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The Daily Dispatch: November 29, 1864., [Electronic resource] | 2 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Atlantic Essays | 1 | 1 | Browse | Search |
Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 3. | 1 | 1 | Browse | Search |
The Daily Dispatch: May 12, 1864., [Electronic resource] | 1 | 1 | Browse | Search |
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Your search returned 116 results in 43 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: June 4, 1861., [Electronic resource], Ordered off. (search)
Federal movements in the Southwest. Grenada, July 23.
--General Sherman has evacuated Germantown, LaGrange, and Moscow, moving his whole force to Memphis, and burning those towns in his flight.
A portion of Curtis's army has left Helena, Ark, for some point below — probably Vicksburg.
The Daily Dispatch: November 29, 1862., [Electronic resource], Proclamation of the Governor of North Carolina . (search)
Movements of the enemy in the Southwest--a Successful cavalry Dash. Mobile, Nov. 28.
--A letter in the Advertiser and Register, dated "Headquarters Cavalry Division, ten miles South of Holly Springs, November 23d," says:
"No doubt the enemy intend advancing in this direction.
Some 50,000 to 60,000 Abolitionists are in front at Grand Junction, Davis's Mills, and Lagrange, and reinforcements are joining them daily from Memphis and Jackson.
"The enemy are rapidly repairing the Memphis and Charleston Railroad to Grand Junction; also, the Mississippi Central Railroad towards Holly Springs.
All the stations and bridges are heavily graded.
Their armed foraging parties, composed of the vilest robbers and murderers on the face of the earth, range the country around for miles, on every side, from Davis's Mills to Moscow, which seems to be their base.
"Capt. Mitchell's cavalry company attacked a Yankee forage train, comprising forty wagons, guarded by eighty cavalry
The Daily Dispatch: April 20, 1863., [Electronic resource], The enemy's movements in the Southwest . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: October 10, 1863., [Electronic resource],
A fiend to be triedȔtheMcNeil murder.(search)
The Daily Dispatch: November 3, 1863., [Electronic resource], Cats — affection — Volunteering. (search)
Cats — affection — Volunteering.
--In Augusta, 1861, a German left this city as a volunteer, leaving behind him a wife and a house cat that he thought much of. He made his wife promise that whenever his favorite cat had kittens she would not kill them, but keep them and their increase until his return.
Faithfully the woman kept her word, and this forenoon we saw, ourselves, about her house, in the third ward, in which she lives, in a shed adjoining, and racing about the premises, the old cat and her children, grand-children, great grandchildren, etc., etc., to the number of two hundred and nine cats, catletts and kittens.--Lagrange (Ga.) Democrat.
The Daily Dispatch: December 9, 1863., [Electronic resource], The Legislature. (search)
Deaths in the enemy's lines.
--One of the noble-hearted ladies who nursed our wounded at Gettysburg, and has since come through our lines, informs us that Captain Geiger, of Albemarle county, Va., and L. C. Blackburn, of the 53d Virginia regiment, who died of wounds received in the battle there, have been buried in a cemetery near Baltimore.
Any information needed by the friends of the deceased may be obtained by a letter directed to Surgeon Wm. T. Joynes, St. Mary's Hospital, Lagrange, Ga.
The Daily Dispatch: April 4, 1864., [Electronic resource], The importance of raising sorghum. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: May 12, 1864., [Electronic resource], Contraband — their Sad fate. (search)