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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 7, 1862., [Electronic resource].
Found 726 total hits in 377 results.
Hopkins (search for this): article 1
[from the Mobile evening news, April 28th.]from New Orleans.
The steamer C. W. Dorrence, Captain Hopkins, arrived this morning from the Ringlets, which she reached at 8 o'clock Saturday morning and left in the evening, putting into Pass Christian to avoid some of the enemy, who were in sight.
She left Pass Christian at 10 o'clock last night.
The latest news she brings is that telegraphed to us from the Bay of St. Louis.
It was understood that the city would be occupied at 2 o'clock to-morrow.
All the cotton was rolled into the public squares and burned, and the sugar and molasses on the levee rolled into the river.
The dry docks, shipping of every description, and steamboats were burned, except some of these last, which took troops up the river to destroy the cotton on the bank.
The gunboats, after making a single trip over the lake with soldiers, were burned. --Captain He is sure they could have been brought to Mobile.
At the last intelligence fighting was st
April 28th (search for this): article 1
[from the Mobile evening news, April 28th.]from New Orleans.
The steamer C. W. Dorrence, Captain Hopkins, arrived this morning from the Ringlets, which she reached at 8 o'clock Saturday morning and left in the evening, putting into Pass Christian to avoid some of the enemy, who were in sight.
She left Pass Christian at 10 o'clock last night.
The latest news she brings is that telegraphed to us from the Bay of St. Louis.
It was understood that the city would be occupied at 2 o'clock to-morrow.
All the cotton was rolled into the public squares and burned, and the sugar and molasses on the levee rolled into the river.
The dry docks, shipping of every description, and steamboats were burned, except some of these last, which took troops up the river to destroy the cotton on the bank.
The gunboats, after making a single trip over the lake with soldiers, were burned. --Captain He is sure they could have been brought to Mobile.
At the last intelligence fighting was st
John T. Monroe (search for this): article 1
April 25th, 1862 AD (search for this): article 1
Pass Christian (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 1
[from the Mobile evening news, April 28th.]from New Orleans.
The steamer C. W. Dorrence, Captain Hopkins, arrived this morning from the Ringlets, which she reached at 8 o'clock Saturday morning and left in the evening, putting into Pass Christian to avoid some of the enemy, who were in sight.
She left Pass Christian at 10 o'clock last night.
The latest news she brings is that telegraphed to us from the Bay of St. Louis.
It was understood that the city would be occupied at 2 o'clock Pass Christian at 10 o'clock last night.
The latest news she brings is that telegraphed to us from the Bay of St. Louis.
It was understood that the city would be occupied at 2 o'clock to-morrow.
All the cotton was rolled into the public squares and burned, and the sugar and molasses on the levee rolled into the river.
The dry docks, shipping of every description, and steamboats were burned, except some of these last, which took troops up the river to destroy the cotton on the bank.
The gunboats, after making a single trip over the lake with soldiers, were burned. --Captain He is sure they could have been brought to Mobile.
At the last intelligence fighting was sti
September (search for this): article 1
McClellan (search for this): article 1
Ulm and Richmond — Bonaparte and McClellan.
The Whig says a Northern paper proclaims the intention of McClellan to seize all the communications leading to thisMcClellan to seize all the communications leading to this city, cut off the supplies, shut up our armies as Mack was shut up at Ulm, and take them all without a battle.--This is very grand a k and it is probably suggested ichmond cannot be made an Ulm, unless General Johnston be made a Mack and General McClellan a Bonaparte; and as we are unable to see how these metamorphoses can be af anything but a copy of the old Austrian professor; and we should think even McClellan's warmest admirers can hardly claim anything Napoleonic for his Of all the shich his operations before this very town of film present to the movements of McClellan in his approach to Richmond.
McClellan started his army from Washington McClellan started his army from Washington two months ago. He himself, after issuing a thundering proclamation to his troops, started after them about six weeks ago. From Washington to Richmond, by way of Yor
Napoleon (search for this): article 1
26th (search for this): article 1
October 16th (search for this): article 1