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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 22, 1861.., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 9 total hits in 6 results.
Bucks County (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): article 3
A curious trial.
--The Philadelphia papers report a curious trial which has just been held in that city.
The Ledger says:
Enos Prizer and Henry T. Darlington, proprietors of the Bucks County Intelligencer, were put on trial in the Quarter Sessions, before Judge Allison, on a charge of libel.
The prosecutor was Henry Black, a resident of that city, but formerly of Bucks county, and he complained that he defendants had, on the 23d of April last, published an article giving the state of feeling in the county in regard to the attack upon Fort Sumter, and after narrating some of the incidents attending the uprising of the people, the-article referred to Mr. Black, and continued: "This man undertook to defend Secessionism among a crowd of people, at Sixth and Germantown Road, Philadelphia, when he was seized by the bystanders, a rope put about his neck, and he was nearly strangled by their violence.
It is said that the arteries of his neck were laid open by the rough treatment
Black (search for this): article 3
Enos Prizer (search for this): article 3
A curious trial.
--The Philadelphia papers report a curious trial which has just been held in that city.
The Ledger says:
Enos Prizer and Henry T. Darlington, proprietors of the Bucks County Intelligencer, were put on trial in the Quarter Sessions, before Judge Allison, on a charge of libel.
The prosecutor was Henry Black, a resident of that city, but formerly of Bucks county, and he complained that he defendants had, on the 23d of April last, published an article giving the state of feeling in the county in regard to the attack upon Fort Sumter, and after narrating some of the incidents attending the uprising of the people, the-article referred to Mr. Black, and continued: "This man undertook to defend Secessionism among a crowd of people, at Sixth and Germantown Road, Philadelphia, when he was seized by the bystanders, a rope put about his neck, and he was nearly strangled by their violence.
It is said that the arteries of his neck were laid open by the rough treatmen
Allison (search for this): article 3
Henry T. Darlington (search for this): article 3
A curious trial.
--The Philadelphia papers report a curious trial which has just been held in that city.
The Ledger says:
Enos Prizer and Henry T. Darlington, proprietors of the Bucks County Intelligencer, were put on trial in the Quarter Sessions, before Judge Allison, on a charge of libel.
The prosecutor was Henry Black, a resident of that city, but formerly of Bucks county, and he complained that he defendants had, on the 23d of April last, published an article giving the state of feeling in the county in regard to the attack upon Fort Sumter, and after narrating some of the incidents attending the uprising of the people, the-article referred to Mr. Black, and continued: "This man undertook to defend Secessionism among a crowd of people, at Sixth and Germantown Road, Philadelphia, when he was seized by the bystanders, a rope put about his neck, and he was nearly strangled by their violence.
It is said that the arteries of his neck were laid open by the rough treatmen
April 23rd (search for this): article 3
A curious trial.
--The Philadelphia papers report a curious trial which has just been held in that city.
The Ledger says:
Enos Prizer and Henry T. Darlington, proprietors of the Bucks County Intelligencer, were put on trial in the Quarter Sessions, before Judge Allison, on a charge of libel.
The prosecutor was Henry Black, a resident of that city, but formerly of Bucks county, and he complained that he defendants had, on the 23d of April last, published an article giving the state of feeling in the county in regard to the attack upon Fort Sumter, and after narrating some of the incidents attending the uprising of the people, the-article referred to Mr. Black, and continued: "This man undertook to defend Secessionism among a crowd of people, at Sixth and Germantown Road, Philadelphia, when he was seized by the bystanders, a rope put about his neck, and he was nearly strangled by their violence.
It is said that the arteries of his neck were laid open by the rough treatment