hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
United States (United States) 28 0 Browse Search
New England (United States) 24 0 Browse Search
George Harding 12 0 Browse Search
Lincoln 10 2 Browse Search
R. W. Pool 10 0 Browse Search
L. E. Babcock 10 0 Browse Search
Henry Ward Beecher 10 0 Browse Search
R. E. Lee 8 0 Browse Search
Sherman 7 1 Browse Search
Joseph E. Johnston 7 1 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: February 27, 1865., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 72 total hits in 16 results.

1 2
New England (United States) (search for this): article 4
that he would give all his children to see New England ideas prevailing in the South. We have no ition as it at first appears. The chief of New England ideas,--a high idea of itself,--would greatnt of assurance and self-assertion. Whilst New England was annually celebrating the landing of the Southern civilization, and the man to whom New England is indebted for its very name. We shall betor. And, besides, when we get to be a New England we shall cease to be victimized by all the s while other people do our fighting.--When New England ideas prevail, we shall no longer confine ots limits, and adopt what is said to be the New England theory: that the Equator and the Aurora Bormake the sacrifice, needs no importation of New England ideas to invigorate its hold upon goods and chattels. We must do New England the justice to say that its ideas on the subject of defending itr. Beecher for the universal propagation of New England ideas in the South. Seed cannot take root [2 more...]
United States (United States) (search for this): article 4
de the rest of the country believe that they were all descended from the Pilgrim Fathers, and has quietly taken into its own hands the management of the entire United States. That is the way to get on in this world; and if Beecher will show us how to do it, we shall consider him a public benefactor. And, besides, when we get on of making targets of other communities. We have here in Virginia great manufacturing facilities, and we can use them to supply the troops and fleets of the United States while other people do our fighting.--When New England ideas prevail, we shall no longer confine ourselves to minding our own business, but shall take charge ofd the Rio Grande as its limits, and adopt what is said to be the New England theory: that the Equator and the Aurora Borealis are the natural boundaries of the United States. Our monotonous agricultural existence will give place to a pleasurable love of novelty, like that of the Bostonian who are said, by one of their own people,
Hanover Court House (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 4
ry member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic assurance with which New England has made the rest of the country believe that they were all descended from the Pilgrim Fathers, and has quietly taken into its own hands the management of the entire United States. That is the way to get on in this world; and if Beecher will show us how to do it, we shall consider him a public benefactor. And, besides, w
Patrick Henry (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 4
and considers Theodore Parker superior to Moses. That is the way for a people to think of themselves, if they want to be happy and to have other people think well of them. Whilst every member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic assurance with which New England has made the rest of the country believe that they were all descended from the Pilgrim Fathers, and has quietly taken into its own hands the man
Monticello (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 4
iverse, the centre of the civilization of the planet, and the hope and consolation of all other planets and all future ages, which makes Pilgrim Rock the Holy City of America, and considers Theodore Parker superior to Moses. That is the way for a people to think of themselves, if they want to be happy and to have other people think well of them. Whilst every member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic as
Ashland (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 4
e to think of themselves, if they want to be happy and to have other people think well of them. Whilst every member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic assurance with which New England has made the rest of the country believe that they were all descended from the Pilgrim Fathers, and has quietly taken into its own hands the management of the entire United States. That is the way to get on in this world
R. E. Lee (search for this): article 4
they can give our native-born speculators and extortioners any new ideas on that subject. Judging by the quality of the milk which is sold in Richmond at the moderate price of ten dollars a quart, we should say that a patent had already been obtained here from those Yankee milkmen who are said to skim their milk on the top, and then turn it over and skim the bottom, and then divide it into ten parts, carefully skimming each part. The love of property, that, in face of the declaration of General Lee that the employment of negroes is a military necessity, refuses to make the sacrifice, needs no importation of New England ideas to invigorate its hold upon goods and chattels. We must do New England the justice to say that its ideas on the subject of defending its own homes, from the period of the Indian wars to the close of the American Revolution, never went to the extent of refusing any sacrifice which was necessary for the defence of its soil. On the whole, we are determined no
nd the hope and consolation of all other planets and all future ages, which makes Pilgrim Rock the Holy City of America, and considers Theodore Parker superior to Moses. That is the way for a people to think of themselves, if they want to be happy and to have other people think well of them. Whilst every member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic assurance with which New England has made the rest of th
John Marshall (search for this): article 4
d consolation of all other planets and all future ages, which makes Pilgrim Rock the Holy City of America, and considers Theodore Parker superior to Moses. That is the way for a people to think of themselves, if they want to be happy and to have other people think well of them. Whilst every member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic assurance with which New England has made the rest of the country beli
Henry Clay (search for this): article 4
eodore Parker superior to Moses. That is the way for a people to think of themselves, if they want to be happy and to have other people think well of them. Whilst every member of the Massachusetts Legislature is honored with a biographical and genealogical sketch in the newspapers, the gravestone at Monticello is crumbling into dust, few of us know where Madison or John Marshall, and a host of other great men are buried, and until lately we have had no other memorial of Patrick Henry and Henry Clay than the tavern sign in Clay's old neighborhood at Ashland, which bears on its two sides a "counterfeit presentment" of each of those two illustrious sons of Hanover, who deserved a better fate than to be gibbeted in such style for the inspection of posterity. We can never admire enough the heroic assurance with which New England has made the rest of the country believe that they were all descended from the Pilgrim Fathers, and has quietly taken into its own hands the management of the en
1 2