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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 7, 1862., [Electronic resource].
Found 686 total hits in 354 results.
Fort Warren (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): article 5
Enlistments at the North.
Some of the exchanged prisoners from Fort Warren (Boston harbor) state that previous to their departure for the South, they had good opportunities of learning the facts in regard to enlistments in the Federal army, and they fully confirm the accounts heretofore received from various sources.
In the city of Boston stupendous efforts have been made to stimulate volunteering, but thus far without practical result.
Meetings of citizens are held almost daily, and mo re laboring to convince the public mind of the peculiar advantages of a measure which the masses universally condemn.
A statement has been put in circulation that thirty thousand men have already volunteered in the several States, but this was so utterly at variance with the truth that a New York journal refused to give it currency, and came out with a flat contradiction.
The guard over the prisoners at Fort Warren is composed of paupers taken from the poor houses a Boston and vicinity.
W. K. Smith (search for this): article 5
Heavy Haul.
--The house of W. K. Smith, corner of 27th street and Church Hill, was entered on Tuesday night and robbed of 400 lbs. bacon, a lot of salt, pickles, and soap.
On searching yesterday, half of the bacon was found buried in the garden of a free colored woman named Ann Elizabeth Clarke, on 29th street. This person's house was tenanted by several men wearing uniforms, who were supposed to be deserters.
Ann Elizabeth Clarke (search for this): article 5
Heavy Haul.
--The house of W. K. Smith, corner of 27th street and Church Hill, was entered on Tuesday night and robbed of 400 lbs. bacon, a lot of salt, pickles, and soap.
On searching yesterday, half of the bacon was found buried in the garden of a free colored woman named Ann Elizabeth Clarke, on 29th street. This person's house was tenanted by several men wearing uniforms, who were supposed to be deserters.
April 27th (search for this): article 7
May 30th (search for this): article 7
Prison life at Fort Delaware.
Capt. Beckwith West, of the 48th Virginia regiment, was captured by the enemy at Front Royal, on the 30th of May, and taken to Fort Delaware, where he was held as prisoner until exchanged a few days ago. In a narration of his prison experiences he says that the Confederate commissioned officers, forty-seven in number, were confined in a room forty feet long by fifteen in width, the ascent to which was made by a ladder twenty feet long, which was taken away every night.
On some days, as the caprice of the commanding officer happened to be, the officers were permitted to walk for half an hour on the parapet of the fort.
Officers and privates were subjected to the same fare, which consisted of a small allowance of sour bread and salt meat twice a day, with an occasional introduction of very weak soup.
The Government allowance for rations purports to be sixteen cents a day for each prisoner; but it was stated in a Philadelphia newspaper that Capt. Gib
Gibson (search for this): article 7
Hall (search for this): article 7
Dutch (search for this): article 7
June 18th, 1862 AD (search for this): article 7
Segebarth (search for this): article 7