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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 18, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 19 total hits in 13 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 16
Butler (search for this): article 16
J. W. Finney (search for this): article 16
John Finney (search for this): article 16
Richmond, June 17, 1862. To the Editors of the Dispatch:
Will you be good enough to insert in your paper the enclosed communication from my friend, John Finney, of New Orleans.
I desire to add to his own statement, that from the month of November, 1860, Mr. Finney has been, to my personal knowledge, a warm and devoted advocate of the cause of the Confederate States; that he was earnest in favor of secession from the moment that Lincoln's election was known; that he has with voicMr. Finney has been, to my personal knowledge, a warm and devoted advocate of the cause of the Confederate States; that he was earnest in favor of secession from the moment that Lincoln's election was known; that he has with voice, purse, and hand, defended the independence of the Confederacy; that he was taken away from New Orleans while very ill by friends, who yielded to medical advice and procured from the enemy's General one of the usual printed passports, as a necessary means of saving his life, and that he has not yet recovered his health.
A Virginian by birth, married to a Southern lady, and with a numerous offspring born in New Orleans, he has abandoned there everything he possessed, and is now recruiting his
Lincoln (search for this): article 16
Richmond, June 17, 1862. To the Editors of the Dispatch:
Will you be good enough to insert in your paper the enclosed communication from my friend, John Finney, of New Orleans.
I desire to add to his own statement, that from the month of November, 1860, Mr. Finney has been, to my personal knowledge, a warm and devoted advocate of the cause of the Confederate States; that he was earnest in favor of secession from the moment that Lincoln's election was known; that he has with voice, purse, and hand, defended the independence of the Confederacy; that he was taken away from New Orleans while very ill by friends, who yielded to medical advice and procured from the enemy's General one of the usual printed passports, as a necessary means of saving his life, and that he has not yet recovered his health.
A Virginian by birth, married to a Southern lady, and with a numerous offspring born in New Orleans, he has abandoned there everything he possessed, and is now recruiting his
Virginians (search for this): article 16
Montgomery (search for this): article 16
J. P. Benjamin (search for this): article 16
Jonathan Finney (search for this): article 16
14th (search for this): article 16