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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 20, 1865., [Electronic resource].
Found 690 total hits in 325 results.
1848 AD (search for this): article 1
John Quincy Adams (search for this): article 1
1812 AD (search for this): article 1
Harrison (search for this): article 1
Fillmore (search for this): article 1
The late Mr. Corwin.
This gentleman, who died in Washington on Monday, was in his sixty-ninth year.
He was born in Kentucky (whither his father had moved from New Jersey) in 1794.
The family soon afterwards moved to Ohio.
Mr. Corwin had filled the most responsible public stations in Ohio, including that of Governor.
He had been a member of each of the Houses of Congress, and filled the office of Secretary of the Treasury under Mr. Fillmore. Mr. Lincoln appointed him Minister to Mexico, where he remained until Maximilian arrived, when he came home on leave of absence.
Since then he has been engaged in his profession of lawyer.
It was alleged that he also undertook the business of "pardon broker." Mr. Corwin was a man of more than ordinary ability amongst the representative men of the country.
He excelled in humor and playful satire.
He employed this talent very successfully in answer to Mr. Crary, of Michigan, who, during the Harrison Presidential campaign, who, during the
Lincoln (search for this): article 1
The late Mr. Corwin.
This gentleman, who died in Washington on Monday, was in his sixty-ninth year.
He was born in Kentucky (whither his father had moved from New Jersey) in 1794.
The family soon afterwards moved to Ohio.
Mr. Corwin had filled the most responsible public stations in Ohio, including that of Governor.
He had been a member of each of the Houses of Congress, and filled the office of Secretary of the Treasury under Mr. Fillmore. Mr. Lincoln appointed him Minister to Mexico, where he remained until Maximilian arrived, when he came home on leave of absence.
Since then he has been engaged in his profession of lawyer.
It was alleged that he also undertook the business of "pardon broker." Mr. Corwin was a man of more than ordinary ability amongst the representative men of the country.
He excelled in humor and playful satire.
He employed this talent very successfully in answer to Mr. Crary, of Michigan, who, during the Harrison Presidential campaign, who, during th
Maximilian (search for this): article 1
1794 AD (search for this): article 1
The late Mr. Corwin.
This gentleman, who died in Washington on Monday, was in his sixty-ninth year.
He was born in Kentucky (whither his father had moved from New Jersey) in 1794.
The family soon afterwards moved to Ohio.
Mr. Corwin had filled the most responsible public stations in Ohio, including that of Governor.
He had been a member of each of the Houses of Congress, and filled the office of Secretary of the Treasury under Mr. Fillmore. Mr. Lincoln appointed him Minister to Mexico, where he remained until Maximilian arrived, when he came home on leave of absence.
Since then he has been engaged in his profession of lawyer.
It was alleged that he also undertook the business of "pardon broker." Mr. Corwin was a man of more than ordinary ability amongst the representative men of the country.
He excelled in humor and playful satire.
He employed this talent very successfully in answer to Mr. Crary, of Michigan, who, during the Harrison Presidential campaign, who, during the
Crary (search for this): article 1
Tom Corwin (search for this): article 1
The late Mr. Corwin.
This gentleman, who died in Washington on Monday, was in his sixty-ninth year.
He was born in Kentucky (whither his father had moved from New Jersey) in 1794.
The family soon afterwards moved to Ohio.
Mr. Corwin had filled the most responsible public stations in Ohio, including that of Governor.
He had been a member of each of the Houses of Congress, and filled the o profession of lawyer.
It was alleged that he also undertook the business of "pardon broker." Mr. Corwin was a man of more than ordinary ability amongst the representative men of the country.
He exchim as "the late Mr. Crary," which excited the irrepressible laughter of the whole House.
Mr. Corwin belonged to that powerful party of Whigs which struggled so long against the Jackson Administr bitterly opposed to the Mexican war of 1848, and was the leader of the opposition to it.
Mr. Corwin was raised a farmer, and is said to have been a wagoner in 1812.
On his return from Mexico, w