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Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Mobile, Ala. (Alabama, United States) or search for Mobile, Ala. (Alabama, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 4 results in 4 document sections:
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore), chapter 54 (search)
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore), chapter 63 (search)
Mobile, Sept. 13.--A special despatch to the Advertiser and Register, dated Charleston, September eleventh, says:
It is reported that the people of Baltimore have risen en masse and cleared the city of the Yankee troops, hung the Provost-Marshal, Van Nostrand, and his deputy, McPhailes, and captured a large fort erected on Federal Hill by the Yankees for the destruction of the city in the event of a successful revolt.
Stuart's cavalry are spreading consternation among the enemy in Maryland.
The foregoing report is fully credited in Richmond.--Grenada Appeal, September 13.
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore), chapter 66 (search)
The North A unit against the rebellion.--Mobile, August 20.--Elsewhere, the telegraph gives us a synopsis of the Queen's speech proroguing Parliament.
The little Guelphish lady speaks nothing that is not written or indorsed by Palmerston, as every body knows.
Recognition and armed intervention are phantoms which the good sense of the Southern people will no longer see by night and by day. The British government is determined to take no part in the contest.
Now that there is no chance of English interference, another illusion should be dispelled.
We republish the speech of Dr. Olds of Ohio, as a part of the history of these remarkable times.
Our people are disposed to rely too much on the prospect of a grand smash of the Union of Yankeeland.
Such men as Vallandigham and Dr. Olds are, perhaps, like Burns, dropped in the wrong country, but they are not exponents of Yankee sentiment.
There is no safety in any thing short of the bayonet.
Hope of something turning up, of the
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 6. (ed. Frank Moore), chapter 95 (search)
Mobile, October 3.--Brute Butler has issued an order (No. 76) requiring all persons in New-Orleans, male or female, eighteen years of age or upwards, who sympathize with the Southern Confederacy, to report themselves by first October, with descriptive lists of their property, real and personal.
If they renew their allegiance to the United States Government, they are to be recommended for pardon; if not, they will be fined and imprisoned, and their property confiscated.
The policemen of the city are charged with the duty of seeing that every householder enrols his property in the respective districts.--Richmond Inquirer, October 6.