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The Daily Dispatch: September 5, 1864., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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e melted into one common mass and afterwards spirited away, where she has not since heard from them. Her loss will amount to about sixty thousand dollars. The other houses were considerably damaged in the rear, and each of the occupants lost a portion of their furniture; but the tenements being small, old and dilapidated, the aggregate damage done to them cannot exceed six or eight thousand dollars. The back and front tenements, which first took fire, including the lots, belong to Mr. William H. Poindexter; the house occupied by Swann is owned by John W. Bremer, and that in the possession of Fagan is owned by Mrs. Catherine Burns. Myers's negro quarters, together with all the furniture therein, was entirely destroyed. About the origin of the fire there are two reports, both of which we give without expressing any opinion. One is that it originated from a fire used by an old woman named Jane, who was engaged at that hour in baking pies for sale at the early Petersburg train, as