Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 14, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Edwin M. Stanton or search for Edwin M. Stanton in all documents.

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ertainly of furnishing troops is an absolute essential to success. I have the honor to be your obedient servant, Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War. Letter from the Provost Marshal General. War Department, Provost Marshal Gen's Office, Washington, June 6. To Hon Edwin M Stanton, Secretary of War: Sir --In accordance with the amended Enrollment Act, approved February 24, 1864, and your orders on the subject, I am now conducting a draft in various such districts for the resyesterday, at three minutes past 5 P M, reports that all has been very quiet to-day. No casualties are reported. Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War. From Sherman. War Department Washington, June 8--12M To Major General Dix: A despher states that "the enemy is not in our immediate front; but his signals are seen at Lost Mountain and Kenesaw." Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War. Yankee account of Sherman's repulse on the 27th. The Herald publishes details of Sherm
The Daily Dispatch: June 14, 1864., [Electronic resource], A change in the command of the Richmond Department. (search)
te whether Lee, with the at his command, can, by the procure which he is so of lectually employing, exhaust the of Grant before he reaches Richmond, or whether, on the contrary, in the common life, Grant can outlast Lee. If Grant strength enough to continue to attack on he has attached, it is clear that in the and he will in some plight or other, before the of Richmond, and, if he can still maintain the rate of expenditure, will some day enter the city. He himself writes Secretary Stanton, "proper to fight it out on this line, if it taken all summer" and he has shown by his conduct that we may take him at his word. If, however, his cool, resolute, and skillful adversary, should be strong enough to continue up to the walls of the capital the tactics which he has hitherto compiled, and if he can make Grant pay it the current rate for every mile of ground, it may be a creation whether the resources or endurance of the Federals themselves will prove as inexhaustible as the