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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for May 29th, 1862 AD or search for May 29th, 1862 AD in all documents.
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The war.
The 29th of May, A. D. 1862, will hereafter be looked upon with much respect by the cities of Richmond, since it was at 3 A. M. on that day that Gen. Gustavus Smith lets camp a pursuit of the retiring Federal forces, who save for weeks threatened the safety of the capital.
The enemy are falling back, and all bombast and preparation, are ma ing for the safety of Washington and Maryland, threatened by Jackson's forces operating from the Shenandoah Valley, via Williamsport.
Regiment after regiment has successively and quietly passed through this lty for that distant command, but none could imagine whence they came or whither found.
The fact at last appears, and Jackson's strength is greater than supposed, and mostly augmenting.
The effect of these late movements has the Federals to determine upon request — a fact known to our chiefs three days before, and to harrans or destroy their rear guard, Gen. Smith started forth yesterday morning at 3 o'clock, while the who
The Daily Dispatch: May 30, 1862., [Electronic resource], Removal of sick. (search)
No more Surrenders. Richmond May 29, 1862.
To the Editors of the Richmond Dispatch.
Quesque nd ab O' Catalina, patiently Such is the exclamation that can be heard at this present moment throughout this great Southern Confederacy.
From the banks of the Potomac to the wide-spreading fields of Texas, from the shores of the Atlantic to the very top of the Rocky Mountains, here and everywhere, the heart of the patriot it overwhelmed with sorrow and indignation at the news which, rising from the plains of Louisiana, brings daily to our ears the tidings of all the cruelties which the citizens, the helpless women, our wives, mothers, and sisters, are dealt with by the modern Catalina now ruling the city of New Orleans.
You that have once inhabited or walked over the fair premises of the Crescent city, were you to visit once more the Metropolis of our Confederacy, standing upon the ruins which have followed the inauguration of the present new era — an era of despotism
Commercial.Richmond Markets, May 29, 1862.
Bread — Navy, 4 cents; Pilot, 6 cents; Butter and Soda, 8 cents per lb.
Bacon — Stock light and firm at 87¼ for hog round; Hams; 38 to 40 cents per lb.
Butter — No. 3 Butter 75 to 80
Corn — We quote 85 cents per bushel.
Corn Meal--$1a1.05 per bushel.
Coffee — Rio, 70 cents per lb.; supply nearly exhausted.
Candles — Adamantine, 75a80 cents; Tallow, 25 cents.
Cement — James River, $2.50a3.00 per bbl.
cotton--9¼a10 cents per lb.
cotton Yarns--None. Candlewick, 30 cent per lb.
Dried Fruit--Peaches, unpeeled, from $2.25 to 2.50; Pealed, $5.00a6.50; Apples, $1.50a$1.75 per bushel.
Forage — Timothy, $2.00; Clover, $1.50; Sheaf Oats, $1.80; Shucks, 1.25 per cwt.
Fertilizers — James River Manipulation guano, $60 per ton; stock small and rapidly reducing.
Mexican guano, $25; Sombrero, $35; Bond Ash, $40. Little or nothing doing in Fertilizers.
Feathers — Quiet, at