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The Daily Dispatch: may 23, 1861., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: October 4, 1861., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Lee Guards. --The above name has been chosen by a corps of splendid fellows "bound for the wars and the ascertainment of Southern independence," who arrived yesterday evening, to the number of about 93, from Buckingham county, via Danville Railroad. The men were without uniforms or arms, but the former is being fabricated, and the latter they will get in Richmond. All the men express a desire to have the best arms that can be obtained, as they want to inflict all the damage possible on the cohorts of Old Abe when brought in contact with the motley crew. The following are the officers of the company: Captain, C. H. Irving; 1st Lieut., Geo. P. Bondurant; 2d Lieut. Jno. D. Haskins; 3d Lieut., J. G. S. Boyd; 1st Sergeant, Wm. H. Allen; 2d Sergeant, Jas. E. Jones; 3d Sergeant, R. D. Moseley; 4th Sergeant, Samuel P. Moseley. The company were mustered into service yesterday evening.
bly mangled, but will probably be saved. I learn that he fought with most desperate and reckless bravery at one of the guns of the gallant Captain Delagnel. Taylor states that there were about a dozen of his comrades who had their legs amputated, and that all have died. These released prisoners bring very important news from Northwestern Virginia, which I send you herewith. [Published in yesterday's Dispatch.] The following is a list of the prisoners above mentioned: Captain C. H. Irving, H. D. Crockett, David Comfort, N. C. Reid, A. L. Farley, 20th Virginia Regiment; John A. Taylor, Amos Curry, E. H. Crazy, J. Midden, of the Lee Battery; W. H. Allen, D. O. Young, 1st Georgia Regiment; Thomas Jauntry, 23d Virginia; Janus Lane, 27th Virginia. A Baltimore schooner, the Florida, Captain Terrell, from Saint Domingo, and bound to Baltimore, with a cargo of mahogany, &c., was abandoned at sea and sunk on Friday last, about thirty miles North of Cape Hatteras. She had