Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Beauregard or search for Beauregard in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 3 document sections:

at, for it must be a forlorn and repulsive home indeed which has not more claims upon its inmates than such a country as the United States. The enthusiasm with which the North has taken up McClellan, without knowing anything about him, and converting him into a Napoleon on the strength of his exploit in Western Virginia, is puerile and absurd. Poor old Scott, a short time ago, was the Captain of the age ! Poor old man, sitting with his legs in a tub of ice water, and when asked about Beauregard and Johnston, closing his stiff, paralytic fingers in a grotesque attempt to represent that he'd "got 'em," --where is he now ? But yesterday, the god of Northern idolatry — now none so poor as do him reverence. We never hear of him now. "Oh, no; they never mention him; they never breathe his name." Where is old Scott?--We fear that Lincoln has made way with the dear old man. We insist that a habeas corpus shall be procured by hook or crook, if in all Lincoln's dominions such an article c
We have received from George L. Bidgood, bookseller, 161 Main street, photograph likenesses of President Davis, Mr. Stephens, Gen. Beauregard, and Col. Bartow.
lace at which to cross the Potomac, but it does not appear that they have found one. We suspect that their opportunity has gone by — that they are beginning to realize the fact, and that they are hesitating between the desperate expedient of storming our defences and the demoralizing alternative of falling back into the interior of Virginia. If they hesitate a few days longer, we shall next hear that they are moving 'onward to Richmond.' If we may believe a tithe of what we hear of the sufferings of the rebel soldiers from the want of proper food and clothing, and from the ravages of the small-pox, measles, fevers, and other diseases, we may feel assured that Beauregard is meditating more upon the necessary preparations for a retrograde movement than upon the division of the spoils of Washington. At all events, he must soon make up his mind to attack our lines or to repel an attack; for, from all appearances, McClellan is prepared for a fight, and thoroughly understands his game."