Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 2, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for 26th or search for 26th in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

breaking up sundry camps. We learn Col. L.'s regiment will leave here in a few days for Knoxville — leaving Col. Wood's Alabama regiment and Col. Cook's at this place, (Col. White's having already gone to Knoxville) The prompt and efficient means used by Gen. Carroll has, we think, effectually checked the ardor of those deluded Unionists, and hereafter there will be little trouble in this quarter from them. B. The Flight from Wild Cat. From the Nashville (Tenn.) Ranner, of the 26th ult., we extract the following: We are informed that a copy of the Cincinnati Commercial, of the 21st, which contains a graphic letter from Eastern Kentucky, descriptive of an astoundingly rapid flight from Camp Wild Cat by the Yankee forces there encamped, was received in this city on yesterday. This race — which is pictured as surpassing Bull Ran or Leesburg — was occasioned by a rumor that Hardee and Buckner were advancing upon them with forty thousand men, to attack them in the rear <
of the railroads. I voluntarily signed a communication to Gen. Zollicoffer, weeks ago, together with fifteen or twenty other gentlemen, pledging ourselves to promote peace, and to urge Union men not to rebel, to take up arms, or to commit any outrages whatever. That document was published in all the Tennessee papers. I signed it in good faith, and I have kept that faith. Wm. G. Brownlow President Davis's Fast day in Louisville. The Louisville (Bowling Green) Courier, on the 26th, learns from a gentleman just from Louisville, that the day set apart by President Davis for fasting and prayer was quit generally observed by the Southern-Right citizens of Louisville. Our informant saw procession of Sunday school children that day, and he was quite surprised that they were not arrested by the Yankee authorities there. Public service was held in one of the churches, at which the Louisville Democrat was exceedingly indignant, and gave vent to its rage in its usual supply of