have, and that's just what you know so far about your family history. I hope you're soon able to discover more about your ancestors as you sort through everything you've accumulated and as you find new information pertaining to them. Very interesting that your ancestor was in the battle of Bull Run! Mine was a Appomattox, which I like knowing.
Sometimes important clues can be found in seemingly insignificant bits of information you stumble upon. When my half-sister died last year, her daughter gave me a box of old papers and photos that my half-sister (same moms, different dads) had been storing ever since our step-mother died in 1965. In the box of mostly family pictures from the 1950s and old birthday and Christmas cards Mom had saved, I found a wedding invitation from 1896 addressed to my great-grandfather, my dad's grandfather. With it was a note to my dad written in 1942 by his aunt, daughter of my great-grandfather. She said it would be nice that if before Dad was sent overseas with the Army and was still in California, he tried to find the long-ago bride and groom to say hello from their old friend's grandson. She thought they might still be living and residing in San Bernardino. The bride's father was a prominent post-Civil War photographer in San Bernardino. It was he and his wife who had sent my great-gf the invitation to their daughter's wedding.
I Googled the couple's names and located a descendant of theirs at a gen. forum and wrote to her. I reasoned that if my great-gf was the friend of a professional photographer's, maybe he took my great-gf's picture, and if so, maybe the picture still exists. It was this photographer's descendant I'd contacted through the gen. forum who found my great-grandfather's photo a year later among her ancestor's personal photos.
Leave no stones unturned, nor shots in the dark untaken. That's my motto!