Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 11, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for G. B. Lamar or search for G. B. Lamar in all documents.

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echo of every bosom. The examination of credentials having been completed, the Convention proceeded to business. The seizure of arms in New York. G. B. Lamar, Esq., President of the' Bank of the Republic in New York, has made a formal demand upon Superintendent Kennedy for the arms seized on board, the Savannah steamer Monticello intended for Georgia. Mr. Lamar acts on the authority of a dispatch from some party in Milledgeville. Mr. Kennedy refuses to give up the goods, and it remains to be seen what further steps Mr. Lamar will deem it judicious to take in the premises. Demand has likewise been made through attorneys, by W. H. D. CallendarMr. Lamar will deem it judicious to take in the premises. Demand has likewise been made through attorneys, by W. H. D. Callendar, for twenty-eight cases of rifies, consigned to a party in Montgomery, Ala., and the demand, in this case, has been complied with, under a writ of replevin, so far as to take the arms from the arsenal and give them to the custody of the sheriff. Governor Morgan, by the way, has replied by letter to the Governor of Georgia, in
bey--had gone to Savannah with coal, and was to load there for New Orleans. The New York owners, J. & N. Smith & Co., received a telegram Saturday morning which read, "Your brig is seized by order of the Governor." Shortly after, the agents of the bark Adjuster received this telegram: Savannah, Feb. 8, 1861. My vessel is seized by order of the Governor of Georgia, on account of arms detained in N. York. Chas. A. Enell. The Journal of Commerce says that later intelligence having announced that other vessels had also been seized, steps were at once taken in New York to obtain a release of all the arms detained by the Police, in order to remove, if possible, all cause of irritation. This having been done, Mr. Lamar telegraphed the fact to the Collector at Savannah, and it is understood that orders were given to surrender the vessels to their owners. A telegraphic dispatch from Savannah, dated Saturday, confirms the statement that Gov. Brown had released the ships.
The seized muskets. New York,Feb. 10. --Lieut. Rogers and Shumaker, of the cutter Lewis Cass, from Savannah, have arrived here. The muskets seized by the police have been restored unconditionally to Lamar, and he has telegraphed that fact to Savannah.