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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 11, 1865., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 9 total hits in 7 results.
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.
John Mocasilan (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.
John Flynn (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.
Scofield (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.
William M. Markham (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.
W. J. Hudson (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.
H. C. Holcomb (search for this): article 7
Gone to the Yankees.
--Among those who embraced abolitionism, and went North from Atlanta with the Yankees, was William M. Markham, for many years a resident of that city, where he had made a large fortune.
Scofield, his partner in the rolling mills, and John Flynn, master machinist of the Western and Atlantic railroad.
Also, John Mocasilan, city treasurer, and who had possession of the city funds; W. J. Hudson, county tax collector; and H. C. Holcomb, clerk of the city council.
The Intelligencer very deservedly holds the names of these men up as proper objects of public scorn and indignation.