hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
W. H. Russell 52 0 Browse Search
United States (United States) 50 0 Browse Search
Missouri (Missouri, United States) 24 0 Browse Search
Abraham Lincoln 22 0 Browse Search
Morris Seligman 18 0 Browse Search
Thomas Corcoran 16 0 Browse Search
England (United Kingdom) 16 0 Browse Search
Wise 15 5 Browse Search
Robert Muir 14 0 Browse Search
France (France) 14 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: August 29, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 6 total hits in 4 results.

Covington (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 8
The handcuffs. --A correspondent of the New York Herald, who writes from Covington, Kentucky, has made a wonderful discovery! It appears that Messrs. James B. Clay, John C. Breckinridge and J. W. Stevenson, have alluded in their speeches, in Kentucky, to the large number of handcuffs captured from the Hessians as Manassas; but the audacious writer above alluded to brands the whole story as an infamous lie, and says he has it "from authority just from Richmond that as soon as the news arrived there of the retreat of the Union forces, the negro traders gathered together all the handcuffs in the jails, and sent them clear of the right wing and round to the centre in front, and thus deceived even the rebel soldiers, and had them brought to Richmond as trophies." That writer ought surely to be set down as the first inventive genius of the present age, He may be able to humbug the deluded people of the North with such a tale, but the people of the South know the handcuffs were taken
J. W. Stevenson (search for this): article 8
The handcuffs. --A correspondent of the New York Herald, who writes from Covington, Kentucky, has made a wonderful discovery! It appears that Messrs. James B. Clay, John C. Breckinridge and J. W. Stevenson, have alluded in their speeches, in Kentucky, to the large number of handcuffs captured from the Hessians as Manassas; but the audacious writer above alluded to brands the whole story as an infamous lie, and says he has it "from authority just from Richmond that as soon as the news arrived there of the retreat of the Union forces, the negro traders gathered together all the handcuffs in the jails, and sent them clear of the right wing and round to the centre in front, and thus deceived even the rebel soldiers, and had them brought to Richmond as trophies." That writer ought surely to be set down as the first inventive genius of the present age, He may be able to humbug the deluded people of the North with such a tale, but the people of the South know the handcuffs were taken
John C. Breckinridge (search for this): article 8
The handcuffs. --A correspondent of the New York Herald, who writes from Covington, Kentucky, has made a wonderful discovery! It appears that Messrs. James B. Clay, John C. Breckinridge and J. W. Stevenson, have alluded in their speeches, in Kentucky, to the large number of handcuffs captured from the Hessians as Manassas; but the audacious writer above alluded to brands the whole story as an infamous lie, and says he has it "from authority just from Richmond that as soon as the news arrived there of the retreat of the Union forces, the negro traders gathered together all the handcuffs in the jails, and sent them clear of the right wing and round to the centre in front, and thus deceived even the rebel soldiers, and had them brought to Richmond as trophies." That writer ought surely to be set down as the first inventive genius of the present age, He may be able to humbug the deluded people of the North with such a tale, but the people of the South know the handcuffs were taken f
James B. Clay (search for this): article 8
The handcuffs. --A correspondent of the New York Herald, who writes from Covington, Kentucky, has made a wonderful discovery! It appears that Messrs. James B. Clay, John C. Breckinridge and J. W. Stevenson, have alluded in their speeches, in Kentucky, to the large number of handcuffs captured from the Hessians as Manassas; but the audacious writer above alluded to brands the whole story as an infamous lie, and says he has it "from authority just from Richmond that as soon as the news arrived there of the retreat of the Union forces, the negro traders gathered together all the handcuffs in the jails, and sent them clear of the right wing and round to the centre in front, and thus deceived even the rebel soldiers, and had them brought to Richmond as trophies." That writer ought surely to be set down as the first inventive genius of the present age, He may be able to humbug the deluded people of the North with such a tale, but the people of the South know the handcuffs were taken