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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: October 23, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 13 total hits in 5 results.

Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): article 10
Yankee outrages in Louisiana. The Raleigh Church Intelligencer publishes the following private letter from a lady living on a Mississippi river plantation in the Southwest. The editor vouches for the trustworthiness of his correspondent: Elkridge, August 31, 1862. Time and language would fall me if I attempted to give you an account of all that we hear of their outrages in New Orleans and the adjoining country. Don't believe Butler's lies about "Union sentiments" and loyal citizens there. If there is a place where the Federal are most detested, it is here in Louisiana. In New Orleans the ladies never go out of their houses if they can help it, and then are always armed as, in all parts of the State exposed to their inroads, the woman are. I believe I am the only woman in this community who has not arms and does not know how to use them, and I think I could shoot, too, on an emergency, only I have such a distaste to weapons that I think I would rather be killed
Mississippi (United States) (search for this): article 10
Yankee outrages in Louisiana. The Raleigh Church Intelligencer publishes the following private letter from a lady living on a Mississippi river plantation in the Southwest. The editor vouches for the trustworthiness of his correspondent: Elkridge, August 31, 1862. Time and language would fall me if I attempted to give you an account of all that we hear of their outrages in New Orleans and the adjoining country. Don't believe Butler's lies about "Union sentiments" and loyal citizens there. If there is a place where the Federal are most detested, it is here in Louisiana. In New Orleans the ladies never go out of their houses if they can help it, and then are always armed as, in all parts of the State exposed to their inroads, the woman are. I believe I am the only woman in this community who has not arms and does not know how to use them, and I think I could shoot, too, on an emergency, only I have such a distaste to weapons that I think I would rather be killed t
Intelligencer (search for this): article 10
Yankee outrages in Louisiana. The Raleigh Church Intelligencer publishes the following private letter from a lady living on a Mississippi river plantation in the Southwest. The editor vouches for the trustworthiness of his correspondent: Elkridge, August 31, 1862. Time and language would fall me if I attempted to give you an account of all that we hear of their outrages in New Orleans and the adjoining country. Don't believe Butler's lies about "Union sentiments" and loyal citizens there. If there is a place where the Federal are most detested, it is here in Louisiana. In New Orleans the ladies never go out of their houses if they can help it, and then are always armed as, in all parts of the State exposed to their inroads, the woman are. I believe I am the only woman in this community who has not arms and does not know how to use them, and I think I could shoot, too, on an emergency, only I have such a distaste to weapons that I think I would rather be killed t
the trustworthiness of his correspondent: Elkridge, August 31, 1862. Time and language would fall me if I attempted to give you an account of all that we hear of their outrages in New Orleans and the adjoining country. Don't believe Butler's lies about "Union sentiments" and loyal citizens there. If there is a place where the Federal are most detested, it is here in Louisiana. In New Orleans the ladies never go out of their houses if they can help it, and then are always armed as they soon returned. The servants had picked up their master's body and laid it out decently. The Federal robbed the house of silver, jewelry, and all valuables, and then went off to their boats. Another instance of savagery on the part of Butler: A friend of ours, in the last stages of consumption, was carried from New Orleans to Fort Jackson in spite of the entreaties of his poor wife that he might be permitted to die in peace, as his hours were numbered. The Federal sent him off. Of c
August 31st, 1862 AD (search for this): article 10
Yankee outrages in Louisiana. The Raleigh Church Intelligencer publishes the following private letter from a lady living on a Mississippi river plantation in the Southwest. The editor vouches for the trustworthiness of his correspondent: Elkridge, August 31, 1862. Time and language would fall me if I attempted to give you an account of all that we hear of their outrages in New Orleans and the adjoining country. Don't believe Butler's lies about "Union sentiments" and loyal citizens there. If there is a place where the Federal are most detested, it is here in Louisiana. In New Orleans the ladies never go out of their houses if they can help it, and then are always armed as, in all parts of the State exposed to their inroads, the woman are. I believe I am the only woman in this community who has not arms and does not know how to use them, and I think I could shoot, too, on an emergency, only I have such a distaste to weapons that I think I would rather be killed th