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The Daily Dispatch: January 22, 1861., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
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The Daily Dispatch: January 22, 1861., [Electronic resource], The capture of the New Orleans Barracks. (search)
Passengers per Steamship "Roanoke," Geo. W. Couch, Master, from New York, Jan. 19; J. West, J. P. Powell, C. S. Mitchell, J. Y. Phillips, O. Heiner, Mrs. Lane, Mrs. L. B. Hill, J. T. Dutcher, Mrs. J. P. Perry and child, Jas. Little and lady, J. M. Goodrich, B. F. Jenkins, W. White, Thos. Simpson, Mott Bedell N. A. Benton, S. G. Baptist, Dan'l. Wardsworth, Mrs. Lowry, and 4 in steerage. Also from Norfolk--S. Thornton, Colonel Hodges, Mr. Jarvis, G. B. Cook.
From Washington.[special correspondence of the Dispatch.] Washington,, Jan. 20, 1861. Georgia has gone out like a deer, at a bound. She did not even touch the fence in going over the States, two of them among the Original thirteen are lost to the Union. Will they ever return. The wisest of their Members tell me over. Could they obtain equal rights, with the power to check the great and growing forth, according to the plan of Mr. Hunter, that of Mr. Phillips, they would return.-- at of this there is no hope, Meantime, war is close at hand. Sooner or later. Forts Sumter and Pickens will have to be taken. There is no avoiding it. Neither Buchanan nor Lincoln will surrender them. The only chance of escaping immediate hostilities is in the truce proposed by the Southern Senators to Gov. Pickens. But the end will be the same. And if it be true that Lieut. Talbot, Major Anderson's messenger, has returned with orders to the Charlestonians to be erecting batteries aroun