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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 9, 1865., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 30 total hits in 8 results.
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 1
Hardee (search for this): article 1
Hyder Ali (search for this): article 1
Lincoln (search for this): article 1
We publish at full length to-day the orders of Sherman on taking possession of Savannah.
They are remarkable in one respect.
They are all mildness and conciliation, evincing, on the part of Lincoln, either a change of policy with regard to what he considers a conquered city, or a determination to profess a desire to conciliate, in order to justify himself in the eyes of the world for the employment of harsh measures hereafter.
His policy may be even more profound than that.
Having tried severity, having tried cruelty, having tried oppression everywhere else, and having found that it has nowhere succeeded, he may wish to blind the eyes of the rest of the Confederation by the appearance of lenity, in order that they may be the more easily induced to submit to his mercy.
Be the design what it may — and that some design, and a very deep one, is concealed under these orders, does not admit of a doubt — Sherman seems to have changed his character as completely as the serpent cha
James Gordon (search for this): article 1
R. D. Arnold (search for this): article 1
W. T. Sherman (search for this): article 1
We publish at full length to-day the orders of Sherman on taking possession of Savannah.
They are remarkable in one respect.
They are all mildness and conciliation, evincing, on the part of Lincoln, either a change of policy with regard to gn what it may — and that some design, and a very deep one, is concealed under these orders, does not admit of a doubt — Sherman seems to have changed his character as completely as the serpent changes his skin with the approach of spring.
Formerly e career of Hyder Ali when he invaded the Carnatic than any other occurrence of modern times.
But all this is changed.
Sherman, without opposition, has come into possession of a large and rich city.
There is no circumstance to irritate him. His m ia means to slink out of the Confederacy in this shameful way. We shall not believe it for the sake of her brave soldiers and the noble officers that lead them.
Sherman has made the Mayor of Savannah slander the people of the State.
That is al