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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 5, 1862., [Electronic resource].
Found 401 total hits in 195 results.
1st (search for this): article 7
From the South.
Our exchanges from the South furnish some stone of interest.
There were 116 new cases of fever and 48 deaths in Wilmington, N. C., for the week ending on the 1st.
Among the deaths was Dr. T. C. Worth, Vice President of the Howard Association. Maj. Cooking has arrived in Charleston, S. G., from Nassau, N. P. He was Major of a British regiment stationed there, and resigned to join the Confederate army.
The Jackson Mississippian contains the latest news from New Orleans from a refugee from there.
His account says:
On Wednesday last the new Abolition Brigade, under Brigadier Gen. Weitzel, (late acting Mayor of the city) consisting of seven regiments of infantry, (two of them negroes,) a squadron of cavalry, and four pieces of artillery, were sent up the river.--At the same time five or six gunboats and transports sailed down the river, bound for Berwick Bay, to co-operate with the land forces.
It was well understood in the city that this expedition of pira
2nd (search for this): article 3
A little daughter of Gen. J. B. Stuart died in Va., on the 2d inst.
6th (search for this): article 1
Twenty dollars reward.
--Ran away from the subscriber, for no cause whatever, on the 25th October, a negro man named Griffin, a dark mulatto, 5 feet 4 or 5 inches high, 35 years old, and stammers when spoken to. Having had his left arm broken when young, it is much smaller than his right, which may be discovered from the peculiar position of the hand and fingers.
Said negro was sold by Dickinson & Hill, on the 6th of last month, for Robert Love of N. C. The above reward will be paid if he is delivered to me at Laurel Grove.
In Hanover, two miles from Atlee's station, and all reasonable expenses paid, or lodged in some jail, so that I get him.
Griffin was raised in Norfolk, and has a mother and wife and children there.
No doubt he will attempt to make his way to them, or to Chapel Hill, Orange county, N. C., as he has acquaintances there [no 5--10t*] J. Monroe Carter.
15th (search for this): article 6
Andy Johnson's family.
--A letter from Nashville, on the 15th ult., announce the arrival of the wife and family of "Gov." Andy Johnson.
She is new "the mistress of the elegant mansion formerly occupied by the late Ex-Gov. Aaron V. Brown, once Postmaster General of the United States."
25th (search for this): article 2
Twenty dollars reward.
--I will pay the above reward for Edy and her two children, who left my house on Saturday, the 25th instant.
Edy is my cook, medium sized, dark color, and about 22 years old. Louisa is a mulatto, about five years old, and Kate black, about three years old. They are, no doubt, concealed about the city.
Henry C. Watkins,
oc 29--3taw2w* Shockoe Slip, Richmond, Va.
26th (search for this): article 3
Movements in Tennessee. Knoxville, Nov. 3.
--Northern dispatches, of the 26th ult., published in the Memphis Bulletin, says:
Gen. Bragg is marching rapidly on Nashville, and that Negley's sores at that point is deemed in a critical condition, but that the destruction of Nashville will precede its surrender.
Buell is making a detour in Tennessee via Bardstown, Ky.
29th (search for this): article 1
Important from Tennessee--Surrender of Nashville Demanded — the city to be shelled and burned in case of Refusal. Chattanooga, Oct. 31.
--It is stated by several gentlemen, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville.
At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned.
General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville.
Breckinridge is at Lavergne.
Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery.
Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery.
Several ladies have left Nashville.
The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage.
Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities.
[The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
May 26th (search for this): article 4
Taking the oath.
A flag of truce arrived at Varina Monday night with 149 exchanged prisoners from Fort McHenry and the Old Capitol prison at Washington.
About forty of the Confederate soldiers took the oath at Washington, among them the following: W. L. Mannfield, Loudoun artillery; L. H. Love, 49th Va., from Prince William county, Va.;--Petite, same regiment; D. Allen, 8th Va., from Fairfax C. H.;--May, 26th Ga., W. L. Strobart, 2d S. C. cavalry, Hampton's Legion; -- Saunders, 4th Va. cavalry, and M. Logan, 2d Va. cavalry, a native of Ohio, but enlisted in New Orleans.
Among the officers who came by this arrival was Lieutenant Pittman.
August (search for this): article 11
October 25th (search for this): article 1
Twenty dollars reward.
--Ran away from the subscriber, for no cause whatever, on the 25th October, a negro man named Griffin, a dark mulatto, 5 feet 4 or 5 inches high, 35 years old, and stammers when spoken to. Having had his left arm broken when young, it is much smaller than his right, which may be discovered from the peculiar position of the hand and fingers.
Said negro was sold by Dickinson & Hill, on the 6th of last month, for Robert Love of N. C. The above reward will be paid if he is delivered to me at Laurel Grove.
In Hanover, two miles from Atlee's station, and all reasonable expenses paid, or lodged in some jail, so that I get him.
Griffin was raised in Norfolk, and has a mother and wife and children there.
No doubt he will attempt to make his way to them, or to Chapel Hill, Orange county, N. C., as he has acquaintances there [no 5--10t*] J. Monroe Carter.