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James D. Porter, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.1, Tennessee (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 2 0 Browse Search
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ned during the action. In the meantime another column of troops entered the point of wood on Archer's left, passing around his flank, and attacked the Nineteenth Georgia and Fourteenth Tennessee in rear with a superior force, and compelled these regiments to retire, leaving 160 prisoners in the enemy's hands. A part of the Seventh Tennessee, seeing the regiments on the left give way, left the trenches in disorder. The First Tennessee, said General Archer, with Lieuts. F. A. Timberlake, O. H. Foster, B. Wilmouth and Wm. T. Baird of the Seventh Tennessee, with a portion of their regiment, held the ground gallantly, and after ammunition was exhausted, charged with empty guns under Lieut.-Col. N. J. George (Colonel Turney having been wounded early in the action) across the railroad track, with Hoke's brigade of Early's division, and forced the enemy to retire in confusion. Gen. R. E. Lee, referring to this action in his official report, said Archer and Lane repulsed that portion of th