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Daily comet
Daily comet








Title varies slightly: Daily gazette & comet, Mar. United States-Louisiana-East Baton Rouge-Baton Rouge Crenshaw, 1856-Įast Baton Rouge Parish (La.)-Newspapers

  • Daily Gazette and Comet (Baton Rouge, La.) 1856-186?īaton Rouge, La.
  • Provided By: Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, LA Publication of the Daily Gazette and Comet was suspended for about two months during the Civil War and appears to have ceased entirely by war’s end in favor of a weekly edition with which it had been published concurrently since 1856. Also of interest is news related to other local institutions, including the Louisiana Institution for the Deaf, Dumb and Blind and the newly founded Louisiana Historical Society, which Pike served as secretary. In addition to business news, Pike reported on sessions of the state legislature. Although the city’s population was then only about 5,500, it was one of the most important shipping centers on the lower Mississippi River and had served as Louisiana’s capital of for eleven years. Published Tuesday through Saturday in four pages, the Daily Gazette and Comet consisted primarily of advertisements and thus helps document Baton Rouge’s commercial life on the eve of the Civil War. Pike himself disagreed with Republican ideology in regard to slavery but considered Lincoln to have been fairly elected and encouraged southerners to adopt a “wait and see” attitude. (The city ultimately cast the majority of its votes for Bell.) After the election, the paper reported local and regional responses to Lincoln’s victory. In the months leading up to the election, the Daily Gazette and Comet reported on the activities of Unionists in and around Baton Rouge and on meetings of Bell and Douglas clubs. Louisiana secessionists whom Pike criticized included Senator John Slidell and Governor Thomas Overton Moore.

    daily comet

    However, he also spoke favorably of pro-Union Democrat Stephen A.

    daily comet

    In the presidential election of 1860, he supported Constitutional Union Party candidate John Bell of Tennessee and his running mate Edward Everett of Massachusetts. Pike opposed southern secession and called for compromise on the issue of slavery. By 1856, the party had split over the issue of slavery, whereupon Pike, now editor of the Daily Gazette and Comet, shifted his focus to the growing sectional crisis between North and South. Pike, George Pike had been an outspoken member of the anti-Catholic, nativist Know-Nothing Party, which he promoted as editor of the Morning Comet and its predecessor the Daily Comet. The brother of prominent Baton Rouge landowner and businessman William S. McWhorter’s Baton Rouge Daily Gazette were consolidated to form the Daily Gazette and Comet, which Pike edited with Rev. About Daily Gazette and Comet (Baton Rouge, La.) 1856-186?










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