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Custer's favorite horse Little Sorrel (also Old Sorrel) Stonewall Jackson: Jackson was fatally wounded while riding Little Sorrel at the Battle of Chancellorsville; Little Sorrel is buried on the Virginia Military Institute parade deck mere feet from Jackson's famous statue Lookout: Joseph Hooker: Named after the Battle of Lookout Mountain ...
3 Little Sorrel. 1 comment. 4 More Sorrel. 2 comments. 5 External links modified. 1 comment. Toggle the table of contents. Talk: List of horses of the American Civil War.
[78] His horse was named "Little Sorrel" (also known as "Old Sorrel"), a small chestnut gelding which was a captured Union horse from a Connecticut farm. [79] [80] He rode Little Sorrel throughout the war, and was riding him when he was shot at Chancellorsville. Little Sorrel died at age 36 and is buried near a statue of Jackson on the parade ...
Jubal Anderson Early (November 3, 1816 – March 2, 1894) was an American lawyer, politician and military officer who served in the Confederate States Army during the Civil War. [1]
Garrett's Miss Pawhuska (1946–1975) was a Quarter Horse broodmare who produced eight foals, three of which would become world champion race horses. [1] When she was a yearling , she was sold by her owner, although he had not really planned on selling her.
Little Read Wagon has also partnered with Ice Angels of Mosaic Community Church in Oklahoma City to distribute books and reading glasses. Former teacher's mission to educate continues with free ...
Huffman, Christi L. "They Earned a Place" Quarter Horse Journal March 1998 p. 68-75; Jennings, Jim "1992 Hall of Fame inductees" Quarter Horse Journal May 1992 p. 66-69, 147; Rusk, Rebecca "It Happened in 1989" Quarter Horse Journal January 1990 p. 68-69; Wohlfarth, Jenny "'97 Brings Eleven" Quarter Horse Journal March 1997 p. 64-67
It is a smaller edition of Keck's statue in Kansas City, Missouri. Kansas City. George Washington at Valley Forge, by Henry Shrady, Washington Park, 1906, this cast 1925. A replica of Shrady's statue in Brooklyn, New York City. J.C. Nichols Memorial Fountain, by Henri-Léon Gréber, Country Club Plaza, 1910.