Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Hardaway or search for Hardaway in all documents.

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still on the plain on this side. The three batteries of Jones's battalion, of my division, and Hardaway's battery and Bondurant's, were brought into action, and drove the Yankee artillery off the fieavage, of the Third North Carolina, fell badly wounded. The batteries of Captain Rhett and Captain Hardaway were particularly distinguished in this engagement. The division slept on the field that half their number had been stricken down. My seven division batteries, under Captains Carter, Hardaway, Bondurant, Rhett, Clark, Peyton, and Nelson, were all engaged at one time or another, at Mechagade,1224400 Anderson's, brigade,1597040 Colquitt's, brigade,726336 Jones's, Artillery,5220 Hardaway's Battery,1250 Nelson's Battery, no report,000   Total,7143,19248 Aggregate, 3,955. ThI do not now readily recall their names, and can only mention the batteries of Captains Carter, Hardaway, Nelson, Rhett, Reilly, and Balthis, (the last two belonging to Brigadier-General Whiting's div
on our right. A heavy column was advancing up the Boonsboroa pike, and I ordered up some two or three hundred men under command of Colonel G. T. Anderson, to the hill already described, commanding Sharpsburg. But they were exposed to an enfilade fire, from a battery near the church, on the Hagerstown pike, and compelled to retire to another hill. About thirty men, under Lieutenant-Colonel Betts, Twelfth Alabama, of my division, remained as supports to my division batteries, under Jones, Hardaway, and Bondurant. The Yankee columns were allowed to come within easy range, when a sudden storm of grape and canister drove them back in confusion. Betts's men must have given them a very hot fire, as Burnside reported that he had met three heavy columns on the hill. It is difficult to imagine how thirty men could so multiply themselves as to appear to the frightened Yankees to be three heavy columns. On our extreme right, however, the Yankees had been more successful. They had crossed