hide Matching Documents

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Sherman or search for Sherman in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

ascertained. Reports from below say that the rebels at Columbus are crossing to Belmont; also that they are in possession of Blandensville, Ky., eighteen miles southeast of this place. Gen. Backuer is stated to have taken possession of Owensborough, Ky., on the Ohio river, seventy miles above Paducah. Flight of J. C. Breckinridge. Frankll, Ky., Sept. 23 --It is said that John C. Breckinridge and Wm. Preston escaped from here through Montgomery county on Friday. Gen. Sherman had possession of Muldraugh's Hill yesterday. Henry Dent, City Marshal, has been appointed Provost Marshal of this city. Another $50,000,000 taken. In the money article of the Herald, It is said: We understand that the Bank Committee, which has just returned from Washington recommended the associate banks, at a meeting held to-day, to assume the second fifty millions of the $150,000,000 Government loan, and that the banks at once agreed to do so. The taking of the firs
The Daily Dispatch: September 30, 1861., [Electronic resource], The Equinoctial — presentation — Scarcity of specie, &c. (search)
ipate any attack. Arrests are being made every day. The army seems in a bad condition, and it is with great difficulty the officers can prevent insubordination.--Had heard nothing of the mutinied story. A snort time ago Mr. Carver conversed with a deserter who had forged a pass to get across the river. He was from New York, and said there were nine regiments from that State that could not fight except against their will. The R. I. battery has been re-placed. No person believes yet that Sherman lost any guns, as his battery was also re-placed immediately. Every time firing is heard on this side the river the citizens flock to the hills with their glasses to see McClellan whip the "rebels." Generally, the city was very quiet. That is all Mr. Carver could tell, but I venture to assert that if "your own" could be dropped in Washington for an hour, he could scare up news enough to fill a whole paper. At present he is not prepared to make the trip, but hopes to fill a note book some