Civil War General

Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter

Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter
Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter

Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter   Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter

This is a framed, original signed letter by Confederate General, Roger A Pryor. It comes with information papers and a photo of the item(see all photos). This would make a great addition to any Civil War collection. Here's some information on Pyror.

In early 1861, Pryor agitated for immediate succession in Virginia, but the state convention did not act. He went to Charleston in April, to urge an immediate attack on Fort Sumter. Pryor asserted this would cause Virginia to secede.

On April 12, he and Sara accompanied the last Confederate party to the fort before the bombardment (but stayed in the boat) Afterward, while waiting at Fort. Johnson, he was offered the opportunity to fire the first shot.

But he declined, saying, I could not fire the first gun of the war. Pryor almost became the first casualty of the Civil War - while visiting Fort Sumter as an emissary, he assumed a bottle of potassium iodide in the hospital was medicinal whiskey and drank it; his mistake was realized in time for Union doctors to pump his stomach and save his life. In 1861, Pryor was re-elected to his Congressional seat, but, Virginia declaring secession meant he never took his seat. In this period, several states including Virginia elected U.

Representatives in the early part of odd years. In that period, Congress generally met late in the year.

He served in the provisional Confederate Congress in 1861, and also in the first regular Congress. (1862) under the Confederate Constitution.

He entered the Confederate army. As colonel of the 3rd Virginia Infantry Regiment. He was promoted to brigadier general on April 16, 1862. His brigade fought in the Peninsula Campaign and at Second Manassas, where it became detached in the swirling fighting and temporarily operated under Stonewall Jackson.

Pryor's command initially consisted of the 2nd Florida, 14th Alabama, 3rd Virginia, and 14th Louisiana. During the Seven Days Battles, the 1st Coppens. Louisiana Zouave Battalion was temporarily attached to it.

Afterwards, the Louisianans departed, and Pryor received two brand-new regiments: the 5th and 8th Florida Infantry. As a consequence, it became known as "The Florida Brigade". At Antietam on September 17, 1862, he assumed command of Anderson's Division in Longstreet's Corps when Maj Gen Richard H Anderson was wounded. Pryor proved inept as a division commander, and Union troops flanked his position, causing them to fall back in disorder.

As a result, he did not gain a permanent higher field command from the Confederate president. Following his adequate performance at the Battle of Deserted House, later in 1863 Pryor resigned his commission and his brigade was broken up, its regiments being reassigned to other commands.

In August of that year, he enlisted as a private and scout in the 3rd Virginia Cavalry Regiment under General Fitzhugh Lee. Pryor was captured on November 28, 1864, and confined in Fort Lafayette in New York as a suspected spy. CSA War Clerk and diarist, John B. Jones, mentioned Pryor in his April 9, 1865, entry from Richmond, VA, Roger A. Pryor is said to have remained voluntarily in Petersburg, and announces his abandonment of the Confederate States cause.

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Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter   Confederate General Roger A Pryor framed signed letter