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The Daily Dispatch: March 5, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: May 11, 1863., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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quorum. Afterwards, said vote was reconsidered, and the bill was laid on the table. Bills passed. Bill "giving the consent of the State to the construction of a railroad from the North Carolina Railroad, in the State of North Carolina, to connect with the Richmond and Danville Railroad," with title to be amended thus: "an act to sanction an ordinance of the State of North Carolina entitled an ordinance to incorporate the Piedmont Railroad Company " Bill "for the relief of E. A. W. Hore, late Sheriff of Stafford county." Bill "incorporating the West Fork Iron Manufacturing Company, in Floyd county." House bill "to amend an act entitled an act amending the charter of the town of Danville, passed March 4, 1854, and incorporating into one the subsequent acts amendatory thereof." House bill "refunding to the securities of Thomas K. Davis, late Sheriff of Prince William county, damages paid by them as such." House bill "authorizing Maryland volunteers who
to abandon his pet plan by Chancellorsville, and both had left him to his own devices, the friends of Fremont urged his claims to be Commander in-Chief. I hope they may succeed, but the paper expressed the opinion that Hallock himself would soon take command in person. All this was before the fight. Another paper — the Sunday Mercury--had a long correspondence about the citizen prisoners taken in Stafford and Westmoreland counties, all of whose names I have already sent you except E. A. W. Hore, of Stafford. They were kept in tents "with lousy contrabands," as the correspondent expresses it, and rebel soldiers and deserters, &c.; had to take scarce prisoners fare, and were afterwards put in the prison-ship, which the correspondent says is "a disgrace to the Federal Government." The hardships and privations, although unexampled in severity, have not prevented these "old Virginia gentlemen" from expressing their allegiance to the South and detestation of Yankees. The letter bea