Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 10, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Dickinson or search for Dickinson in all documents.

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. Brannon. Banks.--Mr. Isbell. Lunatic Asylums.--Mr. Claiborne. Agriculture and Commerce,--Mr. Thompson. Military Flairs.--Mr. August. Penitentiary.--Mr. Dickinson. Armory.--Mr. Carson. Executive Expenditures.--Mr. Neal. Library.--Mr. Rives. First Auditor's Office.--Mr. Neeson. Second Auditor's Office.--Mr. Marsing.--Mr. Bruce. Enrolled Bills.--Mr. Thomas. Clerk's Office.--Mr. Johnson. State Convention.--The President announced the following committee, under Mr. Dickinson's resolution adopted yesterday: Messrs. Dickinson of P. E., Douglas, Brannon, Armstrong; Coghill, Neeson and French. Remonstrance Against Coercion.--The fMessrs. Dickinson of P. E., Douglas, Brannon, Armstrong; Coghill, Neeson and French. Remonstrance Against Coercion.--The following joint resolution was offered by Mr. Critcher, and ordered to be printed: Resolved, by the General Assembly of Virginia, That a committee be appointed, consisting of two members of the Senate, and three of the House of Delegates, whose duty it shall be to represent respectfully to the President of the United States tha
1861. Negro Hiring. 1861.E. A. J. Clopton.Real Estate and Hiring Agent.Office corner wall and Franklin streets, opposite Dickinson, Hill & Co.,Richmond, Virginia. The subscriber begs to return his acknowledgments to his friends and patrons for their favors during the past six years. and would inform them that he still continues the business of Hiring Out Negroes, Renting Out Houses, Collecting Claims, and all business pertaining to a General Agency, to all of which he gives his personalin, with a good fire, free of charge. Negroes for hire the coming year, had better be sent in to me as early after Christmas as possible. To those at a distance to whom I am personally unknown, I beg to refer to the following persons: Dickinson, Hill & Co., Richmond; Dr. Thomas Latane, Arthur Temple. John Lumpkin. Thomas Fauntleroy, King and Queen county; Dr. F. D. Wheelwright, Rev. Thomas E. Locke, Westmoreland county; John L. Latane, W. C. Latane, Dr. John Lewis, King William coun
The Daily Dispatch: January 10, 1861., [Electronic resource], Chronology of the day--battle of New Orleans. (search)
within which it was proposed to hold the Convention. He said the country was disrupted, and that the signs of the times impressed on them the necessity of speedy action. Delays are dangerous. Mr. Mallory, of Brunswick, said he had been unanimously instructed by his constituents to vote for a Convention. The time fixed in the bill for its assembling was February 7th. Any shorter time lessened the period within which the people would have to canvass the merits of candidates. Mr. Dickinson was waiting for instructions from his constituents. He wished the action of the House to be deliberate, not hasty. He wanted time. Mr. Segar withdrew his motion to lay on the table, with the leave of the House. Mr. Anderson debated the motion of the gentleman from Madison, sustaining his motion for a second reading of the bill. Mr. Haymond.--I see no objection to the bill laying on the table and coming up in the usual order. Mr. Wilson, of Isle of Wight, said: The v