hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
The Daily Dispatch: July 23, 1862., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 23, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Aborning Herald or search for Aborning Herald in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

rast of the ordinary American style of oration indulged in on that day, and the style which — according to its views — the present position of affairs would seem to demand. The Times puts a speech into the month of a supposed American orator, the burden of which is that the North has not been able to accomplish its purposes, that the complaints, &c., against England have been unjust and unfounded, and that it would have been much better at the start to have let the South go. The Aborning Herald urges that the proscription of the war and the celebration of the 4th of July constitute as glaring a case as was ever alleged against a civilized nation, and that if professions meant anything in America, the mere reading of the Declaration of Independence should suffice to condemn the invasion of the Confederate States as utterly inexcusable in principle and erroneous in policy. The Daily News editorially denounces in sarcastic terms the malignity of the Times, for its pharisaical
The way of the Traitor is hard. --"Ore," the correspondent of the Mobile Advertiser and Herald, says that Charles A. Wicktirfe, the Union M. C. of Kentucky has been totally deserted by his family and relatives. One of his sons, Colonel Cripps Wickliffe, commands the 5th Kentucky in the Confederate army. Another son, Bob Wicktiffe, ex-Governor of is with us, and two nephews also joined our standard--one, Colonel Charles Wickliffe, of the 7th Kentucky, who was killed at Shiloh in one of the most gallant charges of that battle, and whose conspicuous heroism and bravery have never yet been done justice to — and the other, Capt. Nat. Wickliffe, who was aid to the lamented Gen, A. Sidney Johnston, and who is still in the service. Even the wife of this poor, demented old man has declared that she could not side with him, and she would never again cross the Ohio; and both of his daughters, Mrs. Judge Merrick, formerly of Washington, D. C., and Mrs. Senator of Florida, have also le