Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for R. H. Anderson or search for R. H. Anderson in all documents.

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"a Lincoln Grape." The Charleston Mercury learns from reliable authority that Brigadier General Braxton, Brugg has been ordered to report for duty with the army of the Potomac. Brigadier General R. H. Anderson, a gallant officer, succeed Gen. Brugg in the command at Pensacola.
d hills are to be slain for their food. The primeval forests of the boundless West are to be felled for their fuel. The cowards of Bull Run are to be metamorphosed into grim warriors, to whom the Tenth Legion of Caesar and the Old Guard of Napoleon were mere Sunday soldiers. This mighty host is not to be in a hurry. It is to take its own time.--Bennett has allowed it until October. For a month or two, we are told, it will be as much as can be done by Scott, McClellan, Wool, Rosencranz, Anderson, Prentiss, Fremont, and the other Generals, so make the needful preparations, &c. We should suppose it would. At the end of that time all are to advance. A powerful naval armament is to move along our coast, carrying on board forty thousand troops. The others are to move through Virginia and down the Mississippi into the heart of the Cotton States. The mouth of the ancient plunderer waters at the bare prospect of the spoils. All the cotton belonging to the Government of the Confederacy