Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 5. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for October 9th, 1862 AD or search for October 9th, 1862 AD in all documents.

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Regiment. Colonel Sprague's report. headquarters Sixty-Third regiment O. V. I., Second division First brigade army of Mississippi, near Ripley, Miss., Oct. 9, 1862. Captain: I have the honor to report that nine companies of my command, (company D, Captain Fouts, being on detached duty,) consisting of two hundred and seull, Lieut.-Col. Commanding Third Iowa Infantry. Report of Lieut.-Colonel Jones. headquarters Forty-Sixth regiment Illinois volunteers, in the field, October 9, 1862. Capt. F. W. Fox, Assistant Adjutant-General: sir: At eight o'clock on the morning of the fifth instant, under orders from Brig.-Gen. Veatch, the Forty-sixend. A. Lincoln. By command of Major-Gen. U. S. Grant. Jno. A. Rawlings, Assistant Adjutant-General. Cincinnati Commercial account. Corinth, Miss., October 9, 1862. Approaching Corinth from the north, via the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, you scent the battlefield from afar. Sickening exhalations from the carcasses of ho
rcumstances. Yours respectfully, Nathaniel McCalla, Major Commanding Tenth Iowa Regiment. Colonel Sprague's report. headquarters Sixty-Third regiment O. V. I., Second division First brigade army of Mississippi, near Ripley, Miss., Oct. 9, 1862. Captain: I have the honor to report that nine companies of my command, (company D, Captain Fouts, being on detached duty,) consisting of two hundred and seventy-five men, left camp near Tuscumbia River about three o'clock A. M. on the thir have the honor to be, sir, with great respect, your obedient servant, M. M. Trumbull, Lieut.-Col. Commanding Third Iowa Infantry. Report of Lieut.-Colonel Jones. headquarters Forty-Sixth regiment Illinois volunteers, in the field, October 9, 1862. Capt. F. W. Fox, Assistant Adjutant-General: sir: At eight o'clock on the morning of the fifth instant, under orders from Brig.-Gen. Veatch, the Forty-sixth regiment took position on the right of the Second brigade in the advance, to sup
nder McDowell McCook, Major-General Commanding First Corps Army of the Ohio. Report of Brigadier-General Mitchell. headquarters Ninth division of the army of the Ohio, Goodnight Springs, two and one half miles from Perryville, Ky., October 9, 1862. Captain: I have the honor to submit the following report of the part taken by the Ninth division in the engagement of the seventh and eighth instant, near Perryville, Kentucky: Upon the arrival of my column, about two P. M. of the sevt-Colonel Commanding Fiftieth Regiment Volunteers. Report of Lieutenant-Colonel Cowen. headquarters Fifty-Second regiment Ohio volunteers, Thirty-Sixth brigade, Eleventh division, army of the Ohio, battle-field near Perryville, Ky., October 9, 1862. Lientenant J. A. Mallony, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General Thirty-sixth Brigade: I have the honor to submit the following report of the part taken by the Fifty-second regiment in the battle of yesterday: In pursuance of the order o
Doc. 216.-fight at Lawrenceburgh, Ky. Colonel Parrott's report. headquarters First regiment O. V. I., in camp, October 9, 1862. Captain: I have the honor to submit the following report of the skirmish had with the enemy this morning, by the troops under my command, at Dogwalk. As my regiment left camp, the General Commanding apprised me that our rear was threatened by the enemy, and ordered me to march back on the road until I overtook the Nineteenth United States infantry, previously sent out. About half a mile from camp I came up with our troops, on the road to Lawrenceburgh. Major King, Fifteenth United States infantry, had his battalion drawn up in open field, where he commanded the road; Major Carpenter, Nineteenth United States infantry, was to his left, and in the road, which at that point makes an abrupt turn. Being the ranking officer present, I posted the First Ohio behind the crest of a ridge in the skirt of woods to the rear of the open ground, and