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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 24, 1865., [Electronic resource].

Found 439 total hits in 224 results.

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France (France) (search for this): article 3
t; of an amiable disposition; a wise, liberal and firm man. His administration thus far confirms this belief, and we shall not be surprised to see Mexico become a happy, prosperous and powerful country under his reign. If the sagacious ruler of France lives long enough, Maximilian will receive from that powerful empire a support which will render it questionable in the extreme whether the United States will find it any child's play to undertake the overthrow of the new Power. Certainly, if thlation under the hoof of oppression, driven to madness by the execution of their leaders and the confiscation of their property, it will be no safe enterprise to attempt the invasion of a country so distant, and supported by the military power of France. That will be a very different enterprise from making war, ten to one, upon the struggling South, cut off from the world, without a navy, and without friends among the nations. But even this they have not accomplished after a war of four years,
Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) (search for this): article 3
a happy, prosperous and powerful country under his reign. If the sagacious ruler of France lives long enough, Maximilian will receive from that powerful empire a support which will render it questionable in the extreme whether the United States will find it any child's play to undertake the overthrow of the new Power. Certainly, if the present war is protracted any considerable length of time, the United States may bid good-bye to its cherished schemes of territorial extension southward. Mexico and Cuba will be safe from the swoop of the eagle. With bankrupt finances, and the Southern population under the hoof of oppression, driven to madness by the execution of their leaders and the confiscation of their property, it will be no safe enterprise to attempt the invasion of a country so distant, and supported by the military power of France. That will be a very different enterprise from making war, ten to one, upon the struggling South, cut off from the world, without a navy, and wi
Mexico, Mo. (Missouri, United States) (search for this): article 3
It seems evident that Maximilian is steadily consolidating his powers in Mexico. He is believed to be a man of sagacity; of sound judgment; of an amiable disposition; a wise, liberal and firm man. His administration thus far confirms this belief, and we shall not be surprised to see Mexico become a happy, prosperous and pMexico become a happy, prosperous and powerful country under his reign. If the sagacious ruler of France lives long enough, Maximilian will receive from that powerful empire a support which will render it questionable in the extreme whether the United States will find it any child's play to undertake the overthrow of the new Power. Certainly, if the present war is prut a navy, and without friends among the nations. But even this they have not accomplished after a war of four years, in which they have passed the culminating point of their capacity for conquest without effecting that result. We rather think that the "manifest destiny" of Mexico points in a different direction from formerly.
In a debate on the Oregon Bill, in 1848, Daniel Webster said: "I understand that one- half the people who settled in Illinois are people, or descendants of people, who came from the Southern States. And I suppose that one-third of the people of Ohio are those, or descendants of those, who emigrated from the South." We dare say that a large proportion of the people of other Northwestern States are, in like manner, Southern citizens, or men of Southern descent. The most formidable armies we have encountered in this war are made up of Northwestern men, and Kentuckian and Tennessean. It is the hands of her own children that have given the South more trouble than all the Puritan, European and African troops combined.
Illinois (Illinois, United States) (search for this): article 4
In a debate on the Oregon Bill, in 1848, Daniel Webster said: "I understand that one- half the people who settled in Illinois are people, or descendants of people, who came from the Southern States. And I suppose that one-third of the people of Ohio are those, or descendants of those, who emigrated from the South." We dare say that a large proportion of the people of other Northwestern States are, in like manner, Southern citizens, or men of Southern descent. The most formidable armies we have encountered in this war are made up of Northwestern men, and Kentuckian and Tennessean. It is the hands of her own children that have given the South more trouble than all the Puritan, European and African troops combined.
The first slave ship belonging to the American colonists was fitted out in 1645 by a member of the Puritan Church of Boston. The first slaves of Europeans in America were the Indians; and the Puritan Governor (Winthrop) of Massachusetts bequeathed his soul to God and his Indian slaves to the lawful heirs of his body. Confederate New England, in 1643, provided for the equitable division of lands, goods and persons as equally a part of the "spoils" of war — enacting the first fugitive slave law in America. On the 4th of July, 1776, every American Colony had become a slave State, and the number of slaves was four hundred and fifty thousand. Nature warred against the institution in the Northern States; otherwise, slavery would have existed there to this day. It was not profitable, and died; lingering in New York till July, 1827. The most of the slaves were transported and sold to the South, and thus their owners were enabled to turn an honest penny, and to say to th
July 4th, 1776 AD (search for this): article 5
rican colonists was fitted out in 1645 by a member of the Puritan Church of Boston. The first slaves of Europeans in America were the Indians; and the Puritan Governor (Winthrop) of Massachusetts bequeathed his soul to God and his Indian slaves to the lawful heirs of his body. Confederate New England, in 1643, provided for the equitable division of lands, goods and persons as equally a part of the "spoils" of war — enacting the first fugitive slave law in America. On the 4th of July, 1776, every American Colony had become a slave State, and the number of slaves was four hundred and fifty thousand. Nature warred against the institution in the Northern States; otherwise, slavery would have existed there to this day. It was not profitable, and died; lingering in New York till July, 1827. The most of the slaves were transported and sold to the South, and thus their owners were enabled to turn an honest penny, and to say to the South: "Behold, we are purer and holier than t
The first slave ship belonging to the American colonists was fitted out in 1645 by a member of the Puritan Church of Boston. The first slaves of Europeans in America were the Indians; and the Puritan Governor (Winthrop) of Massachusetts bequeathed his soul to God and his Indian slaves to the lawful heirs of his body. Confederate New England, in 1643, provided for the equitable division of lands, goods and persons as equally a part of the "spoils" of war — enacting the first fugitive slave law in America. On the 4th of July, 1776, every American Colony had become a slave State, and the number of slaves was four hundred and fifty thousand. Nature warred against the institution in the Northern States; otherwise, slavery would have existed there to this day. It was not profitable, and died; lingering in New York till July, 1827. The most of the slaves were transported and sold to the South, and thus their owners were enabled to turn an honest penny, and to say to th
The first slave ship belonging to the American colonists was fitted out in 1645 by a member of the Puritan Church of Boston. The first slaves of Europeans in America were the Indians; and the Puritan Governor (Winthrop) of Massachusetts bequeathed his soul to God and his Indian slaves to the lawful heirs of his body. Confederate New England, in 1643, provided for the equitable division of lands, goods and persons as equally a part of the "spoils" of war — enacting the first fugitive slave law in America. On the 4th of July, 1776, every American Colony had become a slave State, and the number of slaves was four hundred and fifty thousand. Nature warred against the institution in the Northern States; otherwise, slavery would have existed there to this day. It was not profitable, and died; lingering in New York till July, 1827. The most of the slaves were transported and sold to the South, and thus their owners were enabled to turn an honest penny, and to say to th
July, 1827 AD (search for this): article 5
olonists was fitted out in 1645 by a member of the Puritan Church of Boston. The first slaves of Europeans in America were the Indians; and the Puritan Governor (Winthrop) of Massachusetts bequeathed his soul to God and his Indian slaves to the lawful heirs of his body. Confederate New England, in 1643, provided for the equitable division of lands, goods and persons as equally a part of the "spoils" of war — enacting the first fugitive slave law in America. On the 4th of July, 1776, every American Colony had become a slave State, and the number of slaves was four hundred and fifty thousand. Nature warred against the institution in the Northern States; otherwise, slavery would have existed there to this day. It was not profitable, and died; lingering in New York till July, 1827. The most of the slaves were transported and sold to the South, and thus their owners were enabled to turn an honest penny, and to say to the South: "Behold, we are purer and holier than thou!"
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