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Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 2. (ed. Frank Moore), Doc. 125.-Southern Bank Convention. (search)
Bee, Geo. B. Reid, Robert Mure, and Geo. M. Coffin; Union Bank of South Carolina, W. B. Smith; Planters and Mechanics' Bank, J. J. McCarter, C. H. Stevens, and C. T. Mitchell; Bank of Charleston, J. K. Sass and George A. Trenholm; Southwestern Railroad Bank, Jas. Rose, J. G. Holmes; Farmers' and Exchange Bank, John S. Davies; People's Bank, D. L. McKay and James S. Gibbes; Merchants' Bank of South Carolina, at Cheraw, Allen Macfarlan; Bank of Georgetown, J. G. Henning; Bank of Chester, George S. Cameron. Tennessee.--Bank of Tennessee, G. C. Torbett; Branch Bank of Tennessee, Memphis, Jos. Lenow; Branch Bank of Tennessee, Knoxville, J. G. M. Ramsey. Virginia.--Farmers' Bank of Virginia, W. H. McFarland; Bank of Virginia, James Caskie, Alfred T. Harris, and John L. Bacon; Exchange Bank, L. W. Glazebrook and W. P. Strother; Bank of the Commonwealth, L. Nunnally, J. B. Norton, and James Alfred Jones; Merchants' Bank of Virginia, C. R. Slaughter; Danville Bank, W. T. Sutherlin; Bank
tion.--The total force under Gen. McDowell was over 50,000, but 35,000 will probably cover the force in action at the Stone Bridge. Many of the prisoners say that General Scott slept on Saturday night at Centerville, and was within two miles of his lines on Sunday in his carriage. Whether this be so or not, this defeat is his, and the first he ever suffered; but the men who fought and won his battles were now arrayed against him, and they were determined not to be conquered. Secretary Cameron, of the War Department, Washington, was also stated to have been on the field, in company with Mr. Ely, Congressman from the Rochester District, N. Y., who was captured, and Senator Foster, of Connecticut. They came to witness a Waterloo defeat of the Confederate Army. They fled after witnessing a Waterloo defeat of Gen. Scott's grand army. Of the pursuit, already the particulars are known. Suffice it to say, we followed them on the Leesburg road and on the Centreville road
elligence is insatiable. Many unauthorized rumors prevail which seem to confuse the truth. The smoke of the battle could be seen from the eminences in Washington. A number of members of Congress and even ladies went to the neighborhood of Bull Run to witness the battle. One of these members reports that Col. Hunter, of the third Cavalry, acting as Major-General, was seriously, if not mortally wounded. It is stated in all quarters, and the sad news is generally credited, that Colonel Cameron, of the Seventy-ninth Regiment, and brother of the Secretary of War, and also Col. Slocum, of the Second Rhode Island Regiment, were killed in the action. It appears from intelligence received in Richmond, from a reliable gentleman, that the enemy thought they had whipped the Confederates at 3 o'clock P. M., and so telegraphed to Gen. Scott, who was at Centreville. This was sent to Washington, and thence telegraphed North. From Fortress Monroe. The following is from the B
Carolina, at Cheraw, Allen Macfarlan; Bank of Georgetown, J. G. Henning; Bank of Chester, George S. Cameron. Tennessee.--Bank of Tennessee, G. C. Torbett; Branch Bank of Tennessee, Memphis, Jos. Lenow; Branch Bank of Tennessee, Knoxville, J. G. M. Ramsey. Virginia.--Farmers' Bank of Virginia, W. H. Macfarland; Bank of Virginia, James Caskie, Alfred T. Harris, and John L. Bacon; Exchange Bank, L. W. Glazebrock and W. P. Strother; Bank of the Commonwealth, L. Nunnally, J. B. Norton, and Jones Alfred Jones; Merchants' Bank of Virginia, C. R. Slaughter; the Danville Bank, W. T. Sutherlin; Bank of Richmond, Alexander Warwick; Traders' Bank of Richmond, Hector Davis, E. Denton, and Andrew Johnson. On motion of R. A. Cuyler, Esq., the Secretary read the resolutions adopted by the Convention at Atlanta, Georgia, June 3, 1861, as follows: Resolved, That this Convention do recommend to all the Banks in the Southern Confederacy to receive in payment of all dues to the
, George B. Reid, Robert Mure and George Coffin; Union Bank of South Carolina, W. B. Smith; Planters' and Mechanics' Bank, J. J. McCarter, C. E. Stevens and C. T. Mitchell; Bank of Charleston, J. K. Sass and George A. Trenhorm; South Weston Railroad Bank, James Rose, J. K. Holmes; Farmers' and Exchange Bank, John S. Davice; People's Bank, D. D. McKay and James. S. Gibbes; Merchants' Bank of South Carolina, at Cheraw, Allen MacFarlan; Bank of Georgetown, J. G. Henning; Bank of Chester, George S. Cameron. Tennessee.--Bank of Tennessee, G. C. Torbett; Branch Bank of Tennessee, Memphis, Jos. Lenow; Branch Bank of Tennessee, Knoxville, J. G. M. Ramsey. Virginia.--Farmers' Bank of Virginia, W. H. McFarland; Bank of Virginia, James Caskie, Alfred T. Harris, and John L. Bacon; Exchange Bank, L. W. Glazebrook and W. P. Strother; Bank of the Commonwealth, L. Nunnally, J. B. Norton, and James Alfred Jones; Merchants' Bank of Virginia, C. R. Slaughter; the Danville Bank, W. T. Sutherli
following interesting Kentucky items are gathered from the latest papers received at this office: The Blue Grass in arms — Uprising of the people. From the Memphis Avalanche, of the 27th ult., we take the following: We have received some information from a gentleman just from Bourbon county, Ky., confirmatory to the accounts we have had of the progress of the Southern cause in the Blue Grass section. He reports that Unionism is dead in that section, killed off by Lincoln and Cameron's abolition scheme. Except among some designing Lincolnites in the towns, no one is heard to speak a word in favor of Lincoln; but the feeling is unanimous for the South. From every county men are constantly going out in squads to join Gen. Humphrey Marshall's army, whose men have become so bold that they come down into the counties so recently overrun by the Hessians and openly recruit for the Confederate service. The road from Paris to Prestonsburg, which our informant travelled, he sa
The Daily Dispatch: January 2, 1862., [Electronic resource], Abolition of imprisonment for Deer in England. (search)
utes," and the Boston Post swears that he performs the work neatly and in the time specified. At Dubuque, on the 16th, a woman named Stokely shot a Capt. Conway, killing him instantly. The act was committed in self-defence, at her house. Conway is well known on the river. He was mate of the steamer Milwaukee last season. On the 23d ult., Mr. John Bowers' gun factory, on Battle Creek, eight miles southwest of Springfield, Tenn., was destroyed by fire. Loss, $5,000. Mr. George S. Cameron, President of the Bank of Chester, S. C., and one of the best financiers in the Confederate States, has taken $50,000 of the capital stock of the Bank of Fulton, in Atlanta, Ga. James McInharnay died at Charleston on the 27th inst., from the effects of injuries received at the explosion of a rifled cannon at Otter Island a short time since. Dr. Lucius C. Fambro, a private in the Thirteenth Georgia regiment, from Upson county, Georgia, committed suicide on the 25th instant.