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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 76 total hits in 22 results.
8th (search for this): chapter 102
15th (search for this): chapter 102
17th (search for this): chapter 102
Doc.
99.-expedition to Gallatin, Tenn.
Colonel Morgan's report.
Shelbyville, Tenn., March 19. Major-Gen. W. J. Hardee, Commanding First Division:
sir: I have the honor to submit the following report of the operations of a portion of my command on the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth inst. At about four o'clock P. M., on the fifteenth inst., with Col. Wood and a detachment of forty men, I left Murfreesboro for Gallatin, having learned that no Federal forces remained at that place.
The chief objects of the expedition were to intercept the mail, to destroy the rollingstock on the road, to make prisoners, and to obtain information of interest to the service.
Our destination was kept secret, and the command having been sent from Murfreesboro in separate parties, by different roads, to unite at some distance from town, it was impossible that the enemy could be apprised of the movement until after the blow was struck.
A citizen of Murfreesboro, whose zeal a
18th (search for this): chapter 102
Doc.
99.-expedition to Gallatin, Tenn.
Colonel Morgan's report.
Shelbyville, Tenn., March 19. Major-Gen. W. J. Hardee, Commanding First Division:
sir: I have the honor to submit the following report of the operations of a portion of my command on the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth inst. At about four o'clock P. M., on the fifteenth inst., with Col. Wood and a detachment of forty men, I left Murfreesboro for Gallatin, having learned that no Federal forces remained at that place.
The chief objects of the expedition were to intercept the mail, to destroy the rollingstock on the road, to make prisoners, and to obtain information of interest to the service.
Our destination was kept secret, and the command having been sent from Murfreesboro in separate parties, by different roads, to unite at some distance from town, it was impossible that the enemy could be apprised of the movement until after the blow was struck.
A citizen of Murfreesboro, whose zeal an
March 19th (search for this): chapter 102
Doc.
99.-expedition to Gallatin, Tenn.
Colonel Morgan's report.
Shelbyville, Tenn., March 19. Major-Gen. W. J. Hardee, Commanding First Division:
sir: I have the honor to submit the following report of the operations of a portion of my command on the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth inst. At about four o'clock P. M., on the fifteenth inst., with Col. Wood and a detachment of forty men, I left Murfreesboro for Gallatin, having learned that no Federal forces remained at that place.
The chief objects of the expedition were to intercept the mail, to destroy the rollingstock on the road, to make prisoners, and to obtain information of interest to the service.
Our destination was kept secret, and the command having been sent from Murfreesboro in separate parties, by different roads, to unite at some distance from town, it was impossible that the enemy could be apprised of the movement until after the blow was struck.
A citizen of Murfreesboro, whose zeal an
June (search for this): chapter 102
Wirt Adams (search for this): chapter 102
Austin (search for this): chapter 102
John Bates (search for this): chapter 102
D. C. Buell (search for this): chapter 102