Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 1, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for A. P. Hill or search for A. P. Hill in all documents.

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l, pressing back our astonished; and, for a while, discomfited troops, gaining, possession of the salient, the four guns, and a number of prisoners. The enemy now held some two hundred yards of our lines, and could be distinctly seen hurrying up troops from the rear and forming their lines with the view of pushing forward and pressing their advantage. A crisis was now undoubtedly upon us. A brief space and we might be undone. General Mahone was at once apprised of the disaster by Lieutenant General Hill, who, fortunately, was on the spot.--General M. was directed by General H. to bring his own and Wright's brigade to the scene of the disaster, and to endeavor, it possible, to regain the lost works and to retrieve the disasters of the day. With lightning speed the Virginians and Georgians, moving by the left flank, came to the rescue, under the lead of their gallant commander, who, be it known, was utterly unacquainted with the configuration of the lines or the nature of the ground.
l, pressing back our astonished; and, for a while, discomfited troops, gaining, possession of the salient, the four guns, and a number of prisoners. The enemy now held some two hundred yards of our lines, and could be distinctly seen hurrying up troops from the rear and forming their lines with the view of pushing forward and pressing their advantage. A crisis was now undoubtedly upon us. A brief space and we might be undone. General Mahone was at once apprised of the disaster by Lieutenant General Hill, who, fortunately, was on the spot.--General M. was directed by General H. to bring his own and Wright's brigade to the scene of the disaster, and to endeavor, it possible, to regain the lost works and to retrieve the disasters of the day. With lightning speed the Virginians and Georgians, moving by the left flank, came to the rescue, under the lead of their gallant commander, who, be it known, was utterly unacquainted with the configuration of the lines or the nature of the ground.
New York papers of the 27th contain a variety of items and speculations about the new advance into Maryland of the Confederate forces. General A. P. Hill's corps has already reached General Early, according to advices received in Washington Tuesday, and the plan of the Confederates was supposed to comprise a small raid into Pennsylvania as a feint, and a dash in heavy force on Washington city. The papers think that the withdrawal of the sixth and nineteenth corps from the pursuit of Early (with the view of sending them back to Grant) was the false move that has started this new rebel invasion. They had gotten back as far as Rockville, Md., on their return to Washington. It appears that General Joseph E. Johnston, who was removed from the Army of Tennessee, is the officer who is in command of the new invasion, according to the New York Herald Baltimore was full of rumors, some of which are given in the telegrams which follow, dated the 26th: Among the rumors prevalent was
Ly Hill, Dickinson & Co, Auct'rs. Trustee's Sale of a Negro Girl.--On Tuesday, the 2d of August, at 11 o'clock. I will sell, by virtue of a good of trust, dated 14th May, 1163, and recorded in Richmond Hustings Court, at the auction house of Kenn Hill, Dickinson & Co, a Negro Girl named Adeline. A. D. Williams, Trustee. Hill, Dickinson & Co, Auct'rs. Jy 28