Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 19, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Rockland, Me. (Maine, United States) or search for Rockland, Me. (Maine, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

, to New York with a cargo of coals. Bonded for seventeen thousand five hundred dollars and prisoners put on board. Two o'clock, Made the Nova Scotia coast above Cape Sable, and during the day skirted along it, just near enough to distinguish the houses, villages and forts by the shore. A large steamer, standing to the southward, passed us at 3 P. M., but we had too little coal to give chase, even if night had not been so near. At 4 P. M., captured schooner Josiah Achome, of Rockland, Maine, bound to Cape Breton for coals.--There was nothing on this vessel of value to us, and she was burned as soon as the prisoners and their baggage could be removed. Towards 5, the air grew heavy and some rain fell. A dense mist hangs over the water. Two light houses visible on the shore, and a long line of sterile coast. Barometer falling. Wind northeast, with prospect of a storm. Running along the coast, we saw two small fishing schooners a few miles ahead, which, as soon a
, to New York with a cargo of coals. Bonded for seventeen thousand five hundred dollars and prisoners put on board. Two o'clock, Made the Nova Scotia coast above Cape Sable, and during the day skirted along it, just near enough to distinguish the houses, villages and forts by the shore. A large steamer, standing to the southward, passed us at 3 P. M., but we had too little coal to give chase, even if night had not been so near. At 4 P. M., captured schooner Josiah Achome, of Rockland, Maine, bound to Cape Breton for coals.--There was nothing on this vessel of value to us, and she was burned as soon as the prisoners and their baggage could be removed. Towards 5, the air grew heavy and some rain fell. A dense mist hangs over the water. Two light houses visible on the shore, and a long line of sterile coast. Barometer falling. Wind northeast, with prospect of a storm. Running along the coast, we saw two small fishing schooners a few miles ahead, which, as soon a