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From Pensacola.further particulars of the fight on Santa Rosa Island. Mobile Oct. 11.
--A special dispatch to the Mobile advertiser and Register, of yesterday's date at Pensacola, states that five companies of Mississippians were engaged in the fight on Santa Rosa Island on Wednesday night, under the command of Col. Chalmers, with Captains Benton, McGowen, Peak, and Miller, and Lieutenants Watson, Myckle, Johnson, McGowen, Banks, and Smith.
The casualties were three killed, among whom is private W. E. Welbur.
Among the wounded are Capt. Benton and privates Stillman and Davis.
The Georgia troops suffered severely.
Col. Brown treats the wounded prisoners kindly.
Latest Intelligence.--The Federals have 22 of our men prisoners, including the wounded.
Lieut. Layne is in the enemy's hospital doing tolerably well, and it is hoped that his leg will be saved.
Col. Brown, of Fort Pickens, will not respect our hospital, and Dr. Ford will not remove the sick un
The Daily Dispatch: November 13, 1861., [Electronic resource], Court Martial. (search)
A Trait of Santa Rosa.
--Captain Peak, of the McFarland (Miss.) Rifles, who was engaged in the affair of Santa Rosa, says in an account published in the Vicksburg Citizen:
I know of one instance where a small Irishman of a quaint turn shot down a fellow with a nice coat upon him. He deliberately took the coat off him and transferred it to his own back with as much evident composure as he would have tried a fit in a furnishing tailor's shop.
This last incident is mentioned in order to say, that under the cuff of the fellow's coat sleeve were found the ace and knave of spades — a significant commentary upon his character.
The Daily Dispatch: April 4, 1863., [Electronic resource], Arrest of a notorious Lincolnites (search)
Arrest of a notorious Lincolnites
--The Knoxville Register, of the instant, has the following account of the arrest of a notorious traitor near that place:
Seth Lea, an old Lincolnites, well known in this county, and who has been making regular trips into the enemy's lines in Kentucky, was caught on Saturday last, at Winter's Gap, by Lieut. Peak, of Capt. Butler's famous company.
He had with him a small bag, containing some three hundred letters from parties in Knox and adjoining counties to soldiers and other parties in the Federal lines.
He had on his person a commission as recruiting officer of a Federal cavalry regiment, and was accompanied by two fugitive slaves and one recruit, John Dinkins.
The negroes, by their fleetness of foot, escaped, but Dinkins was captured and brought here with Lea, and both are safety lodged in jail.
The periodical trips of Lea and a few other notorious characters, with their mail bags, to Lincolndom, explains how Brownlow, according to
The Daily Dispatch: May 4, 1863., [Electronic resource], The "Situation"--a Yankee raid. (search)
Substitute wanted.
--A farm of two hundred and thirty acres, in Hanover, near Peak's Turn-out on the Central Railroad, or the highest price in Confederate money, will be paid for a suitable man to go as a Substitute in the army.
Apply at the store of Geo I Heering, 56 Main street.
jy 25--2t*