Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 19, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Beauregard or search for Beauregard in all documents.

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" He took 10,000 prisoners and deserters, 15,000 stand of arms, nine locomotives, and a million worth of stores, while Beauregard's loss was 20,000!!! The eldest son of the Father of Lies, with the aid of the whole family to the remotest edge of cononeville, 20 miles below Corinth, on Friday morning, was a daring and successful affair. I account for it in this way: Beauregard's movement had been so sudden, quiet and successful, that Halleck did not know where his army had gone to. In fact, I dtory of Gen. Price, who it is a shame to keep here in harness. He ought to be with "Stonewall," and "without orders. " Beauregard was showing him the entrenchments, when the old hero said he never had seen such things but twice before, and then his The little boy replied, "Do you want any?" The splutter and rage of "our own correspondents" at being banished by Beauregard from Corinth, has been fierce and bitter. The "deep damnation of their taking off" has been set forth in terms of angr
early dawn the Federal advanced, steaming slowly down in the following order: First, a series of eight rams, then the heavy, black, iron-clad gunboats, and behind a swarm of transports, mortar boats, and tugs. Altogether, the number of the fleet was about thirty-five. Our own force consisted of the following rams, seven in number, and was under the command of Commodore Montgomery and his associate steamboat captains: Gen. Van-Dorn, Gen. Price, Gen. Bragg, Jeff. Thompson, Gen. Lovell, Gen. Beauregard, Sumter, and Little Rebel. The flag ship of the Commodore was the Van-Dorn, but as she was on the present occasion loaded with over one hundred thousand pounds of powder, and other valuable stores, he transferred his flag to the Little Rebel, with instructions to the other to remain in the rear of his squadron and await his signal, when she was to make her way with all possible dispatch down the river to a place of safety. Such were the immense odds against which our little fle
"An Opinion." --A late telegram to a Northern paper says: An opinion, based upon private letters from Fortress Monroe, gains ground here that the flower of General Beauregard's army is at Richmond. It is said that a connection has been made between the Mobile Railroad south of Corinth and the Montgomery (Ala.) road, via Selma. If this be so, it is not impossible that some picked regiments have left General Beauregard's column for Richmond. In all this matter of railroad extensionss from Fortress Monroe, gains ground here that the flower of General Beauregard's army is at Richmond. It is said that a connection has been made between the Mobile Railroad south of Corinth and the Montgomery (Ala.) road, via Selma. If this be so, it is not impossible that some picked regiments have left General Beauregard's column for Richmond. In all this matter of railroad extensions and connection to facilitate military movements, the rebels have exhibited great forecast and judgment.