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taken from his command a few days afterward by Captain Rankin, company E, Seventh Ohio volunteer cavalry, reported that we killed eight and wounded some fifteen of their men. I have no further information of this than the prisoners' report. Major Brown is able to state from his own observation, how much less was accomplished by the first expedition after Cluke that consisted of superior forces to Cluke's. He may also, perhaps, be able to account for the fact that Cluke slipped through the founder Col. Walker and Lieut.-Col. Wilson. To be twenty-four hours behind the enemy that was marching in the direction of the important post at Mount Sterling is a phenomenon in cavalry movements that ought certainly to occupy the attention of Major Brown, to the exclusion of any thing that was done by the Seventh cavalry. My movement to Mount Sterling was a voluntary one, and not under any order. My orders took me no further than Winchester. I was fully informed of the orders that had bee
R. French; First Lieutenant, Barry Fox. Company E.--Captain, Henry C. Inwood; First Lieutenant, John P. Morris; Second Lieutenant, E. Bayard Webster. Company F.--Captain, Gould H. Thorpe; First Lieutenant, James B. Vose; Second Lieutenant, Wm. J. Walker. There has been one death by disease, and three men have been accidentally killed since the regiment left New-York, on the eighteenth of December last. Private Spicer J. Ruderow, of company A, died, in January, of typhoid fever. Corporal David Brown, of company D, was shot during the same month, while on guard, by the accidental falling of a stack of muskets. Private Geo. Hoctor, and Corporal Andrew Jackson, both of company E, were killed last week. The first, while on guard, was accidentally shot by the corporal of the guard; the last was killed by a piece of shell, fired from the United States gunboat Portsmouth, which, by some strange carelessness, burst over the camp of the Zouaves. They were all estimable men, and their e