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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 19, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 15 total hits in 8 results.
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.
Mason (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.
Dixon, Ill. (Illinois, United States) (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.
Wood (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.
Tucker (search for this): article 12
McMaran (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.
Stuart (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.
Lawrence (search for this): article 12
A Faitmful Fuw.
--The Mobile Register states that Mr. Wood, of New York, gave to what was then his organ, The Daily News, a new direction.
Mr. Stuart resigned the editorial charge he had hold over it for two years, and published The Volunteer, the only campaign paper started for Southern Rights north of Mason and Dixon's line.
In connection with ex-Secretary of State, Tucker, MacMakan, and others, he took a leading part in two organizations against Abolitionism and Republicanized Democrasy.
He and McMaranhave now become citizens of the South, as there was no longer safety North for men of their views.
Mr. Tucker is about settling in Georgia, Mr. Lawrence in Lonislana, and the other gentlemen in other Southern States; so that New York has not even "the ten men" which Sacred History tell us were necessary to save a "doomed city" in the days when God made fearfully manifest his dealings with mortals.