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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 1, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 61 total hits in 19 results.
Lippincott (search for this): article 12
Adams (search for this): article 12
The ground in Pennsylvania.
--It appears that our troops occupy points in three counties of Pennsylvania--Fulton, Franklin and Adams.
Fulton, the westernmost of the three, is but thinly settled, having a population, by the census of 1850, of 7,567 on an area of 380 square miles.
It is mostly mountainous, but has some fertile land in the valleys.
Adams county has an area of 530 square miles, and a population of about 26,000.
Gettysburg, the chief town, is a thriving place, the population having increased between 1850 and 1853 from 2,150 to 3,000.
It is the seat of a Lutheran Theological Seminary and of Pennsylvania College.
The former, in 1859, had 25 students and a library of 10,000 volumes, the latter 87 students and a library of 9,000 volumes.
Its principal business is carriage building, besidds which copper mines have been worked in its vicinity for twelve years past.
Franklin, the central county of the three, has an area of 740 square miles, and a population
Imboden (search for this): article 12
Fulton (search for this): article 12
The ground in Pennsylvania.
--It appears that our troops occupy points in three counties of Pennsylvania--Fulton, Franklin and Adams.
Fulton, the westernmost of the three, is but thinly settled, having a population, by the census of 1850, of 7,567 on an area of 380 square miles.
It is mostly mountainous, but has some fertile land in the valleys.
Adams county has an area of 530 square miles, and a population of about 26,000.
Gettysburg, the chief town, is a thriving place, the populFulton, the westernmost of the three, is but thinly settled, having a population, by the census of 1850, of 7,567 on an area of 380 square miles.
It is mostly mountainous, but has some fertile land in the valleys.
Adams county has an area of 530 square miles, and a population of about 26,000.
Gettysburg, the chief town, is a thriving place, the population having increased between 1850 and 1853 from 2,150 to 3,000.
It is the seat of a Lutheran Theological Seminary and of Pennsylvania College.
The former, in 1859, had 25 students and a library of 10,000 volumes, the latter 87 students and a library of 9,000 volumes.
Its principal business is carriage building, besidds which copper mines have been worked in its vicinity for twelve years past.
Franklin, the central county of the three, has an area of 740 square miles, and a population e
Doncaster (search for this): article 12
Franklin (search for this): article 12
The ground in Pennsylvania.
--It appears that our troops occupy points in three counties of Pennsylvania--Fulton, Franklin and Adams.
Fulton, the westernmost of the three, is but thinly settled, having a population, by the census of 1850, of 7,567 on an area of 380 square miles.
It is mostly mountainous, but has some fertile land in the valleys.
Adams county has an area of 530 square miles, and a population of about 26,000.
Gettysburg, the chief town, is a thriving place, the popul n 1859, had 25 students and a library of 10,000 volumes, the latter 87 students and a library of 9,000 volumes.
Its principal business is carriage building, besidds which copper mines have been worked in its vicinity for twelve years past.
Franklin, the central county of the three, has an area of 740 square miles, and a population exceeding 40,000.
Lippincott's Gazette says:
"The greater part of the county consists of a broad limestone valley, watered with copious and unfalling moun
1859 AD (search for this): article 12
1850 AD (search for this): article 12
1853 AD (search for this): article 12