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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: March 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 6
f history of the past confirms them in this belief. Since the organization of the Government of the Confederate States in February last, and since Mr. Lincoln assumed the reins of Government in the United States, and commenced preparing his aggressive policy against the Confederate States, the moral weight of their position and cause, aided by the constitutional action and policy of the new President and his Cabinet, have caused four other great States, viz., Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas, containing about 4,500,000 inhabitants, and covering an extent of valuable territory equal to that of France and Spain, to secede from the late Union and join the Confederate States; while the inhabitants of three other powerful States, viz: Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri, are now agitated by the throes of revolution, and a large part of them are rising in arms to resist the military despotism which, in the name of the Constitution, has been so ruthlessly, and in such utte
Carnarvon (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 6
nder. Confederate States Navy. C. S. Steamer Sumter. Gibraltar, Jan. 29, 1862 The British Parliament. In the House of Lords on the 7th inst. the Earl of Carnarvon was anxious to ascertain the truth, or rather to obtain from Her Majesty's Government a contradiction of a story which had been in circulation during the last we, when he was offered his liberty, it was on the condition that he should for swear his own nationality and swear allegiance to the Northern States. He (Earl of Carnarvon) could hardly believe that such a state of things was possible; but this was the story. It was said that this gentleman with very great courage and constancy resuch a power attached to the President under the Constitution of the States.--He had no objection to produce the correspondence upon the subject. The Earl of Carnarvon was sorry to hear that the facts of the case as he had stated them, and which he could scarcely bring himself to believe, were borne out by the statement of the
United States (United States) (search for this): article 6
paring his aggressive policy against the Confederate States, the moral weight of their position and ch exists among the people of the eleven Confederate States, with the solitary and unimportant excepiotism to furnish them, exist within the Confederate States for that purpose. The undersigned ard the existence of the Government of the Confederate States the Government at Washington seems confi, in their opinion the Government of the Confederate States has at this time to a recognition as a Gt upon the questions in debate between the United States and their adversaries in North America; threcognize the successful revolt of those Confederate States. Now, what he did say was, that in his own prize courts. The ports of the Confederate States were blockaded on or about the 1st of Juh some persons engaged in the war in the Confederate States Nothing was found to inculpate him in thork, on a charge of conspiracy against the United States. That gentleman further stated the charge[40 more...]
Arkansas (Arkansas, United States) (search for this): article 6
he past confirms them in this belief. Since the organization of the Government of the Confederate States in February last, and since Mr. Lincoln assumed the reins of Government in the United States, and commenced preparing his aggressive policy against the Confederate States, the moral weight of their position and cause, aided by the constitutional action and policy of the new President and his Cabinet, have caused four other great States, viz., Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas, containing about 4,500,000 inhabitants, and covering an extent of valuable territory equal to that of France and Spain, to secede from the late Union and join the Confederate States; while the inhabitants of three other powerful States, viz: Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri, are now agitated by the throes of revolution, and a large part of them are rising in arms to resist the military despotism which, in the name of the Constitution, has been so ruthlessly, and in such utter perversion of
Washington (search for this): article 6
right of secession with ability and dignity. It then reviews the previous efforts of the Commissioners to impress the British Government with a sense of the rights justly belonging to the Confederacy, and proceeds as follows: In the interview already alluded to as well as in one of a similar character held between your lordship and the undersigned at a later date, the undersigned were fully aware of the relation of amity existing between her Britannic Majesty's Government and that of Washington, and of the peculiar difficulties into which those relations might be thrown if her Majesty should choose to recognize the nationality of the Confederate States of America, before some decided exhibition of ability on the part of the Government of these States to maintain itself had been shown. Therefore they did not deem it advisable to urge her Majesty's Government to an immediate decision upon so grave a question, but contented themselves with a presentation of the cause of their Gover
W. L. Yancey (search for this): article 6
With a view to preserve, as history, the official record of the mission of Messrs. Yancey, Rost, and Mann, we commence with. Lord Russell's interview with the SoLord Lyons on the 11th May, gives an account of an interview he had held with Mr. Yancey and his colleagues. My Lord: On Saturday last I received at my house Mr. Yancey, Mr, Mann, and Judge Rost, the three gentlemen deputed by the Southern Confederacy to obtain their recognition as an independent State. One of these geracy would not be long delayed, I am, &c., J. Russell The letter of Messrs. Yancey, Rost and Mann. Following the above is a letter addressed by the Commisman race, both in the Eastern as well as upon the North American continent. W. L. Yancey, P. A. Rost, A. Dudley Mann. Earl Russell's reply. Foreign Offi had the honor to receive the letter of the 14th inst., addressed to him by Messrs. Yancey, Rost, and Mann, on behalf of the so-styled Confederate States of North Ame
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