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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: September 23, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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G. W. Morgan (search for this): article 3
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, entering Northeastern Kentucky for the Blue Glass Region, expecting to form a junction with General Kirby Smith, f
Pallavicini (search for this): article 3
in pursuit approached be abandoned it by a skillful movement, and the pursuers lost all trace of his whereabouts. Colonel Pallavicini, of whom I will speak more particularly, with a picked battalion of Bersaglieri, whom he had led to victory more tours before, with about two thousand volunteers. The royal force consisted of eighteen hundred Bersaglieri. "Colonel Pallavicini sent one of his aids to Garibaldi to enjoin him, in the name of the King and of the law, to lay down his arms, wition that he had orders to use force to make the law respected. Garibaldi returned an absolute refusal. Thereupon Colonel Pallavicini, although his soldiers were fatigued by the forced march, and had only had a halt of forty minutes, gave the word,ed to be put on board an English vessel and conveyed to England or America Such, I can assure you, was his request. Col. Pallavicini replied that he would apply for orders from the Government. These orders, after a council of ministers, were that t
August 30th (search for this): article 3
hat 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 from these States, as they had furnished scarcely a regiment to the Federal army under the recent call. Incidents of the capture of Garibaldi A Turin letter to the London Daily News, dated, August 30, gives these particulars of the defeat of Garibaldi and its effect: "Garibaldi, it appears, had occupied the position of Aspromonte, but as the regiments sent in pursuit approached be abandoned it by a skillful movement, and the pursuers lost all trace of his whereabouts. Colonel Pallavicini, of whom I will speak more particularly, with a picked battalion of Bersaglieri, whom he had led to victory more than once before, divining at a glance that Garibaldi could not have gone on to a
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