Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 15, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hood or search for Hood in all documents.

Your search returned 11 results in 2 document sections:

Commencement of Hood's advance. There is no impropriety now in giving some account of Hood's departure from Sherman's front for his rear. The letters given belHood's departure from Sherman's front for his rear. The letters given below, giving a description of the march, are particularly interesting, from the fact that they are written by a soldier, and show the exultant state of feeling in the Aiting patiently for an order to resume the march this morning; but I suppose General Hood is waiting for the completion of some of his arrangements. October 2.--In one hour we are on the war path again. General Hood has unbosomed himself to the army; and every private of the army knows what is expected of him. General Hood hGeneral Hood has received positive information of the fact that Sherman has sent two divisions in quest of "the Wizard of the Saddle" in Middle Tennessee. Two more divisions have ble bread, on hand.--We move this morning to the railroad — at what point, is General Hood's secret, not mine. We will proceed northward, tearing up the road as we go
The Situation in Georgia. --A correspondent of the Montgomery (Alabama) Appeal, writing from Hood's headquarters, says that Sherman has three millions of rations south of the Tennessee river. Moman advance in sufficient force to threaten seriously our cities and manufactories further south, Hood will pounce on his weakened lines and ruin his reserve stores and thoroughly destroy his railroadore he can reach a point where he can do us the least mischief beyond robbing citizens. "General Hood's base is still behind him. He can fall back, in case the exigencies of events require it, in who has been appointed chief quartermaster of the Army of Tennessee. "It is stated that General Hood is tearing up the tracks of the Georgia, Macon and West Point roads. Seventy miles, it is statity had been stored away at that point. "The Macon Intelligencer states, it is rumored that Hood has captured a whole corpse of the enemy, amounting to seven thousand, in the rear of Sherman's a