Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 27, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Price or search for Price in all documents.

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us were as two to one. Our troops fought for three days and nights and more desperate fighting was never seen. Gen. Price's retreat from Springfield. We have already published the Yankee accounts of Gen. Price's retreat from Springfield Gen. Price's retreat from Springfield into Arkansas, previous to the battle of Pea Ridge, as well as the General's official report of the affair, exposing the mendacity of the Federal commander. We now copy from a Louisiana paper a portion of a letter written by one who shared the perilthe deadly fire of the Missourians' shot guns. Monday our forces reached their winter quarters to spend the night, while Price's army occupied Cross. Hollows, distant two and a half miles. Young's Texas regiment camped with us. The next morning weands of the Hessians. Naught remains of those fine and comfortable buildings now except heaps of smouldering-ashes. Price has conducted a masterly retreat, covering, as he has, a train of 8,500 wagons, loaded with his army supplies, and moving