Woodworth, pp. Mississippi state legislator, 1850–1854, state senator, 1856–1862. Promoted to brigadier general, CSA, after his death on March 21, 1862, from wounds received at Pea Ridge, March 7, 1862, close to old wound. Brigadier general, North Carolina Militia, May 27, 1861. Wounded at Williamsburg, Second Manassas. Commonwealth attorney, judge, Virginia legislator, lieutenant governor of Virginia. 1st Virginia Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, colonel, July 16, 1861. Ordered to intercept David Hunter's raid in Shenandoah Valley. But more importantly, it required him to replan his spring offensive, and instead of an amphibious landing at his preferred target of Urbanna, he chose the Virginia Peninsula, between the James and York Rivers, as his avenue of approach toward Richmond. Sherman and Johnston corresponded frequently, and they met for friendly dinners in Washington whenever Johnston traveled there.

3rd Louisiana Infantry, colonel, May 11, 1861. Command of military prisons east of the Mississippi in 1864. On the Northern side, McClellan was publicly embarrassed when it was revealed that the Confederate position had not been nearly as strong as he had portrayed. Elected to Virginia House of Delegates, 1849, Virginia Senate, 1859. 15th Georgia Infantry: colonel, January 1863. Fought in Jackson's Valley Campaign of 1862.

In Vicksburg campaign with Joseph E. Johnston. 8th Virginia Infantry Regiment, colonel, May 8, 1861. Johnston felt that since he was the senior officer to leave the U.S. Army and join the Confederacy he should not be ranked behind Samuel Cooper, Albert Sidney Johnston, and Robert E. Lee. Resigned as 1st lieutenant, brevet captain and assistant adjutant general. Bragg achieved a significant victory against Rosecrans in the Battle of Chickamauga (September 19–20), but he was defeated by Ulysses S. Grant in the Battles for Chattanooga in November. Resigned as brigadier general, January 10, 1864. Almost the last Confederate general to surrender on May 26, 1865. Brigadier general of Missouri State Guard, July 4, 1861– March 21, 1862. Conducted a series of raids in Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio.

He died of pneumonia 10 days after attending Sherman's funeral in the pouring rain. Detailed to lead troops against Union left at the Wilderness. Lawyer, Dyersburg. 1st Georgia Infantry, colonel, April 13, 1861. 3rd Battalion Arkansas Infantry, major, July 15, 1861. Captain and aide to Beauregard, April 11, 1861– June 1861. 5th Alabama Infantry, major, May 5, 1861. North Carolina Militia, 2nd lieutenant, 1861. Mortally wounded during Pickett's Charge, Gettysburg, July 3, 1863. In 1863, Johnston was placed in command of the Department of the West. U.S. Treasury Secretary under President James Buchanan. Died of yellow fever, October 4, 1862, Charleston, South Carolina, aged 37. Commandant of USMA, July 31, 1854–May 22, 1856. Captured at Tazewell, Tennessee, and exchanged in November 1862.

Killed at Champion Hill, Mississippi, May 16, 1863, aged 47. Killed at Chancellorsville, May 3, 1863, aged 35.

Killed September 14, 1862, at Fox's Gap, South Mountain, Maryland, aged 31. Initial brigade command, December 23, 1863. Colonel, July 9, 1862. Severely wounded at Bean's Station, Tennessee. Mexican–American War: volunteer colonel from Mississippi. U.S. Given six-month leave of absence for health, November 28, 1864, but apparently moved to Canada as secret agent.

Retired as brigadier general in the U.S. Army. Opposed Crook at Cloyd's Mountain near Dublin, Virginia, on May 9, 1864. Said to be only general addressed by first name by Robert E. Lee. South Carolina Infantry, major, April 1861. 4th Georgia Infantry, private, April 1861, Sergeant, May 1861, 1st lieutenant, assistant adjutant general. [11], When his native state, Virginia seceded from the Union in 1861, Johnston resigned his commission as a brigadier general in the regular army, the highest-ranking U.S. Army officer to do so. 4th Arkansas Infantry, captain, August 17, 1861, lieutenant colonel, May 1861, colonel, October 29, 1861. Captured at Sailor's Creek, released July 24, 1865. Led his troops out of Fort Donelson, with permission, before surrender. Died October 12, 1870, Lexington, Virginia, aged 63. In command at Staunton, Virginia for defense of Shenandoah Valley, May 17, 1864. Assigned to duty as major general by E. Kirby Smith on April 18, 1864, but not appointed by Jefferson Davis. Wounded at Shiloh and Pulaski, Tennessee. Mexican–American War, 2nd lieutenant, age 17. Special parole for prisoner exchange, 1864. When his native state, Virginia seceded from the Union in 1861, Johnston resigned his commission as a brigadier general in the regular army, the highest-ranking U.S. Army officer to do so. Hood visualized a glorious replay of Jackson's famous flank attack at Chancellorsville and ordered a new attack. Killed in a duel with Brig. 11th North Carolina Infantry, colonel, April 2, 1862.