Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 23, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Williams or search for Williams in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 3 document sections:

Unclaimed goods. --Among the unclaimed goods stored in the Mayor's office, City Hail, we noticed yesterday three suspicious looking trunks, said to belong to Mrs. Dobson, lately sent on for perjury; one blue bed quilt of home manufacture; two faro tables, one made by Williams, of New York, and the other the product of the skill of some Richmond carpenter. These latter were seized at 149 and 151 Main street, and are to be burned. The trunks are said to contain evidence eneficial to the Commonwealth — among other things a lot of money belonging to Mrs. Dobson. The large box in the North corner of the Mayor's office still remains a terra incognita to the uninitiated. The contributors are many; the receivers of its benefits are few. It is the receptacle of contraband pistols, and other articles "too numerous to mention."
during his imprisonment at Charleston. Summers and his whole pack now pretend to think the Yankees won't do. Dr. Patrick, a Northern man also by birth and education, and instinct, but belonging to the better species of that nation, told Gen. Williams that the North had started this war under the pretence of upholding the Union and the Constitution; that they had now overthrown the Constitution and destroyed the Union, and that they are now prosecuting the war to free the negroes and make the South pay the expenses of the war, and he hoped to God that they might never come back to Kanawha.--Gen. Williams asked what George W. Summers's position was? Dr. Patrick replied, "His views and mine are exactly the same." Our Government has stores enough not far from, Charleston, including the salt, to load 250 wagons. The quantity of iron, lead, and cannon balls, seem to be out of proportion to the number of troops the Yankees had stationed there, and horse-shoes enough to supply s
auley, and in Western Virginia, under Gen. Floyd15,000 Total in Virginia328,000 At Knoxville, and in Eastern Tennessee20,000 Near Louisville, under General Kirby Smith25,000 Near Glasgow, under Gen. Bragg20,000 In Eastern Kentucky, under Gen. Williams5,000 70,000 Department of Missouri, west of the Mississippi river, under General Holmes and General Magruder50,000 Department of the Lower Mississippi, in Arkansas, and at Vicksburg, under Gen. Hindman40,000 Near Corinth, under Gen. Priceand two hours after the firing ceased the carpenter and a deck hand were found dead below. At the same time two feet of water was discovered in the hold of the Saint Maurice. The pilot of the Cyrus Bell was shot dead at the wheel. The General Williams had ten men scalded to death by the cutting in two of a supply pipe. The Iberville had one of her engines disabled by the enemy's shots. The very first shot from the enemy — a twenty-pounder rifle — passed through and through the Sciota.