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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 4, 1863., [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 5 results in 3 document sections:
From Tennessee.
--The Abolitionists are forming clubs throughout that portion of Tennessee in their possession.
It is stated that the people of Nashville are not disheartened, but look for the Confederates with anxious hearts.
There are 23 Federal army hospitals in Nashville.
One is capable of holding three thousanTennessee in their possession.
It is stated that the people of Nashville are not disheartened, but look for the Confederates with anxious hearts.
There are 23 Federal army hospitals in Nashville.
One is capable of holding three thousand.
It is said that Memphis is one vast hospital, and yet the sickly season has not begun.
It is thought that large numbers of Rosecrans's troops have been sent to reinforce Grant in Mississippi.
Northern papers state that affairs in Rosecrans's department are unchanged.
Our army in Tennessee still continues in tTennessee still continues in the same position, everything being unchanged and apparently unchangeable.
Large numbers of refugees from Nashville and other points daily come within our lines, having been banished from home as Southern sympathizers, and in order that the vandals may the more perfectly become possessed of their property — being thrust out fro
The Louisville Journal.
A friend has handed us a copy of the Louisville Journal, of the 25th of May. It is amusing to glance at that paper in its embarrassing position of sustaining the war and remonstrating against its Abolition excesses at the same time.
Utterly unprincipled, it yet cannot altogether desert Kentucky.
The copy before us takes Burnside to task for misdirecting the extension of the railroad to East Tennessee, recommended by Lincoln, and which, it appears, he is working at, notwithstanding Congress would give no money for it. The Journal thinks Burnside is deflecting it too far east of Danville, and urges its extension direct to Clinton, on Clinch river, and so on to Knoxville.
It urges its immediate progress (with contraband labor) not only as a military necessity during the war, but after the war, as an avenue for the "products of the West and Northwest" to "Southern markets," and also "a bond of future fraternity," and as a mediator "between brethren now est