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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 22, 1865., [Electronic resource].
Found 337 total hits in 171 results.
12th (search for this): article 1
Later from the North.
We have received New York dates of the 18th instant.
Latest Yankee Accounts from Sherman — his destruction of property in the South.
The New York Herald has two pages filled with its army correspondence from Sherman, dated at Fayetteville on the 12th instant.
The letters represent that Sherman has found plenty of provisions in the country along the route, and had left "thousands of bushels of corn on the road for want of transportation." All the farm-houses from Savannah to Columbia from which the inhabitants had fled were burned.
This seems to have been peculiarly joyous to the correspondent, who, in a gush of delight, says:
Think of this black swath extending from Barnwell to the coast, and figure upon the value of Southeastern South Carolina at the present day. Even the negroes were weary — afraid, in some instances, to trust themselves among the men who made this fearful work on the country.
White table-cloths were suspended from windows
18th (search for this): article 1
Later from the North.
We have received New York dates of the 18th instant.
Latest Yankee Accounts from Sherman — his destruction of property in the South.
The New York Herald has two pages filled with its army correspondence from Sherman, dated at Fayetteville on the 12th instant.
The letters represent that Sherman has found plenty of provisions in the country along the route, and had left "thousands of bushels of corn on the road for want of transportation." All the farm-houses from Savannah to Columbia from which the inhabitants had fled were burned.
This seems to have been peculiarly joyous to the correspondent, who, in a gush of delight, says:
Think of this black swath extending from Barnwell to the coast, and figure upon the value of Southeastern South Carolina at the present day. Even the negroes were weary — afraid, in some instances, to trust themselves among the men who made this fearful work on the country.
White table-cloths were suspended from windows
Geary (search for this): article 1
Hampton (search for this): article 1
Lincoln (search for this): article 1
Hardee (search for this): article 1
Butler (search for this): article 1
Sherman (search for this): article 1
Later from the North.
We have received New York dates of the 18th instant.
Latest Yankee Accounts from Sherman — his destruction of property in the South.
The New York Herald has two pages filled with its army correspondence from Sherman, dated at Fayetteville on the 12th instant.
The letters represent that Sherman hSherman, dated at Fayetteville on the 12th instant.
The letters represent that Sherman has found plenty of provisions in the country along the route, and had left "thousands of bushels of corn on the road for want of transportation." All the farm-houses from Savannah to Columbia from which the inhabitants had fled were burned.
This seems to have been peculiarly joyous to the correspondent, who, in a gush of delight, Sherman has found plenty of provisions in the country along the route, and had left "thousands of bushels of corn on the road for want of transportation." All the farm-houses from Savannah to Columbia from which the inhabitants had fled were burned.
This seems to have been peculiarly joyous to the correspondent, who, in a gush of delight, says:
Think of this black swath extending from Barnwell to the coast, and figure upon the value of Southeastern South Carolina at the present day. Even the negroes were weary — afraid, in some instances, to trust themselves among the men who made this fearful work on the country.
White table-cloths were suspended from window
Barnum (search for this): article 1
Giles A. Smith (search for this): article 1