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S. Bassett Fremont (search for this): article 2
st 26 --The Adams Express Company having discontinued the sending of letters to the South, those now received and arriving from the North will be returned to the senders. A flag was presented to-day at camp "Joe Holt," to General Rossean's brigade, entitled the "Louisville Legion," by the citizens of Louisville. There was an immense concourse in attendance. Explosion of percussion primers. Pittsburg, August 27 --A box of percussion primers for cannon, addressed to Gen. Fremont, at St. Louis, arrived here to-day on Adams' Express car, and from some uncurtained cause exploded, and seriously injured an employee of the railroad company and another man. No one was killed, as at first reported. The explosion caused some excitement and gave rise to a rumor of an infernal machine. Another Newspaper in trouble. Pittsburg, August 26. --The United States District Attorney, R. B. Carnahan, Esq. has notified the editor of the German Republikaner, L. W. Kœlkenb
William Bender (search for this): article 2
ed here from Harper's Ferry, with the camp equipage of the three months men under General Patterson. General Banks' headquarters are now at Pooleville, twenty miles above, and his entire supplies are carried by negroes by the way of Rockville. The Western Railroad is still in Federal possession. Capt. Tansill. Captain Tansill, the resigned officer of Marines, who has been sent to Fort Lafayette, has always previous to his arrest been much esteemed here. His wife is a daughter of Major Bender, Chief Clerk of the Ordnance Department. The Captain only arrived in Boston on Thursday last from the Brazil station. Sickness among the troops. Typhoid fever has appeared in the Government hospitals, and nearly all the sick and wounded soldiers have been attacked by the disease. Four hundred army ambulances have arrived here. From Gen. Banks' column. Hyattstown, Aug. 26. --A general court-martial for this division has been organized, of which Col. Biddle, of t
William L. Johnston (search for this): article 2
Washington to this point was completed on Saturday. The work was commenced at Taneytown on. Tuesday last, and run a distance of about thirty miles in a little over four days. The surgeon of Colonel Geary's regiment on Saturday took his sick to the general depot at Frederick. It is stated that Col. Geary anticipated an attack from the Confederates. The surgeon reported that he heard heavy firing near Poolesville, supposed to have been between General Stone's advance guard and some of Johnston's force. He fell in with General Stone, who, with a full battery and the Tammany regiment, started for the scene of action. The mail messenger from, Poolesville also reported having heard firing in the same direction, and believed that a fight was going on near Edwards' Ferry; but up to this present writing your correspondent has been unable to glean any further particulars of the affair. Dater from Missouri. Knokun, Iowa, August 26, 1861 --A private of Colonel Moore's regime
Captain only arrived in Boston on Thursday last from the Brazil station. Sickness among the troops. Typhoid fever has appeared in the Government hospitals, and nearly all the sick and wounded soldiers have been attacked by the disease. Four hundred army ambulances have arrived here. From Gen. Banks' column. Hyattstown, Aug. 26. --A general court-martial for this division has been organized, of which Col. Biddle, of the 1st Pennsylvania Rifles, in President, and Major Majelton, of the 2d Pennsylvania Reserve, is Judge Advocate. It is not known that any officers of high rank are to be arraigned. A telegraph line from Washington to this point was completed on Saturday. The work was commenced at Taneytown on. Tuesday last, and run a distance of about thirty miles in a little over four days. The surgeon of Colonel Geary's regiment on Saturday took his sick to the general depot at Frederick. It is stated that Col. Geary anticipated an attack from the C
ean any further particulars of the affair. Dater from Missouri. Knokun, Iowa, August 26, 1861 --A private of Colonel Moore's regiment arrived here from Athens, Mo. last night. He states that Colonel Green was approaching that place with a force variously estimated at from fifteen hundred to three thousand. The Union pickets, which were sixteen miles out, are driven in. Colonel Moore has nine hundred men and four cannon. Three hundred men left here to reinforce him. General Huribut is reported to be behind Green, with six hundred Union troops. Kansas City, Mo., August 26 --On Friday, the 234 Instant, the sum of $143,000 in gold, belonging to the Mechanic and Union Banks of this place, was seized by order of Major R. T. Van Horn, commanding the Reserve Corps of Home Guards. Some excitement was created here on Saturday by a skirmish which took place between twenty mounted Confederates on the north bend of the river, and the Ferry Guard on the south bank, a
now in the lower part of Monroe county. moving southward, and will probably attempt to cross the river to Boone county. This will rid Northeast Missouri of his presence and restore quiet to that portion of the State. From Louisville. Louisville, August 26 --The Adams Express Company having discontinued the sending of letters to the South, those now received and arriving from the North will be returned to the senders. A flag was presented to-day at camp "Joe Holt," to General Rossean's brigade, entitled the "Louisville Legion," by the citizens of Louisville. There was an immense concourse in attendance. Explosion of percussion primers. Pittsburg, August 27 --A box of percussion primers for cannon, addressed to Gen. Fremont, at St. Louis, arrived here to-day on Adams' Express car, and from some uncurtained cause exploded, and seriously injured an employee of the railroad company and another man. No one was killed, as at first reported. The explosion ca
R. B. Carnahan (search for this): article 2
, August 27 --A box of percussion primers for cannon, addressed to Gen. Fremont, at St. Louis, arrived here to-day on Adams' Express car, and from some uncurtained cause exploded, and seriously injured an employee of the railroad company and another man. No one was killed, as at first reported. The explosion caused some excitement and gave rise to a rumor of an infernal machine. Another Newspaper in trouble. Pittsburg, August 26. --The United States District Attorney, R. B. Carnahan, Esq. has notified the editor of the German Republikaner, L. W. Kœlkenbeck, Esq., through the Marshal of this district, that the-tone of his paper is decidedly inimical to the Government, and if not changed may subject him to legal prosecution. Union men killed in Kentucky. Cincinnati, Aug. 26 --A Union man named Moore was killed, and another, named Neill, mortally wounded, on Sunday afternoon, by a gang of five rebels at Shotwell Tollgate, Ky., seven miles from Covington.
Daniel C. Lowber (search for this): article 2
he Confederates. Nine Confederate prisoners were brought to Wheeling on Saturday from Grafton, Va. Jeff. Thompson being told that Hecker had offered a reward for his head, replied, "Sorry I cannot return the compliment, for I would not have his as a gift." A definite arrangement is understood to have been made in Missouri, by which all the prisoners taken on each side, in the late battle, are to be released. A man named Spencer, of Cincinnati, has it is stated, invented a submarine bomb that can be thrown into the water, and will explode after it is submerged. Daniel C. Lowber, of New Orleans, who stands charged with being a bearer of dispatches from England to President Davis, was removed on Monday to Fort Lafayette. Up to the 26th inst. the subscription to the Confederate loan in Raleigh, N. C., was $36,800. The new regulation in regard to passports to Europe goes into effect immediately. Oscar Irving has been appointed Government agent in New York.
Oscar Irving (search for this): article 2
he Confederates. Nine Confederate prisoners were brought to Wheeling on Saturday from Grafton, Va. Jeff. Thompson being told that Hecker had offered a reward for his head, replied, "Sorry I cannot return the compliment, for I would not have his as a gift." A definite arrangement is understood to have been made in Missouri, by which all the prisoners taken on each side, in the late battle, are to be released. A man named Spencer, of Cincinnati, has it is stated, invented a submarine bomb that can be thrown into the water, and will explode after it is submerged. Daniel C. Lowber, of New Orleans, who stands charged with being a bearer of dispatches from England to President Davis, was removed on Monday to Fort Lafayette. Up to the 26th inst. the subscription to the Confederate loan in Raleigh, N. C., was $36,800. The new regulation in regard to passports to Europe goes into effect immediately. Oscar Irving has been appointed Government agent in New York.
England (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 2
tinat, now in the harbor of New York. The Courier thinks it possible that the Catinat may touch for a moment at a Southern port to leave dispatches for French consuls. The Toronto Globe mentions in an editorial article, "the presence in Canada of an active sympathizer with Mr. Jefferson Davis--a gentleman who did service to the Southern cause as a newspaper writer in Washington — seeking through the Ministerial press of this country to stir up strife between the Northern States and Great Britain." In New York, on Tuesday morning, the United States Marshal seized in Adams & Co.'s Express office about ten thousand copies of the New York Daily News, destined for Louisville, St. Louis and St. Joseph. The name of the steamship Joseph Whitney has been changed to the McClellan, in honor of the Federal General. She is attached to the quartermaster's service, and will soon sail with prisoners for Tortugas, Fla. The Philadelphia Inquirer is informed of the stoppage of seve
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