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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 1 1 Browse Search
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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Thomas, Isaac 1735-1819 (search)
Thomas, Isaac 1735-1819 Scout; born in Virginia about 1735; settled among the Cherokee Indians in 1755. He warned Gen. John Sevier and James Robertson at Watauga, Va., on May 30, 1776, of an intended attack by the Indians. About the middle of July he joined the small force of forty in the fort at Watauga, and with them repulsed the assault of Oconosta. Later he led the party that invaded the Indian country. He was guide to General Sevier for twenty years in almost all of his numerous movements against the Creeks and Cherokees. He died in Sevierville, Tenn., in 1819.
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)
; 27, 1; 81, 4; 100, 1 Sequatchie Valley, Tenn. 35, 5 Seven Days battles, Va., June 25-July 1, 1862: Gaines' Mill, June 27, 1862 42, 3; 63, 8 Glendale, June 30, 1862 21, 8 Malvern Hill, July 1, 1862 21, 10 Mechanicsville, June 26, 1862 21, 7; 63, 8; 90, 9 Stuart's cavalry operations, June 25-July 10, 1862 22, 1 Theater of operations 20, 1 Seven Pines, Va. 17, 1; 19, 1; 20, 1; 74, 1; 77, 1; 92, 1; 100, 1, 100, 2; 135, 3; 137, F8 Sevierville, Tenn. 24, 3; 118, 1; 135-A; 142, E4 Sewell's Point, Va. 18, 2; 26, 4; 135-A; 137, G11 Shadna Church, Ga. 57, 3; 60, 2; 88, 2 Shady Grove, Va. 16, 1; 100, 1 Shallow Ford, N. C. 142, C13 Shanghai, Mo. 66, 1 Shanghai, W. Va. 100, 1; 116, 2 Sharon, Miss. 155, B10 Sharpsburg, Ky. 141, D3 Sharpsburg, Md. 25, 6; 27, 1; 28, 1, 28, 2, 28, 6; 29, 1, 29, 2; 43, 7; 69, 1; 74, 1; 81, 4; 100, 1; 116, 2; 136, E6 Battle of, Sept, 16-17, 1862. Se
y killed and wounded. A messenger, who is waiting to take this letter to Chattanooga, prevents me from ascertaining the truth of a rumor which is being circulated this afternoon, that a division of our cavalry had been cut off by the rebels at Sevierville, twenty- eight miles from here. Mail and telegraphic facilities are sadly out of repair this side of Chattanooga, and we must do the best we can. The rumor of a division of our cavalry being cut off, which gained circulation yesterday afternoon, proves to have been partly correct; but no had results ensued, as the whole force managed no escape without loss, by way of Maysville. Longstreet's whole command is now across the French Broad river, his right resting on Sevierville, our troops having been driven from that town. In a fight which took place, Colonel Leslie, of the Fourth Indiana cavalry, was killed and several enlisted men killed and wounded. Some one hundred prisoners were brought in to-day, and three guns which were
The Daily Dispatch: December 8, 1864., [Electronic resource], Clothing for the Confederate prisoners. (search)
t Morristown.--Whether he will proceed to Knoxville or risk an engagement with Vaughn is not known. A party of Vaughn's cavalry had a skirmish across the Clinch river at Evans's ferry with about one hundred of the enemy, in which Lieutenant Hipshur and private Benly, on our side, were wounded. "From below, we also learn that a Federal regiment, of three hundred mounted men, reached Knoxville from Cumberland gap a week ago. Kirk's men and the Eighth Tennessee (Yankee) regiment are at Sevierville, the Ninth and Thirteenth are at Knoxville, and the Tenth Michigan is still at Strawberry Plains. "The two Boyds (brothers-in-law of General Vaughn), who were missing after the defeat of Morristown, have just come in. They have been in Monroe and Blount counties, where they report our Southern friends in good spirits. The East Tennessee hundred days men are refusing to re- enlist in the Federal service. Captain James Giles had killed Captain A. J. Pearsons, both of Major Joseph Dev