Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 14, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for George.Philip St. George or search for George.Philip St. George in all documents.

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n is trunk and agreeable, the lower part of his face is overflowed by a torrent of reddish-brown beard, his eye is bright and mobile, his movements are full of grace, his address is pleasing, his port lofty and his horsemanship perfect. Altogether he would challenge attention among a hundred thousand men upon the Vienness Prater or the Purisian Champ de Mars In the social circle his manners are engaging and his conversation fertile and suggestive. Gen Stuart married a daughter of Philip St. George Cooke, Colonel of the Second Dragoons, in the United States army. This officer, though a Virginian by birth and education, (he is the brother of the late John R. Cooke, of this city,) preferred his rank to his duty, and remained in the old service, to moke war upon the Southern people. He is now a General, and was under Cinilan when siege was laid to Richmond. It was said that one of Stuart's objects in the Pamunkey expedition was to take his father-in-law prisoner. At the age