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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 10. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). Search the whole document.
Found 24 total hits in 10 results.
Savannah (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 5.53
Editorial paragraphs.
General Fitz Lee's visit to Tee South has been postponed until the early autumn by the severe illness of his wife's mother.
Our kind friends at Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Charleston, &c., were preparing to give our gallant friend an ovation, and to make his tour a great success for the Society.
But we are sure that they will appreciate the necessity for the delay, and will be equally ready to greet General Fitz in the autumn.
Memorial day seems to have been observed this year all through the South with even more than usual enthusiasm.
Large crowds, brilliant speeches and sweet music have added to the interest of the occasion, while fair hands have strewn with choicest flowers the graves of our heroic dead.
We regret that our space forbids us even the briefest notice of the many reports of these services which we have received (and we are always glad to receive and preserve them), but we may say that we are gratified to find that the general to
Augusta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 5.53
Editorial paragraphs.
General Fitz Lee's visit to Tee South has been postponed until the early autumn by the severe illness of his wife's mother.
Our kind friends at Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Charleston, &c., were preparing to give our gallant friend an ovation, and to make his tour a great success for the Society.
But we are sure that they will appreciate the necessity for the delay, and will be equally ready to greet General Fitz in the autumn.
Memorial day seems to have been observed this year all through the South with even more than usual enthusiasm.
Large crowds, brilliant speeches and sweet music have added to the interest of the occasion, while fair hands have strewn with choicest flowers the graves of our heroic dead.
We regret that our space forbids us even the briefest notice of the many reports of these services which we have received (and we are always glad to receive and preserve them), but we may say that we are gratified to find that the general t
Atlanta (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 5.53
Editorial paragraphs.
General Fitz Lee's visit to Tee South has been postponed until the early autumn by the severe illness of his wife's mother.
Our kind friends at Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Charleston, &c., were preparing to give our gallant friend an ovation, and to make his tour a great success for the Society.
But we are sure that they will appreciate the necessity for the delay, and will be equally ready to greet General Fitz in the autumn.
Memorial day seems to have been observed this year all through the South with even more than usual enthusiasm.
Large crowds, brilliant speeches and sweet music have added to the interest of the occasion, while fair hands have strewn with choicest flowers the graves of our heroic dead.
We regret that our space forbids us even the briefest notice of the many reports of these services which we have received (and we are always glad to receive and preserve them), but we may say that we are gratified to find that the general t
Texas (Texas, United States) (search for this): chapter 5.53
Warrenton (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 5.53
Hollywood (Arkansas, United States) (search for this): chapter 5.53
Fitz Lee (search for this): chapter 5.53
Editorial paragraphs.
General Fitz Lee's visit to Tee South has been postponed until the early autumn by the severe illness of his wife's mother.
Our kind friends at Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Charleston, &c., were preparing to give our gallant friend an ovation, and to make his tour a great success for the Society.
But we are sure that they will appreciate the necessity for the delay, and will be equally ready to greet General Fitz in the autumn.
Memorial day seems to have been ight.
We propose hereafter to cull for our pages some of the gems produced — notably a poem by Miss Marr, of Warrenton, Va., sister of the lamented Captain Marr who fell in the first skirmish at Fairfax Courthouse — and some extracts from General Fitz Lee's oration at Hollywood.
Renewals are always in order, and especially so on the part of those to whom we have been sending the papers all of the year (this making six numbers) without payment.
We need not remind any such that we need th
George D. Johnston (search for this): chapter 5.53
Fannie H. Marr (search for this): chapter 5.53
Fitz (search for this): chapter 5.53
Editorial paragraphs.
General Fitz Lee's visit to Tee South has been postponed until the early autumn by the severe illness of his wife's mother.
Our kind friends at Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Charleston, &c., were preparing to give our gallant friend an ovation, and to make his tour a great success for the Society.
But we are sure that they will appreciate the necessity for the delay, and will be equally ready to greet General Fitz in the autumn.
Memorial day seems to have been observed this year all through the South with even more than usual enthusiasm.
Large crowds, brilliant speeches and sweet music have added to the interest of the occasion, while fair hands have strewn with choicest flowers the graves of our heroic dead.
We regret that our space forbids us even the briefest notice of the many reports of these services which we have received (and we are always glad to receive and preserve them), but we may say that we are gratified to find that the general to