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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 3, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) or search for Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.
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A Delectable Scheme.
The Paris Patric says a British official has expressed the opinion that a settlement of the American difficulties will take place before the first of June on the following basis: The Yankees are to have Tennessee, Kentucky, and Missouri.
There are to be no custom houses along the line.
Slavery is to be extinguished in thirty years. That is to say, the Yankees are to have all they wish, and we are to have nothing; for it is quite evident that they are fighting for this line, knowing perfectly well that subjugation is impossible.
Little do they care to whom the Cotton States, and Virginia and North Carolina, may belong, provided they be allowed to retain the market for their manufactures which they had before the war, and to have free access to our cotton and tobacco, without being subjected to the payment of custom-house duties.
So far as the Yankees are concerned, they would doubtless be glad enough to make such a peace.
But, we suggest, it requires two
The Daily Dispatch: April 3, 1862., [Electronic resource], House of Representatives . Wednesday, April 2, 1862. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: April 3, 1862., [Electronic resource], An Assumption of power. (search)
An Assumption of power.
--The following orders have been issued by the usurping authorities at Nashville:
Executive Office,Nashville,March 20, 1862.
Having been officially notified by Gov. Tod, of Ohio, that many of my fellow-citizens of Tennessee are now confined as prisoners of war at Camp Chase, I have appointed Counally T. Trigg, Esq., as a commissioner to interpose in their behalf.
I have instructed him, should he be entrusted by their friends with letters or money, or other articles of value or comfort, not inconsistent with their conditions as prisoners of war, to see the same promptly and carefully delivered. Andrew Johnson. Military Governor.
I shall leave this city on Saturday, the 22d inst., for Camp Chase, and in obedience to the instructions above referred to, will take charge of, and deliver to any of the prisoners there confined, letters and such articles of value or comfort, not inconsistent with their condition as prisoners of war, as
The gunboat fund.
We insert the partriotie response of Col. Edmund Fontains, President of the Virginia Central Railroad, to the proposition for building a gunboat or gunboats for the defence of Richmond.
His name will be placed in honorable contrast with those of Messrs. Charles M. Wallace and Edmund Ruffin, of Virginia, Col. Blanton Duncan, of Kentucky, Milton P. Garnigan, of Tennessee, and others who have stepped forward in aid of the project with a patriotic generosity that needs no commendation.
Let others emulate the example.
Col. Fontaine's letter reads as follows:
Heaverdam, Hanover, April 2, 1862. To the Editors of the Dispatch: Dear Sir
--As you seem to be the organ for residing subscriptions for the proposed gunboat. "Richmond," you will put my name down, $250. If the enterprise goes forward promptly, and it be necessary, I will double by subscription.
Although you are justified in saying there is a "seeming indifference"among the citizens of Richmond