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AMERICA AND MEXICO

... political capital, in aid of hit views. Thus, the defence of New Orleans, in 1814-15, made Gen! Jackson President of these United States; ii itj therefore, surprising that Gen. Taylor's friends, or squatter Benton's (the would-be lieut.-general of the ...

PROJECTED IRISH CANADA COMPANY

... Great Britain and the United States should proceeu on land in Canada, and to invest there the earnings oiit nllt they would thus create an opening the labour market o tries which would naturally filled up, heretofore', gj. j by Irishmen, anxious to through ...

THE ELECTIONS

... the removal of the last vestiges of religious intolerance, and that, hereafter, the privileges of the free people of this united kingdom—the privileges of serving the crown and representing the people in parliament—are to be enjoyed by all the subjects ...

IRELAND

... promote the interest of Ireland—and although we feel disappointed and humiliated that the ready and cordial liberality of the united parliament, and the noble, the universal, munificence of the British people during our late calamities, have been met, in ...

COLONIAL

... great majority of Canadians of both origins. Success in such an undertaking will entitle him to the lasting gratitude of a united and therefore of a prosperous and happy P °l?umourB of a dissolution of the provincial parliament had been spread, but were ...

IRELAND

... It was most painful to a man's feelings to go into a club-room in London, and hear them speak of the inconsistencies of' Irishmen. ' Look, they say, how their representatives act; and there is Mr O'Brien chaired to-day by the people of Limerick; and in ...

IRELAND

... indictments be tolerated except in this country, where the liberty of speech and of action was the right of every subject in the United Kingdom. But that liberty of speech and of action was regulated by law, and had its necessary limits. In our free country ...

PROCEEDINGS IN IRELAND

... property, and to respect vested interests. Resolved-That while we maintain loyalty to our Sovereign, we deem it our duty as Irishmen to testify our attachment to our country; and inasmuch as the Impe- rial Parliament has failed to make the Union a source ...

Published: Sunday 14 May 1848
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1291 | Page: 12 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

STATE PROSECUTIONS

... Irish people to fraternize with the citizens of the United States of America. He then pro- eeded :] One of the objects of the Irish Confederation was the formation of an Irish brigade in the United States of America, with a view of inducing those people ...

IRELAND

... committed to gaol on a charge of felony, under the 11th Victoria, cap. 12, for two seditious articles, which appeared in the United Irishman newspaper of the 6tb and 13th of the present month, the tendency of those articles being, ma set forth in the ...

IRELAND

... sworn before him, that Mr Mitchel had committed felonies under the act of 11th Victoria, by writing and publishing, in the ' United Irishman' newspaper, certain articles on the 6th and 13th of this month, addressed to the Protestant farmers, labourers, and ...

THE STATE PROSECUTIONS

... style, honour, and royal name of the imperial crown of the United Kingdom; and that lie did also compass, imagine, invent, devise, and intend to levy war against her Majesty, within the United Kingdom, in order, by force and constraint, to compel her to ...