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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 27, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for England (United Kingdom) or search for England (United Kingdom) in all documents.
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The London Times thinks that the "moral effect" of the fall of Charleston will be highly injurious to the Confederacy, and that we shall suffer additionally from the complete closing of all our ports to the outside world, meaning thereby we suppose, Great Britain, which has furnished us with such a large amount of military supplies during the war.
We are unable to see why the "moral effect" of the fall of Charleston should be greater now than in the first Revolution.
The military advantages gained by the enemy are not to be compared in the last case with those of the first.--Charleston has now fallen, not by a successful assault, nor by the superior strength of its assailants, but has been simply evacuated, without the loss of its army, which was brought safely off by Hardee, and has since gained a brilliant victory over the Federals.
In the first Revolution, the American fortifications were battered down by artillery, and General Lincoln, the commander, compelled to sig
The Daily Dispatch: March 27, 1865., [Electronic resource], Interesting Chapter on circus elephants. (search)
Late and important from Europe.
Advices from Europe to the 11th instant have been received.
Great Britain.
In the House of Commons, on the 9th instant, Lord Robert Cecil asked whether any demands had been received by the foreign office from the American Government or the American Ambassador, demanding compensation for losses occasioned to American citizens by the Alabama or other vessels commissioned by the American Government of the Confederate States.
Mr. Layard said that t to make us hold our hands.
Perhaps it is some such second-sight that forces itself on the mental vision of our fellow-citizens in their most prophetic moods, and keeps consols down below 90.
The Relations between the United States and great Britain. [From the Daily News, March 10.]
It is time to introduce a little reason into the discussion of this and similar questions; time that the language in which they are treated in newspapers should become conformable to the usages by which c