Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 21, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Rosecrans or search for Rosecrans in all documents.

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Important from Rosecrans's army — a Bold cavalry dash into Madisonville, Ky. Murfreesboro', Nov. 17. --Rosecranz arrived in Nashville on the 11th, with three divisions, making five divisions now there. An Abolition division is at Bowling Green, another at Mitchellville another at Gallalin. Rosecrans declares his determination to subdue Southern people as he proceeds South. The alternative will be offered, he says, of allegiance to the Union, or forced within rebel lines. He will aRosecrans declares his determination to subdue Southern people as he proceeds South. The alternative will be offered, he says, of allegiance to the Union, or forced within rebel lines. He will apply the same law to women and children. His idea is to throw an immense population on the South, to consume, what he considers, our limited supplies, and thus starve us into subjugation. A force of ten thousand Abolitionists are near Lebanon, a body of whom made a dash into that place last Saturday, but left after destroying several houses and plantations in the neighborhood. The enemy made a reconnaissance in force with in four miles of Lavergne last night, shelling our works as th
d in one hand, and the Constitution and the olive branch in the other. [Applause.] With such a policy animating the war, he believed the Union could be restored again to a condition of happiness and prosperity. [Applause.] Threats of General Rosecrans--Negroes for Washington. A dispatch from Nashville, dated the 15th, says a large amount of supplies will be massed there, when the grand army of the West will proceed towards East Tennessee. It adds that "Gen. Rosecrans intends to hangGen. Rosecrans intends to hang all the guerrillas, and defies the threatened rebel retaliation." A dispatch from Fortress Monroe says: All the able-bodied contrabands here and at Hampton have recently been taken to Washington, and those unable to work are to be sent to Craney Island. A conversation between Mr. Adams and Earl Russell about contraband trade. Private letters of a semi-official nature relative to the contraband trade carried on by English merchants with the rebels, containing some informatio