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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: November 19, 1860., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Roanoke (United States) (search for this): article 5
r part. She has a large midship-house for the accommodation of the crew; boys' room and a galley 29 feet long. The stern is embellished with a richly carved moulding, with the Virginia coat of arms as a centre piece. She has a light and symmetrical cutwater, finished with a billet and, in fact, the finish throughout combines utility, beauty and strength. She has been named the Virginia Dare, after the first white child born in Virginia, and of which birth Capt. John Smith, the leader of the settlers in that colony, make particular mention in his history of the events connected with the settlement of Virginia, in these words:--"And on the 18th, Ellinor, the Governor's daughter, and wife to Ananias Dare, was delivered of a daughter, in Roanoke, which, being the first Christian there born, was called Virginia." She was constructed to the order of Messrs. David J. Burr, John Purcell and Wm. G. Paine, the building committee on the part of the company of merchants of Richmond, Va.
ion of her: Length between perpendiculars, 160 feet; breadth of beam extreme, 33 feet 6 inches; depth of hold, 21 feet; average depth of hold, 22 feet. Her keel is sided 15 inches and moulded 16 inches, with a five-inch shoe frame, composed of white oak, locust and cedar; sided 9, 10 and 11 inches; moulded at heel, and 7 inches at the plank shears. Floors sided 11, 12 and 13 inches. Kelsons 15 inches square, bolted through the floors and keel with one and one-eighth inch yellow metal. Rider 14 inches square, well bolted through main kelson, first futtock, heels, and the keel. She is square-fastened throughout, and copper-fastened to the load-line. She has a half-poop, 46 feet long, and the cabin rising out of the poop 23 feet long, having seven fine staterooms for the accommodation of passengers, with a large pantry and mates' room in the forward part, and a well arranged captain's room; bathroom and water-closet in the after part. She has a large midship-house for the accom
William G. Paine (search for this): article 5
er part. She has a large midship-house for the accommodation of the crew; boys' room and a galley 29 feet long. The stern is embellished with a richly carved moulding, with the Virginia coat of arms as a centre piece. She has a light and symmetrical cutwater, finished with a billet and, in fact, the finish throughout combines utility, beauty and strength. She has been named the Virginia Dare, after the first white child born in Virginia, and of which birth Capt. John Smith, the leader of the settlers in that colony, make particular mention in his history of the events connected with the settlement of Virginia, in these words:--"And on the 18th, Ellinor, the Governor's daughter, and wife to Ananias Dare, was delivered of a daughter, in Roanoke, which, being the first Christian there born, was called Virginia." She was constructed to the order of Messrs. David J. Burr, John Purcell and Wm. G. Paine, the building committee on the part of the company of merchants of Richmond, Va.
David J. Burr (search for this): article 5
r part. She has a large midship-house for the accommodation of the crew; boys' room and a galley 29 feet long. The stern is embellished with a richly carved moulding, with the Virginia coat of arms as a centre piece. She has a light and symmetrical cutwater, finished with a billet and, in fact, the finish throughout combines utility, beauty and strength. She has been named the Virginia Dare, after the first white child born in Virginia, and of which birth Capt. John Smith, the leader of the settlers in that colony, make particular mention in his history of the events connected with the settlement of Virginia, in these words:--"And on the 18th, Ellinor, the Governor's daughter, and wife to Ananias Dare, was delivered of a daughter, in Roanoke, which, being the first Christian there born, was called Virginia." She was constructed to the order of Messrs. David J. Burr, John Purcell and Wm. G. Paine, the building committee on the part of the company of merchants of Richmond, Va.
John Smith (search for this): article 5
water-closet in the after part. She has a large midship-house for the accommodation of the crew; boys' room and a galley 29 feet long. The stern is embellished with a richly carved moulding, with the Virginia coat of arms as a centre piece. She has a light and symmetrical cutwater, finished with a billet and, in fact, the finish throughout combines utility, beauty and strength. She has been named the Virginia Dare, after the first white child born in Virginia, and of which birth Capt. John Smith, the leader of the settlers in that colony, make particular mention in his history of the events connected with the settlement of Virginia, in these words:--"And on the 18th, Ellinor, the Governor's daughter, and wife to Ananias Dare, was delivered of a daughter, in Roanoke, which, being the first Christian there born, was called Virginia." She was constructed to the order of Messrs. David J. Burr, John Purcell and Wm. G. Paine, the building committee on the part of the company of merch
John Purcell (search for this): article 5
er part. She has a large midship-house for the accommodation of the crew; boys' room and a galley 29 feet long. The stern is embellished with a richly carved moulding, with the Virginia coat of arms as a centre piece. She has a light and symmetrical cutwater, finished with a billet and, in fact, the finish throughout combines utility, beauty and strength. She has been named the Virginia Dare, after the first white child born in Virginia, and of which birth Capt. John Smith, the leader of the settlers in that colony, make particular mention in his history of the events connected with the settlement of Virginia, in these words:--"And on the 18th, Ellinor, the Governor's daughter, and wife to Ananias Dare, was delivered of a daughter, in Roanoke, which, being the first Christian there born, was called Virginia." She was constructed to the order of Messrs. David J. Burr, John Purcell and Wm. G. Paine, the building committee on the part of the company of merchants of Richmond, Va.
er part. She has a large midship-house for the accommodation of the crew; boys' room and a galley 29 feet long. The stern is embellished with a richly carved moulding, with the Virginia coat of arms as a centre piece. She has a light and symmetrical cutwater, finished with a billet and, in fact, the finish throughout combines utility, beauty and strength. She has been named the Virginia Dare, after the first white child born in Virginia, and of which birth Capt. John Smith, the leader of the settlers in that colony, make particular mention in his history of the events connected with the settlement of Virginia, in these words:--"And on the 18th, Ellinor, the Governor's daughter, and wife to Ananias Dare, was delivered of a daughter, in Roanoke, which, being the first Christian there born, was called Virginia." She was constructed to the order of Messrs. David J. Burr, John Purcell and Wm. G. Paine, the building committee on the part of the company of merchants of Richmond, Va.