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rryville road on Ramseur, who was posted at the Spout Spring, on the same-road, some four miles east of Winchester. General Gordon was at Bunker Hill, twelve miles from Winchester and ten miles from Martinsburg, on a reconnaissance. General Rodes was at Hopewell Church, near Whitehall, to the left of the Martinsburg road, and about eight miles below Winchester. Gordon commenced moving back to the point of attack about daylight, and Rodes moved in the same direction about seven o'clock. Whartllows: Ramseur's troops stretched from Abraham creek to the Berryville pike, Rodes had taken position between Ramseur and Gordon, and Wharton, as above stated, held the left. The battle now raged heavily, and bore strongly towards our left. It was about half-past 12 when General Rodes, while placing a battery in the gap between himself and Gordon, was struck in the head by a ball and borne from the field. He was carried to Winchester, where he died in about half an hour after reaching the pla
From the latest Northern files received we copy such items as our lack of space will admit. The following is the latest intelligence from Sheridan: "Harper's Ferry, September 21, 1864. "To Hon. E. M. Stanton, Washington. "Reliable news from the front. Our army was crossing Cedar creek yesterday at 3 P. M. No fighting. The following list of rebel generals killed and wounded is correct: Generals Rodes, Gordon, Terry, Godwin, Read, Johnson and Fitz Lee. From all I can learn, the prisoners will approximate five thousand. The indications are that the rebels will not make a stand short of Staunton. They are evidently too much demoralized to make another fight. John D. Stevenson, "Brigadier-General." The schooner Mary B. Smith, which arrived at Several on Saturday, reports: "Spoke, September 7, latitude 44,40, longitude $7.50, fishing schooner William H. Lovett, of Marblehead, who reported that twenty miles to the eastward saw four or five vessels on fi