Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 27, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Bragg or search for Bragg in all documents.

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, and vessels will no doubt, before the close of the week, be leaving laden with produce. Pensacola to be taken. The Washington correspondence of the New York World says: You may soon expect to hear that Pensacola is taken. The Navy Department make no concealment of the fact that dispatches are expected daily from the Gulf with an account of the opening of the guns of Fort Pickens upon the rebel batteries. Colonel Brown has repeatedly written for orders allowing him to blow Bragg and his batteries off the opposite shore. He has been chafing like a hound in the lash; but if I am not mistaken the work has been given that will make Pensacola ours. The selected prisoners. The New York Journal of Commerce, of yesterday, says: We learn from a surgeen recently returned from Richmond, that the apprehensions of the people in regard to the horrible ill-treatment of Col. Cogawell and other officers selected by lot to meet the fate awarded to privateers, is not r
Affairs at Pensacola. As official dispatch from Gen. Bragg, dated at Chanonville, near Pensacola, Monday afternoon, five o'clock, says: "All continues quiet. The enemy's ships are keeping at safe distance"