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
United States (United States) 20 0 Browse Search
Joe Johnston 11 1 Browse Search
Americans 6 0 Browse Search
Hon George Davis 6 0 Browse Search
David Dawson 6 0 Browse Search
Lee 5 5 Browse Search
Drewry's Bluff (Virginia, United States) 4 0 Browse Search
Lawton 4 2 Browse Search
Index 4 0 Browse Search
Jefferson Davis 4 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 23, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 12 total hits in 6 results.

Essex County (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 3
ct suitable covering for the protection of artillery belonging to the State. In the Housethe business was of a desultory and unimportant character. The following bills were passed: A bill incorporating the Porcelain and Earthenware Company, of Augusta county; vacating the commissions of officers of the militia; punishing the harboring and employing of slaves; for the relief of Wm. C. R. Douglass, late steward of the Eastern Lunatic Asylum; for the relief of Wm. C. Prince, of Essex county. From the Committee of Finance a bill was reported requiring certain corporate companies to sell to consumers at the same prices demanded of merchants, by the piece or package, without any preference to merchants over consumers. The bill was read twice. A preamble and resolution were adopted looking to the displacement, by the Confederate Government, of its impressment agents, their return to the service, and the supplying of their places by citizens of the counties who are ab
Augusta county (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 3
d, if possible, the residence of the persons to whom they are due. The following bills were passed. For the relief of W. G. Singleton; making an appropriation to the Virginia Military Institute; authorizing the Governor to erect suitable covering for the protection of artillery belonging to the State. In the Housethe business was of a desultory and unimportant character. The following bills were passed: A bill incorporating the Porcelain and Earthenware Company, of Augusta county; vacating the commissions of officers of the militia; punishing the harboring and employing of slaves; for the relief of Wm. C. R. Douglass, late steward of the Eastern Lunatic Asylum; for the relief of Wm. C. Prince, of Essex county. From the Committee of Finance a bill was reported requiring certain corporate companies to sell to consumers at the same prices demanded of merchants, by the piece or package, without any preference to merchants over consumers. The bill was read twic
Oklahoma (Oklahoma, United States) (search for this): article 3
House to Senate bill for employing free negroes, convicted of misdemeanors, in the public service or for the public benefit, were disagreed to. The House amendments to Senate bill increasing the salaries of certain officers of Government were agreed to. A communication from the Governor, enclosing an application from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the Secretary of War, asking for the payment of the interest on Virginia bonds held by the U. S. Government in trust for the Cherokee nation, be paid into the C. S. Treasury, was referred and ordered to be printed. A resolution of inquiry was adopted as to the amount of debts due from the State now outstanding, the dates at which the same were due, and, if possible, the residence of the persons to whom they are due. The following bills were passed. For the relief of W. G. Singleton; making an appropriation to the Virginia Military Institute; authorizing the Governor to erect suitable covering for the protection
William C. Prince (search for this): article 3
e Governor to erect suitable covering for the protection of artillery belonging to the State. In the Housethe business was of a desultory and unimportant character. The following bills were passed: A bill incorporating the Porcelain and Earthenware Company, of Augusta county; vacating the commissions of officers of the militia; punishing the harboring and employing of slaves; for the relief of Wm. C. R. Douglass, late steward of the Eastern Lunatic Asylum; for the relief of Wm. C. Prince, of Essex county. From the Committee of Finance a bill was reported requiring certain corporate companies to sell to consumers at the same prices demanded of merchants, by the piece or package, without any preference to merchants over consumers. The bill was read twice. A preamble and resolution were adopted looking to the displacement, by the Confederate Government, of its impressment agents, their return to the service, and the supplying of their places by citizens of the c
William C. R. Douglass (search for this): article 3
eton; making an appropriation to the Virginia Military Institute; authorizing the Governor to erect suitable covering for the protection of artillery belonging to the State. In the Housethe business was of a desultory and unimportant character. The following bills were passed: A bill incorporating the Porcelain and Earthenware Company, of Augusta county; vacating the commissions of officers of the militia; punishing the harboring and employing of slaves; for the relief of Wm. C. R. Douglass, late steward of the Eastern Lunatic Asylum; for the relief of Wm. C. Prince, of Essex county. From the Committee of Finance a bill was reported requiring certain corporate companies to sell to consumers at the same prices demanded of merchants, by the piece or package, without any preference to merchants over consumers. The bill was read twice. A preamble and resolution were adopted looking to the displacement, by the Confederate Government, of its impressment agents, thei
W. G. Singleton (search for this): article 3
irs to the Secretary of War, asking for the payment of the interest on Virginia bonds held by the U. S. Government in trust for the Cherokee nation, be paid into the C. S. Treasury, was referred and ordered to be printed. A resolution of inquiry was adopted as to the amount of debts due from the State now outstanding, the dates at which the same were due, and, if possible, the residence of the persons to whom they are due. The following bills were passed. For the relief of W. G. Singleton; making an appropriation to the Virginia Military Institute; authorizing the Governor to erect suitable covering for the protection of artillery belonging to the State. In the Housethe business was of a desultory and unimportant character. The following bills were passed: A bill incorporating the Porcelain and Earthenware Company, of Augusta county; vacating the commissions of officers of the militia; punishing the harboring and employing of slaves; for the relief of Wm. C