Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 2, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Ashby or search for Ashby in all documents.

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ation, or the shouts of our brave boys for "Jeff Davis and the Confederacy." The same letters represent the Yankees as looking upon Jackson's army, particularly Col. Ashby's cavalry, with fear and trembling. The men claim no victory over us, though the usual noise will be made in their papers. Our people on the border look upon , on the retreat. Both lost some four or five horses. All of our batteries acted well on the field, and the enemy admit that they did terrible execution. Col. Ashby, held the right, and before the fight was over was completely in the rear of the enemy. He covered our retreat, and by his tireless enemy has made himself the n A. Barman, Chief Quartermaster of this army. It is no slight job to move at train three miles long across a dangerous ford, (Cedar creek bridge was destroyed by Ashby on our first "fall back,") in presence of an enemy. Our train was in night of the battle held, when Maj. Harman, seeing the position of affairs, ordered it back.