ECU Libraries Catalog

Roswell S. Ripley paper, 1862.

Physical mediumpaper handwritten.
Abstract The collection consists of a seven page report , dated July 11, 1862, that was prepared by Brigadier General Ripley and sent to Major J. W. Ratchforde, adjutant to Major General D. H. Hill. Ripley commanded the Fifth Brigade in D. H. Hill's division. The battle action described in the report recounts in detail the activities of Ripley's brigade in the Seven Days' Battles (Peninsular Campaign, June 25 - July 1, 1862) in which General Robert E. Lee dislodged the Union Army under General McClellan from its positions before Richmond. Ripley recounts the movement of his troops across the Chickahominy River to support A. P. Hill's division, then holding a position on the Mechanicsville Road near Ellison's Mill. Battle action at Mechanicsville, Ellison's Mill, and Malvern Hill is described. Of particular interest is Ripley's accounting of battle losses and his comments on the deaths of Colonel Montfort S. Stokes, Commander of the 1st N.C. Infantry, and Gaston Meares, Commander of the 3rd N.C. Infantry.
Cite as Roswell S. Ripley Paper, #49, East Carolina Manuscript Collection, East Carolina University.
Acquisitions source Joyner- 1 item; Joyner Library, East Carolina University; Greenville, N.C.; transfer; Mar. 18, 1968.
Biographical noteGeneral Roswell S. Ripley, a native of Ohio, graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1843 and served in the Mexican and Seminole Wars. Subsequent to leaving army service, he settled in South Carolina, where he was a businessman and also active in the state militia. He was named Major of South Carolina ordnance in 1860. As a lieutenant colonel, he commanded the reconditioned forts, Moultrie and Sumter. In 1861, he was appointed brigadier general, C.S.A. After serving with Pemberton in South Carolina, Ripley was a brigade commander in the Army of Northern Virginia. Wounded at Antietam, he returned to South Carolina as commander of the 1st Artillery District. After the fall of Charleston, in 1864, Ripley joined the Army of the West at Bentonville. After Bentonville, he left the United States for Britain where he stayed for a number of years. Ripley died in New York in 1887.

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner Manuscript Collection #49 - DOES NOT CIRCULATE. ✔ Available Request Material