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The Daily Dispatch: September 21, 1864., [Electronic resource], Arrival of the flag of truce with sick and wounded prisoners. (search)
ng that General Johnston never removed a single family except at their own request. General Hood, in finishing his letter, says: You say, "let us fight it out like men." To this my reply is, for myself, and I believe for all true men, aye, and women and children, in my country, we will fight you to the death. Better die a thousand deaths than submit to live under you or your government and your negro allies. Having answered the points forced upon the by your letter of the 9th of September, I close this correspondence with you, and notwithstanding your comments upon my appeal to God in the cause of humanity, I again humbly and reverently invoke his Almighty aid in defence of justice and right. A letter from Lovejoy's station, dated the 15th instant, says: The banished citizens of Atlanta continue to arrive. Some five hundred families have already come through. Many of them report the most deplorable condition of the Atlanta populace. About one-half of the po