FULL STANDING CDV OF CONFEDERATE GENERAL JOHN PEGRAM

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Originally $4,275.00

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Item Code: 846-507

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Image shows the General posed leaning against a tall half column. He wears a light-colored double-breasted frock coat with dark trousers and holds a dark low crowned cap in his hand.

Contrast and clarity are very good. Paper has light to moderate surface oxidation from age and storage but this in no way hurts the image. Mount has a partially obscured photographer’s imprint in the bottom right corner that reads (BEN)DANN BROS. (BA)LTO. The letters in parentheses have been marred by a slight loss of surface finish.

Reverse is blank but for a pencil ID that reads “PEGRAM.” There is also some collector information in pencil at bottom.

John Pegram was born in Petersburg, Virginia, January 24, 1832.  He was appointed a cadet from Virginia to the United States Military Academy, and was graduated in 1854, with promotion to brevet second lieutenant of dragoons.

He served on frontier duty, first at Fort Tejon, California, and afterward at Fort Riley, Kansas, where he was commissioned second lieutenant of dragoons, and at Forts Lookout and Randall, Dakota Territory.

His duties in the west were relieved for a time in 1857, by assignment as assistant instructor of cavalry.  Promoted first lieutenant of the Second Dragoons, he became adjutant of that regiment, and resumed his frontier service until 1858, when he was given leave of absence for two years for a tour of Europe.

On his return he continued in the United States Army until May 10, 1861, when he resigned.

He was commissioned captain in the Confederate cavalry and was promoted rapidly to higher grades.  As lieutenant-colonel he participated in the operations of General Garnett's command about Beverly in western Virginia in the summer of 1861, and when confronted by the Federal forces in overwhelming numbers under McClellan and Rosecrans, Pegram was entrusted by Garnett with the command of one of the two bodies of his divided command.

A rear attack by Rosecrans compelled him to withdraw after a gallant fight, from Rich Mountain, and two days later he was compelled to surrender with half his command.

After his return to the army, he was assigned to the staff of General Bragg at Tupelo, Mississippi as chief of engineers, July, 1862, and later became chief of staff of Gen. E. Kirby Smith, in command in east Tennessee.  In that capacity he participated in the Kentucky campaign and the battle of Richmond, where his services were gratefully recognized in the report of the general commanding.

In November he was promoted brigadier-general and assigned to the command of a cavalry brigade of Tennesseans in Smith's army.  With his brigade he participated in the battle of Murfreesboro, and subsequently was upon outpost duty and various active operations until the battle of Chickamauga, where he commanded a division of Forrest's cavalry corps.

Subsequently he was transferred to the army of Northern Virginia and the infantry service, being given command of a brigade in Early's Division of the Second Corps, composed of the Thirteenth, Thirty-first, Forty-ninth, Fifty second and Fifty-eighth Virginia regiments.

With this gallant body of veterans, he was in the campaign from the Rapidan to the James, and was particularly distinguished during the second day of the fight in the Wilderness, when his brigade repelled the persistent assaults of the Federals, determined to turn the flank of Ewell's Corps.

In command of Early's Division he took part in the campaign against Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley in the fall of 1864, and after the return of these forces to the Petersburg lines he was promoted major-general and continued in command of the division, a part of Gordon's Corps, throughout the winter.

On February 6, 1865, he moved from camp to reconnoiter and was attacked by the enemy in heavy force on Hatcher's Run.  His men were pressed back in spite of a brave resistance until reinforced by the division of C. A. Evans, when the enemy was in turn forced to retire.

After meeting a second check the Confederates reformed and charged again, driving the Federals, and in this moment of success General Pegram fell mortally wounded.  He is buried in Richmond’s Hollywood Cemetery.

Ex-Bill Turner collection.  [ad] [ph:L]

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