Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Raguet or search for Raguet in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

mounted rifles. Their conduct was itself equal to their reputation. For six full hours the battle raged in the canon, when the enemy was driven from the same end they went in at. Scurry now charged them again, and put them to utter rout, following them ten miles, when his men were too exhausted to go further, and the chase was discontinued. The enemy left 500 men killed and wounded in the canon, and lost 200 besides. Our loss was sixty-eight killed and wounded, including the brave Major Raguet and Capt. Charley Buckholts, (of Austin,) of the 4th regiment, and Major Shropshire, of Colorado, of the 5th regiment. Scurry's conduct was most gallant. He never flagged, and was always the same Bill Scurry, full of humor, we all knew so well. He always carries the same laugh on the battle field he does everywhere. He was wounded in both cheeks by Minnie balls. Pyrom had his horse blown from under him by a shell. Rev. L. R. Jones, Chaplain of Kelly's regiment, was wounded. He