Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 23, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Andy Johnson or search for Andy Johnson in all documents.

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The Northern journals do not seem disposed to patronize His Excellency, Andy Johnson, Vice- President of the United States. The exhibition he made of himself on the Inauguration Day was not worthy of the wisest and most virtuous people in the world and the best government under the sun. The American Eagle was much chagrineh state of inebriation, and invited several of the prominent friends of temperance to engage with him in single combat. The Army and Navy Gazette says that Mr. Johnson's "bearing at the capitol, 'trembling a little, probably, with excitement,' and his rather incoherent speech, 'which was scarcely audible on account of the noisrive their power from the people' is too obvious a truism to require 'two minutes and a half on that point.' "On that fatal occasion, the prominent idea in Mr. Johnson's mind seems to have been that he was a 'plebeian'; and that he was 'proud of the title.' --In the strict sense of the term, however, the claim he makes at dist
Fayetteville. General Johnston's defeat of the enemy last Sunday, the 19th instant, occurred at Bentonsville, near the Neuse river. By these facts, we are informed that Sherman has been pushing towards Raleigh in two columns--one moving due north from Fayetteville, the other northwest from Newbern. General Hardee fought the former, General Johnston the latter. News from Fort Warren. A returned prisoner, who left Fort Warren on the 13th instant, informs us that the following Confederate Generals are in that prison, and well: Major-General Edward. Johnson, of Virginia; Brigadier-Generals Gordon, Smith and Frazier, of Tennessee; Brigadier-General Jones, of Virginia; Brigadier-General Henry R. Jackson, of Georgia, and Brigadier-Generals Cabell and Marmaduke, of the Trans-Mississippi Department. Brigadier-General Page has been sent to Fort Delaware. Major Harry Gilmor is also in Fort Warren, held as a "guerrilla" chief, and not subject to exchange, as the Yankees say.