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
Rodes 48 2 Browse Search
Cashtown Early 25 1 Browse Search
A. P. Hill 24 0 Browse Search
Doles 20 0 Browse Search
D. Scott 18 0 Browse Search
R. S. Ewell 15 1 Browse Search
Johnson 14 2 Browse Search
Daniel 14 2 Browse Search
A. Heintz 14 0 Browse Search
Iverson 12 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: February 22, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 14 total hits in 5 results.

Mississippi (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 2
The movements of the enemy in the South. The expedition under the Yankee General Sherman, which was evidently designed for a land demonstration against Mobile, seemed to have come to a stand-still in the vicinity of Meridian, Miss. This point is at the junction of the Southern Mississippi and Mobile and Ohio Railroads, and is one hundred and thirty-four miles above Mobile. Official information was yesterday received at the War Department that since their arrival at Meridian no demonstration has been made by the enemy. Since our last report they have made no further assault on Grant's Pass, below Mobile. A dispatch received at the War Department states that the enemy had landed heavy force and were marching against Gen. Finnegan, who lately repulsed them at Lake City, Fla.
Grant's Pass (Oregon, United States) (search for this): article 2
The movements of the enemy in the South. The expedition under the Yankee General Sherman, which was evidently designed for a land demonstration against Mobile, seemed to have come to a stand-still in the vicinity of Meridian, Miss. This point is at the junction of the Southern Mississippi and Mobile and Ohio Railroads, and is one hundred and thirty-four miles above Mobile. Official information was yesterday received at the War Department that since their arrival at Meridian no demonstration has been made by the enemy. Since our last report they have made no further assault on Grant's Pass, below Mobile. A dispatch received at the War Department states that the enemy had landed heavy force and were marching against Gen. Finnegan, who lately repulsed them at Lake City, Fla.
Meridian (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 2
The movements of the enemy in the South. The expedition under the Yankee General Sherman, which was evidently designed for a land demonstration against Mobile, seemed to have come to a stand-still in the vicinity of Meridian, Miss. This point is at the junction of the Southern Mississippi and Mobile and Ohio Railroads, and is one hundred and thirty-four miles above Mobile. Official information was yesterday received at the War Department that since their arrival at Meridian no demonsbile and Ohio Railroads, and is one hundred and thirty-four miles above Mobile. Official information was yesterday received at the War Department that since their arrival at Meridian no demonstration has been made by the enemy. Since our last report they have made no further assault on Grant's Pass, below Mobile. A dispatch received at the War Department states that the enemy had landed heavy force and were marching against Gen. Finnegan, who lately repulsed them at Lake City, Fla.
The movements of the enemy in the South. The expedition under the Yankee General Sherman, which was evidently designed for a land demonstration against Mobile, seemed to have come to a stand-still in the vicinity of Meridian, Miss. This point is at the junction of the Southern Mississippi and Mobile and Ohio Railroads, and is one hundred and thirty-four miles above Mobile. Official information was yesterday received at the War Department that since their arrival at Meridian no demonstration has been made by the enemy. Since our last report they have made no further assault on Grant's Pass, below Mobile. A dispatch received at the War Department states that the enemy had landed heavy force and were marching against Gen. Finnegan, who lately repulsed them at Lake City, Fla.
The movements of the enemy in the South. The expedition under the Yankee General Sherman, which was evidently designed for a land demonstration against Mobile, seemed to have come to a stand-still in the vicinity of Meridian, Miss. This point is at the junction of the Southern Mississippi and Mobile and Ohio Railroads, and is one hundred and thirty-four miles above Mobile. Official information was yesterday received at the War Department that since their arrival at Meridian no demonstration has been made by the enemy. Since our last report they have made no further assault on Grant's Pass, below Mobile. A dispatch received at the War Department states that the enemy had landed heavy force and were marching against Gen. Finnegan, who lately repulsed them at Lake City, Fla.