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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 13. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 8 0 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore) 6 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: August 6, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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struck on the hill to the right of Morris's battery, without doing harm. The compliment was acknowledged by Capt. Morris with two of his shots, aimed straight for Manny's battery, both striking the plunge near him, and throwing masses of dirt into the air as they ricocheted to the rampart. The heavy columbiads and thirty-two-pounl has burst, a fragment splintering the carriage of the second gun; between the third gun and the angle there are three shell-holes. On the south-west side is the Manny battery, two of the guns on artillery-carriages mounted on wooden platforms. The glacis in front is like a ploughed field, from the number of shot which have strurked in the Tribune composing-rooms, and learned from him that six of our printers were in the ranks of the battalion, and then a guard around the Fort. Next to Manny's battery comes one of six small carronades, the flanking guns which had been removed from the counterscarp-galleries, arranged as mortars, to throw grape, caniste
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 13. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 11 (search)
sed on an excellent and large ferry boat; and on the same day the regiment pushed on twenty miles farther, to the town of Manny. The men furloughed at the start had nearly all rejoined, and the regiment numbered four hundred and fifty men in the s old West Pointer, whose name is not now remembered, visited the camp in the evening; on the next morning he started from Manny after the regiment had passed it, but riding rapidly along the column, he overtook the Colonel, who rode at the head of i, which he expressed in his memoirs published a few years ago, a short time before his death. At a short distance from Manny the order was received to take the road to old Fort Jesup, and join Colonel Bagby's regiment of Texas cavalry on outpost trict, Western Louisiana, in the field, April 5th, 1864. No.——. On the 2d instant, while marching his regiment from Manny to Pleasant Hill, Colonel X. B. Debray was suddenly attacked by the enemy in superior force. Considering the unexpected
egar. Mrs Watson, refugee at Salem, Va, package of lint. Mrs N C McPhall, Charlotte, 14 bottles black berry vinegar and dried peaches. Mrs A C Cross, Hanover, hops and sage. Mrs E Griffin, lint. From N C, one package lint. Ladies of Culpeper C H, through Miss Bell Norris, biscuit, honey, preserves, cake, butter, sheets, shirts, bandages, &c, Mrs M Blackwell and Owen Bransford, Buckingham, shirts and drawers, linen rags, pickle and butter, &c. Ladies of Manny's Neck, Hertford, N C, through Jos D Barnes, coop chickens, 12 bottles wine, shirts and drawers, cotton and linen rags, dried peaches, &c. One box per Express for Chimborazo Hospital. Ladies' Aid Society, Lunenburg C H, 3 coops chickens, firkin butter, onions, pillows, shirts and drawers, wines, eggs, &c. Ladies of Cumberland, through E S Brown, one box hospital supplies. Mrs Boyle, Caswell county, N C, lint. Mrs G P Luck and other ladies of Bedford, eggs, soap, shir