hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
United States (United States) 40 0 Browse Search
Orange Court House (Virginia, United States) 21 1 Browse Search
Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) 16 0 Browse Search
France (France) 16 0 Browse Search
A. P. Hill 15 1 Browse Search
Chancellorsville (Virginia, United States) 12 0 Browse Search
Richmond (Virginia, United States) 12 0 Browse Search
Abraham Lincoln 12 0 Browse Search
Baldy Smith 10 0 Browse Search
Gen Price 10 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: May 7, 1864., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 78 total hits in 52 results.

1 2 3 4 5 6
Wm Curtis Noyes (search for this): article 13
ths are as years in the periods of peace. With a pure and patriotic desire to serve the best interests of the country, and in the belief that they will be best served by a postponement of a political convention to the latest day possible, we respectfully ask that you will reconsider your action, and name a day for the assembling of the National Convention not earlier than the first day of September next. Respectfully, your obedient servants, W C Bryant, Wm K Strong, J McKaye. Wm Curtis Noyes, Geo P Putnam, Lorenzo Sherwood, George Opdyke.New York State Senators. District. 19--A H Bailey, 18--James A Bell, 17--Albert Hobbs, 15--James M Cook. 26--Charles J Folger, 32--N M Allen, 30--Wilkes Angell, 27--S T Hayt, District 29--Dan G Cole, 21--Cheney Ames, 12--F H Hastings, 2--D Strong. 6--Wm Laimbeer, Jr., 23--Frederick Juliana, 24--E Cornell, 9--H R Low, contestant. The above list contains the names of two thirds of the Unio
ions we may date the beginning of our present troubles. The first convention candidate was Martin Van Buren, and his convention successors, Harrison, Polk Taylor, poor Pierce, poor old Buchanan, and Lincoln, the joker, are a sorry catalogue. The time has fully come when the responsible representatives of the people in Congress should again take this matter of the Presidential nominations into their own hands. Under this system — from 1800 to 1824--we had such Presidents as Jefferson, Madison and Monroe; and in resuming it we are confident that a Congressional cancus will return to our first class men. Let the war and Union members of Congress, therefore, hold a conference or two and cause it to be understood that towards the close of the present session they will dominate a Union ticket for the Presidency, and these corrupt and demoralizing party conventions will be superseded. In the meantime the events of the impending military campaign will be very apt to designate the
ars in the periods of peace. With a pure and patriotic desire to serve the best interests of the country, and in the belief that they will be best served by a postponement of a political convention to the latest day possible, we respectfully ask that you will reconsider your action, and name a day for the assembling of the National Convention not earlier than the first day of September next. Respectfully, your obedient servants, W C Bryant, Wm K Strong, J McKaye. Wm Curtis Noyes, Geo P Putnam, Lorenzo Sherwood, George Opdyke.New York State Senators. District. 19--A H Bailey, 18--James A Bell, 17--Albert Hobbs, 15--James M Cook. 26--Charles J Folger, 32--N M Allen, 30--Wilkes Angell, 27--S T Hayt, District 29--Dan G Cole, 21--Cheney Ames, 12--F H Hastings, 2--D Strong. 6--Wm Laimbeer, Jr., 23--Frederick Juliana, 24--E Cornell, 9--H R Low, contestant. The above list contains the names of two thirds of the Unionists chosen
because they have been caught napping, and want time to intrigue and to buy up the trading politicians among the delegates to suit their purposes. Postponed or not, the Convention will be but a gathering of trading politicians, and some incompetent candidate may be expected.--From the beginning of these national party conventions we may date the beginning of our present troubles. The first convention candidate was Martin Van Buren, and his convention successors, Harrison, Polk Taylor, poor Pierce, poor old Buchanan, and Lincoln, the joker, are a sorry catalogue. The time has fully come when the responsible representatives of the people in Congress should again take this matter of the Presidential nominations into their own hands. Under this system — from 1800 to 1824--we had such Presidents as Jefferson, Madison and Monroe; and in resuming it we are confident that a Congressional cancus will return to our first class men. Let the war and Union members of Congress, therefore, ho
ravest possible treatment of the subject. But Mr. Lincoln, like George Law, must have been convinced by our arguments that he was the people's choice; for when Mr. Seward made a short political visit to his native State in the fall it was to announce to his neighbors that, as Abraham Lincoln was elected President not of a party, te recognized as President of the whole country — meaning that he was entitled to another term to make good his first election. The shipt thus thrown out by Mr Seward was speedily followed up by active engineering. The winter was thus appropriated on an extensive scale of operations. The results were positively astounding toa majority of the delegates and the time and place arranged to their liking, the Lincoln engineers began to flatter themselves that the succession was settled. Mr. Seward, the Binir family, Simon Cameron, Thurlow Weed, and the Chevalier Forney, were among the happiest of men. But their rejoicing began too soon. Mutterings o
George Opdyke (search for this): article 13
d patriotic desire to serve the best interests of the country, and in the belief that they will be best served by a postponement of a political convention to the latest day possible, we respectfully ask that you will reconsider your action, and name a day for the assembling of the National Convention not earlier than the first day of September next. Respectfully, your obedient servants, W C Bryant, Wm K Strong, J McKaye. Wm Curtis Noyes, Geo P Putnam, Lorenzo Sherwood, George Opdyke.New York State Senators. District. 19--A H Bailey, 18--James A Bell, 17--Albert Hobbs, 15--James M Cook. 26--Charles J Folger, 32--N M Allen, 30--Wilkes Angell, 27--S T Hayt, District 29--Dan G Cole, 21--Cheney Ames, 12--F H Hastings, 2--D Strong. 6--Wm Laimbeer, Jr., 23--Frederick Juliana, 24--E Cornell, 9--H R Low, contestant. The above list contains the names of two thirds of the Unionists chosen to our present State Senate. Others, who would
date the beginning of our present troubles. The first convention candidate was Martin Van Buren, and his convention successors, Harrison, Polk Taylor, poor Pierce, poor old Buchanan, and Lincoln, the joker, are a sorry catalogue. The time has fully come when the responsible representatives of the people in Congress should again take this matter of the Presidential nominations into their own hands. Under this system — from 1800 to 1824--we had such Presidents as Jefferson, Madison and Monroe; and in resuming it we are confident that a Congressional cancus will return to our first class men. Let the war and Union members of Congress, therefore, hold a conference or two and cause it to be understood that towards the close of the present session they will dominate a Union ticket for the Presidency, and these corrupt and demoralizing party conventions will be superseded. In the meantime the events of the impending military campaign will be very apt to designate the right man fo
ing; but the accustomed spirit and bustle, demonstrations of white cravats and so forth, do not seem to be coming with it. Anniversary week is likely to be a very flat time this year, and yet it ought not to be on. Now is the hour for the Abolitionists to take more special interest than ever in the new theory of miscegenation Practically the science is yet but an infant, and needs all the tender nursing which can be bestowed upon it. The Anti Slavery Society, which commences operations at Dr. Cheevers' church on the 10th inst, will no doubt take care of the question, and the Women's National League, whose object is to carry northern charity, ministers, teachers, &c, into the Union portions of the South, must, from the nature of its mission, take a hand in the miscegenation scheme. But where are all the other abolition societies? If they would not perish entirely, and the Tunds reach a lower point than they have already come to — and that slow enough — they must go in with miscegenati
ty conventions we may date the beginning of our present troubles. The first convention candidate was Martin Van Buren, and his convention successors, Harrison, Polk Taylor, poor Pierce, poor old Buchanan, and Lincoln, the joker, are a sorry catalogue. The time has fully come when the responsible representatives of the people in Congress should again take this matter of the Presidential nominations into their own hands. Under this system — from 1800 to 1824--we had such Presidents as Jefferson, Madison and Monroe; and in resuming it we are confident that a Congressional cancus will return to our first class men. Let the war and Union members of Congress, therefore, hold a conference or two and cause it to be understood that towards the close of the present session they will dominate a Union ticket for the Presidency, and these corrupt and demoralizing party conventions will be superseded. In the meantime the events of the impending military campaign will be very apt to desi
untry, and in the belief that they will be best served by a postponement of a political convention to the latest day possible, we respectfully ask that you will reconsider your action, and name a day for the assembling of the National Convention not earlier than the first day of September next. Respectfully, your obedient servants, W C Bryant, Wm K Strong, J McKaye. Wm Curtis Noyes, Geo P Putnam, Lorenzo Sherwood, George Opdyke.New York State Senators. District. 19--A H Bailey, 18--James A Bell, 17--Albert Hobbs, 15--James M Cook. 26--Charles J Folger, 32--N M Allen, 30--Wilkes Angell, 27--S T Hayt, District 29--Dan G Cole, 21--Cheney Ames, 12--F H Hastings, 2--D Strong. 6--Wm Laimbeer, Jr., 23--Frederick Juliana, 24--E Cornell, 9--H R Low, contestant. The above list contains the names of two thirds of the Unionists chosen to our present State Senate. Others, who would doubtless have signed, were not in Albany when the above
1 2 3 4 5 6