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The Daily Dispatch: July 31, 1861., [Electronic resource], Gen. Scott's programme — his opposition to the advance on Richmond — his resentment towards that city. (search)
Gen. Scott's programme — his opposition to the advance on Richmond — his resentment towards that city. The infamous editor of the New York Times--appropriately styled by the Tribune the "little villain"--has become the champion of General Scott. He defends him against the party who clamored for the march to Richmond, led on by General Greeley, and to which the President yielded. In vindication of Gen. Scott, Raymond, of the Times, gives the substance of a conversation at the General's table, in presence of his Aids and a "single guest," (the "little villain" himself, we suppose.) This conversation, he says, took place on Tuesday, before the battle at Stone Bridge. Taken in connection with the impassioned remark of the aged Fuss and Feathers Chieftain before the President, as reported by Richardson, of Illinois, it would appear that he was overruled in the march to Manassas; but on pretty good authority it is stated that he declared, on the forenoon of the 21st, the most perfec
the North has no money and cannot get any. The rebels are under the delusion that the heavy sums owed to the North by the South will be the means of making us bankrupt, and that in less than a year the North will "cave in." There are two regiments of well drilled negroes at Richmond. The bitterness of the feeling at the South against the North is described as terrible, and our informant thought that the Federal prisoners would suffer bad treatment in rebel hands. The stampede. Henry J. Raymond writes from Washington to the New York Times: As soon as it was understood in the crowd of teamsters, fugitive soldiers and miscellaneous hangers-on of the army at Centreville that our columns were retreating, they became very considerably excited, and this feeling arose to panic when they heard the sound of cannon in the rear, as they supposed it to indicate that the enemy was pursuing in force. After I had driven something over a mile from the village on my way to Washington, t