Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 15, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for December 14th or search for December 14th in all documents.

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as before. The list of casualties not yet received. No firing on-Sumter yesterday or to-day, and very little firing between the batteries. Four shells were thrown into the city between two and three o'clock this afternoon, but no one was injured. Thirteen Yankee prisoners, including three commissioned officers of the United States brig Perry, captured at Merrill Inlet by the 21st Georgia cavalry, have arrived here and been committed to jail. [second Dispatch.] Charleston, Dec. 13. --No firing last night. Nothing new this morning. [third Dispatch.] Charleston, Dec. 14. --No firing to-day, and nothing unusual, except that we have one monitor less to fight. An official dispatch from Gen. Walker, at Pocataligo, dated the 14th, says the Yankee paper, the Free South, published at Beaufort, received by flag of truce, contains a report of the sinking of the monitor Wehawken in a gale off Charleston harbor on Monday, Dec. 7.--Twenty-eight lives were lost.
From East Tennessee. Bristol, Dec. 14. --The main body of our army remains at Rogersville, and Gen. Long street's headquarters are at that place.--Large droves of hogs and cattle are being gathered up in East Tennessee by our cavalry. Burnside is reported marching towards Cumberland Gap, but nothing official is known in regard to it.
Sinking of a Yankee monitor. Savannah, Dec. 14. --The Free South, published at Beaufort, reports the loss of the Yankee monitor Wehawken, near Charleston harbor, during the gale of the 6th inst. Over twenty of her crew went down with her.
North Carolina Legislature. Raleigh, Dec. 14. --The Legislature adjourned at 9 o'clock this morning, to meet again on the third Tuesday in May. Sixty acts and twenty resolutions were passed.