Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 23, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Fleming or search for Fleming in all documents.

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ng the usual loss of strength and spirit. But in saving the public stores and other property, and in getting all the railway transportation out of the enemy's reach, there has been displayed extraordinary energy, resulting in complete success. Everything was saved at Meridian, including 2,000 bales of Government cotton, several hundred hogsheads of sugar, immense supplies of commissary, quartermaster, and ordnance stores. In this the General was seconded by the energy and experience of Col. Fleming, the Superintendent of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, who further succeeded in removing all the movable property of the road, even to the machine shop at Enterprise. The Selma Reporter, of the same date, says: The last and most reliable rumor from the West says that the Yankee army is still at Meridian, and that ours is at Demopolis. Considerable excitement prevails in this city, and the citizens, we believe, are preparing to defend their homes and firesides whenever the emerge