Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 13, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Sacramento (Kentucky, United States) or search for Sacramento (Kentucky, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 1 document section:

nesses, and thus escaped the punishment which their villainies so justly merit. Infamous Yankee outrages. Since the signal defeat of the Lincolnites at Sacramento, the troops at Calhoun have been perpetrating every species of outrage that their cowardly hearts could plan or their Yankee ingenuity devise. They have arrest stolen, and what other property they could not carry off they wantonly destroyed. We learn that Mrs. Morehead, an estimable and venerable lady residing at Sacramento, was arrested and forcibly carried off to the camps at Calhoun by these vile miscreants. The old lady has two noble sons in the Southern army, and this is her eart of Kentucky, then surely it is as pulseless as adamant, and cold as the mountain snow. Jim Jackson's Cavalry. Jim Jackson's retreating cavalry from Sacramento rushed into the camps at Calhoun without caps, guns or pistols, the very pictures of deep despair, the hair on their heads resembling the "quills on the back of