Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 2, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Beauregard or search for Beauregard in all documents.

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Our Generals. --If ever an army and a people had reason to repose the most entire and perfect confidence in their military leaders, it is the Southern army and the Southern people. Generals Johnston, Beauregard, and Smith, at the head of the army of the Potomac, are soldiers who would grace any military service in the world. They have shown not only their skill and their courage, but their patriotic devotion to the cause by toils and services which can never be repaid. Their soldiers haday for the Confederacy were that confidence to be diminished by unjust criticism. The men who have fought our battles know better how to appreciate our Generals than peaceful citizens who have never smelt gunpowder. Such men as Johnston, Beauregard, Smith, and others who might be named, on the Potomac; such Generals as Lee and Loring in Western Virginia; such a master of his profession as Gen. Albert S. Johnston; such accomplished soldiers and strategists as Generals Hardee, Magruder, McC