Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 21, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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The police of the War. --From an article in a recent number of the New York Herald we take the following: By precipitating battles at the two places named, (Corinth and Richmond,) we risk, in case of a disaster, the indefinite protraction of the war. By enclosing the Confederates within a network from which they cannot ercape, and starving them into submission, we gain two objects which the country would be gratified to accomplish — that of sparing the further effusion of blood, and capturing and punishing the rebel leaders. This line of policy cannot be entrusted into better hands than those of Generals McClellan and Halleck. If the Government consults the interests and feelings of the country, it will support them in pursaui it.
ceive, are grossly false. From M'Clellan's army. Williamsburg, Va, May 10, 1862. Gen. McClellan and staff having gone forward, Gen. C. Grover, first brigade Hooker's division, has been appac, since the evacuation of Yorktown, has been to overtake and fight the enemy. The army of Gen. McClellan has been pressing hard after the rebels ever since last Sunday. During all that time ou at Williamsburg to Hancock's troops. This is a great mistake.--Hancock's conduct was, as General McClellan observes in his dispatches, brilliant and superb, but, compared to the bulk of the hard fi this is stirring little speech called forth the ulmost enthustasm. --The whole army indelizes McClellan, and to be thus comolimented by him was felt to be an honor indeed. The army began to movmies of men or the most formidable entrenchments, that can withstand their progress. With General McClellan at its head, the Army of the Potomac could march victoriously from one and of the continen