Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 8, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for L. M. Hatch or search for L. M. Hatch in all documents.

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agent of Seguin, that she will give every pound of cotton she raises to the Confederate cause, and will attend to the gathering herself to see that all is saved. Gen. Beauregard's watch stopped during the great battle of Manassas. Quartermaster L. M. Hatch visiting Richmond soon after, was requested to deliver the watch to a watchmaker for repairs. On examining it, the artisan found nothing the matter beyond a jar or shock, and immediately set it agoning. On delivering the watch to General Beauregard, Col. Hatch remarked, "General, your watch, like yourself, cannot run under fire." The Charleston Courier has information which authorizes the belief that traitorous communication has been had with the blockading fleet from some points of the coast between Charleston and Savannah. A small sloop was recently overhauled containing five hundred chickens and other supplies, evidently intended for a Lincoln market. The crew of the sloop escaped in a small boat into a creek.