Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 26, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for William H. Carroll or search for William H. Carroll in all documents.

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d decided victory over the Federal troops. We captured 13 of the enemy's best cannon and all the accompanying carriages and ammunition. Also some 400 prisoners, stand of colors and a large quantity of good arms. Mr. Hughes, in a postscript, adds. We have lost a great number of our officers I will name some of them; Gen. Slack, severely wounded; Gen. Weightman, killed; Lt. Col. Aussin, of Col. R. A. Rives' regiment, killed; Colonel B. J. Brown, of Ray killed; Capt. Blackwood, of Carroll, killed; Captain Enyard, of Rives' regiment, killed; Lieut. S. S. Hughes, of my regiment killed, and my own brother; Capt. of Clinton, wounded severely; Capt. Thomas McCarty or Clay county, severely wounded, and a great many more. About forty other of my regiment, including the Clay county battalion have been buried on the battle field. Amos Stout, of Clay, killed; R. D. Kelley and John Brooking, of Clinton, killed and Jas. Porter and Samuel Brooking, wounded, and a great many more whom
Strasburg. Favorable from East Tennessee. The Memphis (Tenn.) Appeal, of the 20th, contains the following cheering news from East Tennessee: Col. Wm. H. Carroll arrived on yesterday from East Tennessee, where he has been sojourning for several weeks, raising troops under a special commission for the Confederate serv Government The Hon. Geo. W. Bridges, who has been an intense Union man, and was a candidate for the United States Congress in the late election, advised Col. Carroll of his intention to raise a regiment of volunteers from among the Unionists of his district and enter the active service of the Confederate States. Col. CCol. Carroll issued an address to the people, calling upon them to daily to the support of their section against the vulgar despotism of Lincoln, and informs us that the Knoxville Whig will publish it in a few days, approving of its spirit and counseling a patriotic response to it. He thinks that he can raise at least 4 000 men among th