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The Daily Dispatch: April 18, 1861., [Electronic resource] | 26 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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The Daily Dispatch: April 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], [from our regular Correspondent.] (search)
A narrow escape.
--The Charleston Courier says that Arthur P. Lining, a member of the Palmetto Guard, stationed at the Iron Battery, narrowly escaped death from Maj. Anderson's first gun upon that point.
He was upon the parapet, about planting the Palmetto Flag, when the first ball from Sumter passed within three feet of him, upon which he (still retaining his position on the parapet,) waved the flag aloft, as if in defiance of Sumter, amid the cheers of his comrades, and retired behind the battery.
The Daily Dispatch: April 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], [from our regular Correspondent.] (search)
General Webb.
That amazing war hawk, Gen. James Watson Webb, is at present in full glory.
He is now standing on his head, and making faces at the South with his heels.
His latest performance is an elaborate article denouncing Major Anderson as a Traitor!
This, from the man who beat so hasty a r etreat from the "mahogany stock, percussion lock, nine inches in the barrel." We only wish the valiant Brigadier had himself been in the midst of the burning fort.
But it is not too late to retrieve his reputation.
Let him come now, at least as far as the Long Bridge at Washington.