Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A

James Dearing was born on April 25, 1840, at ""Otterburne"" near Altavista, Virginia. When his father died in 1843, Dearing was adopted by his uncle. In 1858, after graduating from Hanover Academy, a classical school near Richmond, Dearing entered the United States Military Acade...

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Main Author: Parker, William L.
Other Authors: History
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70538
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-705382021-05-05T05:40:48Z Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A Parker, William L. History Robertson, James I. Jr. Williamson, G. G. Jr. LD5655.V855 1969.P35 James Dearing was born on April 25, 1840, at ""Otterburne"" near Altavista, Virginia. When his father died in 1843, Dearing was adopted by his uncle. In 1858, after graduating from Hanover Academy, a classical school near Richmond, Dearing entered the United States Military Academy. In 1861, Dearing left West Peint to join the Confederate Army. He joined the Washington Artillery as second lieutenant and, in July, 1861, distinguished himself at the First Manassas. By April, 1862, he was a captain. With that rank, he fought in the Peninsula campaigns at the Second Manassas. Early in 1863, as mayor, Dearing received command of General George Pickett's artillery. Impressed by Dearing's ability at Gettysburg, Pickett transferred him to the cavalry and recommended his promotion to lieutenant colonel. In April, 1864, Dearing’s cavalry overwhelmed the Federals at Plymouth, North Carolina, earning Dearing a promotion to brigadier general. The Confederate attack against New Bern was interrupted when Dearing was ordered to Petersburg. For nine months Dearing defended Petersburg and its vital railroads. Early in 1865, Robert E. Lee gave Dearing command of the Laurel Brigade and recommended his promotion to major general. Before receiving the promotion, Deairing was mortally wounded near Farmville while covering Lee’s retreat toward Appomattox. On April 22, Dearing died at Lynchburg. He was buried at ""Avoca'' near Altavista. His body was later disinterred and reburied at Spring Hill Cemetery, Lynchburg. In March, 1863, Dearing had married Roxana Birchett. The couple had one child, Mary Lucretia. Master of Arts 2016-04-21T15:35:11Z 2016-04-21T15:35:11Z 1969 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70538 en OCLC# 38464049 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ii, 89 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1969.P35
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1969.P35
Parker, William L.
Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A
description James Dearing was born on April 25, 1840, at ""Otterburne"" near Altavista, Virginia. When his father died in 1843, Dearing was adopted by his uncle. In 1858, after graduating from Hanover Academy, a classical school near Richmond, Dearing entered the United States Military Academy. In 1861, Dearing left West Peint to join the Confederate Army. He joined the Washington Artillery as second lieutenant and, in July, 1861, distinguished himself at the First Manassas. By April, 1862, he was a captain. With that rank, he fought in the Peninsula campaigns at the Second Manassas. Early in 1863, as mayor, Dearing received command of General George Pickett's artillery. Impressed by Dearing's ability at Gettysburg, Pickett transferred him to the cavalry and recommended his promotion to lieutenant colonel. In April, 1864, Dearing’s cavalry overwhelmed the Federals at Plymouth, North Carolina, earning Dearing a promotion to brigadier general. The Confederate attack against New Bern was interrupted when Dearing was ordered to Petersburg. For nine months Dearing defended Petersburg and its vital railroads. Early in 1865, Robert E. Lee gave Dearing command of the Laurel Brigade and recommended his promotion to major general. Before receiving the promotion, Deairing was mortally wounded near Farmville while covering Lee’s retreat toward Appomattox. On April 22, Dearing died at Lynchburg. He was buried at ""Avoca'' near Altavista. His body was later disinterred and reburied at Spring Hill Cemetery, Lynchburg. In March, 1863, Dearing had married Roxana Birchett. The couple had one child, Mary Lucretia. === Master of Arts
author2 History
author_facet History
Parker, William L.
author Parker, William L.
author_sort Parker, William L.
title Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A
title_short Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A
title_full Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A
title_fullStr Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A
title_full_unstemmed Brigadier General James Dearing, C.S.A
title_sort brigadier general james dearing, c.s.a
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70538
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