Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 18, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Lincoln or search for Lincoln in all documents.

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ently upon the porch, attended by General Blenker, by whom he was presented to the throng.Gen. McClellan bowed in acknowledgment of the compliment paid to him, and gracefully received the assurances of Gen. Blenker that the men of his division were ready to prove their attachment to the flag of the Union by braving a soldier's death in its defence. Among the transparencies carried in the procession the most remarkable bore upon one side the words: "Hall to McClellan, " and on the reverse, "Lincoln, liberty and law." The display of fire-works was magnificent. The rockets, bursting high in every direction, filled the whole arch of heaven with splendid spangles of red, white, and blue. Conspicuous among the fixed places in front General of McClellan's was one representing a monument, upon which was inscribed in letters of light the name of "McClellan." It was surmounted with an eagle of glowing fire, bearing in its talons the national flag suspended on either side. At the conclusion
irst leaf of the New York Herald, of the 12th instant, is taken up with a long letter of a Yankee spy, containing a minute but grossly inaccurate description of this city and its localities; an account, characteristic of his class of Yankees news writers, of the state of feeling alleged to prevail here; and details of what the spy saw in his unobstructed journey hence to the West. through Nashville and Memphis, and up the Mississippi river to Columbus, whence we suppose he made his exit to Lincoln realms; if indeed he ever left the news-rooms of the Herald, in New York city, at all. Under the lax discipline observed throughout the South, it is not impossible that a cunning adventurer, born with a counterfeit face, capable of kissing the Bible to false oaths a every moment, and of shouting false exclamations as he goes in praise of Davis and the South whom he affects to despise, and in denunciation of his own breed and race North of the Potomac whom he professes to honor and love
No passes are given to any person to go northward, except in some very special cases, and even in those cases an oath has to be taken that no Southern secrets, nothing damaging to the cause of the rebellion will be divulged. I got no pass, took no oath, made my way into the loyal States by my own energy, perseverance and devices, and just so I expect to find myself once more in the regions of secessia, huzzting for Jeff. Davis, loudly maledicting the Federal baboon — as they often call Mr. Lincoln--and inwardly cursing the madness and the devilishness that have got possession of the people of the South. A trip Southward. There is but one daily train running from Richmond to Nashville, and that one runs very irregularly. The trains are mostly filled with troops. There were a great many sick and disabled soldiers returning to the South. It occurred to me, as the train was crossing a valley — over the Appomattox river, I think — on a trestle work viaduct of about half a mi<
The Daily Dispatch: November 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], The great naval expedition — from Fortress Monroe and Hatteras Inlet. (search)
to be doomed and damned, it is that Sodom of America. Let it never be forgotten that New York has shown, by her enormous contributions to the war, that she was able financially, morally, and physically, to have stood aloof from the Lincoln scheme of coercion, and, instead of suffering from such a course, would have been some hundreds of millions better off in pocket at this moment, with a fair prospect of ultimately recovering the Southern trade. She was bound to withhold her aid from Lincoln by every dictate of justice and generosity as well as expediency. She had ever professed to be Southern in principle and sentiment. She was the great Democratic city, and the natural ally of the agricultural South. Her presses had taught the South to believe that, in weal or woe, New York would stand by the people who had raised her from a provincial position to the summit of power and prosperity. Yet, in an instant, she became transferred into the most deadly, the most intolerant, the
From the Peninsula. the people of King and Queen — their kindness to the soldiers — Anxiety of the troops to meet Lincoln's hirelings, &c. [Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.] Camp Martin, York Co., Nov. 11, 1861. In justice to the people of King and Queen, I desire to say something in regard to the reception and treatment of the sick soldiers of the 5th regiment of North Carolina volunteers, (as I was one of the number.) I cannot find language to express my gratitude t their hearts behind when they came away. I am glad to be able to say that the health of our regiment is now good, though we have had a great deal of sickness. They are all in fine spirits, but spoiling for a fight. We are now close in the neighborhood of Lincoln's hirelings, but they dare not come out of their dens and face us. When you do hear of the North Carolina 5th getting into an engagement, you may expect to hear a good report from them and of some Yankees being hurt. W. L.