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Browsing named entities in a specific section of J. B. Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary. Search the whole document.
Found 113 total hits in 57 results.
April, 1862 AD (search for this): chapter 14
XIII. April, 1862
Gen. Beauregard succeeds Gen. Sydney Johnston.
Dibble, the traitor.
enemy at Fredericksburg.
they say we will be subdued by the 15th of June.
Lee rapidly concentrating at Richmond.
Webster, the spy, hung.
April 1
Gen. Sydney Johnston having fallen in battle, the command in the West devolved on Gen. Beauregard, whose recent defense at Island No.10 on the Mississippi, has revived his popularity.
But, I repeat, he is a doomed man.
April 2
Gen. Wise is here with his report of the Roanoke disaster.
April 3
Congress is investigating the Roanoke affair.
Mr. Benjamin has been denounced in Congress by Mr. Foote and others as the sole cause of the calamities which have befallen the country.
I wrote a letter to the President, offering to show that I had given no passport to Mr. Dibble, the traitor, and also the evidences, in his own handwriting, that Mr. Benjamin granted it.
April 4
The enemy are shelling our camp at Yorktown.
I c
G. T. Beauregard (search for this): chapter 14
XIII. April, 1862
Gen. Beauregard succeeds Gen. Sydney Johnston.
Dibble, the traitor.
enemy at Fredericksburg.
they say we will be subdued by the 15th of June.
Lee rapidly concentrating at Richmond.
Webster, the spy, hung.
April 1
Gen. Sydney Johnston having fallen in battle, the command in the West devolved on Gen. Beauregard, whose recent defense at Island No.10 on the Mississippi, has revived his popularity.
But, I repeat, he is a doomed man.
April 2
Gen. Wise l be able to hold up his head, sir.
April 14
There will soon be hard fighting on the Peninsula.
April 15
Gen. Beauregard has written to Gen. Wise, offering him a command in his army, if the government will consent to it. It will not be c stian gentleman as well as a consummate general, has been ordered into the field.
He will have a brigade, but not with Beauregard.
The President has unbounded confidence in Lee's capacity, modest as he is.
Another change!
Provost Marshal Godwi
Judah P. Benjamin (search for this): chapter 14
A. T. Bledsoe (search for this): chapter 14
Cromwell (search for this): chapter 14
Dibble (search for this): chapter 14
XIII. April, 1862
Gen. Beauregard succeeds Gen. Sydney Johnston.
Dibble, the traitor.
enemy at Fredericksburg.
they say we will be subdued by the 15th e a letter to the President, offering to show that I had given no passport to Mr. Dibble, the traitor, and also the evidences, in his own handwriting, that Mr. Benjam the invaders.
The enemy were piloted up the river to Newbern by the same Mr. Dibble to whom I refused a passport, but to whom the Secretary of War granted one.
The press everywhere is commenting on the case of Dibble-but Mordecai still sits at the gate.
April 6
Two spies (Lincoln's detective police) have been arres ession of the capital.
April 21
A calm before the storm.
April 22
Dibble, the traitor, has been captured by our soldiers in North Carolina.
April 23
The North Carolinians have refused to give up Dibble to Gen. Winder.
And, moreover, the governor has demanded the rendition of a citizen of his State, who was arr
H. S. Foote (search for this): chapter 14
D. J. Godwin (search for this): chapter 14
Griswold (search for this): chapter 14
Huger (search for this): chapter 14