Robert E. Lee

NOUN
  1. American general who led the Confederate Armies in the American Civil War (1807-1870)
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How To Use Robert E. Lee In A Sentence

  • June 3, 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee, the father of my deceased colleague, assumed the command of the Army of Northern Virginia three days after the retiracy of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, caused by a wound received in the battle of Seven Pines. Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H. F. Lee (A Representative from Virginia) Delivered in the House of Representatives and in the Senate, Fifty-Second Congress, First Session
  • For example, James Longstreet's protest to Robert E. Lee on the infeasibility of Pickett's Charge is well-known.
  • General Robert E. Lee narrowly escaped defeat this battle and the lack of men caused him and his army to retreat back in to Virginia.
  • Three bloody days of fighting ended in the failure of the Confederate army, led by General Robert E. Lee, to invade the North.
  • The Confederates won the second battle of Bull Run, and the Union army failed to stop Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia from escaping after the bloody battle at Antietam Creek.
  • American Shopping Leads Companies to Bankruptcy appomattox courthouse, curly lambeau, general robert e. lee, hugh hefner, jenna jameson, rodney king, theobald boehm Five People Born on April 9 | myFiveBest
  • On June 3, 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee, the father of my deceased colleague, assumed the command of the Army of Northern Virginia three days after the retiracy of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, caused by a wound received in the battle of Seven Pines. Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H F Lee
  • The Confederates won the second battle of Bull Run, and the Union army failed to stop Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia from escaping after the bloody battle at Antietam Creek.
  • In other words, fate had brought him there, and the title ties in with Robert E. Lee being led into defeat at Pickett's Charge by success after success after success, until finally fate decided to hammer him down, and they did at Pickett's Charge. Stars in Their Courses: The Gettysburg Campaign
  • In the passage quoted, from the Library of America edition, there is one word that bears looking at: "impassible," referring to Robert E. Lee's face. Languagehat.com: IMPASSIBLE.
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