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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 17, 1863., [Electronic resource].

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Jefferson Davis (search for this): article 1
ave; or the little boy in New England, who sells newspapers for a living; or men of high and spotless character and devoted fidelity to the laws, like Judge Duff, of Illinois; or the unfortunate boy who was confide in Camp Chase, who could not pay his washer woman's bill, and was, therefore, accused of disloyal practices; or take the men of great intellect, like Edson. B. Olds, of Ohio, or the unlearned squirrel hunter from my friend's (Mr. Robinson's) district, who did not know but that Jeff. Davis and Lincoln were on the same side; or the intermediate between these extremes — there is no one of them that could not have been tried in the place where the offence was said to have been committed; and, if found guilty, correct public sentiment would have seen that the penalties of the law were fully enforced upon them. In all these cases you have violated the Constitution and laws. You have disregarded them both. And now you turn around and pass an act of indemnity to all concerned i
. Richardson made a speech scathing the gorilla. He said: Mr. Chairman--The annual Message recently sent to this House by the Presidente enjoyed in this now distracted and divided country. But, Mr. Chairman, there are a few pass ages in the message so extraordinary, so wrtment of the Government is being run for his benefit. Now, Mr. Chairman, I have a single word to those who are temporarily exercising thf need be, vindicate it before God and the world. I repeat, Mr. Chairman, our people are in earnest. They mean all that they have said. onstitution, take the legal consequences of their act. But, Mr. Chairman, there is no excuse or palliation for the arrests that have beenn this country, except inside the actual lines of the army. Mr. Chairman, I have talked warmly upon this subject because I felt deeply. sings of the Union may yet be restored, and made perpetual. Mr. Chairman, I am very much obliged to the committee for the attention with
resentatives, has been elected by the Illinois Legislature to the vacant rest in the U. S. Senate. Last week, in the House, Mr. Richardson made a speech scathing the gorilla. He said: Mr. Chairman--The annual Message recently sent to this House by the President of the United States is the most remarkable of any that has over been delivered to Congress. It is remarkable for what it says, and still more remarkable for what it omits to say. One half of the twenty-one pages which it coverseek to accomplish. * * * * * * On the 17th of March last, my colleague, (Mr. Lovejoy) having heard that two negroes had been arrested, introduced a resolution instructing a committee to inquire into the facts, which resolution passed this House by a majority of two to one. On the first day of this session I introduced a resolution directing an inquiry into the causes why white citizens of Illinois without charges being made against them, were detained in the various forts and Bastiles
se of the old man, like Mahoney, tottering to the grave; or the little boy in New England, who sells newspapers for a living; or men of high and spotless character and devoted fidelity to the laws, like Judge Duff, of Illinois; or the unfortunate boy who was confide in Camp Chase, who could not pay his washer woman's bill, and was, therefore, accused of disloyal practices; or take the men of great intellect, like Edson. B. Olds, of Ohio, or the unlearned squirrel hunter from my friend's (Mr. Robinson's) district, who did not know but that Jeff. Davis and Lincoln were on the same side; or the intermediate between these extremes — there is no one of them that could not have been tried in the place where the offence was said to have been committed; and, if found guilty, correct public sentiment would have seen that the penalties of the law were fully enforced upon them. In all these cases you have violated the Constitution and laws. You have disregarded them both. And now you turn aro
Americans (search for this): article 1
etition is to quietly leave your present fields of labor, homes to which, perhaps, you may be attached, and the graves of your kindred and migrate southward, and occupy the places made vacant by the exodus of what his Excellency terms the "free Americans of African descent." That is the sum and substance of it. But, for the sake of argument, admit, if you choose, that all the plans of the President touching emancipation and colonization of the negro were to-day successfully carried out, wh men more devoted to the Constitution and laws of the country than all of them together. Now, after all these outrages, you propose to invest the President with power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus, the great birthright of Englishmen and Americans and which has never, until now, been disregarded under any circumstances in this country, except inside the actual lines of the army. Mr. Chairman, I have talked warmly upon this subject because I felt deeply. I have advised, and now advi
March 17th (search for this): article 1
nal strength in the North was to be obtained; not certainly from the Democratic element in the North. If additional vigor was infused into the service, it must come from some other quarter which until then had not heartily sustained the policy of the Administration. I need not particularize what class of individuals were to be thus induced to lend their support, the country well knows the baleful influences of this class, and the ends they seek to accomplish. * * * * * * On the 17th of March last, my colleague, (Mr. Lovejoy) having heard that two negroes had been arrested, introduced a resolution instructing a committee to inquire into the facts, which resolution passed this House by a majority of two to one. On the first day of this session I introduced a resolution directing an inquiry into the causes why white citizens of Illinois without charges being made against them, were detained in the various forts and Bastiles in the country, and that resolution was laid on the t
licy of the Administration. I need not particularize what class of individuals were to be thus induced to lend their support, the country well knows the baleful influences of this class, and the ends they seek to accomplish. * * * * * * On the 17th of March last, my colleague, (Mr. Lovejoy) having heard that two negroes had been arrested, introduced a resolution instructing a committee to inquire into the facts, which resolution passed this House by a majority of two to one. On the first day of this session I introduced a resolution directing an inquiry into the causes why white citizens of Illinois without charges being made against them, were detained in the various forts and Bastiles in the country, and that resolution was laid on the table, on motion of Mr. Lovejoy, by a similar vote. The army is being used for the benefit of the negro. This House is being used for his benefit. Every department of the Government is being run for his benefit. Now, Mr. Chairman, I
U. S. Senator (search for this): article 1
A speech on Lincoln's message from a Newly-elected U. S. Senator. Hon. W. A. Richardson, now in the Federal House of Representatives, has been elected by the Illinois Legislature to the vacant rest in the U. S. Senate. Last week, in the House, Mr. Richardson made a speech scathing the gorilla. He said: Mr. Chairman--The annual Message recently sent to this House by the President of the United States is the most remarkable of any that has over been delivered to Congress. It is remarkable for what it says, and still more remarkable for what it omits to say. One half of the twenty-one pages which it covers is devoted to the negro. No page, no sentence, no line, no word, is given to land, or even to mention, the bravery and gallantry, or even the good conduct, of our soldiers in the various bloody battles which have been fought. No sorrow is expressed for the intended dead. No allusion is made to the maimed and wounded. No sympathy is tendered to the sorrowing widow and
A speech on Lincoln's message from a Newly-elected U. S. Senator. Hon. W. A. Richardson, now in the Federal House of Representatives, has been elected by the Illinois Legislature to the vacant rest in the U. S. Senate. Last week, in the House, Mr. Richardson made a speech scathing the gorilla. He said: Mr. Chairman--T policy contained in that proclamation, for reasons which must commend themselves to every reflecting man sincerely desirous of terminating this rebellion. Mr. Lincoln, on the 4th of March, 1861, on the east portico of this Capitol, took a vow, which he said was registered in Heaven, to support the Constitution of the United St intellect, like Edson. B. Olds, of Ohio, or the unlearned squirrel hunter from my friend's (Mr. Robinson's) district, who did not know but that Jeff. Davis and Lincoln were on the same side; or the intermediate between these extremes — there is no one of them that could not have been tried in the place where the offence was said
March 4th, 1861 AD (search for this): article 1
ountry by surprise, and no one of the citizens more than myself. I had fondly hoped and been anxious that the President of the United States would so conduct himself in his high office of Chief Magistrate that I could lend him my support. I have been driven, with thousands of others, into opposition to the policy contained in that proclamation, for reasons which must commend themselves to every reflecting man sincerely desirous of terminating this rebellion. Mr. Lincoln, on the 4th of March, 1861, on the east portico of this Capitol, took a vow, which he said was registered in Heaven, to support the Constitution of the United States. In his inaugural address, delivered on that occasion he said he had no lawful authority or inclination to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. In his proclamation of the 22d of September last he assumes that he has power to forever free "all persons held as slaves within any State, or designated part of a State
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