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very highest, drawing thence the following order:

"By direction of Maj.-Gen. McClellan, the permit given to the Hutchinson Family to sing in the camps, and their pass to cross the Potomac, are revoked, and they will not be allowed to sing to the troops."

As the then freshly uttered stanzas of JOHN G. WHITTIER, which thus caused the peremptory, ignominious suppression and expulsion of the Hutchinsons, are of themselves a memorable and stirring portion of the history of our time, they may fitly-as they will most worthily-close this volume:

"EIN FESTE BURGIST UNSER GOTT." 12 (Luther's Hymn.)

WE wait beneath the furnace-blast
The pangs of transformation :
Not painlessly doth God recast

And mold anew the nation.

Hot burns the fire

Where wrongs expire;
Nor spares the hand
That from the land
Uproots the ancient evil.

The hand-breadth cloud the sages feared
Its bloody rain is dropping;

The poison-plant the fathers spared

All else is overtopping.

East, West, South, North,
It curses earth;

All justice dies,

And fraud and lies

Live only in its shadow.

What gives the wheat-field blades of steel?
What points the rebel cannon ?
What sets the roaring rabble's heel
On th' old star-spangled pennon?
What breaks the oath

Of th' men o' th' South?
What whets the knife

For the Union's life?-
Hark to the answer: SLAVERY!

Then waste no blows on lesser foes,
In strife unworthy freemen:
God lifts to-day the vail, and shows
The features of the demon!

O North and South,
Its victims both,

Can ye not cry,

"Let Slavery die!"

And Union find in Freedom?

What though the cast-out spirit tear
The nation in his going?
We, who have shared the guilt, must share
The pang of his o'erthrowing!
Whate'er the loss,
Whate'er the cross,
Shall they complain
Of present pain

Who trust in God's hereafter?

For who that leans on His right arm
Was ever yet forsaken?
What righteous cause can suffer harm
If He its part has taken?
Though wild and loud
And dark the cloud,
Behind its folds

His hand upholds

The calm sky of To-Morrow!

Above the madd'ning cry for blood,
Above the wild war-drumming,

Let Freedom's voice be heard, with good
The evil overcoming.

Give prayer and purse
To stay the Curse
Whose wrong we share,
Whose shame we bear,

Whose end shall gladden Heaven!

In vain the bells of war shall ring
Of triumphs and revenges,
While still is spared the evil thing
That severs and estranges.

But blest the ear
That yet shall hear
The jubilant bell

That rings the knell
Of Slavery forever!

Then let the selfish lip be dumb,

And hushed the breath of sighing:
Before the joy of peace must come
The pains of purifying.

God give us grace,
Each in his place,

To bear his lot.

And, murmuring not,
Endure and wait and labor!

12 'Our God is a strong fortress,' (or castle.)

I.

ADDITIONAL NOTES.

Ir is stated on page 119 that "the Synod of Kentucky adopted a report on Slavery which condemned slaveholding broadly and thoroughly," etc. That statement is not literally accurate. The Synod met at Danville, in the Autumn of 1835, and appointed a Committee of ten-five ministers and five elders-who were instructed to "digest and prepare a plan for the moral and religious instruction of our slaves, and for their future emancipation," etc. The Committee did its duty faithfully, and the report in due time appeared-its character being such as is indicated in the text. The result was duly submitted to the Synod at its next meeting, at Bardstown, in 1836; but no action was taken thereon, beyond noting on the Synod's records the reception of the report, which had meantime been printed, and had excited some feeling among the slaveholders.

II.

The statement on page 120, respecting the attitude of the New School Presbyterian Church toward Slavery, is held by members of that Church to require qualification, in view of its more recent action on the subject. The material facts are as follows:

At the session of the General Assembly at Cleveland, Ohio, for 1857, a report on Slavery of the Committee on Bills and Overtures, after having been debated with great animation for the better part of a week, was finally adopted (June 3d), by the decisive majority of 169 yeas to 26 nays. This report is largely devoted to a recital of the former testimonies of the Presbyterian Church on the general subject, and is leveled at the new Southern doctrine that Slavery is essentially beneficent and just-a doctrine notoriously at variance with that originally maintained by this Church. The Report says:

"We are especially pained by the fact that the Presbytery of Lexington, South, have given official notice to us that a number of ministers and ruling elders, as well as many church-members, in their connection, hold slaves 'from principle' and 'of choice,' 'believing it to be, according to the Bible, right,' and have, without any qualifying explanation, assumed the responsibility of sustaining such ministers, elders, and church-members, in their position. We deem it our duty, in the exercise of our constitutional authority, 'to bear testimony against error in doctrine, or immorality in practice, in any church, Presbytery, or Synod,' to disapprove and earnestly condemn the position which has been thus assumed by the Presbytery of Lexington, South, as one which is opposed to the established con

victions of the Presbyterian Church, and must operate to mar its peace and seriously hinder its prosperity, as well as bring reproach on our holy religion; and we do hereby call on the Presbytery to review and rectify their position. Such doctrine and practice cannot be permanently tolerated in the Presbyterian Church. May they speedily melt away under the illuminating and mellowing influence of the Gospel and grace of God our Saviour!

"We do not, indeed, pronounce a sentence of indiscriminate condemnation upon all our brethren who are, unfortunately, connected with the system of Slavery. We tenderly sympathize with all those who deplore the evil, and are honestly doing all in their power for the present well-being of their slaves, and for their complete emancipation. We would aid, and not embarrass, such brethren. And yet, in the language of the General Assembly of 1818, we would 'earnestly warn them against unduly extending the plea of necessity; against making it a cover for the love and practice of Slavery, or a pretense for not using efforts that are lawful and practicable to extinguish this evil."

Upon the announcement of this vote, Rev. James G. Hamner, of the Synod of Virginia, presented the protest of twenty-two Southern members of the Assembly against this doctrine of the Report, saying:

"We protest-Because, while past General Assemblies have asserted that the system of Slavery is wrong, they have heretofore affirmed that the slaveholder was so controlled by State laws, obligations of guardianship, and humanity, that he was, as thus situated, without censure or odium as the master. This averment in the testimony of past Assemblies has so far satisfied the South, as to make it unnecessary to do more than protest against the mere anti-Slavery part of such testimony.

"We protest, then, now, That the present act of the Assembly is such an assertion, without authority from the word of God, or the organic law of the Presbyterian body.

"We protest that such action is, under present conditions, the virtual exscinding of the South, whatever be the motives of those who vote the deed.

"We protest, that such indirect excision is unrighteous, oppressive, uncalled for-the exercise of usurped power-destructive of the unity of the Church-hurtful to the North and the South-and adding to the peril of the Union of these United States."

From the date of this action-which seems to have been but a more explicit reäffirmance of the older testimonies of the Church against Slavery, and to have stopped far short of declaring slaveholding inconsistent with the Christian character-the New School Presbyterian Church had hardly a foothold in the Slave States.

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III.

The Albany Evening Journal of May 20th, 1861, commenting on a very abusive attack on Gov. Seward, in a then recent Richmond Whig, with regard to his assurances to or through Judge Campbell, respecting Fort Sumter, says:

If the Secretary of State were at liberty to reply to ex-Judge Campbell, revealing all that passed between them on several occasions, not only no imputation of insincerity would rest upon the Secretary, but the facts would seriously affect Judge Campbell's well-established reputation for candor and frankness. These revelations would furnish no evidence of either the 'falsehood' or 'duplicity' of Governor Seward; for there was nothing of either in his conversations.

"We violate no confidence in saying that Judge Campbell balanced long between Loyalty and Secession; the preponderance, up to a late day, being in favor of the Union. If he at any time looked with favor or satisfaction upon Secession, he was much and generally misunderstood. If he did not seriously contemplate remaining in the Union and upon the Bench, he was misunderstood. If, during that period of mental trial, he was acting in harmony with the leading enemies of the Union, he was grossly misunderstood.

"That Gov. Seward conversed freely with Judge Campbell, we do not deny; nor do we doubt, that, in those conversations, at one period, he intimated that Fort Sumter would be evacuated. He certainly believed so; founding his opinion upon a knowledge of Gen. Scott's recommendation. Subsequently, the President deemed it his duty to authorize an effort to reënforce and provision that fortress. We do not know whether Gov. Seward met Judge Campbell after that change of purpose; but he was not at liberty, if they did meet, to reveal what was so well kept.

"But, whatever Gov. Seward said or intimated to Judge Campbell, was true at the time it was said.

"That Judge Campbell reported to the Confederate President half that he said or intimated, is more than doubtful."

IV.

The statement on pages 449-50, that the original attack on Fort Sumter was impelled by a stringent, imperative political necessity-that hostilities were inaugurated, to prevent the else inevitable crumbling away and utter collapse of the Confederacy-has received additional confirmation since that portion of this work was stereotyped, through an averment of Hon. Jere. Clemens, late U. S. Senator from Alabama, who, in a Union meeting held at the city of his residence, Huntsville, Ala., March 13, 1864, said:

"Before I declare this meeting adjourned, I wish to state a fact in relation to the commencement of the war: Some time after the ordinance of Secession was passed, I was in Montgomery, and called upon President Davis, wko was in that city. Davis, Memminger, the Secretary of War, Gilchrist, the member from Lowndes

County, and several others, were present. As I entered, the conversation ceased. They were evidently discussing the propriety of firing upon Fort Sumter. Two or three of them withdrew to a corner of the room; and I heard Gilchrist say to the Secretary of War, 'It must be done. Delay two months, and Alabama stays in the Union. You must sprinkle blood in the faces of the people.'

The Secretary of War in question was Mr. Leroy Pope Walker, also a citizen of Huntsville, who made, the evening after Fort Sumter's surrender, a public proclamation that the Rebels would have possession of Washington City within a month. He was an original Secessionist; while Senator Clemens, with most of the people of their county (Madison), clung to the Union, so long as they could with safety. That Mr. Clemens has fabricated such a statement with regard to two of his neighbors, by whom it might so easily be refuted, if untrue, will hardly be suggested.

V.

That the speedy capture and occupation of Washington by the Confederates were confidently anticipated by their chiefs, as among the earliest and most inevitable results of the War they were inaugurating, has, perhaps, been sufficiently established in due course; but, since the Governors of Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Missouri, with others, boldly and broadly charged President Lincoln with wantonly inaugurating civil war, by his Proclamation calling out 75,000 militia for the defense of the Federal metropolis, it may be proper to accumulate evidence on this head. Here is what Wm. H. Russell, The Times's correspondent, who was in the South when Sumter was reduced, records in his 'Diary,' under the date of April 20th, 1861, just after dining at Charleston with W. H. Trescott, W. Porcher Miles, Gov. Manning, and other pioneers of Disunion:

"The Secessionists are in great delight over Gov. Letcher's proclamation, calling out troops and volunteers; and it is hinted that Washington will be attacked, and the nest of Black Republican vermin, which haunt the capital, be driven out."

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ANALYTICAL INDEX.

A.

ABACO, The Island of, 176; 598.

ABOLITIONISTS, Convention of in 1823-4, 113;
irreverent and 'infidel' tendencies of, 121; they oppose
Clay for President in 1844, 167.

ABOLITION SOCIETY of Pennsylvania, The, 107.
ABORIGINES, The, Enslavement of, 27; do. by

the Puritans, 30.

ACADEMIES, etc., number of, by the 8th Census, 23.
ADAMS, CHARLES FRANCIS, nominated for Vice-
President by the 'Freesoilers,' 191.

ADAMS, EX-Gov., one of South Carolina's Com-
missioners to Washington, 411.
ADAMS, GREEN, of Kentucky, 194.

ADAMS, JOHN, allusion to, 33; 35; 42; letter
from, to Robt. G. Evans, 51; letter to Jefferson on the
Missouri Restriction, 80; 81; becomes President in
1797, 83; his Treaty with the Indians in 1798, 102.
ADAMS, JOHN QUINCY, his firm stand in behalf
of the Georgia Indians, 103; attempts to purchase
Texas, 149; unites in an anti-Annexation Address,
159; allusion to, 248; 250; favors the Panama Con-
gress, 267-8; 357.

ADAMS, SAMUEL, 42.

ADRAIN, GARNET B., of N. J., Resolution, 374.
AGRICULTURE, 19; 20-21; statistics of by 8th
U. S. Census, 22; value of implements of, by do., 23.
AIKEN, WILLIAM, (Gov.) of S. C., 241.
AIKEN, U. S. CUTTER, surrendered to the South
Carolinians, 410; reäppears as the Petrel, 599.
ALABAMA, 123; Legislature of favors Annexa-
tion, 157; the 'Union' party triumph in, 211; Legisla-
tive instructions to her delegates to the Democratic
National Convention, 312-13; statement and withdraw-
al of the delegation, 313-14; secession meeting in, 330;
her Commissioner at the South Carolina Convention,
344; Governor of, sends a dispatch to the Convention,
345; secession of, and vote thereon, 347; population in
1860, 351;"Declaration of Causes" at Mobile, 355; of-
fers volunteers to South Carolina, 410; seizure of Fed-
eral property in, 412; surrender of the U. S. cutter
Cass to, 413.

ALABAMA, The Privateer, is fitted out at Liver-
pool, for Rebel service, 603.
ALAMO, THE, battle of, 150.

ALBANY, N. Y., 'Peace' Convention at, 388-96.
Albany Argus, The, editorial of, sympathizing
with and justifying 'the South,' 395; against coercion,'
396; on the President's call for troops, 456–7.
Albany Evening Journal, The, editorial of, in fa-
vor of 'Conciliation,' 360-61; citation from, 632.
ALEXANDER I. of Russia, arbitrates between
Great Britain and the United States, 176.
ALEXANDRIA, Va., originally included in the
District of Columbia, 142; retaken by Unionists, 533.
ALIEN AND SEDITION LAWS, 82-3; are denounced
by Jefferson, in his "Resolutions of '98," 84:
ALLEGHANY SUMMIT, Va., battle at, 527.
ALLENTOWN, Pa., military organization at, in
1860, for defense of Southern Rights,' 396.

ALTON, Ill., LOVEJOY'S speech at the Court House
of, 138; Federal property taken thither from St. Louis,
490. See LOVEJOY, and The St. Louis Observer.
AMERICAN COLONIZATION SOCIETY, The, 73.
AMERICAN SOCIETY for promoting National Uni-
ty, The, 439; programme of, 439–40.
ANDERSON, MAJ. ROBERT, evacuates Fort Moul-
trie and occupies Fort Sumter, 407-8; The Charleston
Courier accuses him of commencing civil war, 408
attempt to relieve him by the Star of the West, 412;
confers with Col. Lamon, 442; is notified that he will
be attacked, 443; surrenders the fort, 448; his report to
the Secretary of War, 449; is in command in Kentucky;
solicits reënforcements from Fremont, 587; 612; 613.
ANDERSON, RICHARD C., of Ky., appointed to at-
tend the Panama Congress, 268-9.

ANDREW, GOV. JOHN A., of Mass., a delegate
to the Chicago Convention, 321; his correspondence
with Mayor Brown, of Baltimore, 465-6.
ANDREWS, T. A., of Phila., letter refusing the use
of his hall to George W. Curtis, 367.
ANNAPOLIS, Md., landing of Gen. Butler at, 469.
ANTHONY, HENRY B., of R. I., his speech on the
crisis, 381-2; allusion to, 404.

ARCHY, a fugitive slave in California, 218.
ARISTA, GEN., defeated at Palo Alto, 187.
ARKANSAS, legislative enslavement of free ne-
groes in, 73; withdraws from the Democratic National
Convention, 315; 341; secession of, and vote thereon,
348; population in 1860, 351; progress of secession in;
Convention votes not to secede, 486: Ordinance of se-
cession passed; the nature of her tenure to her soil;
action of the 'conservatives,' 487; seizure of Fort Smith,
488; testimony of Gen. Gantt in regard to Union senti-
ment in, 515.

ARKANSAS TERRITORY, organization of, 75; 108.
ARMSTRONG, COMMANDER, orders the surrender
of the Pensacola forts, 412.

ATCHISON, DAVID R., his advice to the Border
Ruffians, 237; surrounds Lawrence with an army of
Missourians, 243; 244; 283; defeats a small Union
force in Northern Missouri, 587.

ATHERTON, CHARLES G., of N. H., offers resolu-
tions to reject petitions for the abolition of Slavery in
the District of Columbia, 146.

ATLANTIC STATES, The, poverty of at close of
Revolution, 18; obstacles to transportation in, 19.
AUGHEY, REV. JOHN A., of Miss., reference to,
350; extract from his "Iron Furnace," 514.
AUGUSTA, Ga., seizure of the Federal Arsenal,
411; a letter from, in testimony of the common use of
deadly weapons by the Southrons, 500.

Augusta
Augusta (Ga.). Chronicle, The, extract from, 123;
citation from, "Death to the Abolitionist," 128; cita-
tion from, 347.

AUSTIN, MOSES, 148.

AUSTIN, STEPHEN F., 148; 150.

AVERY, WILLIAM W., of N. C., 278; his resolves
in the Democratic National Convention, 309-10; his
speech there, 311; 318.

AVIS, CAPT. JOHN, referred to in one of John

Brown's letters, 296; his treatment of old Brown, 289.
AYRES, CAPT., engaged at Blackburn's Ford, 539.

B.
BADGER, GEORGE E., of N. C., wants liberty to
take his "old mammy" to Kansas, 231; 232.
BAKER, COL. EDWARD D., 422; reënforces Col.
Devens at Ball's Bluff, 622; his death, 623; orders from
Gen. Stone to, 624.

BAGBY, ARTHUR P., of Ala., on Annexation, 174.
BAILEY, GODARD, an account of his defalca-
tions at Washington, 410-11.

BALDWIN, ROGER S., of Conn., 397; 398; 404.
BALDWIN, HENRY, of Pa., his vote on the Mis-
souri Compromise, 80.

BALLOU, MAJOR, killed at Bull Run, 545; 552.
BALL'S BLUFF, Battle of, 621 to 624; bravery of
the Federal troops at, 625.

BALTIMORE, Dem. Convention of 1844 at, 164;
Convention of 1848 at, 191; Conventions at, in 1852,
222-3; Whig Convention of 1856 at, 247; Seceders' and
Douglas Conventions at, 817-18; other Conventions at,
318-19; 407; 420; President Lincoln's passage through,
421; 461; Secession meeting at, 462; the mobbing of
the Federal troops, 463-4; great Union meeting at,
471; Gen. Butler takes possession of, 471; 472; 523–9.
Baltimore Exchange, The, endeavors to incite a
mob against President Lincoln, 420.
Baltimore Republican, The, 420.
Baltimore Sun, The, 428.

Bangor Union, The, citation from, 392; on the
President's call for troops, 456.

BANKS, GEN. N. P., elected Speaker, 241; suc-
ceeds Gen. Patterson, 539; 620; at Ball's Bluff, 624.
BAPTISTS, The, and Slavery, 119 to 121.
BARBOUR, JAMES, 176.

BARBOUR, PHILIP P, of Va., his remarks on the
Missouri question, 110.

BARBOURSVILLE, Ky., captured by Zollicoffer, 614.
BARBOURSVILLE, Va., captured by Gen. Cox, 524.
BARBER, THOS. W., shot dead in Kansas, 243.
BARKER, GEORGE P., 166.

BARN WELL, R. W., of S. C., a Commissioner to
Washington, 411.

BARRINGER, DANIEL M., of N. C., in the 'Peace
Conference,' 401.

BARRON, COM. S., surrenders at Hatteras, 600.
BARROW, WASHINGTON, Commissioner to the
Confederacy from Gov. Harris, 482.

BARRY, MAJOR, on the battle of Bull Run, 545.
BARRY, MR., of Miss., withdraws from the Dem.
Convention at Charleston, 314.

BARTOW, GEN., killed at Bull Run, 543; 545.
BATES, EDWARD, of Mo., 247; in the Chicago
Convention, 321; in President Lincoln's Cabinet, 428.
BATON ROUGE, La., Arsenal seized at, 412; 490.
BAYARD, JAMES A., (father,) 107.

BAYARD, JAMES A., (son,) 315; presides at the

Seceders' Convention, 317, on Secession, 350; 437; 562.
BEAUFORT, S. C., captured by Federals, 605.
BEAUREGARD, GEN. G. P. T., 442; demands the
surrender of Fort Sumter, 443; proclamation by, 534;
commands the Rebels at Bull Run, 539; his official
report, 541 to 546; 551.

BECK WITH, MAJOR, at Lexington, Mo., 588.
BEDFORD, Pa., fugitive-slave arrests near, 216.
BEE, GEN, (Rebel,) killed at Bull Run, 543; 545.
BELL, JOHN, his election to Congress, in 1827,
aided by negro votes, 179; 207; nominated for Presi-
dent, 319; 325; 482; vote cast for him in Ky., 492.
BELL, JOSHUA F., of Ky., 338.

BELMONT, Mo., battle of, 594 to 597; The Chicago

Journal's report, 595-6; other reports, etc., 597.
BENDIX, COL., (Union,) 529; 530.
BENHAM, GEN., 525; on Floyd's retreat, 526.
BENNING, HENRY L., in Dem. Convention, 315.
BENTON, COL. THOMAS, 106; 159; speech against
the Annexation treaty, 164-5; his repugnance to An-
nexation overcome, 174; 207; on the Dred Scott deci-.
sion, 258–9; allusion to, 488,

BERRIEN, JOHN M., of Ga., 268.

BIG BETHEL, Va., battle of, 529 to 531.
BIG SPRINGS, Kansas, Free-State meeting at, 240.
BING, JULIUS, at Bull Run, 547; 550.
BINGHAM, JOHN A., of Ohio, 570.
BIRNEY, JAMES G., candidate for President, 167.
BLACK JACK, Kansas, battle of, 244.

BLACK, JEREMIAH S., his opinion of Secession,
371-2; appointed Secretary of State, 411.

BLAIR, COL. FRANK P., 490; has an interview
with Gen. Price, 491; his strictures on Gen. Scott, 548-
9; 555; offers a resolve to expel John B. Clark, 562.
BLAIR, MONTGOMERY, in Lincoln's Cabinet, 428.
BLAKEY, GEO. D., in Chicago Convention, 321.
BLUE MILLS LANDING, Mo., Union defeat at, 587.
BOCOCK, THOS. S., of Va., 304-5.

BOLIVAR HIGHTS, captured by the Federals, 620.
BOONEVILLE, Mo., Rebels defeated at, 574.
BOOTH, SHERMAN M., case of, at Milwaukee, 215.
BORDER RUFFIANS, one of their resolutions, 235;
further resolves, 236; 237; 238; numerous outrages by,
242 to 245; their manner of voting, 249; are taught
piety by John Brown, 286; allusion to, 490.
BOREMAN, ARTHUR J., chairman of the Wheel-
ing Convention, 518.

BORLAND, SOLON, of Ark., 226; he seizes Fort
Smith, 488.

BOSTON, memorializes Congress on the Mis-
souri question, 78; respectable Pro-Slavery mob at,
127; repugnance to the Fugitive Slave Law, 215.
Boston Courier, The, on Secession, etc., 356.
Boston Post, The, on the President's calls, 457.
BOTELER, A. R., of Va., 372.

BOYCE, W. W., of S. C., speech at Columbia, 332.
BOYD, COL., reënforces Price at Lexington, 587.
BOYD, LINN, of Ky., 208; chosen Speaker, 226;
again chosen, 250.

BRADLEY, DR., of Plymouth, Mass., 125.
BRAGG, GEN. BRAXTON, his order as to Fort

Pickens, 436; 601; attacks Wilson's Zouaves, etc., 602.
BRAINE, LIEUT., commanding the Monticello, 601.
BRANCH, ADJT., (Rebel,) killed at Bull Run, 545.
BRANSON, JACOB, arrested by Sheriff Jones, 242.
BRECKINRIDGE, JOHN C., nominated for Vice-
President, 246; elected, 248; vote for, in the Douglas
Convention, 318; nominated for President, 319; 322;
review of the canvass, 323 to 326; classified table of the
Presidential vote, 328; allusion to, 376; 402; declares
Lincoln duly elected, 418; 421; 437; is answered by
Douglas, 441; vote cast for him in Kentucky, 492, 561-
5; flees to the Confederacy, 614; his Address, 615.
BRECKINRIDGE, SENATOR, Jefferson's letter to, 85.
BRECKINRIDGE, REV. ROBT. J., 495.

BRESHWOOD, CAPT., surrenders the cutter Mc-
Clellan to the Rebels, 413.

BRIGGS, GOV. GEO. N., of Mass., 106; appoints
Samuel Hoar as Commissioner to Charleston, 180.
BRIGHT, JESSE D., of Ind., 197.
BRINCKERHOFF, JACOB, of Ohio, 189.
BRODHEAD, JOHN, his letter to Jeff. Davis, 278.
BROLASKI, CAPT., (Union,) killed at Belmont, 597.
BROOKS, JAMES, speech on the Mexican War, 200.
BROOKS, PRESTON S., assails Senator Sumner, 209.
BROWN, AARON V., sends T. W. Gilmer's letter
to Gen. Jackson, 158.

BROWN, ALBERT G., of Miss., visits Buchanan,
277; his interview, 278; 373.
BROWN, B. GRATZ, at Chicago Convention, 321.
BROWN, COL., (Union,) at Chicamicomico, 600.
BROWN, COL. HARVEY, at Fort Pickens, 601.
BROWN, DAVID PAUL, 126.

BROWN, FREDERICK, killed by Martin White, 284.
BROWN, GOV. JOSEPH E., of Ga., speech at Con-
vention, 837; his Message, urging Secession, 347.

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