Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 3, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for James Barron or search for James Barron in all documents.

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hat he was in much pain, his arm having been badly hurt. It is feared that amputation will be necessary. It is generally believed that the killed and wounded will reach eighty or ninety. But fifteen escaped on the Winslow. Lieut. William Sharp, late of the U. S. Navy, is known to be among the prisoners. He is a native of Norfolk, Va., where, as also in Petersburg, he has many relatives and friends. Commodore Samuel Barron, formerly of the U. S. Navy, and a nephew of old Commodore James Barron, is also among the prisoners. A gentleman now in this city, who visited Fort Hatteras last Tuesday, two weeks since, informs us that it was scientifically arranged and substantially built. The timbers used were of the most massive and durable kind, and the whole was covered with earth to the thickness of twelve or more inches, and then turned, the grass being already verdant and innoxious. The same gentleman informs us that there was an abundance of ammunition — powder, shell