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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 5, 1862., [Electronic resource].

Found 401 total hits in 195 results.

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John Morgan (search for this): article 1
n, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville. At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned. General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have left Nashville. The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage. Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities. [The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
October 31st (search for this): article 1
Important from Tennessee--Surrender of Nashville Demanded — the city to be shelled and burned in case of Refusal. Chattanooga, Oct. 31. --It is stated by several gentlemen, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville. At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned. General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have left Nashville. The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage. Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities. [The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
Important from Tennessee--Surrender of Nashville Demanded — the city to be shelled and burned in case of Refusal. Chattanooga, Oct. 31. --It is stated by several gentlemen, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville. At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned. General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have left Nashville. The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage. Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities. [The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
Important from Tennessee--Surrender of Nashville Demanded — the city to be shelled and burned in case of Refusal. Chattanooga, Oct. 31. --It is stated by several gentlemen, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville. At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned. General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have left Nashville. The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage. Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities. [The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 1
Important from Tennessee--Surrender of Nashville Demanded — the city to be shelled and burned in case of Refusal. Chattanooga, Oct. 31. --It is stated by several gentlemen, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville. At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned. General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have left Nashville. The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage. Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities. [The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
Lavergne (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 1
Important from Tennessee--Surrender of Nashville Demanded — the city to be shelled and burned in case of Refusal. Chattanooga, Oct. 31. --It is stated by several gentlemen, who left Murfreesboro' on the 29th, that Breckinridge had given Gen. Negley two days in which to remove the women and children from Nashville. At the expiration of this period, Nashville is to be surrendered or shelled and burned. General John Morgan is said to be on the North and Forrest on the South of Nashville. Breckinridge is at Lavergne. Morgan has about thirty pieces of artillery. Breckinridge and Forrest have about sixty pieces of artillery. Several ladies have left Nashville. The Yankees did not even inspect their baggage. Permits to leave were readily granted by the Abolition authorities. [The above dispatch we give for what it is worth, the news from that section having been too unreliable heretofore for us to endorse it.]
Abraham Lincoln (search for this): article 1
ed it in the suddenness of its downfall. If it began with George Washington, it ended with Abraham Lincoln. Let us see what Abraham Lincoln has done for the United States, and what he will do wAbraham Lincoln has done for the United States, and what he will do with fore he returns to his native obscurity in Springfield. He has completely revolutionized its Constitution, and blotted out every vestige of freedom in what are called per excellence the free Ste of the earth but his own deluded subjects believes it practicable. What then? What will Abraham Lincoln have then accomplished for the United States? Before his object can be accomplished the prue of the Southern States. That value, however, has been derived from the peculiar labor which Lincoln has determined to destroy, and without which, as all experience proves, it is impossible to culst fertile spot of the earth can be converted into a wilderness by precisely that process which Lincoln proposes to apply to the Southern Confederacy. What, then, would be the value of the South to
George Washington (search for this): article 1
d justly boasted of in former days as the most rapid and wonderful in history. In the lifetime of a man it sprang to the front rank of the nations of the earth; but in less than the weaning time of a child it came to its end. Its descent was far more sudden and startling than its rise. If it "went up like the rocket, it came down like the stick." If it exceeded all other nations in the quickness of its growth, none have equalled it in the suddenness of its downfall. If it began with George Washington, it ended with Abraham Lincoln. Let us see what Abraham Lincoln has done for the United States, and what he will do with fore he returns to his native obscurity in Springfield. He has completely revolutionized its Constitution, and blotted out every vestige of freedom in what are called per excellence the free States.--He has established on the ruins of the great Republic a despotism only equalled — if that equals it — by the inexorable despotism of Russia. He has crowded dunge
April, 11 AD (search for this): article 1
The 4th of November. Two years ago yesterday occurred the election of the man who was chosen to the Presidency of the United States, by a sectional vote, and who has ruled over the section by which he was chosen, but has not been able to extend his dominion over the States which disowned his authority. In these two years have been crowded events which make them more than equal to a century of common life. The progress of the United States in population, wealth, and power, was often and justly boasted of in former days as the most rapid and wonderful in history. In the lifetime of a man it sprang to the front rank of the nations of the earth; but in less than the weaning time of a child it came to its end. Its descent was far more sudden and startling than its rise. If it "went up like the rocket, it came down like the stick." If it exceeded all other nations in the quickness of its growth, none have equalled it in the suddenness of its downfall. If it began with George Washi
Russia (Russia) (search for this): article 1
If it began with George Washington, it ended with Abraham Lincoln. Let us see what Abraham Lincoln has done for the United States, and what he will do with fore he returns to his native obscurity in Springfield. He has completely revolutionized its Constitution, and blotted out every vestige of freedom in what are called per excellence the free States.--He has established on the ruins of the great Republic a despotism only equalled — if that equals it — by the inexorable despotism of Russia. He has crowded dungeons with political prisoners. and accumulated a national debt of over a thousand millions. He has sent two hundred thousand of his miserable dupes to bloody graves in a land he has vainly sought to subjugate. He has made the American name a hissing bye word throughout the earth. He has now resolved to extend martial law over all the North to obliterate all traces of State in dependence, and to establish one consolidated Government for the North during the remainder
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