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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 18, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 15 total hits in 9 results.
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 15
Alabama (Alabama, United States) (search for this): article 15
Dorn (search for this): article 15
Letter from Corinth. [from an Occasional Correspondent.] Corinth, Miss., May 28, 1862.
This has been a day of excitement, in strange contrast with the quiet and calm and music I wrote about yesterday.
The intense heat suggested the propriety of preparing to dodge a substance.
Riding out early to visit Gen. D. H. Maury, at Van Dorn's headquarters we were informed his whole command had gone out at daylight to meet the enemy.
We halted to listen to the artillery, and for hours "the music of its roar" resounded along our lines.
During part of the morning so heavy and constant was the cannonade that some said it was worse than at Shiloh; and most exhilarating music it was — so long anticipated, so long resounding in our imaginations.
And now this cannon-thunder, hitherto slumbering in stern silence, had found a voice to answer the approaching foe, and had wakened to the eloquence of action.
I could only wait with an officer friend until his turn came, and I could accompa
Halleck (search for this): article 15
D. H. Maury (search for this): article 15
Letter from Corinth. [from an Occasional Correspondent.] Corinth, Miss., May 28, 1862.
This has been a day of excitement, in strange contrast with the quiet and calm and music I wrote about yesterday.
The intense heat suggested the propriety of preparing to dodge a substance.
Riding out early to visit Gen. D. H. Maury, at Van Dorn's headquarters we were informed his whole command had gone out at daylight to meet the enemy.
We halted to listen to the artillery, and for hours "the music of its roar" resounded along our lines.
During part of the morning so heavy and constant was the cannonade that some said it was worse than at Shiloh; and most exhilarating music it was — so long anticipated, so long resounding in our imaginations.
And now this cannon-thunder, hitherto slumbering in stern silence, had found a voice to answer the approaching foe, and had wakened to the eloquence of action.
I could only wait with an officer friend until his turn came, and I could accompa
Cheatham (search for this): article 15
Beauregard (search for this): article 15
May 31st, 1862 AD (search for this): article 15
May 28th, 1862 AD (search for this): article 15
Letter from Corinth. [from an Occasional Correspondent.] Corinth, Miss., May 28, 1862.
This has been a day of excitement, in strange contrast with the quiet and calm and music I wrote about yesterday.
The intense heat suggested the propriety of preparing to dodge a substance.
Riding out early to visit Gen. D. H. Maury, at Van Dorn's headquarters we were informed his whole command had gone out at daylight to meet the enemy.
We halted to listen to the artillery, and for hours "the music of its roar" resounded along our lines.
During part of the morning so heavy and constant was the cannonade that some said it was worse than at Shiloh; and most exhilarating music it was — so long anticipated, so long resounding in our imaginations.
And now this cannon-thunder, hitherto slumbering in stern silence, had found a voice to answer the approaching foe, and had wakened to the eloquence of action.
I could only wait with an officer friend until his turn came, and I could accomp