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Date

April 1845
1 17 3 19

Newspaper

Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier

Countries

Ireland

Access Type

4

Type

4

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Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier

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... moved that the report be received, printed, and circulated. Mr. 8. O’BRIEN seconded the motion, and it passed. Mr. HENRY GRATTAN addressed the meeting, and pressed his approbation, a Protestant, of the grant to Maynooth. Although he was apt not to go ...

rnrot. .ml the tyrant', ignominy. The they burned .ltd -corned, .re .hiding .monpt m. »rir..dnln and .ni.njting ..

... reprodticme—their principle- Immortal, astli-ir soul* interpenetrate all time—for ever working good to man. And thus did Grattan, knowing «ellathis fact, knowing how the great spirit had been cherished at their foimMin*. when length «t»v«l before country ...

-K, - riBST BANQUET OF THE ’B2 CLUB. iilnati— -* •*— —■ aft the Roj“V, wiila-—**T •vaaing. It a magmficmt

... picture of Grattan moving the Declaration of Irish Independence on the floor of the Irish House of Parliament on the 16th April, 1782, The picture contains portraits of all the celebrated Irish statesmen that day, and is the property of Mr. H. Grattan, one ...

accused partiality, If too little isfight eccsesed Irtdlffercnce, and if he silent it might attributed, not ..

... sprung up like armed men. She had likewise Hushe, Yclverton.Daly. who alike contended for the Independence of their country. Yes, there they stood. [The bon. gentleman pointed a painting of the Irish House of Commons, when Mr. Grattan moved the bill the ...