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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 3, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 28 total hits in 6 results.
Utica (New York, United States) (search for this): article 2
Connecticut (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): article 2
Plymouth, N. C. (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 2
Barnum Redivivus.
For nearly two years past we had been wondering at the total eclipse of that great Yankee luminary and representative man, Phiness T. Barnum.
That this celebrated man should be absent from the roll of Yankee Major-Generals we could easily understand, the effect of Confederate bullets on the Yankee constitution being thoroughly appreciated by that worthy; but that such a chip of the old Plymouth block should remain at home in inglorious case, whilst the Butlers and the Yankees were achieving elsewhere unfading laurels and cramming their pockets with untold plunder, was something wholly unaccountable.
We are indebted to the New York Tribune for a solution of this strange phenomenon.
Barnum still lives — his inventive genius yet shines with undiminished lustre; but from an exhibitor of woolly horses and mermaids he has now become the great engineer of the Northern Loyal Leagues and the patent manufacturer of Yankee enthusiasm.
In his editorial account of the me
Phiness T. Barnum (search for this): article 2
Barnum Redivivus.
For nearly two years past we had been wondering at the total eclipse of that great Yankee luminary and representative man, Phiness T. Barnum.
That this celebrated man should be absent from the roll of Yankee Major-Generals we could easily understand, the effect of Confederate bullets on the Yankee constitut amming their pockets with untold plunder, was something wholly unaccountable.
We are indebted to the New York Tribune for a solution of this strange phenomenon.
Barnum still lives — his inventive genius yet shines with undiminished lustre; but from an exhibitor of woolly horses and mermaids he has now become the great engineer o a picture of unsupportable moral sublimity.
Pity that the effect of the whole should be somewhat marred by the concluding paragraph, in which Leonard W. Jerome, (Barnum, of course,) delicately calls upon an admiring public "to divide and lighten the cost," there by practically ignoring the fact stated by Greeley just above, that
Greeley (search for this): article 2
Leonard W. Jerome (search for this): article 2