Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 12, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Beaufort, S. C. (South Carolina, United States) or search for Beaufort, S. C. (South Carolina, United States) in all documents.

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erthrown, exhausted, and impov by an unsuccessful war, will be in no even if she had the inclination, to the trade and commerce of Yankee masters. The cotton crop would be destroyed, and the great staples of the South, can alone reinvigorate the backbone of Yankee section, would never again be private. The burning of cotton which has taken place on the Southern seacoast, and the contemptuous refusal of Southern white men to trade with the impertinent Yankee she have opened stores at Beaufort, illness the stern determination of the South any sacrifices rather than yield any longer to the rapacious and cruel There is not the shadow of a doubt every pound of cotton in every Southern are will be burned by its owners before it will be permitted to fall into Yankee hands. This is as certain as any future event can be, from that time forth, so long as Yankees holds dominion, the Yankees must themselves raise all the cotton that is grown on soil. They neither understand its n
s's Landing, and especially at Whitehall Ferry. The body of the command reached the landing at Station creek and crossed to Dr. Junkins's plantation during the night, and after resting a short time at the latter place, resumed the march for Beaufort, where it arrived early Friday morning. The town was deserted by the white population, and no representative of the Quartermaster's or Commissary's departments, or other person in authority, could be found; I was therefore under the necessity oftation at the landing on Eddings's Island. The Rev. Stephen Elliott was chosen to discharge this important duty, and left on Thursday morning for that purpose. Fortunately, Captain Thomas Hankel, Mr. Henry Stuart, and Mr. W. H. Cuthbert, of Beaufort, had already secured a large number of flats at Dr. Jenkins's landing for the purpose of taking them to some point on Eddings's Island for our relief. Mr. Elliott; informed them of the plan agreed upon, and thus, through the co-operation of the