Inscription
Led army of Northern Virginia which included famed Hood's Texas Brigade. He said about them "I never ordered that brigade to hold a position that they did not hold it." "The enemy never sees the backs of my Texans." In the Battle of the Wilderness the Texans, seeing Lee set to lead the charge and fearing for his safety, halted, shouting, "General Lee to the rear," until he complied.
Lee once declined furloughs for the Texans for he needed their services. He considered them his best shock troops. About Lee's surrender a Texan said, "I'd rather have died than surrendered; but if Marse Bob thinks that is best...Marse Bob is bound to be right as usual." COLONEL ROBERT E LEE IN TEXAS 1857-1861 Robert E. Lee spent 25 months on the Texas frontier, proving and seasoning grounds for great army leaders in the impending Civil War.
With the 2nd U. S. Cavalry at Camp Cooper, he led a 1,600-mile scouting expedition into Indian country. He commanded the 2nd, first at San Antonio - leading the attempt to capture Mexican bandit Juan Cortina - next at Fort Mason. Lee learned how to adapt himself and his men to outdoor life and adverse conditions he later faced on battlefields.
Knowledge of the ways of his fellow officers who later held high ranks in both armies...
Location
Sources
More markers in Lee
First National Bank
Giddings, TX
Lee County's oldest banking institution.
Lee County
Giddings, TX
Located on Old San Antonio Road, on land surveyed in 1821 as part of the original colony of Moses and Stephen F. Austin.
Town of Lexington
Lexington, TX
Settled in 1837 in area then part of Burleson County; named for Massachusetts town where the American Revolution began.
Henry Prentice Redfield
Giddings, TX
Texas Soldier Henry Prentice Redfield (May 27, 1819 - February 27, 1900) Born Derry, N.H.; came to Texas, 1831.
Pioneer Publisher and Printer David Ervin Lawhon
Lexington, TX
(Buried 1/2 mile NW of here) Born in Tennessee on June 15, 1811.
