Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 21, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Dix or search for Dix in all documents.

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ered into the service of the United States. To all this General Dix emphatically objected on the following grounds, as near e city and harbor, and gave perfect satisfaction to him--General Dix. Secondly, that he, General Dix, was still in command oGeneral Dix, was still in command of the department, and saw no good reason for erecting the peaceful and loyal State of New York into a separate military distr out of uniform, to aid in avoiding. For these reasons, General Dix suppressed the final paragraph of General Butler's receneport to him. This addendum was suppressed by command of General Dix, Major-General Sandford having earnestly expressed his dsumed authority, although perfectly willing to report to General Dix with his command whenever properly called upon by the ri is rumored, the Secretary of War sustains the action of General Dix, and is unreserved in condemning the loose wording of thtion of the fifteen hundred or two thousand asked for by General Dix for service along the Canadian line. Whether General Bu