Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 24, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Joe Johnston or search for Joe Johnston in all documents.

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nemy attack Thomas's corps, they are temporarily repulsed, a second assault by reinforcements, the enemy again repulsed, another engagement expected, Gens. Hill, Johnston, Longstreet, and Polk engaged," the Tribune has the following dispatch: Headq's army of Cumberland,Crawfish Spring, Ga., Sept. 19, 1863. A desperate enga9th Indiana regiment. The battle is not yet over. It will probable be renewed to-morrow. Rebel prisoners represent that the corps of Gens. Hill, Polk, Johnston, and Long street were in the engagement. Our men are in the best of spirits and eager to begin a new. A dispatch dated Washington, the 20th, says: ce, and here, as so often before the best and perhaps the only sound defence for the rebels consisted in assuming the offensive at once. The armies of Bragg and Johnston were united. The Georgia Militia was hurried forward. Conscripts, guerillas, deserters, and what ever she could to swell the waste ranks of the rebel army, wer
--On the 19th day of September--the very day on which the battle terminating in the rout of Rosecrans and his army was fought — the New York Herald told its readers that Meade and Rosecrans were both moving on the rebel capital, (this city,) the one through Virginia and the other through Georgia; that the rebels were in the utmost terror at the anticipated success of these movements, which were to be executed simultaneously; that Bragg had collected 100,000 men from the odds and ends of Joe Johnston's army, the Vicksburg paroled prisoners, &c.; but that, composed as it is of such crude and discordant materials, "it cannot stand a day before the disciplined and victorious legions of Rosecrans."--Before the newsboys were done distributing the newspaper containing this gasconade the "disciplined legions" of Rosecrans were already in full retreat before this army of "crude and discordant materials," and twenty four hours after they found themselves compelled to take leave in the night, l