Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 4, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Carter County (Tennessee, United States) or search for Carter County (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

says! In Carter county a large number of those more or less implicated in the late rebellion voluntarily came forward and delivered up their arms and took the oath of allegiance to the Confederate States of America. The principal ringleaders however, have fled up Johnson county, or elsewhere. None of the bridge-burners have been taken that we have heard of. Some spasms of the rebellion yet exist on the upper borders of the Buffalo — in the Limestone Cove and the Crab Orchard, in Carter county, and in Greasy Cove in this county. It is in contemplation to start another daily paper in Knoxville, Tenn. Kentucky items. From the Louisville (Bowling Green) Courier, of the 28th ult., we gather the following items: A man styling himself "Leonidas Metcalf, Colonel Kentucky Volunteers," has issued an impudent "Proclamation" to the people of Breathiest county, Ky., telling the rebels they are fighting without cause, and promising them if they come back they shall not
The Carter outbreak. --The Jonesboro' Union, of the 25th ult., says: The expedition which entered Carter county, on Saturday last, under Maj. Ledbetter, of Stoval's Georgia regiment, on marching to Doe River cove, found no enemy, the insurgents having disbanded. They had camped at that point several days, and their wooden tents were still standing. They were burned, a pen of corn taken possession of, and a few other eatables, when they returned to the line of the insurgents, Capt. McClellan's cavalry company being determined to take possession of and occupy Elizabethton, the county scat. This he performed without opposition, and he is at that point. A few prisoners have been taken, and sent to Knoxville, on various charges. The Carter Outbreak