The Edinburgh Gazette, April 21, J857

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Edinburgh Gazette, April 21, J857 370 THE EDINBURGH GAZETTE, APRIL 21, J857. CRQWN-OFFICE, April 15, 1857. f April 16. These are the names of the sixteen Peers County of Buckingham. elected and chosen to sit and vote in the House Caledon George Du Pre", of Beaconsfield, Esq. of Peers in the Parliament of the United Kingdom The Right Honourable Benjamin Disraeli, of of Great Britain and Ireland, summoned to be Hugedon Manor. holden at Westminster, the 30th day of April The Honourable Charles Compton Cavendish, of instant:— Latimers. The Marquis of Tweeddale. The Earl of Morton. Borough of Honiton. The Earl of Home. Joseph Locke, of Lowndes Square, Middlesex, The Earl of Strathmore. Esq. The Earl of Airlie. Archibald Henry Plantagenet Stuart Stuart The Earl of Leven and Melville. Wortley, of Charles Street, Berkeley Square, The Earl of Selkirk. Middlesex, Esq. The Earl of Orkney. The Earl of Seafield. The Viscount Strathallan. The Lord Gray. Board of Trade, Whitehall, The Lord Sinclair. April 16, 1857. The Lord Elphinstone. The Lord Colville of Culross. NAVIGATION OF THE DANUBE. The Lord Blantyre. A COMMISSION being at present occupied in the The Lord Polwarth. preparation of arrangements to be established in concert with the Sublime Porte, for the proper regulation of the port of Sulina, in all that con- cerns the navigation of the Danube, and it being1 CROWN-OFFICE, April 15, 1857. highly essential to the success of the undertaking MEMBERS returned to servein the PARLIAMENT that such measures as may be provisionally adopted by the Commissioners should meet with the prompt summoned to be holden at Westminster, concurrence and support of those interested in the 30th day of April 1857. shipping, Her Majesty's Secretary of State for County of Cornwall. Foreign Affairs and the Lords of the Committee of Privy Council for Trade and Plantations invite Eastern Division. the attention of the owners and commanders of Thomas James Agar Robarts, of Lanhydrook, vessels resorting to the Danube to the importance Cornwall, Esq. of ready compliance with such rules, and payment Nicholas Kendall, of Pelyn, Cornwall, Esq. of such tolls as the Commissioners may find it es- sential to adopt, pending the passage of permanent Western Division. laws and a tariff for giving order and security to Michael Williams, of Trevince, Cornwall, Esq. the navigation of the river. Richard Davey, of Bochim, Cornwall, Esq. County of Devon. Board of Trade, Whitehall, Southern Division. April 16, 1857. Sir John Buller Yarde Buller, Bart. The Right Honourable the Lords of the Com- Lawrence Palk, of Haldon, Devonshire, Esq. mittee of Privy Council for Trade and Plantations have received, through the Secretary of State for Northern Division. Foreign Affairs, a copy of a Despatch from Her James Wentworth Bailer, of Downes, Devonshire, Majesty's Minister at Brussels, enclosing an Esq. Official Notice of a Royal Industrial Exhibition, The Honourable Charles Henry Rolle Trefusis, of to be held at Brussels, by the Society for the Heanton SatchviUe, Devonshire. Encouragement of Industrial Arts, during the -r present year, a translation of which, so far as Borough of Chopping Wycombe. regards Belgian and Foreign exhibitors, is sub- joined :— Sir George Henry Dashwood, Bart. ART. i.—An exhibition of designs, models, and Martin Tucker Smith, Esq. finished works, connected with the industrial arts, the productions of Belgians or Foreigners, will be County of Kent. opened at Brussels on the 15th August 18.57. Eastern Division. The following works will be admitted to this Sir Brook William Bridges, Bart. exhibition :— Sir Edward Cholmeley Dering, Bart. DESIGNS AND MODELS, Western Division. 1. Designs or models of architectural works, plans for ornament and decorations of the exteriors Charles Wykeham Martin, Esq. and interiors of public edifices, churches, chapels, James Whatman, Esq. assembly rooms, railway stations, theatres, &c., Covinty of Flint. as also for private habitations. The Honourable Thomas Edward Mostyn Lloyd 2. Designs or models of objects associated with architectural works, such as capitals, cornices, Mostyn. cariatidea, statues or decorative groups, mouldings Borough of Flint. of all kinds, consol tables, chimney-pieces, doors, Sir Jobn Hanmer, of Bettisfield, Flintshire, Esq. balconies, staircases, &o..
Recommended publications
  • The Arms of the Baronial and Police Burghs of Scotland
    '^m^ ^k: UC-NRLF nil! |il!|l|ll|ll|l||il|l|l|||||i!|||!| C E 525 bm ^M^ "^ A \ THE ARMS OF THE BARONIAL AND POLICE BURGHS OF SCOTLAND Of this Volume THREE HUNDRED AND Fifteen Copies have been printed, of which One Hundred and twenty are offered for sale. THE ARMS OF THE BARONIAL AND POLICE BURGHS OF SCOTLAND BY JOHN MARQUESS OF BUTE, K.T. H. J. STEVENSON AND H. W. LONSDALE EDINBURGH WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS 1903 UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME. THE ARMS OF THE ROYAL AND PARLIAMENTARY BURGHS OF SCOTLAND. BY JOHN, MARQUESS OF BUTE, K.T., J. R. N. MACPHAIL, AND H. W. LONSDALE. With 131 Engravings on Wood and 11 other Illustrations. Crown 4to, 2 Guineas net. ABERCHIRDER. Argent, a cross patee gules. The burgh seal leaves no doubt of the tinctures — the field being plain, and the cross scored to indicate gules. One of the points of difference between the bearings of the Royal and Parliamentary Burghs on the one hand and those of the I Police Burghs on the other lies in the fact that the former carry castles and ships to an extent which becomes almost monotonous, while among the latter these bearings are rare. On the other hand, the Police Burghs very frequently assume a charge of which A 079 2 Aberchirder. examples, in the blazonry of the Royal and Parliamentary Burghs, are very rare : this is the cross, derived apparently from the fact that their market-crosses are the most prominent of their ancient monuments. In cases where the cross calvary does not appear, a cross of some other kind is often found, as in the present instance.
    [Show full text]
  • Biographical Appendix
    Biographical Appendix The following women are mentioned in the text and notes. Abney- Hastings, Flora. 1854–1887. Daughter of 1st Baron Donington and Edith Rawdon- Hastings, Countess of Loudon. Married Henry FitzAlan Howard, 15th Duke of Norfolk, 1877. Acheson, Theodosia. 1882–1977. Daughter of 4th Earl of Gosford and Louisa Montagu (daughter of 7th Duke of Manchester and Luise von Alten). Married Hon. Alexander Cadogan, son of 5th Earl of Cadogan, 1912. Her scrapbook of country house visits is in the British Library, Add. 75295. Alten, Luise von. 1832–1911. Daughter of Karl von Alten. Married William Montagu, 7th Duke of Manchester, 1852. Secondly, married Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire, 1892. Grandmother of Alexandra, Mary, and Theodosia Acheson. Annesley, Katherine. c. 1700–1736. Daughter of 3rd Earl of Anglesey and Catherine Darnley (illegitimate daughter of James II and Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester). Married William Phipps, 1718. Apsley, Isabella. Daughter of Sir Allen Apsley. Married Sir William Wentworth in the late seventeenth century. Arbuthnot, Caroline. b. c. 1802. Daughter of Rt. Hon. Charles Arbuthnot. Stepdaughter of Harriet Fane. She did not marry. Arbuthnot, Marcia. 1804–1878. Daughter of Rt. Hon. Charles Arbuthnot. Stepdaughter of Harriet Fane. Married William Cholmondeley, 3rd Marquess of Cholmondeley, 1825. Aston, Barbara. 1744–1786. Daughter and co- heir of 5th Lord Faston of Forfar. Married Hon. Henry Clifford, son of 3rd Baron Clifford of Chudleigh, 1762. Bannister, Henrietta. d. 1796. Daughter of John Bannister. She married Rev. Hon. Brownlow North, son of 1st Earl of Guilford, 1771. Bassett, Anne. Daughter of Sir John Bassett and Honor Grenville.
    [Show full text]
  • W. A. Campbell, Prominent Laurel Hill Citizen Dies
    OCCG£ - ^ ■ VOLUME XXX NUMBER 98 ^ Fall/Winler 2008 ^rom thefiCes ofthe HN'orthwest 'Flhrida ^Herita^e Museum, VaCparaiso, Source: IN'ewspaper cCipping, ^oC 10 -S^o. 47. IN'o name orcCate shown W. A. Campbell, Prominent Laurel Hill Citizen Dies Family Tree Gives Direct Descent From Old Scotland The Deceased Was At One Time Walton County Commissioner And Was In Good Shape Mr. W. A. Campbell, better known to his intimate friends as "Uncle Bud," passed away quietly at his home in the Magnolia settlement four miles to the west of Laurel Hill, early yesterday (Wednesday) morning. The deceased was 79 years old and one of the first settlers in this section of the State, his great-grandparents being direct descendents from Scotland to America over two hundred years ago. (A biography of the family tree is given below.) The Campbells The following news story is copied from the Pensacola Gazette of December 10, 1842: "There now resides in Walton County, about 75 miles from this (Pensacola place, a man and wife whose united ages is 229 years. The old gentleman's name is Daniel Campbell. He was united to his present wife 94 years ago, on the Isle of Skye, Scotland. He emigrated to this country several years before the Revolution, and was about 50 years old when the war begun. There were no neutrals then and as Mr. Campbell left his native country in consequence of the political troubles of 1745, he was prepared to take part vdth the Colonists against the House of Hanover. He served through nearly the entire Revolutionary War, but although very poor he has not been able to avail himself of the county, or rather of the just remuneration which the pension laws have provided for the survivors of that glorious epoch, because before the passage of the Act of 1832 he was by extreme old age and mental infirmity rendered incapable of making the declaration required by the law.
    [Show full text]
  • ROYAL GALLERY FIRST WORLD WAR Name (As On
    Houses of Parliament War Memorials Royal Gallery, First World War ROYAL GALLERY FIRST WORLD WAR Also in Also in Westmins Commons Name (as on memorial) Full Name MP/Peer/Son of... Constituency/Title Birth Death Rank Regiment/Squadron/Ship Place of Death ter Hall Chamber Sources Shelley Leopold Laurence House of Lords, In Piam Memoriam, Baron Abinger Shelley Leopold Laurence Scarlett Peer 5th Baron Abinger 01/04/1872 23/05/1917 Commander Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve London, UK X MCMXIV-MCMXIX (c.1927) Humphrey James Arden 5th Battalion, London Regiment (London Rifle House of Lords, In Piam Memoriam, Adderley Humphrey James Arden Adderley Son of Peer 3rd son of 2nd Baron Norton 16/10/1882 17/06/1917 Rifleman Brigade) Lincoln, UK MCMXIV-MCMXIX (c.1927) The House of Commons Book of Bodmin 1906, St Austell 1908-1915 / Eldest Remembrance 1914-1918 (1931); Thomas Charles Reginald Thomas Charles Reginald Agar- son of Thomas Charles Agar-Robartes, 6th House of Lords, In Piam Memoriam, Agar-Robartes Robartes MP / Son of Peer Viscount Clifden 22/05/1880 30/09/1915 Captain 1st Battalion, Coldstream Guards Lapugnoy, France X X MCMXIV-MCMXIX (c.1927) Horace Michael Hynman Only son of 1st Viscount Allenby of Meggido House of Lords, In Piam Memoriam, Allenby Horace Michael Hynman Allenby Son of Peer and of Felixstowe 11/01/1898 29/07/1917 Lieutenant 'T' Battery, Royal Horse Artillery Oosthoek, Belgium MCMXIV-MCMXIX (c.1927) Aeroplane over House of Lords, In Piam Memoriam, Francis Earl Annesley Francis Annesley Peer 6th Earl Annesley 25/02/1884 05/11/1914
    [Show full text]
  • Diplomatic, Political, Educational and Military Connections Existed Between Scots, Scotland and the Rest of Europe
    SCOTTISH TRAVELLERS ABROAD, 1660-1688 Diplomatic, political, educational and military connections existed between Scots, Scotland and the rest of Europe. This paper concentrates on the connections fostered between Scots and the European continent by travel. A great number of young gentlemen travellers left the British isles to travel abroad during the reigns of Charles II and James II. Young British gentlemen travelled for many and varied reasons. Many travelled for their education, often in company with a tutor. Rarely did a Briton travel in an area totally lacking in support networks of friends and social contacts; continental Europe was awash with members of Britain's ruling elite who travelled together or formed enclaves in almost every major town and city throughout western Europe. Much has been written on the subject of the British tourist abroad. By 'British' most scholars have meant 'English'. Where discussions of Scots have occurred these have usually been as an adjunct to, or an extension of, constructs associated with the English travel experience. Similarly, so great an emphasis has been placed upon the 'Grand Tour' of the eighteenth century that the travelling networks and experiences of the late seventeenth century have often been treated as a mere preamble to the better established routes of the following century. The disposition and personality of Scottish travellers in this period ranged from the strongly anti-English, pro-French Walter Scot, Earl of Tarras, to the anglophile James Douglas Hamilton, Earl of Arran. Scottish travellers were exclusively male, though many Scottish women lived abroad on a permanent basis. I Whatever their proclivities it was the duty and pleasure of all young noblemen to traveJ.2 The appeal of travel was further increased by the fact that Scots, all over the European continent, had little trouble finding co-religionists and other Britons of comparable social status wherever they travelled.
    [Show full text]
  • The Highland Clans of Scotland
    :00 CD CO THE HIGHLAND CLANS OF SCOTLAND ARMORIAL BEARINGS OF THE CHIEFS The Highland CLANS of Scotland: Their History and "Traditions. By George yre-Todd With an Introduction by A. M. MACKINTOSH WITH ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-TWO ILLUSTRATIONS, INCLUDING REPRODUCTIONS Of WIAN'S CELEBRATED PAINTINGS OF THE COSTUMES OF THE CLANS VOLUME TWO A D. APPLETON AND COMPANY NEW YORK MCMXXIII Oft o PKINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN CONTENTS PAGE THE MACDONALDS OF KEPPOCH 26l THE MACDONALDS OF GLENGARRY 268 CLAN MACDOUGAL 278 CLAN MACDUFP . 284 CLAN MACGILLIVRAY . 290 CLAN MACINNES . 297 CLAN MACINTYRB . 299 CLAN MACIVER . 302 CLAN MACKAY . t 306 CLAN MACKENZIE . 314 CLAN MACKINNON 328 CLAN MACKINTOSH 334 CLAN MACLACHLAN 347 CLAN MACLAURIN 353 CLAN MACLEAN . 359 CLAN MACLENNAN 365 CLAN MACLEOD . 368 CLAN MACMILLAN 378 CLAN MACNAB . * 382 CLAN MACNAUGHTON . 389 CLAN MACNICOL 394 CLAN MACNIEL . 398 CLAN MACPHEE OR DUFFIE 403 CLAN MACPHERSON 406 CLAN MACQUARIE 415 CLAN MACRAE 420 vi CONTENTS PAGE CLAN MATHESON ....... 427 CLAN MENZIES ........ 432 CLAN MUNRO . 438 CLAN MURRAY ........ 445 CLAN OGILVY ........ 454 CLAN ROSE . 460 CLAN ROSS ........ 467 CLAN SHAW . -473 CLAN SINCLAIR ........ 479 CLAN SKENE ........ 488 CLAN STEWART ........ 492 CLAN SUTHERLAND ....... 499 CLAN URQUHART . .508 INDEX ......... 513 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Armorial Bearings .... Frontispiece MacDonald of Keppoch . Facing page viii Cairn on Culloden Moor 264 MacDonell of Glengarry 268 The Well of the Heads 272 Invergarry Castle .... 274 MacDougall ..... 278 Duustaffnage Castle . 280 The Mouth of Loch Etive . 282 MacDuff ..... 284 MacGillivray ..... 290 Well of the Dead, Culloden Moor . 294 Maclnnes ..... 296 Maclntyre . 298 Old Clansmen's Houses 300 Maclver ....
    [Show full text]
  • The Feud Between Lords Airlie and Argyle
    294 THE SCOTISH WARS. taken prisoners by Argyle, but many of them escaped, and he was enabled to carry only eighty-two of them to Stirling. Of this number were Lord Strathallan, Thomas Drummond his brother, Walkinshaw of Barrowfield, Drummond of Logie-Drummond, and Murray of Auchtertyre. THE FEUD BETWEEN LORDS AIRLIE AND ARGYLE. A FEUD between the Ogilvies, Earls of Airlie, and the Campbells, Earls of Argyle, was of long continuance, and produced much commotion and disaster. When or how it began is not known; but so fierce was it that the great wil- derness of moor and mountain which extends from Loch Etive to Strathtay was no hinderance to its outbursts and desolating movements. In the year 1591, when the Ogilvies were residing peaceably in Glenisla, a body of Argyle's men made an inroad upon them, ravaged their estates, killed several of their people, and compelled their chief and his lady to flee for their lives. And during the civil war be- tween the Covenanters and the Royalists, the private feud between the Campbells and the Ogilvies blended itself with the public quarrel, and borrowed thence at once pretexts, opportunities, and means for venting its wrath and executing its vengeance. The Earl of Airlie was one of the most dis- tinguished and inflexible champions of the cause of Charles I., and acted for some time as official director of his interests throughout the central parts of Scotland, and exerted stre- nuous and persevering energy in his behalf both in the council and in the field, both by efforts among the Scots at home and by services under the monarch's own eye in England; and he was therefore specially obnoxious to all the public partisans of the National Covenant, and very eminently so to the Earl, afterwards the Marquis of Argyle.
    [Show full text]
  • MS 69 Papers of Christopher Collins, Mid to Late Seventeenth Century, C.1800-75
    1 MS 69 Papers of Christopher Collins, mid to late seventeenth century, c.1800-75 Christopher Collins entered the service of the First Duke of Wellington in 1824 and remained as his confidential servant for the remainder of the Dukes life, continuing in the service of the Second Duke. He travelled with Wellington on most of his journeys, including Wellington’s journey to St. Petersburg in February to April 1826. The collection that forms MS 69 was for the most part separated from the papers of the First Duke of Wellington that form MS 61 during the 1860s, when that collection was weeded extensively, and which were preserved by Collins rather than being destroyed. Other papers include a sample of Wellington’s letters and notes to Collins, which provide an interesting insight into the organization and running of the Duke’s household. The Collection divides into four groups: (i) political correspondence of the First Duke of Wellington, 1807-1852 (ii) correspondence of Wellington with Lieutenant Colonel Gurwood, editor of his Dispatches (iii) Wellington’s correspondence with Christopher Collins and (iv) papers of Christopher Collins. The collection was grouped in five portfolios and his arrangement has been preserved. It was acquired by the University with the assistance of the Museums and Galleries Commission/Victoria and Albert Museum Purchase Grant Fund and the Pilgrim Trust at Messrs. Woolley and Wallis’ sale at Salisbury on 13 November 1991. MS 69 1/1 Letter from Prince Albert to Arthur Wellesley, First Duke of Wellington. Prince Albert conveys Queen Victoria’s approval of Prince Albert’s design of military cap.
    [Show full text]
  • 95255930.23.Pdf
    R Kits, National Library of Scotland 'B0001 94370* THE RUTHVEN FAMILY PAPERS Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from National Library of Scotland http://www.archive.org/details/ruthvenfamilypprOOcowa Frontispi, SIR WILLIAM, SECOND LORD RUTHVEN, 152S-1552, KEEPER OF THE PRIVY SEAL, AND PROVOST OF PERTH, I529 X THE RUTHVEN FAMILY PAPERS The Ruthven Version of the Conspiracy and Assassination at Gowrie House Perth, 5th August 1600 CRITICALLY REVISED AND EDITED SAMUEL COWAN, J.P. AUTHOR OF 'THE ROYAL HOUSE OF STUART," "THE LORD CHANCELLORS OF SCOTLAND," "THE ANCIENT CAPITAL OF SCOTLAND" "LIFE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS," "LIFE OF QUEEN MARGARET," ETC., ETC. £S i? ^ LONDON Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. Ltd. 1912 *w ILLUSTRATIONS Sir William, second Lord Ruthven. Lady Lilias Ruthven, his Daughter, married to David, Lord Drummond of Stobhall. Lady Barbara Ruthven, his Daughter, married to the sixth Lord Gray. Marie Ruthven, Daughter of Patrick Ruthven and Wife of Sir Antony Van Dyck. (From the original in the Munich Gallery) General Patrick Ruthven, Earl of Forth and Brentford, Officer Commanding in the Army of Gustavus Adolphus, and Commander-in-Chief of the Troops under Charles I. (From the original in the Imperial Museum, Stockholm) James, fifth Lord Ruthven of Freeland. Mary, Daughter of Walter Campbell of Islay and Shawfield, Wife of the fifth Lord Ruthven of Freeland. Jean Ruthven, born 1781 (main line) ; married her first Cousin, James Ruthven, born 1783. James Ruthven, born 1752 (main line). John Ruthven, born 1753 (main line). James Ruthven, born 1783 (main line). Arms of the Earl of Gowrie.
    [Show full text]
  • Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745
    MEMOIRS OF THE JACOBITES OF 1715 AND 1745. By MRS. THOMSON, AUTHOR OF “MEMOIRS OF THE COURT OF HENRY THE EIGHTH,” “MEMOIRS OF SARAH, DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH,” ETC. VOLUME III. LONDON: RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty. 1845. LONDON: Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, Bangor House, Shoe Lane. PREFACE. In completing this work, I have to repeat my acknowledgments to those friends and correspondents to whom I expressed my obligations in the Preface to the first volume; and I have the additional pleasure of recording similar obligations from other channels. I beg to testify my gratitude to Sir William Maxwell, Bart., of Montreith, for some information regarding the Nithsdale family; which, I hope, at some future time, to interweave with my biography of the Earl of Nithsdale; and also to Miss Charlotte Maxwell, the sister of Sir William Maxwell, whose enthusiasm for the subject of the Jacobites is proved by the interesting collection of Jacobite airs which she is forming, and which will be very acceptable to all who can appreciate poetry and song. To Sir John Maxwell, Bart., of Pollock, and to Lady Matilda Maxwell, I offer my best thanks for their prompt and valued suggestions on the same subject. I owe much to the courtesy and great intelligence of Mrs. Howison Craufurd, of Craufurdland Castle, Ayrshire: I have derived considerable assistance from that lady in the life of the Earl of Kilmarnock, and have, through her aid, been enabled to give to the public several letters never before published. For original information regarding the Derwentwater family, and for a degree of zeal, combined with accurate knowledge, I must here express my cordial thanks to the Hon.
    [Show full text]
  • Her Majesty's Government
    HER MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT MEMBERS OF THE CABINET (FORMED BY THE RT. HON. MARGARET THATCHER, MP, JUNE 1987) PRIME MINISTER, FIRST LORD OF THE TREASURY AND MINISTER FOR THE CIVIL SERVICE— The Rt. Hon. Margaret Thatcher, MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS—The Rt. Hon. Sir Geoffrey Howe, QC, MP CHANCELLOR OF THE EXCHEQUER—The Rt. Hon. Nigel Lawson. MP LORD CHANCELLOR—The Rt. Hon. The Lord Mackay of Clashfern SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT—The Rt. Hon. DotiRlas Hurd, CBE, MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WALES—The Rt. Hon. Peter Walker, MBE. MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE—The Rt. Hon. George Younger, TD, MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EMPLOYMENT—The Rt. HOn. Norman Fowler, MP*.—. SECRETARY OF STATE FOR NORTHERN IRELAND—The Rt. Hon. Tom King, MP SECRETARY OF STATE TOR THE ENVIRONMENT—The Rt. HOn. Nicholas Ridley, MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRADE AND INDUSTRY AND PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF TRADE— The Rt. Hon. The Lord Young of Graffharn SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EDUCATION AND SCIENCE—The Rt. Hon. Kenneth Baker, MP CHANCELLOR OF THE DUCHY OF LANCASTER AND MINISTER OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY— The Rt. Hon. Kenneth Clarke, QC, MP MINISTER OF AGRICULTURE, FISHERIES AND F000—The Rt. Hon. John MacGregor. OBE, MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ScoTLAND—The Rt. Hon. Malcolm Ritkind, QC, MP SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRANSPORT—The Rt. HOn. Paul Channon. ME' SECRETARY OF STATE FOR SOCIAL SERVICES—The Rt. Hon. John Moore, MP*----+ LORD PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL AND LEADER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS—The Rt.
    [Show full text]
  • 127179818.23.Pdf
    National Library of Scotland niiimiiHiii *6000425470* 0C3.5H55. Sfe'HflO'b SCOTTISH HISTORY SOCIETY FIFTH SERIES VOLUME 13 Scodand and the Americas, c. 1650 - c. 1939: A Documentary Source Book Scotland and the Americas, c. 1650 - c. 1939: A Documentary Source Book edited by Allan I. Macinnes, Marjory-Ann D. Harper & Linda G. Fryer EDINBURGH printed for the Scottish History Society by LOTHIAN PRINT LTD, EDINBURGH 2002 Scottish History Society 2002 The date of 2000 on the spine refers to the nominal in the Society’s annual series of publications. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data: A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0-906245-22-2 Printed in Great Britain CONTENTS Acknowledgements vi Abbreviations viii List of Contributors x INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER ONE: PERSUADERS, PROCESSES AND PERILS 32 CHAPTER TWO:THE ENREPRENEURIAL EMIGRANT 70 CHAPTERTHREE:THE MILITARY EMIGRANT 97 CHAPTER FOUR: SCOTTISH SOJOURNERS 132 CHAPTER FIVE: THE GAEL IN AMERICA 169 CHAPTER SIX: SETTLEMENT AND RESETTLEMENT 207 CHAPTER SEVEN: ANCHORS AND ASSIMILATION 252 SCOTLAND 292 THE ATLANTIC SEABOARD 293 THE CANADIAN PROVINCES 294 THE UNITED STATES 295 SOUTH AMERICA 296 INDEX 297 vi ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Permission to reproduce documents was granted by the following individuals and institutions, citations being given in parentheses in cases where identification would otherwise be unclear. Aberdeen County Archives; the Earl of Airlie (NAS, GD16/34/359/11); the Aldrich Public Library, Barre, Vermont; the Archives of Ontario, Toronto (Adam Hope fonds, F 484. NAS, RH 1/2/612/8); the British Library (Egerton MS 2395 f.632v); the John Carter Brown Library, Rhode Island; Roderick D.H.
    [Show full text]