Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for October 22nd or search for October 22nd in all documents.

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pliance with orders from General Schofield, moved at seven A. M., bivouacked at Lee and Gordon's Mills, marching (12) twelve miles. October nineteenth, moved at eight A. M., marching thirteen miles, bivouacking at La Fayette. October twentieth, moved at six A. M., marched thirteen miles, bivouacking near Enthittaga Springs or Chattooga River. October twenty-first, moved at six A. M., and marching sixteen miles, bivouacking at Dougherty plantation on Broomtown Valley road. October twenty-second, moved at six A. M., marching eight miles, bivouacked at Gaylesville, and, in accordance with orders from General Schofield, reported to corps headquarters and joined the First and Third divisions, thus closing a short but active campaign. My thanks are due and cheerfully awarded to my command, for energy and good conduct and good nature. Starting without tents or a single wagon, almost without a change of clothing, raining almost constantly for the first week, fording rivers and d
rom Atlanta, loaded five hundred wagons principally with corn and oats, and returned to the city October fourteenth. October 22.--Ordered by Major-General Slocum, commanding Twentieth corps, to proceed with the brigade and reinforce Colonel Dustinst 11 A. M., and arrived in Atlanta at two o'clock P. M. October 15 to 21, inclusive.--Remained in the same camp. October 22.--Marched with the balance of the brigade, at four P. M., on road to Flat Rock Shoals, to cover the return of a foragintlanta, and encamped at three A. M. of next morning. October 14.--Marched five miles to camp in Atlanta, Georgia. October 22.--Marched fifteen miles, to near South-River, to reinforce forage expedition against a threatened attack. October 23ty, near the Chattanooga Railroad. While there, the time was mainly occupied in picket-duty, drill, etc. On the twenty-second of October, it went on another foraging expedition, under command of Colonel E. A. Carman, which lasted three days. The dis