Browsing named entities in Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4. You can also browse the collection for June 30th, 1863 AD or search for June 30th, 1863 AD in all documents.

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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, Chapter 48: Seward.—emancipation.—peace with France.—letters of marque and reprisal.—foreign mediation.—action on certain military appointments.—personal relations with foreigners at Washington.—letters to Bright, Cobden, and the Duchess of Argyll.—English opinion on the Civil War.—Earl Russell and Gladstone.—foreign relations.—1862-1863. (search)
and the Red River of the North by canal navigation, Jan. 28, 1863 (Globe, p. 562); justice to a widow on Sunday morning, Feb. 28, 1863 (Globe, p. 1391); an hospital and ambulance corps, Dec. 3, 1862 (Works, vol. VII. p. 255; Boston Journal, June 30, 1863, replying to Dr. H. I. Bowditch). Mr. Stanton appointed a commission to investigate the condition of the negroes coming within our lines, and to propose methods for protecting and assisting them. Sumner hoped much from it. Its results wen face of the antislavery measures of Congress and Mr. Lincoln's Proclamation of Emancipation, that the slaves would be better off, and their final liberation nearer, by a division of the country into two sections. He declared in Parliament, June 30, 1863, his belief that the restoration of the American Union by force is unattainable, and again denounced (after Lincoln's Proclamation) the emancipation of the negro race as an object that can be legitimately pursued by means of coercion and bloo