Valley of the Shadow
Page 1
Page Description:

List of national, state, and local officeholders, column 1; prospectus of the Semi-weekly Dispatch, column 1; advertisements, columns 1 and 2; poem, column 3; anecdote about Benjamin Butler, article about the destructive properties of the conical balls fired from Minie rifles, column 4; the chronology of secession, column 4; article about the case of John Merriman, charged with treason in Baltimore, column 5

Fun Among the Soldiers

(column 3)

Excerpt:

"I am living luxuriously, at present, on the top of a very respectable fence, and fare sumptuously on three granite buscuits [sic] a day, and a glass of water, weakened with brandy."

Drill! Drill!

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Page 2
Page Description:

Short articles giving news from Washington, North Carolina, Mechanicsville in New York, Cincinnati, and other locations, columns 3 and 4; advertisements, column 5

The Attitude of England

(column 1)

Virginia Affairs

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Horses and Wagons for the Army

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Page 3
Page Description:

Prices current, column 3; advertisements, columns 3-5

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Shot Himself

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Another Arrival of Troops

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Buried at Last

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Robbery

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Relief Fund

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Quarters of Troops

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Death of a Soldier

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Full Text of Article

On yesterday morning the body of a soldier, named Samuel Hoin, Company G, 2d Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, was conveyed to the railroad station to be taken to his friends. The company of which the deceased was a member followed the corpse to the station, another company with the regimental band preceded it, the band playing a dead march. The whole was conducted in a very solemn manner, and we noticed as the procession passed that some of his comrades in arms were in tears. The disease, we understood, was brain fever.

Disgraceful

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Full Text of Article

On Monday night a soldier went to the house of Mr. Christ, and represented himself as an officer, sent to search the house for a man whom he named. He was told that no man of that name was there, and was denied admission. He threatened to break the door, when he was admitted, and after passing through the house, went away without doing any damage. What his object was is not known, but such conduct is not to be tolerated. If the soldiers stationed here cannot be kept in order by their officers, some other means must be devised. The citizens here are ever ready to do all in their power for the comfort and kind treatment of our soldiers, and we are glad to record that nearly all the soldiers are well behaved, and appreciate the kindness of the people. We hope the few disorderly ones may see the necessity of maintaining order and conduct themselves accordingly.

Soldiers Letters to be Franked

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Pennsylvania Secessionists

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Page 4
Page Description:

Poem, column 1; excerpt from an article written in Richmond by a correspondent of the New York Tribune about the state of Southern troops, column 1; advertisements, columns 2-5