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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 20 total hits in 8 results.
Washington (United States) (search for this): chapter 86
Kentucky (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): chapter 86
Hidden (search for this): chapter 86
Doc (search for this): chapter 86
Doc.
84.-the charge at Burk's Station, Va.
A correspondent, writing from Fairfax Court-House, March eleventh, gives the following account of this affair:
Two days of excitement and the monotony of camp-life on the Potomac is broken.
Companies A and H, of the Lincoln cavalry, were on Saturday ordered to proceed to Burk's Station, (your readers all know where that is,) and guard a portion of the railroad and a bridge, then being repaired by a body of laborers.
On Sunday morning, Gen. Kearney and his brigade pushed forward to the same point, feeling his way into the enemy's country.
The enemy's scouts were hovering about in the vicinity, and it was evident that we were close upon his outposts.
About eleven o'clock, Gen. Kearney ordered a detachment of fourteen men, of the Lincoln cavalry, under command of Lieut. Hidden, to advance to a certain point on the road, feel the enemy's position and report.
Flankers were furnished, but they do not seem to have kept up with the cava
Thomas H. Kearney (search for this): chapter 86
Eugene Lewis (search for this): chapter 86
William Webb (search for this): chapter 86
March 11th (search for this): chapter 86
Doc.
84.-the charge at Burk's Station, Va.
A correspondent, writing from Fairfax Court-House, March eleventh, gives the following account of this affair:
Two days of excitement and the monotony of camp-life on the Potomac is broken.
Companies A and H, of the Lincoln cavalry, were on Saturday ordered to proceed to Burk's Station, (your readers all know where that is,) and guard a portion of the railroad and a bridge, then being repaired by a body of laborers.
On Sunday morning, Gen. Kearney and his brigade pushed forward to the same point, feeling his way into the enemy's country.
The enemy's scouts were hovering about in the vicinity, and it was evident that we were close upon his outposts.
About eleven o'clock, Gen. Kearney ordered a detachment of fourteen men, of the Lincoln cavalry, under command of Lieut. Hidden, to advance to a certain point on the road, feel the enemy's position and report.
Flankers were furnished, but they do not seem to have kept up with the caval