Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 24, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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They were both to come off in America, and they both seemed inevitable, but the doubt was which would come off first Gen. McClellan, with his army of the Potomac, was a ponder which could be measured. We could number his forces and we could form some notion of their efficiency. Gen. McClellan, however. is just where he has been for the last four months--about to advance to-morrow or next day. Delayed expectation has pulled the edge of curiosity somewhat as to this great invasion. But the invapoleon the Great. The only question was which tempest would be the first to break? Would General Insolvency take General McClellan in the rear, and disperse his army before it advanced, or would he wait until McClellan had won a battle, and had mMcClellan had won a battle, and had marched southward, and then content him self with cutting off the victor's supple, and ravaging the whole country during his absence. This question of precedence is now settled. The invasion with which the North has been threatened has now taken pl
cksburg Recorder makes up the appended summary, from Northern papers as late as the 15th: The St. Louis Republican publishes an account of a bloody battle which occurred near Fort Craig, in New Mexico, between the Texans and the Federal forces. The latter being deserted by the New Mexican levies, (as they say,) were defeated after a long and desperate struggle, with the loss of all their artillery and the loss of 200 killed and wounded. This occurred on the 21st of February. Gen. McClellan has written a letter to all commanders of forts on the seaboard, warning them of the Merrimac and directing them to be put in the best possible defence. The latest accounts from the Arkansas fight represent the Federal loss at 1,000 killed.--They say they captured thirteen pieces of artillery and 1,000 prisoners. The U. S. Senate has, by a vote of 26 to 11, refused to expel Ex-Gov. Powell. His colleague, Garrett Davis, was urgent that is should be done. When the news of t
ence. The Southern States before they revolted must have expected all this, and much more. We have always in Europe given the North credit for first successes very greatly superior to these, and have reckoned that their real difficulties would only commence when they had mastered the great strategic points throughout the South. At the rate at which the war is now proceeding it will take, not ninety days, but ninety years to "crush this rebellion;" and the respective grandsons of General McClellan and General Beauregard may at last fight out the battle for Manassas. "Wall street" begins to see all this more clearly. It was worth a costly experiment to retain that rich Southern business, and New York will be hard put to it either to win it back or to do without it. But the capitalists have now come to the conclusion that the game is up, and that the experiment is passing out of their hands. The suggestion to raise $150,000,000 yearly, by direct taxation, does not deceive t