Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 1, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Jim Washington or search for Jim Washington in all documents.

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, were making an effort to get our prisoners off to Florida; with what success was not known. The number of prisoners at Millen was said to be about twenty thousand, whither they had been removed from Andersonville, as a place of more security from cavalry raids by General Sherman. The New York Herald swallows this promptly, and says: This is one of the great triumphs of Sherman's brilliant movement. The case of the Florida — the Yankees Sink the Ship. A telegram from Washington says that the Yankees have determined to surrender the Florida to the Brazilian Government, and adds: The eleven officers of the pirate Florida, taken from the Old Capitol prison several days since and sent to General Barnes, at Point Lookout, have been forwarded by that officer to Rear Admiral D. D. Porter, commanding the North Atlantic blockading squadron, who has been directed that they be turned over to Captain Collins, of the Wachusett, which vessel is now lying in Hampton Roads.
One thousand dollars reward. --Ran away, on Saturday evening, my slave, Jim Washington, formerly the property of B. W. Totty. He is five feet six inches high; jet black; high forehead; flat nose; high cheek bones; big mouth, with a scar on the right eye; stout built. Henry Smith, corner of Cary and Virginia streets. no 29--6t*