hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
The Daily Dispatch: December 23, 1865., [Electronic resource] 13 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1865., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 15 results in 2 document sections:

The Daily Dispatch: December 23, 1865., [Electronic resource], Greeley makes a motion to admit the Southern members. (search)
would have nothing more to do with him. She then told me that Mr. Joseph McCoy had made proposals of marriage to her, and that they had been and asked me what I thought of it. She said she had found out that McCoy was a single man, a good mechanic, with a good reputation. A day or so afterwards she got a letter from McCoy asking her to visit him at the city jail, where he was confined. She went to the commandant of t see him. She came back and said she was going to write a letter to McCoy, and asked me to assist her, and I did so. Things went on in this way until McCoy was released, after which he visited the place regularly. I went home again about the 1st of September for a niece of mine toe young lady whom I was to marry. Returned to Richmond and found Mr. McCoy at the restaurant as usual. On the day that I was shot, the 22d blankets and pillow on it. On this bedstead I found Mrs. Ould and Mr. McCoy together. She was leaning over him, and both were apparently asl
The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1865., [Electronic resource], The Franklin street shooting affair — close of the investigation.--the accused sent on for examination. (search)
o continue to be her friend; that she was a poor, unhappy, lost woman, when she could have been better, and all she asked of him was to befriend her once more — was introduced by Meade and read by Mr. Johnson. The letter exhibited a most extraordinary degree of affection on her part for Meade, whom she constantly addressed as "Dear Bob." Mr. Johnson read a number of letters written by Meade to Mrs. Ould, addressed to his "Dear Is," and couched in the most affectionate language. Joseph McCoy testified that he knew Mrs. Ould and Meade. Meade's statements in regard to the intimacy between Mrs. Ould and himself were false. She always acted towards him as a lady. Witness was never in her bed chamber before last Monday night, when he took supper with her and Mr. and Mrs. Matthews. He never made any proposition to her, nor she to him, about going away together. James Jones, one of the late military police, testified that he saw Mrs. Ould shoot Meade on Franklin street, and