Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for D. Hunter or search for D. Hunter in all documents.

Your search returned 20 results in 2 document sections:

-General. Major-General H. W. Halleck. General Hunter immediately took up the offensive, and movs very great. To meet this movement under General Hunter, General Lee sent a force, perhaps equal tof which reached Lynchburg a short time before Hunter. After some skirmishing on the seventeenth and eighteenth, General Hunter, owing to a want of ammunition to give battle, retired from before the ever taken exceptions to the operations of General Hunter, and am not now disposed to find fault witnferior grazing), and hearing nothing from General Hunter, he withdrew his command to the north sidediately upon the enemy's ascertaining that General Hunter was retreating from Lynchburg by way of thood of Winchester, while our forces, under General Hunter, were concentrated on the Monocacy, at theore, on the fourth, I left City Point to visit Hunter's command, and determine for myself what was bthe advance reached Hallton that night. General Hunter having, in our conversation, expressed a w[9 more...]
er, Duval, E. Upton, R. S. McKenzie, Kitchen (since died of wounds), J. B. McIntosh, G. H. Chapman, Thomas C. Devins, Penrose, Colonels D. D. Johnson, Daniel McAuley, Jacob Sharpe. From the seventh of August, the Middle Department, Department of Washington, Department of the Susquehanna, and Department of West Virginia, were under my command, and I desire to express my gratitude to their respective commanders, Major-Generals Lew Wallace, C. C. Augur, Couch, and Cadwallader, and to Major-Generals Hunter and Crook, who at separate times commanded the latter Department for the assistance given me. General Augur operated very effectively with a small force under his command, the reports of which were forwarded direct to the War Department. After the battle of Cedar Creek nothing of importance occurred in the valley up to February twenty-seventh, 1865, the day on which the cavalry moved from Winchester to Petersburg. On the night of November eleventh, 1864, General Early moved