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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 11, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hagerstown (Maryland, United States) or search for Hagerstown (Maryland, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 7 results in 4 document sections:
From Maryland.all quiet at Hagerstown. Martinsburg July 9.
--Our army is at Hagerstown.
All quiet there to-day.
A cavalry skirmish took place yesterday.
There is no information of the whereabouts of the Yankee army.
Maryland Heights have been reoccupied by a small force of the enemy.
An ordnance train has just passed on the way to Gen. Lee, who is waiting for it.
From Maryland.all quiet at Hagerstown. Martinsburg July 9.
--Our army is at Hagerstown.
All quiet there to-day.
A cavalry skirmish took place yesterday.
There is no information of the whereabouts of the Yankee army.
Maryland Heights have been reoccupied by a small force of the enemy.
An ordnance train has just passed on the way to Gen. Lee, who is waiting for it.
Another attack on Charleston. Charleston, June 10.
--The attack here has commenced.
There are four iron-clads off the bar, one at the mouth of Stone river, and one in that river.
There are also forty-three other vessels off the harbor.
There was heavy firing from 5 o'clock A. M. for two hours, our Morris Island batteries replying.
Troops are landing at Grimball's.
An iron-clad and a gunboat have gone up Stone river to attack Fort Pemberton.
[Second Dispatch.]
Martinsburg, July 9th, via Staunton, 10th.
A heavy cavalry fight occurred across the river yesterday.
We drove the enemy seven miles, capturing a number of prisoners.
The army is quiet at Hagerstown.
Gen. Lee's Army.
The only direct intelligence we have from Gen. Lee's army, is from a dispatch received at the office of the Enquire yesterday, which states that there was a severe infantry fight at Boonsboro', Md., on the 8th, which resulted in the repulse of the enemy after three hours severe fighting.
No other particulars are given.
A cavalry fight is also reported to have taken place near Hagerstown, on the same day. The same dispatch states that the forces of the enemy had been withdrawn from Gettysburg twelve hours before our army retired.
This would not indicate that we suffered so serious a reverse as is alleged by the Yankee journals.
The Central train from Staunton — by which it was hoped some news would reach us — had not arrived up to the hour of going to press, in consequence of the breaking of an sale between Charlottesville and Gordonsvill