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John Ryan, Daniel Wrenn, and John Butter, were carried before the Mayor yesterday to answer the consequences resulting from a general "bender," indulged in by them Saturday night and Sunday.
Witnesses in the case ascribed to them the commission of a considerable amount of lawlessness, embraced under the common heading of drunkenness, fighting, and disorderly conduct.
Daniel Wrenn drew a pistol on Robt. S. Thompson, bar-keeper for Edwin W. Ussher, keeper of the Grapes Saloon; and Ryan, Ryan, and the others, pounded the unfortunate mixer of liquors "without sufficient cause," and in a manner which was decidedly detrimental to his good looks, on his attempting to get off. After "clearing out" the Grapes Saloon, and putting its proprietor in great bodily fear, the parties proceeded to Thomas M. Granger's, on 23d street, and enacted similar doings, to the disgust of the proprietor, and the using-up of his water-gutter and door.
Inasmuch as Morris Wilcher, John Chappell, and Jos. Fordse
The Daily Dispatch: March 28, 1861., [Electronic resource], Movements in the army and Navy. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1860., [Electronic resource], Counterfeit money. (search)
Counterfeit money.
--Michael Walls, a trader in the Second Market, is now in prison to answer the charge of passing a $20 counterfeit South Carolina note on John Ryan.
Mike denies the accusation, and says he can prove his innocence.
The Daily Dispatch: August 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], The twenty-seventh Virginia Regiment . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: August 19, 1861., [Electronic resource], T. Butler King and Southern Experts. (search)
Dismissed.
--Jas. St. Clair and B. McCarthy were acquitted before the Mayor, Saturday, of drunkenness and disorderly conduct in the streets.
Also, Andrew J. Biffo and Edward Honfrere, for fighting in Thos. J. Briggs' saloon.
John Ryan, drunk, and trespassing on Wm. H. Grant, was also dismissed; also, Jno Ballardy, drunk, and raising a muss in the street; also, C. C. Tinsley, owner of a vicious dog.
The Daily Dispatch: August 24, 1861., [Electronic resource], Hard on the soldiers (search)
List of sick and wounded soldiers at Louisa court-house. Louisa C. M.,Va., Aug. 21, 1861
To the Editors of the Dispatch: The following is a list of sick and wounded soldiers in private families at this place: F. W. J.
Virginia.
William H. Sight, Company D, Second Regiment, wounded,
B. J. Cavanaugh, Company D, Twenty-seventh Regiment, wounded.
George Winn, Lunenburg Cavalry, sick.
Joseph Colburt, Company H, Second Regiment, wounded.
John Ryan.
Twenty-seventh Regiment, wounded badly.
Patrick Quinn, Twenty-seventh Regiment, died of wounds.
Thomas Emmett, Thirty-third Regiment, badly wounded.
John Hefferman, Thirty-third Regiment, badly wounded.
K. G. Holland, Goochland, (Captain Lacy's Company,) sick.
North Carolina Sixth Regiment.
Harmon Sears, Company I, wounded.
S. A. Hinton, Company I, sick.
Wm. Shambly, Company B, wounded.
W. P. Mangum, Company H, died of wounds.
David Roberts, Company H, wounded.
Simeon Carrington, Company
The Daily Dispatch: June 20, 1862., [Electronic resource], List of Deaths at Seabrook 's Hispital to June 20th, 1862. (search)