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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 21, 1861., [Electronic resource].
Found 1,255 total hits in 579 results.
Alabama (Alabama, United States) (search for this): article 6
Alabama--the Popular secession vote.
Official returns from all but five counties in Alabama of the vote cast for Delegates to the State Convention, show the following result, viz:
Immediate Secession35,776
Co-operation26,286
Majority for immediate secession9,100
Compared with the Presidential, the falling ofAlabama of the vote cast for Delegates to the State Convention, show the following result, viz:
Immediate Secession35,776
Co-operation26,286
Majority for immediate secession9,100
Compared with the Presidential, the falling off in the aggregate vote is about 22,000, which amount, of course, is reduced by the returns from the five counties not heard from.
The secessionists claim that their majority would have been increased by the increased vote. --Nor is it reasonable to conclude that co-operationists are not secessionists.
They were most of them in fm that their majority would have been increased by the increased vote. --Nor is it reasonable to conclude that co-operationists are not secessionists.
They were most of them in favor of seceding when four States had seceded.
But Alabama makes the fourth out of the Union, and so the co-operationists have not much to complain of.
18 AD (search for this): article 6
Fire and loss of life.
--A house, owned by Mrs. Elizabeth McNally, in Charleston, S. C., was consumed by fire on the morning of the 18th inst.
Mrs. McNally, in attempting to make her way down stairs, was suffocated and burnt to death.
Elizabeth McNally (search for this): article 6
Fire and loss of life.
--A house, owned by Mrs. Elizabeth McNally, in Charleston, S. C., was consumed by fire on the morning of the 18th inst.
Mrs. McNally, in attempting to make her way down stairs, was suffocated and burnt to death.
Fire and loss of life.
--A house, owned by Mrs. Elizabeth McNally, in Charleston, S. C., was consumed by fire on the morning of the 18th inst.
Mrs. McNally, in attempting to make her way down stairs, was suffocated and burnt to death.
Charleston (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 6
Fire and loss of life.
--A house, owned by Mrs. Elizabeth McNally, in Charleston, S. C., was consumed by fire on the morning of the 18th inst.
Mrs. McNally, in attempting to make her way down stairs, was suffocated and burnt to death.
January 19th (search for this): article 6
The New Jersey Legislature. Trenton, Jan. 19.
--The majority of the Joint Committee on National Affairs, reported a series of resolutions to the Senate, fully endorsing the Crittenden resolutions, and instructing the Senators of the State in Congress, and requesting the Representatives to support them.
They will be discussed next week and passed by both Houses, no doubt.
The committee also call upon Congress to order a National Convention in case Crittenden's or similar measures are not speedily adopted.
John J. Crittenden (search for this): article 6
The New Jersey Legislature. Trenton, Jan. 19.
--The majority of the Joint Committee on National Affairs, reported a series of resolutions to the Senate, fully endorsing the Crittenden resolutions, and instructing the Senators of the State in Congress, and requesting the Representatives to support them.
They will be discussed next week and passed by both Houses, no doubt.
The committee also call upon Congress to order a National Convention in case Crittenden's or similar measures are not speedily adopted.
December 28th (search for this): article 6
March, 1 AD (search for this): article 6
Omaha (Nebraska, United States) (search for this): article 6
A Wonderful phenomenon.
The following extract, descriptive of an atmospheric display witnessed at Omaha City, Nebraska, is taken from a letter addressed to a gentleman of Philadelphia, from his daughter, who resides in Omaha;
Last evening (Dec. 28th,) just after tea, on going to the front door, I witnessed the most remarkable as well as the most beautiful lunar exhibition I ever gazed upon.
There before me was the full moon, the centre of a golden cross, as brilliant as herself.
On es, one northwest and the other southwest.
Oh, how we wished for you all. We have watched the papers closely to see whether you were favored in the East with the same sight.
I hope you were.
The Daily Telegraph, a little paper published at Omaha, gives, in its issue of Jan. 3d, the following account of the phenomenon above described:
On the night of the 28th of December, was witnessed a most beautiful lunar bow, or rainbow, as it is commonly called, though there was no rain at the
Fort Moultrie (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 6