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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 22, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Conner or search for Conner in all documents.

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sed to be mortal. He was taken to the office of Dr. Hintze, where he received surgical attendance, and was then taken to the Protestant Infirmary. At the police station, an old man, who did not give his name, was badly wounded. How many were wounded it is impossible to ascertain, as many of the soldiers who left on the cars were known to have been injured. Kirk Hatch, of Philadelphia, was wounded on the head by a blow from a stone or bludgeon. He was severely injured. --Conner, of Baltimore, was also wounded on the head with a stone, and was taken to his residence on Bond street. At the central police station two soldiers were taken in dead, as also two citizens. --Three soldiers and one citizen were taken to the same place wounded. The crowd passed on up Pratt street, and near Light street there was another volley fired. At Light street wharf a boy named William Reed, a hand on board the oyster sloop "Wild Pigeon," of York county, Va., received a ball