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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 21, 1865., [Electronic resource].
Found 564 total hits in 233 results.
Enquirer (search for this): article 1
Superintendent's office,Richmond and Danville Railroad,Richmond, February 13, 1865.
Notice.--All persons that have hired slaves to this company, and have not procured bonds, will please come forward and get them, or said slave will not be considered as hired by this company. G. S. Netherland, Superintendent of Transportation. Examiner, Whig and Enquirer will copy one week. fe 14--6t
February 13th, 1865 AD (search for this): article 1
Superintendent's office,Richmond and Danville Railroad,Richmond, February 13, 1865.
Notice.--All persons that have hired slaves to this company, and have not procured bonds, will please come forward and get them, or said slave will not be considered as hired by this company. G. S. Netherland, Superintendent of Transportation. Examiner, Whig and Enquirer will copy one week. fe 14--6t
G. S. Netherland (search for this): article 1
Superintendent's office,Richmond and Danville Railroad,Richmond, February 13, 1865.
Notice.--All persons that have hired slaves to this company, and have not procured bonds, will please come forward and get them, or said slave will not be considered as hired by this company. G. S. Netherland, Superintendent of Transportation. Examiner, Whig and Enquirer will copy one week. fe 14--6t
N. M. Lee (search for this): article 1
For Hire, a negro man, twenty-five years old, a good house servant, washer, tolerable good cook, and a good hand with horses, Apply to N. M. Lee, Franklin street, near Exchange Hotel.
fe 17--4t*
Russian (search for this): article 1
England (search for this): article 1
London (search for this): article 1
England does not treat the United States with that respect which is due to youth from old age. The immense naval armaments of Brother Jonathan do not excite that astonishment and consternation in the Old World which he had a right to expect.
They have the effrontery in England to be amused with the bravado of the Federals because they have seven hundred ships-of-war, mounting nearly five thousand guns.
A private letter from London, published in the Enquirer, says that, "setting aside the improvements already made in gunnery, machinery, or structure — and they are more considerable than is talked about; setting aside what is now being done in that way — and it is much more than is generally known; we (the English) have at this instant a navy consisting of sixteen ships, of one hundred guns and upwards, averaging, collectively, one thousand eight hundred and twenty guns, and engines of 11,200 horse power; we have twenty-seven ships, carrying ninety or ninety-one guns each, mount
Military Gazette (search for this): article 1
Canada (Canada) (search for this): article 1
United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
England does not treat the United States with that respect which is due to youth from old age. The immense naval armaments of Brother Jonathan do not excite that astonishment and consternation 'Marry, come on, ' like the clown in the circus.
They admit that all the navy-yards in the United States combined would not offer as many facilities for the construction of war vessels as the least point that any of our misgivings, as a people, are centred."
These are facts which the United States will do well to digest before it bursts its breeches in the conceit of naval supremacy.
Nei f naval operations in America, nor deaf to the boastful shouts which have been set up in the United States of what they intend to do. Whilst all this absurd uproar has been going on in America, the F ves." In addition to these facts, the fortifications proceeding in Canada have their significance.
The United States must not expect either England or France to fall an easy prey to their designs.