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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 6, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for June 3rd or search for June 3rd in all documents.

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From North Georgia. New Hope, June 2--4 P. M., via Marietta, June 3. --Skirmishing continued during last night, and up to the time of sending this dispatch, between the enemy's sharpshooters and ours, with some artillery fighting. The enemy are still manœuvering for advantage of position, but so far they have been promptly met. [second Dispatch] New Hope, via Marietta, June 3. --The enemy are still throwing forward troops on our right. There has been considerable artillerJune 3. --The enemy are still throwing forward troops on our right. There has been considerable artillery skirmishing to-day. Gen. Echols was very slightly wounded in the thigh. Prisoners continue to be brought in. Among them is Lieut. J. R. Bagby, Quartermaster of the 9th Illinois regiment. [third Dispatch.] New Hope, June 4 --In the action on the 24, on our left, the enemy's loss was 1,500 killed and wounded. Seven or eight shells passed through the headquarters of Gen. Thomas Ewing. The enemy are fortifying Kingston and the river four miles below. Their troops are much dish
Yankee steamers burned. Clinton, La, June 3, via Summit, June 4. --On Friday night last, as appears from New Orleans papers of Saturday, ten steamboats were burned at the New Orleans levee. Their names are the Black Hawk, Better Time, Tide Bell, Lee, Faun, Nebraska, Belle Creole, New Orleans, and Empire Parish, and a steam barge. One explosion of a shell occurred on the Faun. Everything on board the steamers was lost. The Nebraska was a Yankee transport. The Picayune and Courier Francaise have been suppressed.
The Daily Dispatch: June 6, 1864., [Electronic resource], The Confederate cotton loan in England. (search)
A Yankee steamer captured. Savannah, June 3. --The Yankee steamer Water Witch was boarded and captured, with her entire crew, after a desperate fight, early this morning, by a detachment from the Savannah squadron. Lieut. Pelot, who led our men, was killed, together with the pilot and a few others. The Water Witch was a somewhat distinguished craft in the old navy. She figured some years before the war in the Paraguay expedition in South America. She must be a pretty substantial vessel, and her capture is a brilliant affair. The enemy have been repulsed at Baldwin, Florida.