Your search returned 21 results in 4 document sections:

The Annals of the Civil War Written by Leading Participants North and South (ed. Alexander Kelly McClure), Morgan's Indiana and Ohio Railroad. (search)
been recalled from its line in the south of Kentucky, and had been pushed rapidly toward the northern border. Every available trooper was put in pursuit. General H. M. Judah, commandant Third Division, Twenty-third Army Corps, heard of Morgan's crossing of the Cumberland in his tent, at Glasgow, late on the night of the 2d. With his staff and a small escort he hastily rode to within a few miles of Burksville that night. Judah and Hobson held a short council; the scattered cavalry was speedily concentrated, and Hobson took command of that portion which made the chase direct astern, and he gathered into his command all the loose cavalry on his route. JudJudah, with the Fifth Indiana, the Fourteenth Illinois, the Eleventh Kentucky, a section of Henshaw's Illinois Battery and a section of three-inch Rodmans, manned by troopers of the Fifth Indiana, set out on an interior line of the arc on which Morgan moved. And though his force was delayed almost an entire day in effecting a crossi
Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Chapter XXII: Operations in Kentucky, Tennessee, North Mississippi, North Alabama, and Southwest Virginia. March 4-June 10, 1862. (ed. Lieut. Col. Robert N. Scott), April 29-June 10, 1862.-advance upon and siege of Corinth, and pursuit of the Confederate forces to Guntown, Miss. (search)
ut and a part of General Davies' on the left, and General Logan, of Judah's division, on his right, advanced along the main Corinth road and igades of my own division. General John A. Logan's brigade, of General Judah's division, of MeClernand's reserve corps, and General Veatch'sey's White House, and the First Division, under command of Brigadier-General Judah, to the vicinity of Monterey. Encountering a heavy rain-s by General Logan's brigade as a reserve, under command of Brigadier-General Judah, moved forward to the railroad. Upon reaching the road heront and right of our general line of advance, under command of General Judah, in pursuance of my order. Immediately co-operating with Generieved from the command of the division by the assignment of Brig. Gen. H. M. Judah to the command. Being in ill health, I deferred assuming chere fortifications were thrown up, under the direction of Brigadier-General Judah. Upon arriving at the position assigned me on the righ
ndenburg, July 7. 40 miles below Louisville; seizing there the steamboats McCombs and Alice Dean, on which he crossed his command — increased, during his progress, by Kentucky sympathizers, till it was said now to number 4,000 men, with 10 guns. The Alice Dean was burned; the McCombs — which probably belonged to a friend, who had placed it where it would be wanted — was left unharmed. Gen. Hobson, who, with a bad start, had been following from the Cumberland, under the direction of Gen. H. M. Judah, reached Brandenburg Just after Morgan's last boat-load had left it. Morgan sped inland, by Corydon, Greenville, and Palmyra, to Salem, Ind., where he surrounded July 9. and captured 350 Home guards, who had fallen back thus far from Corydon before him. He here broke up the railroad, burnt the depot, and ordered a general conflagration of mills and factories, but allowed each to be ransomed by the payment of $1,000 in each. Thence moving by zigzags, but in an easterly course, thr<
ones, E. F., X., 213. Jones, J., VII., 80. 82. Jones, J. M.: III., 42, 49; X., 153. Jones, J. R., X., 111. Jones, P. H., X., 229. Jones, R., VI., 154. Jones, S.: II., 164, 342; X., 251, 256. Jones, W. E.: II., 346, 348; III., 322; IV., 73, 86, 88, 104, 106; X., 155. Jones' bridge, Va., III., 324. Jones' hay Station, Ark., III., 330. Jones Island, Ga., VI., 237. Jones Point, Va., V., 102. Jonesboro, L'anguille Ferry, Ark. , II., 320. Jonesboro, Ga., III., 135, 138, 330. Jonesville, Va., II., 348. Jordan, sergeant, II., 29. Jordan, T.: V., 71; VII., 31; VIII., 288; X., 317. Jorker, J., V., 27. Jouett, J. E., VI., 45, 268, 310. Judah, H. M., IX., 167; X., 93, 221. Judah,, C. S. S.: I., 352; VI., 268, 310, 339. Juliet,, U. S. S., VI., 232. Juniala,, U. S. S., III., 342. Junkin, G., IX., 132. Just before the battle, Mother, G. F. Root, IX., 350.