Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 24, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Butlers or search for Butlers in all documents.

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ment, who have desecrated that ancient church in Hampton, and violating the solemn and sacred repose of the dead, have hauled the tombstones from the foundations where the hands of broken-hearted relatives had placed them over dust, which to guard they would have died and have barricaded the church gateway with their fragments? It is useless for any of his apologists in the Northern papers to say that Butler does not countenance this outrage. "I tell him, though a clergyman, he lies." Butlers is no man, but a dog! and a dog's death should be his doom. It is a little singular, however, that the new-made grave in that churchyard referred to by one of the correspondents of the New York papers — where he saw stakes fixed, and a cross piece above the mound, and the demoralized demons boiling their cauldron — is to my own knowledge the grave of the child of a Yankee, who, having made money out of our people, fled to his cold, unfeeling, creepiness and godless North, as soon as he fo