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The Daily Dispatch: August 31, 1861., [Electronic resource], Death of Miss Hayes, the "Irish Nightingale." (search)
sh teacher, Garoia, and afterwards proceeded to Milan, where she became the pupil of Renconi. Her debut in opera was made at Marseilles, in the "Huguenots, " in the year 1845. She was immediately afterwards engaged at the celebrated theatre of La Scala, in Milan, where she gathered laurels from the most discriminating musical audience in the world, winning universal admiration by the simplicity and naturalness of her manner and the purity of her voice. The season of 1846 she passed at Vienna, and after having made the tour of the principal cities of Italy, made her first appearance in London in 1849. Two years later she left Europe for the United States, and arrived in the fall of 1851, making her first appearance in New York in a concert at Tripler Hall, where the Lafarge Hotel now stands. Her successful career in this country is well known. She seldom appeared in opera while in the United States, preferring to appear in concerts, following in this the example of her Swedish
$100 reward. --Ran away from the subscriber, on the 6th inst., at Vienna, Virginia, a mulatto boy named Sam. Said boy is about 20 years of age, 5 feet 5 or 6 inches high. He had on when he left a pair of white Osnaburg pants and a checked shirt, no coat; is rather slow spoken; no particular marks remembered. The above reward will be given for sufficient proof to convict any white person of assisting said boy in effecting his escape; or twenty-five Dollars will be paid for his safe delivery either to myself or in any jail where I can get him. A. K. Tribble, Of the 3d Reg't S. C. Vols. au 27--1m*