hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 27, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abraham Lincoln or search for Abraham Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 9 results in 4 document sections:
Lincoln's last proclamation.
There was a time when the proclamations of Lincoln for more men had something alarming in them for the people of the Confederate States.
That time has past.
They Lincoln for more men had something alarming in them for the people of the Confederate States.
That time has past.
They are now always received with pleasure, because they are regarded as so many acknowledgments of defeat, and by consequence so many evidences of weakness.
After every Confederate victory we hear of th for. The present call, notwithstanding the heavy premium offered, is not likely to be more so. Lincoln began the war with volunteers.
They were killed off so rapidly that each succeeding call yield was no work for them to do, and they volunteered to escape starvation.
The declaration of Lincoln that his object is to "reinforce our victorious armies in the field," is ludicrous enough in vi other nation, is the last to be cheated into danger by any such clap-trap declamation.
Indeed, Lincoln has done his worst.
He can never, hereafter, do us as much harm as he has done heretofore.
We
The Daily Dispatch: October 27, 1863., [Electronic resource], New York feeling towards the English and French . (search)
Execution of Dr. Wright.
--A Federal surgeon, who arrived at City Point Saturday on the flag of truce boat, brought the announcement of the execution of Dr. David Minton Wright, by order of Abraham Lincoln, at Norfolk, on Friday last.
It will be recollected that Dr. Wright killed a Federal Lieutenant of a negro company who had ordered three of his negroes to arrest him for expressing his indignation at the company being marched through the streets of Norfolk.
The Petersburg Express says:
The Federal surgeon says he witnessed the execution, and that the Doctor died with heroic firmness.
The execution was public, the scaffold having been erected near the Fair Grounds, on the suburbs of the city.
But a few days previous to his execution there was occasion to remove him from the jail to the Custom-House, where the mock trial which unrighteously condemned him to death was held.
He was carried through the streets in irons, but this ignominious treatment did not subdue
The Confederate and U. S. naval officers at Brest treat each other with "dignified politeness." The crews of the Florida and Kearsage, however, have bloody fights whenever they meet.
The C. S. steamer Alabama was reported to be off Cardenas, Cuba, with another commander, Capt. Semmes having been appointed to another ship.
Among late arrivals reported at Nassau were Messrs. Richardson and Joyce, lately editors of the Baltimore Republican, expelled by Lincoln.
Mrs. Trolloppe, the English authoress, is dead.