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The Daily Dispatch: April 18, 1864., [Electronic resource] 5 1 Browse Search
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The Daily Dispatch: April 18, 1864., [Electronic resource], Yankee vessel Blown up by a Torpedo. (search)
campaigning, and for two days has been rainy, rendering the roads very muddy. Miscellaneous There has arrived in Baltimore a refugee from Richmond, Mrs. Lucy A. Rice. Mrs. Rice, says the Yankee papers, despite the "tyranny that reigns at Richmond, has a ways preserved her loyalty to the Union, and evinced a warm sympathy Mrs. Rice, says the Yankee papers, despite the "tyranny that reigns at Richmond, has a ways preserved her loyalty to the Union, and evinced a warm sympathy for the sufferings of the Federal officers and men who have been imprisoned in Richmond. Her house was for nine days the hiding place and refuge of Col. Streight, Major B. B. McDonald, and another officer, after they escaped from Libby Prison, and were awaiting an opportunity to get out of the city" Mrs Rice has reached the YankeeMrs Rice has reached the Yankee lines in a destitute condition. She has been forced "to abandon all she possessed in Richmond." From the report of the Secretary of the Treasury, in answer to a resolution of the Senate relative to the number of Commissioners and the amount of money received under the law to collect direct taxes in the insurrectionary distr