Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 28, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Marmaduke Johnson or search for Marmaduke Johnson in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 2 document sections:

day last, has information from passengers just from Tennessee that Nashville is now in the possession of the enemy. General Johnson deserted the city on the Friday previous, falling back upon Murfreesboro' and Columbia At that time General Buell waon Sunday evening. The railroad bridge had been previously destroyed by the citizens. The Commonwealth, adds: General Johnson is represented as having only one-half of his original force at Murfreesboro'. The tracks from Nashville to Columbia and Murfreesboro' are being torn up by bodies of soldiers sent out by General Johnson. Nearly all the railroad stock and Government stores were removed before the Yankees arrived. Buell's force is said to have numbered sixty thousand. It is not known whether Johnson will make a permanent stand at Murfreesboro or not. If he should not, and the Yankees move upon Columbia, they can move down on the railroad to Decatur, Alabama, seize the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, and operate at leisure
J. W. Goodrich to "work out," he succeeded in tracing the possession of one of the notes so printed to Tyrer, and establishing the fact of his having passed it as true and genuine. As the offence committed by the prisoner was against the Confederate Government, the Mayor directed officer Goodrich to take the party before Commissioner Wm. F. Watson for examination, which was done; but no new fact was elicited to throw further light on the transaction. The case, at the request of Mr. Marmaduke Johnson, who appeared for Tyrer, was continued until Saturday morning. No doubt the officer who has charge of the matter will sift it out and thoroughly unkennel the other rogues who were joined with the one already in the hands of the law in deprecating the currency of the Confederacy.--It is understood that a guard will be maintained in future about the Government printing office, to prevent the possibility of a recurrence of an affair similar to the above. No notes stolen as the above we