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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: April 11, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 5 total hits in 3 results.

Lynchburg (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 5
Returned. Maj. G. C. Hutter, Paymaster U. S. Army, who has for some time been stationed at Charleston, returned to this city, where his family reside, on Tuesday. We learn that the Major expressed the confident belief, in conversation with his friends here, that a conflict between the Southern troops and Maj> Anderson at Fort Sumter is inevitable, as he does not believe the fort will be evacuated. The Major, who has the best opportunity of getting accurate information on the subject, also thinks that a fearful conflict is about to be inaugurated between the Southern and Northern Confederacies, and that are long we shall see brother arrayed against brother, and friend against friend, in bloody strife.--Lynchburg (Va.) kep.
Returned. Maj. G. C. Hutter, Paymaster U. S. Army, who has for some time been stationed at Charleston, returned to this city, where his family reside, on Tuesday. We learn that the Major expressed the confident belief, in conversation with his friends here, that a conflict between the Southern troops and Maj> Anderson at Fort Sumter is inevitable, as he does not believe the fort will be evacuated. The Major, who has the best opportunity of getting accurate information on the subject, also thinks that a fearful conflict is about to be inaugurated between the Southern and Northern Confederacies, and that are long we shall see brother arrayed against brother, and friend against friend, in bloody strife.--Lynchburg (Va.) kep.
G. C. Hutter (search for this): article 5
Returned. Maj. G. C. Hutter, Paymaster U. S. Army, who has for some time been stationed at Charleston, returned to this city, where his family reside, on Tuesday. We learn that the Major expressed the confident belief, in conversation with his friends here, that a conflict between the Southern troops and Maj> Anderson at Fort Sumter is inevitable, as he does not believe the fort will be evacuated. The Major, who has the best opportunity of getting accurate information on the subject, also thinks that a fearful conflict is about to be inaugurated between the Southern and Northern Confederacies, and that are long we shall see brother arrayed against brother, and friend against friend, in bloody strife.--Lynchburg (Va.) kep.