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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 3, 1861., [Electronic resource].

Found 1,016 total hits in 479 results.

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Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
October, 1860 AD (search for this): article 1
Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
Andrew Jones (search for this): article 1
plexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold ears about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
James Toliver (search for this): article 1
Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
John E. Wilson (search for this): article 1
Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
George W. Cold (search for this): article 1
Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
Negro Head (Texas, United States) (search for this): article 1
Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
Westmoreland (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): article 1
Runaway in jail. --Was committed to the jail of the county of Westmoreland, on the 20th of May last, a Negro Man, calling himself James Toliver. The said Negro is of a tanny complexion, and is about 5 feet 6 inches high, and about 36 years about his person. The said Negro head a red flannel shirt, dark green coat, and black pants. He was sold from this county in October, 1860, by Mr. John E. Wilson, to (he says) Mr. Andrew Jones, of Wilmington, N. C. from which place he ran away, that Mr. Jones lives now in Richmond. The owner of said Negro will come forward, prove property, charges, and take him away, else he will be desiring the law directs. Geo. W. Cold by, acting Jailor je 26-- Westmore and County, Va.
Garrett Davis (search for this): article 1
Kentucky cannot remain in her-anomalous position. Delay but increases the gloomy prospect for her, no matter which side she takes. Delay but embitters the two parties into which she is being divided and which will be thrown into hot and bloody conflict, no matter which side she takes. This might have been avoided. Her people might have been comparatively united had Mr. Crittenden died or gone to the shades of retirement two years since, and had there been no such men as Guthrie, Garrett Davis, and that unscrupulous editor, Prentice. Providence has otherwise ordered it; and a day of woe, we fear, is in store for Kentucky should the war last long. That she will go with the South, we believe is inevitable. Every argument, every interest, every honest sympathy of her's, plainly force her to that position. But the mismanagement, if not treachery, of some of her leaders have so obstructed her course, so imbued her public mind with conflicting views and bitter animosities, that w
ets of war! Kentucky cannot remain in her-anomalous position. Delay but increases the gloomy prospect for her, no matter which side she takes. Delay but embitters the two parties into which she is being divided and which will be thrown into hot and bloody conflict, no matter which side she takes. This might have been avoided. Her people might have been comparatively united had Mr. Crittenden died or gone to the shades of retirement two years since, and had there been no such men as Guthrie, Garrett Davis, and that unscrupulous editor, Prentice. Providence has otherwise ordered it; and a day of woe, we fear, is in store for Kentucky should the war last long. That she will go with the South, we believe is inevitable. Every argument, every interest, every honest sympathy of her's, plainly force her to that position. But the mismanagement, if not treachery, of some of her leaders have so obstructed her course, so imbued her public mind with conflicting views and bitter animosi
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