Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Robert Vaughan or search for Robert Vaughan in all documents.

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ous statements about Corinth being evacuated. [It is hardly necessary to state that the story of two Louisiana regiments laying down their arms is an infamous canard] Seven Miles from Monterey, Tenn., April 28, 1862. Five companies of our cavalry and a skirmish with the enemy's cavalry two miles in advance of this. The enemy retreated. Five of them were killed--one a Major. Eighteen persons, with horses and arms, were captured and are now in camp. One of the prisoners, Robert Vaughan, was formerly, foreman in the office of the Louisville, Democrat. We had one man wounded and none killed. Our forces are in capital spirits. The prisoners say the enemy have upwards of eighty thousand men at Corinth, and will fight, and that they are busy entrenching and mounting large guns. The bombardment of Fort Wright. Washington, April 29, 1862. --The Navy Department has received dispatch from Commodore Foote, dated last evening. His fleet was still in front of