Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 12, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for July 10th, 1861 AD or search for July 10th, 1861 AD in all documents.

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Runaway Negro. --Ranaway from the service of the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad Company, in June last, a slave named Abraham. He is about 25 year of age, 8 feet high, and of a dark brown color, usually wears a handkerchief on his head, and has a scar on his forehead or face. Abraham belongs to Capt. John Buford, of Bedford county, and it is supposed that he is now about Richmond, or at one of the volunteer encampments. A liberal reward will be paid for him. E. H. Gill, Gen'lSup'tVa. & Tenn. Railroad. Lynchburg, July 10, 1861. ly 10--1m
Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.more Outraces by Yankee scoundrels. Cavalry Camp, Ashland, Va., July 10, 1861. I have just received a letter written by a Virginia lady now in the North, to a friend in Alexandria. The writer is a near relation of mine, and I will vouch for the entire reliability of what is here stated. I suppress all names. It is sufficient to say that the ladies referred to are the fairest of the fair daughters of the South, for which Baltimore is so celebrated, and descendants of our revolutionary sires. I copy verbatim an extract from the letter: "I remained in Washington till Monday evening, and then went to Baltimore, where I was most cordially welcomed. Oh.--,these are the sufferers, more than we; these have more to bear of insult and tyranny than we Miss — told me that — had one of these soldiers' hands put in her bosom, under pretence of looking for concealed arms; and — had her arms pinioned behind her by one of Gen. Cad<