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The Daily Dispatch: July 7, 1863., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
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as we have been able to learn, was about one hundred killed and four or five hundred wounded. It is also reported that Major Claybrooke was not killed as was at first reported, though but little hopes of his recovery were entertained by his surgeon Later information, by private dispatch, has been received, that our troops have also retaken Hoover's Gap. A New Orleans trial for murder — Yankee Justice. The trial of Geo. White, of the 6th regiment N. Y. Zouaves, for the murder of Sussu Parker, a woman of the town, remarkable for her beauty, has just been concluded in New Orleans. The New Orleans Picayune gives the evidence and the extraordinary verdict in the case as follows: On the afternoon in question he met on the sidewalk and addressed her. She looked at him contemptuously; said she was secesh, and did not want to have anything to say to such a fellow as he was. Thereupon he drew his revolver and fired at her twice wounding her in the wrist and in her breast. She
The Daily Dispatch: July 7, 1863., [Electronic resource], The Yankee movement around Richmond. (search)
issippi, and Gens. Kemper and Garnett, of Virginia, were killed. Gen. Hood, of Texas, was wounded. [the Press dispatches.] Martinsburg, Va., July 5. --At 6 P. M. Saturday Gen. Lee had changed his front and occupied the ground he drove the enemy from on the 1st and 2d. His whole army is in excellent spirits and the master of the situation. We have captured 12,000 of the enemy. Gens Ponder and Pickett are wounded. Colonel Avery, of N C., is killed, and Colonels Bennett and Parker wounded. Ewell's wagons are recaptured. [second Dispatch.] Martinsburg, July 6. --Reports to-day all concur that there was a heavy fight yesterday, in which we defeated the enemy and drove him three miles. A vast number of prisoners are reported taken by Gen. Lee. The prisoners refuse to be paroled, and are on the way to Richmond by this place. This has been the bloodiest battle of the war. Our loss is very great — the enemy's immense. The Yankee cavalry injured the pont