Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 13, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Bradley Johnson or search for Bradley Johnson in all documents.

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refield, in Hardy county. They claim that the Confederate forces were completely routed, with the loss of six hundred prisoners; that they fled in great disorder, and were pursued by Averill twenty-five miles. They assert that they captured Bradley Johnson and all his staff, with the colors and ordnance trains of his command, and a large quantity of small arms. McCausland, they affirm, barely escaped by fleeing to the mountains. Johnson, it is said, were no insignia of rank, and was thernd were pursued by Averill twenty-five miles. They assert that they captured Bradley Johnson and all his staff, with the colors and ordnance trains of his command, and a large quantity of small arms. McCausland, they affirm, barely escaped by fleeing to the mountains. Johnson, it is said, were no insignia of rank, and was thereby enabled to effect his escape. Another capture is claimed of thirty-five loaded wagons, said to have been taken from the rebels near Aldie on Sunday last.
From the North. Petersburg, August 12. --Northern papers of the 10th have been received. Unofficial dispatches claim a great victory for Averill over McCausland and Bradley Johnson, on the 7th, near Moorefield, Hardy county. Johnson and staff were captured, but escaped. They also claim between five and six hundred prisoners, trains, colors and small arms to have been captured. The Commercial of the says Sherman and Thomas both telegraphed to Washington that Atlanta will fJohnson and staff were captured, but escaped. They also claim between five and six hundred prisoners, trains, colors and small arms to have been captured. The Commercial of the says Sherman and Thomas both telegraphed to Washington that Atlanta will fall this week certainly. A rebel wagon train of thirty-five wagons was captured in Loudoun county. There is nothing from the Army of the Potomac. Four expeditions entered Florida and destroyed railroads, burning bridges and committing other depredations. Gold 254½.
came, from an unreclaimed savage, a social and comparatively enlightened human being. He left Africa a benighted heathen, his intellect clouded, and his soul enslaved by the foul and dark superstition in which that wretched land has been involved from the earliest traces of recorded time.--He became a converted man — a Christian--and transmitted his new faith, with all its glorious hopes and glowing associations, to his children and his children's children, oven to the tenth generation. Dr. Johnson, one of the most humane men that ever existed, and, as far as his humble mean went, one of the most actively benevolent, expressed his regret at the attempts made in his day to suppress the African slave trade, because he regarded it as, under Providence, the most powerful of all agents for the Christianization of Africa. That it was so, we are enabled to see from the four millions of Africans upon this continent, not one of whom believes in the superstition of the country from which his