Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 9, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Train or search for Train in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

l. When the British passengers on board the Trent, (according to a Yankee officer's own account,) at the time of the bearding of the passel by the San Jacinto's boats, denounced the whole party in the most indignant manner as a gang of robbers and pirates, and taunted them with Manassas and Leesburg, they spoke the read feelings that are welling up in every Briton's heart. The boys in the streets sing Dixie, the newspapers, with few exceptions, play the same tune, the bursted locomotive, Mr. Train, charges that all England is in favor of Dixie, and we believe it is. Mr. Beecher may go over and discourse after the highly original style of Everett, Adams, and all after dinner orators of the two countries, about the land of Alfred, Shakespeare, Milton, & &c., being our own, and proceed to annex the whole literature and laws of Great Britain to Yankeedondledom but John Bull has an excellent memory, and whilst he politely cries hear, inwardly wonders what these fine fellows thought of th