Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 2, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Oconee (Georgia, United States) or search for Oconee (Georgia, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

perfect wreck. A large gin-house full of cotton corn-cribs, dwelling — all a smouldering ruin. His loss was greater than that of any-planter in this section. Besides the cotton, several thousand bushels of corn, potatoes, several hundred of wheat, and much other valuable property, with every horse and mule and many negroes, are gone. No farm on the road to this place, and, as far as we can hear, towards Atlanta, escaped their brutal ravages. They ravaged the country below here to the Oconee river. The roads were strewn with the debris of their progress. Dead horses, cows, sheep, hog, chickens, corn, wheat, cotton, books, paper, broken vehicles, coffee mills, and fragments of nearly every species of property that adorned the beautiful farms of this county, straw the wayside, monuments of the meanness rapacity and hypocrisy of the people who boats that they are not robbers and do not interfere with private property. "In Madison, they burned the depot and one or two old wareho