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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 22, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abraham Lincoln or search for Abraham Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 10 results in 6 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: March 22, 1861., [Electronic resource], Fearful tragedy in Roxbur. (search)
Politics of the President.
One of the most ingenious devices for accounting for the present volcanic state of the country, is that the Democracy have created the disturbance because they were defeated in the Presidential election.
What exquisite nonsense!
Was not the National Whig party also defeated?
Moreover, does any man in his senses suppose that if John Bell and Edward Everpt had been elected, any party in the country would have cried out for Secession or Revolution!
They were National men, Lincoln is a Sectional man, and his election an avowed sectional triumph.
Some of the strongest supporters of Bell and Everett are the leading secessionists in the South.
Carl Schurz.
The native wing of the Lincoln party have succeeded in choking this German Red and Black Republican Atheist and Abolitionist from the Vienna mission, and sending him to Brazil, where we are now represented by an American gentleman, Mr. Meade, of Virginia.
The friends of Schurz, who has been in the country only six years, and boasts that he gave Lincoln half a million of votes, are greatly scandalized.
The other side, however, are of opinion that Schurz, and a good many moreending him to Brazil, where we are now represented by an American gentleman, Mr. Meade, of Virginia.
The friends of Schurz, who has been in the country only six years, and boasts that he gave Lincoln half a million of votes, are greatly scandalized.
The other side, however, are of opinion that Schurz, and a good many more like him, ought to be thankful that they find a refuge, and the means of life in America, without assuming to control the policy, and represent the people of this country.
The Daily Dispatch: March 22, 1861., [Electronic resource], Mr. Bates on the collection of the revenue. (search)
Mr. Bates on the collection of the revenue.
--The St. Louis Democrat, of Monday, gives currency to a rumor that the Attorney General, Mr. Bates, has given the opinion to President Lincoln that the revenue cannot be collected, except under the law of 1809, which renders it necessary for collectors to reside within their respective districts, and therefore it will be impossible to execute the laws with propriety, even were it otherwise feasible, in vessels.
Forts Caswell and Johnson.
It is most important to the interests of the South that the Abolition Administration should not be permitted to seize these forts.--In a strategic point of view, their value cannot be overrated.
If our North Carolina friends would keep the peace, let them proceed forth with to keep Abraham Lincoln out of those forts.
The Daily Dispatch: March 22, 1861., [Electronic resource], Frightful case of hydrophobia. (search)