Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 11, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for December 23rd or search for December 23rd in all documents.

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ations, Mr. Sumner has peculiar facilities for information, which are greatly enhanced by his intimate and extensive acquaintance with leading European statesmen. The speech is looked for with great interest. Supposed wreck of an English transport with over Eleven hundred men on board. Gaspe Bay, Jan. 4. --The screw steamer Australasian, supposed to be wrecked on the shores of this bay, sailed from Liverpool for Canada, with troops, &c., December 13. She passed Cape Race December 23. An English paper informs us that the Australasian had on board 47 officers and 1,035 men — namely, 4th brigade Royal Artillery. The Australasian had also on board four men of the Army Hospital Train, two horses, six Armstrong field guns, nine tens of ammunition for the ordnance, and 600,000 rounds of Enfield ball cartridges, &c. The destination of the Australasian was the mouth of the St. Lawrence, with instructions to steam up to the island of Bic, or the Riviers du Loup, and