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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 1. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.
Found 19 total hits in 9 results.
Columbus, Ky. (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): chapter 501
Chicago (Illinois, United States) (search for this): chapter 501
Cairo, Ill. (Illinois, United States) (search for this): chapter 501
A private letter, dated Camp Defiance, Cairo, May 13, 1861, contains the following:--
Your blood would boil if you should witness what I have witnessed.
Persons are daily arriving here who have been driven away from the South--some for expressing love of the Union, and others for saying that they did not wish to fight against us. Many such have been whipped, scourged, and treated with all manner of brutalities.
One man, a Philadelphian, called upon Gen. Prentiss, and invited him to h not shout for Jeff: Davis's flag.
Mr. Chivalry is very penitent, and he don't hear a pistol shot but he imagines it is for him. This beauty came here to see what the damned abolitionists were doing, and was recognized by the victim, who reached Cairo before.
Victim wanted an even show with Chivalry at any kind of a fight, and said if lie did not kill him, he would submit to be hung the next minute.
Chivalry did not want to fight — there were not odds enough — it was not seventy-five to one.
Jeff (search for this): chapter 501
Prentiss (search for this): chapter 501
Jefferson Davis (search for this): chapter 501
Chivalry (search for this): chapter 501
May 16th (search for this): chapter 501
May 13th, 1861 AD (search for this): chapter 501
A private letter, dated Camp Defiance, Cairo, May 13, 1861, contains the following:--
Your blood would boil if you should witness what I have witnessed.
Persons are daily arriving here who have been driven away from the South--some for expressing love of the Union, and others for saying that they did not wish to fight against us. Many such have been whipped, scourged, and treated with all manner of brutalities.
One man, a Philadelphian, called upon Gen. Prentiss, and invited him to his room in the hotel, where lie exhibited the welts and wounds inflicted by those fiends of rebellion upon his person.
The devils had not only beaten him black and blue, but had slashed his arms and body with their knives.
He was the worst object I ever saw. This man was making collections in the South for a Philadelphia house, and such was the payment received from Southern creditors.
The game of the villains is about up here.
Every traitor who makes his appearance is arrested.
We have on