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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 7, 1865., [Electronic resource].
Found 640 total hits in 327 results.
William H. Seward (search for this): article 1
It is said that Mr. Seward will send a minister to Mexico, and thus give the final kick to the Monroe Doctrine, as hitherto understood in the United States.--What the United States Congress or the people of that subjugated country may think of n, Monroe or otherwise, which may interfere with their one vital object of overwhelming the South.
But, of course, Mr. Seward, in taking this step, gets a good bargain, and insists upon a substantial consideration for what he gives.
Seward is tSeward is to let Napoleon alone, and Napoleon is to let him alone.
All this is very good, as long as it lasts.
That it cannot last always must be plain enough to both parties to the contract.
Both are shrewd, experienced diplomatists, and each is aware of th ny day, he is the most gullible, instead of the most sagacious, Frenchman now alive.
He has studied the character of Wm. H. Seward and the temper of the United States people to little purpose if he supposes he or they will be bound by any such cont
Louis Napoleon (search for this): article 1
Maximilian (search for this): article 1
Mexico (Mexico) (search for this): article 1
United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
France (France) (search for this): article 1
Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) (search for this): article 1
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 2
The defence, by the North Carolina troops, of Fort Fisher is almost unprecedented in military warfare.
Never, in this, or any other war, has any fort, with the single exception of Sumter, been subjected to such an assault.
Twenty thousand shells were thrown into it, during a bombardment the most furious in naval annals.
But the Spartan band by whom it was defended never dreamed of surrender.
They left such humiliation to those whom the sight of a few gunboats can paralyze out of chivalry and patriotism.
The whole Confederacy will do honor to these heroic men. North Carolina has reason to be proud of such sons.
No State in the Confederacy has contributed more to the common defence, and none can show a more splendid record of courage and resolution.
The handful of malcontents in her borders should no more be permitted to eclipse the fame of such men as fought at Fort Fisher, and upon a hundred other battle-fields, than the spots on the sun to hide its transcendent glory an
1500 AD (search for this): article 3
1666 AD (search for this): article 3