Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 25, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Burnside or search for Burnside in all documents.

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Movements in Hampton Roads. Norfolk, March 24 --Twenty Federal transport steamers entered the Roads last evening. All excepting one were painted white, and all crowded with troops. They apparently came across the Bay, from the direction of the Eastern Shore. It is supposed that they are intended to reinforce Burnside or attack Magruder. Between ninety and a hundred steamers and sailing vessels were in the Roads yesterday.
The steamers of Nashville. From the C. S. steamer Nashville night last week, in defiance of steamers off Fort Macon, She having been fired at by thirty times. The Nashville steamers safe from the clutches Burned of the blockaders. It is said to have been in of Burnside to at capture of the Nashville on the day of the
Incidents of the Newbern fight. --A Goldsborough correspondent of the Petersburg Express gives some further incidents of the capture of Newbern: Calvin Dibble, a former resident of Newbern, came with Burnside, bringing several vessels to carry off the cotton and spirits of turpentine. Most of these articles were destroyed by the citizens, but strangely enough a large amount of spirits turpentine, owned by John Dibble, was not destroyed. Capt. Westervelt, who formerly ran a schoonernd about 1,000 soldiers are encamped at the Clemmins larm, about four miles west of Newbern. The Confederates have rallied, been reinforced, and are at a place where they will be heard from in due time. It is confidently expected that Burnside will move up the Noise river to Kinston soon, and unless stubbornly resisted will move on towards this place. Mr. George Petry, a prominent and patriotic citizen of Jones county, is a prisoner in irons at Newbern for having helped our retre