hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 7, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abraham Lincoln or search for Abraham Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 11 results in 5 document sections:
The 10th Louisiana Regiment.
--When the Tiger Rifles, who played such fearful havoc with Lincoln's "Pet Lambs, " at Manassas, on the memorable 21st July, passed through this city, we thought that we had seen a specimen of the toughest and most ferocious set of men on earth, but when we speak of the 10th Louisiana Regiment of New Orleans, which passed through this city on Sunday, language is inadequate to give a description, composed as it was of English, French, Germans, Dutch, Italians, , or something else which we could not exactly understand, but seemed to be executed with promptness and a remarkable degree of precision.
The Mexicans particularly were objects of much curiosity with our citizens, most of whom had never seen one before.
The entire regiment has gone to a point where they will be likely to get a chance at Lincoln's minions, and we confidently predict that when the 10th Louisiana Regiment is again head from "somebody else will be hurt."--Lynchburg Republican.
The Daily Dispatch: August 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], To paper Makers. (search)
British Press on Lincoln's Message.
The subjoined extracts were prepared for yesterday's paper, but omitted in consequence of the heavy demand upon our columns ose principles of which it was the earnest embodiment.
We cannot think that Mr. Lincoln rises to the height of this practical, but not less lofty argument.
He clin not say this is mere trifling, but we do say that it goes some to show that Mr. Lincoln and his advisers do not feel the full force of those considerations which ha of European observers.
[from the London Star.]
It is mere folly in Mr. Lincoln to talk of the people of the Confederate States "as a few discontented men." le of popular sovereignty, they had a right to do what they did; and to hear Mr. Lincoln quoting the Constitution of the United States made eighty years since, and e ecause not a syllable is whispered upon that subject in the message, nor has Mr. Lincoln, nor any member of his Cabinet, made the remotest allusion to it since their