Browsing named entities in Horace Greeley, The American Conflict: A History of the Great Rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-65: its Causes, Incidents, and Results: Intended to exhibit especially its moral and political phases with the drift and progress of American opinion respecting human slavery from 1776 to the close of the War for the Union. Volume II.. You can also browse the collection for Munroe or search for Munroe in all documents.

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s their masters' mode of punishing that offense. Fayetteville was our chief outpost on the Arkansas frontier; and here Col. M. L. Harrison, with the 1st Arkansas (Union) infantry and 1st Arkansas cavalry, was charged April 18. by Gen. W. L. Cabell, who, with 2,000 mounted men and 2 guns, had rapidly crossed the Boston mountains from Ozark, intending to attack at daylight, but not arriving till after sunrise. After due shelling, a spirited cavalry charge on our right wing was led by Col. Munroe, but repulsed; and by noon the enemy were on their way back to Ozark. Harrison, having very few horses, was unable to pursue. His loss was but 4 killed, 26 wounded, 16 prisoners, and 35 missing, whom he Bluntly reports as mostly stampeded to Cassville during the engagement. lie took 55 prisoners, 50 horses, and 100 shot-guns. He says all of his force who did any fighting numbered less than 500. Marmaduke, after his failure in south-western Missouri and his mishap at Batesville, rep
rris, Gen. W. H., at the Wilderness, 571. Morton's Engineers, at Stone River, 275. Moseby, Col. John S., his movements, 727. Mosquito Inlet, naval expedition to, 459. Mound City, gunboat, boiler exploded, 57. Mower, Gen., at Corinth, 226; at Vicksburg, 311; at Pleasant Hill, 548; in Missouri, 559. Mulligan, Col., 15th Ga., killed at Antietam,210. Mulligan, Gen. (Union), killed, 606. Mumford, Wm. B., hanged at N. Orleans, 100-1. Munfordsville, Ky., fight at, 215. Munroe, Col., charges at Fayetteville, Ark., 448. Murfreesboroa, Tenn., capture of, 212. Murphy, Col. R. C., 8th Wis., abandons Iuka, 222; surrenders Holly Springs, 287; is cashiered, 287. N. Naglee, Gen. H. M., at Seven Pines, 142-4; wounded, 148. Nashville, Tenn., occupied by Unionists, 53; railroad reopened to, 270; stores accumulated at, 272; battle of, 685; losses and captures, 686. Nassau Island, focus of blockade runners, 643. Natchez, Miss., surrenders, 104. Nation