Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 27, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Buckingham or search for Buckingham in all documents.

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the secession of his State he reluctantly left his seat, and maintained at home the position of a dissenter, abstaining from participation with his country and his fellow citizens in their struggle for defence. He remained at home, and, it is understood, cheerfully submitted to the Lincoln Government. In the election recently held in New Orleans for members of Congress we observe that he received the small vote of 136 against one Flanders, who was elected by a vote of 2,184. "So much for Buckingham!" Mr. Bouligny receives no consolation from the rabble row hectoring and lording it over his neighbors and former constituents. Disloyal to the cause of his own people, he is flouted by the vulgar horde who are tyrannizing over them and robbing them of their property. He has as little comfort in his isolation as Joseph Segar. Segar and Bouligny, if they are remembered long enough, will serve to warn men in after times of the sad fates of those who are untrue to their people and their co