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South East, England

Place

Canterbury, Kent, England

Access Type

90

Type

90

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THE QUEEN'S SPEECH

... in the morning press ; there is not one of the journals that assimilates so nearly to the Whigs as the Post-- indeed it maintains that the principles of the Whigs and the Conservatives are now all but identical, with the exception of free-trade. We repeat ...

Published: Tuesday 12 August 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 662 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

CANTERBURY JOURNAL

... dominions, not even excepting those whose means of nhsistence are dependent the continuance in of the Whig Government, more desirous of Riamtaii.uig the Whigs in Downing-strect. than the ! itcctionist noble lord. It otherwise with tome his followers. They ...

IRELAND

... RELAND EMIGRATION FROM Northern Whig savs :—‘“‘In addition to the 270 emigrants who left Belfast in the Sir Colin Campbell, for New York, on Saturday, the fine American ship Mary Annah, con- veyed about the same number from our quays on Thursday The Mary ...

Published: Tuesday 24 June 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 150 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

CANTERBURY JOURNAL

... from tbit which —for the moment—ii , t.e Iradiog characteristic of the teason and the J*s * art accustomed the difficulties of Whig- Radiol cabinet, but are not quite so much in the habit seeing all the world our gitei to ipend the summer in scrutinising ...

THE MINISTRY AND REFORM OF PARLIA MENT

... be difficult to make a much more complicated mess of our domestic, colonial, and foreign relations, than the snug family of Whigs have man- aged to get them into; still the Walmesley clique are not exactly the men we should like to see at the head of affairs ...

Published: Tuesday 21 October 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 1094 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

POLITICAL RUMOURS

... , NOY. 18, 185]. is, Only rumour in the political world this w eek that Mr. Frederick Peel, in accepting office under the Whigs, did so with the approbation o f Sir James Graham, whom he went dow n to Netherby, to con- sult. This is looked upon a 8 indicative ...

Published: Tuesday 18 November 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 262 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE KENTISH GAZETTE

... introduce a paragraph of congratulation upon the Prosperity of the countrv. We trust that an announcement wil| accompany the Whig that her Ministers pur- pose to revise the law for the protection of home produce, or she will have soon to deplore the ruin ...

Published: Tuesday 04 February 1851
Newspaper: Kentish Gazette
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 283 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE PROTESTANT CHAMPION

... oor Protestant constitution. The occasion for them arose in the coarse of long debate upon vote ot want of confidence in the Whig, or rather Popiab, ministry of the day *** But/ the honorable gentleman, * If voa do not mean repeal the Catholic Emancipation ...

CANTERBURY JOURNAL

... of confuaton and disorganisation at present that it ia difficult to what is to done in the future. The great object of the Whigs has ever been from the first moment they came into jiuu so act as to cut and 'split parties and interest* into sections, pamper ...

CANTERBURY journal

... complacency chceae parings «artJ cutting down the salaries of subordinate*, anu doubt highly applauded the act. only conaonant with Whig retrenchment and economy ”j but the moment the knife ia to applied his own n the recommendation of the Official Salaries Committee ...

CANTERBURY JOURNAL

... further state that the impending resignation will real one. and not sham resignation, like the last. Not. indeed, that the Whigs are desirous that it should be real, but that circumstances which they uuut control will make it to. Wc believe »’e tokjr Ktueitk ...

EATE-PATKaa or mauoatb

... expressed himself thus :—“ Tbe Whigs,” exclaimed the chairman. •* were at present out of office; and Ae believed the people mi large would not re§ret it, Whig out of office might make very fair and liberal profes>ions, but Whig in office was synonymous with ...