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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 23, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for South Carolina (South Carolina, United States) or search for South Carolina (South Carolina, United States) in all documents.
Your search returned 8 results in 3 document sections:
The Daily Dispatch: January 23, 1861., [Electronic resource], The National crisis. (search)
A South Carolina traitor.
--The Pee Dee (S. C.) Times publishes the following description of "a South Carolina traitor!"
John N. Merriman, recently Collector of this port, now in jail for playing the part of a traitor and a spy, has been regarded by our citizens generally, for several years past, as an unprincipled scamSouth Carolina traitor!"
John N. Merriman, recently Collector of this port, now in jail for playing the part of a traitor and a spy, has been regarded by our citizens generally, for several years past, as an unprincipled scamp: his component parts being, one-third knave, one-third fool, and the other- third whiskey — the combination producing the first traitor in the Commonwealth of South Carolina. ort, now in jail for playing the part of a traitor and a spy, has been regarded by our citizens generally, for several years past, as an unprincipled scamp: his component parts being, one-third knave, one-third fool, and the other- third whiskey — the combination producing the first traitor in the Commonwealth of South Carolina
The Daily Dispatch: January 23, 1861., [Electronic resource], Heat and cold in the United States . (search)
Becoming Enlightened.
Even the New York Tribune's "Charleston correspondent" now admits that the slaves of South Carolina are true to their masters, and anxious to fight the Abolitionists.
The "John Brown" raid ought to have satisfied them of the fidelity of the servants.
The first man shot in that invasion was a negro, and not a single slave availed himself of the pikes which had been kindly manufactured by the Puritan Brown. The truth is, this class of our population, ignorant though they may be of books, are well acquainted with one branch of knowledge, in which few white men are proficient — they know when they are well off!