hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
United States (United States) 34 0 Browse Search
Butler 23 1 Browse Search
A. Lincoln 20 0 Browse Search
Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) 12 0 Browse Search
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) 10 0 Browse Search
Taylor 10 0 Browse Search
John J. Allen 10 2 Browse Search
John Kelly 8 0 Browse Search
John Staples 8 0 Browse Search
Thos 8 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 16, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 132 total hits in 65 results.

... 2 3 4 5 6 7
January 1st (search for this): article 14
one's blood run cold to think of it. Now, if any one doubts this — if the authorities at camp or at the State House doubt — if the Legislature, when it meets, will raise a committee, we promise to name the witnesses who, if sent for, will, under oath, prove all this, and as much more, some of which is too indecent to print in a newspaper for the public eye. A meeting of political Parsons in New York — a Fizzle. A meeting of clergymen to adopt an address in favor of Lincoln's New Year's proclamation was held at the Cooper Institute last week. Cheever, Tyng, and their aiders and abettors, were on hand, numbering about seventy. The New York Express gives the following account of the manner in which the proceedings fizzled out: Dr. Tyng said he would not take any part in the proceedings except all who were not clergymen were excluded. He saw some ladies present, and he liked them in their proper places, but he thought they should not be present there. [Some eigh<
December 18th (search for this): article 14
the clergy remained in the outer hall, some expressing their disappointment, and other their pleasure at the action of the meeting. It was reported that the committee had proceeded to the house of one of the members to take some action. The Abolition Senatorial Caucus on the"State of the country." The injunction of secrecy having been removed, the New York Tribune publishes the following paper, which it says was drawn by Senator Collamer, and presented to Lincoln on the 18th of December last by the committee of nine, causing the resignation of Secretaries Seward and Chase; A meeting of the Republican members of the Senate of the United States, at which they were all present but two, after full consultation, came unanimously to the following conclusions--one present not voting: First--The only course of sustaining this Government, and restoring and preserving the national existence, and perpetuating the national integrity, is by a vigorous and successful prose
January, 1 AD (search for this): article 14
male should pass over the ferry without a written order from headquarters, and a guard sits in the cabin of the boat to keep ladies from talking. On the first of January, my son William was arrested by a negro girl, who belonged to us, and had left six months ago. She cursed him, and he struck her three times. Capt. York sent the following article relative to the proclamation of President Davis against Butler, in the same article it pretty nearly foretells the result of Lincoln's 1st of January proclamation: The brutal tyrannies of Gen. Butler at New Orleans, recited in the late proclamation of Jeff Davis, will, if they be truly recited, amply juis relates to him and his officers only; but it is the forerunner of one that will apply to every officer of our armies if the proclamation threatened on the first of January is issued. The magnanimity of which Mr Seward assured the French Government would be observed by us toward the seceded States has grown small, by large degre
December 26th (search for this): article 14
y's account of her arrest by order of Mrs. Gen Viele. A brief paragraph has appeared noticing the arrest of a lady in Norfolk by the wife, (or mistress, it is not certain which) of Gen. Viele, the military commandant there. The following is a letter from the lady herself to a friend in Lynchburg, giving the particulars of the affair. It is dated Portsmouth, Jan. 4th: Mrs. C--:According to promise, I will write you a correct account of my difficulties with the Yankees. On the 26th of December I went to Norfolk; on returning home there was a carriage on board of the boat with a Yankee woman and two children in it; while going over she hastily raised the carriage window and put a newspaper up, as much, as to say, the ladies should not look at her — Such unlady-like behavior drew the attention of all on the boat. She appeared to be very much enraged at something. My opinion is that her intention was to have a difficulty before she left the boat, to show her power. She called
December 25th (search for this): article 14
erate service from the commencement of the war until within a few months past when he received his discharge on a Surgeon's certificate, and, being probably still loyal to the South, the affray may have arisen from some taunt, he cast at the recreant Louisianian. Dr. Rossvelly, who figured conspicuously in this city two or three months ago, had put in an appearance on the streets of New Orleans. Quite a number of persons, among them the James Finn mentioned above, were arrested Christmas day for "using seditious language and annoying loyal persons by hurrahing for Jeff Davis, Stonewall Jackson, and other rebel leaders." Miscellaneous. The Yankee dispatches from Fort Monroe say the Federals burnt a rebel baggage train at the White House and captured $50,000 worth of goods from "Jim Brown of Baltimore," a blockade runner who is now a prisoner aboard the gunboat Hatasken. Col. Ludlow, the U. S. agent for the exchange of prisoners, telegraphs that it is "highly pro
... 2 3 4 5 6 7