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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: October 4, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Plymouth, N. C. (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 1
From our Northern papers, of the 30th, we confine our news extracts. The Hygeia Hotel at Old it is to be pulled down this week, notwithstanding "Representative" Segar's profess: Nursery Ward on the The New York Herald of Tuesday, gives Rev. a complimentary called, as follows mountebank Received, who has turned his to Brooklyn into a theatre, where applause liven to his points by the audience, Just as it is correct, or Miss Estemen, or any other these appeared on the boards at Plymouth such on Sunday evening, when he diverted the constitution as a mere "sheepskin parchment" of and said two are going to have the as it never was but as it was meant to be Union as it was meant to be, and not as it was, our doctrine, because the Union as it was a montrons outrage on your rights and place be declared himself to be the mouthpiece of like Greeley a short time ago, and applies resounded from all parts of the house,-- the Union and the Constitution, he next assails things
United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
of General Taylor's old hats and coats, belts, swords — and, in fact, every old role he had is worn about the camp. You and every one may be thanks full that you are not of the rotten. of plundering armies. --Here are whole families. of women and children running in the woods, a large plantation entirely disserted — nothing left except slaves too call to runaway — all kinds of the best mahogany broken to pieces. Nothing is respected. The great iron Clast Preparations in the United States. The ship yards at New York are alive with the building of the iron clad fleets with which every city of the South which has a water approach is to be destroyed. There are 5,200 men at work in them and an equal number engaged in iron foundries and mills in the vicinity on work intended for them. The New York world, of the 30th, says: The Weehawken will probably be the next Iron. clad vezzel laughed. She is building at Cotwell's foundry, in Jersey City. Planking has already b<
Parkersburg (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
utch) troops: The Twelfth has received its new guns, (of the Enfield patent,) and these of them hare are delighted with the change. The Fourteenth is afflicted with mumps and meanies, chiefly, however, confined to Capt. Sourth's company. The Tenth and part of the Sixth Virginia, and the Eighty-Seventh Pennsylvania, are here; also, Captain Manlsby's battery. How many more, it might be contraband to say. Captain Carlin's battery practice here a night or two ago on its way to Parkersburg. or below. That is the direction in which to look now for stirring events. Gen Taylor's plantation plundered. The Montpelier Journal contains a letter from a soldier of the Vermont 8th, dated Camp Allemande, August 20th, is which he states that on the previous Thursday the property of General Richard Taylor a son of old General Taylor, (by whom it was requested to him.) was confederated, the son being now in the rebel army. The slaves, 150 in number, were all declared emancip
Milwaukee (Wisconsin, United States) (search for this): article 1
t Henry, a sort of sister ship to the Essox, is 250 feet long, 40 feet wide, and 11 feet deep. The Choctaw is 225 feet long, 34 feet wide, and about 10 feet deep. The Fort Henry will carry eight guns, and the Choctaw six. The latter is a mere ram, the former being more of a gunboat. Each boat's ram measures two feet, of bell metal. Porter's India rubber invention is carried on these vessels, which is said to be better than three inches of iron. The Osage, Winnebago, Chick saw, and Milwaukee, are progressing rapidly in the yard whence the shipstnamed were launched. The "old Pub, face," on the War. Ex. President Duchanen is not altogether quiescent. The New York, Express contains, from the pen of a "distinguished politician, " an account of an interview with the venerable "Pub, Fine" Just week. The D. P. says: In an interview. last evening, be dealed all charges against his proposing an early vindication, which should be triumphant as to his loyally, integri
Franklin (Ohio, United States) (search for this): article 1
this position against any odds, and you have but to determine to conquest and victory is your Comrades, I greet and salute you! Geo. W. Morgan, General commanding the Victors of Cumberland Gap. Miscellaneous. The Alexandria Gazette denies a report "that many of the soldier? stationed in Alexandria, with their officers, are showing some spirit of insubordination, in consequence of the President's proclamation." The Gazette says that it has heard nothing whatever of this, except what is contained in the statement above quoted. An explosion took place at the arsenal in Columbus, Ky, on the 25th instant, destroying a large amount of ordnance stores and cotton. No lives were lost. One hundred thousand dollars worth of ammunition was destroyed. The Gazette du Mian, (Italy,) of the 12th of Sept., says: "Mgr. Olin, Archbishop of New Orleans, who so worthily occupied for the last year the Metropolitan See of the Southern States of America, has arrived in Rome.
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 1
bolition action that there can be no difficulty to genuine in a men to comprehending that their policy is the most of the war, and with the least possible delay in any quarter. in Virginia in Kentucky, and in Missouri, the the rebellion are now so situated that all the advances the in our favor for active operators against them. We have the men, the means, and the facilities at hand, whereby we may make work of the rebellion, note only in Virginia, Kentucky and Missouri, but in North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas, within the next sixty lane. Let this be done, and the approach of winter will find our armies advanced southward late the cotton States, where winter is the most favorable reason for military operations, and where our land foresee can be assisted by our gunboats far into the interior of every seaboard State, from South Carolina to Texas. But with our armies along the northern frontier of these States, and with our meets in occupation of their seaboard towns, th
Maryland (Maryland, United States) (search for this): article 1
the Virginians, to whom they have ever borne considerable resemblance. Like them, too, they were great roysters, much given to revel on hoecake and bacon, mint- and apple today; whence their newly formed colony had already acquired the carte of Maryland; which, with a slight modification, it retains to the present day. In fact, the Marylanders and their consigns, the Virginians, were represented to William Kief as off boots from the same original stock as his bitter enemies the Yankee or Ys most powerful speeches, written in vigorous Low Dutch. "Admiral Alpendam arrived without accident in the Schuylkill, and came upon the enemy just as they were engaged in a great barbecue. a king of festivity, or carouse much practiced in Maryland Opening upon them with the speech of William the Testy. he denounced them as a pack of lazy, causing Julep shipping cock fighting horse-racing, all slave draying, tevern- haunting, Sunbath-breaking, mulatto breeding upstarts, and included by or
Carondelet (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 1
7,000 tons burden. All other ships on the iron system will be more catamarans to her. She will be a double ship, too hull not being iron out wood. At present she looks too unlike anything to be described In two months she will be a great ram, able to go to sea and accommodate a larger ship's company than the Niaga a Her name has not been mentioned yet, but people think it ought to be "Washington," as we have no man-of war with that name. The Fort Henry, an iron-clad gunboat, built at Carondelet, was launched there on Thursday, the 24th inst. The Choctaw, a vessel purchased some time since by the Navy Department, and subsequently converted into a ram, was launched on the previous Saturday. The Fort Henry, a sort of sister ship to the Essox, is 250 feet long, 40 feet wide, and 11 feet deep. The Choctaw is 225 feet long, 34 feet wide, and about 10 feet deep. The Fort Henry will carry eight guns, and the Choctaw six. The latter is a mere ram, the former being more of a gunboat.
Greenport (New York, United States) (search for this): article 1
be afloat. On the same yard with this vessel the Camanche, fotended for California, is being built. She is all iron. Yesterday the different sizes of that metal arose in half circles, stopping at what is to be the top of the build. The intermediate stabs will be put on day by day until there is room for no more, and the ship is finished. She is in sections, and when complete will be taken apart and transported to the theatre of her future operations, is as already explained. Greenport is like a human beehive Ears are worthless once you get raids the bounds of the Continental works. The greater part of inquiries and answers are pantomimic. Montauk, Raatskill, and Passaic, of the nine-Monitor fleet, and the On ondaga and Puritan, of the special fleet, are in hand. The Paspaic, launched and " engined," is preparing rapidly for sea. The Montank and will be effect in a month. They are so like their sister ship that Mr. Erission says the same hole would answer each of th
Kansas (Kansas, United States) (search for this): article 1
al Scott, that he had not the means, North or South, to protect some fourteen I Southern fortifications. It expressed a firm faith in the full restoration of the Union through the new and ground of interest, that the South out of the Union would be ever humiliated before the nations of the earth — in the Union, exalted He believed slavery the cause of the rebellion; in an interference wish the Compromise Measures of 1820; securing Missouri with slavery; in 1850, California without; through Kansas the Dance as repeat reinsure and to agree in the resolutions. He believed foreign only commendable in a united European pronounced --to restore the Union. He of the Government that was based upon a powerful force, with the maintenance of every constitutional right of the entire people and States; that in a victory we could proclaim to the South--we have your of slavery, now unite and harmony through either gradual emancipation or the restoration of the Compromise Measures of 1820 an
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