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Franklin Pierce (search for this): article 1
h of Hon. James Guthrie. The speech of Hon. James Guthrie, Secretary of the Treasury under the Administration of President Pierce, will be found below. It was pronounced before the people of Louisville, on the evening of the 26 , and created the we do let us do calm, coolly, and collectively, and let our action be harmonious and consistent. Letter from Ex-President Pierce. The Washington Constitution publishes a letter from Ex-President Pierce, from which we extract the concludingEx-President Pierce, from which we extract the concluding paragraphs: I trust the South will make a large draft on their devotion to the Union, and be guided by the moderation which the exigency urgently calls for. Can it be that this flag, with all the stars in their place, is no longer to float or with responsibilities unknown since the sitting of the Convention which framed the Constitution. Your friend, Franklin Pierce Comments of the Press. The Savannah Republican, noticing the complaints of Northern papers at the returning
year, and have been very frequent within the past two or three years, owing to a disposition on the part of the General Government to put its works of defence in a good condition. The correspondents take quite contrary views of the temper of the fast arriving members of Congress. One correspondent writes: Among the arrival to-night, which increase rapidly, are Mr. Breckinridge; Senator Fitzpatrick; Ruffle; Boyce and Morrill, of South Carolina: Grow, of Pennsylvania; Gurley, Oliver, Senator Green, of Missouri, and Logan, of Illinois. Many Southern members have brought their families with them, indicating that they expect to stay all winter.--This looks well for the Union. They are very moderate in tone. Ruffin says that South Carolina will undoubtedly go out unless all her demands are complied with. The fear of secession is not nearly so strong to day. Senators Green and Breckinridge are at the National. Their rooms are in it of visitors tonight. Mr. Breckin
Patterson C. H. Foster (search for this): article 1
terest in the preservation of harmony and peace rise and take these matters out of the control of men who get their living by agitation. The Journal of Commerce gives the following explanation of the recent landing of ammunition at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina: Some weeks ago four gun carriages for "flank defence," and eighty-four boxes or cartridges, having twenty rounds a piece, were sent on to Fort Moultrie, in pursuance of the ordinary routine of supply. For the last year Capt. Foster, of the Engineers, has been engaged in repairing the Fort, and the gun carriages are needed to complete the armament --The cartridges are sent to all the forts in the country once a month, on average, all the year round. They are intended to supply a deficiency in the ammunition caused by fall practice or firing salutes; or to replace those cartridges in which powder has become "caked" by long standing, and which are removed to the nearest Arsenal of construction to be made over. Change
R. B. Scott (search for this): article 1
speak the common voice of nearly all her sons, when I say that, where she leads we will follow; and should she in her sovereign capacity throw her banger to the breeze, we will rely to it as the emblem of our allegiance, whether it bears upon its folds a single star, as the representation of her undivided sovereignty, or a whole constellation to mark the numbers of a confederated system. When she speaks, her voice will be needed at home, and, I trust, respected abroad. Letter from R. B. Scott, Esq. The Enquirer, of yesterday, publishes the following letter: Richmond, Nov. 30th, 1860. To the Bastards of the Richmond Enquirer; General: In your article of this morning, inviting attention to the letters of Mr. Mison and Mr. Hopkins, you state that these letters were written in response to a letter addressed by one of the editors of the Enquirer to several gentleman, whose name are given, among which I find my own, and you say, "if any of the gentlemen named a
moderate in tone. Ruffin says that South Carolina will undoubtedly go out unless all her demands are complied with. The fear of secession is not nearly so strong to day. Senators Green and Breckinridge are at the National. Their rooms are in it of visitors tonight. Mr. Breckinridge takes hopefully, and counsels moderation, forbearance and compromise. Many gentlemen believe that early in the session, before the assembling of the South Carolina Convention, prominent Republicans, like Corwin, Sherman, Trumbull, Covode, and perhaps , will set forth the position of the Republican party and their policy satisfactorily, so that all troubles and danger to the Union will be at an end. A conservative compromise measure is being prepared here, which will cover the entire sectional issue in dispute. It agreed upon, it will leave no State a shadow of an excuse for seceding. It re-establishes the Missouri line, and extends it to the Pacific. Another correspondent, looking at t
Benedict Arnold (search for this): article 1
convenient of our liberties, the Constitution be abandoned at the first alarm? Lincoln was elected according to the constitutional to his by a sectional minority, because they were united and we were divided; and shall we then pull down this glorious fabric? Rather let us say to the North, "Retrace your steps;" and to the South, "take your hand; the remedy for your grievances is in, and not out of the Union." The only man of the Revolution who was unfaithful, was from the North. Benedict Arnold rests under the scorn of the world as a traitor to his country. The greatest of patriots, George Washington, was from the South. If there are going to be traitors to liberty, let them be from the North; let us stand by the precepts of Washington and his noble compatriots and rebuke sectionalism. But let us be calm, temperate, and discreet in action. Let not this glorious nation that in its infancy, with but 3,000,000 people, bearded the British lion, be divided in its greatness,
of the temper of the fast arriving members of Congress. One correspondent writes: Among the arrival to-night, which increase rapidly, are Mr. Breckinridge; Senator Fitzpatrick; Ruffle; Boyce and Morrill, of South Carolina: Grow, of Pennsylvania; Gurley, Oliver, Senator Green, of Missouri, and Logan, of Illinois. Many Southern members have brought their families with them, indicating that they expect to stay all winter.--This looks well for the Union. They are very moderate in tone. Ruffin says that South Carolina will undoubtedly go out unless all her demands are complied with. The fear of secession is not nearly so strong to day. Senators Green and Breckinridge are at the National. Their rooms are in it of visitors tonight. Mr. Breckinridge takes hopefully, and counsels moderation, forbearance and compromise. Many gentlemen believe that early in the session, before the assembling of the South Carolina Convention, prominent Republicans, like Corwin, Sherman, Trumbull
ays that South Carolina will undoubtedly go out unless all her demands are complied with. The fear of secession is not nearly so strong to day. Senators Green and Breckinridge are at the National. Their rooms are in it of visitors tonight. Mr. Breckinridge takes hopefully, and counsels moderation, forbearance and compromise. Many gentlemen believe that early in the session, before the assembling of the South Carolina Convention, prominent Republicans, like Corwin, Sherman, Trumbull, Covode, and perhaps , will set forth the position of the Republican party and their policy satisfactorily, so that all troubles and danger to the Union will be at an end. A conservative compromise measure is being prepared here, which will cover the entire sectional issue in dispute. It agreed upon, it will leave no State a shadow of an excuse for seceding. It re-establishes the Missouri line, and extends it to the Pacific. Another correspondent, looking at the other side of the pictur
Succession movement at the South. position of Senator Hunter's Views — letter from Robert E. Scott--General News from the South,&c,&c. Letter from Senator Hunter. The Examiner, of yesterday, contains a long later from Senator Hunter, of Va. on the He thinks there is little to hope from the North to view of the " almost entire instability" which prevails there relative to the state of public sentiment at the South.--The wrongs of the South reached a climate west Lincoln was elected, and a State which believe that the General Government will be set to imperil the welfare and rights of the withholding States, is about to leave the Confederacy. As to coercion, that is impossible, for: It would fail it attempted, and would never be attempted, unless madness ruled the hour, wild passion waged, when reason ought to govern. But now would we stand it we should attempt to rule by force five States of this confederacy, who declared our government over them to be a tyra
et them be from the North; let us stand by the precepts of Washington and his noble compatriots and rebuke sectionalism. But let us be calm, temperate, and discreet in action. Let not this glorious nation that in its infancy, with but 3,000,000 people, bearded the British lion, be divided in its greatness, with 30,000,000 people; and let us not be alarmed, and fly, because of the election of a sectional President from the Constitution under which we have been prosperous and happy. Seward's doctrine of the "irrepressible conflict," a battle between two systems of labor, was fallacious. There was no system of labor so well adapted to the South as ours, and that argument against slavery cannot stand. The Constitution fined the rights of States.--It did not mean that you shall invade your neighbor's privileges and rights. Such was not its language or intent. If the North will mind in own business and the South attend to its own concerns, we the middle States, we will ma
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