hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
United States (United States) 20 0 Browse Search
Heenan 10 0 Browse Search
Jackson 10 2 Browse Search
Lincoln 10 0 Browse Search
King 8 0 Browse Search
Fort Warren (Massachusetts, United States) 8 0 Browse Search
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) 8 0 Browse Search
Gen Grant 8 0 Browse Search
Dalton, Ga. (Georgia, United States) 8 0 Browse Search
Danville (Virginia, United States) 7 1 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 28, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 503 total hits in 251 results.

1 2 3 4 5 6 ...
The Yankees in the Valley. The recent advance of the enemy up the Valley seems to have been one solely of plunder. In Harrisonburg they robbed every store in the town, besides several private residences. Isaac Paul, A. Lewis, J. W. Beach, Theophilus Ott, Rodeffer & Golliday, Sibert & Koogler, R. P. Fletch & Bro., and Lowenbeck & Bro., were the principal sufferers. The Yankees entered the town about 12 o'clock on Saturday night, and a portion of them remained until Monday morning.--During their visit they took occasion to pay their respects to the office of the Rockingham Register, where they pled a lot of type, and destroyed one of the process.
The Yankees in the Valley. The recent advance of the enemy up the Valley seems to have been one solely of plunder. In Harrisonburg they robbed every store in the town, besides several private residences. Isaac Paul, A. Lewis, J. W. Beach, Theophilus Ott, Rodeffer & Golliday, Sibert & Koogler, R. P. Fletch & Bro., and Lowenbeck & Bro., were the principal sufferers. The Yankees entered the town about 12 o'clock on Saturday night, and a portion of them remained until Monday morning.--During their visit they took occasion to pay their respects to the office of the Rockingham Register, where they pled a lot of type, and destroyed one of the process.
Isaac Paul (search for this): article 1
The Yankees in the Valley. The recent advance of the enemy up the Valley seems to have been one solely of plunder. In Harrisonburg they robbed every store in the town, besides several private residences. Isaac Paul, A. Lewis, J. W. Beach, Theophilus Ott, Rodeffer & Golliday, Sibert & Koogler, R. P. Fletch & Bro., and Lowenbeck & Bro., were the principal sufferers. The Yankees entered the town about 12 o'clock on Saturday night, and a portion of them remained until Monday morning.--During their visit they took occasion to pay their respects to the office of the Rockingham Register, where they pled a lot of type, and destroyed one of the process.
J. W. Beach (search for this): article 1
The Yankees in the Valley. The recent advance of the enemy up the Valley seems to have been one solely of plunder. In Harrisonburg they robbed every store in the town, besides several private residences. Isaac Paul, A. Lewis, J. W. Beach, Theophilus Ott, Rodeffer & Golliday, Sibert & Koogler, R. P. Fletch & Bro., and Lowenbeck & Bro., were the principal sufferers. The Yankees entered the town about 12 o'clock on Saturday night, and a portion of them remained until Monday morning.--During their visit they took occasion to pay their respects to the office of the Rockingham Register, where they pled a lot of type, and destroyed one of the process.
Theophilus Ott (search for this): article 1
The Yankees in the Valley. The recent advance of the enemy up the Valley seems to have been one solely of plunder. In Harrisonburg they robbed every store in the town, besides several private residences. Isaac Paul, A. Lewis, J. W. Beach, Theophilus Ott, Rodeffer & Golliday, Sibert & Koogler, R. P. Fletch & Bro., and Lowenbeck & Bro., were the principal sufferers. The Yankees entered the town about 12 o'clock on Saturday night, and a portion of them remained until Monday morning.--During their visit they took occasion to pay their respects to the office of the Rockingham Register, where they pled a lot of type, and destroyed one of the process.
R. P. Fletch (search for this): article 1
The Yankees in the Valley. The recent advance of the enemy up the Valley seems to have been one solely of plunder. In Harrisonburg they robbed every store in the town, besides several private residences. Isaac Paul, A. Lewis, J. W. Beach, Theophilus Ott, Rodeffer & Golliday, Sibert & Koogler, R. P. Fletch & Bro., and Lowenbeck & Bro., were the principal sufferers. The Yankees entered the town about 12 o'clock on Saturday night, and a portion of them remained until Monday morning.--During their visit they took occasion to pay their respects to the office of the Rockingham Register, where they pled a lot of type, and destroyed one of the process.
's, over every available road but one, which was deemed impracticable, but by which I crossed over the top of the Alleghenies with my command, with the exception of four caissons, which were destroyed in order to increase the teams of the pieces. My loss is six men drowned, one officer and four men wounded, and one officer and ninety men missing. We captured about 200 prisoners, but have retained but four officers and eighty men, on account of then inability to walk. We took also about 1500 horses. My men and horses subsisted entirely upon a very poor country, and the officers and men have suffered cold and hunger, and fatigue, with remarkable fortitude. My command has marched, climbed, slid, and swam three hundred and fifty miles since the 8th inst. W. W. Averill, Brig. Gen. The Siege of Charleston. The following dispatches appear in the Baltimore American: Charleston, Dec. 18--Gen. Gillmore again shelled Charleston on Thursday night, throwing a number of
t decision of that State or to bring the question involved before the Supreme Court of the United States for final adjudication, to the end that if Congress shall deem such legislation necessary, a bill may be prepared not subject to constitutional objections. The proposition was laid upon the table — yeas nays . A Verile Within the enemy's lines — his official report The following is Averill's official report of his recent raid upon Salem: Essay, Pockmont as county, Va. Dec. 91, via Beverley, Dec. 22. H. W. Halfork, General-in-Chief: If I have the honor to report that I cut the Virginia and Tennessee railroad at Salem, on the 14th inst., and have arrived safely at this point with my command, consisting of the 2d, 3d and 8th Virginia mounted infantry, 14th Pennsylvania, Dobson's battalion of cavalry, and Ewing's battery. At Salem, three depots were destroyed, containing 2,000 barrels of four, 10,000 bushels of wheat, 100,000 bushels of shelled corn, 50,000
ur tugs. The amount of timber was so large that it is believed the obstructions must be seriously damaged.--There is no other news of importance. New York, Dec. 18.--By the arrival of the Aragon it is stated that a recent heavy gale swept away nearly all the rebel obstructions, and their remnants line the shore. The entrance to the harbor is now believed to be clear, and it is supposed our navy will take due advantage of the fact. From the army of the Potomac. A telegram from Meade's army, dated the 21st inst., says that up to that time about 10,000 had re-enlisted, and large numbers had gone home on the thirty days furlough. Of course the writer does not say how many of these will ever come back again. The telegram adds: Reports which have found their way into certain papers, regarding a retrograde movement nearer Washington, are, so far as can be learned, utterly unfounded. On the contrary, all appearances indicate a continued occupation of this region for s
the Exchange of prisoners probably resumed — Recapture of the Chesapeake, &c., &c. Through the courtesy of Capt. Hatch, of the Exchange Bureau, we have received Northern papers of Thursday, the 94th inst. The flag-of-trues boat by which they came arrived at City Point on Saturday with 507 returned Confederate soldiers, in good health, and seven surgeons. It is understood at the Exchange office that Gen. Butler, at Portress Monroe, has been placed in control of the subject, and it is believed that the regular exchange of prisoners has been reopened. The news contained in our files is not of much importance. We give a summary of it: Proceedings in the Yankee Congress — the amnesty — Habeas corpus. The proceedings in the Yankee Congress for the week are not of much interest. One of the "personal explanations" in the Senate was that of Mr. Hale, Senator from New Hampshire, who was charged with receiving a bribe of $3,000 for getting two political prisoner<
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...