Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 18, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Daniel S. Dickinson or search for Daniel S. Dickinson in all documents.

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ery upon which the prosperity of the South and the permanency of this Union in this present form depend. (Applause.) There are no enemies to this Union except the honest, virtuous, conscientious people of the North, whose action is to be feared. Let us draw away that support, and that instant this disturbing, mischievous controversy ends, and our Union renews its youth and appears before us as an institution designed to perpetuity and to bless untold millions for untold ages. Hon. Daniel S. Dickinson made a speech in which he said: The free States must be brought up to the consideration of a great public duty. The South have not offended us. We cannot say they have ever laid finger upon us. They have not invaded our domain. They have not interfered with any interests belonging to us as sovereign States. But they read in our newspapers that their slaves have been run off by an underground railroad, and they see it set down in derision that one more Southern individual has