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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 11, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 7 total hits in 3 results.
Washington (United States) (search for this): article 15
The Despot.
--The editor of the Chicago Post recently visited Washington.
He thus writes to his journal of the protection of Lincoln from the danger of assassination:
We spent a few days recently in Washington city, and while there saw many things and heard many thing which to us seemed very suggestive evidence of the extraordinary progress with which the nation is rushing onward in its history.
The presence of an armed guard at the gates of the Executive mansion every morning, and the care taken to keep strangers outside of the approaches to the building, was to us something new. The President's arrival and departure from the Executive mansion are, notwithstanding the melancholy suggestions they render, peculiarly remarkable.
We saw him leave the building once, and though the sight may be witnessed every day, it was of a character too wretched to invite a second visit.
We saw him leave on Sunday afternoon, and the manner, was as follows: About half-past 5 in the after
United States (United States) (search for this): article 15
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 15
The Despot.
--The editor of the Chicago Post recently visited Washington.
He thus writes to his journal of the protection of Lincoln from the danger of assassination:
We spent a few days recently in Washington city, and while there saw many things and heard many thing which to us seemed very suggestive evidence of the extraordinary progress with which the nation is rushing onward in its history.
The presence of an armed guard at the gates of the Executive mansion every morning, and the care taken to keep strangers outside of the approaches to the building, was to us something new. The President's arrival and departure from the Executive mansion are, notwithstanding the melancholy suggestions they render, peculiarly remarkable.
We saw him leave the building once, and though the sight may be witnessed every day, it was of a character too wretched to invite a second visit.
We saw him leave on Sunday afternoon, and the manner, was as follows: About half-past 5 in the after