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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 1, 1860., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 7 total hits in 3 results.
Lexington (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 10
Kentucky.
The Lexington (Ky.) Statesman, a Democratic journal published at the home of Mr. Breckinridge, and his enthusiastic supporter during the late Presidential contest, has the following editorial remarks:
There is as yet no just cause for revolution or dissolution.
The Union commands our cordial allegiance; to it we shall be loyal until its basis, the Constitution, has been actually destroyed.
Kentucky will not surrender the Union.
Our people are as gallant and spirited defenders of their rights, and as little disposed to submit to wrong and dishonor as any men who tread the soil of America.
They will not permit themselves to be degraded nor their rights invaded; but they do not believe the time has come for revolution, and will yet cling to the Union with the devotion of the true sons of '76.
To our Southern friends we would earnestly appeal to await the full development of Lincoln's policy before striking the fatal blow to the Union.
Kentucky is a border Stat
Lincoln (search for this): article 10
Breckinridge (search for this): article 10
Kentucky.
The Lexington (Ky.) Statesman, a Democratic journal published at the home of Mr. Breckinridge, and his enthusiastic supporter during the late Presidential contest, has the following editorial remarks:
There is as yet no just cause for revolution or dissolution.
The Union commands our cordial allegiance; to it we shall be loyal until its basis, the Constitution, has been actually destroyed.
Kentucky will not surrender the Union.
Our people are as gallant and spirited defe r the administration of Lincoln as long as we can.--Then let them heed the voice of Kentucky, stand true to the Union, and not exhaust all hope of yet maintaining the Constitution.--The Democracy of Kentucky--those men who, in the support of Mr. Breckinridge, have given earnest of their fidelity to the rights of the South--will appeal to the South to give up whatever movements are now in contemplation, and, like patriots, uphold the Constitution and the Union.
Do this, and all may yet be well.