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: December 18, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abe Lincoln or search for Abe Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 7 results in 5 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: December 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch . (search)
Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.
the cat out of the bag — an incident Relating to the Desecration of Centreville Church, &c.
Near Centreville, Dec. 13, 1861
The paragraph of Abe Lincoln's message, under the caption "Colonization of emancipated slaves," at last discloses the policy of the abolitionists — let's the cat out the bag after nearly thirty years concealment.
Send all the negroes out of the country — leave additional room for white men. We had a glimpse of this identical cat three or four years ago, in this manner; A church, not fifty miles from Alexandria, was without a Rector, and it was deemed expedient to get a student from the Seminary to come on alternate Sundays, and read the service.
A friend recommended a young gentleman from St. George's, N. Y.--a protege of Dr. Tyng.
He came, and won all hearts by his zeal, fresh from the Union prayer meetings.
He ignored the slavery question altogether, till his last visit, just before his ordina<
The Daily Dispatch: December 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], The Searching case at Fort McHenry . (search)
The Searching case at Fort McHenry.
The Baltimore American, edited by a coarse, vulgar, low-bred Yankee, speaks of the female passengers who were so brutally searched in the steamboat off Fort McHenry as "the women," &c. This expression he uses at least five or six times.
These "women" were, every one of them, ladies of the highest respectability.
They all came from the lower counties of Maryland, on the Patuxent, a region celebrated, ever since the days of Leonard Calvert, as among the most refined on the Continent.
The scoundrels who conducted the search endeavored to induce a little girl four years old to betray her father, showing her a Union badge and asking her whether he had one like it. The child artlessly replied that he had not — that none but people that "went to the bad place" had them — that old Abe Lincoln's bad soldiers wore them.
These men call themselves officers, and wish to be thought gentleme
The Daily Dispatch: December 18, 1861., [Electronic resource], Horrid Hartality. (search)
Horrid Hartality.
--It is currently stated by several passengers from Charleston, says the Columbia South Carolinton, that the Lincoln blockading fleet off the bar, fired a salute of thirty or more guns, in their fiendish joy at the conflagration of the city.
If this be so, it seems evidence of Lincoln emissaries having been engaged in the diabolical and cowardly of the homes of women and children in the absence of their husbands and fathers, who had gone out boldly to give bottle to the invaders of their soil.