Five Confederate generals, including the gallant Cleburne, lay dead upon the field.
Cleburne's command was just in front of the old gin house, forming for another charge.
At length Breckinridge and Cleburne opened the fight, and then it raged with desperate, bloody obstinacy, until late afternoon.
Gen. Cleburne was a better fighter than speaker, and yet his oratory was sometimes very effective.
This advance was the attack upon Cleburne's brigade reported by General Hardee.