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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 26, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Gen Lee or search for Gen Lee in all documents.
Your search returned 9 results in 6 document sections:
East Tennessee.
Burnside has been called to Washington, with all his troops.
Of this there seems to be no doubt whatever.
The traitors in East Tennessee, who profess to have planted their crops in the hope that they would be reaped by the Yankees, are, therefore, likely to be disappointed.
Burnside will not prevent troops from being sent to Johnston, as the New York Herald suggested.
The movement of General Lee, whatever may be its object, seems to have been, in the language of a lard-room, "a ten strike." It has disconcerted all the latest schemes for crushing out the rebellion.
The success of Gen. Chalmers in sinking several transports below Memphis, proves what we said some time since — that even though Vicksburg and Port Hudson should both be captured, the Mississippi can never be considered open for trade as long as a hostile population inhabits a portion of the territory lying upon its banks.
Flying batteries will always be found to annoy trading boats, and secu
The Scare at Washington.
A gentleman who came through the lines since the capture of Winchester by our forces says that the newspapers convey a very inadequate idea of the extent of the alarm at Washington, produced by the news of the advance of Gen. Lee's army.
Every available man was being hurried to the capital for its defence, and the whole city was in a perfect furore of alarm and excitement.
Official information, received here, state that under the influence of this excitement Burnside's corps has been ordered from Kentucky to constitute a portion of the army designed for the defence of the Yankee Sodom.
From Northern Virginia.
The passengers by the Central train last evening bring no new report of army operations on the border, and it is presumed that matters in that interesting quarter have assumed comparative quiet since its occupation by our forces.
There was not even a rumor yesterday as to the whereabouts of Gen Lee's army, a portion of which is known to be in Maryland.
The train brought down eleven unlucky Yankee "ladies," who were not so fortunate as Milroy and his amiable wife in making their escape, when our forces captured Winchester.
They were assigned quarters in Castle Thunder.