Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 27, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Armstrong or search for Armstrong in all documents.

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ld, therefore, be necessary for me to have waited near the town an hour, and fearing that information would be carried into town to the enemy, I dismounted the four companies of Churchill's Regiment about a quarter of a mile of the town, and marched them by platoons at double-quick time within two hundred yards of the Court-House, where we found a company eighty strong. I sent Captain Carroll, with his company, to make a detour to take them in the rear. After halting my command, I sent Dr. Armstrong, (volunteer aid-decamp,) to demand a surrender of the forces. I allowed them ten minutes to decide; at the end of the time the Captain in command made an unconditional surrender of the company, laying down their arms and side arms. We took one hundred rifles, with sabre bayonets, a quantity of ammunition, and a train of seven wagons loaded with provisions. Further from Missouri. The St. Louis Republican records the arrest of Dr. Bass, an influential citizen, and his confineme