Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 7. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Julius White or search for Julius White in all documents.

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nty-third army corps, commanded by Brigadier-General Julius White, was stationed upon the opposite be thirteenth of November, at nine o'clock, General White received the first report of any considerao General Burnside, who was at Knoxville. General White ordered the field-officer of the day to vi started to the ferry were ordered back by General White upon receipt of a telegram from General Bunant, and soon opened fire on Generals Potter, White, and Ferrero, their staffs and escorts. GenerGeneral White immediately ordered Colonel Chapin forward with his brigade, the One Hundred and Eleventh our of danger of their division commander, General White, who knew the odds against which his gallatteries in the rear, and right and left of General White, opened on their rear line with shell. Th of protecting the rear upon the troops of General White. They were hotly pursued by the enemy, wh To the members of his staff the report of General White will, I presume, do justice. Their names [14 more...]
by's command. In this locality private Kellogg, of company K, was killed in a running fight with a rebel. He belonged to the advance-guard, and, in the pursuit of the guerrilla, left his comrades far behind by the uncommon speed of his horse. When the advance reached the scene of the skirmish they found Kellogg mortally wounded — the Rebel had skedaddled! At Piedmont Captain Boyd received information, through the agency of his valuable guides, indicating the whereabouts of a party of White's men — all lawless bushwhackers. An intricate byroad through underbrush and over hills brought us to the rendezvous. The game had gone. A farmer had warned them of the coming of our cavalry — the deep woods affording them every facility to successfully vamoose the ranche, and continue to enjoy life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; and it is assuredly happiness for them to be able to shoot pickets, assassin-like, at midnight, or plunder farmers in a style worthy the palmiest days o<
urgh, where he came up with Major-General Hartsuff, commanding the Twenty-third army corps. Major Emory here made a cavalry reconnoissance toward Jacksboro, encountered two regiments of rebel cavalry, and routed them, taking forty-five prisoners. General Burnside, with the main body of his army, left Chitwood on the twenty-eighth and reached Montgomery, the county-seat of Morgan County, Tennessee, forty-two miles from Chitwood, on the thirtieth. Here another column of infantry, under Colonel Julius White, came in, having marched from Central Kentucky, by way of Albany, Monticello, and Jamestown. Colonel Burt, commanding the cavalry advance, sent word that the rebel General Pegram was holding the gap in the mountains, near the Emery Iron-Works, with two thousand men. The position was a very strong one, and the gap was the gate to the Clinch River Valley. A battle was expected, as there was not a better place in the country to check our forces. But on the morning of the thirty-first