Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 28, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for James Green or search for James Green in all documents.

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Mayor's Court. --The court room was thronged yesterday morning with a motley crews of witnesses, prisoners and spectators, and the air was redolent with the steam from damp garments. The following is a summary of the business disposed of: A young, and well-dressed female, named Green, was charged with being drunk and disorderly in the street. The Mayor required her to give security in the sum of two hundred dollars to keep the peace. Philip Downer was charged with being drunk and lying in the street. Being his first appearance, he was released with an admonition. R. Q. Allen was up to answer a charge of assaulting and beating two Federal soldiers. No witnesses appeared and the case was dismissed. Philip Lambert was charged with fighting and disorderly conduct in the street. A policeman saw the accused Monday night in company with a drunken man, and saw him knock the drunken man down. He made no noise, and seemed perfectly sober. The Mayor required secu
The Daily Dispatch: December 28, 1865., [Electronic resource], The railroad projected by the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company in the Valley of Virginia. (search)
The Byrom murder — Green identified by Mrs. Byrom. The arrest of a man, supposed to be James Green, the murderer of Mr. Byrom, has already been announced. About 12 o'clock yesterday, Mayor Brown, accompanied by Mrs. Byrom and several others, James Green, the murderer of Mr. Byrom, has already been announced. About 12 o'clock yesterday, Mayor Brown, accompanied by Mrs. Byrom and several others, visited the jail for the purpose of identifying the prisoner. They were shown into the reception room, Mrs. Byrom seating herself with her back to the door. The prisoner was sent for, and had advanced into the middle of the room, when Mrs. Byrom turned round with a quick start and exclaimed, "That is the very man who shoved me against the bureau." Green became suddenly pale and sank into a chair. Concealment was no longer possible; he felt that he was a doomed man. It appears that Mrs. Byrom's exclamation referred to the night of her husband's murder, when, seizing Green by the collar just as he was about to shoot, she was thrust by him rudely against the bureau. She states most unequivocally that the person now in custody is th