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The Daily Dispatch: November 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], The great naval expedition — from Fortress Monroe and Hatteras Inlet. (search)
d be a cruelty and a piece of barbarous injustice. A little vigor would even now rid. Pamlico Sound of the rebel steamers, and then, with gun-boats in the Sound, our camp might be moved from Fort Hatteras to the light-house. It may be a little easier to back out than to go ahead; therefore, since one or the other must be done, back will probably be the policy. Arrival of Contrabands from Smithfield — death of Col. Elder. The New York Herald's Fortress Monroe correspondence, of November 4, says: Twenty-nine contrabands, consisting of twenty-four men, one woman, and four children, have just been brought down from Newport News, whither they had come from Smithfield. They report numberless rebel soldiers above Newport News, and that they have had plenty to eat; but their stories are not reliable. The death of Lieut. Col. Elder, of the 10th regiment New York volunteers, (Col. John E. Bendix,) has cast a gloom over the members of that organization, inasmuch as that o
d, and left the after threatening the life of Col. Staunton. The latter followed them with a portion of his regiment, overtook them at the corner of Broad and Chestnut streets, made them lay down their arms, and placed about 20 of the ringleaders in jail. Capture of the English schooners Harmony and severely off the coast of North Carolina--Southerners enlist (under Compulsion) as seamen. The New York Times publishes a letter from a correspondent on board the U. S. bark Gemsbok, Nov. 4, from which we take the following: The United States bark Gemsbok, Lieut. Edward Cavendy commanding, left Hampton Roads on the 17th of September, bound for Wilmington, N. C., on the blockade. On the 19th of Sept., off Beaufort, N. C., captured the English schooner Harmony, from Yardmouth, Nova Scotia, loaded with fish, trying to run the blockade. On the 22d Sept., off Frying Pan Shoal, captured the schooner Mary A. Pludar, of Wilmington, N. C., loaded with lime. After which we stood