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cManus, not severe; Thomas Wilson, thigh shattered. Company K.--Wounded, Corporal William Mathews, thigh, slight; John H. Johnson, hand, slight. Very respectfully, Your obedient servant. J. J. Woods, Colonel Twelfth Iowa Infantry. Coloed that the attack should commence upon our extreme left, and this duty was assigned Brig.-Gen. Pillow, assisted by Brig.-Gen. Johnson, having also under his command commanders of brigades, Col. Baldwin, commanding Mississippi and Tennessee troops, aued in the defence of the position. I had placed Brigadier-General Buckner in command of the right wing, and Brigadier-General Johnson in command of the left. By extraordinary efforts, we had barely got the works in a defensible condition, when brigades, I can speak from personal knowledge of their gallant bearing. I must also acknowledge my obligations to Brig.-Gen. Johnson, who assisted me in command of the forces with which I attacked the enemy, and who bore himself gallantly throughou
ndler; Second Lieutenant, Chas. L. Chandler. Company B (Union Guards)--Captain, Edward Pearl; First Lieutenant, George H. Smith; Second Lieutenant, Chas. S. Kendall. Company C (True Blues)--Captain, Gardner Walker; First Lieutenant, Joseph Hibbert; Second Lieutenant, D. G. E. Dickinson. Company D (Roxbury City Guard)--Captain, Ebenezer W. Stone, Jr.; First Lieutenant, Chas. M. Jordan; Second Lieutenant, Oliver Walton. Company E (Pulaski Guards)--Captain, C. B. Baldwin; First Lieutenant, John H. Johnson; Second Lieutenant, Miles Farwell. Company F (National Guards)--Captain, Albert W. Adams; First Lieutenant, John L. Ruggles; Second Lieutenant. George E. Henry. Company G (Independent Boston Fusiliers)--Captain, Henry A. Snow; First Lieutenant,----Smith; Second Lieutenant, Francis H. Ward. Company H (Chelsea Light Infantry)--Captain, Sumner Carruth; First Lieutenant, Albert S. Austin; Second Lieutenant, Robert S. Saunders. Company I (Schouler Volunteers)--Captain, Chas. F. Rand; First L
disclosure: From all quarters have come to my ears the echoes of the same voice; it may be feigned, but there is no discord in the note, and it sounds in wonderful strength and monotony all over the country. Shades of George III., of North, of Johnson, of all who contended against the great rebellion which tore these colonies from England, can you hear the chorus which rings through the State of Marion, Sumter, and Pinckney, and not clash your ghostly hands in triumph? that voice says, If w and the rebels are elevated into a belligerent power — and this intervention of England, depriving us of a support which her practice permitted, and giving the rebels a status and right they did not possess, we are coolly told is neutrality. Dr. Johnson in his famous letter gave us a sketch of a Chesterfieldian patron seeing a man struggling for life in the water, and when lie reached ground encumbering him with help. Lord John has taught us the meaning of British neutrality towards a nation
after he was wounded, by Col. A. J. Walker, of the Thirteenth. The Thirty-first was engaged at Franklin, Strasburg and Winchester, and both regiments at Cross Keys and Port Republic. At the latter combat the Thirty-first lost 116 out of 226 and was saved from destruction by the timely charge of Richard Taylor's Louisiana brigade. The Pocahontas company in fifteen minutes lost half of its men in battle. In the Twenty-fifth Capt. W. T. Gammon and Lieuts. E. D. Camden, J. J. Dunkle and John H. Johnson were wounded, and in the Thirty-first Capt. R. H. Bradshaw and Lieut. A. Whitley were killed, and Lieuts. J. W. Arnett, J. M. Burns and W. C. Kincaid were wounded. The regiments went through the Seven Days battles before Richmond, and in the Second Manassas campaign were brigaded with the Thirteenth, Forty-fourth, Forty-ninth, Fifty-second and Fifty-eighth Virginia, under General Early, Ewell's division, Jackson's corps. Lieutenant-Colonel Jackson, commanding the Thirty-first, and Maj
To Miss Macon, for Sweetmeats, 2.00. To Mrs. Gaines, for Watermelon Jelly, 1.00. Class no. 25.-- Pickles, Catsups, Sauces, &c. To Mrs. Ragland, for Yellow Pickle, $3.00. o Mrs. P. W. Harwood, for Pickled Peaches, 2.00. To Mrs. Pilkinton, for Tomato Catsup, 1.00. Class no. 26.-- Chewing and Smoking Tobacco, Snuff, &c., To Christian & Lea, for Manufactured Tobacco, Certificate of Silver Medal. To Hart & Hunt. ditto, First-Class Diploma. To John H. Johnson, for Smoking Tobacco, Certificate of Silver Medal. To J. Morris &Co., for Snuff, First-Class Diploma. Class no. 27.-- Photographs, Daguerreotypes, Engravings,&c. To G. W. Minnis, for finest display of Photographs, Certificate of Silver Medal. To Smith & Vannerson, for second best Specimens, First-Class Diploma. To Rees&Co., for third best do., Second-Class Diploma. To Albert L. West, for the best Architectural Drawings, First-Class Diploma. Class no. 28
llowing officers and managers were elected: President — A. M. Bailey. Vice-Presidents--Thos. H. Wynne and Wm. Macfarland. Recording Secretary — J. W. Lewellen. Corresponding Secretary — H. P. Edmond. Treasurer — Samuel P. Mitchell. Auditor — George W. Anderson. Board of Managers.-- Geo. Bargamin, James D. Browne, E. B. Spence, S. S. Cottrell, Geo. A. Ainslie, H. R. Burger, John W. McKell, James T. Pemberton, Wm. W. Snead, Jos. F. Powell, James Kersey. John H. Johnson, James A. Scott, John McFarland, John Tyler, John P. Tyler, Geo.. S Lownes, Chas. W. Allen, A. J. Bowers, and Oliver Davis. The Board are to meet at the Hall on Tuesday night next, for organization and the election of Standing Committees, at which time every member who intends to serve ought to be at his post. The Institute is now in a flourishing condition; but to continue to prosper, its managers must be energetic and attentive in the discharge of their duties. Its next
The Daily Dispatch: may 6, 1861., [Electronic resource], Gen. Harney's account of his arrest and subsequent Adventures in Virginia. (search)
effort made to obtain my confidence. On Sunday evening we reached Richmond, and went at once to Gov. Letcher's house. The Governor was dining out, but was sent for immediately. He released me, stating that his orders had been misunderstood. I learned that the Harper's Ferry force had been directed to stop all armed bodies, and that the telegraph had announced me as coming at the head of fourteen hundred troops. I was treated with great attention at Richmond by Gov. Letcher, Col. Lee, Col. Johnson and others, whom I have long known, and was waited upon by a number of other prominent citizens. There seemed to be some curiosity to see me, and some belief that I intended to resign my commission in the United States Army. On this latter point they were deceived. At half-past 5 Monday morning I left for Alexandria, where I arrived in the afternoon. Gov. Letcher offered escort, which I refused. The people along the route seemed to have heard that I was coming, and at some of the
id, is now in Upper Marlboro', Maryland, organizing a Southern company. A letter from a well-informed man in Missouri expresses the confident opinion that that State will be with the South in a very short time. Maj. O. M. Critchfield, for so many years Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, announces himself a candidate for re-election. Hon. John Cochran, private in the Eufaula Rifles, has been appointed Aid-de-Camp to Gen. Bragg. He is not the New York John. Mr. John H. Johnson, of Appomattox county, has contributed six hundred dollars towards arming and equipping the volunteers. Henry Ward Beecher, it is said, is going to the war as a chaplain. He would do well to keep beyond the range of Southern rifles. Hon. C. C. Clay, Jr., late U. S. Senator from Alabama, has returned home from Minnesota in somewhat improved health. The President and Directors of the Bank of North Carolina have tendered to the State a loan of $500,000 for purposes of def
ct of knives and forks from some person unknown, was ordered to be whipped. Similar treatment was inflicted upon Dick, slave of J. R. Anderson & Co. charged with stealing a lot of brass castings from the Central Railroad Depot. Charges were preferred against Watson, slave of Miles George, of entering the dwelling-house of Dr. O. F. Munson and stealing four hundred pounds of bacon; and Betty, slave of some person unknown, of stealing a breastpin, valued at $3,000, the property of Mrs. John H. Johnson; but owing to the absence of important witnesses the cases were put off for future consideration. Through her counsel, (Littleton Tazewell,) Mrs. Mildred A. Roganal applied for a warrant against Mrs. Mary E. Cary, who, it is alleged, has recently indulged in abusive and libellous language towards Mrs. R. and her family. Mr. Cary, the husband of the accused, desired a postponement of the case, in order to allow him time to procure the attendance of certain witnesses, which reques