Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 1, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Burnside or search for Burnside in all documents.

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urtesy of Captain Philip Cashmeyer for a copy of the New York Herald of Thursday last, the 27th inst. The Herald, in an editorial, sees no indications in the European news of intervention, as it thinks it improvable that the three powers will agree. It relies on the known sympathy of Russia for the United States to prevent it. From the army of the Potomac--Burnside Visits Aquia Creek — the impudence of the rebels. A dispatch from Fairmont, Va., dated the 26th, says that on that day Burnside visited. Aquia Creek, It adds: Five of the enemy's batteries, commanding the river, are distinctly visible Besides these there are a number of rifled cannon planted upon an eminence, evidently with a view of shelling our camps Many of the rebel encampments can be distinctly seen by us. The rebels lounge about the streets of Fredericksburg in great numbers watching our operations; but, almost of our camps have been removed out of range, little can be discovered. Night before last
Departure of a Yankee fleet from Port Royal. Charleston Nov. 29. --We have ascertained that a large Yankee fleet left Port Royal yesterday — destination unknown. Some suppose it carries reinforcements to Burnside; others that a demonstration on Georgetown is intended.
ofore, or is likely to be hereafter. The experience of last summer's campaign on the Richmond peninsula has also proved that if he would escape the deadly malaria of those swamps, and those tropical rains which render them almost impassible, Gen. Burnside must avail himself of the advantages of the winter season for his advance upon the rebel capital.*** Let Washington be rendered perfectly safe without requiring Gen. Burnside to keep a sharp eye in that direction while advancing upon RicGen. Burnside to keep a sharp eye in that direction while advancing upon Richmond, and let him be further assisted with a co- operating land and a naval force by way of the James and York rivers, and his advance upon the rebel capital will be the death blow to the rebellion. The army Lee, if not captured or destroyed at Richmond, will be enveloped by forces sufficient to capture it or scatter it to the inds; and, with the loss of this army, the suffering and exhausted people of the rebellions South themselves come to the rescue. They will recognize in the results