Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 13, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Havana (Cuba) or search for Havana (Cuba) in all documents.

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ed the subordination of the negro to the white man as the formal order of American society, and contended that the relations of the races, as it has come down to us from the founders of our Government, is right.--This being simply a question of political opinion, we had no suspicion that its advocacy could fall under the ban of the Administration. Arrival of a Prize schooner. The Baltimore Patriot, of the 7th instant, says: The schooner William H. Northrop, balling from Havana, December 1st, was brought into New York yesterday by Prize Master Rhodes and five men from the gun-boat Fernandina. She has a cargo of eighteen bags of coffee and a quantity of quinine and other medicines. She was taken December 25, off Cape Fear, by the gun-boat Fernandini, while attempting to run the blockade at Wilmington, North Carolina. She was formerly a Charleston pilot boat of about 80 tons burden. Deserters from the Confederate Army. The Washington Star, of the 6th ins
equest put out the decoy information that they were expected to go by way of Mexico, their real exit from Charleston was not divulged by it until they had reached Havana. On arriving in that neutral city, they, themselves, very properly threw off all disguise, and chose to go about openly in their true characters, rather than skulk, as if they had been infamous outlaws, in holes and corners. The day of their intended sailing was known to everybody in Havana, including the United States Consul and the Federal naval officers in those waters. The Southern press did not know of their departure from Havana until they were brought into Hampton Roads prisonersHavana until they were brought into Hampton Roads prisoners of Wilkes. So much for this aspersion upon the press. We were censured, by some persons ignorant of facts, the other day, for declaring that the enemy would burn New river bridge, and blow up the Allegheny tunnel, if the Virginia and Tennessee railroad were left longer without protection. A dozen Yankees have been passing
The Daily Dispatch: January 13, 1862., [Electronic resource], The Sinking cause of Jeff. Davis and his Southern Confederacy. (search)
From New Orleans. New Orleans, Jan. 11 --Captain Clone, of the French dispatch steamer Millar, arrived yesterday from off Ship Island, the bearer of dispatches to the French Consul here. New Orleans, Jan. 12.--At a meeting of the Frenchmen, held on yesterday, it was resolved, by the consent of the French Consul, and the approval of Secretary Seward, to send delegates to Havana, by the French steamer Millar, and charter there a vessel which will come to New Orleans and carry to France such subjects of that Government as desire to go, owing to the disturbed state of the country. Col. Lubbock's remains reached here yesterday. They were escorted to the depot en route to Texas.