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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 17, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Virginia (Virginia, United States) or search for Virginia (Virginia, United States) in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: September 17, 1861., [Electronic resource], Seizure of a Southern vessel. (search)
Northern War News.
Slave Property Declared Free in Missouri--The War in Northwestern Virginia--Soldiers Prohibited from Transporting Slaves not Their Own, &c., &c.
We have received Baltimore and New York papers of Friday's and Saturday's dates.--The following is a summary of the war news at the North.
Slave prop he gun-boat Flag has returned to Hampton Roads in a disabled condition, having come in collision with the steam frigate Susquehanna at sea.
The War in Northwestern Virginia.
We take the following items from the Wheeling Intelligencer, (Black Republican,) of Thursday last:
Gentlemen who arrived yesterday from Roane co r its charter, it is expressly prohibited for any officer or soldier to transport, or cause to be transported, over the lines of the Baltimore and Ohio and Northwestern Virginia Railroads, any black or mulatto persons, the same being a slave, unless owned by such officer or soldier, or transported by permission of the owner.
T
The campaign in Northwest Virginia.
--Without presuming to criticise the plan of campaign for Western Virginia which our able military authorities decided upon in the outset, we think it has been rendered pretty clear by the course of events, that we have made a mistake in sending so large a force in the direction of Montere Kentucky, but also as a leading feature of the war. The Yankee newspapers are continually asserting that the South are divided in counsels, and pointing to Northwestern Virginia as a prominent in stance of the alleged disaffection.
Virginia is too important a member of the Southern Confederacy, for a bogus Government to be allowed an apparent foothoid on any portion of her soil.
Until Northwest Virginia is delivered of the presence of the invader, the idea of a strong Southern disaffection will continue to retain a lodgement in the mind of the world.
If Gen. Lee. with his comparatively large force, shall succeed in penetrating to Clarksburg, driving