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A Bowling Green dispatch says that a large rebel force, under Buckner, least Tompkinsville.
The Daily Dispatch: October 17, 1862., [Electronic resource], The repulse at Corinth — Incompetence of the commanders. (search)
Prison Items.
--Col. Thos. J. Jordan, of the 9th Pennsylvania cavalry, who was detained from going North on the last flag of truce because charges had been preferred against him by the citizens of Sparta, Tenn., that he allowed his men to commit the most unheard of atrocities on the citizens of that place, was yesterday removed from the Libby prison and put in Castle Thunder, in company with four Yankees belonging to the 1st Maryland cavalry, who are charged with committing a willful murder on an unarmed citizen of the Valley of Virginia. Colonel Jordan was captured at Tompkinsville, Ky., on the 9th of July. Yesterday seventeen deserters were received into the Castle from the South, sent thither by Major Mallett.
Among the other inhabitants there is Capt. Arnold Harris, a Yankee.
The cage was empty last night, the city police having made no arrests.
The Daily Dispatch: December 29, 1862., [Electronic resource], Election of a Lincoln Congressman in the Norfolk District . (search)
Capture of Tompkinsville, Ky. Chattanooga Dec. 27
--Parties from Murfreesboro' report that Morgan has taken Tompkinsville, Ky., and captured 1,200 prisoners and 100 head of cattle and sent them to Murfreesboro'.
Capture of Tompkinsville, Ky. Chattanooga Dec. 27
--Parties from Murfreesboro' report that Morgan has taken Tompkinsville, Ky., and captured 1,200 prisoners and 100 head of cattle and sent them to Murfreesboro'.
The Yankees repulsed on the Cumberland. Chattanooga, May 5.
--A heavy force of Yankees crossed the Cumberland at Celina, near the Kentucky line, under cover of artillery, and attacked Col. Hamilton's forces, who, interior in number, and without artillery, fell back to Hill's, where they made a stand, and after several hours' hard fighting repulsed the enemy, killing ten and wounding nineteen.--Our loss, two killed and three wounded. The Yankees, retreating through Celina, burned the place.
Col. Hamilton pursued to Tompkinsville, Ky., and destroyed most of that place.