Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 20, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Winder or search for Winder in all documents.

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ned for being in an unlawful assembly at the house of Ellen, slave of Mrs. Hall, near the corner of 12th and Cary streets. The parties were engaged in having a "colored fancy ball," and a number of white men were present. The entry of the police spoilt the fun, as they proceeded to capture the fiddler and the white and colored visitors and carry them to the cage. As application had been made to the Mayor for permission to have the above ball, and it had been refused, the parties went to Gen. Winder, but met with no better success. All of the above named parties were ordered ten inches each. The women part of the crowd were dressed in the most fanciful styles imaginable. They caused a decided sensation as they walked through the streets bedecked with their tawdry spangles and finery, looking like real belles'd Afrique. Three white men, named John P. Brooks, Seymour Sawyer, and Harvy Huster, were next arraigned on the charge of associating with negroes, having been arrested at the