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Your search returned 38 results in 14 document sections:
Horace Greeley, The American Conflict: A History of the Great Rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-65: its Causes, Incidents, and Results: Intended to exhibit especially its moral and political phases with the drift and progress of American opinion respecting human slavery from 1776 to the close of the War for the Union. Volume II., chapter 21 (search)
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), United States of America . (search)
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, Chapter 48 : Seward .—emancipation.—peace with France .—letters of marque and reprisal.—foreign mediation.—action on certain military appointments.—personal relations with foreigners at Washington .—letters to Bright, Cobden , and the Duchess of Argyll .—English opinion on the Civil War .—Earl Russell and Gladstone .—foreign relations.—1862 -1863 . (search)
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, Chapter 51 : reconstruction under Johnson 's policy.—the fourteenth amendment to the constitution.—defeat of equal suffrage for the District of Columbia , and for Colorado , Nebraska , and Tennessee .—fundamental conditions.— proposed trial of Jefferson Davis .—the neutrality acts. —Stockton's claim as a senator.—tributes to public men. —consolidation of the statutes.—excessive labor.— address on Johnson 's Policy.—his mother's death.—his marriage.—1865 -1866 . (search)
The Daily Dispatch: January 13, 1863., [Electronic resource], Foreign news. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: March 31, 1863., [Electronic resource], The intervention question. (search)
The intervention question.
The New York Herald of the 27th, gives the following summery of the news by the Etna, which left Liverpool on the 12th instant:
We believe that the question of French intervention in our affairs has received a quietus in a dispatch recently issued by M Drouyn de L'Huys to the Minister of the French Governments at Washington, which comprises an answer to Mr. Seward's memorable note of the 6th ult. The spirit of the dispatch forwarded by M. Drouyn de L'Huys involves a withdrawal on the part of France from all further offer of mediation — a course which she has adopted with regret — and assumes henceforth the part of a simple spectator in the contest confining herself to following merely the course of events.
At the same time the Cabinet of Louis Napoleon expresses its sorrow that its suggestions, as expressed in its counsels on the 9th of January, were not more fully comprehended by Mr. Seward; but it declares that its opinions remain uncharged, no
The Daily Dispatch: October 15, 1863., [Electronic resource], The dismissal of the British Consuls — official correspondence. (search)