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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 29, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 12 total hits in 6 results.
Mount Vernon, Knox County, Ohio (Ohio, United States) (search for this): article 1
Edward Everett.
The following is an extract from Edward Everett's letter accepting his nomination for the Vice-Presidency by the Union Convention at Baltimore.
After expressing his regret that by the acceptance he shall have to retire from any further labors in behalf of Mount Vernon be refers to the angry state of feeling in the country and the necessity for the revival of the kindly sentiments which once existed between the North and the South, as sufficient excuse to warrant his sacrificing his own inclinations.
He thus proceeds:
I suppose it to be the almost universal impression — it is certainly mine — that the existing state of affairs is extremely critical.
Our political controversies have substantially as an died and almost purity sectional character — that of a fearful struggle between the North and the South.
It would not be difficult to show at length the perilous nature and tendency of this struggle, but I can only say, on this occasion, that, in my opinion, <
Edward Everett (search for this): article 1
Edward Everett.
The following is an extract from Edward Everett's letter accepting his nomination for the Vice-Presidency by the Union Convention at Baltimore.
After expressing his regret that Edward Everett's letter accepting his nomination for the Vice-Presidency by the Union Convention at Baltimore.
After expressing his regret that by the acceptance he shall have to retire from any further labors in behalf of Mount Vernon be refers to the angry state of feeling in the country and the necessity for the revival of the kindly senti omment on the above is unnecessary.--Contrast it with the Fourth of July speech of this same Edward Everett, in which he out Greeley's Greeley in his wild hurrah for the entire subjugation of the Sout on of the South has caused, the South will do the North no such injustice as to suppose that Edward Everett is a fair specimen of her people.--There are some whose voices have not joined the rabble sh wing in fierce passions, it cannot be said that they are inconsistent and hypocritical.
But Edward Everett, the cold, selfish, false pretender, who cannot plead ignorance, and who has sported his but
Greeley (search for this): article 1
1776 AD (search for this): article 1
1787 AD (search for this): article 1
July 4th (search for this): article 1