Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Henry Baldwin or search for Henry Baldwin in all documents.

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n residents of the penitentiary, who desired to enlarge their sphere of usefulness. The Grand Jury being thus instructed, retired, and soon returned with a true bill for felony against Alexander Wright, other wise called Allen Smith, for escaping from the State's prison. A true bill for felony was also found against John McQuay, otherwise called Henry Russell; Joseph Laurence, John Powers Edward Barry, Wm. Harren, Fontaine Rowe, Silas Beazley, James P. Henry, Jesse Howell, Henry Horst, Henry Baldwin, and George Stephens, for conspiring together on the 21st of April to resist the lawful authority of an officer of the Penitentiary, for the purpose of escaping therefrom. Another true bill for felony was also found against the last named parties, for making, procuring, secreting, and having in their possession certain keys for a similar purpose. If the parties are convicted, as they no doubt will be.--a number of their fellow convicts having been paraded as witnesses against them — th
Important, if true. --We get the following from the Savannah News, of the 29th April: A dispatch received in this city from Baldwin. Florida, states that a gentleman arrived at that place from Gainesville, on Sunday night, who says that he had seen a captain of a vessel, who, in attempting to run the blockade, was chased by the blockaders, and was compelled to blow up his vessel, the crew escaping in their boats. The captain had late Havana papers, in which it was stated that the Spanish Government had recognized the independence of the Southern Confederacy, and that ambassadors from that Government were on their way to Richmond with dispatches to that effect. We give the above as it comes to us, from a reliable source, in the hope that it is true.