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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Gen Kilpatrick or search for Gen Kilpatrick in all documents.

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s almost destroyed. The 931 N Y regiment went in 550 strong, and in the Wilderness fights alone was reduced to less than 200. Miscellaneous. The captain of the captured blockade-runner Greyhound, which reached Boston on Thursday afternoon, escaped during the excitement incident to her arrival. The ship was surrounded by hosts from the shore, and there being little or no lookout kept, the captured captain availed himself of the neglect, and got ashore, dodging his captors. Gen Kilpatrick in a dispatch to his family at Buttermilk Falls, N Y. says that although his wounds are slight, they will compel him to give up his command, and he is, therefore, on his way home. He was wounded near Sammerville, Ga., while leading a cavalry charge in the rear of Johnston's army. The Alexandria (Va) Journal says that Monday afternoon 45 officers and 300 men, all of them skedaddles from Grant's army, were forwarded to Belle Plain to be returned to their regiments. The officers were
From Yankeedom. Senator's, May 27. --Sam Medary has been arrested and brought to Cincinnati. The Chicago Times correspondent of the 17th says that the loss in front of Resaca was 600 killed, 8,000 wounded, and 400 missing. Hooker was slightly wounded at Resaca, and Kilpatrick painfully, Manson seriously, Willick mortally. The Kentucky provost marshals to enrol negroes take them as substitutes.