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Lieutenant Dunlop was especially much exposed in carrying orders. Lieutenant R. T. Daniel, Jr., Adjutant of the Fifth regiment, reported to me on the twenty-seventieutenant-Colonel Whittle, who was badly wounded, and compelled to retire. Captain Daniel, volunteer officer, commanding company F, then took them; and he, too, fellof the position he held — daring all things, fearing nothing. Volunteer Captain R. T. Daniel performed every duty in the most creditable manner. Though among strangFirst Lieutenant N. D. Price; company E, Captain T. M. Tyree; company F, Captain R. T. Daniel; company G, Captain H. L. Lee, and company K, Captain G. R. Griggs, I regiment, was severely wounded, having the larger bone in one arm broken. Captain R. T. Daniel, Adjutant Fifth Kentucky regiment, being on furlough, volunteered for thClayton, Larkin Davis, Kilech and W. H. Howerton, wounded. Company F. Captain R. T. Daniel, commander. He is absent, wounded. The regimental commander reports all
of fortifications was begun, (which subsequently met the approval of the chief engineer, Colonel J. F. Gilmer, C. S. A.,) and the brigades of Ransom, Walker, and Daniel were put to work on it. About a thousand negroes were procured (chiefly from North Carolina) and employed in like manner. Pontoon bridges were constructed at sevand, on the night of the thirty-first of July last. On the morning of July twenty-ninth, you directed me to have the brigades commanded by Colonels Manning and Daniel ready to move the following night. But when I had an interview, that evening at ten P. M., you directed me to have them move at seven o'clock the next morning, t road. I am indebted to General Pendleton and the officers under him for the careful and successful execution of the parts assigned them. Colonels Manning and Daniel's brigades and Major Ross, of the Second Georgia battalion, at Ruffin's house, protected the whole of the attack. General Ransom's brigade guarded the City Point