Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 15, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Knoxville (Tennessee, United States) or search for Knoxville (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.

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The Cherokees. --Maj. G. W. Morgant left Knoxville on Friday, en routs for Western North Carolina, to recruit a battalion among the Cherokee warriors. The bravest of this gallant aboriginal race have already been tilling up the ranks of our volunteers in the Tennessee regiments, and we fears that the numbers yet are eager to cuter the service.
acts. Speaking of his experience in jail, he said: The Brigadier. General commanding at Knoxville came to see me one day. The prisoners all failed around to hear what was said. He said: "Brow's green earth. That little valley, forty miles wide and about sixty miles long, of which Knoxville is the centre, is full of such Union men and women. When I came away the jail of Knoxville waKnoxville was full of Union men. I was there in jail when they took my companions our and bung then. I did not see them hung, because this was done over the hill, but I saw them go out with the black poplar cofner could whip five blue-bellied Yankees," and here let me relate an incident that happened in Knoxville a few weeks since: A Union lady met on the sidewalk one day a Colonel of a regiment stationed at Knoxville, and she said to him "Colonel, how is it that I notice the Northerners have been getting the best of us at Forts Henry, Donelson, and Fishing Creek. I thought one Southerner, could