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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: August 23, 1864., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Terry's Brigade, formerly John M. Jones's. (search)
liard, Wm. Daws, S. O. Daws, Benj. W. Griffin, J. S. Moore, G. W. Thomas, C. T. Moseley. [16 officers, 122 men.] Twenty-seventh North Carolina Regiment. Field and Staff. Jos. I. Burgess, sutler, one private horse and clothing, A. D. Lindsay, Ord. Sergeant, Wm. E. Ward, Sergeant-Major, Chas. M. Parks, Hosp'l Steward. Co. A. Sergeant R. B. Parker, Corporal S. B. Kilpatrick, Private L. Aycock, Jos. Peacock, Private Geo. W. Stegall, Richard Ward, Courier John T. Roberts, one private horse and clothing. Co. B. 1st Sergeant Thos. J. Rhodes, Sergeant Joel J. Thorn, Mus'n S. M. Lipscomb, Private Peter M. Brown, Lewis Iseley, J. H. Hardin, Private E. T. Sharp, W. A. McBride, George Lemons, Silas C. Dodson. Courier Walter Green, one private horse and clothing. Co. C. Mus'n J. H. Suggs, Private L. H. Fields, Jesse Grant, Private Henry Grant, Thomas Perdue, R. Sutton. Co. D. 1st Sergeant H. S. Nunn, Corporal J. R.
g train last evening represent that the affair of Sunday was much less disastrous than it was reported to have been. Some say that our loss was not over seven hundred, and the highest estimate that we heard was one thousand, killed, wounded and missing. The following are the casualties in Braxton's Fredericksburg battery: Killed: Private Bernard Taylor. Wounded: Privates Edward Howison, lost a leg, (since dead); S. Charters, slightly; --Spence, in head; Charles Donahoe, slightly; John T. Roberts, in neck, slightly. All quiet yesterday with the exception of some cannonading in the afternoon. A raiding party out. Intelligence was received yesterday that a party of raiders had started from Grant's army with the supposed intention of cutting the Southside and, perhaps, the Danville railroad. Official. Official dispatches, received from Petersburg yesterday, state that General Hill attacked the enemy on the Weldon railroad Sunday morning and drove him from his