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The Daily Dispatch: August 30, 1861., [Electronic resource] | 26 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: August 30, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Bomba Lincoln or search for Bomba Lincoln in all documents.
Your search returned 13 results in 6 document sections:
The expedition from Fortress Monroe.
Our dispatches announce the departure of a fleet from Fortress Monroe, under command of General Butler.
The supposed destination is the coast of North Carolina, and the probable object is to fill up the inlets by sinking old hulas, in order to render Lincoln a blockade "effective."
The Daily Dispatch: August 30, 1861., [Electronic resource], Mr. Russell 's second letter on the Manassas rout — an editorial from the London Times . (search)
Mr. Russell's second letter on the Manassas rout — an editorial from the London Times.
We subjoin a few extracts from Mr. Russell's second letter, dated Washington, July 24th, 1861:
Lincoln's Cabinet.
In the States one thing is certain — the Cabinet will resist the pressure of the mob or be hurled out of office.
If they yield to the fanatics and fight battles against the advice of their officers, they must be beaten, and the tone of New York indicates that a second defeat would cost them their political existence.
They can resist such pressure in future as has been brought on them hitherto by pointing to Bull Run, and by saying, "See the result of forcing General Scott against his wishes. " Of the Cabinet, Mr. Chase, the Secretary of the Treasury, is perhaps the only man who bore up against the disheartening intelligence of Monday morning; but Mr. Seward and others are recovering their spirits as they find that their army was more frightened than hurt, and that the
Kentucky.
--The Knoxville Register, of the 28th inst, says:
Our fellow-citizens, H. Dreyfous and W. C. Kain, Esqs., have returned from Kentucky, where they have been for some weeks.
They confirm the newspaper accounts of the excitement existing there, and think that the inflamed state of the public mind, occasioned by Lincoln's disregard of Kentucky's neutrality, only requires one more act of usurpation to precipitate the State into revolution.