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The Daily Dispatch: June 18, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: July 10, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Wounded Confederate prisoners. --The following Confederate soldiers, wounded at the battle of Seven Pines and taken prisoners, have been conveyed to the U. S. Marine Hospital at Portsmouth: Wm. Johnson, James M. Dougherty, Thos. Smith C. Callen. Andrew Cain. Andrew McCormick, Jno, Farrell, Eighth Alabama regiment; Benj. H. Ewers, F. Bryant, D. C. Buttler, Geo. S. Utz, Forty Ninth Virginia regiment; H, Spencer, Twenty-Fourth Virginia regiment, T. J. Horton, J. West, W. R. Flagim, Twenty- Seventh (Georgia regiment; J. A. John, Second Florida regiment; Wm. Thos. Gilbert, Forty-Ninth Georgia regiment D. J. McHavel, Second Mississippi Battery.
Twelve citizens of Pennsylvania, composing the "Pittsburg Sanitary Commission," a self-constituted committee to wait on the Yankee wounded, and witness McClellan's triumphal entry into the rebel capital, were, by order of the military authorities of the Department of Henrico; removed on Tuesday evening from their comfortable quarters at Savage's farm, and brought to this city and lodged in Libby's warehouse as prisoners of war. They gave the following names: R. R. Bounot Jeans Brown, F. Bryant, W. H. Smith, John Beltzhooves, Oliver L. Miller, J. W. Whiteman, W. E. Goeling, Thos. G. Smyth, John Harney, Thos. McCanes, and L. Hart. Accompanying the above was a committee of one named M. E. N. Howell, of Michigan, who was at Savage's on a similar errand as his Pittsburg brothers. In connection with the subject of Yankee prisoners, we may mention that eight Pennsylvania soldiers, including a Lieutenant, were brought to the C. S. Prison in this city, yesterday, by two Virginia yo