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United States (United States) (search for this): article 1
hree cheers for Governor Hicks" was responded to with a mingled chorus of cheers, hisses and groans. Cheers for the "United States" were also given.] Mr. Handy--obtaining silence — I am not here, in my native State, to be deterred by hisses fr are daily expecting one hundred improved stand of arms, with cartridge boxes, cap pouches, etc. Disunion in the United States. [From the London Times of December 5th.] The feelings which now divide the United States into antagonists far moUnited States into antagonists far more bitter than those of diverse languages and races, are themselves facts which cannot be reasoned away, and they have an irresistible bearing on the practice of slavery — they must tend to tighten the grasp of the slave-owner on the one hand, and, hich the real difficulties of the question will be met and quietly answered? It is too true that the commerce of the United States is almost, if not quite, as much committed to slavery as its agriculture. For what would New York be without slavery
Washington (United States) (search for this): article 1
he home squadron could also be added to the list. Rumored resignation. There is no truth in a paragraph which has obtained extensive currency through the newspaper press, stating that Commodore Shubrick and Capt. Ingraham have resigned their commissions in the navy. Capt. Ingraham is at present absent in the Mediterranean in command of the steamer Richmond, and has probably not yet even heard of the troubles at the South, and Commodore Shubrick is daily and actively engaged in Washington city with his duties as Chief of the Light-house Board. Sent off. A man calling himself Lieut. Henry W. Paul, U. S. A., (says the Mobile News,) was warned out of Oxford, Miss., last Thursday. Paul is a stalwart fellow, six feet five inches high, and very military in appearance. He advertised to give fencing lessons, but would accept but two pupils, and claimed to be a native of Wheeling, Va. Suspicion being excited, he was taken in hand by a committee, who ascertained that he was
Manchester (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 1
that slavery was a British bequest to the States. --All these considerations apply quite as much, and more nearly by several degrees to the Northern States. May not this quarrel give way to a calm, in which the real difficulties of the question will be met and quietly answered? It is too true that the commerce of the United States is almost, if not quite, as much committed to slavery as its agriculture. For what would New York be without slavery?-- But, what, alas! would Liverpool and Manchester? What this metropolis? Cannot all the partners in this business put their heads together, shake hands over the quarrel, and think what can be done to mitigate what it is so difficult to abolish? Perhaps we speak to the deaf, but anything is better than dividing State against State, house against house, and servant against master, in the most rising nation in the world. Circular letter of the Bishop of the dioceses of Hartford on the Crisis. Right Rev. James P. McFarland, D.D.,
Wheeling, W. Va. (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 1
heard of the troubles at the South, and Commodore Shubrick is daily and actively engaged in Washington city with his duties as Chief of the Light-house Board. Sent off. A man calling himself Lieut. Henry W. Paul, U. S. A., (says the Mobile News,) was warned out of Oxford, Miss., last Thursday. Paul is a stalwart fellow, six feet five inches high, and very military in appearance. He advertised to give fencing lessons, but would accept but two pupils, and claimed to be a native of Wheeling, Va. Suspicion being excited, he was taken in hand by a committee, who ascertained that he was from Vermont, and is a cousin of Cook, one of John Brown's men. Rev. E. H. Chapin on the Crisis. Boston, Dec. 18. --The Rev. E. H. Chapin, in an address delivered in Tremont Temple to-night said the crisis in our nationality is a crucible in elements, and public liberty is to be tried to the uttermost. Further remarks were made in a like strain, and received with applause. The house
Charleston (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 1
ts of penance and the holy eucharist, at or before Christmas, and to give alms generously to the poor. If in addition to these works of piety, we turn to God with our whole hearts in humility and confidence, we may hope that he will turn from his fierce anger and deliver us from the evils that threaten us. Given at Providence, this 14th day of December, 1860. Francis Patrick, Bishop of Hartford. Shocking treatment of Southern slaves. We clip the following from the Charleston (S. C.) Mercury: Annual Christmas Exclusion.--It will be seen by reference to our shipping advertisements, that the steamer St. Mary's, E. Lafitte & Co., agents, will leave Savannah Packet wharf on Sunday afternoon, the 23d inst., for Wilmington, N. C., and return the afternoon following. For many seasons one of the Messrs. Lafitte & Co.'s steamers has been chartered, a few days previous to Christmas, to convey a large gang of negroes, who are employed in the constructions of railroads,
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 1
l, when the vital principle of concession has not been touched. I was in Washington a few days, and spoke with gentlemen on that Committee, to whom I took the liberty of suggesting a resolution similar to that since proposed by Mr. Crawford, of Georgia, recognizing the institution of slavery as it is recognized in the Constitution and in the decisions of the Supreme Court. Well, let them attempt to press that resolution, and that moment the Committee will explode.--The men from the North willd return the afternoon following. For many seasons one of the Messrs. Lafitte & Co.'s steamers has been chartered, a few days previous to Christmas, to convey a large gang of negroes, who are employed in the constructions of railroads, &c., in Georgia and Florida, to their old homes in old "Norf Kerlina" to spend the Christmas holidays, and the St. Mary's has been chartered for this purpose on this occasion. When the holidays are over the St. Mary's will return to Wilmington for the negroes,
Mississippi (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): article 1
in it. But the plan is an impracticable one--the Convention could only meet with a purpose of preparing for disunion; called with any other purpose it would be futile, and a disunion Convention, need not say, is in violation of the spirit of the Constitution. The States have no right to go out together — no one asserts any such right. Each State must go out by herself and in the exercise of her separate State sovereignty. The only available remedy for our oppression which the State of Mississippi can suggest, is that each State shall secede from the Union. [A stormy scene followed the last remark of the speaker, a violent storm of hisses being met by a counter-blast of cheers, though the former largely predominated, and was pertinaciously continued after the applause had subsided into an occasional individual shout. After a calm of a few seconds the tempest of hisses and applause was resumed with renewed force, parties on the floor of the hall endeavoring to make up in t
Vermont (Vermont, United States) (search for this): article 1
with his duties as Chief of the Light-house Board. Sent off. A man calling himself Lieut. Henry W. Paul, U. S. A., (says the Mobile News,) was warned out of Oxford, Miss., last Thursday. Paul is a stalwart fellow, six feet five inches high, and very military in appearance. He advertised to give fencing lessons, but would accept but two pupils, and claimed to be a native of Wheeling, Va. Suspicion being excited, he was taken in hand by a committee, who ascertained that he was from Vermont, and is a cousin of Cook, one of John Brown's men. Rev. E. H. Chapin on the Crisis. Boston, Dec. 18. --The Rev. E. H. Chapin, in an address delivered in Tremont Temple to-night said the crisis in our nationality is a crucible in elements, and public liberty is to be tried to the uttermost. Further remarks were made in a like strain, and received with applause. The house was crowded. Tender of service. Captain O'Hars, formerly of the United States Army, has raised a c
Connecticut (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): article 1
ss put their heads together, shake hands over the quarrel, and think what can be done to mitigate what it is so difficult to abolish? Perhaps we speak to the deaf, but anything is better than dividing State against State, house against house, and servant against master, in the most rising nation in the world. Circular letter of the Bishop of the dioceses of Hartford on the Crisis. Right Rev. James P. McFarland, D.D., Bishop of the dioceses of Hartford, States of Rhode Island and Connecticut, has issued a circular letter and addressed it to the clergy of his dioceses, on the subject of the dangers which threaten the perpetuity of the Union. The letter was addressed to the Catholic congregations in the dioceses on last Sunday. The following is a copy of the letter: Dear Sir: Rev. The most serious apprehensions at present fill every breast on account of the evils which threaten our beloved country. These evils are the punishment of sin, and can be averted only by
Rhode Island (Rhode Island, United States) (search for this): article 1
rs in this business put their heads together, shake hands over the quarrel, and think what can be done to mitigate what it is so difficult to abolish? Perhaps we speak to the deaf, but anything is better than dividing State against State, house against house, and servant against master, in the most rising nation in the world. Circular letter of the Bishop of the dioceses of Hartford on the Crisis. Right Rev. James P. McFarland, D.D., Bishop of the dioceses of Hartford, States of Rhode Island and Connecticut, has issued a circular letter and addressed it to the clergy of his dioceses, on the subject of the dangers which threaten the perpetuity of the Union. The letter was addressed to the Catholic congregations in the dioceses on last Sunday. The following is a copy of the letter: Dear Sir: Rev. The most serious apprehensions at present fill every breast on account of the evils which threaten our beloved country. These evils are the punishment of sin, and can be
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