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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 29, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): article 6
l letter, in which we find the following reference to the "Fenian Brotherhood," a secret society gotten up by the Yankees to entrap more Irishmen into such slaughter pens as Fredericksburg: Very probably, also, the great projects proposed by the Fenian Brotherhood and their doings beyond the seas have no other object but to induce brave young men to go to America, there to fight the battles of the States and to sacrifice their lives in the swamps of Virginia, or on the battlefields of Louisiana or Mississippi. At all events, it is evident that, as those whose aid we are promised to free us from oppression cannot terminate their own dissension, or re- establish the union of the country in which they live, we, who are separated from them by the waters of the vast ocean, across which it would be almost impossible to transport a large army, especially in the face of hostile and powerful fleets, we, I say, should hope for no good result from their promises or interference. To those
Dublin (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 6
Archbishop Cullen on the Fenian Brother, hood --Archbishop Cullen, of Dublin, has written a pastoral letter, in which we find the following reference to the "Fenian Brotherhood," a secret society gotten up by the Yankees to entrap more Irishmen into such slaughter pens as Fredericksburg: Very probably, also, the great projects proposed by the Fenian Brotherhood and their doings beyond the seas have no other object but to induce brave young men to go to America, there to fight the battles of the States and to sacrifice their lives in the swamps of Virginia, or on the battlefields of Louisiana or Mississippi. At all events, it is evident that, as those whose aid we are promised to free us from oppression cannot terminate their own dissension, or re- establish the union of the country in which they live, we, who are separated from them by the waters of the vast ocean, across which it would be almost impossible to transport a large army, especially in the face of hostile and po
Archbishop Cullen on the Fenian Brother, hood --Archbishop Cullen, of Dublin, has written a pastoral letter, in which we find the following reference to the "Fenian Brotherhood," a secret society gotten up by the Yankees to entrap more Irishmen into such slaughter pens as Fredericksburg: Very probably, also, the great projects proposed by the Fenian Brotherhood and their doings beyond the seas have no other object but to induce brave young men to go to America, there to fight the batArchbishop Cullen, of Dublin, has written a pastoral letter, in which we find the following reference to the "Fenian Brotherhood," a secret society gotten up by the Yankees to entrap more Irishmen into such slaughter pens as Fredericksburg: Very probably, also, the great projects proposed by the Fenian Brotherhood and their doings beyond the seas have no other object but to induce brave young men to go to America, there to fight the battles of the States and to sacrifice their lives in the swamps of Virginia, or on the battlefields of Louisiana or Mississippi. At all events, it is evident that, as those whose aid we are promised to free us from oppression cannot terminate their own dissension, or re- establish the union of the country in which they live, we, who are separated from them by the waters of the vast ocean, across which it would be almost impossible to transport a large army, especially in the face of hostile and