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Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 3
field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in supporting distance of each other in North Alabama, East Tennessee and Southeastern Kentucky, marching to the front and rear of Buell's and Grant's armies, supposed to number less than 150,000 that the Confederate cavalry, under Gene. Forest and Morgan, had cut off the Federal reinforcements and supplies byhe larger portion of the State of Missouri; that to hold St. Louis and Missouri against the rapidly augmenting force it would require a Federal army of not less than one hundred and fifty thousand men; that all accounts from Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Maryland, represented the young men of those States ready to rise and co-operate on the advance of the Confederate armies; and that the Confederates calculated upon adding not less than one hundred and fifty thousand men to their numbers f
Gen Beauregard (search for this): article 3
Jura. It adds: He has important dispatches for the Confederate Commissioners, Messrs, Mason and Slidell. Mr. Sanders says Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Beauregard had so far recovered as to be able to resume active duty; that the Confederate at my in Virginia, east of Petersburg, under command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Line condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in supporting distance of each other in North Alabama, eft Abingdon, Virginia, with his division, entering Northeastern Kentucky for the Blue Glass Region, expecting to form a junction with General Kirby Smith, from Beauregard and Bragg's army; that Major General Holmes, at the head of thirty thousand man from Texas, Northwest Louisiana and Arkansas, had pasted Fort Smith, and would s
Joseph E. Johnston (search for this): article 3
he Liverpool Mercury announces the arrival of George N. Sanders from the Confederate States by the steamer Jura. It adds: He has important dispatches for the Confederate Commissioners, Messrs, Mason and Slidell. Mr. Sanders says Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Beauregard had so far recovered as to be able to resume active duty; that the Confederate at my in Virginia, east of Petersburg, under command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including more than 400 pieces of well-appointed field artillery under General Pendleton, and 10,000 splendidly mounted and efficiently armed cavalry under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fine condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in suppo
Interesting Foreign news. The latest foreign papers give us some interesting news. The supposed fight between a Confederate and Federal vessel off the British proves to have been nothing but some target practice by British vessels of war. George N. Sanders in England. The Liverpool Mercury announces the arrival of George N. Sanders from the Confederate States by the steamer Jura. It adds: He has important dispatches for the Confederate Commissioners, Messrs, Mason and Slidell. Mr. Sanders says Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Beauregard had so far recovered as to be able to resume active duty; that the Confederate at my in Virginia, east of Petersburg, under command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including more than 400 pieces of well-appointed field artillery under General Pendleton, and 10,000 splendidly mounted and efficiently armed cavalry under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fi
Pendleton (search for this): article 3
the Confederate States by the steamer Jura. It adds: He has important dispatches for the Confederate Commissioners, Messrs, Mason and Slidell. Mr. Sanders says Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Beauregard had so far recovered as to be able to resume active duty; that the Confederate at my in Virginia, east of Petersburg, under command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including more than 400 pieces of well-appointed field artillery under General Pendleton, and 10,000 splendidly mounted and efficiently armed cavalry under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fine condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in supporting distance of each other in North Alabama, East Tennessee and Sou
Longstreet (search for this): article 3
h vessels of war. George N. Sanders in England. The Liverpool Mercury announces the arrival of George N. Sanders from the Confederate States by the steamer Jura. It adds: He has important dispatches for the Confederate Commissioners, Messrs, Mason and Slidell. Mr. Sanders says Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Beauregard had so far recovered as to be able to resume active duty; that the Confederate at my in Virginia, east of Petersburg, under command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including more than 400 pieces of well-appointed field artillery under General Pendleton, and 10,000 splendidly mounted and efficiently armed cavalry under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fine condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150
y under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fine condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in supporting distance of each other in North Alabama, East Tennessee and Southeastern Kentucky, marching to the front and rear of Buell's and Grant's armies, supposed to number less than 150,000 that the Confederate cavalry, under Gene. Forest and Morgan, had cut off the Federal reinforcements and supplies by river and rail, destroying transports and trains from close proximity to the rear; that it was confidently believed at Richmond that Buell's army would be captured or disposed that it could not possibly make a successful south of the Ohio river; that General Humphrey Marshall had left Abingdon, Virginia, with his division, enteri
Braxton Bragg (search for this): article 3
Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fine condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in supporting distance of each other in North Alabama, East Tennessee and Southeastern Kentucky, marching to the front and rear of Buell's and Grant's accessful south of the Ohio river; that General Humphrey Marshall had left Abingdon, Virginia, with his division, entering Northeastern Kentucky for the Blue Glass Region, expecting to form a junction with General Kirby Smith, from Beauregard and Bragg's army; that Major General Holmes, at the head of thirty thousand man from Texas, Northwest Louisiana and Arkansas, had pasted Fort Smith, and would soon co-operate with twenty thousand State troops and partisan rangers already in possession of t
r command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including more than 400 pieces of well-appointed field artillery under General Pendleton, and 10,000 splendidly mounted and efficiently armed cavalry under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fine condition, arching upon the enemy and anxious to meet and give them battle on any fair field; that no one in or out of the army doubted the result; that Generals Beauregard, Bragg, Price and Kirby Smith were at the head of 150,000 infantry and artillery and 12,000 cavalry, in supporting distance of each other in North Alabama, East Tennessee and Southeastern Kentucky, marching to the front and rear of Buell's and Grant's armies, supposed to number less than 150,000 that the Confederate cavalry, under Gene. Forest and Morgan, had cut off the Federal reinforcements and supplies by river and rail, destroying transports and trains from close proximity to the rear; that it was c
Interesting Foreign news. The latest foreign papers give us some interesting news. The supposed fight between a Confederate and Federal vessel off the British proves to have been nothing but some target practice by British vessels of war. George N. Sanders in England. The Liverpool Mercury announces the arrival of George N. Sanders from the Confederate States by the steamer Jura. It adds: He has important dispatches for the Confederate Commissioners, Messrs, Mason and Slidell. Mr. Sanders says Generals Joseph E. Johnston and Beauregard had so far recovered as to be able to resume active duty; that the Confederate at my in Virginia, east of Petersburg, under command of Generals Lee, Johnston, Longstreet and Jackson, numbers about 200,000 men, including more than 400 pieces of well-appointed field artillery under General Pendleton, and 10,000 splendidly mounted and efficiently armed cavalry under Generals Stuart and Fitzhugh Lee; that the Confederate army are in fi
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