus Patrick Raines Jr. was one of South Carolinas most outspoken supporters of keeping the Confederate flag flying above South Carolinas capitol.
 
   
 

Dedicated to Darlingtons "Lynch Creek Guards"