Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 10, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Talbott or search for Talbott in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

The City jail. --The city has employed Messrs. Talbott & Brother to line the cells of the jail with sheet iron, and do other things calculated to render the rickety old trap a secure place of deposit for offenders against the law. The Council had better order plans to be prepared for a new edifice. In the end it will be found that the money spent in repairs would suffice for the purpose. A considerable percentage of a certain class of our population — idle, dissolute friendless and homeless Bohemians — male and female, young and old, spend their valuable time in alternate visits to the alms-house and jail, and it is somewhat to be regretted that such valuable members of the body politic cannot be provided with a little work as a pleasant interlude to the existing order of eating the city's pork and beans without a quid pro quo. If a new jail were built, and a work-house were affixed, the operations of the correctional police would be undisturbed by a single drawback; but it is
Lieut. Talbott, mentioned in the dispatches as having been refused admittance to Fort Sumter by the South Carolina force, did not arrive here yesterday evening, on his return to Washington.