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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 6 total hits in 4 results.
Hudson (New Jersey, United States) (search for this): article 5
Tribulations of the Yankee Press.
--The Baltimore News Sheet, noticing the arrest of Charles C. Fulton, Agent of the Associated Press and editor of the Baltimore American, says:
Of the condition of affairs in regard to the army of the Potomac, even if it were known to us, it would be manifestly impolitic to speak.
President Lincoln has admonished us, in his little way-side speech at Jersey City, that --Secretary Stanton holds a tight rein over the Press," and we have had, still more recently, a local illustration of the same important fact in the arrest and imprisonment of the editor and proprietor of the Baltimore American, who has been wounded in the house of his friends for having "done that which he ought to have done." in what particular this, the humblest servant of the Government, hag offended, we are not informed; but we are quite sure that the error which led to his introduction to the Provost Marshal is not to be found in the telegram to the New York Press annou
Stanton (search for this): article 5
Tribulations of the Yankee Press.
--The Baltimore News Sheet, noticing the arrest of Charles C. Fulton, Agent of the Associated Press and editor of the Baltimore American, says:
Of the condition of affairs in regard to the army of the Potomac, even if it were known to us, it would be manifestly impolitic to speak.
President Lincoln has admonished us, in his little way-side speech at Jersey City, that --Secretary Stanton holds a tight rein over the Press," and we have had, still more recently, a local illustration of the same important fact in the arrest and imprisonment of the editor and proprietor of the Baltimore American, who has been wounded in the house of his friends for having "done that which he ought to have done." in what particular this, the humblest servant of the Government, hag offended, we are not informed; but we are quite sure that the error which led to his introduction to the Provost Marshal is not to be found in the telegram to the New York Press annou
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 5
Tribulations of the Yankee Press.
--The Baltimore News Sheet, noticing the arrest of Charles C. Fulton, Agent of the Associated Press and editor of the Baltimore American, says:
Of the condition of affairs in regard to the army of the Potomac, even if it were known to us, it would be manifestly impolitic to speak.
President Lincoln has admonished us, in his little way-side speech at Jersey City, that --Secretary Stanton holds a tight rein over the Press," and we have had, still more recently, a local illustration of the same important fact in the arrest and imprisonment of the editor and proprietor of the Baltimore American, who has been wounded in the house of his friends for having "done that which he ought to have done." in what particular this, the humblest servant of the Government, hag offended, we are not informed; but we are quite sure that the error which led to his introduction to the Provost Marshal is not to be found in the telegram to the New York Press annou
Charles C. Fulton (search for this): article 5
Tribulations of the Yankee Press.
--The Baltimore News Sheet, noticing the arrest of Charles C. Fulton, Agent of the Associated Press and editor of the Baltimore American, says:
Of the condition of affairs in regard to the army of the Potomac, even if it were known to us, it would be manifestly impolitic to speak.
President Lincoln has admonished us, in his little way-side speech at Jersey City, that --Secretary Stanton holds a tight rein over the Press," and we have had, still more recently, a local illustration of the same important fact in the arrest and imprisonment of the editor and proprietor of the Baltimore American, who has been wounded in the house of his friends for having "done that which he ought to have done." in what particular this, the humblest servant of the Government, hag offended, we are not informed; but we are quite sure that the error which led to his introduction to the Provost Marshal is not to be found in the telegram to the New York Press annou