Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 24, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for November 29th or search for November 29th in all documents.

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forced upon them the responsibility will not be theirs. The war fever in England — Hesitation about the Cabinet Council in England.[from the Dublin Freeman, Nov. 29.] The American question continues to agitate commercial circles. The Chamber of Commerce (Dublin) yesterday was crowded during the greater part of the day by d hopes that moderate counsels will prevent a collision with this (England) country. War risks on vessels from England to New York.[from the Dublin Freeman, Nov. 29.] At Lloyd's, Liverpool, yesterday, in consequence of the news by the La Plata, war risks of five guineas were demanded on vessels from New York. The ste the Connecticut at New York — accession of prisoners to Fort Lafayette. The United States steamer Connecticut, Commander Maxwell Woodhull, from Galveston, November 29, Southwest Pass; December 1; Ship Island, December 2; Mobile Bar and Fort Pickens, 3d; Key West, 10th; Savannah, 12th; Fortress Monroe, 16th; arrived at New Yor
l things. We have already the opinions of the English journals, which are not of a nature a calm the fears we have entertained. The Morning Post asserts that no reparation will be complete without the restitution of the passengers violently forced from the protection of the British flag. While wisely reserving the question of right, the English press in general expresses a profound resentment at the affront which England has just suffered. [From the Paris Constitutional, Nov. 29.] The arrest of an English mail steamer by an American vessel of war is so serious a fact that we may be justified in believing that the officer who committed the act did so upon his own responsibility, so that, if he was obeying instructions from the Cabinet of Washington, the latter had not sufficiently weighed the consequences. In either case we hope that the American government will make a reparation and satisfy the claims of England. We count upon it doing so in its own inter