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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 23, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 4 total hits in 4 results.
Stoneman (search for this): article 2
Kilpatrick (search for this): article 2
W. H. F. Lee (search for this): article 2
Our cavalry.
It is gratifying in the extreme to learn, from the dispatches of Gen. Lee to the President, alluded to in another column, that our cavalry under Gen. Stuart still maintains its ancient reputation.
For several days, so reads the report, they have met the enemy daily, and on all occasions have been victorious.
This is so much the more gratifying than we had been led to believe from the reports of passengers on the cars, that the sceptre was departing from us. There certainly would be nothing more mortifying to the Southern man than to see that arm of the service in which his countrymen have always been supposed to excel, represented by a race of combatants who were not able even to cope with the Yankees.
Nevertheless that the Yankees are straining every nerve to make discipline supply the place for natural aptitude for the cavalry service is too clear to admit of dispute.
The time has been, and that not very long ago, when they would not have dared to project a
Stuart (search for this): article 2
Our cavalry.
It is gratifying in the extreme to learn, from the dispatches of Gen. Lee to the President, alluded to in another column, that our cavalry under Gen. Stuart still maintains its ancient reputation.
For several days, so reads the report, they have met the enemy daily, and on all occasions have been victorious.
This is so much the more gratifying than we had been led to believe from the reports of passengers on the cars, that the sceptre was departing from us. There certainly would be nothing more mortifying to the Southern man than to see that arm of the service in which his countrymen have always been supposed to excel, represented by a race of combatants who were not able even to cope with the Yankees.
Nevertheless that the Yankees are straining every nerve to make discipline supply the place for natural aptitude for the cavalry service is too clear to admit of dispute.
The time has been, and that not very long ago, when they would not have dared to project