Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 18, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Pope or search for Pope in all documents.

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by burning bridge., bakeries, depots camps &c. The sight was beautiful and refreshing. Our citizens — men, women and children — were exultant to a degree which manifested itself in every way, except standing on their heads — so glad, so thankful, so thoroughly rejoiced, and jubilant!--The Yankees left, skedaddled, gone glimmering.--What a hurrah all over town. When Kingsbury sent for the acting Mayor (they had Mr. Slaughter prisoner) and delivered up the burg to its citizens, they knew Pope had been smashed and that they were free. To this excited crowd the magnificent conflagration was most welcome. The flames the water, the illumination, the ree and the dark night together, made a splendid celebration of the restored independence of the subjugated Confederate. I can't describe the crowds of flying fugitive darkies with bags and bundles, and bandboxes, and chests, and every imaginable variety of baggage, lumber, &c. One woman had a feather bed on her head — all frightened b
From the North. We continue our extracts from late Northern papers, McClellan denies failure to send Pope supplies, in Saturday's Journal of Commer The Washington Star, of the 10th September, denounces Pope's report as false, mischievous, &c., and says it is verbatim the letter of the New York Time's correspondent. The New York Herald of Saturday, 11th says our forces been gone to Hager town on their way to Chambersburg, Pa., Our cavalry have been to Havre de Grace A. New York Herald, coPope's report as false, mischievous, &c., and says it is verbatim the letter of the New York Time's correspondent. The New York Herald of Saturday, 11th says our forces been gone to Hager town on their way to Chambersburg, Pa., Our cavalry have been to Havre de Grace A. New York Herald, correspondent thinks we will hold Frederick City, (on the Monocracy river almost due north from Leesburg,) equal, distant from Washington and Baltimore, and there threaten both cities. He says our army can winter in Maryland, and draw supplies from the Cumberland Valley on Pennsylvania. The change of tone about the danger from our army of invasion is an amusing contrast to the "on to Richmond insanity." Changing front — a usurpation Predicted. The disaster of the past two weeks have occa
Flag of Truce. --Two hundred and fifty of the six hundred Yankee prisoners of war still remaining in Richmond will be dispatched home ward this morning at 10 o'clock, starting from the Libby prison and the hospital attached thereto. Probably two-thirds of the party will consist of disabled men, it being the design to send off all in the hospital willing to go. The following commissioned officers not included amongst those known as "Pope's," will also go down with the soldiers, viz: Second Lieuts. Albert Bonsall, D. Chase, M. Koenigsberg, Thos. Moseley, and Charles Zimmerman; and 1st Lieuts. Abraham Long, R. McAteer, Geo. Wehn, and Capt, David Schortz, all of the 12th Pa., also, 1st Lieut. W. H. Clark, and 2d Lieut. Geo. C. Parker, of the 21st Massachusetts regiment.