Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 23, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Fitch or search for Fitch in all documents.

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hat to believe. The stores are nearly all closed, the streets empty and quiet as on Sunday; no drays, no carriages, save now and then a lonely one going solemnly by as if to a funeral procession. The Yankees thus far are on very good behavior Col. Fitch, it is hoped, is not such a beast as Butler. So far as I can learn, not a scrap of a Federal flag has yet been hung out save by the invaders them selves, and not a single instance of a Memphian reading the enemy cordially, if I may except thatdewalks, who witnessed the scene, broke out into a big laugh. Our citizens are extremely anxious to get Southern papers, that we may have at least one grain of truth to rely on. We see by the Argus, of June 11th, that the Federal commander, Fitch, attempted the outrage of prescribing rules for the government of the criminal court of Memphis, whereupon Judge Swayne very promptly and properly declined to proceed with the business of the court. The Argus asserts most positively that if
Designs of the enemy. --In a recent conversation with a prominent citizen of Memphis Colonel Fitch, the Federal commander, boasted that they would soon have a force of fifty thousand men for the purpose of operating South, making Memphis the base of operations. The movements be indicated would be down the Mississippi Central, via Grand Junction, so as to cut off all the country between the Central and the river, which he thought would leave the navigation of the river undisturbed, and give the North the trade of the greater part of Mississippi.