Results for Robert E. Lee
Robert E. Lee
In loving memory of
Robert E. Lee
and to mark ...
Gen. Robert E. Lee
1807-1870
Commander-in-Chief
Confederate Army....
Robert E. Lee
1807 – 1870
Commander in Chief
Confe...
Robert E. Lee
Dixie Highway
In loving memory of
Robert E. Le...
Headquarters of Generals Robert E. Lee
“Stonewall” Jackson and Longstreet
Headquarters of G...
Gen. Robert E. Lee
Gen. Robert E. Lee with Longstreet’s Corps entered Hagerst...
General Robert E. Lee
A tribute to the memory of
General Robert E L...
Results for Robert E. Lee
Robert E. Lee
In loving memory of
Robert E. Lee
and to mark the route of the
Dixie Highway
“The shaft memorial and highway straight
attest his worth — he cometh to his own.”
— Littlefield —
Marker is at the intersection of U.S. 25 and S. Serpentine, ...
Gen. Robert E. Lee
1807-1870
Commander-in-Chief
Confederate Army.
The South's Idol
Marker is on East Main Street.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Robert E. Lee
1807 – 1870
Commander in Chief
Confederate States of America
1861 – 1865
Placed by
Julia Jackson Chapter No. 4
Children of the Confederacy
Marker is on Lee Circle near Howard Avenue.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Robert E. Lee
Dixie Highway
In loving memory of
Robert E. Lee
and to mark the route of the
Dixie Highway
“The shaft memorial and highway straight
attest his worth — he cometh to his own.”
— Littlefield —
Marker is on Hendersonville Road (U.S. 25), on the right ...
Headquarters of Generals Robert E. Lee
“Stonewall” Jackson and Longstreet
Headquarters of Generals Robert E. Lee, “Stonewall” Jackson, and Longstreet Sept. 6-9, 1862
Here was written the famous lost order No. 191 and the proclamation to the people of Maryland.
Marker is at the intersection of Urbana Pike (Maryland ...
Gen. Robert E. Lee
Gen. Robert E. Lee with Longstreet’s Corps entered Hagerstown Sept. 11, 1862 to make it a base for operations in Pennsylvania. On Sept. 14, 1862 this force hastened to the battle of South Mountain and then to the battlefield of ...
General Robert E. Lee
A tribute to the memory of
General Robert E Lee
"His monument is the Adoration of the South, his shrine is in every Southern Heart."
Thomas Nelson Page.
Erected 1935
By the Greenville Chapter and Fort Sumter
Chapter of the United Daughters of the
Confederacy of Greenville ...