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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 3. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 36 total hits in 15 results.
Port Royal (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 175
Doc.
166. the capture of the Mabel.
Commodore Dupont's report.
the following official report from Commodore Dupont describes the capture of the British schooner Mabel:
flag-ship Wabash, Port Royal Harbob, November 18, 1861.
sir: I have the honor to report that Commander E. M. Yard, of the United States steamer Dale, captured the British schooner Mabel, on the evening of the 15th instant, in lat. 31 deg. 10 min., and lon. 80 deg. 52 min. 30 sec. west, and brought her into this harbor.
She purported to be from Havana and bound for New York, but at the time of her capture was heading for St. Catherine's Sound.
Her cargo consists of seven bales blankets, four cases cloth, two cases saddles and bridles, three boxes starch, twenty-five boxes tin, one hundred and twenty boxes coffee, twenty barrels potatoes, three hundred and fifty pigs of lead, thirty bags of shot, one box shoes, six bags arrow root, one case pistols, (revolvers,) and two cases of cavalry swords.
Washington (United States) (search for this): chapter 175
United States (United States) (search for this): chapter 175
Havana, N. Y. (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 175
Nassau River (Florida, United States) (search for this): chapter 175
St. Catherine's Sound (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 175
Baltimore, Md. (Maryland, United States) (search for this): chapter 175
S. F. Dupont (search for this): chapter 175
Doc.
166. the capture of the Mabel.
Commodore Dupont's report.
the following official report from Commodore Dupont describes the capture of the British schooner Mabel:
flag-ship Wabash, Port Royal Harbob, November 18, 1861.
sir: I have the honor to report that Commander E. M. Yard, of the United States steamer Dale, captured the British schooner Mabel, on the evening of the 15th instant, in lat. 31 deg. 10 min., and lon. 80 deg. 52 min. 30 sec. west, and brought her into this Commodore Dupont describes the capture of the British schooner Mabel:
flag-ship Wabash, Port Royal Harbob, November 18, 1861.
sir: I have the honor to report that Commander E. M. Yard, of the United States steamer Dale, captured the British schooner Mabel, on the evening of the 15th instant, in lat. 31 deg. 10 min., and lon. 80 deg. 52 min. 30 sec. west, and brought her into this harbor.
She purported to be from Havana and bound for New York, but at the time of her capture was heading for St. Catherine's Sound.
Her cargo consists of seven bales blankets, four cases cloth, two cases saddles and bridles, three boxes starch, twenty-five boxes tin, one hundred and twenty boxes coffee, twenty barrels potatoes, three hundred and fifty pigs of lead, thirty bags of shot, one box shoes, six bags arrow root, one case pistols, (revolvers,) and two cases of cavalry swords.
Gideon Welles (search for this): chapter 175
E. M. Yard (search for this): chapter 175
Doc.
166. the capture of the Mabel.
Commodore Dupont's report.
the following official report from Commodore Dupont describes the capture of the British schooner Mabel:
flag-ship Wabash, Port Royal Harbob, November 18, 1861.
sir: I have the honor to report that Commander E. M. Yard, of the United States steamer Dale, captured the British schooner Mabel, on the evening of the 15th instant, in lat. 31 deg. 10 min., and lon. 80 deg. 52 min. 30 sec. west, and brought her into this harbor.
She purported to be from Havana and bound for New York, but at the time of her capture was heading for St. Catherine's Sound.
Her cargo consists of seven bales blankets, four cases cloth, two cases saddles and bridles, three boxes starch, twenty-five boxes tin, one hundred and twenty boxes coffee, twenty barrels potatoes, three hundred and fifty pigs of lead, thirty bags of shot, one box shoes, six bags arrow root, one case pistols, (revolvers,) and two cases of cavalry swords.