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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: October 18, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 25 total hits in 8 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 2
A singular affair of honor. [From the N. Y. Commercial.]
There arrived by the Edinburg on Saturday, from Europe, Captain C. Lee Moses, of Saco, Maine, late United States Astronomer, &c., who is yet the sufferer from the results of a singular and not unromantic affair of honor, which was fought on the Seine, near Paris, on the 19th of August last.
The particulars of the affair are as follows:
Capt. Moses, although a South Carolinian by birth, is a strong and devoted adherent to the cause of the Union, and during his journey through France made no hesitation in expressing his sympathies and feelings for the United States Government, and his abhorrence of the Southern traitors and rebels.
Hon. F. G. Farquar, of Virginia, meeting the Captain at a hotel in Paris, and knowing his parentage, reproached him in opprobrious terms as a renegade from his native State.
He charged him with being a traitor to the South, and a man of no honor because he abandoned her when she
Saco (Maine, United States) (search for this): article 2
A singular affair of honor. [From the N. Y. Commercial.]
There arrived by the Edinburg on Saturday, from Europe, Captain C. Lee Moses, of Saco, Maine, late United States Astronomer, &c., who is yet the sufferer from the results of a singular and not unromantic affair of honor, which was fought on the Seine, near Paris, on the 19th of August last.
The particulars of the affair are as follows:
Capt. Moses, although a South Carolinian by birth, is a strong and devoted adherent to was boastful and coarse in his manner and remarks.
The Captain was calm, though determined.
All being ready, Captain Moses handed two letters to his second--one addressed to the American Consul at Liverpool, and the other to his wife at Saco, Maine, to be delivered in case he fell.
He then removed his coat, bandaged back the hair from his eyes, and took his position.
The word was then given and with a simultaneous report of both pistols the combatants fell to the ground.
Both were sho
France (France) (search for this): article 2
New England (United States) (search for this): article 2
C. Lee Moses (search for this): article 2
Stephanie (search for this): article 2
F. G. Farquar (search for this): article 2
August 19th (search for this): article 2
A singular affair of honor. [From the N. Y. Commercial.]
There arrived by the Edinburg on Saturday, from Europe, Captain C. Lee Moses, of Saco, Maine, late United States Astronomer, &c., who is yet the sufferer from the results of a singular and not unromantic affair of honor, which was fought on the Seine, near Paris, on the 19th of August last.
The particulars of the affair are as follows:
Capt. Moses, although a South Carolinian by birth, is a strong and devoted adherent to the cause of the Union, and during his journey through France made no hesitation in expressing his sympathies and feelings for the United States Government, and his abhorrence of the Southern traitors and rebels.
Hon. F. G. Farquar, of Virginia, meeting the Captain at a hotel in Paris, and knowing his parentage, reproached him in opprobrious terms as a renegade from his native State.
He charged him with being a traitor to the South, and a man of no honor because he abandoned her when she n