Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 6, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for McClellan or search for McClellan in all documents.

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es to day that the Yankees evacuated Winchester night before last, burning all their stores and blowing up the magazine. They also burnt one whole square in the town. We learn from the same source that the Baltimore papers report the death of McClellan. [second Dispatch.] Harrisonburg. Sept. 4. --We have Baltimore papers of the 1st and 2d inst. They report the Federal loss in the battle of Friday to be 8,000 killed and wounded. They claim a victory. Of Saturday's fight, the A and Siegel, severely of the late Daniel Webster, was killed Colonel wounded. The American has a list of more than one hundred and fifty officers killed. Pope's report admits a loss of 8,000 on Friday. The American contains an account of the fight at Richmond, Ky., which admits that the Federal were defeated with immense loss, and driven to Lexington. Gen. Bull Nelson was severely wounded. Gen. McClellan retains command only of the "Army of the Potomac."He was not sent to Pope.
ferent color. They have beaten, although their full strength was not there, the combined forces of Pope, Burnside, and McClellan.--They have given these veracious gentry food enough for a whole broadside of bulletins. They have furnished them with material to manufacture Yankee victories out of for six months to come. For if McClellan was victorious when he was driven thirty miles from his original position and forced under the protection of his gunboats, where he lay shivering and skulking people of their cities would be sure, if they told the tale themselves, to go in mourning for it. A victory by Pope or McClellan always means a disastrous defeat. Nothing can equal or abate Yankee impudence. It is as indestructible as the Yan troops like a flock of sheep, a few weeks ago, on the Chickahominy. Precisely the same kind of language was used when McClellan set out with his grand army, four months ago. We were to be run over by the invincible Yankee heroes as though we were