Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 21, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for April 14th or search for April 14th in all documents.

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re said to be only in a position to reach vessels below them in the middle of the river, and light draught vessels can approach within a short distance of the Point with safety by hugging the shore. From Fortress Monroe. Fortress Monroe, April 14. --The Merrimac has not come out, and nothing has been seen of her to-day. The tide has been low and this may have kept her in. Early in the morning a rebel rug ran out from behind Sewell's Point, but soon returned. Later in the day therhere and made self-supporting. Such a colony properly managed would do much good. Those now here, some forty in number, live on F. Dullerking's place, under cover of our guns. The Yankees destroying bridges. Pittsburg Landing, Tenn., April 14. --A force of four thousand men, on five transports, left this landing on Saturday night, accompanied by the gunboats Tyler and Lexington, and proceeded up the Tennessee river to a point near Eastport, Miss, where they landed and proceeded
ina.their raid upon Elizabeth City. A correspondent of the Petersburg Express gives the following account of the brutal conduct of the Yankees on the occasion of their recent visit to Elizabeth City. The letter is dated South Mills, N. C., April 14. On last Monday night I slept in Elizabeth City. Very early in the morning I was aroused and told to look out and see the Yankees passing under my window!. I looked out, and there they went about two hundred Zouaves, traveling at a quick pent to persuade Mr. Whitehurst's negroes to go with them; but they all refused and thus ended this outrageous Yankee raid into North Carolina. More of their doings. The Wilmington Journal publishes a letter dated Onslow county, N. C., April 14th, from which we make some extracts. It is well enough to let the people know what their fate will be if they fall into the hands of the heathen Lincoln hirelings. On Saturday last, the 12th inst., some of Capt. Ward's cavalry were sent thr
ack by McArthur's brigade, and the rest of W. H. L. Wallace's division which hurried over to its assistance. For the present let us leave them there.--They held the line from this time on till four. Further Yankee accounts. Chicago, April 14. --The special correspondent of the Chicago Journal says: Beauregard called a council of war of all the best Generals in his army before the battle of Pittsburg. There were present Generals Pillow, Floyd, Breckinridge, Hardee, Braggeman from Pittsburg Landing says that the wounded are well provided for in the transports and barracks. No battle is expected for some days yet. The heavy rains have made the roads impassable for artillery and army wagons. St. Louis, April 14.--The steamer January arrived at our wharf last evening, with several hundred of our wounded from Pittsburg. Capt. Bartlett, of the January, reports that the Minnehaba has gone up to Ohio City, laden with the wounded, and that the Memphis l