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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: August 22, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 23 total hits in 6 results.
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 3
General Hood Increases his army.
--The Atlanta correspondent of the Columbus Enquirer says that General Hood is rapidly increasing the fighting men of his army:
General Hood is putting guns into the hands of every available man connected etain their present position, Sherman and his army will be routed.
Sherman does not manifest a disposition to shell Atlanta.
For two days he has not thrown a shell into the place.
Large quantities of tobacco continue to be unearthed and brought forth from its hiding places in and around Atlanta, which General Hood promptly impresses for the use of the army.
There is no doubt but what the owners thought that Atlanta would be evacuated and then they and their tobacco would fall into places in and around Atlanta, which General Hood promptly impresses for the use of the army.
There is no doubt but what the owners thought that Atlanta would be evacuated and then they and their tobacco would fall into the embrace of the Yankees.
Sherman (search for this): article 3
Burwell Brown (search for this): article 3
William F. Clayton (search for this): article 3
Hood (search for this): article 3
Hood Increases (search for this): article 3
General Hood Increases his army.
--The Atlanta correspondent of the Columbus Enquirer says that General Hood is rapidly increasing the fighting men of his army:
General Hood is putting guns into the hands of every available man connected with the army. --All of the cooks have been armed and returned to their respective commands, and the negroes connected with the army have been employed in that capacity.
Quartermasters and commissaries have been made to disgorge the many superfluous men in their departments; surgeons also.
The result is that the army has received a considerable reinforcement.
In Clayton's division alone the number of new men returned from the cooking detachments reached three hundred, which at this time is considered a good regiment.
The increase from the cooks alone will reach four thousand effective men.
But General Hood does not stop here.
He has ordered the arming of every artillerist except from No. 1 to 6, who are absolutely necessary to ha