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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: September 27, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 22 total hits in 6 results.

Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 6
his letter to the mineral resources of the Confederate States. We make the following extracts: "It may be of interest to your readers to know, that, having spent the last summer in a general geological reconnaissance of North Georgia, East Tennessee, and North Carolina, I have had a special eye to those mineral resources which could be made specially available against our Northern foes. Saltpetre, sulphur, and lead, have all claimed my attention. "The three States mentioned cannot is now in market, if not in the hands of the Government, an ample supply for even a seven years war. Not so, however, with regard to ultra; what we require we will have to work for. I am happy to say that I have discovered it in many places in Tennessee and Georgia. Some of the localities are new, others have been and are being worked, but in every case in a very primitive style, so that the operations, in no case which has fallen under my observation, realize more than half the amount which
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 6
Mineral resources of the Confederacy. --Mr. N. A. Pratt, of Talmadge, Ga., writing to the Savannah Republican, devotes a part of his letter to the mineral resources of the Confederate States. We make the following extracts: "It may be of interest to your readers to know, that, having spent the last summer in a general geological reconnaissance of North Georgia, East Tennessee, and North Carolina, I have had a special eye to those mineral resources which could be made specially available against our Northern foes. Saltpetre, sulphur, and lead, have all claimed my attention. "The three States mentioned cannot supply lead enough for a single battle of this metal; however, we have, or can get, all we shall need. With regard to sulphur, it can be made in abundance from the pyrite, which exists in large quantities in various localities. The apparatus and process are extremely simple, but we will not soon be obliged to resort to our native supplies, as I believe there is
Talmadge (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 6
Mineral resources of the Confederacy. --Mr. N. A. Pratt, of Talmadge, Ga., writing to the Savannah Republican, devotes a part of his letter to the mineral resources of the Confederate States. We make the following extracts: "It may be of interest to your readers to know, that, having spent the last summer in a general geological reconnaissance of North Georgia, East Tennessee, and North Carolina, I have had a special eye to those mineral resources which could be made specially available against our Northern foes. Saltpetre, sulphur, and lead, have all claimed my attention. "The three States mentioned cannot supply lead enough for a single battle of this metal; however, we have, or can get, all we shall need. With regard to sulphur, it can be made in abundance from the pyrite, which exists in large quantities in various localities. The apparatus and process are extremely simple, but we will not soon be obliged to resort to our native supplies, as I believe there is
United States (United States) (search for this): article 6
Mineral resources of the Confederacy. --Mr. N. A. Pratt, of Talmadge, Ga., writing to the Savannah Republican, devotes a part of his letter to the mineral resources of the Confederate States. We make the following extracts: "It may be of interest to your readers to know, that, having spent the last summer in a general geological reconnaissance of North Georgia, East Tennessee, and North Carolina, I have had a special eye to those mineral resources which could be made specially available against our Northern foes. Saltpetre, sulphur, and lead, have all claimed my attention. "The three States mentioned cannot supply lead enough for a single battle of this metal; however, we have, or can get, all we shall need. With regard to sulphur, it can be made in abundance from the pyrite, which exists in large quantities in various localities. The apparatus and process are extremely simple, but we will not soon be obliged to resort to our native supplies, as I believe there is
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 6
votes a part of his letter to the mineral resources of the Confederate States. We make the following extracts: "It may be of interest to your readers to know, that, having spent the last summer in a general geological reconnaissance of North Georgia, East Tennessee, and North Carolina, I have had a special eye to those mineral resources which could be made specially available against our Northern foes. Saltpetre, sulphur, and lead, have all claimed my attention. "The three States mrket, if not in the hands of the Government, an ample supply for even a seven years war. Not so, however, with regard to ultra; what we require we will have to work for. I am happy to say that I have discovered it in many places in Tennessee and Georgia. Some of the localities are new, others have been and are being worked, but in every case in a very primitive style, so that the operations, in no case which has fallen under my observation, realize more than half the amount which well-directed
N. A. Pratt (search for this): article 6
Mineral resources of the Confederacy. --Mr. N. A. Pratt, of Talmadge, Ga., writing to the Savannah Republican, devotes a part of his letter to the mineral resources of the Confederate States. We make the following extracts: "It may be of interest to your readers to know, that, having spent the last summer in a general geological reconnaissance of North Georgia, East Tennessee, and North Carolina, I have had a special eye to those mineral resources which could be made specially available against our Northern foes. Saltpetre, sulphur, and lead, have all claimed my attention. "The three States mentioned cannot supply lead enough for a single battle of this metal; however, we have, or can get, all we shall need. With regard to sulphur, it can be made in abundance from the pyrite, which exists in large quantities in various localities. The apparatus and process are extremely simple, but we will not soon be obliged to resort to our native supplies, as I believe there is