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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 21, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Georgia (Georgia, United States) or search for Georgia (Georgia, United States) in all documents.
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The Daily Dispatch: February 21, 1862., [Electronic resource], A Chapter in life. (search)
Visitors to the City.
--Among the visitors to the city, now sojourning at the Spotswood Hotel, may be mentioned the Hon. T. Butler King, of Georgia; Gen. Loring, Gen. Reed, of Kentucky; Judges Moore and Burnett of Kentucky; Judge Swann, M. C., from Tennessee; Hon. Messrs. Barksdale of Mississippi, Bruce of Kentucky, and Col. Cenat Zulaskowski.
We must not omit from the list of arrivals of distinguished visitors at the Spotswood the name of Miss Martha Haines Butt, of Norfolk, the beautiful and gifted authoress of "Leisure Moments," "Anti-Fanaticism, " and other works of sentiment and fiction.
The inauguration of our President takes place to-morrow, and we look to-day for a large influx of visitors.
The Daily Dispatch: February 21, 1862., [Electronic resource], The destruction of C to prevent their occupation by the enemy. (search)
The destruction of C to prevent their occupation by the enemy.
The advice of the retiring delegates from Georgia in the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States, to burn and desolate the country, when our forces are compelled to retire from the approach of the enemy, seems to meet with no single approval of the Georgia press.
The Savannah Republican protests against the policy, "as the promptings of patriotic phrensy and will romance, rather than of military skill and common sense."
The Augusta Constitutionalist says:
The stone flee blockade is denounced throughout Christendom as vandalism against all mankind, because it seeks to destroy a beneficent provision of nature, designed for the benefit of all ages.
The destruction of a city of brick and stone by its own people would be vandalism against its own posterity, unless the hope of winning back was abandoned.
But there could be no such abandoning of hope by our people, even though one hundred thousand