We were on the road by 8 o'clock and after marching ten
miles, lay by until 10 p. m., when we were ordered to fall in again. After an
hour's march we came to the Ockmulgee river, which we crossed by pontoons at
Ockmulgee Mills. The entire Seventeenth Corps came together again here and at 1
o'clock in the night we went into bivouac on the east side of the river. The
Fifteenth Corps crossed the river by the same pontoon bridge. There is fine
water power here and there are large mills. The country is very rough.
Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B.,
Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 229-30
No comments:
Post a Comment