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The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource], Continued skirmishing — hot work — Gallantry of our men — an incident — a veteran stands to his post — Treacherous Yankee--advance of the enemy, &c. (search)
rday that Jackson had crossed the Potomac and was now in Williamsport, Maryland. Although we could not learn that official dispatches had been received to that effect, still the information was very generally believed and we deem it more probable than otherwise. Williamsport is on the river above Harper's Ferry, six miles from Hagerstown and on the Fredericktown turnpike. This rapid advance of Jackson has caused great consternation in Washington and is said to have made the diversion in McClellan's plans spoken or else where. We hope to be able to chronicle Jackson's entrance into Fredericktown, in which place he will meet with powerful additions to his army. We are told that seventy thousand Marylands stand ready at a moment's warning to join the standard or the old hero. Many of these men have arms hidden, and those who have none are ready to fight with thes, sticks or brickbats. It must be a happy thought that deliverance is so nigh. The fact that Jackson is the first
opies the independence Belge's paragraph, though it affects to disbelieve the fact. Prince Napoleon is known to have said, only two days ago, in the presence of more than one gentleman connected with the South, that, strong as his sympathies were towards the North, he was afraid he must sacrifice them in face of the increasing distress in France. Last year, he said our harvest failed us, and "no labor no food" is a state of things which turns every man's thoughts upon himself. It General McClellan cannot stamp out the rebellion I see nothing for it but interference on the part of Europe. Before this letter reaches you I do hope that the tide of battle may have set in against the rebels in such a fashion that Mr. Lincoln's words in his thanksgiving proclamation may be verified, and that foreign interference may cease forever to be a matter of question; but if not, from all I hear, I ask strongly persuaded that the year 1862 will not pass away without its having taken place.
The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource], The London times' correspondents in America. (search)
the Potomac the correspondent of that paper, attributing it to the fact that it has been his lot heretofore to chronicle nothing but defeats of the forces under McClellan. We give the conclusion of the article. The truth and moderation with which these early scenes of failure were described have now been acknowledged by all,n, but as an impartial witness. He might have written the history of the Anabasis to Richmond from the entrenchments at Yorktown as well as from the camp of General McClellan. But Mr. Stanton was evidently confident that he would not do this. As he had been long in the Federal camps, and upon terms of intimacy with many of the F in this city, and published in the London Times of the 7th instant, he has touched upon rebel Generals, messages, President Lincoln's Cabinet, the operations of McClellan, the Merrimac, the Monitor, the blockade, and the arrest of Cameron on the complaint of Pierce Butler. On the latter he done the prophetic mantle of Ll. D. Russ