Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 16, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Horace Hovan or search for Horace Hovan in all documents.

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ollars, from Colonel Joseph Maye, of Buckingham county. Dr. John Maye, of Buckingham, testified that the horse belonging to his brother, Colonel Maye, was turned loose with his own horses in his private pasture; that he was stolen therefrom by Harris, and afterwards traced to Richmond, where he was sold to a Mr. Bass for eight hundred and fifty dollars. [The other testimony has already been published.] The two negroes and Harris were sent on for examination before the Hustings Court. Horace Hovan, a youth, was charged with stealing one hundred and fifteen dollars from Mrs. Patrick Sweeney. The charge was fully made out against the accused, but as in many other cases of a similar character, the extreme youth of the offender induced the Mayer to release him with an admonition. Sum, slave of Richard Winslew, arrested without any pass, and charged with stealing a piece of beef, a chicken, and sundry other articles from the Winder Hospital, was ordered to be whipped; but subsequ