Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 13, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Arnold or search for Arnold in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

tion ball — the Vice-President Johnson still Drunk. The inauguration ball at Washington appears, from the accounts of the Yankee letter-writers themselves, to have been a very complete exhibition of rowdy vulgarity. We copy the concluding portion of a description of it given in the New York Herald: The President and Mrs. Lincoln did not dance, nor did the grave Secretaries trip the "light fantastic." There was a court set, however. Vice-Admiral Farragut, Major- General Banks, Congressman Arnold, and an attache of one of the legations, danced the Lancers together. Miss Buchanan, daughter of Commodore Buchanan, of the Boston Navy-Yard, and Miss Wilson, of Chicago, were in this set. An admiring crowd surrounded the party, and they danced with a grace and spirit unequalled by any others of the large company. The notabilities did not keep together or dance together, but mingled freely with the crowd. Some of the distinguished people were conspicuous from their absence. Neither