Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 24, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Samuel Houston or search for Samuel Houston in all documents.

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it may not, let us provide employment for the healthy by originating various industrial institutions, and thereby supply our own wants to an extent never yet reached, and enlarge, adorn, strengthen, and solidify our home independence. Gen. Sam. Houston on the war. The Galveston Civilian, of the 7th, says: Gen. Sam. Houston was in town day before yesterday. He has entirely recovered his usual good health since his residence on the bay; and he deems to think that the great battle Gen. Sam. Houston was in town day before yesterday. He has entirely recovered his usual good health since his residence on the bay; and he deems to think that the great battle of Manassas was the turning point in the war, and that the North will never be able to raise another army as large as that which was defeated there. The "Manassas ram." A well-known Mobilian, in a letter to the Advertiser, dated New Orleans, September 10th, writes: I went over to Algiers yesterday, to see the steamer Manassas, commonly called "the turtle," or "the ram," intended to "pitch into" Dr. Lincoln's blockading fleet. The commander or that fleet sent up a challenge a m