Valley of the Shadow
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Miscellaneous Congressional and war news

The Constitution of 1789

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Excerpt:

"Higher law doctrines, Nullification doctrines, the vague notion of Liberty which characterizes modern radicalism, all of these are the elements of enmity to the Constitution as it now is, and of course will forbid any new Union when the old one is destroyed...."

The Contest

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Excerpt:

"General McClellan is also aware of the fact that he is surrounded by unwearying, relentless enemies, who are watching every opportunity to overthrow him, and to overthrow with him that entire plan for the salvation of the country, on which it is believed by all sound minds, the hope of the future depends."

A Hero Wanted

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Excerpt:

"The Republicans are in a desperate strait for a hero. Since the collapse of Jim Lane, they are bleating about like sheep without a shepherd."

Full Text of Article

The Republicans are in a desperate strait for a hero. Since the collapse of Jim Lane, they are bleating about like sheep without a shepherd. Their first hero in this war was Fremont. He achieved the defeat of Lyon, the surrender of Lexington, the "freedom" of a few niggers, and squandered millions of public money. We hardly know which exploit most commended him to their favor. When Fremont was retired from command in disgrace, they fixed their hopes upon one Simon, surnamed Cameron, who, it has been said, "was a thief from the beginning," and did not hesitate to sell his country for a few pieces of silver. But Simon wanted the niggers set at liberty--he wanted arms put in their hands so they could butcher the women and children of the South. This exalted him in the eyes of the Republicans and they loved him as their own souls. But Simon is dismissed from the council table which he had disgraced. Just then Jim Lane turned up and the Republican journals turned their eyes upon him and saw that he was good at stealing niggers, and they proclaimed that he was to do wonderful things in that line--it just suited him. But General Jime [sic] is suddenly "squelched"--his "expedition" vanished, and he is left before the public a miserable charlatan, a dirty jack that has brayed his own fame, a fit object of scorn and anathema from all patriotic people. Who will be the next hero of the Republican journals?--Exchange.

No Union With Slaveholders

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Excerpt:

"Unpleasant neighbors as they are at Richmond and Manassas, we prefer them there rather than in power at Washington, with a drilled partisan majority at their back."

The State of the Case

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Full Text of Article

The great duty of the Democratic Party in this time of peril, as well as of fraud, with great burthens of taxation in prospect, is to aid with all their influence in putting an end to the rebellion, in making the taxes as light as possible whilst sustaining the public honor and credit, in bringing back prosperity to the great industrial interests of the North, and in preserving the great boon of Liberty, handed down to us by our patriotic fathers--the CONSTITUTION of the United States, on which the Republic rests. So says the New Haven Register and we entirely agree with it.

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Fiction and poetry

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Fiction and advertisements

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The Union Cause

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Excerpt:

"The buoyant feeling created by the success of our arms in Kentucky and Missouri is, we trust and believe, soon to be rendered still more joyful by the glad tidings that the stars and stripes have been hosted over the entrenchments of Manassas."

Treason and Loyalty

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Excerpt:

"Our neighbor [the Transcript] evidently don't know much about treason. If he were called upon to define it, he would probably say--'Treason consists in being a Democrat and adhering to the Constitution.' Loyalty, in his opinion, consists in being a Black Republican and selling bad horses to the government."

Full Text of Article

That brilliant legal and political luminary, the Transcript, says treason is "the lowest of crimes." If the editor will search his law books, he will probably learn that treason is one of the highest of crimes. Our neighbor evidently don't know much about treason. If he were called upon to define it, he would probably say--"Treason consists in being a Democrat and adhering to the Constitution." Loyalty, in his opinion, consists in being a Black Republican and selling bad horses to the government. The purchase of linen pantaloons and straw hats, with government money, is also a proof of loyalty in our neighbor's opinion. If BRIGHT, in place of foolishly writing a letter of introduction to JEFF DAVIS, had formed a partnership with CAMERON and swindled the government out of a few millions, what a patriot he might be.

Alarm Among the Renegades

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Excerpt:

"He [John W. Forney] is continually telling us that Democrats are disloyal, and all his small imitators throughout the State take their cue accordingly, and join in the hue and cry against the Democracy, carping at every move the party makes with the impudent interrogatory--"Is this loyalty?" The Chambersburg Times is a paper of this stamp."

Full Text of Article

That renegade and political cut-throat, JOHN W. FORNEY, has, for some time past spurted his venom against the Democratic party with an unusual degree of vindictiveness. There is no depth of meanness, no matter how low it requires him to stoop, to which he will not descend to injure and revile the Democratic party. He is evidently fearful that the Democracy will make a clean sweep of the State, at the next October election, and these apprehensions have filled him with fears and alarms, and excited his petulancy equal to the scolding capacity of any rebel beldam. Every fabrication, no matter how monstrous or how ridiculous, that he can invent, he puts in circulation to create prejudice against the Democracy. He is continually telling us that Democrats are disloyal, and all his small imitators throughout the State take their cue accordingly, and join in the hue and cry against the Democracy, carping at every move the party makes with the impudent interrogatory--"Is this loyalty?" The Chambersburg Times is a paper of this stamp. It imitates FORNEY to a crotchet, and gives him all the aid it can, in its feeble way, to cry down the Democratic party and keep it divided for the benefit of the Republicans. It keeps up a continual howl about "sympathizers with treason" but those persons who are "traitors" in its very loyal estimation are always sure to be Democrats. The Republicans may condemn the war because it is not made an Abolition war, and assail MCCLELLAN, and other Union Generals, and aught is not said against it, but let a Democratic paper undertake to show the enormous taxation with which the people will be burdened, and which might have been avoided if COMPROMISE, in place of shedding each others blood, had been adopted, and it is at once set down as "disloyal." To show the hypocritical meanness of the Times which professes to be ready to immolate any Democrat who will presume to talk in favor of compromise, or against the taxes which have been piled up on the people by the plunderings under this administration, we have only to refer to its last issue. In one column it copies a garbled extract from the Spirit and rolls up its eyes in holy horror over it and exclaims--"If this is loyalty, God preserve us from treason." In the very next column it pats His Satanic Majesty--THADDEUS STEVENS--very lovingly on the back and says "We do not accuse Mr. Stevens of disloyalty," and to make it more emphatic it reiterates in the same article "Our object is not to charge Stevens with disloyalty." Oh! No, never mention it! It would never do to charge a Black Republican Abolitionist with "disloyalty," but the Valley Spirit is fair game for every whelp to snarl at. How exceedingly anxious the Times is to screen Republicans and condemn Democrats, but in this it is only carrying out the dictation of its master FORNEY, who has recommended that "immediate steps be taken for the purpose of consolidating such a party at the next election as will put down the secession sympathizers forever." Meaning, of course, the Democrats, for that is the manner in which FORNEY speaks of the whole Democratic party. The Times is playing its part of the programme, in a small way, to perfection. Here is the convincing sample of its treachery. We give an extract from the Valley Spirit which the Times pronounces "disloyal," and an extract from a speech of THADDEUS STEVENS, delivered in congress a few weeks ago, whom the Times will "not accuse of disloyalty." We ask Democrats to compare them and then say if there is any honesty in the Times. We give the extracts without another word of comment:

From the Valley Spirit as garbled in the Times.

"We have a war which, no matter how soon it may end, will leave on our shoulders a debt of at least one thousand millions of dollars. This is the lowest amount we can escape with. The interest on this debt, at 7.80, the present treasury rate, will be seventy-three millions per annum. If the country is kept together and the Southern States are made to pay their proportion, Pennsylvania will have about one-tenth of this sum to raise--say seven millions of dollars a year. If the South gets off, Pennsylvania will have about one-sixth of it to make up--say twelve millions of dollars a year. Can the people of this State stand the grinding of additional taxes out of them to the amount of twelve millions per annum? Can they pay even seven millions over and above their present State, County, School, Borough and township taxes? We don't see how it is to be done. Perhaps those who would have no compromise with traitors' can tell me."

From a speech of Thaddeus Stevens in Congress
Dec. 16, 1861.

"The Committee of Ways and Means will have to report a deficiency bill, even after Congress appropriating $818,000,000 last July. We shall have to appropriate from one hundred and sixty to two hundred and fourteen million dollars more to make up the deficiencies for this fiscal year. We shall also have to report a bill making an appropriation of $413,000,000 for next year. We will then have to appropriate more than six hundred million dollars, without the addition of a single dollar beyond what is estimated for. Now, sir, that in itself is alarming. I confess I do not see how, unless the expenses are greatly curtailed, this Government can possibly go on over six months. If we go on increasing expenses, as we have been doing, and as we propose to do by this the whole country must give way, and the people will be involved in one general bankruptcy and ruin. For Heaven's sake do not let us go on piling mountains upon mountains of debt and taxation, until the nation itself is finally destroyed in the operations of this war.

Republican Intolerance

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Extremely Loyal

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Excerpt:

"[The editor of the Times] seems to be a perfect expert in loyalty and understands the exact length, breadth, height and depth of the thing."

In the Last Agony

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Excerpt:

"It has fed so voraciously on public plunder that it has become completely gorged, plethoric and inert...."
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Death of a Wealthy Citizen

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The Seventy Seventh

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Forwarded

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Where the Honor Belongs

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Released Prisoners

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Released

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Excerpt:

"This Franklin county boy proved a troublesome customer to the rebels. He was in the habit of flinging out the bitterest taunts when they came about, and rejoicing in the most boisterous manner over all the Union victories he could hear of. No punishment could tame him and the rebels were no doubt glad to get rid of him on any terms."

Iron Works Sold

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Played Out

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Excerpt:

"That dodge was attempted last fall and a few Democrats were cheated by it, but they were not long in discovering that as soon as the election was over the so-called 'Union Party' repudiated the Crittenden platform on which it professed to stand."

Visit to the Battle Field

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Excerpt:

"Great numbers lay in heaps, just as the fire of the artillery had mowed them down, mangling their forms into an almost indistinguishable mass. Many of our men had evidently fallen victim to the rebel sharpshooters, for they were pierced through the head by rifle bullets, some in the forehead, some in the eyes, others in the bridge of the nose, in the cheeks and in the mouth."

Proclamation of General Halleck

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Excerpt:

"Let us show to our fellow citizens in those States that we come merely to crush rebellion, and restore to them peace and the benefits of the Constitution and the Union, of which they have been deprived by selfish and unprincipled leaders. They have been told that we come to oppress and plunder. By our acts we will undeceive them."

Full Text of Article

Headquarters Department Of Missouri,


ST. LOUIS, February 23

The Major-General Commanding the Department desires to impress upon all officers the importance of preserving good order and discipline among their troops as the armies of the West advance into Tennessee and the Southern States.

Let us show to our fellow citizens in those States that we come merely to crush rebellion, and restore to them peace and the benefits of the Constitution and the Union, of which they have been deprived by selfish and unprincipled leaders. They have been told that we come to oppress and plunder. By our acts we will undeceive them. We will prove to them that we come to restore not to violate the Constitution and the laws. In restoring to them the glorious flag of the Union, we will assure them that they shall enjoy under its folds the same protection of life and property as of former days.

Soldiers! let no excess on your part tarnish the glory of our arms!

The order heretofore issued in this Department, in regard to pillaging and maurading, the destruction of private property, and the stealing or concealment of slaves, must be strictly enforced. It does not belong to the military to decide upon the relation of master and slave. Such questions must be settled by the civil courts. No fugitive slave will therefore be admitted within our lines or camps, except when specially ordered by the general commanding.

Women and children, merchants, farmers, mechanics, and all persons not in arms, are regarded as non-combatants, and are not to be molested either in their persons or property. If, however they aid and assist the enemy, they become beligerents, and will be treated as such. As they violate the laws of war, they will be made to suffer the penalties of such violation.

Military stores and the public property of the enemy must be surrendered, and any attempt to conceal such property by fraudulent transfers or otherwise, will be punished but no private property will be touched unless by order of the General commanding. Wherever it becomes necessary to obtain forced contributions for the supply and subsistence of our troops, such levies will be made as light as possible, and to be so distributed as to produce no distress among the people. All property so taken must be receipted and fully accounted for, as heretofore directed.

These orders will be read at the head of eve[r]y regiment, and all officers are commanded to strictly enforce them.

By command of
MAJOR GENERAL HALLECK.
W. H. McLean, Adjutant General.

Married

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Died

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Died

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Died

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Other war news and classified advertisements.

"We are sorry...."

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Classified advertising

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Also classified advertising

Shall the Union be Saved?

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Excerpt:

"No future is now acceptable to [the radicals] except the prospect of blazing cities, of servile insurrections, and all the ghastly horrors of a war of extermination."