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The Daily Dispatch: November 10, 1863., [Electronic resource] 21 1 Browse Search
William Schouler, A history of Massachusetts in the Civil War: Volume 2 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: November 7, 1863., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 10, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for W. A. Scott or search for W. A. Scott in all documents.

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Grant'sarmy at Chattanooga have to carry their wood on pontoon bridges across the river, all the trees in and around the place having been cut down and burnt by our army while encamped there. The Rome (Ga.) Southerner learns that thirty days furloughs are being granted to the farmers in the State forces for the purpose of allowing them to sow wheat. Rev. Dr. W. A. Scott, late of California, and formerly of New Orleans, was installed pastor of the Forty second Street, Presbyterian Church, in New York, on Wednesday. Gen. Thomas, Rosecrans's successor in the command of the Army of the Cumberland, was Gen. (then Captain) Bragg's First Lieutenant in Mexico. The impressment officers seized all the cotton and woolen cloth in Lynchburg, Va., on Friday. The wife of Bishop H. Kavanaugh died at Shelbyville, Tenn, on the 7th ult.
ty Council. --A regular monthly meeting of the Council was held at the City Hall yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Present; Messrs. Saunders, Hill, Richardson, Scott, Epps, Stokes, Clopton, Griffin, Glazebrook, Walker, and Denoon. Messrs. Stokes and Scott, from the Market Committees, presented petitions from persons occupyScott, from the Market Committees, presented petitions from persons occupying stalls in the meat markets, praying to be allowed to sell salt meats, lard and butter at their stalls. The presentation of these petitions led to a lengthy discussion, and resulted in referring the papers to the Committee on the Markets. [The continually hammering and patching of the market ordinance will eventually lead the table and ordered to be printed. Mr. Glazebrook offered a resolution, which was adopted, appropriating $25,000 to the use of the Board of Supplies. Mr. Scott offered a resolution, which was adopted, offering a reward of $1,000 for the detection of those persons who have been taking hogs, clothing, &c., from the citize
The Daily Dispatch: November 10, 1863., [Electronic resource], The fight near Kelley's Ford Saturday--further Particulars; (search)
rom the North. Petersburg. Nov. 9. --The New York Times, of the 6th, has been received. The news is unimportant. Gen. Thomas officially announces the capture of Bragg's forage train, with its escort, and the arrival of the captures at Chattanooga. The train was seized in Lookout Valley, in front of Bragg's position, on the 4th inst. He writes from headquarters at Chattanooga that Major Fitzgibbon had overtaken the combined Confederate forces of Cooper, Kirk, Williams, and Scott, numbering 400 men, at Lawrenceburg, on the 3d, and engaged them in a hand to hand fight. The rebels lost eight killed and seven wounded and twenty-four prisoners. The Yankees lost three wounded. The rebels renewed the fight on the 3d at Colliersville, on the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, and after a brief engagement were repulsed. Among the rebel prisoners taken were Gen. Geary and staff.(?) The Memphis papers contain information of another fight at Pine Bluff, Ark, between 3
Gen. Scott. A "personal admirer" of Gen. Scott, connected with the New York Times gives the following in an account of a visit to that distinguished personage: Gen. Scott, connected with the New York Times gives the following in an account of a visit to that distinguished personage: "On the subject of the war the General is reticent. It gives him pain. To a question in regard to it he shook his head, replying, 'That is a matter I do not tan arises in some degree from other feelings besides personal disappointment. Gen. Scott must still have about him some of the ordinary feelings of human nature, and,. Whatever the ribald hirelings of the Northern press may say of Virginia, General Scott knows, of his own personal observation, the pure and generous character of s of a more selfish nature add, no doubt, to the "pain" which the war gives General Scott. When the war commenced he was the military idol of the whole American peouth is not only unsubdued, but stronger and more defiant than ever.--Well may Gen. Scott be sorrowful and silent. Unhappy old man! He has outlived himself and his c