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
McCook 18 4 Browse Search
United States (United States) 14 0 Browse Search
New Jersey (New Jersey, United States) 12 0 Browse Search
Crittenden 10 0 Browse Search
Lincoln 9 1 Browse Search
Rosecrans 9 7 Browse Search
William Hill 8 0 Browse Search
Hood 6 0 Browse Search
Butler 6 2 Browse Search
J. L. Dickinson 6 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 8, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 181 total hits in 74 results.

... 3 4 5 6 7 8
the three branches are all of one faith and one opinion, and it is not so in any other Northern State of the Union." We anne's the resolutions: Resolved, That the State of New Jersey, through her State Government, be respectfully requested to interpose in order to arrest the existing civil war. 1. By inviting the non-slaveholding States and the loyal slaveholding States--Delaware, Maryland. Kentucky, and Missouri--to meet in Convention in Louisville, Ky., on the --day of February next. 2. By requesting the permission of the President of the United States to send Commissioners to Virginia. North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas, and Tennessee, to invite them also to meet in like National Convention. And 3. He is further Resolved, That the President be requested by the State Government of New Jersey, to declare an armistice with or for such State or States as may accept this call for a National Convention
January 1st (search for this): article 6
h and Armstrong are distanced with one sixth of the charge which they used. It has never yet been equaled. In these result Capt Dahlgren is prepared to bid the rebel iron-clads "a happy New Year," if they come within hailing distance. New Year's day in Washington — scenes in the Yankee Court. The fifteen thousand slain at Fredericksburg and the thirty thousand at Murfreesboro' have but little sympathy in Washington. No thought of those poor devils clogged the festivities of New Yearmall that the battle soon ceased to engage our attention, and the grand army of Burnside has nearly passed out of the public The following extract from a letter date "Opposite Fredericksburg, Jan. 1." will refresh our memories. This is New Year's day, and it is very generally observed throughout the army as a holiday. Games and amassments were plenty, and "New Year" calls were the order of the day — the officers of many regiments, in a body, calling upon their General officers to offer t
cavalry made a dash in the rear, on Lavergne, burned a few wagons, and captured thirty five prisoners. That night dispositions were made to attack the enemy in the morning. After dark the enemy was reported massing near McCook, obviously to turn our right wing. This correspondence with the wishes of Gen. Rosecrans, who instructed Gen. McCook to hold him in check stubbornly, while the left wing should be thrown into Murfreesboro's behind the enemy. At daybreak, on the last day of December, everything appeared working well. The battle had opened on the right, and our left wing was on hand. At seven o'clock ominous soon is indicated that a fire was approaching our left. Aids were dispatched for information, and found the forests full of flying negroes and straggling soldiers, who reported whole regiments falling back. Meantime one of McCook's side had announced to Gen. Rosecrans, that Gen. Johnston had permitted the three batteries of his division to be captured by a hidde
January, 1 AD (search for this): article 6
to make the matter an element in our calculations of success or rapture. Until then we shall deem the reliable reports touching the condition of their wardrobes as unworthy of the stress heretofore laid on them. The grand army at Fredericksburg. The Confederate loss at Fredericksburg was a small that the battle soon ceased to engage our attention, and the grand army of Burnside has nearly passed out of the public The following extract from a letter date "Opposite Fredericksburg, Jan. 1." will refresh our memories. This is New Year's day, and it is very generally observed throughout the army as a holiday. Games and amassments were plenty, and "New Year" calls were the order of the day — the officers of many regiments, in a body, calling upon their General officers to offer their congratulations. The officers and men, generally, were in good spirits, but there was almost an entire absence of the alcoholic stimulus which is usually an accompaniment of the day at hom
... 3 4 5 6 7 8