Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 27, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Fort Warren (Massachusetts, United States) or search for Fort Warren (Massachusetts, United States) in all documents.

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ieutenant in the United States Navy. He returned from the East Indiea, in the Decotab, on the 7th or 8th of Novemeber, and was immediately arrested and sent to Fort Warren. Mr. Claiborne is a Louisianian. He was a midshipman on the Congress, and on her arrival in Boslon harbor he was arrested and sent to Fort Lafayette, and afterwards to Fort Warren. Mr. Ruggles is a Virginian, and was also a midshipman in the Federal Navy. He resigned in March last, at New York city, but was arrested and sent first to Fort Columbus, and to Fort Lafayette, and finally to Fort Warren. Another Release. The Savannah Republican says: Lieut. B. H. Harte, and finally to Fort Warren. Another Release. The Savannah Republican says: Lieut. B. H. Hardee, who, it will be recollected, was captured with the Adaline, by the Federals, taken into Key West and subsequently to New York, arrived here Monday night by the Western route. He was discharged without conditions.
The Daily Dispatch: January 27, 1862., [Electronic resource], The case of Senator Bright in the Washington Senate. (search)
husetts would bring about such a state of things as now exist. He did not think the South guilty of such mad folly. After he wrote the letter employees of the Government sent documents to Davis and Benjamin, &c. He went himself that summer forty miles into Virginia, not dreaming there would be a gun fired, and he believed it only when the sad reality came. He had his own political opinions after twenty-seven years political services, and would not give them up for threats of expulsion, Fort Warren, or the halter. No man should charge him with want of fealty to the flag of his country. He did not anticipate war, because he believed in a President whom he was sorry he helped to elevate to his position, and who was false to his trust. Mr. Fessenden, (rep) of Me., asked if the Senator did not suppose there would be any war, what occasion was there to suppose that Davis wanted an improvement in fire-arms? Mr. Bright said he had said repeatedly that he had no recollection of