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Capt. Calvin D. Cowles , 23d U. S. Infantry, Major George B. Davis , U. S. Army, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, Index. (search)
, 2; 88, 2; 90, 2; 101, 21; 118, 1; 148, A13; 149, H13 Kilpatrick's expedition to, Aug. 15-16, 1864 90, 2 Fairfax, or Culpeper Court-House, Va. See Culpeper Court-House. Fairfax Court-House, Va. 5, 10; 7, 1; 21, 13; 22, 5; 74, 1; 100, 1; 117, 1; 135-A; 137, A7 Vicinity of, toward Hunter's Chapel, Va., Nov., 1861 5, 10 Fairfax Station, Va. 7, 1; 86, 15; 117, 1 Fairfield, N. C. 138, E11 Fairfield, Pa. 43, 7; 116, 2; 136, B2, 136, D3, 136, D7 Fairfield, Tenn. 24, 3; 30, 2; 32, 5; 118, 1 Fair Garden, Tenn. 135-A Fair Haven, Md. 137, A9 Fairmont, W. Va. 135-A; 135-C, 1; 140, D11 Fair Oaks, Va. 16, 1; 17, 1; 19, 1; 20, 1; 63, 8; 74, 1; 77, 1; 92, 1; 100, 1, 100, 2; 117, 1; 135, 3; 137, F8; 171 Falling Waters, W. Va. 42, 5; 43, 7; 69, 1; 81, 4; 116, 2 Adjacent country in Maryland 42, 5 Falls Church, Va. 6, 1; 7, 1; 27, 1; 89, 1; 100, 1 Falmouth, Ky. 118, 1; 135-A; 141, B2; 151, D13 Falmout
Estes, in Wharton's brigade, Wheeler's cavalry. (966) Mentioned in General Wharton's report of Murfreesboro. Vol. XXIII, Part 1—(162) Mentioned in Wharton's report of fight at Triune, March 21, 1863. (430, 454, 458) Mentioned in reports of General Thomas, General Reynolds and Col. John T. Wilder (Union), of fight near Hoover's Gap. (578) Mentioned by Lieutenant-Colonel Lamborn (Union) as falling back to Tullahoma, June 27th. Vol. XXIII, Part 2—(739) Wharton says: Third will camp at Fairfield, April 4, 1863. (740) Col. Baxter Smith says regiment, under Col. W. N. Estes, was at Jacksonburg, April 5th. (915) General Anderson reports bridge over Sequatchie, near Jasper, burned by detachment under Capt. P. H. Rice, July 19th. (943, 960) Harrison's brigade, Wharton's division, Wheeler's corps, July. No. 50—(232) Harrison's brigade, October 7, 1863. (468, 469) Captain Edmondson's company mentioned in Federal reports, at the Narrows, near Jasper, Tenn., August
ted resources of his government could make them; his force was ample, his supplies abundant; but his experience at Murfreesboro had made him and his corps commanders timid and hesitating in their advance. General Bragg determined to offer battle in front of Shelbyville, and ordered Lieutenant-General Polk to move his army corps to Guy's gap on the Murfreesboro road, and assail the enemy before Liberty gap; but learning that the left of Major-General Stewart's division, stationed between Fairfield and Hoover's gap, had been turned, he decided to withdraw the army of Tennessee to Tullahoma. This flank attack was made by the Federal corps commanded by Maj.-Gen. George H. Thomas, and was met by Bushrod Johnson's, Clayton's and Bate's brigades, of Stewart's division, and Liddell's and Wood's brigades, of Cleburne's division, Hardee's corps. General Bragg, under date of July 3d, referred to these engagements as a series of skirmishes, but they were continuous from the 24th to the 27t
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 16. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.35 (search)
rjury a pillar of Church and State, and the crime of larceny a commendable virtue. The seeds so sown bore fruit. Article IV, section 2, of the United States Constitution, ordains: A person charged in any State with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice and be found in another State, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up to be removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime. In two instances, Kent and Fairfield, Governors of Maine, refused to comply with this provision on requisitions by the Governor of Georgia for negro thieves. Governor Seward (afterwards Senator), of New York, made a similar refusal to the same State, saying it was not against the laws of New York to steal a negro. He made a similar refusal to Virginia. These Governors were sworn to support the Constitution of the United States, and certainly understood its plain command. In 1793, while Washington was President, an ac
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book I:—eastern Tennessee. (search)
d by the Federals; that is to say, on the north-east the road to Fairfield on Garrison Creek at the beginning of the elevated plains, and on, on the right, occupies Wartrace and extends his lines as far as Fairfield; large detachments of infantry are watching the routes which leadadvance of Hardee's troops, the nearest of which were encamped at Fairfield. Bragg, either because he was deceived by Mitchell's manoeuvreremity of the defile at the point where the route debouches above Fairfield in the valley of Garrison Creek. His boldness and promptness spaigorously attack the Confederates, who are forced to fall back on Fairfield, whence they reach Tullahoma, where the remainder of Bragg's armyists. Thomas halts Rousseau and Brannan at a short distance from Fairfield, with their right resting on Garrison Creek, while Reynolds movesn the line of march, and Rousseau and Brannan, who were posted at Fairfield in the morning, all reach Manchester in the night. Crittenden se
Through Passage to New York. The Charlotte (N. C.) Bulletin, of Tuesday, has the following: George W. Boulware, from Buckingham county, Va., but recently of Fairfield District, South Carolina, arrived in this city yesterday afternoon over the Charlotte &S. C. Railroad, and was sent forward last night by Express, consigned to Horace Greeley, of the New York Tribune. The said Boulware was shipped from Winnsboro', in the neighborhood of which place he had been engaged in illicit traffic with negroes, and had been guilty of violent incendiary language. He had been striped 150 times, shaved and passage money furnished for his transit northward. About one hundred or more of our fellow citizens took charge of Boulware on his arrival and turned him over to our Marshal, who placed him in the "lock-up" for safe- keeping until the departure of the Express train.--Everything passed off quietly.
Gen. John Buchanan, one of the oldest; citizens in Fairfield District, S. C., is dead. Judge Samuel R. Andrews, a well known citizen of Columbus, Ga., died on the 2d inst. F. A. Parham, the founder of the Chattanooga (Tenn.) Gazettes, died on the 27th inst.