Fxtract of a letter from an officer in Lord Wellingtun’s army, dated Celerico, June 6:— On the morning of the

... and the supremacy of the parent State was acknowledged with perfect sabmission wud complaceney. In the vicinity of the Caribbean J 2., the same disposition was not apparent. ‘The dissentions in Venezucla had been ¢xtesied to the whole colony of the Caraccas ...

Published: Monday 16 July 1810
Newspaper: Coventry Standard
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3471 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

LGAN SOCIETIES BILL

... carried from the lake to the nearest point of tha Pacific Ocean (a distance of 5} leagues,) so as to connect it with the Caribbean Sca. The canal, for a certain distance, should be conducted by a tunrel, through a hill elevated 487 English feet above the ...

Published: Saturday 15 August 1840
Newspaper: Berwick Advertiser
County: Northumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 803 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

ol R Ly & ——— 11 Coireapondenee, THE PEACE-PARTY AND THE WAR. STRICTURES ON A LETTER OF MR, RICHARD TO

... “taken from the French,” Itis ratler singular that not one of these places is in France. Most of them are islands in the Caribbean Sea (West Indies), and some of them were alternately in possession of the British and Frenehyalthough now wholly under the ...

it A .q that a positive demand was made upon England, and that our Government brought in the Conspiracy Bill

... \‘]}' :uh- | ;,:i;};';’;.x‘:,yl;c|;:“”:l‘i !:';r:.l:“ :l::’n n” '”l] e s g Wheat :l ',vi R in the southern part of the Caribbean Sea, about 50 miles | sals e e Sy speech (laughter). detached building, which would be sufficient for all that | . T require ...

INTERNATIONAL AGGRESSION

... Falkland Tslands but to control the commerce that passes round Cape Horn, while Trinidad gives her all she desires in the Caribbean Sea.’ Halifax at one point, and Bermuda at anothery stand out in great force over our own coast from one extremity to the ...

STORM WARNINGS

... England to the Equator, leaving the regions of the Central and Northern Pacific, the north coast of South America and the Caribbean Sea, altogether unrepresented. A curious investigation has been conducted by the Marine Branch of the Office in reference ...

OCCASIONAL NOTES

... Simon, a naturalist, on the Sierra Nevada of New Granada. Tt appears that these mountains, familiar to the navigator of the Caribbean sea, are more than 17,000 feet high, and entirely distinet from the Andes formation. Mr. Clements Markham greeted the lecture ...

New York World

... N.P. The island here alluded to is the islet of Santa Catalina, 'sing about ninety miles off the Mosquito cm-tat in the Caribbean lea, and forming one of the little group known to the few who know anything of Spanish-Ameriout history as the islands of ...

Published: Tuesday 27 December 1881
Newspaper: Toronto Daily Mail
County: Ontario, Canada
Type: Article | Words: 972 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

'MORAL REFORMS IN SOCIAL LIFE. By J. PyweL,, F.RS

... and about eight miles in length by five in breadth. It is formed of a cluster of voleanic mountain tops, rising ont of the Caribbean Sea to the height of 3,000 feet. The steep sides of these hills are covered with virgin forests, abounding in graceful palm—which ...

EXTRAORDINARY ADVEN|URE OF SAILORS. WRECKED AND ATTACKED BY PIKATES

... White Star steamer Germanic, arrived s Liverpool, has brought particulars of an extrs ordinary case of shipwreck in the Caribbean Ses. The Gellert, a Britich vessel, commanded by Captain Long, which wss bound to San Domingo, wheo pesr the island of Catslinita ...

COUNTRY LIFE ILLUSTRATED

... keeping time to the clang of his engines. Along in 1879 I was chief engineer of the Staffordshire, a steamer that was in the Caribbean and South American trade. Tbe third ·mate of the steamer was a curious old chap who had been master of a ship in his time ...

Published: Saturday 04 June 1898
Newspaper: Country Life
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3615 | Page: 13 | Tags: none