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The Daily Dispatch: April 26, 1861., [Electronic resource] 3 1 Browse Search
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The Palmetto Regiment. --As some errors crept into our enumeration of the names of the officers of the First Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers, whose arrival was noticed on yesterday, we re-publish the same, corrected, to-day. Yesterday the DeKalb Rifles and Richardson Guards, numbering 96 men, arrived here, and 45 more were expected last night. There are about six hundred Carolina troops here now. The following is a list of the officers of the Regiment: Brigadier-General--M. L. Bonham. Staff of Gov. of S. C.--Col. M. A. Moore, Col. J. C. Calhoun. General's Staff--Col. W. C. Moragne, Col. A. P. Aldrich, Col. R. B. Boylston, Col. J. N. Lipscomb, Col. J. W. Simpson, Maj. S. W. Nelson, Maj. Ed. Sparr Hammond, Maj. Samuel W. Melton, Col. J. M. F. Gaston, Surgeon. Of the 1st S. O. Regiment--Col. Maxcy Gregg, Lieut. Col. D. H. Hamilton, Maj. A. M. Smith, Adjt. Ferguson, Quartermaster McGowan, Commissary Kennedy.
Serenade and speeches. --Yesterday, between 11 and 12 o'clock, two fine companies from Southwestern Virginia--the Wythe Grays and Smyth Blues — marched to the Exchange Hotel, attended by the Armory Band, and serenaded Gov. Floyd, who was sojourning at that place. Mr. Floyd acknowledged the compliment in a patriotic speech. After this, in response to a call from the throng who had assembled, speeches were made by Majors Boylston and Simpson, of the South Carolina forces, Gen. Thomas J. Green, of N. C., and Sergeant Cook, of the Wytheville Grays. The speeches were full of patriotic sentiment, and were calculated to inspire the breasts and nerve the arms of the brave soldiers who heard them. Gen. Green said he had come to offer 30,000 men from North Carolina, fully armed, equipped and provisioned, for the defence of the South.