hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

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

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

hide Most Frequent Entities

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

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
A. B. Johnson 22 0 Browse Search
James M. D. Irvin 20 0 Browse Search
McMinnville (Tennessee, United States) 18 0 Browse Search
United States (United States) 18 0 Browse Search
Meade 15 1 Browse Search
John Morgan 14 2 Browse Search
William Truesdale 14 0 Browse Search
Chariton Morgan 13 1 Browse Search
John H. Morgan 13 1 Browse Search
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) 12 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 11, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 558 total hits in 270 results.

1 2 3 4 5 6 ...
Richmond Yankee (search for this): article 8
A Yankee deserter, named James Wood, is now in police custody, and will be examined before the Mayor to-day, as a suspicious character. Wood is said to be an Englishman by birth, a deserter from the Yankee army, and now on parole by order of Gen. Winder. His Honor takes the ground that the Confederate authorities have no right to turn loose in Richmond Yankee soldiers.
C. L. Woodward (search for this): article 9
Shoddy in the Yankee capital. --A Washington correspondent of the New York Express writes: Since the breaking out of the war quite a number of our citizens have enriched themselves, chiefly by legitimate business operations. G. C. McGuire & Co., the auctioneers, have cleared $300,000 by a contract for mattresses and iron bedsteads; Savage & Co., hardware dealers, at least $150,000; Sibley & Gray, stove dealers, as much more; C. L. Woodward, in the same business, $100,000. These firms occupy contiguous places of business between 10th and 11th streets. John E. Evans & Co., hardware, $200,000; J. & E. Owen, merchant tailors, $76,000; Mr. Lutze, saddler, $60,000; Mr. Rapler, blacksmith, $100,000, for shoeing Government horses. A poor wheelwright, for putting together wheelbarrows, bought at the North, $30,000--they were transported hither in pieces to save freight. Hudson, Taylor, and Philip & Solomon, stationers, $50,000 apiece. Mr. Taylor, has invested part of his propert
James Wood (search for this): article 8
A Yankee deserter, named James Wood, is now in police custody, and will be examined before the Mayor to-day, as a suspicious character. Wood is said to be an Englishman by birth, a deserter from the Yankee army, and now on parole by order of Gen. Winder. His Honor takes the ground that the Confederate authorities have no right to turn loose in Richmond Yankee soldiers. A Yankee deserter, named James Wood, is now in police custody, and will be examined before the Mayor to-day, as a suspicious character. Wood is said to be an Englishman by birth, a deserter from the Yankee army, and now on parole by order of Gen. Winder. His Honor takes the ground that the Confederate authorities have no right to turn loose in Richmond Yankee soldiers.
he 8th inst. The Yankee Congress. The first session of the 38th Congress commenced in Washington on Monday. In the Senate the credentials of several newly-elected Senators were presented. Mr. Davis made an earnest opposition to the admission of Senators from West Virginia, contending that, constitutionally, there was no such State as West Virginia, and therefore there could be no Senators from such a State. By a vote of thirty-six yeas to five nays the Senators (Messrs Willey and Van Winkle) were admitted to their seats. The House of Representatives was organized by the election of Schuyler Colfax as Speaker on the first ballot. He received 101 votes; Cox, 42; Dawson, 12; Mallory, 10; all others, 17. Necessary to a choice, 92. The Speaker, on assuming the chair, declared himself in favor of "crushing out the rebellion" by all the means within the power of the Government. Lincoln's message was not delivered in either House. From East Tennessee. The telegrams f
A Yankee deserter, named James Wood, is now in police custody, and will be examined before the Mayor to-day, as a suspicious character. Wood is said to be an Englishman by birth, a deserter from the Yankee army, and now on parole by order of Gen. Winder. His Honor takes the ground that the Confederate authorities have no right to turn loose in Richmond Yankee soldiers.
unwieldy packages. Cannot attention be called to this fact by all the papers? It will be doing the soldiers a service. Sunday was a bright, beautiful day, and a large audience turned out at the Episcopal Church at Orange C. H., where Rev. Dr. Wilmer, of Albemarle, preached a most able and excellent sermon. Among his auditors were Gens. R. E. Lee, Hill, Fitz Lee, J. E. B. Stuart, and other leading officers of the army, besides many of the private soldiers. Dr. Wilmer frequently visits icers of the army, besides many of the private soldiers. Dr. Wilmer frequently visits the army, and his sermons are always productive of good. Our captures in prisoners since Meade first began his forward movement will amount to eight hundred, which will in some measure compensate for the losses at Rappahannock bridge. To-day some fifty or sixty boxes of clothing arrived, containing shirts, drawers, socks, pants, and jackets, for the army. There is still a demand for blankets. X.
Ravages of the enemy when last this side of the Rapidan. After Meade's army had crossed at Germanns and Ely's fords they subjected the unfortunate farmers within their lines to the most inhuman treatment. They burned the house of Mr. Reuben Gordon, son of Ger. Wm. F. Gordon, because, as they said, he was an original Secessionist, and did not leave a thing of any value whatever on the place.--The farms of Miss Sally Grymes, Mr. Skinker, Mrs. Willis, Captain Beale, Capt. Strother Green, Mr. John Spottswood, Major J. H. lacy, and others, were desolated to that extent that not a meal's victuals was left on any of them. They broke up the furniture of the houses and took off all the clothing and bed linen from every house. The feather beds were emptied out in the yard, and the venerable Capt. Green and his children were reduced to sleeping between two mattresses Mr. John Spottswood and Capt. Beale were taken off by the Yankees, leaving their helpless families without provisions or
Mollie Williams (search for this): article 12
apt. Clarence Morgan, the General's brother, addressed to their mother in Kentucky, to be mailed at Nashville. This letter advised the mother that its writer would be at Lexington, Ky., upon a certain day, and desired her to meet him there. This letter contained the following note from the devoted Chariton Morgan to his lady love, as it would seem: "McMinnville, Feb. 14, 1863. Dear Mollie --Meet me at Lexington. I will be there in four or five days." Directed to "Miss Mollie Williams, care of Mrs. Mary Atkinson, Russellville, Ky." Of course this letter came to the hands of the inevitable Col. Truesdale, and he forthwith advises Gen. Boyle, commandant at Louisville. The latter sends a force and arrests Capt. Morgan, and he was sent to Camp Chase as a prisoner of war or a spy — we are not positive which. Returning on his third trip to Morgan's headquarters at McMinnville, "our man" found himself in trouble at once, and under arrest as a traitor to the Sou
re Gazette, of the 8th inst. The Yankee Congress. The first session of the 38th Congress commenced in Washington on Monday. In the Senate the credentials of several newly-elected Senators were presented. Mr. Davis made an earnest opposition to the admission of Senators from West Virginia, contending that, constitutionally, there was no such State as West Virginia, and therefore there could be no Senators from such a State. By a vote of thirty-six yeas to five nays the Senators (Messrs Willey and Van Winkle) were admitted to their seats. The House of Representatives was organized by the election of Schuyler Colfax as Speaker on the first ballot. He received 101 votes; Cox, 42; Dawson, 12; Mallory, 10; all others, 17. Necessary to a choice, 92. The Speaker, on assuming the chair, declared himself in favor of "crushing out the rebellion" by all the means within the power of the Government. Lincoln's message was not delivered in either House. From East Tennessee.
ived 101 votes; Cox, 42; Dawson, 12; Mallory, 10; all others, 17. Necessary to a choice, 92. The Speaker, on assuming the chair, declared himself in favor of "crushing out the rebellion" by all the means within the power of the Government. Lincoln's message was not delivered in either House. From East Tennessee. The telegrams from East Tennessee are only confirmatory of Gen. Longstreet's retreat. A dispatch from Gen. Foster, dated the 7th inst., 7 A. M., says that he had sent Gen. Wilcox with his infantry and artillery towards the mountains to attack the enemy's flank at Bean's Station. A proclamation. Lincoln has issued the following proclamation, dated at the Executive Mansion, Washington, 7th inst: Reliable information being received that the insurgent force is retreating from East Tennessee, under circumstances rendering it probable that the Union forces cannot hereafter be dislodged from that important position, and esteeming this to be of high nationa
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...