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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: November 18, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 18 total hits in 6 results.
West Virginia (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 8
From Western Virginia. Cincinnati, Nov. 12.
--The defeat of the Union troops at Guyandotte, Va., was accomplished by the treachery of the inhabitants conspiring with a force of rebels, variously estimated at from five hundred to one thousand men, who concentrated in the country back of the town.
These troops proposed, with the assistance of the rebel to habitants of Guyandotte, to annihilate the Federal troops stationed at the town, consisting of 250 men, port of a Virginia regiment and a few of Col. Zeigler's Virginia cavalry.
It was arranged between the rebel cavalry and rebel citizens to massacre our troops in cold blood.
Accordingly these rebel citizens assumed a very friendly manner to our troops last Sunday evening, and invited them to their houses on various precepts, and all who were off duty accepted the invitations.--While being thus entertained the rebel cavalry dashed into the town.
Signals were displayed from every house where the General soldiers were an
Guyandotte (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 8
From Western Virginia. Cincinnati, Nov. 12.
--The defeat of the Union troops at Guyandotte, Va., was accomplished by the treachery of the inhabitants conspiring with a force of rebels, variously estimated at from five hundred to one thousand men, who concentrated in the country back of the town.
These troops proposed, with the assistance of the rebel to habitants of Guyandotte, to annihilate the Federal troops stationed at the town, consisting of 250 men, port of a Virginia regiment aGuyandotte, to annihilate the Federal troops stationed at the town, consisting of 250 men, port of a Virginia regiment and a few of Col. Zeigler's Virginia cavalry.
It was arranged between the rebel cavalry and rebel citizens to massacre our troops in cold blood.
Accordingly these rebel citizens assumed a very friendly manner to our troops last Sunday evening, and invited them to their houses on various precepts, and all who were off duty accepted the invitations.--While being thus entertained the rebel cavalry dashed into the town.
Signals were displayed from every house where the General soldiers were an
Cotton Hill, W. Va. (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 8
Villers (search for this): article 8
Zeigler (search for this): article 8
December, 11 AD (search for this): article 8
From Western Virginia. Cincinnati, Nov. 12.
--The defeat of the Union troops at Guyandotte, Va., was accomplished by the treachery of the inhabitants conspiring with a force of rebels, variously estimated at from five hundred to one thousand men, who concentrated in the country back of the town.
These troops proposed, with the assistance of the rebel to habitants of Guyandotte, to annihilate the Federal troops stationed at the town, consisting of 250 men, port of a Virginia regiment a rived there, and learned the particulars of the affair, he ordered the destruction of the town, when the buildings were immediately fired, and the whole town was reduced to asb s.
Later from the Kanawha — the rebels Retreating. Cincinnati, Nov. 12.
--Later advices from the Kanawha Valley, Va., State that the rebels, who had been ling Camp Tomams from Cotton hill, retired upon the approach of the force under Col. De Villers. Nine of the enemy's pick is were killed, but there was no l