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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 78 total hits in 60 results.
Stone River (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 72
Doc.
66.-fight near La Vergne, Tenn.
in camp near Nashville, Tennessee, Saturday, December 13, 1862.
I propose to give full particulars of the fight at La Vergne, as witnessed by a participant in the exciting scene.
The Thirty-fifth Indiana, Fifty-first Ohio, Eighth and Twenty-first Kentucky infantry, with two guns of Swallow's Seventh Indiana battery, went out beyond our picket-lines to escort fifty wagons on a foraging expedition.
They ventured as far as Stone's River, four miles from La Vergne, and in sight of the enemy's videttes.
We halted in a rich bottom in a bend in the river, where an abundance of corn, fodder, and oats was found.
The wagons were sent to the various cribs, pens, and stacks near by to load, while Col. Mathews led the whole command or escort to Dobbins's Ferry, a mile off, and satisfied himself that there would be no attack from the enemy at that point.
Returning to the wagons, he placed the artillery, Fifty-first Ohio, and Thirty-fifth Indian
Swallow (Utah, United States) (search for this): chapter 72
Doc.
66.-fight near La Vergne, Tenn.
in camp near Nashville, Tennessee, Saturday, December 13, 1862.
I propose to give full particulars of the fight at La Vergne, as witnessed by a participant in the exciting scene.
The Thirty-fifth Indiana, Fifty-first Ohio, Eighth and Twenty-first Kentucky infantry, with two guns of Swallow's Seventh Indiana battery, went out beyond our picket-lines to escort fifty wagons on a foraging expedition.
They ventured as far as Stone's River, four miles from La Vergne, and in sight of the enemy's videttes.
We halted in a rich bottom in a bend in the river, where an abundance of corn, fodder, and oats was found.
The wagons were sent to the various cribs, pens, and stacks near by to load, while Col. Mathews led the whole command or escort to Dobbins's Ferry, a mile off, and satisfied himself that there would be no attack from the enemy at that point.
Returning to the wagons, he placed the artillery, Fifty-first Ohio, and Thirty-fifth Indian
Edgefield (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 72
Doc.
66.-fight near La Vergne, Tenn.
in camp near Nashville, Tennessee, Saturday, December 13, 1862.
I propose to give full particulars of the fight at La Vergne, as witnessed by a participant in the exciting scene.
The Thirty-fifth Indiana, Fifty-first Ohio, Eighth and Twenty-first Kentucky infantry, with two guns of Swallow's Seventh Indiana battery, went out beyond our picket-lines to escort fifty wagons on a foraging expedition.
They ventured as far as Stone's River, four mile he highest encomiums of praise for resisting the enemy at great odds — maintaining their position under a murderous fire of musketry, and returning volley for volley, working destruction in the enemy's lines.
Col. S. W. Price being called to Nashville on business, the command of the Twenty-first Kentucky devolved on Lieut.-Col. J. C. Evans, who stood firmly at his post in the trying hour, and our favorite, Adjutant Scott Dudley, unconscious of self, stood up boldly, cheering the boys by exam
Lavergne (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 72
Doc.
66.-fight near La Vergne, Tenn.
in camp near Nashville, Tennessee, Saturday, December 13, 1862.
I propose to give full particulars of the fight at La Vergne, as witnessed by a participant in the exciting scene.
The Thirty-fifth Indiana, Fifty-first Ohio, Eighth and Twenty-first Kentucky infantry, with two guns oLa Vergne, as witnessed by a participant in the exciting scene.
The Thirty-fifth Indiana, Fifty-first Ohio, Eighth and Twenty-first Kentucky infantry, with two guns of Swallow's Seventh Indiana battery, went out beyond our picket-lines to escort fifty wagons on a foraging expedition.
They ventured as far as Stone's River, four miles from La Vergne, and in sight of the enemy's videttes.
We halted in a rich bottom in a bend in the river, where an abundance of corn, fodder, and oats was found.
La Vergne, and in sight of the enemy's videttes.
We halted in a rich bottom in a bend in the river, where an abundance of corn, fodder, and oats was found.
The wagons were sent to the various cribs, pens, and stacks near by to load, while Col. Mathews led the whole command or escort to Dobbins's Ferry, a mile off, and satisfied himself that there would be no attack from the enemy at that point.
Returning to the wagons, he placed the artillery, Fifty-first Ohio, and Thirty-fifth India
William Ross (search for this): chapter 72
Andrew Hays (search for this): chapter 72
L. Courtwright (search for this): chapter 72
Henry Stahel (search for this): chapter 72
Watson Smith (search for this): chapter 72
Thomas Burke (search for this): chapter 72