Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 22, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Southampton (United Kingdom) or search for Southampton (United Kingdom) in all documents.

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ould venture to suggest that they are reckoning without their host in expecting aid from such a quarter. We will venture to say, that the system of slavery in the Southern States of this Union, has presented fewer cases of riot, insubordination, and insurrection, from its foundation to the present day, and has been the parent of less bloodshed, than any other system of labor that ever existed the same length of time.--We believe that more lives were lost in the single insurrection of Southampton, (lives of masters, we mean,) than in all the other slave risings that were ever attempted put together, and the lives lost in that case did not amount to sixty. It is impossible to conceive anything more hopeless than the success of a slave rebellion, in any part of the South, and the slaves know this as well as their masters.--Even the proclamation of freedom, made by a royal Governor, backed by a fleet and army, to all slaves who would rise in the cause of George III., failed to produ
Arrival of the Fulton. Cape Raor Dec. 21. --The steamer Fulton, from Southampton on the 12th inst., has arrived here. The City of Baltimore had arrived out. The Fulton brings $600,000 in specie. The news is unimportant. Victor Emmanuel was expected back at Naples at any moment. There is nothing later from Gaeta. Francis II. had issued another protest complaining of the apathy of European sovereigns in regard to his position, and denouncing Victor Emmanuel. The tone of his dispatch does not indicate a prolonged occupation of Gaeta. He had concluded a loan at Vienna. Reactionary disturbances are reported to have taken place at several places, but had been suppressed by the Garibaldian and the ringleaders shot. The Archbishop of Naples on his return was mobbed and his palace threatened with destruction; but, after eighteen hours rioting, the mob were appeased by the appearance of the Archbishop bearing the national tricolor. The Londo