Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for September 24th or search for September 24th in all documents.

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respecting American affairs. We gave on Saturday the news of the battle at Lexington, from the Herald of the 24th. The particulars given below corroborate those given in that issue, and include the official report of Gen. Fremont. From the dainty manner in which the Herald deals with the details of the battle, it may be justly surmised that the defeat of the Federals was not only most disastrous, but humiliating in the extreme; Fremont's official report of the disaster. Washington, Sept. 24 --The following dispatch was received at the War Department this morning from the headquarters of the Western Military Department. It follows the announcement by Gen. Fremont of the fall of Lexington: St. Louis, Sept. 23, 1861. Nothing since my dispatch this morning announcing the surrender of Lexington. Our loss is thirty-nine killed, and one hundred and twenty wounded. The loss of the enemy was 1,400 killed and wounded. Our non-commissioned officers and pr
Miscellaneous. From the New York Herald, of the 25th, we gather the following additional news items: Release of Ross Winans. Fortress Monroe, Sept. 23 --Ross Winans, having taken the oath of allegiance, was released this morning, and will to-night accompany his son to Baltimore. Confiscation of a Southern vessel. Boston, Sept. 24. --The bark Florence, from Malta, was seized this morning by the Port Surveyor, in consequence of being partly owned in Charleston. Sent to Fort Lafayette. Messrs. Morehead, Barr, and Duadd, who were recently arrested in Kentucky, were sent to Fort Lafayette on Tuesday last. They were previously allowed to take refreshments at the Astor House. Ex-Governor Wise and his son indicted at Wheeling. Ex-Governor Wise and his son, O. Jennings Wise, have been indicted for treason by the United States District Court, at Wheeling, Virginia. Condemned to hard labor. Ulysses C. Vannorhoff and Isaac Wilcox have been