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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: August 15, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Malmesbury (search for this): article 25
Death of a . --The Baltimore Exchange, of Monday, says: About the time of the arrival of the train from Washington last night, a very respectably dressed man, who had alighted from the train, was seen to stagger and fall upon the platform. A crowd immediately gathered around him, and a vice-policeman procured a hack and conveyed him to the Western district police station. He had been there but a few minutes when he expired. Upon an examination of his effects, it was ascertained that his name was Mayrick Beauford Field. He had a letter of introduction from the Duke of Malmesbury to President Lincoln, two medals from Queen Victoria for meritorious service in the Crimean War, a pass from Gen. Scott, signed by an aid de-camp, giving the bearer permission to pass the lines of the United States army, a gold watch and a very neatly bound diary.
Death of a . --The Baltimore Exchange, of Monday, says: About the time of the arrival of the train from Washington last night, a very respectably dressed man, who had alighted from the train, was seen to stagger and fall upon the platform. A crowd immediately gathered around him, and a vice-policeman procured a hack and conveyed him to the Western district police station. He had been there but a few minutes when he expired. Upon an examination of his effects, it was ascertained that his name was Mayrick Beauford Field. He had a letter of introduction from the Duke of Malmesbury to President Lincoln, two medals from Queen Victoria for meritorious service in the Crimean War, a pass from Gen. Scott, signed by an aid de-camp, giving the bearer permission to pass the lines of the United States army, a gold watch and a very neatly bound diary.
John A. Scott (search for this): article 25
Death of a . --The Baltimore Exchange, of Monday, says: About the time of the arrival of the train from Washington last night, a very respectably dressed man, who had alighted from the train, was seen to stagger and fall upon the platform. A crowd immediately gathered around him, and a vice-policeman procured a hack and conveyed him to the Western district police station. He had been there but a few minutes when he expired. Upon an examination of his effects, it was ascertained that his name was Mayrick Beauford Field. He had a letter of introduction from the Duke of Malmesbury to President Lincoln, two medals from Queen Victoria for meritorious service in the Crimean War, a pass from Gen. Scott, signed by an aid de-camp, giving the bearer permission to pass the lines of the United States army, a gold watch and a very neatly bound diary.