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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 5, 1861., [Electronic resource].
Found 1,124 total hits in 532 results.
Jackson (search for this): article 1
Latest News late from Winchester.
Passengers who arrived on the Central cars yesterday, who left Winchester on Wednesday evening, report the retreat of General Patterson's command across the Potomac on the approach of General Johnston.
It is further reported that of Col. Jackson's force of 4,500 which engaged Patterson's column on Tuesday, at, Falling Waters, near Martinsburg, there were six killed and twenty wounded, and it is believed there were about eighty of the enemy killed.
The arrival of over forty prisoners at Winchester is confirmed.
It seems useless to anticipate any pitched battle, as the enemy is apparently not disposed to give Gen. Johnston battle, at least on this side of the river.
Their retreat looks very much like a ruse to draw our troops into Maryland.
We publish this morning from the Baltimore Sun, of Wednesday, the Northern account of the engagement between Gen. Johnston's advance force and the Federalists under Gen. Patterson, on the 2d inst.
Johnston (search for this): article 1
Maryland (Maryland, United States) (search for this): article 1
Martinsburg (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Latest News late from Winchester.
Passengers who arrived on the Central cars yesterday, who left Winchester on Wednesday evening, report the retreat of General Patterson's command across the Potomac on the approach of General Johnston.
It is further reported that of Col. Jackson's force of 4,500 which engaged Patterson's column on Tuesday, at, Falling Waters, near Martinsburg, there were six killed and twenty wounded, and it is believed there were about eighty of the enemy killed.
The arrival of over forty prisoners at Winchester is confirmed.
It seems useless to anticipate any pitched battle, as the enemy is apparently not disposed to give Gen. Johnston battle, at least on this side of the river.
Their retreat looks very much like a ruse to draw our troops into Maryland.
We publish this morning from the Baltimore Sun, of Wednesday, the Northern account of the engagement between Gen. Johnston's advance force and the Federalists under Gen. Patterson, on the 2d inst.
Douglas (search for this): article 1
17th (search for this): article 1
May 30th (search for this): article 1
Washington (search for this): article 1
13th (search for this): article 1
Leland Stanford (search for this): article 1
Arrival of the Pony Express, Fort Kearney, July 1.
--The Pony Express, with the following summary of news, passed here this morning:
The Republican State Convention of California had met in Sacramento and dominated Leland Stanford for Governor.
The platform adopted endorses the Administration, denounces Secession and the doctrine that State allegiance is superior to that of the National Government.
The Convention also adopted resolutions expressing a profound grief at the death of Senator Douglas.
Demonstrations of mourning at the death of Douglas have been general throughout the State.
Fifteen wagons of the Overland Telegraph Company left Carson Valley on the 17th, loaded with poles and wire for Fort Churchill, where the first work was to be commenced about the 19th.
Poles had already been contracted for about three hundred miles from Fort Churchill eastward, and the line will be extended at the rate of five miles per day.
samuel H. Dash, a prominent c