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The Daily Dispatch: June 26, 1861., [Electronic resource], Judge Parker's charge to the Grand Jury of Frederick county, Va. (search)
easures. I partook of a soldier's dinner with Lieut. G. A. Cary, of the Elizabeth City Cavalry, and smoked a pipe with that warm-hearted prince of gentlemen, Robert Shield, the Sheriff of the county of York, bade the gallant and brave Colonel Magruder adieu, and, through dust and sunshine, returned to the ancient city of Williamsburg, to partake of the hospitalities of one of her most modest and most gifted sons, Dr. John M. Galt. Hampton, now overrun by the mongrel mercenaries of Lincoln, under the control and direction of that cross-eyed scoundrel, Butler, is largely represented in this town by families from that once pleasant and thriving place. You meet them on the thoroughfares and in the churches in Williamsburg, and the citizens have thrown open their houses and tendered their hospitalities to them with that warm welcome which Virginians know how to give and how to receive. An incident occurred one day last week of the most touching kind. The remains of Maj Win
ites, June 6th: "The ministers of the United States have hardly left Paris when the agents of the Confederate States make their appearance. Mr. William Rost has arrived, charged with an extraordinary message from President Davis to the Emperor of the French. Many Americans — It is hard to divine why they venture such an assertion — say that the Southern envoy and his friends are very sanguine as to the ultimate success of his mission. Mr. Rost is accompanied by several other gentlemen, some of whom set out immediately for St Peters burg, Prussia and Austria; and others try and engage on their side the sympathies of the manufacturers of France. Nothing is said about the Manchester men, in connection with this new mission; but it may fall strangely on English ears to be told that most of the slave-owners staying at Paris appear to be under the impression that some of these days English men-of-war will be dispatched to break up the blockade established by President Lincoln.
t in this State, has been guilty of treasonable conduct, or other conduct such as will justify his removal from office. The regular order of the day was now called up, in reference to suspending payment on public debt, coupons, &c., except the sterling bonds payable in London. A substitute was submitted, providing that the interest be paid in Richmond in currency. Mr. James Barbour opposed any proposition which would hand over $700,000 a year to the very men who are supplying Lincoln's Government with the means to subjugate the South, while that Government seizes upon our slave property as contraband of war. The ordinance which gave rise to this interesting discussion provides that the interest due to citizens of the North on the bonds of the State shall be suspended during the war. Mr. Montague followed Mr. Barbour in support of paying this interest as a necessity required by the honor of the State. Mr. Montague denied that the repudiation would be sanctione
lay I indulged in. Carelessly folded and drooping over the front of my dress in such a way as to admit of no doubt as to its character, I walked up Baltimore street, holding it in my hand.--In the course of my promenade we encountered a squad of Lincoln's beggarly, beastly brutes. (I suppose it would not be wholly consistent with female delicacy and decorum to give voice to such pretty words as these.--If there is any impropriety in committing them to paper, my pen is responsible. Outraged fek of the emotions those people excite in me sometimes ! I am sure it would have given me a sensation of unmixed pleasure to have strangled the young lady (?) of the house, when, a few evenings since, she cheered and kissed her hand to a crowd of Lincoln's rowdy rabble, passing by on their way to Washington — men who, but the day before, had almost mutinied, because they were not allowed to hang upon the spot three of our best citizens who had been arrested at a county town through which the tro
The Daily Dispatch: June 26, 1861., [Electronic resource], The peace movement in New York City. (search)
elf, as Mr. Crittenden phrases it, upon her neutral position till peace is secured, and the independence of the Confederate States is acknowledged by the North, may she not adopt with emphasis the famous interrogatory of Mr. Webster: "Where am I to go?" In that event, the end of the war will find her a member of the Northern Confederacy, and, whilst the North may be willing to acknowledge the independence of eleven States, covering an immense extent of territory and a large population, it may not be so ready to render that concession to a single Commonwealth, which has placed itself in the "proud position" of a game of "heads I win, tails you lose." The North may insist that Kentucky shall remain a member of the Northern Confederacy. "Choose ye this day whom ye will serve. No man can serve two masters." These are the texts which the clergy in Kentucky may readily adapt to political subjects. She has produced the two Presidents--Davis and Lincoln. Let Kentucky choose between them!
Barbarity of the Federal Government. One of the most gallant officers the late United States ever had in its service writes to us for information of an interesting family of children, whom the savage despotism at Washington will not permit to come to their father. We submit that in civilized warfare such barbarity as this is entirely unknown.--The Confederate Government has pursued an entirely different course, permitting families to join their relatives under the Lincoln Government and even affording them facilities for their departure.
ders in this movement wish to furnish fresh food for agitation. They wish to keep the people on a sea of dissatisfaction. Although a large majority of the people of East Tennessee voted against separation from the. Union, being misguided by dishonest and unprincipled leaders, we have no fear whatever that they are wanting in patriotism and a knowledge of their own interests so far as to desire a separation from their own State for the purpose of joining the corrupt Abolition Government of Lincoln. The leaders of the Union movement have prated continually of the horrors of Secession, and now turn around and advocate the most radical species of secession, which will lead to the disruption of all those intimate, social, political and geographical ties to which they have been accustomed, and all for the purpose of joining themselves to the Government of a usurper and tyrant, who abhors their institutions and is making war upon their brethren. This usurper has overturned the Constituti