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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 13, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Maryland (Maryland, United States) or search for Maryland (Maryland, United States) in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: September 13, 1862., [Electronic resource], From our army. (search)
From our army.
No definite intelligence from our army was received yesterday through the usual channels of information.
Baltimore papers, of the 9th, say that our cavalry was foraging in Pennsylvania.
We learn that our commissary finds no difficulty in procuring bacon at 10 cents per pound in Maryland for Confederate money, and it is stated that Gen. Lee has intimated that no more stores need be sent him.
The Daily Dispatch: September 13, 1862., [Electronic resource], From our army. (search)
The advance into Maryland.
There are timid persons who still determine to consider this last movement of Gen. Lee as full of danger.
That it is dangerous to a certain extent, is true enough.
No military operation ever was, or ever can be, entirely destitute of danger.
War itself is a very unsafe game for any man to play and of course none of its moves are perfectly safe.--Washington was thought to be a cautious commander, and to a certain extent he was so. Yet his two movements across t ined, and we still maintain, that the true danger to that army lay in its inactivity after the battle of Manassas.--It would not have been, as far as we have ever been able to understand the matter, hair so dangerous to have crossed at once into Maryland, where it would have met nothing but raw troops, thoroughly demoralized by the defeat they had so lately sustained, and ready to fly at the first crack of a gun. By remaining stationary at Manassas, with the Rappahannock and James both in its re
The Daily Dispatch: September 13, 1862., [Electronic resource], A good example. (search)
Maryland Volunteers
--Companies composed of natives of Maryland have lately been formed in this city under the following commanders Capt. John W. Torseh, Wm. H. Murray, Wm C. Crane, J. R. Herbert, Geo. H. Emack P Bryan,--McAber, and — Smith.
All of them number the requisite amount of men — in a word, were full companies.
The commands of Emack Smith, Murray, and Crane, have started to join Jackson, and the others are read