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Place

Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Access Type

171

Type

171

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ABOLITION OF THE IRISH COURT

... the fashion in which it has been taken up by our esteemed correspondent, either wise or prudent. Holding out the hope to Irishmen, that if their court be now abolished, it may lead to the obtainment, instead of a Viceroy, of a Queen and parliament for ...

THE NEW CORPORATION—ABOLITION OF THE IRISH COURT

... country to sell. And yet this ai corporate body, representing, as it will, the commercial inte- rests of the second city in the United Kingdom, might, if directed by the pervading influence of earnest and honest wv patriotism, be on the citadel of their capital's ...

NATIONAL PROTEST AGAINST PENAL LAWS

... the Prime Minister of William III. We who, by being united, wrung Catholic Emancipation from the Duke of Wellington, ought, by pulling together n6w, be able to restrain Lord John Russell. We should unite and make one great effort. in support of freedom of ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... because Lord John Russell lad seen the Protestant Dissenter and the Catholic in this country united by one common bond, and that he feared this union of Irishmen, that he had flung this apple of discord amongst them ? Too lung had the people of Ireland ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... praying the rijec- tion of the penal measures at present before the legislature, directed against the Catholic church in the United Kingdcm. There could not have been lees than 10,000 persons present, and the greatest enthusiasm was manifested by the vast ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... Catholic church (loud cheers)? WVill you not so rally (cbeers) ? Yes you will, and as becomes Irishmen and Catholics, and more especially Irish Catholics, you will unite in oneserried phalanx to rally round the treedom of the church, which the invader found ...

THE [ill] OF THE IRISH TENANT LEAGUE [ill] PEOPLE

... and ENGLISH AND SCOTCH THE MAJORITY LI HER POPULATioN. The nine or ten millions who, by that time, will have settled in the United States cannot sell be much less friendly, and will certainly be much better cus- tomers than they now are. When the Celt has ...

THE STOCKPORT RIOTS

... too Igreat an extent between certain classes of Englishmen and Irishmen who might be residing in such places as Stockport; but he must remind them that as Ire- land was a portion of the United Kingdom, the Irish had as great a right to take up their residence ...

THE PHŒNIX CLUB PROSECUTIONS

... They refused to give that great man a setat on the be ch because he was an Irise barrister and was it now to be said that Irishmen were such crawling slaves-that the iron bad entered so deeply into their aoule-that they hnd lost so utterly their aelf.reepeet ...

THE TUAM SCHOOLS CASE

... side of the channel, snd I hope and trust that the faithful of bi your diocese, and those unprojudiced Protestants of the United Kingdom, will combine, and give some substantial proof of their sympathy towards the poor children over whom Providence hae ...

SPRING ASSIZES

... sh wiwas unparalleled by nnything that occurred in Syria. Another gentleman, Dr. Madden, author of thie Lives of the United Irishmen, favoured him (Mr. M1'ecllan) with his lucrubrations on the Orarigesysten, doubtless witi tile view of assisting his defeice ...