Private Harwood - who was born in 1834 - enlisted with Company K. of the 5th Virginia Cavalry on April 7th, 1862 in Petersburg, Virginia. However, he would die on July 17th, 1862 - likely from wounds received during the Seven Days Battles - and was buried in what would become Section C.
of the Confederate section. Posted before, but here’s the list again…..courtesy of firearmsguide.com Code Inspector A O.W. Aimsworth Colt M1873 S.A. .45 Revolvers 1873-1874 AAH Andrew A.
dr harwood morgan hill, Harwood Cdr., USN Ames Flask 1818-1846 AAJ Unknown M1903 Rifles 1930 AAW A.A. Whiste 1905-1906 AB A. Buckminister Sample... As he saw it, the job's administrative responsibilities didn't leave enough time for experimentation. Instead, the Navy Department made Captain Andrew A.
dr harwood morgan hill, Harwood ordnance chief. Harwood handled the administration and deferred to Dahlgren's expertise in R & D. " That brings us up to March 8th-9th of 1862 and the Battle of Hampton Roads. De Villiers led the regiment into west Virginia that summer but managed to get captured on during the Battle of Scarey Creek and imprisoned at Harwood Prison in Richmond, Virginia. In an editorial written by local newspaper editor Doug Harwood, it was reported that, "...when Stonewall Jackson's statue was being erected in 1891, an Englishman offered to pay for a monument to mark the grave of one of his slaves [sic. Jim Lewis].