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

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Charles L. Scott, late member of Congress from California, is a private in one of the volunteer companies from Alabama, of which State he has become a resident. He is a Virginian by birth, a son of Robert G. Scott.
Information to the enemy. Gen. Scott boasts that he is regularly posted up in everything that transpires in Richmond and Montgomery. If this be true, it must be either by letter, sent through the Post-Office or Adam's Express, or else by special message. Either of these ways can be prevented by subjecting all letters in the Post-Office, and by any and every mode of conveyance, to inspection, just as it is now done in Washington, and to let no suspicious characters leave.
Gen. Scott. In the course of January last, Gen. Scott wrote a letter to a Virginia gentleman, an old friend, denouncing in the most indignant manner the idea that he would aid in drawing the sword against the Southern States. We have this from the gentleman himself, and Scott will not deny it. Gen. Scott. In the course of January last, Gen. Scott wrote a letter to a Virginia gentleman, an old friend, denouncing in the most indignant manner the idea that he would aid in drawing the sword against the Southern States. We have this from the gentleman himself, and Scott will not deny it. Gen. Scott. In the course of January last, Gen. Scott wrote a letter to a Virginia gentleman, an old friend, denouncing in the most indignant manner the idea that he would aid in drawing the sword against the Southern States. We have this from the gentleman himself, and Scott will not deny it.
The ladies and Gen. Scott. A lady of Richmond seconds the suggestion of a late correspondent of the Dispatch, that the ladies of this city hold a meeting at some suitable time and place, to make arrangements for demanding from General Scott the sword which was presented to him by Virginia. The ladies and Gen. Scott. A lady of Richmond seconds the suggestion of a late correspondent of the Dispatch, that the ladies of this city hold a meeting at some suitable time and place, to make arrangements for demanding from General Scott the sword which was presented to him by Virginia.
"Gen. Scott. at the age of 76, is true to the principles of '76." --Wash. Star. True to the Tory principles of '76, as the Enquirer suggests, as true as the Star is to its interests of 1861.
d plan the operations of attack.--Col Lee and Gen. Beauregard would have command of a force of several thousand. My informant further says that he was told that there were five men who had taken an oath to assassinate President Lincoln and Gen. Scott, if it cost them their lives. They are to go direct to Washington, and will attempt their purpose as soon as the first conflict takes place. My informant is a highly respectable gentleman, and I give the above points as he gave them to me and to-day was unwarranted. I feel, however, authorized to state positively that a corps d'armes will cross the Potomac and enter Virginia from this point at no distant day. To commence a campaign without due preparation is a folly of which General Scott will not be guilty. The steamer Cambridge has arrived here from Boston, via Fort Monroe. She made the run to Fort Monroe in fifty-six hours, and landed a reinforcement of several Massachusetts companies. The steamer Roanoke arrived