Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.
Affairs at Harper's Ferry — loyally of Western
Virginia, &c.
Through the assistance of the late ‘" Brown raid "’ on Harper's Ferry, the geographical position and the topographical defences of that place were rendered so very plain by the different presses throughout the country, that it makes it useless for me to attempt to describe them. But I will say, that if the Massachusetts regiment that I saw in Washington is a fair representation of the Lincoln army, the band of Virginians stationed at this place, and so well fortified as they are, would defy ten times their number in the Gibraltar of America. All entrances to the town must breast the mouths of anxious and hungry batteries, always ready and willing to belch forth their howling and destructive contents into the ranks of the invading foe.
I think it is nonsense and idle talk, from what I have seen and heard since here, for any one to entertain such an idea as that ‘" Western Virginia is not loyal to the State. "’ Of the troops at Harper's Ferry, not one is from the Eastern part of the State. I have conversed freely with many of them, and the unanimous voice seems to be, we are for our State, ‘" right or wrong, "’ though many were strong Union men until Lincoln compelled their native State to be no longer a part of that ‘" glorious Union "’ that was.
The majority of the citizens of Harper's Ferry, I am sorry to say, are disloyalists; some went so far as to go to Washington and request the so-called Government there to send more Federal troops to the former place to protect the Armory from the army of Secessionists, and also told the said Government that, ‘" if Virginia did secede, Harper's Ferry would not. "’ One of these very men shouldered his Sharp's Rifle and called upon the citizens to come out and resist the State troops, stating that he had been assured at Washington that if they would stand by the Federal troops stationed there, the Lincoln Government would stand by them. Another one said he had ‘" twenty good Union men at the Rifle works to resist the mob, "’ (State authorities,) and said, ‘" Can't I get twenty more to assist Lieut. Jones ?"’ Such were the feelings then, and I am sure they are not much changed now; but with the exception of that rotten, contemptible, and which has always been a disgraceful, hole, this section of the State will, on the 4th Thursday in May, prove itself truly loyal to the ‘" Old Commonwealth. "’ Rex.