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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 27, 1865., [Electronic resource].

Found 533 total hits in 276 results.

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United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
. Anthony Barclay, formerly British consul at New York, and now a resident in Savannah, was repulsed by General Sherman with the remark, that as soon as the rebels were disposed of (which he seemed to think would be done in a few months) the United States would turn their guns against Great Britain. He said the ocean would soon swarm with five hundred Federal cruisers, which would sweep the British flag from the sea; and that after England had been sufficiently reduced and exhausted, he wouldbe excused for failing to tremble at the threats of General Sherman. Even Ledru Rollin, that rabid French Republican, seems to entertain a very different idea of the resources and greatness of England from the politicians and soldiers of the United States. "Who can deny," he exclaims, "that England, in an industrial and manufacturing point of view, has become the first in the world?--the chief moving power, the universal agent, the sovereign people of credit, circulation and commerce? "Wh
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 1
e at his back, and possessing an amount of military talent almost, if not quite, equal to that of the Yankee general, a threat from his lips was not calculated to make Englishmen laugh. Nevertheless, even he never carried through that little enterprise; no hostile footstep profaned the soil of perfidious Albion, and Napoleon never reached any portion of her territories except St. Helena. And does Sherman think, because he has run through the State of Georgia, retreating in good order from Atlanta to Savannah, with not even "Major Jones" to dispute his progress, nor "Simon Suggs" to harass his rear, that he is going to pitch his tent in Hyde Park? We are no great admirers of English policy, but English power is another and different matter. We may not admire the rapacity and sanguinary appetites of the King of Beasts, but, for all that, should not be anxious to provoke him to a trial of muscle. An empire which confronted Europe half a century ago with a fleet of a thousand shi
Hyde Park, Mass. (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): article 1
Ho for Hyde Park! General Sherman proposes to travel.--Having thoroughly explored his own country, he intends to complete his education in foreign parts. Thisly reduced and exhausted, he would land upon her shores and pitch his tent in Hyde Park." We should like to have beheld the countenance of that worthy and resp American grandiloquence. When General Sherman promises to pitch his tent in Hyde Park, we are very much afraid that Hyde Park will either never hear of the threat,Hyde Park will either never hear of the threat, or that it will be more amused than terrified. One Napoleon Bonaparte, who walked over all Europe with as little difficulty as Sherman did over Georgia, and who me, nor "Simon Suggs" to harass his rear, that he is going to pitch his tent in Hyde Park? We are no great admirers of English policy, but English power is anothe, who has taken Savannah, is going to take London! He will pitch his tent in Hyde Park! Oh, most puissant! Let Victoria and the House of Lords hasten to the shore
Hindustan (Uttar Pradesh, India) (search for this): article 1
ficent landed estate; thanks to its inexhaustible mines, to its admirable system of internal communications, conducted by eighty six canals and seventy lines of railroad, in all, the general income of the British Empire is nearly £500,000,000 sterling. Its power among the nations is rendered manifest by the number and greatness of its fleets and dominions. In Europe it possesses the lesser islands which adjoin Great Britain--Ireland, Gibraltar, Malta, and the Ionian islands; in Asia, Hindustan, with its tributary States; Ceylon, and its forced allies in Scinde and the Punjaub — that is, almost an entire world; in Africa, Sierra Leone, with its dependencies, the Isle of France, Fernando Po, the Cape, and St. Helena; In America, Upper and Lower Canada, the West Indies, Bermuda, Newfoundland, and all the lesser provinces of North America; in Oceanic, the whole of New Holland and New Zealand; Norfolk island and New Caledonia. These united territories contain a hundred and fifty mi
North America (search for this): article 1
ts and dominions. In Europe it possesses the lesser islands which adjoin Great Britain--Ireland, Gibraltar, Malta, and the Ionian islands; in Asia, Hindustan, with its tributary States; Ceylon, and its forced allies in Scinde and the Punjaub — that is, almost an entire world; in Africa, Sierra Leone, with its dependencies, the Isle of France, Fernando Po, the Cape, and St. Helena; In America, Upper and Lower Canada, the West Indies, Bermuda, Newfoundland, and all the lesser provinces of North America; in Oceanic, the whole of New Holland and New Zealand; Norfolk island and New Caledonia. These united territories contain a hundred and fifty millions of inhabitants, including the twenty-eight millions of the British isles. As to its commercial marine, two facts are sufficient to make its immensity known. It has nearly thirty thousand vessels, including those propelled by steam, besides eight thousand in the colonies; and in a single year it exports more than £28,000,000 cotton good
France (France) (search for this): article 1
St. Helena; In America, Upper and Lower Canada, the West Indies, Bermuda, Newfoundland, and all the lesser provinces of North America; in Oceanic, the whole of New Holland and New Zealand; Norfolk island and New Caledonia. These united territories contain a hundred and fifty millions of inhabitants, including the twenty-eight millions of the British isles. As to its commercial marine, two facts are sufficient to make its immensity known. It has nearly thirty thousand vessels, including those propelled by steam, besides eight thousand in the colonies; and in a single year it exports more than £28,000,000 cotton goods — an amount for a single article greater than the whole export of the manufactures of France for everything put together. And so, General Sherman, who has taken Savannah, is going to take London! He will pitch his tent in Hyde Park! Oh, most puissant! Let Victoria and the House of Lords hasten to the shore, with ropes about their necks, in token of submission
Sierra Leone (Sierra Leone) (search for this): article 1
nd seventy lines of railroad, in all, the general income of the British Empire is nearly £500,000,000 sterling. Its power among the nations is rendered manifest by the number and greatness of its fleets and dominions. In Europe it possesses the lesser islands which adjoin Great Britain--Ireland, Gibraltar, Malta, and the Ionian islands; in Asia, Hindustan, with its tributary States; Ceylon, and its forced allies in Scinde and the Punjaub — that is, almost an entire world; in Africa, Sierra Leone, with its dependencies, the Isle of France, Fernando Po, the Cape, and St. Helena; In America, Upper and Lower Canada, the West Indies, Bermuda, Newfoundland, and all the lesser provinces of North America; in Oceanic, the whole of New Holland and New Zealand; Norfolk island and New Caledonia. These united territories contain a hundred and fifty millions of inhabitants, including the twenty-eight millions of the British isles. As to its commercial marine, two facts are sufficient to mak
New Zealand (New Zealand) (search for this): article 1
lands which adjoin Great Britain--Ireland, Gibraltar, Malta, and the Ionian islands; in Asia, Hindustan, with its tributary States; Ceylon, and its forced allies in Scinde and the Punjaub — that is, almost an entire world; in Africa, Sierra Leone, with its dependencies, the Isle of France, Fernando Po, the Cape, and St. Helena; In America, Upper and Lower Canada, the West Indies, Bermuda, Newfoundland, and all the lesser provinces of North America; in Oceanic, the whole of New Holland and New Zealand; Norfolk island and New Caledonia. These united territories contain a hundred and fifty millions of inhabitants, including the twenty-eight millions of the British isles. As to its commercial marine, two facts are sufficient to make its immensity known. It has nearly thirty thousand vessels, including those propelled by steam, besides eight thousand in the colonies; and in a single year it exports more than £28,000,000 cotton goods — an amount for a single article greater than the who
British Isles (search for this): article 1
commerce? "Who can deny that British agriculture, on an equal extent and quality of soil, gives a greater return for the labors of the husbandman than lands the most furrowed by the plow or favored by the sun? "Who can deny that the British isles--two miserable little spots when looked at on the map of the world — have for centuries taken their place among the greatest empires, and obtained an illustrious place in the history of the earth?" You might as well deny the existence ofser provinces of North America; in Oceanic, the whole of New Holland and New Zealand; Norfolk island and New Caledonia. These united territories contain a hundred and fifty millions of inhabitants, including the twenty-eight millions of the British isles. As to its commercial marine, two facts are sufficient to make its immensity known. It has nearly thirty thousand vessels, including those propelled by steam, besides eight thousand in the colonies; and in a single year it exports more than
Aragon (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 1
ts markets, its docks, its arsenals, its girdle of colonies, and fortresses encircling the globe,--composing an empire larger than ever obeyed the laws of Rome. The pen cannot describe the animation of its harbors, the activity of its commercial and manufacturing cities, the extent of its rural industry. Figures alone can convey an idea of its immensity. Great Britain, which is only two hundred leagues long, and the soil of which is far from rivalling in richness the plains of Lombardy or Aragon, yields annually to the labor of the husbandman a revenue of about £140,000,000 sterling; an income, great as it is, which is almost doubled by the value of similar productions in its dependencies and colonies. Its industry, commerce and manufactures yield a revenue superior to that magnificent landed estate; thanks to its inexhaustible mines, to its admirable system of internal communications, conducted by eighty six canals and seventy lines of railroad, in all, the general income of the B
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