Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 3. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for William Turner or search for William Turner in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 1 document section:

ett, who lives below the Guyandotte River, on that side, with his guns in his hand, was active in shooting men as they came to the shore in swimming across. Capt. Wm. Turner, an old and respectable citizen of Wayne County, a very candid man apparently, was in the fight, and escaped by mounting his horse and dashing through their and two guns went off. There's another just out behind the tree there. Oh, I've sunk that d-----d Yankee. Another was shot while crawling in the mud, near where Turner lay concealed in the water, and there was a yell, I've got one of the d-----d dad's scalps, and a first-rate Enfield rifle. Turner afterward swam the river, and Turner afterward swam the river, and gives us some of these items: A reliable citizen of Cabell County reports that he heard the rebels boast, on the return to Barbours-ville, that they had thrown eight or nine wounded men off the bridge into the river. When the rebel cavalry left Guyandotte, twenty-one secession women, all with their secession aprons on, parad