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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 21. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 232 total hits in 66 results.
Franklin Buchanan (search for this): chapter 1.8
George M. Troup (search for this): chapter 1.8
Nicholson (search for this): chapter 1.8
Cass (search for this): chapter 1.8
C. L. Vallandigham (search for this): chapter 1.8
Jere Clemens (search for this): chapter 1.8
Advertiser (search for this): chapter 1.8
William Lowndes Yancey, [from the Moutgomery, Ala., daily Advertiser, April 15, 1893.]
The sincere and Unfaltering Advocate of Southern rights.
His eventful career as sketched by Hon. Anthony W. Dillard.
San Antonio, Texas, April 12, 1893. Editor Advertiser.
No man in the South contributed so much as did William L. Yancey towards working up the people of the South to the determination to secede from the Union, in order to withdraw slavery from the possible unfriendly action of the United States. Mr. Yancey, during this time, enjoyed none of the prestige of official position—he was the editor of a newspaper, and, therefore, able to scatter his opinions on the wings of the wind; he was a private citizen, a lawyer engaged in practicing his profession, and was in quite moderate circumstances in regard to fortune.
Nor was his location in Montgomery of a character to draw to him the leading men of the South, nor to afford peculiar facilities for the propagation of his
Caleb Cushing (search for this): chapter 1.8
A. G. Horn (search for this): chapter 1.8
George E. Pugh (search for this): chapter 1.8