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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: August 12, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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West Virginia (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
ginning of the war to the present moment. The only one we now recollect is a telegraphic dispatch published soon after Gen. McClellan had reached a point in Western Virginia, where he could have marched upon Staunton without any difficulty, and thus taken Manassas in the rear, and gone pretty much where he pleased, that he had go their various attacks upon our land batteries? Who more indebted than Gen. McClellan to the Northern press, which has so trumpeted his successes, gained in Western Virginia by the most tremendous odds, that they have made a great man of him, and puffed him to the head of the army? No one ought to understand better the value of an ingenious lie than the military leader who informs the world under his own hand that he lost only twenty men in Western Virginia. The inventive genius that was capable of such an achievement, has no reason to be jealous of the most fertile invention in the daily press. A grateful man ought not to kick ever the ladder that has
Bull Run, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
to hold their tongues. If there are any men in the North under special obligations to the press of their section, it is the Northern military. Every victory they have gained has been gained in their newspapers, and nowhere else. Who can count the achievements which these knights of the pen have attributed to the knights of the sword? How adroitly these newspapers, which published so much, covered up the ghastly number of their dead and wounded at Rich Mountain, at Bethel, at Vienna, at Bull Run, and even at Manassas! Who can tell to this day the number that has been slaughtered upon the decks of their vessels in their various attacks upon our land batteries? Who more indebted than Gen. McClellan to the Northern press, which has so trumpeted his successes, gained in Western Virginia by the most tremendous odds, that they have made a great man of him, and puffed him to the head of the army? No one ought to understand better the value of an ingenious lie than the military leader w
Vienna (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
y suggestion to hold their tongues. If there are any men in the North under special obligations to the press of their section, it is the Northern military. Every victory they have gained has been gained in their newspapers, and nowhere else. Who can count the achievements which these knights of the pen have attributed to the knights of the sword? How adroitly these newspapers, which published so much, covered up the ghastly number of their dead and wounded at Rich Mountain, at Bethel, at Vienna, at Bull Run, and even at Manassas! Who can tell to this day the number that has been slaughtered upon the decks of their vessels in their various attacks upon our land batteries? Who more indebted than Gen. McClellan to the Northern press, which has so trumpeted his successes, gained in Western Virginia by the most tremendous odds, that they have made a great man of him, and puffed him to the head of the army? No one ought to understand better the value of an ingenious lie than the milit
Rich Mountain (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
thern press, this military suggestion to hold their tongues. If there are any men in the North under special obligations to the press of their section, it is the Northern military. Every victory they have gained has been gained in their newspapers, and nowhere else. Who can count the achievements which these knights of the pen have attributed to the knights of the sword? How adroitly these newspapers, which published so much, covered up the ghastly number of their dead and wounded at Rich Mountain, at Bethel, at Vienna, at Bull Run, and even at Manassas! Who can tell to this day the number that has been slaughtered upon the decks of their vessels in their various attacks upon our land batteries? Who more indebted than Gen. McClellan to the Northern press, which has so trumpeted his successes, gained in Western Virginia by the most tremendous odds, that they have made a great man of him, and puffed him to the head of the army? No one ought to understand better the value of an in
McClellan (search for this): article 1
Gen. McClellan and the Press. It seems that Gen. McClellan has called a convention of editors, and endeavored to impress upon them the iGen. McClellan has called a convention of editors, and endeavored to impress upon them the importance of not publishing any news in relation to military movements, a preliminary step, probably, to a censorship of the Northern journalse Southern press in general has learned to hold its tongue, and Gen. McClellan is trying to teach the same lesson to the Northern journalists.we now recollect is a telegraphic dispatch published soon after Gen. McClellan had reached a point in Western Virginia, where he could have maned out to be true after all. But that truth was the fault of General McClellan, and not of the press. In fact, it is a poor return to tarious attacks upon our land batteries? Who more indebted than Gen. McClellan to the Northern press, which has so trumpeted his successes, gahat has failed him in the world. We do not understand that Gen. McClellan prohibits the Northern press from chronicling battles after the