hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Cash 42 0 Browse Search
W. B. Crittenden 26 0 Browse Search
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) 16 0 Browse Search
Jefferson Davis 14 0 Browse Search
Thomas B. Lincoln 14 0 Browse Search
Felix K. Zollicoffer 13 1 Browse Search
Somerset, Ky. (Kentucky, United States) 10 0 Browse Search
A. M. Barbour 9 1 Browse Search
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) 8 0 Browse Search
Bowling Green (Kentucky, United States) 8 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 27, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 5 total hits in 4 results.

meek, unsuspicious, invalid minister of the gospel, calls them, and many a meal, bundle of straw and other kindness they receive from him; and his faith in them could not be shaken by such instances as the following, until a day or two ago: "Massa, dem hame strings gone!" "Hame strings gone, Frederick, where are they gone?" "Dunno Massa, spects dem soldiers what got straw yestiddy, dun tied em on to dar straps so dey could carry more." "Tut, tut, Frederick, accuse the noble Massa, spects dem soldiers what got straw yestiddy, dun tied em on to dar straps so dey could carry more." "Tut, tut, Frederick, accuse the noble soldiers of taking them, that won't do." But there was the turning point. Soldier No. 1 dropped in to get his dinner, depositing his gloves, coat, and bucket of butter, just purchases, on the hall table. Soldier No. 2 came in also, but ate hastily and left the table, returning to the sitting-room before anyone else. When the family and soldier No. 1 came in, the other had disappeared; also gloves and bucket. This led to some suspicion, and search was made to see if anything else was mi
but ate hastily and left the table, returning to the sitting-room before anyone else. When the family and soldier No. 1 came in, the other had disappeared; also gloves and bucket. This led to some suspicion, and search was made to see if anything else was missing. It was soon discovered that a small morocoo bag, containing a porte monnale with twenty dollars, was also gone, belonging to the lady of the house. Mine host moralized on the frailty of man in general, and the delinquency of this noble soldier in particular, and contented himself by quoting-- "He who steals my purse steals trash," which is literally true, in these days of shin-plas'ers; but still, as this trash could very well help to supply numerous household comforts, the good lady was not so easily won over to the philosophy of the quotation. It is but justice to add, of the hundreds of soldiers who have been here since the 21st of July, these were the first things ever taken from the house. B. C. L.
January 22nd, 1862 AD (search for this): article 20
From Manassas. [Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.] Manassas Plains, Jan. 22, 1862. Rain, snow, sleet, mist, fog, mud, and the state of the weather generally, have for the time being, monopolized conversation to the exclusion of that everlasting topic "the advance and the expected battle." Since this miserable spell of weather set in the subject has been quietly laid aside; and, as it is the time since last July, that a week has gone first by without a rumor of the Federal force advancing, and it being such a great piece of news not to hear it, I concluded to send it to the Dispatch, hoping its readers will feel very grateful to hear such a piece of intelligence. A trip down to Centreville last week was quite an event, considering the state the roads are in now, but I felt amply repaid by the hearty greetings of my friends, and the opportunity I had of noting the change in the scene since I last travelled over the road. The old tents, in some cases dilapidated, mildew
From Manassas. [Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.] Manassas Plains, Jan. 22, 1862. Rain, snow, sleet, mist, fog, mud, and the state of the weather generally, have for the time being, monopolized conversation to the exclusion of that everlasting topic "the advance and the expected battle." Since this miserable spell of weather set in the subject has been quietly laid aside; and, as it is the time since last July, that a week has gone first by without a rumor of the Federal force advancing, and it being such a great piece of news not to hear it, I concluded to send it to the Dispatch, hoping its readers will feel very grateful to hear such a piece of intelligence. A trip down to Centreville last week was quite an event, considering the state the roads are in now, but I felt amply repaid by the hearty greetings of my friends, and the opportunity I had of noting the change in the scene since I last travelled over the road. The old tents, in some cases dilapidated, mildew