Refine Search

Countries

Counties

Leicestershire, England

Access Type

7

Type

7

Public Tags

No tags available

1345,

... seen to be imperative towards the close of 1845, and Sir Robert Peel resigned office in order that Lord John Russell and the Whigs might come in and grapple with this vexed question. Lord John was unable to form a Ministry, however, and on the sth of December ...

1841,

... 1841, Perhaps the most remarkabie event of this year was the change of Ministry, consequent on the defeat of the Whig Government, Sir Robert Peel taking Lord Melbourne's place as Prime Minister. The Queen’s parting with Lord Melbourne was a very trying ...

LORD HARTIN GTON'S ATTITUDE

... ard restatement of the ciews to which he has loyally adhered since Mr. | Gladstone turned Separatiet, anathematised the | Whigs, and resolved to pit the masses agaiost the slasses. Lord Hartington has never receded an wch from the ground he took up when ...

CURRENT OPINION

... their numbers, The most eminent of Mr. Gladstone's former colleagues, the ablest and most unimpeachable inberitors of | the Whig traditions to which he has lately appealed after ill-advised expressions of contempt, men distinguished for official expericnce ...

HARBY

... full. The pig was won by Mis. |. Fox. On \\'cdnm‘la) the yejoicings ended in a gurden parly W the Vicarage ' geounds, aud Whigs nding prole will remember the Jubikee as one of the ot successful cvenes of their Yives. : T DERAYHS : On the I)th inst., gy ...

POLITICAL AND PARLIAMENTARY

... pa ox! ¥, ;mt this unfoubtgs;y was the case, tgn the Unionist party was basel on the negation of rrty (hear, hear). Tories, Whigs, Liberals, and Radicals bhad united to meet a common enemy. Men had disdained and become indifferent to the power, the patronage ...

NOTES

... the Liberal party of that time rejected all thonght of ]v;nty wain at the expense of the Union. “As you arc the head of the Whigs in Ircland,” wrote Lord John Russell, e TR U TR 1 wish you would write to Lord Charlemont and others to beware of countenancing ...