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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 10, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 447 total hits in 213 results.

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Felix T. Thedson (search for this): article 10
Judge Meredith held his Court yesterday and disposed of the following business; Felix T. Thedson, a minor, was discharged from the army on a writ of habeas corpus. In the case of Sarah Ferrand, indicted for engaging in a riot on the 21 April, a nolle prosequi was entered. Daura Gordon, tried in the Circuit Court for a misdemeanor and found guilty by the jury, and who it will be recollected took laudanum when the result of the trial was known, was this day brought into Court and sentence was passed upon her, which was that the be confined in jail for four hours.
Sarah Ferrand (search for this): article 10
Judge Meredith held his Court yesterday and disposed of the following business; Felix T. Thedson, a minor, was discharged from the army on a writ of habeas corpus. In the case of Sarah Ferrand, indicted for engaging in a riot on the 21 April, a nolle prosequi was entered. Daura Gordon, tried in the Circuit Court for a misdemeanor and found guilty by the jury, and who it will be recollected took laudanum when the result of the trial was known, was this day brought into Court and sentence was passed upon her, which was that the be confined in jail for four hours.
Daura Gordon (search for this): article 10
Judge Meredith held his Court yesterday and disposed of the following business; Felix T. Thedson, a minor, was discharged from the army on a writ of habeas corpus. In the case of Sarah Ferrand, indicted for engaging in a riot on the 21 April, a nolle prosequi was entered. Daura Gordon, tried in the Circuit Court for a misdemeanor and found guilty by the jury, and who it will be recollected took laudanum when the result of the trial was known, was this day brought into Court and sentence was passed upon her, which was that the be confined in jail for four hours.
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 11
Prison Record. --At Castle Thunder the arrivals amounted to about forty, most of them being the ordinary desertion or army delinquent cases. The records do not show any aggravated cases in the list. At the Libby there was but one Yankee received. He was captured in, and sent on from, North Carolina.
Culpeper (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 12
Fighting in Culpeper. Passengers by the Central train last evening report having heard heavy cannonading in Culpeper county yesterday morning, about 11 o'clock. As the train was on its way down no particulars of the fight were ascertained.
William Fitzgerald (search for this): article 12
Continued. --The charge against Wm. Fitzgerald, of feloniously shooting, with intent to kill, John Troner, a city watchman, was not disposed of yesterday, because of the inability of Troner to attend as a witness. The accused, it is alleged, did the shooting without provocation.
John Troner (search for this): article 12
Continued. --The charge against Wm. Fitzgerald, of feloniously shooting, with intent to kill, John Troner, a city watchman, was not disposed of yesterday, because of the inability of Troner to attend as a witness. The accused, it is alleged, did the shooting without provocation.
Stonewall Jackson (search for this): article 13
my of the Potomac is only changing camps. Fifty-six prisoners, captured at Fredericksburg, arrived at Washington on Saturday night. Gold was quoted at 142½, a decline of 3½ on the quotations of Friday. A dispatch to the Cincinnati Commercial, dated Vicksburg, the 30th, says: A deserter came into our lines this morning. He represents that he was sent by Gen. Pemberton to communicate verbally with Gens. Johnston and Loring. The former is supposed to be between the Big Black river and Jackson. The latter was near Port Gibson. He represents affairs in the city as growing desperate. About eighteen thousand effective men are there, two-thirds of whom are kept on the fortifications night and day, and not allowed to leave an instant on any pretext. Gens. Pemberton, Lee, Reynolds, Stevenson and others are in the city. Most of the sick left the city before its investment. Those who remain have excavated caves and remain in them night and day. Valuable merchandize in the c
ght near Franklin A dispatch has been published giving a brief Yankee account of a fight between the Confederate and their cavalry, near Franklin, Tenn. A dispatch from Murfreesboro', dated the 4th, says: The rebels have been reconnoitering on our front. Yesterday Wheeler appeared on the Manchester, and this morning on the Shelbyville road. Brisk skirmishing has been kept up all day. The Second Indiana cavalry, on picket duty, was first attacked, and the Thirty ninth Indiana. Col. Harrison, of the first brigade of Gen. Davis's division, was subsequently sent to their assistance. The rebels were driven about a mile. Our loss was only one man killed and several wounded. The Fourth cavalry was engaged at the same time on the Middletown road. In this last fight seven were killed and wounded. Col. McCook reports hearing heavy firing in the direction of Triune. Gen. Granger telegraphs that Gen. Baird, of the 85th Indiana, in command at Franklin, was attacked to-d
tely impossible. It is simply a precautionary measure which should have been taken months ago. An Impudent raid by Mosby. The Yankee papers publish an "impudent" raid by Mosby on the Federal relief reserve picket, on the Frying Pan road, Mosby on the Federal relief reserve picket, on the Frying Pan road, near Fairfax C. H., on the 4th inst. The dispatch says: They came suddenly on the relief, intermingling themselves so much that they could not be distinguished from our own soldiers, and, as they wore the Federal uniform, it was difficult to dalry, then started in pursuit, and, as far as heard from, has only succeeded in capturing a rebel surgeon. He represents Mosby to be in command on this occasion, with a force of from fifty to one hundred men, and says that his (Mosby's) horse was sMosby's) horse was shot and one man killed. Major-General Stahl and Gen. Copeland have started for the scene of action. The Recent Cavalry fight near Franklin A dispatch has been published giving a brief Yankee account of a fight between the Confederate and
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