Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Gibralter (North Carolina, United States) or search for Gibralter (North Carolina, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 3 document sections:

them myself I send you enclosed a copy of a letter which I addressed to the Governor of the town of Cienfuegos, in the Island of Cuba, as early as the 6th of July last. This letter will explain itself, and I have only to remark with reference to it, that I had not at its date seen the Spanish proclamation. I rely upon your sense of justice to give place in your columns both to this communication and the letter. R. Semmes, Commander. Confederate States Navy. C. S. Steamer Sumter. Gibraltar, Jan. 29, 1862 The British Parliament. In the House of Lords on the 7th inst. the Earl of Carnarvon was anxious to ascertain the truth, or rather to obtain from Her Majesty's Government a contradiction of a story which had been in circulation during the last week or ten days. That story seemed to him so monstrous in the shape in which it had reached this country, that he was almost confident it must be full of exaggeration. It was to the effect that a Canadian gentleman, a Britis
lding in New Orleans has been completed. The Pemberton Coal Mines in New Orleans have been flooded, and thousands of have been thrown out of employment. The Great Eastern is announced to its for New York in April. The arrest of British subjects by the Lincoln Government has been discussed in a House of Lords. Earl Russell freely accepted the right of the United States authorities arrest British subjects who are rightful suspected of treason. The privateer Sumter was at Gibraltar on the 13th of February. Paris letters state that Mr. Slidell had been received by M. Thouvenal in a private capacity, and that his diplomatic character was ignored. The Paris Bourse on the 13th February, was firmer. Rentes were quoted at 71.33. The office of President of the Spanish Country having been vacated by the death of Martinez de la Rosa, the place will be supplied by Senior Mon. He will also retain his former appointment as Ambassador to France. A dissolution
w. To have received them would have been a breach of courtesy on the part of Captain Pegram. Besides, she is a national vessel, and would be used for fighting purposes, instead of a transport. Capt. Pegram and Paymaster Taylor arrived in Richmond on Saturday, and have delivered the invoices and ship papers to the Treasury Department. Capt. Pegram speaks in high terms of the hospitality of the English people, and thinks the general feeling of the people is decidedly in favor of the Confederate States. He thinks Belgium will be the first Government to recognize the South, where her interest chiefly lie. The Sumter was at Gibraltar, and had been very active in her operations among the Federal shipping. At last accounts she had captured and destroyed twenty-one Yankee vessels. Running out of a Confederate port, making a voyage to Europe and returning safely, Capt. Pegram has demonstrated the fact that the blockade is simply of no account and decidedly in effective.