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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 7. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 66 total hits in 23 results.
Saltville (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Bristol (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Doc.
198.-battle near Blountsville, Tenn.
Cincinnati Commercial account.
Bristol, Tenn., October 16, 1863.
I wrote you a few days ago from Brabson's Hill, giving an account of the battle of Blue Springs, on the tenth instant, and the chase after them to that point.
General Shackleford, after recruiting his nearly woille, evidently thinking we were making for the Salt Works at that place.
Our troops followed them up to within six miles of Abington, Va., when they returned to Bristol.
We captured here three locomotives and thirty-four cars, all of which we destroyed, as well as five railroad bridges above Bristol.
We also captured a large amBristol.
We also captured a large amount of salt, sugar, etc.
The rebels had thrown down the fences in the vicinity of Blountsville, and thrown up breastworks, and boasted that they intended to give the Yanks a good thrashing, and drive them from East-Tennessee; but, as usual, instead of their doing it, they did the tallest kind of running.
Our loss in this engag
Abington (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Blountsville (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Doc.
198.-battle near Blountsville, Tenn.
Cincinnati Commercial account.
Bristol, Tenn., October 16, 1863.
I wrote you a few days ago from Brabson's Hill, giving an account of the battle of Blue Springs, on the tenth instant, and the chase after them to that point.
General Shackleford, after recruiting his nearly worn <*>ut horses for twenty-four hours, moved his command forward toward Blountsville, on the evening of the thirteenth.
A reconnoitring party of the Seventh Ohio volunteer cavalry, under Captain Copeland, drove the rebel pickets in, and had a brisk skirmish for half an hour, losing one man, private James Barnes, company E, who was shot in the head and instantly expired.
Early on the morning of the fourteenth, the ball opened four miles from Blountsville, and the firing continued all day, the rebels making stands on all the hills, but they were driven from their positions and retreated through Blountsville at dark, toward Zollicoffer, on the East-Tennessee
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Loudon, Tenn. (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Kingsport (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 201
Doc (search for this): chapter 201
Doc.
198.-battle near Blountsville, Tenn.
Cincinnati Commercial account.
Bristol, Tenn., October 16, 1863.
I wrote you a few days ago from Brabson's Hill, giving an account of the battle of Blue Springs, on the tenth instant, and the chase after them to that point.
General Shackleford, after recruiting his nearly worn <*>ut horses for twenty-four hours, moved his command forward toward Blountsville, on the evening of the thirteenth.
A reconnoitring party of the Seventh Ohio volunteer cavalry, under Captain Copeland, drove the rebel pickets in, and had a brisk skirmish for half an hour, losing one man, private James Barnes, company E, who was shot in the head and instantly expired.
Early on the morning of the fourteenth, the ball opened four miles from Blountsville, and the firing continued all day, the rebels making stands on all the hills, but they were driven from their positions and retreated through Blountsville at dark, toward Zollicoffer, on the East-Tennessee
George L. Foster (search for this): chapter 201
R. M. Bail (search for this): chapter 201