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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 14, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) or search for Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 16 results in 6 document sections:
Latest from Tennessee.
Proclamation from Gov. Harris -- great excitement in East Tennessee--large Union camps at Elizabethtown and Strawberry Plains, &c.
Nashville Nov. 12.
--East Tennessee--large Union camps at Elizabethtown and Strawberry Plains, &c.
Nashville Nov. 12.
--The Union and American will publish to-morrow an address to the people of Tennessee, issued by Governor Harris, in which he calls upon the people to furnish every double-barreled shot-gun and rifle thTennessee, issued by Governor Harris, in which he calls upon the people to furnish every double-barreled shot-gun and rifle they have, to arm the troops now offering their services.
He says that the State must and will, to the full extent of its resources, and shall be protected.
He declares that he is resolved to exhaust rce of the State before the feet of Federal invaders shall pollute, with impunity, the soil of Tennessee.
Parties who arrived here to-day from East Tennessee report that there is great excitemenEast Tennessee report that there is great excitement, and many fear that there will be a general outbreak.
Five men have been arrested who are charged with having been concerned in burning the Hiwassee bridge.
Lynchburg, Nov. 13.--The following
The Daily Dispatch: November 14, 1861., [Electronic resource], The Union Benevolent Society . (search)
The Postal affairs.
The burning of several bridges on the railway lines through East Tennessee, and we believe in upper Georgia, has induced the Post-Office Department to send forward special agents to points where travel and transportation have been interrupted, in order that all possible facilities may be employed to send forward the mails.
The main trains will only be run in the day time.
Engines and cars are on each side of the burnt bridges, at the proper time, to convey passengers and mails with as great dispatch as possible.
The Daily Dispatch: November 14, 1861., [Electronic resource], The Perils of Peace. (search)
East Tennessee.
The telegraphic dispatches inform us that Gov. Harris, of Tennessee, is setting earnestly to work to frustrate the designs of the traitors in that State.
The leniency that has been shown towards them heretofore has warmed them into life, and they now seek to wound the bosom that nourished them.
Reliable advices state that 2,000 Unionists have assembled at or near.
Greenville, on the line of the railroad, fifty miles beyond Bristol, toward which point the Georgia troops tTennessee, is setting earnestly to work to frustrate the designs of the traitors in that State.
The leniency that has been shown towards them heretofore has warmed them into life, and they now seek to wound the bosom that nourished them.
Reliable advices state that 2,000 Unionists have assembled at or near.
Greenville, on the line of the railroad, fifty miles beyond Bristol, toward which point the Georgia troops that lately left this city are advancing.
Greenville is the former home of the arch-traitor, Andrew Johnson.
Transportation of treasure.
We learn that J. H. Craigmiles, Esq., of Cleveland, Tennessee, who left this city last Thursday with $400,000 in cash, furnished him by that indefatigable agent of the Commissary Department, Major Frank G. Griffin, has arrived safely at his destination with his treasure.
With the aid of two good Southern men, secured at Bristol, he crossed the river after the bridges were burned, and his heavy bags of cash are now, as Major Ruffin desired, transferred into Kentucky hogs.
To have gotten possession of that large amount of treasure would have been viewed as a God send by the Unionists of East Tennessee.