Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 14, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Sibley or search for Sibley in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

the coals did it with the consent and approval of the Attorney General. There had been no American Consul at Trinidad for many months. Privateers fitting out. Capt. Welch, of the schooner Mary Alice, recently captured by a Southern privateer, and taken into a Southern port, from whence he has made his way to New York by way of Richmond, makes a statement of the number of privateers now fitting out at Charleston, and those already gone from there. They consist of the Beauregard, Capt. Sibley, with forty men; the steamer South Carolina, alias Bull Run; Capt. Coxsetter, with eighty men; and a light-ship moved from the Rattlesnake Shoals, with forty men. Most of the crew of the latter, however, were in prison, as they had refused to leave after hearing of the fate of the Petrel. Gen. Jeff. Thompson. This officer, who figures in the war in Missouri, is said to be connected with some of the most influential families in Virginia. He is a son of Col. Meriweather Thompson,