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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 9, 1861., [Electronic resource].

Found 1,085 total hits in 461 results.

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Twenty-five Dollars reward. --Absconded from the farm of Mr. Joseph F. Powell. one or two miles west of this city, about the last of June, without any cause whatever, a likely negro man named Edmund, about 21 years of age, supposed to be five feet high, genteel figure, quite intelligent, has a full suit of hair, large, full eyes, big mouth, thick lips, good looking teeth, speak quick, but sometimes affects an impeditseut is speaking; no particular mark remembered. He is supposed to have hired himself to some of the companies near Richmond as a free boy, or may have left with some that have been sent away.--I will pay the about reward of $25, if taken fifty miles, $100 if taken out of the State, and $10 if found in br near this city and delivered to said Mr. Powell, or put in jail so that I can get him again [au 8--26*] E. N. Drewry.
Joseph F. Powell (search for this): article 1
Twenty-five Dollars reward. --Absconded from the farm of Mr. Joseph F. Powell. one or two miles west of this city, about the last of June, without any cause whatever, a likely negro man named Edmund, about 21 years of age, supposed to be five feet high, genteel figure, quite intelligent, has a full suit of hair, large, full eyes, big mouth, thick lips, good looking teeth, speak quick, but sometimes affects an impeditseut is speaking; no particular mark remembered. He is supposed to have hips, good looking teeth, speak quick, but sometimes affects an impeditseut is speaking; no particular mark remembered. He is supposed to have hired himself to some of the companies near Richmond as a free boy, or may have left with some that have been sent away.--I will pay the about reward of $25, if taken fifty miles, $100 if taken out of the State, and $10 if found in br near this city and delivered to said Mr. Powell, or put in jail so that I can get him again [au 8--26*] E. N. Drewry.
E. N. Drewry (search for this): article 1
Twenty-five Dollars reward. --Absconded from the farm of Mr. Joseph F. Powell. one or two miles west of this city, about the last of June, without any cause whatever, a likely negro man named Edmund, about 21 years of age, supposed to be five feet high, genteel figure, quite intelligent, has a full suit of hair, large, full eyes, big mouth, thick lips, good looking teeth, speak quick, but sometimes affects an impeditseut is speaking; no particular mark remembered. He is supposed to have hired himself to some of the companies near Richmond as a free boy, or may have left with some that have been sent away.--I will pay the about reward of $25, if taken fifty miles, $100 if taken out of the State, and $10 if found in br near this city and delivered to said Mr. Powell, or put in jail so that I can get him again [au 8--26*] E. N. Drewry.
William H. Seward (search for this): article 1
es--is oppressed by the presence and insolence of an army of 20,000, what may we of Virginia — a State against which Lincoln is waging war — not expect at his hands? The foregoing facts and figures also afford matter for some nice calculations on the part of Lincoln's adherents. Maryland has a population of about 700, 0000; Virginia, about 1,800,000 I write from memory, without reference to the late census. Now, the question to be considered is: If a loyal State, (for such Maryland professes to be,) unarmed and at peace with the United States, cannot be kept loyal by less than 20,000 men, how large a force will it require, first to subjugate, and then to hold Virginia, already in a state of armed rebellion, and backed by the alliance of ten other States as well armed and as defiant as herself? This problem I leave for solution to Lincoln, Seward, Chase & Co. So respectable a firm surely can work it out, and make their calculations and lay their plans for subjugation accordingly
s--is oppressed by the presence and insolence of an army of 20,000, what may we of Virginia — a State against which Lincoln is waging war — not expect at his hands? The foregoing facts and figures also afford matter for some nice calculations on the part of Lincoln's adherents. Maryland has a population of about 700, 0000; Virginia, about 1,800,000 I write from memory, without reference to the late census. Now, the question to be considered is: If a loyal State, (for such Maryland professes to be,) unarmed and at peace with the United States, cannot be kept loyal by less than 20,000 men, how large a force will it require, first to subjugate, and then to hold Virginia, already in a state of armed rebellion, and backed by the alliance of ten other States as well armed and as defiant as herself? This problem I leave for solution to Lincoln, Seward, Chase & Co. So respectable a firm surely can work it out, and make their calculations and lay their plans for subjugation accordingly
ound the city and in the city, and cannon placed at the Battle Monument and in Exchange Place.-- The habeas corpus has been suspended over the protest of Chief Justice Taney and our fellow citizens held as prisoners in Fort McHenry, the modern Bastille, on mere suspicion, and defied a trial Capt. Merryman has been there for several weeks Our Board of Police Commissioners and Marshal Kane are also there. The best police in America has been disbanded by order of ex-Congressman, ex-Governor, Gen. Banks, who commands at the Fort. Gen. Kenly is our Provost Marshal, and the remains of the Club dynasty and men of such stamp who will take the oath of allegiance, are our police, supported by the hireling soldiers stationed in our streets.-- We have to go through a file of soldiers to go to the post-office. All business is suspended so such thing as collecting house rents, ground rents, or any thing else. A gentleman told me the other day that his income last year from real estate was twenty
e furniture want only destroyed All this has been done, as is abundantly proved by those on their own side as well as by ours, who have been eye-witnesses. These are but specimens of what would have been witnessed in Richmond, had not God given us the victory at Manassas. As for the state of things in Maryland, especially in Baltimore, I refer you to the following extracts from a letter recently received from a highly respectable and reliable citizen of that city. The letter is dated July 8th Since then the reins of oppression have been more tightly drawn The Police Commissioners have been transported to be tried, or perhaps executed without trial, in places where their witnesses could not, without great difficulty and expense, be heard. Other outrages equally flagrant and equally unknown to the Constitution and laws, have been committed. Let our people ponder these things and see if in them we do set find a sufficient motive for making our struggle really one of "Victory or D
April 19th (search for this): article 1
how it is with us in Baltimore? I can't tell you half on paper, for there is no knowing into whose hands this may fall-- Every man is closely watched, and all have to be careful how they speak or write. Yet it can do no harm to say that Maryland is a subjected province, lying on the borders of the District of Columbia, in which neither the Constitution of the United States nor that of the once State of Mary land, nor the laws of the city, are in the least regarded — Since the memorable 19th of April, we have had stirring and exciting times here. For several days following that day the Secession element had the ascendancy. We were daily in expectation of an effort to pass Northern troops through our city This certainly would have been attended with bloody slaughter-- By degrees the Government gained the mastery, and now troops pass through daily.-- The Federalists have everything their own way — camps of soldiers all around the city and in the city, and cannon placed at the Battle M
stery, and now troops pass through daily.-- The Federalists have everything their own way — camps of soldiers all around the city and in the city, and cannon placed at the Battle Monument and in Exchange Place.-- The habeas corpus has been suspended over the protest of Chief Justice Taney and our fellow citizens held as prisoners in Fort McHenry, the modern Bastille, on mere suspicion, and defied a trial Capt. Merryman has been there for several weeks Our Board of Police Commissioners and Marshal Kane are also there. The best police in America has been disbanded by order of ex-Congressman, ex-Governor, Gen. Banks, who commands at the Fort. Gen. Kenly is our Provost Marshal, and the remains of the Club dynasty and men of such stamp who will take the oath of allegiance, are our police, supported by the hireling soldiers stationed in our streets.-- We have to go through a file of soldiers to go to the post-office. All business is suspended so such thing as collecting house rents, groun
on placed at the Battle Monument and in Exchange Place.-- The habeas corpus has been suspended over the protest of Chief Justice Taney and our fellow citizens held as prisoners in Fort McHenry, the modern Bastille, on mere suspicion, and defied a trial Capt. Merryman has been there for several weeks Our Board of Police Commissioners and Marshal Kane are also there. The best police in America has been disbanded by order of ex-Congressman, ex-Governor, Gen. Banks, who commands at the Fort. Gen. Kenly is our Provost Marshal, and the remains of the Club dynasty and men of such stamp who will take the oath of allegiance, are our police, supported by the hireling soldiers stationed in our streets.-- We have to go through a file of soldiers to go to the post-office. All business is suspended so such thing as collecting house rents, ground rents, or any thing else. A gentleman told me the other day that his income last year from real estate was twenty five thousand dollars, but this year h
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