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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Bragg or search for Bragg in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1862., [Electronic resource], Northern papers. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1862., [Electronic resource], Northern papers. (search)
Further from Kentucky--Confirmatory Accounts of Bragg's victory. Mobile, October 17.
--A special dispatch to the Advertiser and Register from Holly Springs yesterday, says:
Lieutenant
The Cincinnati papers, of the 11th, are filled with accounts of the great battle between Gens. Bragg and Buell.
The tenor of their account is that Buell is badly defeated and driven across the Kentucky river, and that Bragg is pursuing vigorously.
Three hundred paroled prisoners arrived here this evening.
[Second Dispatch.]
Chattanooga, Oct. 17.--The Rebel has the following g Nashville.
In addition to the above, I am satisfied there is something on hand.
Letters from Bragg's army say that Buell's army is the worst whipped and most badly cut up army of the war. There i y that intense excitement prevails there, caused by dispatches from General Boyle, saying that Gen. Bragg was in rear of Buell, marching on Louisville.
He urge Gov. Morton to send him reinforcements,
The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1862., [Electronic resource], The other side. (search)
Gen. Bragg's operations.
From the remarkable consistency which the three reports published by us yesterday exhibit, there seems to be a strong probability that the telegram of Wednesday, published on Thursday, was substantially correct, and that our forces under Gen. Bragg have indeed gained a great victory over the forces of Buell at Perryville.
There is nothing, indeed, in any of the Nort for only to the battle of the first day. The Louisville Journal, it is true, says, on the that Bragg was defeated; but, besides that it is the most unreliable of all newspaper on the continent, its been a very serious one, for his line of retreat leaves the road to Louisville entirely open to Bragg.
Whether he was forced out of his natural line of retreat upon Louisville, which is his base o as we have had. It will consequently form no barrier to the operations of either army.
If Gen. Bragg has been as signally victorious as we hope and believe he has, it will have been, probably, th