Collett Leventhorpe, the English Confederate
The Life of a Civil War General, 1815–1889
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About the Book
This is the story of Collett Leventhorpe (1815–1889), an Englishman and former captain in the 14th Regiment of Foot. Leventhorpe came to North Carolina about 1843, settled there, and later served the Confederacy as a colonel in the 34th and 11th N.C. and brigadier general commanding the Home Guard in eastern North Carolina. Though he trained as a physician at the College of Charleston in the late 1840s, he never practiced and was a restless man, endlessly in search of fortune—before the war in the gold fields of North Carolina and Georgia, and after it in the pursuit of lost estates, art treasures and inventions. But he excelled first and foremost as a Confederate soldier. As a field commander he was never defeated in battle, and his record was marred only by his own rejection of a much deserved but very late promotion to CSA brigadier. He lies buried in the beautiful Happy Valley section of Caldwell County.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
J. Timothy Cole and Bradley R. Foley
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 300
Bibliographic Info: 35 photos, appendices, notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2007
pISBN: 978-0-7864-2649-2
eISBN: 978-0-7864-8324-2
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments v
Preface 1
1. English Roots: Ancestry, Youth and the 14th Foot, ca. 1600–1842 7
2. To America: Rutherfordton and the Quest for “Eldorado,” 1843–1861 34
3. “The Best Drilled Regiment,” 1861–1862 61
4. Pettigrew, Pennsylvania and Prison, 1863–1864 90
5. In the Service of His State, 1864–1865 136
6. Post-Bellum Years: Wanderings, Reconstruction Politics and the Seeker of Fortunes, 1865–1889 162
7. Epilog: A Confederate Hero’s Day, May 11, 1896 204
Appendices
I. The Leventhorpes of East London 207
II. Some Courts-Martial During Col. Leventhorpe’s Command of the 11th NC 210
III. Regimental Orders for Changes in the Cape Fear District Command, September, 1862 220
IV. Personal Effects of Four Men Killed at the Battle of White Hall, December 16, 1862 223
V. Poems by General Leventhorpe 226
VI. “General Collett Leventhorpe,” an Address by Col. Edmund Jones, Raleigh, May 11, 1896 232
Chapter Notes 241
Bibliography 273
Index 285
Book Reviews & Awards
“well researched and written, this book is the finest to date on Collett Leventhorpe. It contributes significantly to the scholarship on North Carolina during the Civil War…well worth reading”—The North Carolina Historical Review.