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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 31, 1864., [Electronic resource].
Found 549 total hits in 284 results.
Goldsboro (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 3
New Bern (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 3
Wilmington, N. C. (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 3
Our Wilmington Correspondence. Wilmington, North Carolina, December 19, 1864.
There has been considerable excitement here for the last two or three days, and especially yesterday, when the local forces were called out and other measures taken to resist the reported landing of the enemy.
Without giving the authority upon which the statement is made, I may remark that intelligence has been received to the effect that a land force, estimated at twenty thousand men, together with the fleet of monitors and gunboats which has for some time been assembling at Fortress Monroe, sailed on Friday, the 16th, for the south, with the intention of making a descent on the coast in the vicinity of Newbern and Wilmington.
Other facts and circumstances were reported in connection with the expedition, which I need not stop to relate.
If Wilmington had been the destination of the enemy, the fleet should have arrived off the mouth of the Cape Fear on Saturday; any how, on Sunday; but up to the
Branchville (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 3
Port Royal (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 3
Paris (search for this): article 4
Burial of the Yankee Minister at Paris.
--A letter from Paris, dated the 6th instant, gives an account of the burial of the remains of Mr. Dayton, the Yankee Minister to France.
It says:
"The last sad duties to the remains of the late American Minister to France were performed this afternoon in the American Chapel of the Rue-de-Berry.
The reading of the opening services was shared in by the Rev. Dr. Sunderland, pastor of the church; the Rev. Dr. Cleveland, of New Haven, Connecticut, and the Rev. Mr. Lamson, of the American Episcopal Church in the Rue Bayard.
The choirs of the two churches were united on the occasion, under the direction of Mr. Crane, and with the magnificent new organ, and the admirable solo voice of Mrs. Riggs, of New York, the effect of the service was grand and impressive.--Rev. Dr. Sunderland pronounced an able and appropriate eulogy on the eminent public services and private qualities of the deceased, and was in turn followed by Mr. Consul Bigelow,
6th (search for this): article 4
Burial of the Yankee Minister at Paris.
--A letter from Paris, dated the 6th instant, gives an account of the burial of the remains of Mr. Dayton, the Yankee Minister to France.
It says:
"The last sad duties to the remains of the late American Minister to France were performed this afternoon in the American Chapel of the Rue-de-Berry.
The reading of the opening services was shared in by the Rev. Dr. Sunderland, pastor of the church; the Rev. Dr. Cleveland, of New Haven, Connecticut, and the Rev. Mr. Lamson, of the American Episcopal Church in the Rue Bayard.
The choirs of the two churches were united on the occasion, under the direction of Mr. Crane, and with the magnificent new organ, and the admirable solo voice of Mrs. Riggs, of New York, the effect of the service was grand and impressive.--Rev. Dr. Sunderland pronounced an able and appropriate eulogy on the eminent public services and private qualities of the deceased, and was in turn followed by Mr. Consul Bigelow,
Cleveland (search for this): article 4
Burial of the Yankee Minister at Paris.
--A letter from Paris, dated the 6th instant, gives an account of the burial of the remains of Mr. Dayton, the Yankee Minister to France.
It says:
"The last sad duties to the remains of the late American Minister to France were performed this afternoon in the American Chapel of the Rue-de-Berry.
The reading of the opening services was shared in by the Rev. Dr. Sunderland, pastor of the church; the Rev. Dr. Cleveland, of New Haven, Connecticut, and the Rev. Mr. Lamson, of the American Episcopal Church in the Rue Bayard.
The choirs of the two churches were united on the occasion, under the direction of Mr. Crane, and with the magnificent new organ, and the admirable solo voice of Mrs. Riggs, of New York, the effect of the service was grand and impressive.--Rev. Dr. Sunderland pronounced an able and appropriate eulogy on the eminent public services and private qualities of the deceased, and was in turn followed by Mr. Consul Bigelow,
Dayton (search for this): article 4
Burial of the Yankee Minister at Paris.
--A letter from Paris, dated the 6th instant, gives an account of the burial of the remains of Mr. Dayton, the Yankee Minister to France.
It says:
"The last sad duties to the remains of the late American Minister to France were performed this afternoon in the American Chapel of the Rue-de-Berry.
The reading of the opening services was shared in by the Rev. Dr. Sunderland, pastor of the church; the Rev. Dr. Cleveland, of New Haven, Connecticut, and the Rev. Mr. Lamson, of the American Episcopal Church in the Rue Bayard.
The choirs of the two churches were united on the occasion, under the direction of Mr. Crane, and with the magnificent new organ, and the admirable solo voice of Mrs. Riggs, of New York, the effect of the service was grand and impressive.--Rev. Dr. Sunderland pronounced an able and appropriate eulogy on the eminent public services and private qualities of the deceased, and was in turn followed by Mr. Consul Bigelow,
Sunderland (search for this): article 4