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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 16, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for George B. McClellan or search for George B. McClellan in all documents.
Your search returned 15 results in 4 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: June 16, 1862., [Electronic resource], Bill to be entitled "an act to further provide for the public residence. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: June 16, 1862., [Electronic resource], Bill to be entitled "an act to further provide for the public residence. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: June 16, 1862., [Electronic resource], Exemptions under the Conscription Law of Congress. (search)
The Exposit of General Stuart.
The achievement of General Stuart, recorded in another column, seems to have been one of the most brilliant of the war. He over threw a body of cavalry opposed to him, in a clashing charge, captured 25 men and 300 horses, destroyed a considerable quantity of provisions, burnt two vessels in the Pamunkey, visited the White House, penetrated to James river, look one hundred and forty-three prisoners and negroes and returned to headquarters with scarcely any loss.
This was service after the true Marion and Adiby fashion.
The result proved what we have known all along, that the quality of our troops is infinitely superior to that of the enemy, and we can beat them always in a fair field, when they are not more than two to one.
We suspect McClellan begins to find that a "march to Richmond" is not quite the holiday excursion he took it to be.
The Daily Dispatch: June 16, 1862., [Electronic resource], Extraordinary scheme of a convicted Forger. (search)
McClellan's dispatches.
We publish these documents in another column.
They are curiosities in their way. Whatever tale
They stole back and occupied the ground again, and then McClellan issued his bulletin.
Was there ever anything more ungenen a word, was there ever anything more truly Yankee?
McClellan acknowledges the loss of 800 killed, and about 5,000 wounto the matter of the charges with the bayonet reported by McClellan and some of the Northern letter writers, to have been made upon our lines by the Federalists.
McClellan reported that they charged our lines at Williamsburg, and that our men could sburg were by our men, and the Yankees fied before them.
McClellan again reports charges by his men at Chickahominy, and facWe have the very highest authority — authority which even McClellan would not dare to call in question — that the Yankees mad
These to be truth in any of their reports on the from McClellan down to the lowest writer of letters in the of the Feder