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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 30, 1861., [Electronic resource].
Found 894 total hits in 419 results.
September 18th, 1860 AD (search for this): article 4
February 12th, 1793 AD (search for this): article 4
Maine (Maine, United States) (search for this): article 4
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): article 4
Rhode Island (Rhode Island, United States) (search for this): article 4
Repeal of the Rhode Island Personal Liberty bill.
The vote in the Senate of Rhode Island, on the repeal of the Personal Liberty bill, was yeas 21, nays 9; and in the House of Representatives, yeas 49, nays 18.
The following are the sections repealed:
"Sec. 18.
No. Judge, Justice, Magistrate or Court, whatsoever, of this State, shall grant any certificate or warrant to, or otherwise in any manner officially aid any persons claiming or pursuing another as a fugitive slave, either under the act of Congress approved February 12th, 1793, entitled."
An act respecting fugitives from justice and persons escaping from the service of their masters, or under the act of Congress, approved September 18th, 1860, entitled 'An act to amend and supplementary to said act.
"Sec. 19.
No Sheriff, Deputy Sheriff, Town Sergeant, Constable or other officer of this State shall arrest or detain, or aid in the arrest or detention of any person claimed as a fugitive slave, for or
by rea
Day (search for this): article 5
Good Material for soldiers.
A letter from Warrington, Fla., to the Pensacola Observer, thus describes a private in one of the companies:
Professor Day is just six and a half feet high in his stockings.
His weight is three hundred and ten pounds, and he measures seven feet in the girth.
He is the tallest and biggest man in the regiment, and is noted for his great strength as well as for his huge proportions. --He has been known to shoulder a six hundred bale of cotton, and has frequently taken a whiskey barrel by the chines, raised it at arms' length, and drank at the bung hole.
On one occasion he threw a mustang pony and his rider over a ten-rail fence.
For this offence he was tried and convicted in the Circuit Court of Lauderdale county, and fined five hundred dollars. This remarkable man is the youngest and smallest of seventeen brothers.
His father is two and a half inches taller than he is, but not so thick set. His brothers are taller, but none of them are so stou
Lauderdale (Alabama, United States) (search for this): article 5
Warrington, Fla. (Florida, United States) (search for this): article 5
Good Material for soldiers.
A letter from Warrington, Fla., to the Pensacola Observer, thus describes a private in one of the companies:
Professor Day is just six and a half feet high in his stockings.
His weight is three hundred and ten pounds, and he measures seven feet in the girth.
He is the tallest and biggest man in the regiment, and is noted for his great strength as well as for his huge proportions. --He has been known to shoulder a six hundred bale of cotton, and has frequently taken a whiskey barrel by the chines, raised it at arms' length, and drank at the bung hole.
On one occasion he threw a mustang pony and his rider over a ten-rail fence.
For this offence he was tried and convicted in the Circuit Court of Lauderdale county, and fined five hundred dollars. This remarkable man is the youngest and smallest of seventeen brothers.
His father is two and a half inches taller than he is, but not so thick set. His brothers are taller, but none of them are so stout
Andrew (search for this): article 6
Too good to be lost:
Gov. Andrew, of Massachusetts, is in hot water about his military order intended to menace the South.
Among many letters of remonstrance from patriotic military men in the State, is one from Capt. Charles H. Manning, of the Salem Artillery.
He says:
They, the Salem Light Artillery, are now filled with astonishment at the alacrity with which Massachusetts offers her services in the work of war against her brethren.
That she who, swept on by political rancor, proposed to shut up her arsenals and her store-houses, and bury every military ensign in the dusty seclusion of deserted armories, while a foreign foe was sweeping our seas, destroying our towns, and devastating our fields — that she should now rush to arms against those of her fellow-citizens who ask for a position equal with her own under the confederation, is as strange and unnatural as that national madness which vents itself in the horrors of civil strife.
That she who denounced and defied
Charles H. Manning (search for this): article 6
Too good to be lost:
Gov. Andrew, of Massachusetts, is in hot water about his military order intended to menace the South.
Among many letters of remonstrance from patriotic military men in the State, is one from Capt. Charles H. Manning, of the Salem Artillery.
He says:
They, the Salem Light Artillery, are now filled with astonishment at the alacrity with which Massachusetts offers her services in the work of war against her brethren.
That she who, swept on by political rancor, proposed to shut up her arsenals and her store-houses, and bury every military ensign in the dusty seclusion of deserted armories, while a foreign foe was sweeping our seas, destroying our towns, and devastating our fields — that she should now rush to arms against those of her fellow-citizens who ask for a position equal with her own under the confederation, is as strange and unnatural as that national madness which vents itself in the horrors of civil strife.
That she who denounced and defied t