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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: May 13, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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General Hooker's evidence before the Congressional committee on the conduct of the war, with reference to McClellan and Burnside's campaigns, says: So far as Gen. McClellan is concerned, if he had any reputation left this evidence would annihi2 o'clock Monday night with a company of the Thirteenth United States infantry, sixty-seven men, with directions from Gen. Burnside, commanding the Department of the Ohio, to arrest C. L. Vallandigham at his residence in Dayton. The train reached Drison on Columbia street, between Sycamore and Broadway, where no one was permitted to see him without an order from General Burnside. The official charges against Vallandigham set forth that on or about the first of May, at Mount Vernon, Ohio, were rejected the day before the battle of Fredericksburg. He is also charged with having said that order No. 38 of General Burnside was a base usurpation of arbitrary authority, and that the sooner the people informed the minions of usurped power t
in, which was in waiting. Some of Vallandigham's friends, hearing what was going on, rung the fire bells with the intention of gathering a crowd to attempt a rescue. But few persons appeared, and they gave no trouble. Vallandigham was brought to the city and lodged in the prison on Columbia street, between Sycamore and Broadway, where no one was permitted to see him without an order from General Burnside. The official charges against Vallandigham set forth that on or about the first of May, at Mount Vernon, Ohio, he publicity addressed a large meeting of citizens, declaring that the present war is an injurious, cruel, and unnecessary war — a war not being waged for the preservation of the Union, but for the purpose of crushing out liberty and establishing a despotism — a war for the freedom of the blacks and the enslaving of the whites; and that, if the Administration had so wished, the war could have been honorably terminated; that peace might have been honorably obtained
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