Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for J. Holt or search for J. Holt in all documents.

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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
ty, except the vindictive Judge-Advocate, General J. Holt, whose taste for blood had been freshly snford Conover, but whose true name was Dunham. Holt conducted a long correspondence with Conover, iwitnesses. (Id., 856.) The depositions on which Holt founded his charges against Clay and Davis are he truth of history cannot be overestimated. Holt's theories and charges, however, based as they to be examined were the same whose depositions Holt had secured—Sanford Conover, John H. Patten, Joe a conspiracy for the purpose of deceiving General Holt and obtaining money from the government. Tly ended the whole fiasco, but it left poor old Holt and his vindictive credulity in an awkward posi Mr. Lincoln, but at the same time whitewashing Holt, who had been bitterly attacked by the northernts, and especially between them and Judge Advocate-General Holt, and it gives pleasure and speaks wesident Johnson, Mr. Stanton, Mr. Dana, and General Holt—than from the cruel nature which one might [3 more...]<
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The trials and trial of Jefferson Davis. (search)
ty, except the vindictive Judge-Advocate, General J. Holt, whose taste for blood had been freshly snford Conover, but whose true name was Dunham. Holt conducted a long correspondence with Conover, ie in Wonderland, would reject them as false. Holt, however, swallowed them all with gaping gullibhe truth of history cannot be overestimated. Holt's theories and charges, however, based as they e a conspiracy for the purpose of deceiving General Holt and obtaining money from the government. Tly ended the whole fiasco, but it left poor old Holt and his vindictive credulity in an awkward positting the falsity of the testimony, about which Holt had been so persistent, and practically clearin Mr. Lincoln, but at the same time whitewashing Holt, who had been bitterly attacked by the northernts, and especially between them and Judge Advocate-General Holt, and it gives pleasure and speaks wesident Johnson, Mr. Stanton, Mr. Dana, and General Holt—than from the cruel nature which one might [3 more...]