Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 21, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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thdraw his fleet, being satisfied that the city cannot be taken by water. The arrival of the steamer Roanoke at New York Tuesday announces the fact that another privateer is at large on the ocean. It appears that Captain Scott, of the United States steamer De Sote, informed Captain Drew, of the Roanoke, that he heard, from reliable quarters, that there was a rebel privateer cruising to the westward of Havana, she being a bark rigged steamer, painted lead color. This is important, especially as it concerns the Aspinwall line of steamers. The last news from Europe brings intelligence of the death of Sir William Brown, of Liverpool, a son of Alexander Brown, of Baltimore. Mr. F. Waldron is the person who tells the story of the alleged interview, at the battle of Antietam, between Generals McClellan and Lee. His respectability is said to be indorsed by General Milroy. He is now at Washington, whither he has been summoned to give his testimony before the War Committee.
McClellan's statement of his losses. McClellan, in the official report which he has just published, puts down his losses in the battles around Richmond, from the 26th June to the first of July inclusive, at 4,582 killed, 7,700 wounded, and 5,9McClellan, in the official report which he has just published, puts down his losses in the battles around Richmond, from the 26th June to the first of July inclusive, at 4,582 killed, 7,700 wounded, and 5,958 missing; total, 15,249. When it is recollected that the Confederates actually took, brought away, and confined upon the island, and in other prisons, more than 11,000 men, we may be enable to judge of the claim which this document has to be cons proverb, is as good as the truth. To cover one of the most shameful, as well as complete defeats recorded in history, McClellan's vanity prompted him to indulge in a system of deliberate falsehood, which justly brought upon him the derision of thee. His employers saw through his devices, as his opponents had already done from the beginning. No man — least of all McClellan himself — believes a word of what he writes. He has found his proper level, and all the lying reports which he can man