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The Daily Dispatch: July 18, 1863., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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orary exile. It behooves us to give this subject serious and profound consideration. If the enemy is forced to abandon the effort he is making to gain possession of our city, we can return to our homes in a short time. If he is successful — which God forbid!--we will have avoided privations and woes of which we can now form no adequate conception. Let us take counsel of prudence. The citizens of Charleston are furnishing cooked rations to the troops on Morris's Island. The foreigners in that city who refuse to fight are not sent North to their Yankee friends. Here is the way they are served: We learn that not more than six or seven of all the employees at the Arsenal refused to join any company, and Major Tresevant, commandant of the Arsenal, quickly sent these, with their "foreign protection papers," to Major Perryman, our new enrolling officer, who as quickly forwarded them to Morris's Island, where "ditching" is going on, and "foreign papers" are not respected.