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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Francis B. Carpenter, Six Months at the White House. Search the whole document.
Found 60 total hits in 20 results.
Davenport (Iowa, United States) (search for this): chapter 54
Essex County (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 54
Andersonville, Ga. (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 54
Washington (United States) (search for this): chapter 54
Tunstall (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 54
Newtown (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 54
George Bates (search for this): chapter 54
Liii.
The opinion of the Attorney-General, Judge Bates, as to the safety of Mr. Lincoln's being intrusted with the pardoning power, was founded upon an intimate knowledge of the man. A nature of such tenderness and humanity would have been in danger of erring on what many would call the weak side, had it not been balanced by an unusual degree of strong practical good sense and judgment.
The Secretary of War, and generals in command, were frequently much annoyed at being overruled,--the discipline and efficiency of the service being thereby, as they considered, greatly endangered.
But there was no going back of the simple signature, A. Lincoln, attached to proclamation or reprieve.
My friend Kellogg, representative from Essex County, New York, received a despatch one evening from the army, to the effect that a young townsman, who had been induced to enlist through his instrumentality, had, for a serious misdemeanor, been convicted by a court-martial, and was to be shot t
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): chapter 54
Liii.
The opinion of the Attorney-General, Judge Bates, as to the safety of Mr. Lincoln's being intrusted with the pardoning power, was founded upon an intimate knowledge of the man. A nature of such tenderness and humanity would have been in danger of erring on what many would call the weak side, had it not been balanced by an unusual degree of strong practical good sense and judgment.
The Secretary of War, and generals in command, were frequently much annoyed at being overruled,--the discipline and efficiency of the service being thereby, as they considered, greatly endangered.
But there was no going back of the simple signature, A. Lincoln, attached to proclamation or reprieve.
My friend Kellogg, representative from Essex County, New York, received a despatch one evening from the army, to the effect that a young townsman, who had been induced to enlist through his instrumentality, had, for a serious misdemeanor, been convicted by a court-martial, and was to be shot t
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (search for this): chapter 54
S. F. Miller (search for this): chapter 54