Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 20, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for William G. Brown or search for William G. Brown in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 4 document sections:

ckinridge and partisan Prentice. This was the artful dodge by which those cunning men beguiled over from the ranks of the Secessionists proper, the great body of the good people of Kentucky. This is the delusive bait by which they have succeeded in hooking a great and gallant Commonwealth into the toils of Lincoln. This is the net which they have thrown over the limbs of the Secession party there, and prevented them from following John C. Breckinridge, Magoffin, Powell, Burnett, Stephenson, Brown, and the other true men who would have led them into the Southern Confederacy. The time has passed for the secession of Kentucky. Crittenden and Prentice and Guthrie have done their evil work. The people have been beguiled and deceived by a honeyed word cunningly contrived for their undoing. All further proceedings in Kentucky must be revolutionary, violent and convulsive. There is no legal path by which it is possible now to extricate her from her constitutional association with the
Liberal donation. --Mr. W. J. Hurd acknowledges, through the Macon Telegraph, the receipt of $1,000, a donation from Gov. Brown to the Georgia Hospital and Relief Association.
eld the entrenchments. The rebels, 1,000 strong, were driven back, and were in the neighborhood of Boonville when the Sioux City passed. The Guards lost one killed and four wounded. The rebels lost twelve killed and thirty wounded. Among the killed were Col. Brown and Capt. Brown. A small detachment of Federal troops on the Sioux City had an engagement with Green's forces at Glasgow, of half an hour's duration when a battery of three guns opened on the boat, and they returned without loss. ld the entrenchments. The rebels, 1,000 strong, were driven back, and were in the neighborhood of Boonville when the Sioux City passed. The Guards lost one killed and four wounded. The rebels lost twelve killed and thirty wounded. Among the killed were Col. Brown and Capt. Brown. A small detachment of Federal troops on the Sioux City had an engagement with Green's forces at Glasgow, of half an hour's duration when a battery of three guns opened on the boat, and they returned without loss.
By the Governor of Virginia.--a proclamation. --Whereas, vacancies have occurred in the Convention of Virginia by the resignation of Williams C. Wickham, the member elect from the county of Henrico, and by the death of John N. Hughes, the member from the county of Randolph, and of Valentine W. Southall, the member from the county of Albemarle; and, also, by the expulsion from the Convention of Caleb Bogges, of the county of Lewis; Wm. G. Brown and James C. McGrew, of the county of Preston; John S. Burdett, of the county of Taylor; James Burley, of the county of Marshall; John S. Carlile, of the county of Harrison; Marshall M. Dent, of the county of Monongalia; E. B. Hall, of the county of Marion; Chester D. Hubbard, of the county of Ohio; Jno. J. Jackson, of the county of Wood; Geo. McPorter, of the county of Hancock; Chapman J. Stuart, of the District composed of the counties of Doddridge and Tyler, and Campbell Tarr, of the county of Brooke: Therefore, the Sheriffs of the