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Advertisements & Notices

... were laden or light; 131 of these ships were en- tirely lost, and thirty-three sustained partial danage. Of the 698 lives lost the very great number of 275 were lost in vessels that foundered, fifty-three lives were lost on board vessels in ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... people. It was said that it would be but an act of justice to pay the parties this money: —that these merchants who had lost their ships and cargoes in war had sustained loss for which the country was bound to make them compensation. Whether it was right ...

Advertisements & Notices

... operating on the Weather. Miscellaneous Hints to Emigrants: flints t o Pawnbrokers, Landlords, and Tenants; an account of Ships Lost at Sea; a compple Chronology of General and Local Events for the past year; Herschel's Weather Table, as revised by Dr. ...

Advertisements & Notices

... this Corporation havin- this T day resolved to order. theat the Widows of the Petty Olfi- cers and Seamen who were lost in iis Majesty's ships. St. George, I)efenc-e, Hero, and S2lianha, litely wrecked, shall be put on the Boiks oftlhsl Corporation for the ...

Advertisements & Notices

... tiayar syg commenced 1.l 'h mot oot- M ?? and tie thriee last mentioned v sses otinuedrinha esrlec ufp to tahq jlade of lost year. The, ships. of, the Company htvei n~veixpele~c~t ny casualty, ad,1 bave 066bfriaed ther 'edverid voyage with great1 punctuality ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... previous night had found its way tc the order book. The lord the President of the Board Trade, in,dealing with list sixteen ships lost which he (Mr. Pltmsoll) had •iiven hems grain-laden, had summarily disposed I lirst lour saying that two them had mixed ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... a new ship, built by Sir R. Sydney, was now made a receiving-ship at Woolwich. The Redoubtable, also a good ] ship, which was never at sea, was condemned, and broken up i at Chatham-yard. By these, and other such proceedings, i the navy had lost her best ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... none of our merchants choose to employ their ship* in so hazardous a traffic. When the time of scarcity comes, not a moment is to be lost in despatching ships laden with grain ; we cannot wait for our own ships to and fetch it; and, owing to their employment ...

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE

... experienced dreadful weather Aug. 22. lat. 31 8. long. 31 E., during which she lost lower maintopsail, two boats ana skids, and everything moveable from the decks ; she also lost one man overboard. —Holbeach, Boston, a vessel 38 tons, sand ballast, stranded ...

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE

... seriously. The former vessel proceeded in the morning.— Cauntleis, brig, is reported from Amble, Oct. 20, to have been lost, Hay. Crew lost; vessel a complete wreck.— Aguia, of Middlesbrough, from Poole, got ashore one mile from btallingborough Kiln, River ...

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE

... SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. (From Lloyd'!, Jan. 27.) WRECKS AND CASUALTIES. Eliza, of Belfast, leaving Belfast January, at 8.30 p.m., collided with tiie Curlew, brigantine, Ardro&san, and got part port bulwarks earned away. The damage is trilling ; the Curlew ...

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE

... SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. L ' fFROM Lr.oTD's, Nor. 6.) ■WTIECKS AND CASTJALTIES.-Captain Jones, of the British (rantine Amanda, Carnarvon, from Middlesborough, laden with pig iron and coke, arrived at Naples ; reports that on 7th October experienced very ...