hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
The Daily Dispatch: may 30, 1861., [Electronic resource] 21 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: October 11, 1862., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: may 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Massa Greeley or search for Massa Greeley in all documents.

Your search returned 11 results in 3 document sections:

confiscation. Under this head, the N. Y. Herald says: "Under the caption of 'Confiscation — Past and Present,' Greeley comes out in an elaborate article in favor of confiscation for political causes — that old relic of barbarism abolished on," which every one knows is an unparliamentary phrase in the North. If Bennett is less ferocious than the open robber Greeley, it is only because he is not lost to all sense of shame. He has still some faint idea, or pretends to have, that robbeea, or pretends to have, that robbery and plunder are not essential features of military operations, whilst Greeley cries aloud for every shade and degree of crime, and Greeley, we believe, is the real exponent of the policy of the Administration. ea, or pretends to have, that robbery and plunder are not essential features of military operations, whilst Greeley cries aloud for every shade and degree of crime, and Greeley, we believe, is the real exponent of the policy of the Administratio
The two Northern factions. The grand political scamps, Bennett and Greeley, are once more by the ears. We make the following extracts from the Herald for two objects: to show the peace and harmony of these loving brethren, who know each other so well that neither can possibly be mistaken in the character of the other, and to place before the Southern public the fact, evident from these and other manifestations, that there are in the North two factions, having distinct and antagonistic obtructions, publish in their last daily issue an elaborate historical account of "Denmark Vesey's Insurrection in South Carolina," from that venomous abolition periodical, the Boston Atlantic Monthly; and thus our old white-coated philanthropist, Greeley, gloats over it:-- "The system of slavery — ever accursed — has not improved in these forty years. The hand of the taskmaster has not grown lighter, nor are the bonds worn with greater ease. The nature of the slave changes not, nor does t
ightful state of harmony in the New York editorial camp: Massa Greeley in a Rage.--The Hon. Massa Greeley, though a small beer philanthropist, is a monstrous big liar when the truth is against him. We say big liar, because the qualification of this charge in dainty phraseology with Greeley would be like "casting pearls before swine." In holding up before the world the identity of his views are philosophers who, even in this position, would stick to the truth. Not so with Philosopher Greeley. He flies into a rage, against the Herald, the Herald editor and the Herald office, he hangs acivil war shall be punished — such abolition and disunion agitators of the last twenty years as Greeley, Garrison, and Giddings will be among the list of traitors hung up like herrings to dry in the ings will be among the list of traitors hung up like herrings to dry in the sun. Greeley, particularly, has been a great sinner, and withal a very dirty one. Let him be washed, or let him retire.