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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Abraham Lincoln or search for Abraham Lincoln in all documents.
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Terrific fight between Misscurians and Lincoln's troops.Defeat of the latter. Herman, Mo., via Mobile, June 19th.
--A merchant of this city telegraphs from Letanon, Ky., saying that a gentleman on the train with him, who left St. Louis last night, says that Gen. Lyon and all his command has been taken by the Missourians at Booneville.
[second Dispatch.]
Booneville, Wednesday, June 19th, via Mobile, Ala, June 20.--Gentlemen from St. Louis report that it is current there, and believed, that the Missourians, by a fight, decoyed Gen. Lyon from his boats, whith their thasked batteries sunk.
After a terrifice fight, Lyon's entire force succumbed.
The Daily Dispatch: June 21, 1861., [Electronic resource], Sunday a day of battles. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: June 21, 1861., [Electronic resource], Died of Lincoln Paralysis. (search)
Died of Lincoln Paralysis.
--The Paris correspondent of the New York Times relates the following:
A melancholy circumstance has just occurred here in connection with the exciting news from America.
A Mr. Peters, a wealthy gentleman from Philadelphia, who has been living in Paris some time with his family, showed an extraordinary degree of excitement about the unfortunate state of affairs at home; and a fortnight or more ago, while sitting at the banking house of John Munroe, and while reading the telegraphic dispatch which announced the surrender of Fort Sumter, and President Lincoln's first call for troops, he fell over in an apoplectic f . From this first attack, Mr. Peters appeared to have recovered, out he was visited with another, two days ago, which terminated his life.
The Daily Dispatch: June 21, 1861., [Electronic resource], Foreign Ministers in trouble. (search)
Foreign Ministers in trouble.
--A New York paper, of the 11th inst., says:
Mr. Lincoln's first batch of Foreign appointments appears to be turning out badly.
Harvey is to be recalled from Portugal as a traitor; Carl Schurz, it is feared, will be sent back from the Catholic Court of Spain as a hopeless heretic; Burlingame is reported as already rejected by Austria, because of his Congressional manifestations of sympathy for Victor Emanuel and Garibaloi; the impulsive Casstus M. Clay, appointed to St. Petersburg, has been making a fool of himself in sporting his diplomatic authority in London; and Sandford, appointed to Belgium, has been playing his new character in Paris.
The Daily Dispatch: June 21, 1861., [Electronic resource], Affairs in Cincinnati — sentiment of the people, &c. (search)
Affairs in Cincinnati — sentiment of the people, &c.
The Charleston Mercury publishes a letter, dated Cincinnati, June 12, from which we extract as follows:
When the ninety days expire, a large number of volunteers, having seen quite enough of camp life, will return to their homes.
The true secret is, they are discovering that the "protection of the American flag" is only a masked battery of Lincoln, from behind which he expects to subjugate the South.
So far as I can learn, the people of Ohio do not engage heartily in such a warfare They know that without the trade of the Slave States, the West will be ruined.
From what I have seen and heard in Indiana and this State.
I am convinced they are getting very tired of the Lincoln blockade.
The effects of the war and the blockade of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, are last making the whole West bankrupt.
Bacon and provisions are going to destruction for the want of purchasers.
It is estimated that there are twenty
Nine thousand applications have been made for lieutenantcies in Lincoln's army, and about one- eighteenth of the number have been appointed.
A Northern paper expresses suspicious that the numerous vivandieres are going along with the soldiers for doubtful purposes.
Probably.
The steamer Catawba was sold at auction in Charleston last Monday for $13,000. The Isabel was also put up, but not sold.
The Pensacola Tribune says that watermelons and peaches have appeared in that market.
A New Jersey volunteer shot himself through the heart, in Prince George's county, Md., on Monday last.
The Confederate flag was raised over the Capitol of Tennessee on the 17th inst. Great enthusiasm prevailed.
Prince Alfred had a hearty greeting in Quebec last week.
He left for Montreal on the 17th.
Crops, trees, windows, and other Yankee valuables, were destroyed by a hail-storm in Plymouth county, Mass., last Sunday.
Pain-Killer Perry Davis came near being kille