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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: November 15, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 22 total hits in 6 results.
Kentucky (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 2
West Virginia (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 2
Tennessee (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): article 2
Maryland (Maryland, United States) (search for this): article 2
Unionism in the South.
--In a late letter in the Londons Times, Mr. Russell expresses his incredibility as to the existence of a Union element in Maryland.
The country gentlemen he speaks of "as tenacious and haughty as any Meayor or Pole who ever lived," and in Baltimore "the people and angry." Mr. Russell suggests that if it requires thirty-three thousand men to hold the little State of Maryland in chains, it will demand a very considerable standing army and enormous expenditure to keState of Maryland in chains, it will demand a very considerable standing army and enormous expenditure to keep the rest of the South quiet, even if they could subjugate her. None of the Northern prophets have ventured to look full in the face the consequence of their own success and to realize that, in many respects, it would be as bed as defeat.
"There is, I know," says Mr. Russell, a pretence that there is Union sentiment in solution in the South, which will tumble down in a thick precipitation on the head of the Confederates the moment it is stormed by a Federal bayonet; but there is no trace
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): article 2
Russell (search for this): article 2
Unionism in the South.
--In a late letter in the Londons Times, Mr. Russell expresses his incredibility as to the existence of a Union element in Maryland.
The country gentlemen he speaks of "as tenacious and haughty as any Meayor or Pole who ever lived," and in Baltimore "the people and angry." Mr. Russell suggests that if it requires thirty-three thousand men to hold the little State of Maryland in chains, it will demand a very considerable standing army and enormous expenditure to f their own success and to realize that, in many respects, it would be as bed as defeat.
"There is, I know," says Mr. Russell, a pretence that there is Union sentiment in solution in the South, which will tumble down in a thick precipitation on hypothesis as this that the North builds its expectations of a reconstruction of the old Union.
We need not say that Mr. Russell's statement is literally and thoroughly true.
Except in some portions of Western Virginia, East Tennessee, and Northe