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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 29, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 535 total hits in 247 results.

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E. F. Hitchcock (search for this): article 1
s Landing to be exchanged for the same number from this place. Commissioner Ould sent the like number of Federal prisoners, but at the same time informed Commissioner Hitchcock that the Confederate authorities could hold no communication with Butler, and that no other informal exchange would be allowed. At the same time he said iderable number, represented as prisoners, were not soldiers, but non-combatants, citizens of towns and villages, farmers, &c." judge Ould, in a letter to Commissioner Hitchcock, published in the Enquirer, of yesterday, along with Hitchcock's answer acknowledging the receipt of the same, proposed to exclude from the list of exchanHitchcock's answer acknowledging the receipt of the same, proposed to exclude from the list of exchanges all the classes of persons designated as above, and as Stanton must have had this correspondence before him when he made the statement, the confusion is, that he deliberately lied. The --ole embroilment is peculiarly characteristic of the Yankees. At Gettysburg, they found it very convenient to release their prisoners from pa
Sam Jones. Fitz Lee (search for this): article 1
eir farms, or on the highway, by John Morgan and other rebel raiders, who put them under a shampooer. To balance these men against rebel soldiers taken on the field would be relieving the enemy from the pressure of war and enabling him to protract the contest to indefinite duration. If it had been true that we had released from exchange all the prisoners captured at Vicksburg and Port Hudson, we should have been perfectly justified in so doing.--In the first day's battle at Gettysburg Gen. Lee captured six thousand Yankees, who, having been paroled, were sent through the enemy's lines. Instead of respecting this parole these men were immediately ordered into the ranks by Gen. Meade, and fought during the remaining two days. The excuse for this unheard of breach of faith was that a new interpretation had been put on the cartel at Washington; that the Yankee prisoners not having been paroled by the Commander-in-Chief in person the parole was worth nothing. Like all cunning men, t
uthority, sent 500 prisoners to Alkin's Landing to be exchanged for the same number from this place. Commissioner Ould sent the like number of Federal prisoners, but at the same time informed Commissioner Hitchcock that the Confederate authorities could hold no communication with Butler, and that no other informal exchange would be allowed. At the same time he said that if the enemy desired to renew the exchange, they must do it on the terms and in the manner specified by the cared. Commissioner Onid was perfectly right in doing what he did. Beast Butler is an outlaw, and liable to be hung by the first Confederate officer that may lay hands on him. No honorable man can voluntarily hold any intercourse with him. At the same time, the Yankees must not be allowed to get rid of the cartel by such an evasion at that attempted by Butler. The Yankee Secretary of War makes the following statement with regard to the prisoners captured at Vicksburg and Port Hudson: At Vicksburg ove
Port Hudson (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): article 1
ch an evasion at that attempted by Butler. The Yankee Secretary of War makes the following statement with regard to the prisoners captured at Vicksburg and Port Hudson: At Vicksburg over thirty thousand rebel prisoners fall into our hands, and over five thousand more at Port Hudson. These prisoners were paroled and suffePort Hudson. These prisoners were paroled and suffered to return to their homes until exchanged, pursuant to the terms of the cartel.--But the rebel agent, in violation of the cartel, declared the Vicksburg prisoners exchanged without being exchanged. The Port Hudson prisoners he, without just cause and in open violation of the cartel, declared released from their parole. These pling him to protract the contest to indefinite duration. If it had been true that we had released from exchange all the prisoners captured at Vicksburg and Port Hudson, we should have been perfectly justified in so doing.--In the first day's battle at Gettysburg Gen. Lee captured six thousand Yankees, who, having been paroled,
Wanted — Negroes --We wish to hire the usual number of able bodied men, as mill hands at teamsters. Haxall & Crenshaw. de 29--t
Wanted — Negroes --We wish to hire the usual number of able bodied men, as mill hands at teamsters. Haxall & Crenshaw. de 29--t
Wanted --Twenty good negro Clliers, to work in our mines on Dan river, thirty miles west of Danville, in Rockingham county, N. C. Our haft is a new one, not yet 100 feet deep, and is free from gas. The locality is healthy, and as as any in the Confederacy. Owners of each hands would do well to apply to us in person, or by letter to Denville. Jones & Neal. de 15--
Wanted --Twenty good negro Clliers, to work in our mines on Dan river, thirty miles west of Danville, in Rockingham county, N. C. Our haft is a new one, not yet 100 feet deep, and is free from gas. The locality is healthy, and as as any in the Confederacy. Owners of each hands would do well to apply to us in person, or by letter to Denville. Jones & Neal. de 15--
Danville (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Wanted --Twenty good negro Clliers, to work in our mines on Dan river, thirty miles west of Danville, in Rockingham county, N. C. Our haft is a new one, not yet 100 feet deep, and is free from gas. The locality is healthy, and as as any in the Confederacy. Owners of each hands would do well to apply to us in person, or by letter to Denville. Jones & Neal. de 15--
Rockingham (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 1
Wanted --Twenty good negro Clliers, to work in our mines on Dan river, thirty miles west of Danville, in Rockingham county, N. C. Our haft is a new one, not yet 100 feet deep, and is free from gas. The locality is healthy, and as as any in the Confederacy. Owners of each hands would do well to apply to us in person, or by letter to Denville. Jones & Neal. de 15--
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