Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 11, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Boteler or search for Boteler in all documents.

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er until they met, and a cordon of military posts was established in the very heart of the Cotton States. On the other hand, the Constitution, of this morning, affirms that the "Star of the West" did go to Charleston, and that Secretary Thompson resigned because this was done in defiance of the plighted word of the Administration, and without his knowledge. Here is the third perjury of Buchanan.--First, his honor was pledged to the members of South Carolina and to Gov. Floyd; second, to Mr. Boteler in regard to Harper's Ferry; third, to Secretary Thompson. And General Scott is a party to this violation of pledges. When we have to deal with those who violate their solemn engagements, is it not high time for Virginia to take her welfare into her own hands? Gen. Lane is of opinion that the best chance for peace is for Virginia to act promptly. All the border States look to her. I received a letter from Knoxville yesterday, which closes thus: "Tennessee will, I feel certain, cal
ct a peaceable separation, so that the Government might be reconstructed at some future day. He ridiculed the idea of a constitutional monarchy, and concluded by saying that if the North did not want peace, a war was being inaugurated the equal of which the world never saw. He appealed to Northern Senators to avert it, and preserve the fraternal feelings of the country. The issue laid in their hands. Mr. Greene obtained the floor for Monday. Adjourned until Monday. House.--Mr. Boteler denied the truth of the published statement that he had offered a resolution releasing the Committee of Thirty-Three at the instance of a Republican member. He had offered it on his own responsibility, after consultation with Democrats and Americans. Mr. Maynard offered a resolution instructing the Committee on the President's Message to report on that portion relating to a convention of the people on the subject of the threatening dissolution. Objected to. Mr. Morris, of Penn