Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for F. J. Boggs or search for F. J. Boggs in all documents.

Your search returned 6 results in 3 document sections:

The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1861., [Electronic resource], Camp Pickens — Company "H"--Justice to Capt. Beggs--Miscellaneous News. (search)
ggs--Miscellaneous News. A correspondent, writing from Camp Pickens, June 26, makes a statement in reference to Capt. F. J. Boggs, of the First Regiment, which we take pleasure in publishing: In the Dispatch "local," of the 24th inst., seves; but, whether willfully made or not, the statements are all misrepresentations. In regard to the assertion that Captain F. J. Boggs is disliked by some of the men under his command, I, as a member of Company H, must say that, to the best of my kn the little minutia of military life-- that they object to, and with which they quarrel — not the Captain. In saying Captain Boggs is a strict disciplinarian, the "correspondent" pays him a compliment well deserved, and which I hope he will continuhich another is alluded to that an invidious comparison would naturally follow. It does not need the disparagement of Capt. Boggs, late Chaplain of this regiment, or any other man, to elevate Dr. Teeling in the estimation of the public. His many q
y, numbering sixty-five men, rank and file, under Captain Sherman, which company has only two of Erin's sons. As we are totally ignorant yet about any company having left us but the Blues, I cannot tell what may befall us yet. When Private declares that the Rev. Dr. Teeling gives universal satisfaction, his language is unnecessary and too inclusive. Without detracting in any manner from Dr. T.'s abilities, I would say that his ministry is chiefly conflued to Company C, Montgomery Guard. Capt. Boggs, who, in the same message, gets put down as being somehow or other disliked on account of his strictness, gets nightly crowded, not only by his own company, but by members of all the other companies, including several officers, who come to listen with reverence and attention to the eloquent prayers which he sends up in our behalf to the God of Peace and Battles. Please excuse this deviation, Mr. Editor; for, knowing that you want truth and no fiction, I thought it my duty to enlighten yo
The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1861., [Electronic resource], A Palmetto flag at St. John's, N. B. (search)
Arrived. --Lieut. James Vaughan, of Capt. Boggs' Company, First Regiment Virginia Volunteers, arrived in Richmond on Saturday, from Manassas Junction, in charge of two prisoners of war--one a private in the regular service of the late United States, and the other one of Billy Wilson's "Pet Lambs"--a Zouave in undress uniform. Both were taken prisoners at a place called Cloud's Mills, in Fairfax county, Va., while reconnoitering. The prisoners were taken before the Secretary of War, and were ordered to the Depot to join the other Lincolnites in confinement there.