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The Daily Dispatch: November 5, 1861., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: November 15, 1861., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Life, services and character of Jefferson Davis. (search)
invitation and make all necessary arrangements. Agreed to by Senate December 7, 1889. J. D. Pendleton, Clerk of Senate. Agreed to by House of Delegates December 7, 1889. J. Bell Bigger, Clerk of House of Delegates. The following joint committee was appointed on the part of the Senate and House of Delegates, respectively: Committee on the part of the Senate: T. W. Harrison, of Winchester. Taylor Berry, of Amherst. Committee on the part of the House of Delegates: J. Owens Berry, of Fairfax. P. C. Cabell, of Amherst. James M. Stubbs, of Gloucester. In the House of Delegates, December 12, 1889, the Hon. Walter T. Booth, of Richmond, offered the following concurrent resolution: Resolved (the Senate concurring), That the committee having in charge the arrangements for the delivery of the address of Hon. John W. Daniel on the character and life of Hon. Jefferson Davis be and is hereby authorized and instructed to select for the occasion some other and
un as is possible, and from thence roll the tide of war steadily southward till it meets the waters of the Gulf. Arrival of prisoners in Washington. The Washington Star, of the 29th ult., has following paragraph: Last evening, J. Owens Berry, late Government employee in the Patent Office here; Wm. Davis, of East Tennessee, and Samuel E. Varden, of Richmond, Va., --prisoners taken in the battle of Ball's Bluff, reached Washington under guard, and were duly placed in the military poners in Washington. The Washington Star, of the 29th ult., has following paragraph: Last evening, J. Owens Berry, late Government employee in the Patent Office here; Wm. Davis, of East Tennessee, and Samuel E. Varden, of Richmond, Va., --prisoners taken in the battle of Ball's Bluff, reached Washington under guard, and were duly placed in the military prison. Berry, if we are not mistaken, is a Georgetown man, and professes to have been a lieutenant in the 8th Virginia regiment.
he committee are determined to make a thorough investigation into those matters, let the consequences fall where they may. Artillery practice. Some excitement was occasioned here to-day by sharp firing across the river, and a rumor was put in circulation that the rebel army was advancing. It proved to be only a little extraordinary firing practice in the more distant of our fortifications. Escape of rebel State prisoners. During last night two rebel prisoners of State, J. Owens Berry, of Georgetown, D. C., and Redmond Benke, of Virginia, escaped from the military prison in which they were confined, and have eluded the vigilance of both the Provost Guard and the Metropolitan police. The army. Baron Von Hermann, an experienced officer of the staff of the Adjutant General of the Prussian army, has been appointed and Aide-de-camp, with the rank of Major, and assigned to the staff of General Wool. The Missouri State militia. Gov. Gamble has arranged wit