Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 24, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Thomas H. Smith or search for Thomas H. Smith in all documents.

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essee. Since Thursday, we have captured and brought in just six thousand prisoners, making nine thousand, counting the wounded taken at Franklin. We have captured four major-generals, including Generals Jackson and Johnston, as well as Brigadier-Generals Smith and Roger. Hood had sixty-five pieces of artillery. We have captured fifty-four pieces. The enemy's killed and wounded is a little less than our own. Our entire loss will not reach 3,500. None of our general officers were injured. Thas as follows: Three colonels, one lieutenant-colonel, seven majors, forty-six captains, one hundred and fifty-seven lieutenants, and two surgeons. Among the prisoners taken yesterday were three brigadier-generals not yet reported, viz: Johnson, Smith and Rucker. All the rebel prisoners are corraled in the stone quarry, from which the material for building the capitol was excavated, some few hundred yards from the capitol, which is called Andersonville. The penitentiary and all the publi
Notice. --Committed to jail, in Charlotte county, Virginia, on the 23d of October, 1864, a Negro Man, claiming to be free, but without any free papers, who calls himself John Evans and says he lives in Orange county, North Carolina. Said negro is about twenty-two years old; brown complexion; five feet ten inches high, and weighs one hundred and forty or one hundred and fifty pounds. Parties claiming must come forward and prove property, else he will be dealt with according to the law. Thomas H. Smith, Jailor. no 19--1aw6w