Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 10, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Floyd or search for Floyd in all documents.

Your search returned 4 results in 2 document sections:

arris and Savage become proprietors. Maj. H. has had little or nothing to do with the paper for many months, being absent as bearer of dispatches to Costa Rica. Lord Lyons, the British Minister, has taken umbrage at certain passages in Secretary Floyd's late letter, which show up the hypocrisy and insincerity of the English government and people in regard to the institution of slavery. He demands to know whether Gov. Floyd's sentiments are those of the American government, and if so, theGov. Floyd's sentiments are those of the American government, and if so, the rumor is that he will at once leave Washington and return home. This, however, can be nothing more than a mere rumor, since there is no passage in Gov. F.'s letter comparable to the open, face to face insult offered some month or so ago by Lord Brougham to Mr. Dallas, our Minister at the Court of St. James. But the matter was considered of a nature so serious as to call for a special meeting of the Cabinet, which was said to have been held on Friday morning, and the result of which has not up
The Daily Dispatch: December 10, 1860., [Electronic resource], The Burning of the Kentucky Lunatic Asylum. (search)
arris and Savage become proprietors. Maj. H. has had little or nothing to do with the paper for many months, being absent as bearer of dispatches to Costa Rica. Lord Lyons, the British Minister, has taken umbrage at certain passages in Secretary Floyd's late letter, which show up the hypocrisy and insincerity of the English government and people in regard to the institution of slavery. He demands to know whether Gov. Floyd's sentiments are those of the American government, and if so, theGov. Floyd's sentiments are those of the American government, and if so, the rumor is that he will at once leave Washington and return home. This, however, can be nothing more than a mere rumor, since there is no passage in Gov. F.'s letter comparable to the open, face to face insult offered some month or so ago by Lord Brougham to Mr. Dallas, our Minister at the Court of St. James. But the matter was considered of a nature so serious as to call for a special meeting of the Cabinet, which was said to have been held on Friday morning, and the result of which has not up