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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 29, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for South Carolina (South Carolina, United States) or search for South Carolina (South Carolina, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 17 results in 5 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: January 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], The National Crisis. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: January 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], The National Crisis. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: January 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], The National Crisis. (search)
Highly important from South Carolina,
Rejection of the Virginia Resolutions!
South Carolina FinallySouth Carolina Finally out!
Correspondence of South Carolina with Washington.
Fort Sumter to be taken!
Charleston, JaSouth Carolina with Washington.
Fort Sumter to be taken!
Charleston, Jan. 28.--The South Carolina Legislature, to-day, unanimously adopted the following resolutions:
Resolved, unanimously, That the General Assembly of South Carolina tenders to the Legislature of Virginia their acknowle
Resolved, unanimously, That the separation of South Carolina from the Federal Union is final, and she has no ommerce, with a view to subjugate the people of South Carolina, and that then, since the authorities at Washin orrespondence of Gov. Pickens, Col. Hayne, (the South Carolina Commissioner to Washington,) and the Federal authorities.
It appears that the ultimatum of South Carolina was the surrender of Fort Sumter, that Carolina pr ion of Hon. John L. Preston, Private Envoy from South Carolina to Virginia, was to-day sent on to him at Richm
Wreck.
--The bark Uncle Sam, from Charleston, S. C., for Bordeaux, was run down at sea last month and totally lost.
No particulars given.
The Uncle Sam had on board a cargo of 386 whole and 32 half-casks rice, and 423 bales of cotton.
The cargo is insured in Bordeaux: the vessel for $12,000 in New Orleans, and $2,000 in South Carolina.
The Daily Dispatch: January 29, 1861., [Electronic resource], Resistance to the laws. (search)
The Georgia Convention. Milledgeville, Ga., Jan, 28.
--An ordinance adopted Saturday abolishing the Federal Courts, was reconsidered to-day, and recommitted for the purpose of making an Admiralty Court.
Commissioners were appointed to the slaveholding States, and delegates appointed to Montgomery with instructions to make a Provisional Government on the basis of the Federal Constitution.
The ordinance continuing the existing revenue laws was lost; one which is substantially that adopted by South Carolina, was adopted, after a long and animated debate, by ayes 130, nays 60.
The Convention is not likely to adjourn tomorrow.
The Mississippi Commissioners were received to-day.