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The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource], Vicksburgspirit of the Mississippians. (search)
eply, I will state that neither the municipal authorities nor the citizens will ever consent to a surrender of the city. The second note is from James L. Autry, military governor and commandant of the post. Sir: As your communications of this date is addressed to the "Authorities of Vicksburg, " and that you may have a full reply to said communication, I have to state that Mississippians don't know, and refuse to learn, how to surrender to an enemy. If Com Farragut or Brig-Gen. Butler can teach them, le them come and try. As to the defences of Vicksburg, I respectfully refer you to the reply of Brig Gen Smith, commanding forces at Vicksburg, herewith enclosed. The following is the reply of Gen. Smith: Sir: Your communications of this date, addressed to the "Authorities of Vicksburg," demanding the surrender of the city and its defences, has been received. In regard to the surrender of the defences, I have to reply, that, having been ordered here to hold
Butler's Monstrous despotism, --In New Orleans, on the 14th inst, as we learn from the True Delta, Geo. Posey, for an atack on a United States soldier, was, after the hearing of evidence, sentenced by a Federal military court to be confined in Fort Jackson, La., for the period of twenty-one years, at hard labor, with a ball and chain attached to him.
The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource], The London times' correspondents in America. (search)
ald of May 24th: The London Times' American Correspondent.--The successor of Bull Run Russell as correspondent from the United States for the London Times has commenced his scribbling about American affairs. In his letter dated in this city, and published in the London Times of the 7th instant, he has touched upon rebel Generals, messages, President Lincoln's Cabinet, the operations of McClellan, the Merrimac, the Monitor, the blockade, and the arrest of Cameron on the complaint of Pierce Butler. On the latter he done the prophetic mantle of Ll. D. Russell, and attempts to tell what will become of Seward and other members of the Cabinet. In the next paragraph he has something to say about the emancipation of slaves in the District of Columbia, and closes with an allusion to the disposal of the Southern States after their capture. His whole letter is a silly, stupid, and weak affair. The only idea in it is that which he obtains from the discussion of the project originated by