| 1883 - 474 pages
...existence of an expedition to re-enforce and supply Fort Sumter at the close of our administration. " The present administration had no alternative but...man: and it ought to be sustained at all hazards. " Miss Hetty feels very much indebted to you, and you are frequently the subject of kindly remembrance... | |
| Morgan Dix - Governors - 1883 - 478 pages
...existence of an expedition to re-enforce and supply Fort Sumter at the close of our administration. " The present administration had no alternative but...man: and it ought to be sustained at all hazards. "Miss Hetty feels very much indebted to you, and you are frequently the subject of kindly remembrance... | |
| Governors - 1883 - 476 pages
...existence of an expedition to re-enforce and supply Fort Sumter at the close of our administration. " The present administration had no alternative but...man : and it ought to be sustained at all hazards. " Miss Hetty feels very much indebted to you, and you are frequently the subject of kindly remembrance... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - Buchanan, James - 1883 - 732 pages
...the existence of an expedition to reinforce or supply Fort Sumter at the close of our administration. The present administration had no alternative but...man; and it ought to be sustained at all hazards. Miss Hetty feels very much indebted to you, and you are frequently the subject of kind remembrances... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - Buchanan, James - 1883 - 734 pages
...with a private letter, though I was never so strongly tempted. The sentence I allude to is this : " The present administration had no alternative but...the Southern Confederacy. The North will sustain the administrail. »i almost to a man ; and it ought to be sustained at all hazards." May I use the foregoing,... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - Buchanan, James - 1883 - 732 pages
...remarks were in type before I left the stand, and, indeed, were in circulation in the streets. tration almost to a man; and it ought to be sustained at all hazards." May I use the foregoing, if I think it proper and a fit occasion presents itself? Many of our political... | |
| Ohio - 1906 - 562 pages
...they have fired on the flag — fired on our flag." In less Ohio Arch, and Hist. Society Publications. than a week I saw my friend one morning drilling to...sustained at all hazards." May 6th, to Stanton, he 1 wrote : "The first gun fired by Beauregard aroused the indignant spirit of the North as nothing else... | |
| Alexander Kelly McClure - Presidents - 1892 - 516 pages
...initiated by South Carolina or the Southern Confederacy. The North will sustain the administration to a man, and it ought to be sustained at all hazards." Again, on the 26th of April, writing to Mr. Baker, he said: "The attack on Fort Sum ter was an outrageous... | |
| James Ford Rhodes - United States - 1895 - 686 pages
...despatch, April 14. * New York Tribune, April 16. Buchanan was positive in his letter to Dix, April 19: "The present administration had no alternative but...man ; and it ought to be sustained at all hazards." — Life of Curtis, vol. ii. p. 543; see, also, p. 541. 9 Boston Eeening Transcript, cited in Moore's... | |
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