To the EDITOR of the MORNING CHRONICLE
... Thomnas Flight. Afc days since, aged 34, Mrs. Pilgtirm',e zf Charles Pil- gri.sa. £sq. tampatcad . On his passage from the West Indies, Captain Mann, of the Royal Art'lery, edest son of General Marm. ...
... Thomnas Flight. Afc days since, aged 34, Mrs. Pilgtirm',e zf Charles Pil- gri.sa. £sq. tampatcad . On his passage from the West Indies, Captain Mann, of the Royal Art'lery, edest son of General Marm. ...
... a' correO2 idea of the nature of our disease, -read Dr. Chieshiol's. Essay on the Malignant 'Pestilential Fever of the West Indies, which is ea&ly our disease,, so corred in every particular that you would suppose he had written fioimi what le had seen ...
... from Sir TiIMAs DsUCKWORTH, announcing the captUre of t several Fiench privateers that had annoyed' our tiade eL 8 the West Indies. The Polyphemus, one of the 'ships belonging to Sir jOlN ORDE'S squadion, arrived on Tuesday at Suit- head, having captured ...
... presentatiors to hbs M stv,. -119,,r tt intraduced the Lords ofthe ''reasury. Mr. Bearcroft, upon his return fromn the West Indies, by the ,Loxa in WariTing. c stain O'Bryan, of the Royal Navy, by the Marquis Tho- Major Ogg, on rlisoeingappointed Groom ...
... any more rational ideas of the means of reducing the power than they *had when they. expecaed to conquer France in the West; Indies ' * Letters 'and papers from Holland to the i5th, are received. They mention the transport of a vast quan- tity of military ...
... Thatthere be iaidbe. fore the Hoouse an Account of the qtuaixtity of Raw Sugar ian- n ported into this Country from the West Indies, andi efthc quan- I tity of Raw or Refined Sugars exported from this Country, w ith 4, the duties and drawbacks oni the ...
... hie himself-in a'great measure had, re- a in commncided. The German Leg~ion- The Corps of er Blacks for servica in the West Indies, and eight le Battalions, to be raised. for rank had been, set a 1, on foot by hisn. The two formier ]had been In (¶. Tied ...
... to avod Lord NELSON'S? fleet, the Toulon squadron would steer up, and, leaving the Mediterranean proceed to. the East or West Indies. The Catamaran Admiialty have certainly taken upon themselves a deep responsibi. .lity for the safety of our Sugar Colonies ...
... in pursuit of them. Thedestination of this squadron is notyetascertained, for they might be going either to the East or West Indies, or the Brazils, when seen ofF Madeira. A serious alarm, however, is entertained for the Leeward Islands, which, if the ...
... place. between his Majesty's Secretary of State, and the Governors or Civil Officers of his Majesty's Co- lonies in the West Indies, on the subjesit of the Abolition of the Slave Trade. Ordered-to lie on the Table. - 'I'he House then went into a Committee ...
... House to the nature of the Slave Trade, and to the state of the Slaves in the West Indies. What he had all along contended and , complained of was, that our Slaves in the West Indies were kept in a state of utter degradation, below the level t of the human ...
... particulaily if it is gone to Sicily, as some conjeLture_ The prevalent -opinion is, that the Rochefort squadion is gone to the West Indies. The agitation excited in America in consequence ofj the impressing of sealmen, natives of or belonrinc to th X United States ...