Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 8, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for E. S. Sanford or search for E. S. Sanford in all documents.

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confidence with which you were treated. The publication of facts obtained from Washington under such circumstances is a high military crime. Respectfully, E. S. Sanford. Military Superintendent. To the dispatch from Col. Sanford Mr. Fulton replied as follows: Colonel Sanford: Sir --The dispatch I sent to New York Col. Sanford Mr. Fulton replied as follows: Colonel Sanford: Sir --The dispatch I sent to New York was a private one, addressed to Mr. Craig for his information as to whether he desired to receive the report I was preparing for the press. It was not intended for publication, and would not have been published if my report had been permitted to go through by telegraph. I never dreamed of its being published. To find myselfColonel Sanford: Sir --The dispatch I sent to New York was a private one, addressed to Mr. Craig for his information as to whether he desired to receive the report I was preparing for the press. It was not intended for publication, and would not have been published if my report had been permitted to go through by telegraph. I never dreamed of its being published. To find myself in Fort McHenry, the depot for traitors, is a mortification I cannot express. Having risked both life and property in defending the Union cause when our city was in the possession of traitors, and rendered services, as editor and proprietor of the Baltimore American, to the Government in sustaining the laws which no one has excel