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The Daily Dispatch: December 29, 1864., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: December 30, 1864., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 29, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Gold M. Griffin or search for Gold M. Griffin in all documents.

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Charged with robbery. --Lieutenant John T. Gibson was arrested yesterday afternoon and committed to the lower station-house on the charge of stealing one silver watch, valued at four hundred dollars, and three hundred and twenty dollars in Confederate money, from Gold M. Griffin. On the same afternoon, a negro fellow, named William, slave of Mrs. Hobbs, charged with burglariously entering the house of Edward, slave of R. J. Christian, and stealing therefrom six hundred dollars worth of wearing apparel and two hundred dollars in money, was also arrested and locked up.
mber, commanded by General Hardee--had reached Richmond a few hours before he made his escape. There was a report prevailing at the same time to the effect that Fort Fisher, commanding the entrance to Wilmington, had also fallen, through a combined attack by Major-General Butler and Rear-Admiral Porter's forces, but this could not be traced to any reliable source. The spirits of the citizens of Richmond he describes as in a very much depressed state, and it was with difficulty that the authorities could exercise any influence whatever over the press and citizens, such were the frantic manifestations of contempt for the action of the rebel Government. General Griffin is a passenger in the Thomas Culver, and he places the utmost confederate in the statements of this operator, and is of the opinion that the report of the capture of Fort. Fisher is true, as the extensive preparation made by General Butler on the sailing of the expedition warranted this early surrender.