Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 7. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Albany (New York, United States) or search for Albany (New York, United States) in all documents.

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spondence in relation to the public meeting at Albany, N. Y.--letter of the committee and resolutions. Albany, May 19, 1863. To His Excellency the President of the United States: the undersignficers of a public meeting held at the city of Albany on the sixteenth day of May, instant, herewithResolutions adopted at the meeting held in Albany, N. Y., on the 16th of May, 1863. Resolved, The resolutions of a public meeting held at Albany, New-York, on the sixteenth of the same month, was s and wishes of those who, like the meeting at Albany, declare their purpose to sustain the Governmeic meeting held at the Capitol, in the city of Albany, on the sixteenth day of May, 1863, to conside We are, with great respect, very truly yours, Albany, June 30, 1863. Erastus Corning, President. Elons adopted at a recent meeting in the city of Albany affirming the personal rights and liberties ofMcKown, A. H. Tremain, Daniel Shaw, W. Simon, A. E. Stimson, Isaac Lederer. Albany, June 30, 1863.
W. Bartley, W. J. Gordon, John O'Neill, C. A. White, V. E. Finck, Alexander Long, J. W. White, George H. Pendleton, George L. Converse, Warren P. Noble, James R. Morris, W. A Hutchins, Abner L. Backus, J. F. McKinney, P. C. Le Blond, Louis Schaffer. gentlemen: The resolutions of the Ohio Democratic State Convention, which you present me, together with your introductory and closing remarks, being in position and argument mainly the same as the resolutions of the Democratic meeting at Albany, New-York, I refer you to my response to the latter as meeting most of the points in the former. This response you evidently used in preparing your remarks, and I desire no more than that it be used with accuracy. In a single reading of your remarks, I only discovered one inaccuracy in matter, which I suppose you took from that paper. It is where you say: The undersigned are unable to agree with you in the opinion you have expressed that the Constitution is different in time of insurrection or
y-third army corps. Major Emory here made a cavalry reconnoissance toward Jacksboro, encountered two regiments of rebel cavalry, and routed them, taking forty-five prisoners. General Burnside, with the main body of his army, left Chitwood on the twenty-eighth and reached Montgomery, the county-seat of Morgan County, Tennessee, forty-two miles from Chitwood, on the thirtieth. Here another column of infantry, under Colonel Julius White, came in, having marched from Central Kentucky, by way of Albany, Monticello, and Jamestown. Colonel Burt, commanding the cavalry advance, sent word that the rebel General Pegram was holding the gap in the mountains, near the Emery Iron-Works, with two thousand men. The position was a very strong one, and the gap was the gate to the Clinch River Valley. A battle was expected, as there was not a better place in the country to check our forces. But on the morning of the thirty-first it was discovered that the enemy had fled in the night. Emery River,