Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 19, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for November 18th or search for November 18th in all documents.

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The Daily Dispatch: November 19, 1863., [Electronic resource], Annual report of the Virginia Central Railroad. (search)
From Charleston. Charleston, Nov. 18. --A slow but steady fire has been kept up on Fort Sumter last night and this morning from the enemy's mortar batteries. Everything else quiet.--No casualties at Sumter for the past two days. Major Elliott and the garrison are all well. [second Dispatch.] Charleston, Nov. 18. P. M. --The firing on Fort Sumter continues steady. Our mortar battery on Sullivan's Island has been shelling Gregg and the Cummings Point batteries all day. No casualties at Sumter for the past two days. Major Elliott and the garrison are all well. [second Dispatch.] Charleston, Nov. 18. P. M. --The firing on Fort Sumter continues steady. Our mortar battery on Sullivan's Island has been shelling Gregg and the Cummings Point batteries all day. No casualties at Sumter to-day. The enemy fired at long range to-day up Cooper river at a passing steamer, it is supposed with one of the same guns with which they have been firing into the city.
From Chattanooga. Atlanta, Nov. 18. --Advices from the front unimportant. A special to the Intelligencer says: "A battery planted on an eminence near the mouth of Chickamauga opened yesterday on the enemy's camps on the opposite side of the Tennessee river and after a furious shelling for half an hour, with great effect, the enemy dispersed in every direction. They attempted to reply with two guns, but were completely driven from their position."
Yankee news and views. Mobile, Nov. 18. --A special dispatch to the Register, from Oxford to-day, gives advices from Memphis to the 14th inst. It is reported that General Burnside's resignation has been accepted, and that General Foster will succeed him. General Sherman is reported killed in an engagement with General S. D. Lee. Iuka was burned by the Confederates on the 10th. A telegram dated Washington, 11th, inst., says that Seward had refused to allow recruiting in the United States for the Juarez Government of Mexico, and will prosecute offenders. The Washington correspondent of the Chicago Times says that the restoration of the Union is almost hopeless, and, if restored, the United States will find themselves with a dependency of the French Emperor on the Southwestern frontier. A Republican Administration has abandoned the Monroe doctrine, and by pursuing aggressive measures to coerce the South has given them an ally in Napoleon, whose assistance w