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The Daily Dispatch: March 26, 1861., [Electronic resource], A Bostonian's view of affairs in Charleston. (search)
Extract of a letter from a student at the University, to his friend in this city : " University of Virginia. March 22d, '61. " Mr. Holcombe's speech must have been almost powerful and eloquent effort in behalf of the South, and when it is reported in full in the Enquirer, please have a few copies of it sent to me. " It would really do the heart of any true Southerner good to live in this atmosphere, for there is only one opinion, and that immediate secession. Within sight of my room are eleven large flags of the ' Southern Confederacy, ' flying from the roofs of the boarding-houses. For weeks I have not heard a voice in favor of the Union, and such a thing as the American flag is almost unknown here. No one would dare to raise one in this neighborhood, for it would almost certainly be taken down and supplanted by the three stripes and seven stars. This afternoon, a tall pole, with a secession flag, nineteen feet long, was raised near the railroad station. Th