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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: October 25, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 12 total hits in 5 results.
Ascension Parish, La. (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): article 7
Barbarity of the enemy in Louisiana.
--Hon Albert Duffel, a Judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, died suddenly in Ascension Parish, in that State, on the 1st inst. A letter says:
The Yankees were that day in possession of Dillie, so we took the body to a burial ground ten miles down the Bayon, but when there we received a message stating that we would be allowed to bury the body in the family vault in Dillie.
The body was taken back, and whilst the funeral cortege was entering Dillie under a permit of Col. McMillan, of the 21st Indiana regiment, it was fired upon six times by the gunboats, every ball passing just over the carriages in which ladies and children wire.
Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): article 7
Barbarity of the enemy in Louisiana.
--Hon Albert Duffel, a Judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, died suddenly in Ascension Parish, in that State, on the 1st inst. A letter says:
The Yankees were that day in possession of Dillie, so we took the body to a burial ground ten miles down the Bayon, but when there we received a message stating that we would be allowed to bury the body in the family vault in Dillie.
The body was taken back, and whilst the funeral cortege was entering Louisiana, died suddenly in Ascension Parish, in that State, on the 1st inst. A letter says:
The Yankees were that day in possession of Dillie, so we took the body to a burial ground ten miles down the Bayon, but when there we received a message stating that we would be allowed to bury the body in the family vault in Dillie.
The body was taken back, and whilst the funeral cortege was entering Dillie under a permit of Col. McMillan, of the 21st Indiana regiment, it was fired upon six times by the gunboats, every ball passing just over the carriages in which ladies and children wire.
Hon Albert Duffel (search for this): article 7
Barbarity of the enemy in Louisiana.
--Hon Albert Duffel, a Judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, died suddenly in Ascension Parish, in that State, on the 1st inst. A letter says:
The Yankees were that day in possession of Dillie, so we took the body to a burial ground ten miles down the Bayon, but when there we received a message stating that we would be allowed to bury the body in the family vault in Dillie.
The body was taken back, and whilst the funeral cortege was entering Dillie under a permit of Col. McMillan, of the 21st Indiana regiment, it was fired upon six times by the gunboats, every ball passing just over the carriages in which ladies and children wire.
McMillan (search for this): article 7
Barbarity of the enemy in Louisiana.
--Hon Albert Duffel, a Judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, died suddenly in Ascension Parish, in that State, on the 1st inst. A letter says:
The Yankees were that day in possession of Dillie, so we took the body to a burial ground ten miles down the Bayon, but when there we received a message stating that we would be allowed to bury the body in the family vault in Dillie.
The body was taken back, and whilst the funeral cortege was entering Dillie under a permit of Col. McMillan, of the 21st Indiana regiment, it was fired upon six times by the gunboats, every ball passing just over the carriages in which ladies and children wire.
1st (search for this): article 7
Barbarity of the enemy in Louisiana.
--Hon Albert Duffel, a Judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, died suddenly in Ascension Parish, in that State, on the 1st inst. A letter says:
The Yankees were that day in possession of Dillie, so we took the body to a burial ground ten miles down the Bayon, but when there we received a message stating that we would be allowed to bury the body in the family vault in Dillie.
The body was taken back, and whilst the funeral cortege was entering Dillie under a permit of Col. McMillan, of the 21st Indiana regiment, it was fired upon six times by the gunboats, every ball passing just over the carriages in which ladies and children wire.