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The Daily Dispatch: August 29, 1861., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 29, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Wiley Edward or search for Wiley Edward in all documents.

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, destroying Fort Breckinridge and the stores at that point, a large amount of grain and provisions at Tucson Mills, together with the buildings. Fort Buchanan and all its contents, and other property, amounting in the aggregate to half a million of dollars. The United States officers taken at the surrender of San Augustine Springs were the following: Major Isaac Lindee, commanding; Captains Joseph H. Patten, M. R. Stevenson, Alfred Gibbs; First Lieutenants F. Ryan, David Hancock, Edward J. Brooks. Charles B. Stivors, A. H. Pluner, C. W. McHally; Second Lieutenants F. J. Crilly, Ed. L. Cressy; Assistant Surgeons J. C. McKee, C. H. Alden. They had all been paroled, and were to leave by way of Santa Fe. Col. John R. Baylor had issued a proclamation taking possession of Arizona in the name of the Confederate States of America, and establishing temporarily and until the action of Congress a form of government. The Times adds: The following-named gentlemen, un
village and violate the women. These are the sort of men they are sending South with the pious wish that they will never return. I saw yesterday some twenty men who had been taken out of the prison at Sing Sing to be mustered into service. You may expect these worthy "protectors" shortly in Baltimore, where they will doubtless be warmly received by their sympathizers, the unconditional of your city. The Washington corrrespondent of the New York Herald thus states the case: Wiley Edward, John C. Gray and William T. Andrews, of Boston, have been here endeavoring to persuade the President that he ought to change his constitutional advisers. It is said these gentlemen represent the sentiments of certain prominent monetary interests in Boston, capitalists of the Athens, who demand that the heads of the War and Navy Departments must come off, else they will not risk their capital further. The presentation of their case here has created considerable feeling. Neverthele