Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 26, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Jack Morgan or search for Jack Morgan in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 3 document sections:

Hung. --W. H. Spence, the wealthy banker of Murfreesboro', Tenn., who betrayed the movements of Morgan and Forrest, has been hung by the citizens of Murfreesboro'.
lost all hope of a restoration of the Union; thinks that it is gone forever, and that he is now willing to admit that he has been deceived, and that he will behave himself and give his influence to the South. We know this man we speak of. He was elected a Lieutenant in the army after he got there. Others should take warning.--Greenville (Tenn.) Banner. A smart woman. The Chattanooga Rebel says that Col. Boone, of Kentucky, was in command of the Federal forces at Gallatin when Col. Jack Morgan made his morning call last week, and had not shaken off the doorway god at the time of the demand for the surrender of his forces. Mrs. Boone, however, was more wide awake, and aroused the sleeping Colonel by exclaiming, "I surrender, and no does the Colonel." Of course, after that the Colonel had no more to say, but quietly caved in. General Pettigrew. The Raleigh (N. C.) Standard learns, from a near relative of Gen. Pettigrew residing in that city, that two of his wounds ha
rs in the West--accounts from the North. Mobile, Aug. 25. --A special dispatch to the Advertiser and Register, dated Tupelo, yesterday, says: Louisville papers of the 18th and Cincinnati papers of the 19th have been received. They furnish the following summary of news. Several new points in Kentucky have been occupied by rebel guerrillas Richmond 23 miles from Lexington is now occupied by three thousand rebels. Eighty Confederates, supposed to be on their way to join Morgan, a ere captured at Mammoth Cave. Bodies of cavalry, supposed to be the advance of a large force, have appeared at London and Somerset Bull Nelson was at Nashville on the 18th. Trains are running through from Nashville on the Chattanooga road. A large body of rebels, collected in Jackson Mo., threaten, an attack on Kansas City. The Kansas militia has been ordered out en masse. At the ovation given to Col. Corcoran at Washington. Col. Wilcox declared that the rebellion was s