Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 30, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hill or search for Hill in all documents.

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s on the top of his head, inflicted by Mr. Hicks's club on the night of the attempted burglary.--The circumstances of the case, as they came out in the evidence, may be briefly summed up. On Sunday night a week ago, about two o'clock, some watchmen discovered five negroes in the act of breaking in the rear door of Mr. Howard's store. The negroes fled, and were pursued by the watchmen, and two of them captured. Watchman Hicks pursued Edward, who, getting to a secluded part of Council Chamber Hill, turned on the watchman and fired his pistol at him, the ball passing through his coat and grazing his side Mr. Hicks then knocked the prisoner down several times, but the latter finally managed to escape, leaving his coat, pistol, and hat in the hands of the watchman. Some papers in the coat led to his identification, and the police have been on the look out for him ever since. Yesterday morning, about one o'clock, officer Jenkins caught him secreted in the house of his wife, on Duval stre
The Daily Dispatch: March 30, 1864., [Electronic resource], Religion in the Army of Northern Virginia. (search)
Religion in the Army of Northern Virginia. A correspondent of the Religions Herald says that in Ewell's and Hill's corps, Army Northern Virginia, the total number of chaining is 36--Methodist, 36; Baptists, 20; Presbyterians, 20. Episcopalians, 6; Catholics, 2; Lutherans, 1. There are still fifty regiments and battalions without chaplains.