Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 16, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Sibley or search for Sibley in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 2 document sections:

d and doing well, (the most of them,) and will be left here under the care of competent physicians. Still later advices are contained in a telegraphic dispatch from Houston, Texas. HoustonMarch 31.--Dates from Mesilla to the 7th, report Sibley's advance to be at Socorro, thirty miles above Fort Craig, half way between Mesilla and Santa Fe. Letters received from our troops state that New Mexico is practically in our hands. Sibley is advancing on Santa Fe. Nothing from Fort Craig; we exSibley is advancing on Santa Fe. Nothing from Fort Craig; we expect it is probably evacuated.--Brownsville dates to the 20th state that the British frigate Phæton, 56. (not the Rialto,) Admiral Teasham, and corvette Berthold, &x 89 pounders, Commander Janquiere, is off the Rio Grands. Admiral Teasham had visited Brownsville and sympathizes with our cause. He says his mission is to keep the mouth of the Rio Grands open to the trade of the world, at all hazards. England is reported to have withdrawn from the alliance against Mexico. A fleet of 800 guns is
the bosom of the captive patriot at every announcement of a glorious achievement of our arms. And if we add to this that the victory is won by the soldiers who have been the neighbors, even the blood, of the incarcerated patriot in his distant dungeon, we may appreciate in some degree the emotion which distasted the following lines, penned by one of the most gifted of our Western patriots, on his hearing successively, or perhaps in the same hour, the glorious victories of Price in Arkansas, Sibley in New Mexico, of Morgan wherever he has appeared, and of Johnston and Beauregard on the bloody plains of Shiloh. He might well exclaim, as we did even here in Richmond, after the dark hours we had suffered. " The Day, the Day is Breaking!" See ye not that day is breaking, Freeman from their slumbers waiting, Mightier efforts daily making To break oppression's chain. Who would to Northern power? Who would quail in this stern hear? Who, when clouds of darkness lower, Could