Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 23, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for A. P. Hill or search for A. P. Hill in all documents.

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n, assistant to Major Harmon, Chief Quartermaster of Ewell's corps, is now Acting Chief Quartermaster of that corps. Congress, I am told, will, in all probability, at its present session, create the office of Provost Marshal General for this army. If such be its action, I trust I shall be pardoned for speaking favorably of Major Bridgford, of Richmond, who has been acting in that capacity for the last ten months. He will be a candidate for the post, and is recommended by Gens. Ewell, A. P. Hill, Rodes, Early, and other leading Generals and officers of the army. The Chaplains of this army held a meeting at Orange C. H on Friday. Most interesting reports were made, which show a high state of religious feeling throughout the army. To that sainted hero, the immortal Jackson, is due much, if not all, of the present system by which the Chaplains in our army are enabled to do so much good. And, by the way, let me say, that my firm conviction is, that the great success of this ar
inery of the rolling mill, which was being erected by S. B. Lowe & Co., was buried, but an old man named Riley pointed out the spot where it was interred, and when our informants left a number or Yankees were engaged in resurrecting it. They had also dug up a steam engine buried by Thomas Webster & Co., near their foundry, and taking it, together with the engine belonging to the Rebel office, and one they had taken from D. Kaylor, and placed them at the river, and were throwing water upon Hog Hill, and from that point distributing it throughout the town and their camps by the aid of troughs. The Unionists were, as a general thing, treated as badly as the Southern people. Bill Crutchfield, who was ordered out of Chattanooga by General Bragg, and who swam the river and joined the Yankees and remained with Crittenden's command opposite Chattanooga during the shelling of the place, and who was quite officious in his efforts in their favor, was stripped of everything. It is stated th