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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1861., [Electronic resource].

Found 1,197 total hits in 511 results.

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November 23rd, 1861 AD (search for this): article 1
Runaway in Jail. --Was committed to the jail of Henrico county, on the 23d of November, 1861, as a runaway, a Negro Man, who calls himself John, and says he is the property of Mrs. Mary Scott, of Albemarle county, Va.--Said negro is about 25 years old, 5 feet 10 inches high, yellow complexion, and had on when committed a light winter suit of homespun clothes. The owner of said negro is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges, and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. Geo. D. Pleasants, S. H. C. de 24--ts
George D. Pleasants (search for this): article 1
Runaway in Jail. --Was committed to the jail of Henrico county, on the 23d of November, 1861, as a runaway, a Negro Man, who calls himself John, and says he is the property of Mrs. Mary Scott, of Albemarle county, Va.--Said negro is about 25 years old, 5 feet 10 inches high, yellow complexion, and had on when committed a light winter suit of homespun clothes. The owner of said negro is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges, and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. Geo. D. Pleasants, S. H. C. de 24--ts
Mary Scott (search for this): article 1
Runaway in Jail. --Was committed to the jail of Henrico county, on the 23d of November, 1861, as a runaway, a Negro Man, who calls himself John, and says he is the property of Mrs. Mary Scott, of Albemarle county, Va.--Said negro is about 25 years old, 5 feet 10 inches high, yellow complexion, and had on when committed a light winter suit of homespun clothes. The owner of said negro is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges, and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. Geo. D. Pleasants, S. H. C. de 24--ts
Henrico (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Runaway in Jail. --Was committed to the jail of Henrico county, on the 23d of November, 1861, as a runaway, a Negro Man, who calls himself John, and says he is the property of Mrs. Mary Scott, of Albemarle county, Va.--Said negro is about 25 years old, 5 feet 10 inches high, yellow complexion, and had on when committed a light winter suit of homespun clothes. The owner of said negro is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges, and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. Geo. D. Pleasants, S. H. C. de 24--ts
Albemarle (Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Runaway in Jail. --Was committed to the jail of Henrico county, on the 23d of November, 1861, as a runaway, a Negro Man, who calls himself John, and says he is the property of Mrs. Mary Scott, of Albemarle county, Va.--Said negro is about 25 years old, 5 feet 10 inches high, yellow complexion, and had on when committed a light winter suit of homespun clothes. The owner of said negro is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges, and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. Geo. D. Pleasants, S. H. C. de 24--ts
Negro Hiring for 1862. Wm. S. Phillips, General Agent and Collector, will continue to Hire out Negroes, Rent out Houses, Settle and Collect Claims of every description appertaining to an Agency. He takes this opportunity of returning his sincere thanks to his numerous patrons for their liberal patronage, and hopes, by str'ct attention to business, to merit a continuation of the same. de 23--d&aw3w
William S. Phillips (search for this): article 1
Negro Hiring for 1862. Wm. S. Phillips, General Agent and Collector, will continue to Hire out Negroes, Rent out Houses, Settle and Collect Claims of every description appertaining to an Agency. He takes this opportunity of returning his sincere thanks to his numerous patrons for their liberal patronage, and hopes, by str'ct attention to business, to merit a continuation of the same. de 23--d&aw3w
ferson, the apostle of democracy, writes to John Breckinridge, after the acquisition of Louisiana, if the new nations which are to be formed on the banks of the Mississippi, find it to their interest to detach themselves from the main trunk, what have the Atlantic States to fear? It would be only a quarrel between the elder and the younger brother. God bless them both; let them continue their union if it be for their mutual good, or separate if they think it better, Mr. Lincoln himself, in 1848, said in the Senate, speaking of Hungary, 'A people has always and everywhere the right to change its Government, and to establish another which suits them better. This is our conviction and our experience. It is that inappreciable right which will emancipate the world.' At this moment, to prevent eight millions of his fellow citizens from changing the Govercment of which he is himself the impersonation, Mr. Lincoln braves the evils of a civil war, the end of which it is impossible to fores
e very Northern States that are now the most ferocious adversaries of the South. In the first years of the republic, in 1794, during the administration of Washington, an excise duty, laid by Congress upon distilled liquors, occasioned an insurrection in the Western part of Pennsylvania. Delegates from different counties met at Pittsburg, and from that point offered to Congress the alternative of abolishing the tax, or seeing those they represented secede and unite themselves to Canada. In 1814, at the most critical period of the war with England, seven States, constituting what is called New England, met in Convention at Hartford, in Connecticut, and on the 14th of December, declared that they would leave the Union if peace were not declared before the first of June, 1815. This was an act of pure desertion, unspeakably more criminal than that with which the secessionists of the South are charged. Patriotism only can make a nation. Egodem can make a people. The Americans are only
to an abstract principle, and the well-being of twenty-four millions be rendered certainly impossible, in order that the good of four millions, confessedly of an inferior caste, may possibly be promoted. M. Gaillardet is a man of talents; but the Bee is right when it avers that "Eutopia never reasons." Apart from the concessions which he makes to popular prejudices in Europe, M. G. treats the American question sensibly enough, when he considers it in a constitutional point of view. We give such portions of the article as we find from the French side of the Bee: "The war which the Northern portion of the American Union is waging against the Southern appears to us profoundly deplorable; because we believe success to be extremely difficult, if not absolutely impossible; because the right is doubtful on both sides; and because the mischief occasioned by the fratricidal struggle to the three great interests of humanity, commerce, and freedom, is not counter balanced by a sing
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