tephen, F., 148; 150.
Avery, William W., of N. C., 278; his resolves in the Democratic National 's Ford, 539.
B.
Badger, George E., of N. C., wants liberty to take his old mammy to Kansasroceedings at, 288.
Clingman, Thomas L., of N. C., 308; 329 ; his prescription for free debaters, extract from, 81.
Ellis, Gov. John W., of N. C., calls a Convention, 348; his seizure of Feder5; 42; 107; 255; 385-6.
Franklin, Jesse, of N. C., Chairman of Committee on Indiana Territory meburnt by Rebels, 491.
Gaston, Judge Wm., of N. C., his opinion applied in the Dred Scott case, 2lton, Ill., 139 to 141.
Gilmer, John A., of N. C., resolution by, 305-6.
Gilmer, Thos.
W., t
Grafton, Va., 521; 522.
Graham, Wm. A.,of N. C., for Vice-President, 223.
grant, Gen. U. S.blican vote in, 300-301.
Iredell, James, of N. C., explains the omission of the word slave in thation, 166; final letter from Clay, 17.
North Carolina, slave population in 1790; troops furnishe[4 more...]
Warsaw, 574; retreats through Carthage, 575: his Declaration of Independence. 577; negotiates an alliance with the Confederacy, 577; assembles his Legislature at Neosho, and has an Ordinance of Secession passed, 59-90.
Jackson, Gen. H. R., commands Rebel forces at Monterey, Va., 524; 526.
Jackson, Gen., ( Stonewall, ) fallston, 408.
McCulloch, Gen. Ben., 413; 575; defeated at Dug Springs, Mo., 577; commands at Wilson's Creek, 578; 581; his proclamation, 582; is joined by Price at Neosho, 589.
McGowan, Mr., of S. C., in Convention, 334-5.
McDowell, Gen., 533; his General Order No. 4, 534-5; moves on Centerville, 539; his plan of battle, 540;or, 341; refuses to secede, 349; population in 1860, 351: 460; 489; Jackson calls for 50,000 militia, 491-2, 555; map of the war region in, 573; sham Secession at Neosho, 589-90.
See C. F. Jackson, Reynolds, St. Louis, etc.
Missouri Argus, The, citation from, 128.
Mitchell, Col., wounded at Wilson's Creek, 597.
Mobile,
the capture of John Brown, 286; 338; his Message in the S. C. Convention, 845; his last Annual Message, 367 to 371; 408; sends Cushing to Charleston, 409; 411; 414; 428; vote cast for him in Kentucky, 492; letter to Jeff. Davis, 511.
Buckingham, Gov., of Conn., is reflected, 326.
Buckner, Aylett, of Ky., 194.
Buckner, Gen. Simon B., organizes State Guard; Louisville Journal curses him, 494; 496; 509; 609.
Buffalo, N. Y., the Free-Soil Convention at, 191; its Platform, 192.
Buford, Col., of Ala., his arrival in Kansas, 243; besieges Lawrence, 243.
Bull Run, battle of, 539 to 547; our army moves on Centerville, 539; map of the field, 540; our feint disregarded, 541; Beauregard's report, extracts from, 541 to 546; account of The Richmond Dispatch, 542-3; other accounts, dispatches, etc., 545-4; losses sustained, 545; Heintzelman — Pollard — Bing, 546-7; causes of the disaster, 547 to 554; Gen. Scott's failure to send force enough, etc., 550; evil of short enlistments, 5
ng lie, 220; editorial from, Going to go, 358-9: on proceedings at Charleston, after Sumter's fall, 449 ; on the President's call for troops, 454-5; the infamous fabrication of The Louisvilles Courier, 508; report of the battle of Bull Run, 544; evidence from, that the Rebels were acquainted with our plan.
550.
Nicaragua, invaded by Walker, 276; Democratic resolves with regard to, 277.
Nicholas, Walson C., letter from Jefferson to, 85.
Niles, John M., of Conn., on Annexation, 174.
Niles's Register, citation from, 80; 110.
Norfolk, Va., seizure of the Navy Yard at, 414; troops set in motion for the seizure, 453; the ships, property, etc., at, 473; map of Norfolk and Portsmouth, 474; destruction of the Yard and its contents, 475; the State troops take possession, 476; vigorous Union sentiment at, just prior to the work of destruction, 477.
Norfolk Herald, The, rumors quoted from, 508.
Norris, Moses, of N. H., 229.
North Alabamian, The, letter from Henry Clay on An
n. Benjamin F., in the Charleston Convention, 311; 318; arrives in Maryland with the 8th Mass., 468; at Annapolis, 469-70: takes possession ofgural, 415-16; 427; his Cabinet, 429; his duplicity with regard to Maryland, 472; sends a Commissioner to Arkansas, 486; extracts from his Mespoint, Ks., Free-State meeting at, 242.
Hicks, Gov. Thos.
H., of Md., refuses to convene his Legislature, 349; 461; harangues the Baltimo offers a Peace resolve in the Senate, 571.
Johnson, Wm. Cost, of Md., offers resolves to reject Abolition petitions, 146.
Johnston, Coton, Col. Gilman, at Bull Run, 525.
Martin, Luther, 44; 107.
Maryland, 36; first Abolition Society in, 107; 142; withdraws from the Doug.
Pinckney, Henry L., of S. C., 141; 145.
Pinkney, William, of Md., on Missouri, 76.
Pittsburgh, Pa., the Convention of 1856 at, 246re, 462; State troops seize Harper's Ferry, 462; she threatens Western Maryland, 468; commences hostilities before she is fairly out of the Un
e, cited by Lovejoy, 132.
Oxford, Kansas, fraudulent voting at, 249; 285.
P.
Palmer, Rev. B. M., his Sermon, 501-2.
Palmyra, Kansas, sacked by Border Ruffians.
Palmyra, Mo., Rebels defeated at, 576.
Palo Alto, battle of, 187.
Palsley, Daniel, Lt.-Gov. of W. Virginia, 519.
Panama, the Congress at, 267-8.
Parker, Amasa J., President of the Tweddle Hall Convention, 388; his speech, 389; 396.
Parker, Mr., of S. C., remarks of, in the Secession Convention, 345.
Parkersburg, Va, occupied by Unionists, 512.
Parkville Luminary, The, Mo., destroyed, 238-9.
Parrott, Lieut. E. G., takes the Savannah, 598.
Parsons, Gen., (Rebel,) in Northern Missouri,587.
Pate, H. Clay, whipped at Black-Jack, 244.
Patterson, Com., destroys a Florida fort, 177.
Patterson, Gen. Robert, 528; crosses the Potomac, 535; moves from Bunker Hill to Charlestown, 536; Gen. Sanford's testimony, 536 to 538; Patterson falls back to Harper's Ferry and is superseded, 539; Gen. S