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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) or search for Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) in all documents.
Your search returned 8 results in 7 document sections:
Gen. Houston and Mexico.
--A letter from Texas, written by a Virginia officer of the K. G. C.'s to the Norfolk Argus, says that organization is laboring under unexpected difficulties effecting their plans, which, however, they expect to overcome.
He adds:
Gen. Houston, with whom Gen. Bickley and myself had a conference this morning, not only assured us, but he promised the people of San Antonio, last week, in a public speech, that he should again take the held and cross the Rio Grandould again take the held and cross the Rio Grande with the largest possible force of Texans and other volunteers against Vera Cruz.-- Affairs on the orders in this State, in Mexico and throughout the South, are certainly assuming a critical position, and you need not be surprised to learn at any time within the next six weeks, or two months, that soldiers will swarming on both banks of the Rio Grande, struggling for the country which furnishes the only outlet to the institutions of the South.
The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1860., [Electronic resource], The Captor of Guadalajara --
Sufferings of theBesiegers .(search)
The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1860., [Electronic resource], Large receipts of Silver in England . (search)
Large receipts of Silver in England.
--The steamer Farmanian, arrived at Southampton, England, on the 1st of the month, had on board $5,662,000 in silver from the West Indies and Mexico.
It was contained in 2,168 packages, was landed in seven hours, and deposited in 36 railway wagons, drawn by two engines.
At London it was transferred to 36 street wagons, and was drawn by upwards of one hundred horses.
It took seven hours to receive the whole in the vaults of the Bank of England.
The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1860., [Electronic resource], Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: November 1, 1860., [Electronic resource], Another royal marriage. (search)
Death of an U. S. Army officer.
--Brevet Brigadier Gen. Clark, Commander of the Department of California, died in San Francisco on the 17th ult., of chronic diarrhÅ’a, after an illness of two week.
He has served in the U. S. Army since 1812, was through the war in Mexico, and was promoted to the distinguished position occupied at the time of his death for meritorious conduct at the siege of Vera Cruz.
Export of Cotton to Mexico.
--The San Antonio Ledger, of the 18th, says:
"Not a day passes that we fail to note in our streets one or more trains of Mexican carts, varying in number from six to twelve or fifteen, laden with cotton going to the Rio Grande."
From Havana and Mexico. New Orleans, Oct. 31.
--The steamer De Soto, from Havana on the 27th, reports the Havana sugar market unchanged.
The growing cane crop is in excellent condition.
An arrival from Vera Cruz says the $400,000 seized in the specie conducta by Delgado had been returned to its owners.