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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 17, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 9 total hits in 5 results.
Shenandoah (United States) (search for this): article 10
Piedmont, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 10
Peyton Johnston (search for this): article 10
McClellan (search for this): article 10
Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.
the Thomas Artillery — a long march under adverse circumstance — the part taken at the Batter of Manassas.
Thomas Artillery, Wm. Qrs., Jan. 14.
In my last communication I stated some things, inadvertently, which might give aid to McClellan, and you suppressed it. I thought of my error before I saw it in print, and was glad to find that it was not published.
I think it due to the Dispatch that the public should be informed of the fact that it is as earnestly avoiding the publication of improper matter as any paper in the country.
In my last I said I would tell the citizens of Richmond what our company has done since it enlisted.
It marched from Winchester to Manassas Junction, a distance of near ninety miles, on foot, in the two days and nighs preceding the battle of the 21st, with nothing to eat, under a scorching sun by day and terrific thunder-storms at night, sleeping only two out of twenty-four hours, fording
January 14th (search for this): article 10
Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.
the Thomas Artillery — a long march under adverse circumstance — the part taken at the Batter of Manassas.
Thomas Artillery, Wm. Qrs., Jan. 14.
In my last communication I stated some things, inadvertently, which might give aid to McClellan, and you suppressed it. I thought of my error before I saw it in print, and was glad to find that it was not published.
I think it due to the Dispatch that the public should be informed of the fact that it is as earnestly avoiding the publication of improper matter as any paper in the country.
In my last I said I would tell the citizens of Richmond what our company has done since it enlisted.
It marched from Winchester to Manassas Junction, a distance of near ninety miles, on foot, in the two days and nighs preceding the battle of the 21st, with nothing to eat, under a scorching sun by day and terrific thunder-storms at night, sleeping only two out of twenty-four hours, fording t