Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 16, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Winslow or search for Winslow in all documents.

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age than the famous pirate and Red Rover, Capt. Semmes. The N. Y. Herald avers that he did not deliver himself up to Capt. Winslow of the Kearsarge, which it pronounces an outrage, and is accordingly filled with horror and indignation. There seemsh all its energies for three years only to sink the Alabama? Was not he, Semmes, the real object of pursuit? Would not Winslow, if his flag had been lowered, acted with that nice sense of honor which characterizes his nation, and have disdained to escape, even if he had the opportunity? It may be said that Winslow would have been treated by Capt Semmes according to the laws of civilized warfare, whereas the fate of a pirate was already decreed for Capt Semmes. Here, again, we fall back upovering and successful enterprise — the pleasure of beholding him suspended from the gallows tree? It is possible that Capt Winslow might have hung him at once to the yard-arm of the Kearsarge, but, more probable, that he would have forwarded him, as