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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 1, 1864., [Electronic resource].

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events others from being established, thereby affording full protection to the consumers of food who have heretofore been altogether at the mercy of unscrupulous dealers My last letter made mention of a National Bank being started in this city. It will commence business under favorable auspices, and contribute much to the prosperity of the city. The following gentlemen have been elected as its officers: C. L. Cole, President; G. H. Livermore, Cashier. Directors — Wm. T. Hardson, J G., Shaw, P. Sherman, C L. Cole; and W. H. Turner. Elections in Tennessee The miserable renegade, Andy Johnson, has issued a proclamation for holding an election of county officers in Tennessee, on the 2d day of March, to morrow. in this proclamation the old tory says: But, inasmuch as these elections are ordered in the State of Tennessee as a State of the Union under the Federal Constitution, it is not expected that the enemies of the United States will propose to vote, nor is it inte
August, 1862 AD (search for this): article 1
s done. Bennett, in commenting upon a recent report which Gen McClellan has published in the North, thus sums up what has been done for the country by interference with, and removal of that officer: The administration interfered with the peninsula campaign, and, by its withdrawal of sixty thousand men from the number that had been assigned as necessary to carry that campaign to a successful issue, caused its failure. The administration, by its suspension of General McClellan in August, 1862, caused the successive disasters of Pope's campaign. And the administration, by the removal of Gen McClellan in the fall of 1862, caused directly the massacre at Fredericksburg, the greater massacre at Chancellorsville, the advance of Lee into Pennsylvania, where the country was saved by the stubborn qualities of our soldiers, and Lee's eventual escape across the Potomac, which gave another year of existence to the rebellion. All this the administration has done; but it has not given an
ts were to be struck the following morning, and a serious effort would be made to dislodge Lee from his position on the south bank of the Rapidan It is claimed that 25,000 veterans of the Army of the Potomac have re-enlisted, and it is expected that the remaining 5,000 will follow their example. The Confederate steamer Tussal has been seized at Cape Town, by the British Admiral, for a violation of the neutrality laws. She was captured some time ago by the Alabama, condemned by Capt. Semmes, who armed and sent her out as a cruiser. The seizure of the Tuscaloosa was ordered in special instructions sent out by the British Government, and she will be detained until claimed by her legal owners. The steamship Bohemian, from Liverpool for Portland, on Monday night, was run upon the rocks outside of Cape Elizabeth, off Portland harbor, and immediately filled and sunk. Several of the steerage passengers are supposed to have been lost. The U. S. gunboat Conestoga recently
e, and our conviction of his determination that "slavery must die that the nation may live, " have won the confidence of a large majority of the unconditional Unionists of Maryland Resolved therefore, That this Convention cordially recommends Abraham Lincoln as its choice, and the preference of the unconditional Unionists of the State for the ensuing Presidential term, subject to the decision of the National Union Nominating Convention. What Lincoln's administration has done. Bennett, in commenting upon a recent report which Gen McClellan has published in the North, thus sums up what has been done for the country by interference with, and removal of that officer: The administration interfered with the peninsula campaign, and, by its withdrawal of sixty thousand men from the number that had been assigned as necessary to carry that campaign to a successful issue, caused its failure. The administration, by its suspension of General McClellan in August, 1862, caused t
cent report which Gen McClellan has published in the North, thus sums up what has been done for the country by interference with, and removal of that officer: The administration interfered with the peninsula campaign, and, by its withdrawal of sixty thousand men from the number that had been assigned as necessary to carry that campaign to a successful issue, caused its failure. The administration, by its suspension of General McClellan in August, 1862, caused the successive disasters of Pope's campaign. And the administration, by the removal of Gen McClellan in the fall of 1862, caused directly the massacre at Fredericksburg, the greater massacre at Chancellorsville, the advance of Lee into Pennsylvania, where the country was saved by the stubborn qualities of our soldiers, and Lee's eventual escape across the Potomac, which gave another year of existence to the rebellion. All this the administration has done; but it has not given an effective blow in the East towards the destr
G. W. C. Lee (search for this): article 1
de to the army of the Potomac, on Sunday, was followed by reports that tents were to be struck the following morning, and a serious effort would be made to dislodge Lee from his position on the south bank of the Rapidan It is claimed that 25,000 veterans of the Army of the Potomac have re-enlisted, and it is expected that the ation, by the removal of Gen McClellan in the fall of 1862, caused directly the massacre at Fredericksburg, the greater massacre at Chancellorsville, the advance of Lee into Pennsylvania, where the country was saved by the stubborn qualities of our soldiers, and Lee's eventual escape across the Potomac, which gave another year of eLee's eventual escape across the Potomac, which gave another year of existence to the rebellion. All this the administration has done; but it has not given an effective blow in the East towards the destruction of the Confederacy since General McClellan was sacrificed to the clamor of the radicals. Affairs at Norfolk. A letter dated Norfolk, February 24, appears in the Northern papers. The
lar report of the whereabouts of the vessel, came by the way of Suez. Alluding to this a statement is given from the New York Merchants' Exchange and News Room, as follows: Singapore, Jan. 4.--The Alabama left this port on the 24th ult., and afterwards, in the Straits of Malacca, burned the British ship Martaban, from Moulmein, and American ships Sonora and Highlander The distance from Singapore to Amoy is some 2,000 miles, and Captains Baker and Ranlett, both old and experienced China shipmasters, state that it would be impossible for the Alabama to reach Amoy in nine days, in the face of a heavy monsoon. Lincoln in Maryland. An unconditional Union Convention, held in Temperance Temple, Baltimore city, adopted the following resolutions: Resolved, That this Convention recognizes the spotless integrity, the unsullied patriotism, and thorough devotion to the Union, which have signalized the course of Abraham Lincoln, during three years of gigantic rebellion; t
Gen McClellan (search for this): article 1
nating Convention. What Lincoln's administration has done. Bennett, in commenting upon a recent report which Gen McClellan has published in the North, thus sums up what has been done for the country by interference with, and removal of thatcessary to carry that campaign to a successful issue, caused its failure. The administration, by its suspension of General McClellan in August, 1862, caused the successive disasters of Pope's campaign. And the administration, by the removal of GenGen McClellan in the fall of 1862, caused directly the massacre at Fredericksburg, the greater massacre at Chancellorsville, the advance of Lee into Pennsylvania, where the country was saved by the stubborn qualities of our soldiers, and Lee's eventualation has done; but it has not given an effective blow in the East towards the destruction of the Confederacy since General McClellan was sacrificed to the clamor of the radicals. Affairs at Norfolk. A letter dated Norfolk, February 24, app
April, 1 AD (search for this): article 1
ent military interference in State elections. The latest quotation of gold in New York is 157½. The Alabama. The Northern papers have finally arrived at the conclusion that the Confederate steamer Alabama is not blockaded in the port of Amoy, China, as reported several days ago. The last regular report of the whereabouts of the vessel, came by the way of Suez. Alluding to this a statement is given from the New York Merchants' Exchange and News Room, as follows: Singapore, Jan. 4.--The Alabama left this port on the 24th ult., and afterwards, in the Straits of Malacca, burned the British ship Martaban, from Moulmein, and American ships Sonora and Highlander The distance from Singapore to Amoy is some 2,000 miles, and Captains Baker and Ranlett, both old and experienced China shipmasters, state that it would be impossible for the Alabama to reach Amoy in nine days, in the face of a heavy monsoon. Lincoln in Maryland. An unconditional Union Convention, hel
February, 3 AD (search for this): article 1
ished, thereby affording full protection to the consumers of food who have heretofore been altogether at the mercy of unscrupulous dealers My last letter made mention of a National Bank being started in this city. It will commence business under favorable auspices, and contribute much to the prosperity of the city. The following gentlemen have been elected as its officers: C. L. Cole, President; G. H. Livermore, Cashier. Directors — Wm. T. Hardson, J G., Shaw, P. Sherman, C L. Cole; and W. H. Turner. Elections in Tennessee The miserable renegade, Andy Johnson, has issued a proclamation for holding an election of county officers in Tennessee, on the 2d day of March, to morrow. in this proclamation the old tory says: But, inasmuch as these elections are ordered in the State of Tennessee as a State of the Union under the Federal Constitution, it is not expected that the enemies of the United States will propose to vote, nor is it intend to vote or hold office.
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