hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 8, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) or search for Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 3 results in 3 document sections:
From Tennessee. Sheleyville, June 6.
--All quiet in front The Nashville. Union.
of the 5th has a dispatch from Murfreesboro', on the 4th, which says a body of rebel cavalry attacked and drove in the pickets of the division under Gen. Jeff. C. Davis.
The Federals immediately rallied under arms and the rebels retired.
At present there are no further particulars.
The Union has also information of heavy cannonading in the direction of Franklin, on the 4th, between four and five o'clock P. M.
Chicago, June 4,--The President has revoked Burnside's order prohibiting the publication of the Times.
A dispatch from New York of the 4th inst., states that a Federal gunboat destroyed Franklin, La., in consequence of being fired upon by guerillas.
Admiral Foote supercedes Dupont.
The Daily Dispatch: June 8, 1863., [Electronic resource], Murder of an enrolling officer in Tennessee . (search)
Murder of an enrolling officer in Tennessee.
--Col. James K. McAnally, enrolling officer for the Mayes' Mill District, in Grainger county, Tenn., was waylaid and shot dead from his horse on the night of the 1st inst. The place selected was a lonely nook in the forest, by which the deceased was in the habit of passing late in the evening.
The murderer prepared a rest for his gun, opened a vista through the bushes to the road so that his fire would not be obstructed, and when the unconscious victim of his malice appeared, about dark, from a double barrel shot gun discharged one musket ball and thirty-nine buck shot into his body, killing him instantly.
Mr. Arnold Harris
We regret to find that we have done intentional wrong to a worthy and honorable gentleman, Major Arnold Harris, in identifying him with Captain Arnold Harris, who is accused, on ex parte evidence, of being the author of the capture of Major Reid Sounders's dispatches.
Major Arnold Harris is not a "Pennsylvania politician," being a native of Tennessee and the husband of a Tennessee lady, (daughter of the late General Armstrong, the companion-in-arms of Andrew Jackson, and former proprietor of the Washington Union) He graduated at West Point, and after serving for some years with credit in the old army, he resigned his commission and became one of the most successful merchants of New Orleans, where he has always stood high in the community as a gentleman and a liberal and public-spirited citizens.
A few years ago, Major Harris, having accumulated a handsome fortune in business, left New Orleans and settled with his family in Washington city, where he had remove