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The Daily Dispatch: February 01, 1864., [Electronic resource] 3 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 01, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Robert P. Johnston or search for Robert P. Johnston in all documents.

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eing opened, the House joint resolution of thanks to Gen. Beauregard and officers and men under his command, their defence of Charleston, South Carolina, was taken up and referred to the Military Committee. Mr. Read, of North Carolina, offered the following, which was unanimously agreed to: The Congress of the Confederate States having through the public press, of the re-enlistment for the war, of the North Carolina Brigade the army of Northern Virginia, serving under Gen. Robert P. Johnston: Therefore. Resolved by the Confederate States of America, That and spirit of the North Carolina evinced by this prompt and voluntary devotion of themselves afresh to the service of the are beyond all praise, and deserve the gratitude of the Government. A motion of Mr. Semmes, the Senate ad The House met at 11 o'clock, and was with prayer by Rev. Dr. Ryland. The House then resumed the unfinished business of Thursday, being the bill amends of the act to put
New Publication. Maryland's Hope; Her Trials and Interest in Connexion with the War. By W Jefferson Buchanan. West & Johnston, Richmond. This handsome pamphlet gives a perspicuous and well written narrative of the wrongs which Maryland and her people have suffered under the Lincoln despotism, embracing letters and documents exhibiting the process by which the minions of power accomplished the subjugation of the State. The geographical position and great manufacturing and commercial resources are next set forth in a clear and comprehensive style, and the propositions ably demonstrated that it is the interest of Maryland that she should go with the South, and the interest of the South that Maryland should go with her. The essay closes with a touching and beautiful illustration from an Eastern allegory of the intense and painful solicitude with which the true Maryland heart watches the events of this contest, "ever peering through the future, warmed by each gleam of sunshine,