Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Stuyvesant or search for Stuyvesant in all documents.

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vided was one of the handsomest, perhaps, ever run in the country. The decorations are blue, with silver stars, and the rich sofas, carpeting and luxurious chairs give to the car the appearance of an elegantly furnished saloon. The sides are draped with red, white and blue silk, and national flags are suspended at each end. A locomotive went ahead as pilot, and the train was drawn by a locomotive splendidly decorated with flags. The train ran finely on time to Hudson. At Greenbush, Stuyvesant and Castleton, large crowds assembled, and cannon were fired as the train passed along. The President elect, and suite, reached here by special train at 10.56 A. M. An enthusiastic congregation of about 5,000 people greeted him at the depot, and thirty-four guns were fired from Promenade Hill. A platform car was provided, upon which Mayor Bachman, and Recorder Miller were, prepared to receive the President, but he declined to leave the car. He addressed the crowd in substantially the