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Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore) 19 1 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore) 6 0 Browse Search
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junction with a brigade from Second division; marched to Flat Shoals, eighteen miles from Atlanta, loaded five hundred wagonsAvery's Cross-Roads. The head of the column encamped at Flat Shoals at seven P. M., and by ten P. M. was joined by all the ts of artillery in charge of about four hundred wagons at Flat Shoals, I took the remainder of the troops and wagons,, and marrigade, Third division, and two sections of artillery at Flat Shoals in charge of the loaded wagons, with the remainder of thn at nightfall rejoined in safety the detachment left at Flat Shoals, and on the next day, the nineteenth, returned to Atlantgiment went with the brigade on a foraging expedition to Flat Shoals, on which expedition the regiment was gone four days, an expedition, making a march of sixteen miles, camping at Flat Shoals, South-River. October 17th, 1864.--Moved east five mis of cavalry were also sent to the right, on the road to Flat Shoals, and to the left, toward Stone Mountain, all converging
port of movements of this regiment, since the occupation of Atlanta, Georgia, September second, 1864: October 21.--We received orders to march as a portion of guard to a wagon-train of some eight hundred teams. We moved in the direction of Flat Shoals eighteen miles, assisted in loading the train with corn, and returned to Atlanta on the twenty-fourth. 29th. Moved with the First brigade to Decatur, and formed portion of rear-guard to a forage train, coming in same day. November 5.--Mications, and all duty required of troops at garrison posts; remaining until October sixteenth, when it was ordered out on a forage expedition, under command of Colonel Robinson, commanding First brigade, First division, to the vicinity of Flat Shoals, Georgia; returning and occupying our former camp on the nineteenth, where it remained on duty until the twenty-sixth of the same month, when it was again ordered out on a similar expedition, under General John W. Geary, commanding Second division,
ce, on the twenty-fifth, via Arbacorhee and Bowdoin to Carrolton, Georgia; twenty-sixth, marched to and crossed the Chattahoochee; twenty-seventh, via Newman to Flat Shoals, on Flint river; twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth, via Barnesville and Forsyth to Macon. Georgia. During this march he skirmished with Jackson at Trion, whose fattahoochee at Moore's and Reese's ferries, and by eight o'clock of the next morning had crossed the river. April twenty-seventh. Marched via Newman to near Flat Shoals. At the Chattahoochee a flag of truce from the commanding officer at Newman, informed me of the armistice, and claimed protection under it; I informed them I c and would observe the armistice as far as foraging was concerned, but could not consent to discontinue my march. April twenty-eighth. Crossed Flint river at Flat Shoals and marched to near Barnesville. April twenty-ninth. Through Barnesville to Forsyth, sending Lieutenant Prather and Captain Walden of my staff, by railroad