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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 6, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Annapolis (Maryland, United States) or search for Annapolis (Maryland, United States) in all documents.

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ts to express no opinion upon the merits of the unhappy controversy; and further, the same paper states that all the Governments of Europe will treat privateering as piracy. According to the following it would seem that Alexandria is included in one of Lincoln's military districts: The War Department at Washington has issued an order which constitutes three new military departments, the first of which composes the District of Columbia, according to its original boundary, Fort Washington and the country adjacent, and the State of Maryland as far as Bladensburg, inclusive. The second is the Department of Annapolis, with the headquarters at that city, and including the country for twenty miles on each side of the railroad from Annapolis to Washington, as far as Bladensburg; and the third is the Department of Pennsylvania, and includes that State, Delaware, and all of Maryland not included in the other two. The same order transfers the Annapolis Naval School to Fort Adams.
will, immediately on the arrival of his successor, return to Pennsylvania, having been called there to assume an important military command. A dispatch from Annapolis, April 30, says: Last night the entire garrison was called to arms in consequence of the discharge of cannon and rockets from Fort Madison, on the oppositerthern Central Railroad, and the other by the Wilmington and Baltimore Road, through the city of Baltimore. An army of ten thousand men is to be concentrated at Annapolis, ready to march on Baltimore in case of resistance. The New Jersey troops, three thousand strong, left Trenton yesterday for Annapolis, to form part of this corAnnapolis, to form part of this corps d'armee. This movement will effectually settle the question of free travel to the National Capital. Accounts have been received in Washington that there are not more than seven thousand Confederate troops assembled in Virginia, and that they are little better than a half armed mob. This may be the intelligence circulated at
and by organizing them in companies; the Northern troops will, therefore, seize slaves as prisoners of war wherever they are found. Brooks Elias Connor, the individual that tampered with Government dispatches, was tried by court-martial at Annapolis yesterday, and found guilty. Sentence is reserved. From Philadelphia, May 3d, the telegraph advises us that-- All travel to the South is stopped to-day.-- No communication with Baltimore or Washington is permitted by the military auccupied thirty hours in the journey from that capital to this point. Nineteen members of the Seventh Regiment of New York have just arrived here, and leave immediately to join their comrades at Washington. They go by way of Perryville and Annapolis. Commodore Gregory, of Rhode Island, accompanies this detachment of the Seventh to the capital. He intends, not with standing his advanced years, to offer his services to the Government. He has been in the Navy for fifty-two years.
its the Navy-Yard.&c., &c., &c. Alexandria, May 5. --There are now 6,000 troops at Annapolis. Seven hundred left there last night, bound out. They are to land near Baltimore, to co-operaching that city from the North. Several persons have been arrested in the neighborhood of Annapolis, as spies. Some had made accurate survey and minute details of the operations there. The sloop-of-war Allegheny, the Forward, the Baltic, and the Kedar, are off Annapolis. Travel between Perryville and Annapolis is uninterrupted; twelve steamers are on the route. The railroad Annapolis is uninterrupted; twelve steamers are on the route. The railroad between Annapolis and Washington is guarded by Federal troops. It is supposed the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad will soon be made a military road. [Second Dispatch.] Alexandria, May 5. Annapolis and Washington is guarded by Federal troops. It is supposed the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad will soon be made a military road. [Second Dispatch.] Alexandria, May 5. -- This city, it is expected, will be occupied by Federal troops tomorrow, who will advance from Washington by the Long Bridge. Two transports, with men and munitions, passed up to Washington