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Douglass (Nevada, United States) (search for this): article 10
with minds properly trained to self-dependence, they might select their own homes if they chose, and begin the world for themselves. Mutiny among paroled Federal soldiers. It appears that the soldiers now garrisoned at Chicago are desperate malcontents, and are causing a great deal of trouble and annoyance to the citizens. The Chicago Timessays: Yesterday morning the Sixty fifth Illinois regiment, captured and paroled by the Confederates, destroyed by fire the barracks at Camp Douglas, where they were quartered. There is no reason assigned for their strange conduct. The barracks are to be rebuilt. The example of the gallant Sixty-fifth was followed on the evening of the same day by the Ninth Vermont, encamped at the Horse Fair Grounds. The alarm was given, and two steam fire engines started for the conflagration, one of which was detained and turned back, and the other proceeded to the cue. The engine was quickly surrounded by a large crowd of soldiers, yelling lik
f the Government it will doubtless be competent for the Provost Marshal in any State to suspend political meetings and postpones elections. If the Constitution of the United States is to be construed according to the necessities of a civil war of vest proportions, the Constitutions of individual States cannot be allowed to stand in the way of its vigorous prosecution. Gen. M'Clellan on Delinquent officers. A Court-Martial, of which Brig Gen. Hancock was President, has just found Col. Owens, Sixty- ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers, guilty of a charge of "conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline, and unbecoming an officer and a gentle, man. The Court sentenced him (Col, Owen) to be dismissed the service of the United States. Gen McClellan in his order says: The finding and sentence of the Court are fully supported by the testimony, and are approved by the Major General commanding. It appears that on the 4th of October, 1862, the regiment of the of the
n to change or paralyze the movements of the Government it will doubtless be competent for the Provost Marshal in any State to suspend political meetings and postpones elections. If the Constitution of the United States is to be construed according to the necessities of a civil war of vest proportions, the Constitutions of individual States cannot be allowed to stand in the way of its vigorous prosecution. Gen. M'Clellan on Delinquent officers. A Court-Martial, of which Brig Gen. Hancock was President, has just found Col. Owens, Sixty- ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers, guilty of a charge of "conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline, and unbecoming an officer and a gentle, man. The Court sentenced him (Col, Owen) to be dismissed the service of the United States. Gen McClellan in his order says: The finding and sentence of the Court are fully supported by the testimony, and are approved by the Major General commanding. It appears that on the 4th of O
Samuel M. Price (search for this): article 10
ng possession of Grenada and Jackson, cut up the railroad connecting with Vicksburg, destroy Meridian, the junction of the first-named roads — thus preventing railroad communication with Richmond — and move upon Vicksburg from the rear, while their gunboats engage the Confederates from the river. The writer adds: There is probably no move which can be made by our Generals that would be easier of accomplishment and none, certainly, which promises richer results. The army of Van-Dorn and Price had already been badly whipped, and yet that is the only considerable force between us and Mobile — That they can be overcome, and that by one-half their number, is now a matter of history, and now, while the weather is favorable for a southward movement, the scheme should be worked cut before the enemy shall have time to organize another army like that they hurled against us on the 3d, 4th and 5th inst., at this place. That this will be the plan of the winter campaign in this State, there<
Mitchell Interfered (search for this): article 10
ff the ground they (the battery boys,) would turn the cannon on him and keep him off. They pelted him with bits of bread, and one whole loaf struck him on the head and nearly knocked him off his horse. The very devil was to pay for a time, but finally things got calmed down; but the boys did not go, and they have not all gone yet. It is generally conceded by all classes that the men should have their pay, and that Governor Sprague did not act a wise part. Some of the plans of Gen'l Mitchell Interfered with by his Death. On the 13th ultimo, Major-Gen. Mitchell, in command at Hilton Head, S. C., wrote a letter to Secretary Chase, giving the following as his intentions, if permitted to carry out his views. As he died of yellow fever on the 24th his plans were not as promptly carried out as they might have been. If he were, indeed, under my orders, I have an immense work for him to do, which I would commence without an hour's delay. I would begin the organization of my pl
Samuel Wilkerson (search for this): article 10
Progress of the war. From our late Northern papers we make up some interesting items of news bearing on the war: What is to Happen at the North. If the predictions of the Republican speakers and writers in New York before the elections are to be fulfilled, the North is to have a terrible experience at home. The following is an extract from a letter in the Buffalo Express, written by Samuel Wilkerson, an attack of the Tribunes who has been the greater part of his time for the last year its principal correspondent or agent at Washington.--The letter is dated the 26th of October: I tell you, my dear sir, that if, in a Satanic providence of polities, we are passed under the yokes by Hieratic Seymour, to the slave power, the revolution now in progress in the South will be transferred to the North, and will whelin the great cities and portions of the country with violences that I shudder to think of. This result is inevitable from the enthronement in New York of the power
as been published. A letter from Washington to a New York paper says: They were from Washington, in a carriage loaded with sundry family stores, in which was found quinine and morphine, worth in the South $10,000. On the person of Valley was found a large contraband mail. He preached in Washington last Sunday, and preached in Richmond in the latter part of September. He and the younger female were sent to the old Capitol prison, while the elder, 70 years old, was turned loose. Messrs. Kidwell, of Georgetown; Peale, of Alexandria; and Milburn, of Washington city, druggists, were on Thursday arrested and sent to the old Capitol prison for selling these parties the contraband medicines, knowing, as is alleged where they were to be carried. They were formidably armed with protections and passes from Major- Generals and Provost Marshals and with a certificate of loyalty as strong as words could make it from a Cabinet Minister. As a specimen of the correspondence which these F.
Jefferson Davis (search for this): article 10
with treason. General Frank P. Blair has issued an address to his constituents, in which he distinctly charges General Fremont with treason. He says: "Fremont was then plotting against the Government which had trusted him, and using the means placed in his hands for its support to work its destruction, and establish for himself a dictatorship upon its ruins. If his ability had been equal to his ambition, he would perhaps have sought to enact the same rolls now being played by Jeff. Davis.--The patriotism of our people and his imbecility were our safety. When I represented to the Government that, in my opinion, General Fremont had not the capacity to conduct successfully the military command which had been entrusted to him, (his conspiracy against the Government had not then developed itself,) I was not unprepared for the indignation which this expression of opinion brought upon me on the part of the General and his California contractors and dependents, but confess the a
Gen McClellan (search for this): article 10
he Constitutions of individual States cannot be allowed to stand in the way of its vigorous prosecution. Gen. M'Clellan on Delinquent officers. A Court-Martial, of which Brig Gen. Hancock was President, has just found Col. Owens, Sixty- ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers, guilty of a charge of "conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline, and unbecoming an officer and a gentle, man. The Court sentenced him (Col, Owen) to be dismissed the service of the United States. Gen McClellan in his order says: The finding and sentence of the Court are fully supported by the testimony, and are approved by the Major General commanding. It appears that on the 4th of October, 1862, the regiment of the of the accused was encamped near Harper's Ferry; that the forenoon of the day was passed by the accused at the headquarters of his brigade, in attendance upon a Court of Inquiry on the question of rank between himself and another officer. that he was then very much into
uld make it from a Cabinet Minister. As a specimen of the correspondence which these F. F. V.'s carried on their persons, we extract the following memorandum of a visit to "Southern friends" in New York, from a letter to Mrs. Peyton, of Gordonsville: "--Sister, who returned from New York last week found that our cause has more friends there than she had imagined. The feeling against this Government is very strong, so much so that they expect to have bloodshed in their streets before Christmas." Suicide of an officer in Washington. Major Wm. W. Russell, Paymaster of the U. S. Marine Corps, committed suicide in Washington on the 4th inst. The Start says: An inquest developed the fact that he had inflicted upon himself two wounds--one with a small sword in the side, the intention evidently having been to reach the heart; it struck, however, below it. He then took a pistol and fired it, the ball entering the head at the right temple, passing through the head, and lo
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