Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 10, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hill or search for Hill in all documents.

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striving to destroy our liberties, has trampled down those of his own people War, with all its horrors — the fiendish hate of a bloated and overweening section, and a swollen and checked pride have ruled the councils of our enemies, and pronounced against our existing as a free and independent people. The roll of the drum is now heard from the slopes of the Alleghanies to the western banks of the Mississippi, and from the falls of the Missouri to the deep and sparkling waters of the Gulf. Hill and valley, from mountain to seaboard, throughout the confines of the South, reverberate to the tread of armed men. The tramp you hear is the steady march of legions moving on to battle — not for conquest or fame — but for freedom and for life. The crown for which they labor as the end of all their achievements is peace, their only alternative without victory is slavery or death. --Such is the nature of the struggle which has been so fruitlessly and fatally inaugurated.--It is for this Virgi<
lunteers has just arrived from Raleigh, who will act as an escort to the remains of their late Governor. The train which conveyed the remains of Gov. Ellis, was draped in mourning from the egine to the end of the last passenger car, and in further respect to the deceased, business was entirely suspended throughout the city. Several hundred volunteers from Georgia has just arrived in this city, who were immediately surrounded by a committee of arrangements and escorted to Cool Spring Hill, where refreshments of every description were in waiting for the hungry and thirsty soldiers. It is due to the citizens of the Cockade to say that no city in the Southern country has been so liberal in their efforts to make the soldier, in passing through this city, comfortable and happy. I regret to state that one of the Georgia soldier's had his knee broken last night about 10 o'clock. Every attention was rendered him on his arrival here, and he is now as comfortable as could be expected