Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 2, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Sims or search for Sims in all documents.

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Pickens, Benge, Hildebrand, Judge Fields, Chas. Hicks — captains all — stood by him to the end. There was some lieutenants, (if I knew their names I would give them) and two sons and a grandson of the chief that remained with their colonel also. Col. Cooper, like Gen. Price, is one of the commanders that does not sit perpendicularly up after a fight, but goes out hunting for new ones. And such officers does the Colonel need. If Providence governs, there never will be a fight. Col. Sims's regiment of Texans is encamped here — all daring and decent men. The whole regiment is an honor to its State. Measles and pneumonia have been severe among the men. Two hundred, or thereabouts, are on the sick report. Unionism in Tennessee on the Decline — letter from Hon. John C. Gaut. As an evidence of the effect produced upon the mind of "Union men" in East Tennessee by the abolition message of Abraham Lincoln, the Savannah Republican publishes a very interesting letter from