hide
Named Entity Searches
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 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
View all matching documents... |
Your search returned 1,102 results in 350 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: July 15, 1863., [Electronic resource], A Foul murder. (search)
Charge of receiving stolen Goods.
--The police yesterday arrested Peter H. Morgan upon the charge of receiving a stolen travelling bag, containing promissory notes to the amount of $1,900. payable to Mrs. Exall, by Patterson & Brothers, and notes for $1,100, payable to the order of O. P. Bell and A. A. Bell.
The Daily Dispatch: July 16, 1862., [Electronic resource], Wounded Yankees from Savage's Station . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: October 6, 1863., [Electronic resource], Confederate prisoners in Northern prisons. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: October 22, 1863., [Electronic resource], Casualties among General officers on both Sides during the War . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: October 28, 1863., [Electronic resource], Narrative of Wheeler 's Circuit around Rosecrans . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: December 17, 1863., [Electronic resource], Prison life at Point Lookout . (search)
Prison life at Point Lookout.
We have had a conversation with Mr. Robert Craddock, late an orderly of the President, and afterwards connected with the detective force in this city, who was a short time ago captured by the Yankees on the Peninsula and taken to Point Lookout, from which place he escaped and arrived safely in this city a few days since.
He gives the following particulars of prison life at Point Lookout:
The prisoners' camp, under charge of Capt. Patterson, Provost Marshal, is surrounded by a fence most fourteen feet high, with a platform near the top, on the outside, on which the sentinels walk.
The guard consists of three regiments of infantry, the 2d, 5th, and 12th New Hampshire, and a squadron of cavalry of the 2d regulars.
The enclosure embraces about fifteen acres of ground, and the prisoners are in tents.
Three thousand are in the small "A" tents, five to each tent; the rest (say about 6,000) are in Wall & Sibley tents, from 14 to 20 in a tent.
The Daily Dispatch: January 11, 1864., [Electronic resource], Affairs in the Valley — the capture of Yankees in Hardy County . (search)
Affairs in the Valley — the capture of Yankees in Hardy County.
We mentioned several days ago the fast that a portion of our cavalry had made some important captures in Hardy county.
Our forces who made these captures were under the command of Gens. Fitzhugh Lee and Rosser.
The capture was effected some ten miles from Moorefield, on the road leading to Patterson's creek.
On Sunday last they came up with a train of some forty wagons, which they succeeded in taking, with their teams, guards, &c. On the same night our forces surprised and captured some fifty Yankees who were quartered in a church in Hardy county.
It is said that about 2,000 Yankees were at Front Royal, Warren county, in the early part of last week, moving in the direction of Berryville, Clarke county.
This is a movement of the enemy more probably with the design of meeting movements upon the part of our own forces.
A portion of our troops in the Valley were recently as low down as Bunker Hill, Berkeley co
Heenan, the prize fighter, is thought to be gradually dying so the Northern papers say. He is taking his time at it and not hurrying himself.
He never got over that beating by the English prizefighter.
George N. Reynolds, of Charleston, S. C. father of Gen Reynolds, of Mo, died at Columbia, S. C, a few days ago. He was a native of Yorktown, Va.
Dr. Jno H Patterson, one of the oldest physicians of Lynchburg, Va., died on the 20th inst.