Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 6, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Dudley Mann or search for Dudley Mann in all documents.

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pid and atrocious by military men as well as civilians. The Commissioners of the C. S. A are most courteously and respectfully listened to everywhere. They claim to ask only for independence from a Government which they ably and often convincingly argue has overthrown the Constitution, not only in the South, but in the North. This the best publicists and reasoners of the country declare is no more than Franklin once asked in your contest with England and elsewhere than in Paris. Mr. Dudley Mann has had no difficulty in procuring material aid in the shape of money, arms of the most improved order, and cavalry and artillery experts of the highest stamp. From what I have personally seen and heard on this subject, I should not be surprised should Davis' Government loom up presently with a naval power that will astonish those who have been idle enough to suppose that the menaces of Mr. Seward in his dispatches and his envoys here would pass unnoted. In connection with the fo
omble, and the third by Col. Chas. J. Stone. Other brigades are now forming. The Massachusetts 30th Regiment, at Hagerstown, is expected here to-night. The 5th Connecticut Regiment arrived here this morning. There is much defection in Col. Mann's regiment of the Pennsylvania reserve. A large number were missing at roll-call yesterday morning, and yesterday about 300 refused to be sworn in. The men assign various causes. Some say that they are not armed as they were promised to be byituted to stop such correspondence, if it really exists; also, to break up the organizations. Nothing is positively known outside the staff of the enemy's movements. Sandy Hook, Aug. 1, P. M.--About three hundred of the disaffected men of Col. Mann's Regiment having refused to be sworn in, were to-day disrobed and sent to Harrisburg under a guard. The scene of disrobement was one of humiliation to the men, being considered as a light punishment for their disaffection. It is not known wh