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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: March 24, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

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Tennessee River (United States) (search for this): article 20
ate securities, and the possessors of paper money, who will look around in vain for some sources whence their claims may be met, and will awake to the reality that their property is but a delusion and a dream? This is all that those who wait will ever see. The very joy and exultation which the "successes" of the last few weeks have caused in the North, show hew little the promoters of this war really expect that absolute conquest which they promise. The capture of an earth-work on the Tennessee river, over if it be followed by the capture of the stronger neighboring fort upon the river Constantine, is only one of the first of a long series of military preparations for a campaign in Kentucky and Tennessee. If the invaders should obtain this success, its use will only be to enable them to feed the army which has advanced through Kentucky, and to keep it in working order for operating on a theatre five hundred miles distant from the opposing armies on the Potomac. A year of succe
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 20
This is all that those who wait will ever see. The very joy and exultation which the "successes" of the last few weeks have caused in the North, show hew little the promoters of this war really expect that absolute conquest which they promise. The capture of an earth-work on the Tennessee river, over if it be followed by the capture of the stronger neighboring fort upon the river Constantine, is only one of the first of a long series of military preparations for a campaign in Kentucky and Tennessee. If the invaders should obtain this success, its use will only be to enable them to feed the army which has advanced through Kentucky, and to keep it in working order for operating on a theatre five hundred miles distant from the opposing armies on the Potomac. A year of successes would only give them military possession of two States which were never among the most zealous in the Southern cause. As to the descents upon the coast, they are annoyances rather than wounds. They are bu
ence. The Southern States before they revolted must have expected all this, and much more. We have always in Europe given the North credit for first successes very greatly superior to these, and have reckoned that their real difficulties would only commence when they had mastered the great strategic points throughout the South. At the rate at which the war is now proceeding it will take, not ninety days, but ninety years to "crush this rebellion;" and the respective grandsons of General McClellan and General Beauregard may at last fight out the battle for Manassas. "Wall street" begins to see all this more clearly. It was worth a costly experiment to retain that rich Southern business, and New York will be hard put to it either to win it back or to do without it. But the capitalists have now come to the conclusion that the game is up, and that the experiment is passing out of their hands. The suggestion to raise $150,000,000 yearly, by direct taxation, does not deceive t
Beauregard (search for this): article 20
n States before they revolted must have expected all this, and much more. We have always in Europe given the North credit for first successes very greatly superior to these, and have reckoned that their real difficulties would only commence when they had mastered the great strategic points throughout the South. At the rate at which the war is now proceeding it will take, not ninety days, but ninety years to "crush this rebellion;" and the respective grandsons of General McClellan and General Beauregard may at last fight out the battle for Manassas. "Wall street" begins to see all this more clearly. It was worth a costly experiment to retain that rich Southern business, and New York will be hard put to it either to win it back or to do without it. But the capitalists have now come to the conclusion that the game is up, and that the experiment is passing out of their hands. The suggestion to raise $150,000,000 yearly, by direct taxation, does not deceive them. They know very we
January, 3 AD (search for this): article 20
The War must be ended. [From the London Times, March 1st] "This war must be settled somehow." The world has been waiting to hear these words. The present moment is, perhaps, rather earlier than any one expected, but already we catch the expected phrase, borne in confidential whispers across the Atlantic. It has found birth in Wall street, it stirs gently in its cradle, and it is swathed in unconvertible rags. No one yet dares to own it openly. The thousands of sul ures who are living upon their prey would scream horribly, and attack with beaks and claws any one who should, without adequate power, interfere with their banquet; but still the phrase is heard, and it is growing into more potent voice--"In some way or other this war must be settled." "Wait a while; wait just ninety days, and the rebellion will be crushed," is still the cry; as it has been for thrice ninety days--the cry of the contractors, the Government officials the fanatics and all who find power or profi