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A Sampler of Civil
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| Military Background 
Portrait of the Rebel Colonel Mosby
January 21, 1865 page 45 (3-4)
January 21, 1865, page 43 (4)
John Singleton Mosby, long notorious as a rebel guerrilla,
was born in Virginia in 1832. Little is popularly known of his career before the war. In
1862 he was a Lieutenant in Lees army, and for his services in harassing our troops
encamped near Fredericksburg met with General Lees approval and was promoted Major.
In March, 1863, he captured General Stoughton at Fairfax Court House. He was wounded near
this same place in August of that year, and was unable previous to January, 1864, to
resume his official duties. Last August he was again wounded and put hors de combat
for two months, after which he again appeared in a raid on the Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad, for which he was made Lieutenant-Colonel. December 10 he was given the full rank
of Colonel. We give above an account, entitled "Two Days with Mosby," which, as
being substantially true, will prove very interesting to our readers. This rebel Colonel
has been the centre of a great deal of fabulous romance during the war. He has been
recently wounded again, and so seriously that his friends, it is reported, despair of his
recovery. |
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