Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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reports. By the latest advices last night we learn that General McClellan had returned to Washington and that Generals Banks and Stone,were all day yesterday on the Maryland side. It is said that General McClellan would send to-day very heavy reinforcements to Bank, in orderilled, wounded, and missing, was estimated this morning, when General McClellan left, at 625 men, of whom 79 are thought to have been killed,g the best regiments he had. Statement of Capt. Colburn, Aid to Gen. McClellan. Tribune, Oct. 25. The Confederate forces number some 4,00edition of to-day's Star goes to press, conveys intelligence of Gen. McClellan's arrival there at 8 P. M. yesterday, finding all quiet, and thWestern side of the river.-- Washington Star, Oct. 23. Gen.--McClellan was with Gen. Banks yesterday, and was at the army ferries at 8 oe of the Lincoln press, that Gen. Baker acted without orders from McClellan: Epistolary accounts of the late affair at Ball's Bluff hav
reports. By the latest advices last night we learn that General McClellan had returned to Washington and that Generals Banks and Stone,were all day yesterday on the Maryland side. It is said that General McClellan would send to-day very heavy reinforcements to Bank, in orderilled, wounded, and missing, was estimated this morning, when General McClellan left, at 625 men, of whom 79 are thought to have been killed,g the best regiments he had. Statement of Capt. Colburn, Aid to Gen. McClellan. Tribune, Oct. 25. The Confederate forces number some 4,00edition of to-day's Star goes to press, conveys intelligence of Gen. McClellan's arrival there at 8 P. M. yesterday, finding all quiet, and thWestern side of the river.-- Washington Star, Oct. 23. Gen.--McClellan was with Gen. Banks yesterday, and was at the army ferries at 8 oe of the Lincoln press, that Gen. Baker acted without orders from McClellan: Epistolary accounts of the late affair at Ball's Bluff hav
It is a rather amusing illustration of the working of an elective judiciary, that Colonel McCunn, who was dismissed from the army in consequence of bad conduct should have returned to New York and quietly resumed his place on the bench. This man, who was warned by McClellan not to show his . Within the Washington, is now hereby justice in the largest city of .
too long. The city has been filled to-day with the most absurd and frightful rumors I was told to day at Willard's by gentlemen who really believed what they said, that General Stone had been drowned, Gen. Banks taken prisoner, and that Gen. McClellan had ly escaped a similar fate by the most desperate riding. Then I was told that ten thousand men had crossed the Potomac at M thias Point, and were marching up to take Baltimore. Of course there was no foundation for either of these stori Samuel T. Glover, Esq., of St. Louis, is to act as counsel for the Government. Gen. M'Clellan's war horse. A writer in Forter's Spirit thus describes the horse which some gentlemen in Cincinnati bought in St. Louis and presented to Gen. McClellan, when he took charge of the Federal army in Western Virginia: Dan Webster, or "Handsome Dan," the familiar sobriquet by which he was known to the men, women, and children throughout the city, is a gelding of a beautifully dappled mahoga