Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 30, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hunter or search for Hunter in all documents.

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rise and marched 18 miles, striking the enemy about 2 o'clock on Sunday. They numbered about 12,000 infantry and 3,000 cavalry. The enemy was routed with very little resistance, and fled precipitately. Gen. Mulligan, who was mor wounded, was brought to Kernstown, where he died on Monday morning. In his diary the last entry made on that day was, "Well, our cause is gloomy; we will conquer the South about the time the Jews all return to Jerusalem." Some of the entries were very severe on Gen. Hunter, whom he characterizes as a fiend. Gen. Lilly, of our army, who was captured by the enemy in Ramseur's disaster; was recaptured. His arm had been amputated by the Yankee surgeons. We captured about three hundred prisoners in the fight, or rather in the run, and squads of twenty and thirty were surrendering to the cavalry all the way to Bunker Hill, to which point the pursuit was kept up. Our infantry pursued them as far as Jordan's White Sulphur Springs, five miles beyond Wincheste