hide
Named Entity Searches
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 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Braxton Bragg | 14 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Wm F. Corbin | 10 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) | 10 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Lee | 10 | 4 | Browse | Search |
Joseph E. Johnston | 8 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Conn | 8 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Hooker | 8 | 0 | Browse | Search |
June 22nd | 8 | 8 | Browse | Search |
Jefferson Davis | 8 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Port Hudson (Louisiana, United States) | 8 | 0 | Browse | Search |
View all entities in this document... |
Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 24, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 31 total hits in 13 results.
Tazewell (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 16
Capture of Yankee recruiting officers.
--Col. Roddy's command last week captured in Tennessee Col. Wm. P. Kendrick, of the 3d Tennessee (Yankee) regiment, and Capt. Daniel E Bonham, of the same regiment, both engaged in recruiting in Tennessee for the Federal.
Several privates engaged in the same service were also captured.
Col. Kendrick is a native of Tazewell county, Va., and the unworthy son of Rev. W. P. Kendrick, a Methodist minister, who has suffered in property and person for refusing to take the oath to support Lincoln's Government.
He has two brothers in the Confederate service, one of whom belonged to the command which captured the renegade.
On the 15th of May last Wm F. Corbin and T. J. McGraw, two Confederate soldiers, members of the 4th Kentucky cavalry, were shot dead at Sandusky, Ohio, by order of Gen. Burnside, for recruiting for the Confederate service in Kentucky Comment upon what the fate of Kendrick and Bonham should be is unnecessary; but the following pa
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 16
Capture of Yankee recruiting officers.
--Col. Roddy's command last week captured in Tennessee Col. Wm. P. Kendrick, of the 3d Tennessee (Yankee) regiment, and Capt. Daniel E Bonham, of the same regiment, both engaged in recruiting in Tennessee for the Federal.
Several privates engaged in the same service were also captured.
Col. Kendrick is a native of Tazewell county, Va., and the unworthy son of Rev. W. P. Kendrick, a Methodist minister, who has suffered in property and person for refTennessee for the Federal.
Several privates engaged in the same service were also captured.
Col. Kendrick is a native of Tazewell county, Va., and the unworthy son of Rev. W. P. Kendrick, a Methodist minister, who has suffered in property and person for refusing to take the oath to support Lincoln's Government.
He has two brothers in the Confederate service, one of whom belonged to the command which captured the renegade.
On the 15th of May last Wm F. Corbin and T. J. McGraw, two Confederate soldiers, members of the 4th Kentucky cavalry, were shot dead at Sandusky, Ohio, by order of Gen. Burnside, for recruiting for the Confederate service in Kentucky Comment upon what the fate of Kendrick and Bonham should be is unnecessary; but the following
Sandusky, Ohio (Ohio, United States) (search for this): article 16
W. P. Kendrick (search for this): article 16
Bonham (search for this): article 16
Capture of Yankee recruiting officers.
--Col. Roddy's command last week captured in Tennessee Col. Wm. P. Kendrick, of the 3d Tennessee (Yankee) regiment, and Capt. Daniel E Bonham, of the same regiment, both engaged in recruiting in Tennessee for the Federal.
Several privates engaged in the same service were also captured.
Col. Kendrick is a native of Tazewell county, Va., and the unworthy son of Rev. W. P. Kendrick, a Methodist minister, who has suffered in property and person for refu Corbin and T. J. McGraw, two Confederate soldiers, members of the 4th Kentucky cavalry, were shot dead at Sandusky, Ohio, by order of Gen. Burnside, for recruiting for the Confederate service in Kentucky Comment upon what the fate of Kendrick and Bonham should be is unnecessary; but the following paragraph about the fate of the two Confederates may assist the reader in coming to a correct conclusion:
When Corbin and McGraw were prisoners Miss Corbin, the sister of Corbin, called upon Gen. B
Burnside (search for this): article 16
Daniel (search for this): article 16
Capture of Yankee recruiting officers.
--Col. Roddy's command last week captured in Tennessee Col. Wm. P. Kendrick, of the 3d Tennessee (Yankee) regiment, and Capt. Daniel E Bonham, of the same regiment, both engaged in recruiting in Tennessee for the Federal.
Several privates engaged in the same service were also captured.
Col. Kendrick is a native of Tazewell county, Va., and the unworthy son of Rev. W. P. Kendrick, a Methodist minister, who has suffered in property and person for refusing to take the oath to support Lincoln's Government.
He has two brothers in the Confederate service, one of whom belonged to the command which captured the renegade.
On the 15th of May last Wm F. Corbin and T. J. McGraw, two Confederate soldiers, members of the 4th Kentucky cavalry, were shot dead at Sandusky, Ohio, by order of Gen. Burnside, for recruiting for the Confederate service in Kentucky Comment upon what the fate of Kendrick and Bonham should be is unnecessary; but the following pa
T. J. McGraw (search for this): article 16
Lincoln (search for this): article 16
Roddy (search for this): article 16
Capture of Yankee recruiting officers.
--Col. Roddy's command last week captured in Tennessee Col. Wm. P. Kendrick, of the 3d Tennessee (Yankee) regiment, and Capt. Daniel E Bonham, of the same regiment, both engaged in recruiting in Tennessee for the Federal.
Several privates engaged in the same service were also captured.
Col. Kendrick is a native of Tazewell county, Va., and the unworthy son of Rev. W. P. Kendrick, a Methodist minister, who has suffered in property and person for refusing to take the oath to support Lincoln's Government.
He has two brothers in the Confederate service, one of whom belonged to the command which captured the renegade.
On the 15th of May last Wm F. Corbin and T. J. McGraw, two Confederate soldiers, members of the 4th Kentucky cavalry, were shot dead at Sandusky, Ohio, by order of Gen. Burnside, for recruiting for the Confederate service in Kentucky Comment upon what the fate of Kendrick and Bonham should be is unnecessary; but the following pa