hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Document | Max. Freq | Min. Freq | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
View all matching documents... |
Your search returned 524 results in 138 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: March 31, 1863., [Electronic resource], Progress of the war. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: April 2, 1863., [Electronic resource], Reported Confederate triumph in North Carolina . (search)
Hon. John J. Crittenden.
Poor old Mr. Crittenden, of Kentucky, seems determined to make a driveller and aMr. Crittenden, of Kentucky, seems determined to make a driveller and a show of himself to the last.
He has been making a speech in Philadelphia, full of the usual platitudes of Un rs, some veteran political place-hunter, like John J. Crittenden, obtrudes himself upon our vision, that we ar the sources of power and patronage.
Here is John J. Crittenden, now an old man, with one foot in the grave, for a beggarly mess of political pottage.
When Mr. Crittenden says "we have a wise people," he tells that whi ln to the Presidency of the United States?
Mr. Crittenden says: "If we have now and then foolish rulers, again.
It was only old political courtesan like Crittenden and other experienced prostitutes that could alwa intelligence or knowledge to be patriotic.
If Mr. Crittenden were to speak of his country as he really belie that is recorded in the annals of history?
Yet Mr. Crittenden says that he believes in the people!
Perhaps t
Geo. Wade, of Richmond, who was stabbed a few days since by Richard Thacker, of Louisa co., Va., near Petersburg, has died of his wound.
Capt. Richard Richardson, 12th Mississippi Volunteers, has been assigned to duty as Mastering and Inspecting Officer at Camo Les, and ordered to report to Brig Gen. Winter.
Sapator John J. Crittenden has been captured, in Kentucky, by the Confederates.
The Daily Dispatch: July 20, 1863., [Electronic resource], Progress of the war. (search)
John J. Crittenden.
--A correspondent of the Appeal thus gives some of the more prominent features in the life of this once honored but now unlamented Kentuckian:
The death of Mr. Crittenden, announced a few days since by telegraph, seems to have elicited very little notice from the press.
He died, it appears, at the aMr. Crittenden, announced a few days since by telegraph, seems to have elicited very little notice from the press.
He died, it appears, at the advanced age of seventy seven.
He was a native of Woodford county, Kentucky, or what is now known as such, but then Virginia, his birth being prior to the formation of Kentucky as a State.
He was graduated at William and Mary College.
He settled as a lawyer in 1810 at Russellville, in Kentucky.
He was elected to the Senate of t cial obligation to his friends and kindred, he became the blind follower of a central despotism, in its "work of death, desolation and tyranny," That a man of Mr. Crittenden a fiere of character should have apostatized so greatly from loyal sensibilities can only be explained by the blighting influence of age upon factitive which