On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (5)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
IRELAND. f%
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
Produce of the Harvest . —From all quarters the reports respecting the yield of the current year ' s harvest are highly satisfactory . The partial failure of the potato has been more than counterbalanced b y the abundance of the ceroal crops , especially oats , which , both as regards quantity and quality , have been rarely surpassed . New Ross Election . —According to the Daily Express , a petition against the return of Mr . Charles Gaven Duffy lias been lodged in the proper office ; and Mr . Serjeant Wrangham has been retained as leading counsel for the petitioners .
The Murder of a Soldier . —Under the date of " Fermoy ; Wednesday Evening , " the Cork Constitution has the following paragraph on the subject of the assassination of the soldier of the 3 lst Regiment : — "At ten o ' clock last night Sub-inspector Sommerville , on some information which he received , started from this town with 30 of his men , and after some trouble succeeded in arresting some ten or eleven individuals residing on and around the mountains of Ballyholly , who are charged as having been directly indirectl
or y implicated in the above murder . On their return they gave Mrs . M'Grath , the landlady of the hotel where poor Deegan met his untimely fate , a friendly call , and requsted her to accompany them to Fermoy , where they arrived this morning at half-past seven , considerably fatigued , and [ deposited their charge in the police barrack here , where a private investigation is taking place before Neill Browne , Esq ., R . M ., and some of the local magistrates , the results of which will not be known for a few days . "
The 0 Connell PROPERTY . —The last remnant of the 6 'Connell property in Kerry was sold last week at Tralee under an order of the Encumbered Estates court . But two lots remained to be sold , the net aggregate yearly value of which was about 210 / ., and the sum brought by the sale was 4 , 520 / ., the purchasers being unconnected with the family . The Galway Packet Station . —It is expected that the Galway gentry , assembled at the great fair of Ballinasloe , which commences to-day , will adopt some course for the improvement of their harbour , so as to suit it for a packet station . It is said that they are prepared to guarantee the repayment of any amount of money that may be required for the purpose .
Priests and Soldiers . —A lengthy correspondence appears in the Tuam Herald , with reference to a complaint against a military officer stationed at Ballinrobe , for ordering the Roman catholic soldiers under his charge out of chapel during service , without sufficient cause . Mr . Bright in Belfast . *—A public dinner was given to Mr . Bright , M . P , for Manchester , at Belfast , on Monday .
Brutal Outrage . —Sounders' News Letter hzs the following : Moate , Oct . 4 . —A herd , named John Daly , living about four miles from this town , was last night cruelly beaten by three ruffians who entered his house and left him for dead ; his children gathered around him , and crying fearfully , lifted the poor man from the ground ; his brutal assailants returned , and again struck him six or seven blows , asking him , "Would he ever dare to summon any of the tenants again ? " The only offence committed by Daly was summoning , by direction of his landlord , some persons who had trespassed , and carried away bog stuff , though duly cautioned against doing so .
Untitled Article
Accident on the Great Northern Railway . —On Monday night an accident , which might have been attended with very serious consequences , occurred to the Great Northern express train , consisting of eight first-class carnages , on the main line near Newark . About a mile north of that town the Great Northern intersects the Midland branch from Nottingham to Lincoln , almost at right angles . Signals are of course provided for the prevention of accidents , but it appears from some cause or other , not as yet satisfactorily explained , the Great Northern express and a Midland goods train arrived at the point of intersection at the same instant . They were both going at full speed , and the former dashed through the middle of the goods train , hurling one of the trucks into the river which runs just by , and throwing several others off the line . All the
carnages of the passenger train were much damaged , but happily not one of the passengers was seriously hurt . This , it is believed , was owing to the facility with which the express severed the goods train nevertheless , looking at the state of the carriages , which were too much shattered to proceed on . the journey , and the circumstances under which the collision took place , the escape of so many persons with so little injury seems almost miraculous .
Fatal Accident at the Blaokwall Railway Station . — -On Monday an inquest was held by Mr . W . Baker , at the London Hospital , on the body of Mary Phillips , aged sixty-three years . The deceased was the wife of an eating-house keeper , of No . 3 , Horseshoe-court , Clerkenwell . On the evening of August the 29 th the deceased and a male friend proceeded from Blackwall by railway and in a third-class carriage , and when the train stopped at the Fen church-street station the deceased got out on to the platform beim ?
at me time intoxicated . Directly afterwards an alarm was raised by the guard , just as the train was starting on its return to Blackwall , when the deceased was lying between the front of the platform and the carriages . The deceased was released by the servants of the company , when she was found to have received a severe injury to her right hand , whereby several of the fingers were cut off . She was conveyed to the hospital , where she lingered and died on Saturday last . Mr . Alfred Dell , the house-surgeon , said the deceased died from exhaustion from the operation and shock to the system Ver diet : " Accidental death . "
Man Lost in Loch DooN .-We are sorry to have to record the somewhat unusual event of a person being lost in LochDoon It appears that on Wednesday , the 15 th , a party of men , engag ed at the ironworks , having procured a boat , resolved to have a day ' s amuse ment on the loch . Between eight and nine o ' clock , p . m ., they landed near Craigmulloch , with the exception of a man named Alexander Reid , who insisted on remaining in the boat till the rest returned , lins was agreed to , and on his companions returning , Reid was missing , nothing but his cap being left in the boat . It was thought by his companions that he had started by the road for Dalmellmcton % Z ^^ £ ^*™ «* ™*! M- '
Jy . appearance Sfrhthl % ^ ° % T ^ becomin S ^ rmed Ltouuo watch the loch , and if possible to discover the body of their comrade who by this time there was too much ground to fear , had met with a watery U grave S . There was no appearance of the corpse today Sr , ? T ^ When , f orts were made fo < ^ recovery unu Sabbath a ternoon , when a dark object was observed on the Surface found to bethe corpse of * i \ ^ s l ^ o Z Klhi loch , and afterwards conveyed by a cart to the village
. ACoNVERT .-Davis , a pensioner , receiving 2 s . a day as a discharged sergeant of the 25 th regiment , and living at yLl hi been struck off the list by the Chefeea commissioners , for canying ft * 28 T * ^ ^ °° *> te P ^ tajS
Mttftb Ftttit €M\U\\In
Mttftb ftttit € m \ u \\ in
Untitled Article
Eight Lives Lost at Lytiiam . —Preston Oct h ligence was received here to-day of a melancholy on ? Hnw happened off Lyiham yesterday afternoon , and bnff J % men have lost their lives , each of whom has left ei &W children destitute . The fatality arose from the can , * * Wi ( J ° ^ M boat , belonging to Lytham , under c ircumstances LTm of * % Lytham , the scene of this unfortunate occurrence ^ % watering-place , situated at the estuary of the river Vti ^ iib twelve or fourteen miles from this town . In conseo s ° me numerous vessels which have from time to time been of i Lytham , it was deemed expedient that a life-boat sh T ^ of chased . For that purpose a considerable sum was r" J ^ Inscription amongst the visitors and residentsand a fi » «? ^ y sub
, . . fine boat was obtained from the establishmen t of Mes a ®>» and Son , of Great Yarmouth . Yesterday afternoon ten f , ^ ^ men , all natives of Lytham , set out to test the canihT - W new boat . Though the weather was squally , many ir ° « congregated on the beach to witness her departure anI ?* ' * craft seemed to make way very satisfactoril y . What * il " « "lug sail" was used on the occasion . It was observe d I a experienced persons , as the boat proceeded on its cours tl S 0 ! I " much sail was carried considering the weather . When l tQ " short distance out a sea was shipped without anv (] , »/ , f 8 ° ta
righting herself immediately . Between two and thre . when dashing through the breakers at a distance of aW f * miles from the shore , the boat careened greatly , owin quantity of sail she carried . About that time a heavy sho \ l ° tlle on , and concealed the boat for a brief interval from tl /^ 1116 those on the look out . When next she came in sight sh ^ t uppermost . Some men on the hills skirting the sea rushed ? the beach and gave an alarm , and it is needless to say thattli intense excitement speedily prevailed . Two boats were eot with the least possible delay to proceed to the scene of the 5 y The smallest of them was taken to the edge of the Horse fit large sand bank in the channel ) , where it was moored . The o then hastened the bank into the
across , plunged water and JI ! to the ill-fated boat , underneath which they discovered two ? S crew , named Richard Gillet and James Parkinson , the latter taken up , being nearly exhausted . As the lifeboat has six aiierhi in her bottom ( which formed a sort of dome over the twoauffm \ these enabled them to breathe freely . None of the other unf tunates being visible , the boat returned to Lytham about ml o clock with the two survivors . The scene on its arrival was nain ful beyond description . The following is a list of the lost : —Hud ' man , who has left a widow and six children ; J . Gillet , widow and five children ; Swann , widow and three children ; Davis , widow and three children ; Whiteside , - widow and three children Winder
widow and two children ; Cookson , widow and two children * T Gillet , widow and two children . Swann , a pilot , had the comii or the life- boat , and it is considered that he acted somewhat recklessly in not relieving her of some of her sail . —Lytham , Oct 5-Yesterday afternoon Mr . Palmer , of Preston ( the district coroner ? held an inquest at this place on the bodies of John Davis 35 Thomas Gillet , 29 , and George Cookson , 41—three of the etoln unfortunate men who were drowned on Friday last by the capsizins of the lifeboat . The bodies of-Cookson and Gillet were recovered
on Saturday , having been washed up on the "Middle Bank " a short distance from the spot where the accident occurred ; Daiis ' e body was found on Sunday morning in Croston Pool . The jutr agreed to a verdict of " Accidentally drowned . " On the same evening a meeting of gentlemen was held at the Clifton Aims Hotel for the purpose of organising a committee to obtain eubacriptl 0 " 8 for the relief of the widows and orphans of the sufferers , Mr . J . Talbot Clifton , of Lytham Hall , presided , and there was a
numerous attendance of those who sympathised with the bereaved . Nearly £ 200 was contributed in a few minutes , the chairman heading the subscription list with £ 60 ~ £ 50 on his own behalf , and £ 10 from Mrs . Clifton . Gentlemen were deputed to receive donations m Preston and other places . On Sunday evening , after a sermon in St . John ' s church , Lytham , by the Rev . W . H . Self , £ 33 to received for the same benevolent object . In a short time , therefore , a very handsome sum will be realised .
Explosion and Loss of Life . — -Oh Sunday night an explosion occurred in the premises of Mr . Holyhead , a firework maker , in Long-alley , Eldon-street / Finsbury . During the night whilst one of the hands was filling a squib it exploded , and the sparks falling on a quantity of gunpowder the latter also exploded with a fearful noise , and the heap of composition placed for the use of another lad likem \ } up > and in an instant tne room became filled with blame , and three persons who were unable to escape were completely prostrated . The cries of the unfortunate individuals were pitiable in the
extreme , but , owing to the fury with which the fire was raging , it was with considerable difficulty that any one could enter , Some one , however , more courageous than the others , rushed into the apartment in question , and succeeded in throwing one of the lads out ot window , and at the same time another jumped out with his clothes on . fire , and a third was , it is understood , also thrown . The pooi creatures were immediately collected together and removed to St , Bartholomew ' s Hospital . Everything was done for them that smgical skill could devise , but two of them , Cornelius Crawley and John
Hawes , died the same night . An inquest on their bodies was neld on Wednesday afternoon , by Mr . Payne , at St . Bartholom ews Hospital . The manufactory , so-called , was a back room of a small tenement in Jhe vicinity above-mentioned , a confined , thickly-populated thoroughfare . The other apartments of the cottage were occu-Pied by the family of the factor , a man named George Holyhead , and considering the manner he pursued his act of firework making , and the crowded state of the locality , it is deemed most marvellous that a more calamitous result , as regards loss of life , did not taKe place . The evidence , in a great measure , confirmed the parti * hich d
w have already been published . It addition , it appeare m the youths had onl y been at work making fireworks abouta weK , receiving 2 s . wages from Holyhead , who employed them . ] W «" urged to work on Sunday night , the room being lighted with a taHow candle ma flat candlestick , with a small glass globe over it . How the fireworks became ignited no one can now exp lain . B otn » sufferers died soon after their admission into the hospital . 1 W J » Holyhead was present to be examined , but , after being cft «^ V the coroner he had nothing more to say than he told one ot U » JJ » nesses man named Pigot , a substance of whose testimony is p above . The coroner then addressed the jury . It might be uBSg *
that common prudence would have suggested to Holy head gre » caution than he had exercised in such a dangerous calling' £ thing was clear , that if he had not been the m anufacturer tf d works m such a place , and had not set the boys to work at thcrn , explosion would not have happened , and their lives would tf *» JeeUoBt . The jury would consider whether the fcc * J * £ L . them sending the case before another tribunal . After a bne sultation , a verdict was returned of " Manslaughter" «^ Si Holyhead , the firework manufacturer , and he was forthwith convej to Newgate . Mr % Fatal Accident . —On Saturday an inquest was held by '» - Carter , the coroner , at the Hero of Waterloo Tavern , Wawrwu on the body of George Downes , aged eight , who cam e by n »
Untitled Article
leeied should be divided into five shares . Lieut . G ., Mr . C , and I , to have one each , and the remaining two to be divided between the men and boys . We set to work about the end of February , and the old miners seemed mnch amused at our mode of using the pickaxe and shovel ; however , practice soon made it more easy , and before three weeks C . and I went down 25 feet of a hole , and undermined about the same length on one side . It was anything but easy work , I assure you , particularly the undermining ov drifting ; for hours together obliged to work on your knees by the light of a candle , with the thermometer at 97 ( leg ., ant ? ilie native flies drawing Wood with fifly-musquHo-powei of bite . Notwithstanding all our hard work and deep sinking we had very bad luck . We
occasionally got a few ounces at the bottom of a thirty or forty feet hole , which took us two or three weeks to work properly . We at last came to the conclusion that we were an unlucky party , and resolved that it would be better to separate . Lieutenant G . returned , to get his leave renewed . Mr . C . decided to establish stores at Bendigo , and I joined a new party . The men and boys formed themselves into a separate party , and are doing well . My new mate ( there were only two of us ) was an elderly Scotchman , formerly a distiller , named T . He V ? as a wretchedly tncan , miserly skin-flint , so we Shortly parted . I bought out his share of the tent , cradle , working tools , cooking utensils , &c , and at last fairly
started on my own bottom . It is quite , an independent life , and as long as a man can pay his half ounce a month to government , he may do as he wishes . I have iny own time to read , cook , and wash—not gold washing , but real bond Me laundry washing ; and I have become such an adept in the art , that if ever I return to Ireland I'll be able to give some valuable hints about the saving of soap , and the unnecessary wear and tear of inner garments by over-wringing . . Now for my domestic economy : —While by myself , I arose as the spirit moved me , from six to nine . I then prepared breakfast , namely , by throwing two or three h ; uidsfull of tea into a kettle , and cooking chops of a quarter of
muttonthe smallest quantity you can buy—and these , with a damper , make the breakfast . The damper consists of dough well worked , placed in the hot ashes of a wood fire , and , after remaining there a couple of hours , according to its thickness , it comes out a well-flavoured loaf . After breakfast work till two , then dine ; same as breakfast , rest an hour , then work till evening , and home ; then a general washing and change of working clothes , followed by tea , varied with Yarmouth bloaters , &c Cigar smoking then commences , and we turn into a neighbour ' s tent and play chess or backgammon . Bed from ten to eleven , and then the same work next day . On Sundays I go to church up at the cainp , and dine with whoever will give me the best dinner , like your old friend Dick M—
or some of the boys come down to my location to make the afternoon pass pleasantly . Every one helps to cook and wash for our removes , &c . If we had the deal * girls we would be as happy as any of our old pic-nics about Killiney or ( he Dargle , but , except a few elderly ladies , who have followed the fortunes of their husbands—such as doctors , storekeepers , &c . —no respectable women have as yet appeared at the 'Digging . ' While I worked by myself I made from half-an-ounce to an ounce per day by surfacing ; that is , taking the clay off the surface of the hills in . a wheelbarrow to the creek side , and washing It iu a cradle . This is the easiest and surest work here , but you can never find
gold in large quantities except by sinking ; and that one man is not fit for , as you cannot tell when once you open a hole how deep you'll have to go . I at last got a severe attack of dysentery , and made up my mind to return to Melbourne to recruit , when I luckily Bturabled on a storekeeper who had 6 ome real old Irish whiskey—and some of it Kinaban ' s LL . I found I had letters to him from John C , and that he wa 3 an old friend of his father ' s . He came out to this country in " ' 46 , and is doing well . The ' native' wonderfully assisted in restoring me , * and I have made an arrangement with my friend ' s son to go to Bendigo , the richest of the * diggins' yet discovered .
" 20 th May . —Not moved yet . I have just returned to my tent from Truro Creek , after a walk of 12 miles in torrents of rain , which has penetrated both canvass and bedding . We have made arrangements to start in the morning , so I must draw to a close . There is great excitement here about the immense quantities of gold found at Bendigo . An escort had just arrived with upwards of a ton . Cartage JlOO a ton . Eoads almost impassable from the heavy rains , and starvation staring them in the face—not three week ' s provisions there—a pleasant prospect ! ' " Tell Willy and Bob if they come here I ' ll try to make them good cooks , and teach them how to wash ; but if they have any othev means of earning a livelihood let them above all things avoid the ' Gold Diggins . ' " Yours , affectionately , "ROSS , Jun . "
* Whiskey is only one pound per quart , and that sub rosa
The largest Van Diemen ' s Land Nugget . —The [ Messrs . Stevens have returned from the Fingal diggings , with a small nugget , weighing seven grains , value one shilling ; it is , however , ihe largest lump found in this colony . If we receive the testimony of Messrs . Stevens , not only one , but hundreds of nuggets will be found—the inference is just , the deduction is clear . We believe it is just probable the diggers have been working at the fag-end of range—being about 20 miles too far to the southward . This
specicimen of Van Diemen ' s Land gold was picked up at Stanfield Nook , about 14 uiiles from Avoca . We have heard a gentleman say , whose geological acquirements are considerable , and whose judgment is noi likely to be biassed by the excitement of the gold mania , that the precious metal will be found in large quantities , and probably in a few weeks , and that great changes may be anticipated in the moral and social position of this colony , from the re-action that will take place , and the stimulus that will be given to industry . —Australian and New Zealand Gazette .
The Crown Revenues of New South Wales and the adiacent colony are estimated to produce l , O 00 , 00 OZ . per annum , and if a moiety of this were devoted to the purpose of defraying the direct cost of the passage of an emigrant from England to Australia , say IQL per head , men , women , and children included , the result would be an accession to the colony of 50 , 000 souls per annum . The total number of immigrauts into New South Wales and Port Phillip at the public expense for the seven years ending 1850 was 41 , 477 , averaging less than 6 , 000 J . a-year . — % faey Herald , May 9 .
New South Wales . —The last files of the S ydney Mommy Ucndd contain accounts of a new propeller invented by Sir Thomas Mitchell , the Surveyor-General of New South Wales , a trial of which in a small steamer at that port had just excited great in . UM-e § t . It is called the Bomerang propeller , and is constructed on the principle of the weapon of that name used by the natives to kill game . Although the experiment was only on a small and imjwrfect scale , a speed of 12 knots an hour against a head-wind is stated to have been obtained . The instrument is described to combine great strength and simplicity , while it has also the advantag e that its motion in the water causes but a comparatively slight
agitation , so that it is capable of being adapted to canal boats as well as to other vessels . A Sydney merchant ,. in a letter dated June 22 , says : —I think w « shali have some great diggings here soon . You will see that we shall have our M ' ount Alexander yet , as well as the Victorians . There are deposits to the northward , on the Peel river , calied the Hanging-rock Diggings , which are being developed very quietly . The parties there are doing wonderfully well . We hear of , and see weekly , large nuggets of lOoz . to 20 oz . and upwards from that quarter . They are doing as well , the few that aro there , as those at Victoria . Sir Thomas " Mitchell has been
testing his new invention , the Bomerang propeller for steamers in lieu of the screw . He has tried it on a steamer here , and it has answered very well . Sir Thomas says he will be able to get 20 knots an hour out of it . It will be the very thing for ocean steamships . He has taken out a patent , and wishes to go home to bring it out . "
Ireland. F%
IRELAND . f %
Untitled Article
132 THE TEAR OF FREEDOM , [ Oc ^
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 9, 1852, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1699/page/4/
-