Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: May 14, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Andrew Johnson or search for Andrew Johnson in all documents.

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The Home of Andrew Johnson. --A Tennessee correspondent gives an account of a large and enthusiastic Secession meeting, held in the town of Greensville, Tenn., the home of Andrew Johnson. The man "who was once the idol of his State, is now hissed and hooted, despised and disgraced, wherever he goes; a fate which he truly deserves, and which awaits all who speak and act against their home and country." The Home of Andrew Johnson. --A Tennessee correspondent gives an account of a large and enthusiastic Secession meeting, held in the town of Greensville, Tenn., the home of Andrew Johnson. The man "who was once the idol of his State, is now hissed and hooted, despised and disgraced, wherever he goes; a fate which he truly deserves, and which awaits all who speak and act against their home and country."
as had special agents engaged in investigating the operations of each, with the object in view of ascertaining what excrescences, if any, must be lopped off, and what officers discontinued as superfluous. Nothing can escape his Argus-like vision. His efforts to "stop the beginnings" have been so persevered in that a leak as large as a pin head is nowhere to be found. And could the Government secure his valuable services to guard and direct its Treasury during the term of his life, what Dr. Johnson remarked of the miser would become much more than poetry in its application to the watchful Secretary: "He views his coffers with suspicious eyes, Unlocks his gold, and counts it till he dies." Messrs. Brockenborough and Staples arrived in this city two or three days ago. The admission of Virginia into the Government was transacted in secret session, but soon afterwards made public. Her representatives have been sworn in, and are participating in the proceedings of Congress. T