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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 6, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 13 total hits in 5 results.
Cape Fear (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 16
Double murder.
--The Wilmington (N. C.) Journal learns that on last Friday evening the body of James Steele, a fisherman, we believe, was found in or near the Northeast Branch of the Cape Fear River, about half a mile above the site of Hilton Bridge, and on the far side of the river from town.
His head exhibited such evidence of injuries, apparently inflicted by an axe, as to leave no doubt of his having come to his death by violence.
On Saturday, Coroner Jones, with a jury of inquest, was engaged in the investigation of the case.
Some three men, of rather doubtful character, who were the last persons seen with the deceased, and who were to have gone with him or joined him in his fishing, were arrested on suspicion.
A free negro named Clem Maner, or Manor, who started at the same time with Steele, but in a separate boat, was also missed at the same time, and his body has been found but a short distance from where Steele's was found.
An axe, evidently that with which
Wilmington, N. C. (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 16
Double murder.
--The Wilmington (N. C.) Journal learns that on last Friday evening the body of James Steele, a fisherman, we believe, was found in or near the Northeast Branch of the Cape Fear River, about half a mile above the site of Hilton Bridge, and on the far side of the river from town.
His head exhibited such evidence of injuries, apparently inflicted by an axe, as to leave no doubt of his having come to his death by violence.
On Saturday, Coroner Jones, with a jury of inquest, was engaged in the investigation of the case.
Some three men, of rather doubtful character, who were the last persons seen with the deceased, and who were to have gone with him or joined him in his fishing, were arrested on suspicion.
A free negro named Clem Maner, or Manor, who started at the same time with Steele, but in a separate boat, was also missed at the same time, and his body has been found but a short distance from where Steele's was found.
An axe, evidently that with which
Jones (search for this): article 16
Double murder.
--The Wilmington (N. C.) Journal learns that on last Friday evening the body of James Steele, a fisherman, we believe, was found in or near the Northeast Branch of the Cape Fear River, about half a mile above the site of Hilton Bridge, and on the far side of the river from town.
His head exhibited such evidence of injuries, apparently inflicted by an axe, as to leave no doubt of his having come to his death by violence.
On Saturday, Coroner Jones, with a jury of inquest, was engaged in the investigation of the case.
Some three men, of rather doubtful character, who were the last persons seen with the deceased, and who were to have gone with him or joined him in his fishing, were arrested on suspicion.
A free negro named Clem Maner, or Manor, who started at the same time with Steele, but in a separate boat, was also missed at the same time, and his body has been found but a short distance from where Steele's was found.
An axe, evidently that with which
Clem (search for this): article 16
James Steele (search for this): article 16