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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 13, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 51 total hits in 13 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 5
Arkansas (Arkansas, United States) (search for this): article 5
Missouri (Missouri, United States) (search for this): article 5
Missouri.
The following patriotic address to the people of Missouri is copied from the Nashville papers:
It is dMissouri is copied from the Nashville papers:
It is due to you, as well as to myself, in the present juncture of our affairs, that the motives should be announced which have ind fident, from the Judgment of competent military men, that Missouri was then better prepared to resist, than the Lincoln insu s, at the proper time and on a proper occasion, in aid of Missouri.
The a vowed and decided policy of the Confederate State ve aid, should incite the enemy to increase his forces in Missouri, he but weakens himself else where, and hastens in Virgin information obtainable here concerning recent even is in Missouri, it is difficult to form a judgment about our immediate f ly free.
The difficulty of speedy communication with Missouri being great, I respectfully request the newspapers friend ity of reaching our own journals.
Thomas C. Reynolds.
Lieutenant. Governor of Missouri.
Nashville, July 8, 1861.
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 5
Edgefield (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 5
Ben McCulloch (search for this): article 5
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 5
Missouri.
The following patriotic address to the people of Missouri is copied from the Nashville papers:
It is due to you, as well as to myself, in the present juncture of our affairs, that the motives should be announced which have induced my temporary absence from our State.
Believing that our true interests demanded open, immediate and vigorous war upon the anthesis and abettors, from Mr. Lincoln down, of the rebellion against our State sovereignty on the 10th of May last, and confident, from the Judgment of competent military men, that Missouri was then better prepared to resist, than the Lincoln insurgents were to carry out, their plans of annulling our State lights, I dissented, though in a friendly spirit, from the policy of the Governor in making concessions to them in his earnest desire to preserve peace within our borders.
Aware that some arrangement with that view was about to be made, and entertaining the firm better, since fully justified by events, that
Jackson (search for this): article 5
Thomas C. Reynolds (search for this): article 5
20th (search for this): article 5