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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 8. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 24 total hits in 13 results.
Mossy Creek (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 33
Doc.
31.-the fight at Mossy Creek, Tenn.
Knoxville, January 31, 1864.
The following account of this fight is given by one who participated in it:
We reached Mossy Creek on the twenty-eighth of December, and for the next two days our pickets were constantly skirmishing.
On the twenty-ninth, the rebels attacked us, coming down rapidly with eight thousand cavalry and fifteen pieces of artillery.
They were opposed by our brigade of infantry--First brigade, Second division, Twenty-thiMossy Creek on the twenty-eighth of December, and for the next two days our pickets were constantly skirmishing.
On the twenty-ninth, the rebels attacked us, coming down rapidly with eight thousand cavalry and fifteen pieces of artillery.
They were opposed by our brigade of infantry--First brigade, Second division, Twenty-third army corps--numbering about one thousand five hundred, with four regiments of cavalry, two batteries, with nine guns.
We had the advantage in position, and the enemy in numbers.
The guns were placed in position, and commenced firing at eleven o'clock A. M. At the same time, skirmishing commenced all along the line.
The One Hundred and Eighteenth was still quietly in camp; but soon an aid dashed up with the order to fall in, without knapsacks or blankets, and in five minutes we were rapi
Indiana (Indiana, United States) (search for this): chapter 33
Knoxville (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 33
Doc.
31.-the fight at Mossy Creek, Tenn.
Knoxville, January 31, 1864.
The following account of this fight is given by one who participated in it:
We reached Mossy Creek on the twenty-eighth of December, and for the next two days our pickets were constantly skirmishing.
On the twenty-ninth, the rebels attacked us, coming down rapidly with eight thousand cavalry and fifteen pieces of artillery.
They were opposed by our brigade of infantry--First brigade, Second division, Twenty-third army corps--numbering about one thousand five hundred, with four regiments of cavalry, two batteries, with nine guns.
We had the advantage in position, and the enemy in numbers.
The guns were placed in position, and commenced firing at eleven o'clock A. M. At the same time, skirmishing commenced all along the line.
The One Hundred and Eighteenth was still quietly in camp; but soon an aid dashed up with the order to fall in, without knapsacks or blankets, and in five minutes we were rapi
George R. Martin (search for this): chapter 33
Doc (search for this): chapter 33
Doc.
31.-the fight at Mossy Creek, Tenn.
Knoxville, January 31, 1864.
The following account of this fight is given by one who participated in it:
We reached Mossy Creek on the twenty-eighth of December, and for the next two days our pickets were constantly skirmishing.
On the twenty-ninth, the rebels attacked us, coming down rapidly with eight thousand cavalry and fifteen pieces of artillery.
They were opposed by our brigade of infantry--First brigade, Second division, Twenty-third army corps--numbering about one thousand five hundred, with four regiments of cavalry, two batteries, with nine guns.
We had the advantage in position, and the enemy in numbers.
The guns were placed in position, and commenced firing at eleven o'clock A. M. At the same time, skirmishing commenced all along the line.
The One Hundred and Eighteenth was still quietly in camp; but soon an aid dashed up with the order to fall in, without knapsacks or blankets, and in five minutes we were rapi
Jim Brownlow (search for this): chapter 33
Stephen Wheeler (search for this): chapter 33
Armstrong (search for this): chapter 33
Thomas S. Young (search for this): chapter 33
Sturgis (search for this): chapter 33