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The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1862., [Electronic resource] 8 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Fremont Banks or search for Fremont Banks in all documents.

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nts of the Confederates--that nothing transpired on our lines of which he was not immediately informed. "Ah." said the citizen, "perhaps then you can tell me where Stonewall Jackson is at present." "Oh, yes," replied the Federal, "he is in the Valley, and has been largely reinforced." "Indeed," was the rejoinder; "now what would you say if I was to tell you that Stonewall is now in the rear of your army on the Chickahominy, with a fair prospect of giving McClellan a worse rout than he gave Banks on the Shenandoah?" The Federal started as if he had received another shock from a bomb-shell, and at once subsided into silence. Another Batch of Yankees. There arrived at the Confederate States Military Prison on Sunday, June 29th, two hundred and seventy-one Yankee prisoners of war, including the following officers, viz: Major D. Davidson, 4th U. S. infantry. James Markson, 2d Lieutenant company K, 73d New York. Surgeon M. Grimes, (Major,) 2d N. York, Sickles's Excel
is son-in-law, Lieutenant Wise. Bishop McIlvaine, of Ohio, is in town. The members of Congress from Pennsylvania will not support the new tariff bill, unless a change is made that will do justice to the iron interest of our State. This is fully resolved upon by the entire delegation. Railroad iron is taxed $1.56, while no protection is given it by the new tariff. The sympathizers with secession here are again made jubilant by the comments of English journals on the defeat of Banks, received per steamer An officer in the navy, who is a secessionist, though still holding his position, told me this morning that he had no doubt the British Government would now intervene in our affairs, if it did not immediately recognize the Southern Confederacy. There are too many of his way of thinking in this city, some of whom hold Government positions. It is feared that some difficulty may arise under the District emancipation act, in consequence of the large number of claiman
Virginia, Wheat's Battalion, 25th Virginia, 16th Mississippi, Maryland C. S. Regiment, 27th Virginia, Danville Battery, 12th Georgia, 57th Virginia, 9th Louisiana, 5th Virginia, 1st Louisiana Battery, 21st North Carolina, 92d Virginia, 33d Virginia, 35th Virginia, 42d Virginia, 2d Virginia Cavalry, 1st Virginia Battery, Houstin's Virginia Battery, Courtney's Artillery. War in the Shenandoah Valley. Harper's Ferry, June 24. --A pontoon bridge will arrive this afternoon, on the way to General Fremont's army. A greater part of the force here are throwing up earthworks on Bolivar Heights. The supplies are plenty. It was rumored yesterday that the rebel General Ewell was advancing on New creek with four thousand men. The Twenty-third Illinois and Eighty-seventh Tennsylvania regiments were sent there this morning. Gen. Kelley is fully able to receive Ewell. Jackson is by this time checked, and Fremont Banks and Shields have joined their forces to pursue him.
rapid nocturnal transit in Scotch cap and military cloak from Harrisburg to Washington. The Herald suggests that it was to meet Gen. Scott and Gen. Pope with a view to important military arrangements in Virginia. McClellan, it seems, was too slow, while affairs generally in the Valley have gone away with the Federalists. It seems that Blenker is superseded by Carl Shurz, "Fremont is falling back;" "Shields has fallen from grace," and "McDowell has fallen from his horse," so injuring himself as to be hors de combat. All this added to Banks's humiliation, sets the troubled King off in the night to consult Old Lundy and General Pope. The latter General, the Herald thinks, is, in the estimation of the President, the rising military star to whom to trust the retrieval of affairs in Virginia.--Pope is from Illinois, and an intimate of Lincoln, who is so profoundly impressed with his military talents from his Missouri campaign, that he thinks he will "put things through" in Virginia.