hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
E. W. Russell 58 0 Browse Search
A. T. Caperton 50 0 Browse Search
United States (United States) 32 0 Browse Search
J. B. Floyd 22 0 Browse Search
Rosecrans 18 0 Browse Search
John Randolph Tucker 16 0 Browse Search
William C. Rives 16 0 Browse Search
John B. Floyd 15 1 Browse Search
Walter Preston 14 2 Browse Search
Lincoln 14 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 19, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 708 total hits in 332 results.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ...
[Southern Association Dispatches.]important from the West. brilliant Feat of Gen'l Wheeler--the railroad bridge burnt in rear of Rosecrans — a gunboat and four transports destroyed--four hundred prisoners captured. Mobile, Jan. 18. --The Advertiser and Register has received the following official dispatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's spatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's rear, rushed for the Cumberland river, where he intercepted and captured four large transports, destroyed three with all the supplies, and bearded one to carry off four hundred paroled prisoners.--Being hotly pursued by a gunboat, he attacked captured, and destroyed her, with her whole armament. [signed]Braxton Bragg.
January 17th (search for this): article 1
[Southern Association Dispatches.]important from the West. brilliant Feat of Gen'l Wheeler--the railroad bridge burnt in rear of Rosecrans — a gunboat and four transports destroyed--four hundred prisoners captured. Mobile, Jan. 18. --The Advertiser and Register has received the following official dispatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's rear, rushed for the Cumberland river, where he intercepted and captured four large transports, destroyed three with all the supplies, and bearded one to carry off four hundred paroled prisoners.--Being hotly pursued by a gunboat, he attacked captured, and destroyed her, with her whole armament. [signed]Braxton Bragg.
Braxton Bragg (search for this): article 1
[Southern Association Dispatches.]important from the West. brilliant Feat of Gen'l Wheeler--the railroad bridge burnt in rear of Rosecrans — a gunboat and four transports destroyed--four hundred prisoners captured. Mobile, Jan. 18. --The Advertiser and Register has received the following official dispatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's rear, rushed for the Cumberland river, where he intercepted and captured four large transports, destroyed three with all the supplies, and bearded one to carry off four hundred paroled prisoners.--Being hotly pursued by a gunboat, he attacked captured, and destroyed her, with her whole armament. [signed]Braxton Bragg.
January 18th (search for this): article 1
[Southern Association Dispatches.]important from the West. brilliant Feat of Gen'l Wheeler--the railroad bridge burnt in rear of Rosecrans — a gunboat and four transports destroyed--four hundred prisoners captured. Mobile, Jan. 18. --The Advertiser and Register has received the following official dispatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's rear, rushed for the Cumberland river, where he intercepted and captured four large transports, destroyed three with all the supplies, and bearded one to carry off four hundred paroled prisoners.--Being hotly pursued by a gunboat, he attacked captured, and destroyed her, with her whole armament. [signed]Braxton Bragg.
Cumberland River (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 1
[Southern Association Dispatches.]important from the West. brilliant Feat of Gen'l Wheeler--the railroad bridge burnt in rear of Rosecrans — a gunboat and four transports destroyed--four hundred prisoners captured. Mobile, Jan. 18. --The Advertiser and Register has received the following official dispatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's rear, rushed for the Cumberland river, where he intercepted and captured four large transports, destroyed three with all the supplies, and bearded one to carry off four hundred paroled prisoners.--Being hotly pursued by a gunboat, he attacked captured, and destroyed her, with her whole armament. [signed]Braxton Bragg.
Tullahoma (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 1
[Southern Association Dispatches.]important from the West. brilliant Feat of Gen'l Wheeler--the railroad bridge burnt in rear of Rosecrans — a gunboat and four transports destroyed--four hundred prisoners captured. Mobile, Jan. 18. --The Advertiser and Register has received the following official dispatch: Tullahoma, January 17th. To General S. B. Buckner: Gen. Wheeler, with a portion of his cavalry brigade, after burning the railroad bridge in the enemy's rear, rushed for the Cumberland river, where he intercepted and captured four large transports, destroyed three with all the supplies, and bearded one to carry off four hundred paroled prisoners.--Being hotly pursued by a gunboat, he attacked captured, and destroyed her, with her whole armament. [signed]Braxton Bragg.
ident Davis will more fully command public approval than his exposition of the relations of the Confederate States and Europe. The position that the neutrality of Europe has consisted only in profession, and that she has practically and powerfully co-operated with the North in this war, is demonstrated by facts and arguments which cannot be gainsaid. The English Government, which has dictated the European policy towards the Confederate States, may be regarded as the most influential ally of Seward in his attempt to subvert the liberties and independence of the Southern people. Not that the majority of the English people sympathize with the North, nor that the Government itself desires the conquest of the South or the reconstruction of the Union. Nothing can be further from their wishes or designs. They simply desire the thorough exhaustion of both belligerents, so as to remove from their path a hated rival. Every principle of English policy and of passion point with the clearness
deavored to both the espling, giving aid and comfort through her Government to the North, and through her to the South--now cheering one section, and now plating the other on the head — only anxious that each might rend and destroy the other. The only consolation is that she has now that roughly lost the confidence of both belligerency, and which President Davis, in mild and manly terms, sets forth that fact in his Message to Congress, the Washington Republic, the gemb official organ of Lincoln, declares that the United States would accept mediation sooner from any other European Power than what it designator, in the language of Frenchmen, "Perfidious Albion." We hope never to see the slightest importance attached beteafter to any express on of sentiment in Great Britain upon American affairs. The only voice that has been raised officially in Europe in behalf of suffering humanity in this contest, is that of the great Empire of the French. We hope the day is not far distant
Europe and the Confederate States. No part of the admirable Message of President Davis will more fully command public approval than his exposition of the relations of the Confederate States and Europe. The position that the neutrality of Europe has consisted only in profession, and that she has practically and powerfully co-operated with the North in this war, is demonstrated by facts and arguments which cannot be gainsaid. The English Government, which has dictated the European policy t the South--now cheering one section, and now plating the other on the head — only anxious that each might rend and destroy the other. The only consolation is that she has now that roughly lost the confidence of both belligerency, and which President Davis, in mild and manly terms, sets forth that fact in his Message to Congress, the Washington Republic, the gemb official organ of Lincoln, declares that the United States would accept mediation sooner from any other European Power than what it
ng the other on the head — only anxious that each might rend and destroy the other. The only consolation is that she has now that roughly lost the confidence of both belligerency, and which President Davis, in mild and manly terms, sets forth that fact in his Message to Congress, the Washington Republic, the gemb official organ of Lincoln, declares that the United States would accept mediation sooner from any other European Power than what it designator, in the language of Frenchmen, "Perfidious Albion." We hope never to see the slightest importance attached beteafter to any express on of sentiment in Great Britain upon American affairs. The only voice that has been raised officially in Europe in behalf of suffering humanity in this contest, is that of the great Empire of the French. We hope the day is not far distant when the Southern Confederacy, its independence recognized by the world, will be able to show its first and only friend that it is not forgetful nor ungrateful.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ...