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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 8, 1863., [Electronic resource].

Found 744 total hits in 370 results.

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Pemberton (search for this): article 1
rs we shall have a thrilling retrospective view of the heroic deeds of the long struggle to beat back the masses which were day after day thrown against its defences. That it has been bravely defended all of us know. The Commander in Chief, Gen. Pemberton, has been as it were on trial; a trial of blood. He has been charged with incompetency, in efficiency, and a want of patriotism. He has certainly been unpopular. The people of Charleston were greatly dissatisfied when he was sent to commandence in him. The trial which was to vindicate him or prove the correctness of the accusations against him has come. It has been one of the most terrible encounters with the enemy during the war — while it has been the most prolonged. How General Pemberton has acquitted himself, the details alone can fully explain. That he has fought bravely, however, there can be no doubt. It should be gratifying, however, to the nation, which known so little of him, that a man who has cast his lot with us
Andrew Jackson (search for this): article 2
stern telegrams The messages from the Southwest relative to the situation of affairs at Vicksburg have for many days been of the vaguest and most confused character. Especially was that of Saturday morning last incredible in some respects and incomprehensible in others. In so much has this been the case with reference to a matter so intensely interesting as that of the siege of Vicksburg, that we have been driven to look for some explanation of our own messages to the lying dispatches of the enemy.--Our own editorial comments upon the subject are oftener based upon the confessions of the enemy of the state of the struggle for the reduction of our Mississippi Gibraltar than upon these muddy telegrams from Jackson, Mobile, etc, which are as muddy as the Mississippi itself. Is there not some corrective? Cannot the association for disseminating telegraphic news for the press employ agents who understand the business sufficiently to give a simple and connected statement of facts?
Gibralter (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 2
stern telegrams The messages from the Southwest relative to the situation of affairs at Vicksburg have for many days been of the vaguest and most confused character. Especially was that of Saturday morning last incredible in some respects and incomprehensible in others. In so much has this been the case with reference to a matter so intensely interesting as that of the siege of Vicksburg, that we have been driven to look for some explanation of our own messages to the lying dispatches of the enemy.--Our own editorial comments upon the subject are oftener based upon the confessions of the enemy of the state of the struggle for the reduction of our Mississippi Gibraltar than upon these muddy telegrams from Jackson, Mobile, etc, which are as muddy as the Mississippi itself. Is there not some corrective? Cannot the association for disseminating telegraphic news for the press employ agents who understand the business sufficiently to give a simple and connected statement of facts?
Lincoln and the spirits. A Northern journal contains a long rigmarole account of some spiritual exhibitions made in the presence of Lincoln and his Cabinet. Napoleon, Gen. Knox, and others, were consulted as to the best mode of conducting the war. Lincoln must be in great straits when he has to look to the other world for military counsels. He reminds us of Saul, when Heaven had forsaken him, getting the Witch of Ender to raise up Samuel to give him advice. We should not think that Lincoln and his Cabinet need give themselves any extra trouble about calling up the spirits of the departed. A hundred thousand ghosts, whose blood is on his hands, will visit him soon enough, either in this world or the next, and make him pay, to the last crimson drop, "the deep damnation of their taking off."
Lincoln and the spirits. A Northern journal contains a long rigmarole account of some spiritual exhibitions made in the presence of Lincoln and his Cabinet. Napoleon, Gen. Knox, and others, were consulted as to the best mode of conducting the war. Lincoln must be in great straits when he has to look to the other world for military counsels. He reminds us of Saul, when Heaven had forsaken him, getting the Witch of Ender to raise up Samuel to give him advice. We should not think that Lincoln and his Cabinet need give themselves any extra trouble about calling up the spirits of the departed. A hundred thousand ghosts, whose blood is on his hands, will visit him soon enough, either in this world or the next, and make him pay, to the last crimson drop, "the deep damnation of their taking off."
Lincoln and the spirits. A Northern journal contains a long rigmarole account of some spiritual exhibitions made in the presence of Lincoln and his Cabinet. Napoleon, Gen. Knox, and others, were consulted as to the best mode of conducting theLincoln and his Cabinet. Napoleon, Gen. Knox, and others, were consulted as to the best mode of conducting the war. Lincoln must be in great straits when he has to look to the other world for military counsels. He reminds us of Saul, when Heaven had forsaken him, getting the Witch of Ender to raise up Samuel to give him advice. We should not think that LiLincoln must be in great straits when he has to look to the other world for military counsels. He reminds us of Saul, when Heaven had forsaken him, getting the Witch of Ender to raise up Samuel to give him advice. We should not think that Lincoln and his Cabinet need give themselves any extra trouble about calling up the spirits of the departed. A hundred thousand ghosts, whose blood is on his hands, will visit him soon enough, either in this world or the next, and make him pay, to thLincoln and his Cabinet need give themselves any extra trouble about calling up the spirits of the departed. A hundred thousand ghosts, whose blood is on his hands, will visit him soon enough, either in this world or the next, and make him pay, to the last crimson drop, "the deep damnation of their taking off."
Lincoln and the spirits. A Northern journal contains a long rigmarole account of some spiritual exhibitions made in the presence of Lincoln and his Cabinet. Napoleon, Gen. Knox, and others, were consulted as to the best mode of conducting the war. Lincoln must be in great straits when he has to look to the other world for military counsels. He reminds us of Saul, when Heaven had forsaken him, getting the Witch of Ender to raise up Samuel to give him advice. We should not think that Lincoln and his Cabinet need give themselves any extra trouble about calling up the spirits of the departed. A hundred thousand ghosts, whose blood is on his hands, will visit him soon enough, either in this world or the next, and make him pay, to the last crimson drop, "the deep damnation of their taking off."
Baltimore and Vallandigham. Nothing could be well more sycophantic and slavish than the endorsement by the Baltimore City Council of the despotic proceedings of Lincoln against Vallandigham. But it ought to be remembered that that Council is now composed of Yankees, elected by a Yankee vote, the former Council of Baltimore having long ago resigned, and their places been supplied by supple tools of the Washington tyrant. We cannot expect any voice to proceed from Baltimore in favor of freedom or justice, for her true men have all the bayonet at their throats, and none are permitted to use their tongues who will not use them in be slavering with fulsome adulation a despicable despot.
Vallandigham (search for this): article 4
Baltimore and Vallandigham. Nothing could be well more sycophantic and slavish than the endorsement by the Baltimore City Council of the despotic proceedings of Lincoln against Vallandigham. But it ought to be remembered that that Council is now composed of Yankees, elected by a Yankee vote, the former Council of Baltimore having long ago resigned, and their places been supplied by supple tools of the Washington tyrant. We cannot expect any voice to proceed from Baltimore in favor of freVallandigham. But it ought to be remembered that that Council is now composed of Yankees, elected by a Yankee vote, the former Council of Baltimore having long ago resigned, and their places been supplied by supple tools of the Washington tyrant. We cannot expect any voice to proceed from Baltimore in favor of freedom or justice, for her true men have all the bayonet at their throats, and none are permitted to use their tongues who will not use them in be slavering with fulsome adulation a despicable despot.
jor Harris, having accumulated a handsome fortune in business, left New Orleans and settled with his family in Washington city, where he had removed in order to superintend the education of his children. His arrest at Manassas — where he came several days after the battle was owing to a total misapprehension of his motives, and the examination which subsequently took place before Judge Lyons led to his immediate and honorable discharge, and a passport for Washington was offered to him by Mr. Benjamin, of which he declined to avail himself, preferring to remain with his friends and relatives, who are all Southern By remaining here Major Harris has sacrificed a large amount of property; he has never left the Confederacy since that period, and has been unremitting in his efforts to contribute to the success of our cause. Whilst in Washington all his associations and sympathize were with Southern men, and his consistent adherence to the cause of the South in the midst of the violent exci
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