Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for James E. Kerrigan or search for James E. Kerrigan in all documents.

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ecessity that the War Department shall resume possession of the line between this city and Baltimore and Annapolis, and so be able to control the running of trains and the transportation of supplies and munitions of war. A few days since Mrs. Kerrigan, wife of Col. James E. Kerrigan, of the New York Twenty-fifth, now under arrest, went with another lady beyond our outposts into Secessia. The avowed purpose was to visit the house of the lady, but they were compelled to turn back without reCol. James E. Kerrigan, of the New York Twenty-fifth, now under arrest, went with another lady beyond our outposts into Secessia. The avowed purpose was to visit the house of the lady, but they were compelled to turn back without reaching there. Short Allowance of Forage — the blockade of the Potomac. The special dispatches in the New York Tribune, of the 25th, contain the following: The horses and mules of the army around Washington are on short allowance. It is not possible or the railroad to keep the forage department supplied. Already a remedy is talked of for the threatening evil of a short supply of hay and oats, cheaper and more efficacious, if not more glorious, than arms can supply. The construc