Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 15, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for November 13th or search for November 13th in all documents.

Your search returned 4 results in 4 document sections:

A visit to the Culpeper hospital. Culpeper C. H., Nov. 13. Editors Dispatch: I enjoyed, a few days ago, a visit to the hospital at Culpeper C. H. Allow me to give you a hasty sketch of it for the benefit of those who have friends there. It gave me pleasure to see such comfortable arrangements made for our sick. By the indefatigable efforts of Dr. Green, the surgeon of the post, very comfortable winter quarters have been secured for 800 men. Each ward is well ventilated and lighted; also, supplied with excellent stoves, competent nurses, and good medical attention. There is an air of neatness and good cheer truly refreshing to see. Among all the different wards perfect discipline seems to prevail, each department being carefully overlooked by the surgeon in person, who is truly "the right man in the right place."--doing not only his duty, but his whole duty. Should he succeed in carrying out his plans for other improvements, his hospital will, I am sure, rank among th
Yankee troops Pouring into Kentucky--Occupation of Madisonville by the Federals, &c. Nashville, Nov. 13. --The Yankee troops continue to pour into Kentucky. A regiment from Western Virginia arrived at Louisville on the 4th inst., and two Ohio regiments started from Cincinnati via Louisville, on the 5th inst. Ten regiments from Ohio, Indiana, and the North were expected to arrive at Louisville last night. Madisonville, Hopkins county, was occupied by 1,000 Federals on the 10th instant. Southern men were compelled to fly to avoid arrest. Robert Bunker, Ex-Mayor of Mobile, and Anderson Lane, merchants, were arrested at Cincinnati and sent to Fort Warren, in Boston harbor, on the 5th inst., by the order of Secretary Seward. Both gentlemen recently returned from Europe and were arrested on suspicion of having important information for the Confederate Government.
The Georgia Planters' Convention. Macon, Ga., Nov. 13. --The Georgia Planters' Convention have adopted resolutions endorsing the defensive position of the Government, and recommending a duty of 20 percent. on the productions of the United States. They also recommend to planters, should the war continue, and the present crop remain undisposed of, not to plant any cotton next spring, beyond enough to supply the wants of home consumption.
The Federal fleet. Savannah, Nov. 13. --The Federal fleet is reported to have passed Fernandina yesterday morning, bound southwardly.