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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 13, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abraham Lincoln or search for Abraham Lincoln in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: April 13, 1864., [Electronic resource], A Disappointed man. (search)
Great Britain and the Irish.
The best commentary upon the professed neutrality of the British Government in this war is its persistent connivance in the large emigration from Ireland to America for the manifest purpose of swelling the Federal armies.
She is willing that Ireland should be depopulated of its fighting men for the purpose of enabling Lincoln and Seward to destroy the cotton-raising labor of the Southern Confederacy.
So intent is she upon this cherished object that she pockets the insult to herself which every Federal recruiting agent breathes into Irish ears — that after fighting the battles of the United States, the United States will help them to fight the battles of old Ireland.
England pockets this indignity without difficulty, knowing well enough that it is an empty threat, and that Irishmen are more dangerous to her in their own country than three thousand miles away, with the wide ocean between.
Whilst thus bent on destroying American cotton, and crus
Garrett Davis on Lincoln.
--Garrett Davis, of Ky., made a speech in the U. S Senate a few days since, of which a Washington letter says:
He began by denouncing, in most bitter language, the policy of the Administration, and arraigning Lincoln as a tyrannical usurper.
He attributed all the present difficulties to the "pLincoln as a tyrannical usurper.
He attributed all the present difficulties to the "pestiferous States" of Massachusetts and South Carolina, and believed a change of Administration the only safeguard against utter destruction.
His declaration that Kentucky had more to fear from the present Executive than from Jeff. Davis, and that he would support for the Presidency any man on the face of the earth, "excepting a nfrom the present Executive than from Jeff. Davis, and that he would support for the Presidency any man on the face of the earth, "excepting a negro," in preference to Mr. Lincoln, occasioned something of a sensation, which, however, as quickly subsided, the Senate setting again into a studied air of inattention and indifference.
The Daily Dispatch: April 13, 1864., [Electronic resource], The command of the Yankee Army in Virginia — Lincoln has a Finger in it. (search)
The command of the Yankee Army in Virginia — Lincoln has a Finger in it.
The New York Herald has three editorial articles in its issue of the 2d instant, all denouncing Lincoln for interferenceLincoln for interference with Gen. Grant.
It looks very much as if that paper was preparing to give Grant an easy fall.
The firs article says:
Gen. Grant was made commander of all the United States armies by the fri enough to deplore those follies.
It was found that these extraordinary powers conceded to President Lincoln have been used by him not so much to put down the rebellion as to secure another term of o e bill of complaints which the majority of the Republicans in Congress have made up against Abraham Lincoln.
In assumptions of power, in claptrap cant and low cunning, they have found him a sort of ces its Executive a future holds the balance of power against him, and will exercise it to some purpose.
We count upon the shelving of Lincoln through the postponement of the Baltimore Convention.