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Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.military enthusiasm in the mountains — a Brace young soldier. Christiansburg, June 17, 1861.
This county (Montgomery) has, as you have been informed already, sent five companies, averaging about 80 men, rank and file, and the sixth is waiting for their uniforms, now in the industrious hands of our patriotic ladies, who have for the last three months, all over the county, been rigging out our mountain boys in the inviscible grey.
Capt., James C. Taylor has also raised nearly a full company, making the seventh.
But the county has not sufficient slave labor to do the farm work at this busy season, and therefore Capt. T. does not intend to offer his company to the Governor until after harvest.
One of the thirty North Carolina soldiers who volunteered to cross an open field exposed to the enemy's fire, to reinforce a part of our ranks too weak to stand the Federal force directed against it, in the Bethel Church fight, was a lad formerly
The Daily Dispatch: January 8, 1862., [Electronic resource], The Harmoneans and the Charleston sufferers. (search)
Death of a missionary.
--We learn that Rev. J. B Taylor, Corresponding Secretary of the Southern Baptist Mission Board, has received information, through a flag of truce, that Rev. Mr. Holmes, a native of this State and a missionary of the Foreign Mission Board, located in this city, was murdered at Yental, China, in October last, by Chinese insurgents.
Rev. Mr. Parker, an Episcopal missionary, was murdered at the same time.
The following were the circumstances as detailed by a correspondent of the New York Commercial:
The insurgents were advancing upon Chefce and Yental, the village where the missionaries and their families resided, and Messrs. Holmes and Parker went out to endeavor to prevail upon them not to molest the villagers of the latter place.
But their efforts to save the people were in vain.
They were cruelly murdered, and their mangled, half burnt bodies were not found for more than a week afterward.
Mr. Holmes was struck five times on the head with swords a
The Daily Dispatch: January 8, 1862., [Electronic resource], Try a gentleman, (search)
The Daily Dispatch: January 24, 1862., [Electronic resource], "Sawery" Bennett 's opinion of old Abe . (search)