Jenkins, Major John
Maj. John Jenkins was the commander of the 3rd South Carolina Cavalry Regiment.
REF: http://www.awod.com/gallery/probono/cwchas/williamw.html
Jenkins, Brig. Gen. Micah (1839 - 6 MAY 1864)
Brigadier-General Micah Jenkins was born on Edisto island in 1839. After his graduation at the
South Carolina military academy, at the head of his class, he with the co-operation of his
classmate, Asbury Coward, founded the King's Mountain military school in 1855. His military
genius was valuable in the first organization of troops in 1861, and he was elected colonel of the
Fifth regiment, with which he went to Virginia, in the brigade of Gen. D. R. Jones. In the latter
part of 1861 he was in command of that brigade, and had grown greatly in favor with his division
commander, General Longstreet. Longstreet proposed to begin the reorganization,
a matter approached with much misgiving, in this brigade, and he declared that he hoped to hold
every man in it if Jenkins could be promoted brigadier-general. "Besides being much liked by his
men, Colonel Jenkins is one of the finest officers of this army," Longstreet wrote. Beauregard
also added his approval to this recommendation. Still in the rank of colonel, Palmetto
sharpshooters, he commanded R. H. Anderson's brigade in the battles of Williamsburg and
Seven Pines, and was warmly commended by Longstreet and D. H. Hill and by J. E. B. Stuart,
whom he supported at Fort Magruder. He was again distinguished at Gaines' Mill, and at Fray-
ser's Farm, having been ordered to silence a battery, Longstreet supposing he would use his
sharpshooters alone, he threw forward his brigade and captured the guns, bringing on the battle.
July 22, 1862, he was promoted brigadier-general, and continuing in command of the same
brigade, participated in the battles of August 29th and 30th, Second Manassas, and was severely
wounded. He was on duty again at the battle of Fredericksburg and during the Suffolk campaign,
his division now being commanded by General Pickett, and was on the Blackwater under Gen.
D. H. Hill, during the Gettysburg campaign. When Longstreet was sent to the assistance of Bragg
at Chattanooga, Jenkins' brigade was transferred to Hood's division, and reached the field of
Chickamauga after the battle. During the investment of Chattanooga he commanded the attack
upon the Federal reinforcements arriving under Hooker, and then accompanied Longstreet in the
Knoxville campaign, commanding Hood's division. He took a conspicuous part in the operations
in east Tennessee, and then, early in 1864, returned to Northern Virginia. Field was now in
charge of the division, and Jenkins led his famous old brigade to battle on May 6th, the second
day of the Wilderness fighting, when the splendid veterans of the First corps arrived
in time to check the current of threatened disaster. As he rode by the side of
Longstreet, he said to his chief, "I am happy. I have felt despair for the cause for some months,
but now I am relieved, and feel assured that we will put the enemy across the Rapidan before
night." Immediately afterward, by the mistaken fire of another body of Confederates, he and
Longstreet were both wounded, Jenkins mortally. General Longstreet has written of him: "He was
one of the most estimable characters of the army. His taste and talent were for military service.
He was intelligent, quick, untiring, attentive, zealous in discharge of duty, truly faithful to official
obligations, abreast with the foremost in battle, and withal a humble, noble Christian. In a
moment of highest earthly hope, he was transported to serenest heavenly joy; to that life beyond
that knows no bugle call, beat of drum or clash of steel. May his beautiful spirit, through the
mercy of God, rest in peace ! Amen !"
Johnson, James B. T. ( - 21 APR 1865)
James B. T. Johnson, is listed on a tablet of Confederate Dead
at Orangeburg Courthouse. I don't know if he was injured in the Orangeburg
skirmish, or later on near Bentonville. His date of death is listed on his
gravestone as April 21, 1865. The Confederate record at the Archives in Columbia, seems to be incomplete.
He was in Co B, 2nd Regt, SC Artillery. The last entry in his record is for Nov & Dec 1864 where it says he was absent because he had been detailed
as reg ambulance driver by order of Lt Col Brown on Aug 15, 1863. He lived on the north branch of the Edisto River near Beaver Creek.
REF: EMAIL from Beverly Johnson Chisolm (chisolm@aug.com)