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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: November 26, 1862., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: August 31, 1863., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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special cor. Boston Evening Journal, Aug. 17, 1863, p. 4, cols. 3, 4. Dorson, John, 28th Regt. M. V. I. Is he Jack Dawson, who, sent out as spy, and captured, refuses to save his life by betraying comrades? Bivouac, vol. 3, p. 460. Doubleday, Gen. Abner. Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, rev. of; dealing with his personal prejudices. N. Y. Nation, vol. 34, p. 257. Dougherty, Capt. Wm. E., U. S. A., Sykes' Div., Porter's Corps, 5. Recollections of a campaign; circumstantial . N. Y. Nation, vol. 43, pp. 373, 393. —Determining confederate lines; mention of Col. J. B. Bachelder of Massachusetts, government historian of Gettysburg. Army and Navy Journal, vol. 26, p. 1007. —Diagram and account of action; from Gen. Doubleday's Gettysburg made plain. Army and Navy Journal, vol. 25, p. 991. —Field of. J. T. Trowbridge. Atlantic, vol. 16, p. 616. —1st Corps at. Gen. Henry A. Morrow. Army and Navy Journal, vol. 24, p. 495. —Four days at. John Y. Foster.
e threatened to become a really serious affair. The first and second brigades broke camp at about 7 o'clock A. M. yesterday, to move from the camp at White Sulphur Springs to the neighborhood of Fayetteville, then and still occupied by General Doubleday, of Franklin's corps. There was a choice of two roads, one of which led back from the Rappahannock, and was therefore safe from the shot and shell of the enemy, while the other — the most direct route, and considerably more convenient for battery, and fought the rebels over the same ground. At the last accounts we heard from the Springs, Gen. Burns still occupied them, and there was no enemy in sight. It was a little singular that Gen. Sturgis had not been informed that Gen Doubleday was at Fayetteville, and, upon our hearing drums in that direction, we marched in some expectation of meeting the enemy in our front. Below are the casualties in the fight of Saturday: Killed.--Junior 1st Lt. Howard McIlvaine, Durel
only as a Major in the 2d U. S. regular cavalry. Maj Gen Stoneman as Major in the 4th cavalry. Maj Gen Thomas as Colonel of the 5th cavalry. Maj Gen Sherman as a Colonel in the 3d artillery. Maj Gen Casey, who ran so at Seven Pines, is Colonel of the 4th infantry.--Maj Gen Keyes, lately on the Peninsula, is Colonel of the 11th infantry. Maj Gen W T Sherman, who lost a leg at Port Hudson, is Colonel of the 13th infantry. Major Gen Heintzleman is Colonel of the 17th infantry; and Maj Gen Doubleday, who was at the first bombardment of Fort Sumter, ranks only as a Major in the 17th infantry. Meade, Pope, Hooker, Rosecrans, and McDowell, are Brigadiers in the regular army, and Fremont, McClellan, Grant, and Halleck, are Major Generals. Of the twelve General officers who were in the regular army in August, 1862, two--Gen'ls Sumner and Mansfield — are dead, and their places were filled by the appointment of Gen'ls Hooker and Meade, the former from the volunteer force and the