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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 16, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 26 total hits in 10 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 5
New York State (New York, United States) (search for this): article 5
The late Archbishop Hughes.
The Petersburg Intelligencer has an obituary of this most dangerous prelate, who actually enlisted more men against the South than any one man at the North.
We publish his obituary with respectful, yet cheerful, alacrity:
Few names are more celebrated, or have stood more prominent in the stormy politics of the State of New York.
Called to the Episcopate in January, 1838, for a quarter of a century he has ruled the most populous and most influential diocese belonging to his church in the once United States.--Of commanding intellect, and an eloquent preacher, he has long been looked to by the Roman Catholics of the North as at once the ornament and defence of their oft-assailed creed.
An Irishman by birth, he belonged to a generation of exiles that remembered, perhaps felt, the remorseless tyranny of the British Government during the insurrection of 1798, when that unhappy country was delivered up to the unbridled license of a brutal soldiery, a
Seward (search for this): article 5
Ireland (search for this): article 5
Lincoln (search for this): article 5
Hughes (search for this): article 5
The late Archbishop Hughes.
The Petersburg Intelligencer has an obituary of this most dangerous prelate, who actually enlisted more men against the South than any one man at the North.
We publish his obituary with respectful, yet cheerful, alacrity:
Few names are more celebrated, or have stood more prominent in the stor rectly censured by a letter commanding "prayers for peace," irrespective of terms for the restoration of the Union.
We have no means of learning what were Bishop Hughes's sentiments during the last few months of his life; but, judging from the course pursued by a paper published under his patronage a change must have taken pla enunciation of Northern tyranny.
It may be presumed that the Archbishop, at least, did not disapprove of the honest independence of his official organ.
Archbishop Hughes was a fearless controversialist — he never declined a contest, and seemed to love to live in an atmosphere of controversy.
He was a formidable opponent, and
Meagher (search for this): article 5
Freeman (search for this): article 5
January, 1838 AD (search for this): article 5
The late Archbishop Hughes.
The Petersburg Intelligencer has an obituary of this most dangerous prelate, who actually enlisted more men against the South than any one man at the North.
We publish his obituary with respectful, yet cheerful, alacrity:
Few names are more celebrated, or have stood more prominent in the stormy politics of the State of New York.
Called to the Episcopate in January, 1838, for a quarter of a century he has ruled the most populous and most influential diocese belonging to his church in the once United States.--Of commanding intellect, and an eloquent preacher, he has long been looked to by the Roman Catholics of the North as at once the ornament and defence of their oft-assailed creed.
An Irishman by birth, he belonged to a generation of exiles that remembered, perhaps felt, the remorseless tyranny of the British Government during the insurrection of 1798, when that unhappy country was delivered up to the unbridled license of a brutal soldiery, an
1798 AD (search for this): article 5