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Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland

Access Type

64

Type

61
3

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VOYAGE OF GKEAI' BKITAIN ft# MELBOURNE—

... manafatures and Yankee nvtions abroad. They had the Collins’ steamers, and Hobb’s locks, and M*Cormick’s reapers, aad George Francis Train’s city 8, and Col.’s revolvers, and the Black Swan, and Goodse: aod Trist’s machiues, and Paul Murphy, aod Fred. and ...

GLASGOW•

... fortnightly mee•ing of this committee was held on Monday—the Lord Provost presiding. A communication was read from Mr George Francis Train, of Westminster, proposing to construct a double line of rails for a street railway from the Cross to the Goshet House ...

Published: Saturday 24 November 1860
Newspaper: Renfrewshire Independent
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1817 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE

... experiment should at least have a “‘ clear road,” if ‘‘no Globe says, The new str-et railway which bas bees put down by Mr George Francis Train in the Bayswater Road, was on Saturday for the first time. Perhaps none of oar great public thoroughfares are better ...

STREET RAILWAYS—G. F. TRAIN

... thing whatever, except in concrete or material form. This has been exemplified, in no instance more than in the ease of George Francis Train and Street Railways. From the time first mooted their adoption in England, he has met with nothing but opposition from ...

THE CHARGE AGAINST SIR JOHN SHELLEY. Ths Observer gives the following:— 18 St. Jemes' Street, July 20,1R61. Sir ..

... will cot only hold you personally responsible, but give yon a publicity you never contemplated.—Yours, &c. (Signed) George Francis Train. To Sir John V. Shelley, 66 St James' Street, Piccadi:ly. Copy of Sir John V. Shel 'ey's reply:— St James's Street ...

THE RENFRENVSHIRE INDEPENDENT, SEPTMpII, 20, 1862

... their troubles,.however, they were each served w ith 'modest' sum from the poor box'Tß WAY' TRAIN'h Y BRE tKTASTi. — Mr George Francis Train came to this country from America some two years ago, for the purpose of introducing into England his system of trsunways ...

Published: Saturday 20 September 1862
Newspaper: Renfrewshire Independent
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 9396 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

XERIZAN :iZATORY

... :iZATORY GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN, of tramway notoriety, has been holding forth in America in the following strain : ' I am among Christians once more,' says Mr Train. ' The English are a nation of cowards, and have been so all the day, of their lives. Where ...

Published: Saturday 18 October 1862
Newspaper: Renfrewshire Independent
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2151 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

EEKLY JOURNAL. PAISLEY, OCTOBER 25,

... meeting utterly refused to hear a response.' Free speech, such as had been invited, was not permilUL The friends of Mr. George Francis Train, who with him had remained quietly for two mortal hours listening to Mr. Sumner, thought it only fair that he should ...

Published: Saturday 25 October 1862
Newspaper: Renfrewshire Independent
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1888 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

4

... of the mother country, whatever we may learn to the contrary from such pestilent mountebanka as Camilla M. Clay and George Francis Train—now known to the New York boys as ' Luny Train.l his frightful humbug,' as Manhattan describes him, is still seeking ...

Published: Saturday 20 December 1862
Newspaper: Renfrewshire Independent
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 973 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE RENFREWSHIRE INDEPENDENT; JANUARY _3l: tea

... assisted in freeing themselves from 'the domestic institution.' From the American news we learn that the mountebank George Francis Train has narrowly escaped lynching in Wisconsin. A Confederate gturison, numbering 7000, have been surrounded and captured ...

Published: Saturday 31 January 1863
Newspaper: Renfrewshire Independent
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 6680 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

FREDERICK DOUGLASS LECTURING IN NEW YORK

... everybody knows, an immensity of Bancombe oratory in America, and of that ** high-falatin” in which Mr Robert J. Walker, Mr George Francis Train, and the Rev. Mr Beeeher so greatly excel; but there is none of it about Mr Douglass. He not only speake infinitely ...

PRESIDENT JOHNSON AND MR BANCROFT

... are becoming harmonius, and are beginning to have beariog upon England. In fact, it is thought at Washington that George Francis Train's declaration at the Cooper Institute that ' the head-quarters of Fenianism were in the Taileiies of Paris' was not ...