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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: September 7, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for A. Lincoln or search for A. Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 10 results in 4 document sections:
We have received the Baltimore American, of the 3d inst. The following is a summary of the news which it contains:
Letter from Lincoln — how and when peace is to be obtained — the Enlistment of negro troops.
The following letter from Lincoln to the Springfield (Iii.) mass meeting is published.
Copies of it were to bLincoln to the Springfield (Iii.) mass meeting is published.
Copies of it were to be furnished the other Abolition meetings held in different parts of the United States on the same day. If anything coming from him may be dignified the term "official, " expressive of his views, then this paper may be taken in that sense:
Executive Mansion, Washington, August 26. Hon. James E. Conkling: My Dear Sir
--Y be quite sober, let us diligently apply the means, never doubting that a just God, in his own good time, will give us the rightful result. Yours, very truly, A. Lincoln.
Inauguration of the New Governor of Kentucky--his Message.
Gov. Bramlette, elected Governor of Kentucky on the Union ticket, was inaugurated, at Fran
Lincoln's letter.
--The enemies of Mr. Lincoln have sometimes taken occasion to say that papers presented to the world with his signature attached, were not written by him. We think no man will be found of a nature so skeptical as to doubt thaMr. Lincoln have sometimes taken occasion to say that papers presented to the world with his signature attached, were not written by him. We think no man will be found of a nature so skeptical as to doubt that this letter is genuine.
It has a flat-boat, rail-splitting, whiskey-drinking odor about it which allows of no mistake with regard to its origin.--We doubt whether any other man in his dominions could have written exactly such a letter.
To find o iolence.
It was the entrance by which John Quincy Adams said he could drive a wagon and team through the Constitution.
Lincoln scorns to take shelter under any law of indefinite signification.
He is a military despot, and he regards his sword kno ct he doubtless damned his own soul, and earned for himself the execration of posterity throughout the civilized world.
Lincoln, however, but avows the principle on which his plunderers have all along been acting.
Establish the principle that it i