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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 10, 1862., [Electronic resource].
Found 785 total hits in 382 results.
Floyd (search for this): article 2
Gen. Floyd and the Southwest.
We learn that petitions, signed voluminously by both friends and personal as well as political opponents of General Floyd, have been forwarded to President Davis, urging him to restore the General to command.
TheyGeneral Floyd, have been forwarded to President Davis, urging him to restore the General to command.
They urge it upon the grounds of the distinguished services of General Floyd in the field, his great ability and forecast, and especially his power to command the confidence and excite the enthusiasm of his men strong and entirely well grounded appeals.General Floyd in the field, his great ability and forecast, and especially his power to command the confidence and excite the enthusiasm of his men strong and entirely well grounded appeals.
The list of signatures must exceed a thousand; and a little time will extend it, we learn, ad infinitum.
In connection with this statement, we have the information that Capt. Dunn and Major McMahon, of the Floyd Brigade, (the latter of the Ge e or more regiments, with proper measures, may be readily recruited.
We have not a doubt that the restoration of General Floyd to his command will be the signal for a patriotic rallying of the men of Southwestern Virginia and Eastern Tennessee,
McMahon (search for this): article 2
Dunn (search for this): article 2
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 2
Virginia (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 2
Abingdon, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 2
Reed (search for this): article 2
Supposed death from poison.
--A member of Capt. Reed's company, the President's Guard, named George C. Bozelle, died yesterday, four hours after having swallowed something sent from an apothecary store in answer to the prescription of his attending physician.
The friends of the deceased very naturally thought his death owing to poison being sent by a wrongful interpretation of the physician's order, and requested Coroner Sanxay to hold an inquest, which he was engaged in doing at a late hour last night at the residence of the parents of the deceased, corner of Clay and Henry streets.
Sanxay (search for this): article 2
Supposed death from poison.
--A member of Capt. Reed's company, the President's Guard, named George C. Bozelle, died yesterday, four hours after having swallowed something sent from an apothecary store in answer to the prescription of his attending physician.
The friends of the deceased very naturally thought his death owing to poison being sent by a wrongful interpretation of the physician's order, and requested Coroner Sanxay to hold an inquest, which he was engaged in doing at a late hour last night at the residence of the parents of the deceased, corner of Clay and Henry streets.
George C. Bozelle (search for this): article 2
Supposed death from poison.
--A member of Capt. Reed's company, the President's Guard, named George C. Bozelle, died yesterday, four hours after having swallowed something sent from an apothecary store in answer to the prescription of his attending physician.
The friends of the deceased very naturally thought his death owing to poison being sent by a wrongful interpretation of the physician's order, and requested Coroner Sanxay to hold an inquest, which he was engaged in doing at a late hour last night at the residence of the parents of the deceased, corner of Clay and Henry streets.
Burnside (search for this): article 2
Quitting disagreeable Company.
The 53d regiment New York State Militia, composed of very choice material, many of them being foreigners, and a majority natives of France, was lately attached to Burnside's Division of the "U. S." army of subjugation.
The 53d regiment reached Washington from New York in due course of time, and was quartered in the vicinity of the late National Capitol.
In the meantime murmurs of discontent arose among the members, from the Colonel to the meanest private in the ranks They did not like the style of entertainment to which they had been invited, and made bold to say so. The disaffection of the 53d growing too large for concealment, and the breach between it and the Government being irreconcilable, Lincoln's Secretary of War issued an order disbanding the regiment, and turning its members adrift to go anywhere they pleased.
The order was promulgated a short time since, and the regiment was resolved into its original elements of a number of discontent