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tone Mountain and Lawrenceville, I sent a request to Major-General Slocum, for a force to be sent to Stone Mountain, with the object of preventing annoyance on my right flank. This request was responded to by sending my Second brigade, under Colonel Mindil. Without delaying at Decatur, I detached the main body of my cavalry, seven hundred infantry, and a section of artillery, the whole under Colonel Garrard, with orders to proceed to Stone Mountain, and hold the roads and passes there. With ts joined by Colonel Garrard. Leaving a strong cavalry-guard to hold the village, I moved on the Stone Mountain and Lawrenceville road to Trickum Cross-Roads, near which we camped for the night. Receiving information about nine P. M., that Colonel Mindil with his command had arrived within four miles of Stone Mountain, I sent him orders to push on as near the mountain as possible, and to join me on the following morning. Information obtained this evening confirmed that I had received at De
he Seventy-third regiment Pennsylvania veteran volunteers, since September second, 1864: James Quinn, private, company C, wounded December sixteenth, 1864, at Harrison's Island, near Savannah, Georgia, right leg, severely, since amputated. Colonel Mindil's Report. headquarters Thirty-Third New-Jersey volunteers, Savannah, Georgia, December 26, 1864. Captain N. K. Bray, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General, Second Brigade: Captain: I have the honor to submit the following official report 13, ‘64Deserted to enemy. Adam Wetzel,Priv'teKDec. 12, ‘64Deserted to enemy. Francis Mc Carthy,Priv'teKDec. 12, ‘64Deserted to enemy. John Smith,Priv'teKDec. 12, ‘64Deserted to enemy. Charles Wagner,Priv'teKDec. 12, ‘64Deserted to enemy. G. W. Mindil, Colonel Commanding Thirty-third New-Jersey Volunteers. Major Hoyt's Report. Report of the One Hundred and Thirty-fourth New York Volunteers, from he capture of Atlanta, Ga., September second, 1864, to the twenty-first of Decemb