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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 3, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for December 31st or search for December 31st in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: January 3, 1863., [Electronic resource], A Canadian Opinion of the situation of the people of the North . (search)
The Yankee raid in East Tennessee. Knoxville, Dec. 31.
--The Yankee force which destroyed the bridges on the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad consisted of one Ohio and one Indiana regiment.
They captured Col. Love, of the field North Carolina.
regiment. It is supposed that they destroyed Senator Haynes's plantation, it is said that Gen. Enby Smith ordered three regiments of cavalry from Murfreesboro' towards Pound Gap, to watch the country north of the Cumberland Mountain, but the order was countermanded by Gen. Bragg.
[Southern Association Dispatches.]the battle at Murfreesboro'.
some particulars of the battle of Murfreesboro'--four Federal Generals killed--two millions worth or stores destroyed. Murfreesboro', Dec. 31.
--The battle began at 7 o'clock this morning and raged with great fury all days.
We drove the enemy from all their positions except on the extreme left where he successfully resisted us. With the exception of that point we occupy the entire field.
We have captured four thousand prisoners, including Brigadier Generals Wills and Fry, thirty-one pieces of artillery and about two hundred wagons and teams.
Our loss is very heavy; but we have reason to believe that the enemy's is greater.
We have captured most of the enemy's hospital stores and many ambulances.
General Rains, on our side, has been killed, and General Chalmers wounded.
Colonel A. W. Fry, of Mississippi, has been killed.
The Colonel of the 1st Louisiana was wounded.
The Federal
The Virginia Penitentiary.
--This institution is now presided over by Col. Charles Blue, of Hampshire county, who was elected by the Legislature to succeed Col. James F. Pendleton, the former incumbent, who vacated his office on the 31st of December. The institution is now nearly full, though most of the free negroes and slaves are absent from it.