Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for George B. McClellan or search for George B. McClellan in all documents.

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unt of the examination, before Commissioner Wm. F. Watson, of Robert Blossingham, of Williamsburg, for having in his possession $30 counterfeit Confederate Treasury notes, and a pass permitting him to go to and return from Richmond, signed by Gen. McClellan. At the conclusion of the examination it was stated that the case had been sent before Gen. Winder for adjudication. That official, as we learn, committed Blossingham and a man named G. W. Davis (named in the pass from McClellan) to Castle Robert Blossingham, of Williamsburg, for having in his possession $30 counterfeit Confederate Treasury notes, and a pass permitting him to go to and return from Richmond, signed by Gen. McClellan. At the conclusion of the examination it was stated that the case had been sent before Gen. Winder for adjudication. That official, as we learn, committed Blossingham and a man named G. W. Davis (named in the pass from McClellan) to Castle Thunder till all the circumstances could be inquired into.
Now is the time. Fortune has again crowned our arms with signs success. The shattered columns of McClellan and Pope are flying before our victorious legions. The plains of Manassas have a double claim upon history. It remains for the Congress of the Confederate States to say whether they shall a second time be associated with torpor, hesitation, and the results that usually follow defeat instead of victory. This last victory has brought us to the very door of the Federal capital. Whether it will be followed up to its extreme results will depend entirely upon the judgment of the Commander-in-Chief, which, it is but doing him bare justices to say, has thus for proved itself equal to any emergency. That judgment will, in turn, be decided by the force and condition of the army, and the prospect of success in advancing or merely holding its present ground. A successful blow at Washington would make the enemy reel and stagger like a drunken man. The question is, can such a
clock, on the 28th, which says troops are being rapidly pushed forward from there. Gen. George B. McClellan had visited Washington, and accepted the command of the Army of Virginia. Fugitiveneral slept at Falls Church last night. Nearly all the Quartermasters and Commissaries of McClellan's army are in Alexandria this morning, thus leaving that portion of the army of the Potomac thtrue, General Pope has changed front, and is trying to flank the enemy in the Northwest, while McClellan is coming upon them from the East. Evidently, as I write, a terrible battle is raging, ane future of the republic. But we are hopeful; for thank God and President Lincoln's backbone, McClellan is again at the head of the army, as the telegraph has already informed you. Excitement ien, is probably winding his way through the Blue Ridge to join the main body of his army. McClellan arrived in the Hudson this morning, and his headquarters, for a few days, will be at Fairfax S
g driven from their entrenchments an enemy superior in numbers, and relieved from siege the city of Richmond, as heretofore communicated, our toil-worn troops advanced to meet another invading army, reinforced not only by the defeated army of Gen. McClellan, but by the fresh corps of Gens. Burnside and Hunter. After forced marches, with inadequate transportation, and across streams swollen to unusual height, by repeated combats, they turned the position of the enemy, and, forming a junctionothers not mortally. R. E. Lee. Hdq'rs Army Northern Virginia, Grovetown, Aug. 30, 10 P. M., via Rapidan. To President Davis: This army achieved to day, on the plains of Manassas, a signal victory over the combined forces of Gens. McClellan and Pope. On the 28th and 29th each wing, under Gens. Longstreet and Jackson, repulsed with valor attacks made on them separately. We mourn the loss of our gallant dead in every conflict, yet our gratitude to Almighty God for His mercies r