hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Maryland (Maryland, United States) 44 0 Browse Search
Bradley T. Johnson 22 0 Browse Search
Matamoras (Pennsylvania, United States) 20 0 Browse Search
Viva Caravajal 18 0 Browse Search
McClellan 16 4 Browse Search
Abe Lincoln 14 0 Browse Search
Virginia (Virginia, United States) 14 0 Browse Search
John Slidell 11 1 Browse Search
Cameron 11 1 Browse Search
United States (United States) 10 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 18, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 20 total hits in 7 results.

Connecticut (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): article 4
The New Orleans Delta explodes the bit of literature which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."
North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 4
The New Orleans Delta explodes the bit of literature which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."
Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): article 4
ure which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thouidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."
it of literature which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service froCapt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety." val service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."
John Slidell (search for this): article 4
Delta explodes the bit of literature which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into thMr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."aval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."
The New Orleans Delta explodes the bit of literature which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."
The New Orleans Delta explodes the bit of literature which appeared recently in the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Times purporting to be founded on a love and matrimonial affair in which Hon. John Slidell and Capt. Wilkes figure as rivals for the same fair hand. The Delta says: "Mr. Slidell came to Louisiana in 1824 or '25, and Capt. Wilkes went into the naval service from North Carolina perhaps about the same period. Mr. Slidell married his wife about 1840. She is a Creole lady, and Capt. Wilkes was as far removed from her knowledge and her thoughts at the time of her marriage as Louisiana orange blossoms and female beauty are removed from Connecticut snows and pumpkin piety."