Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-24-1911 New Mexican Printing Company

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-24-1911 New Mexican Printing Company University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 5-24-1911 Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-24-1911 New Mexican Printing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news Recommended Citation New Mexican Printing Company. "Santa Fe New Mexican, 05-24-1911." (1911). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/sfnm_news/431 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Santa Fe New Mexican, 1883-1913 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Libra InSANTA MEXICAN VOL. 47 SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2(, ilU 1 NO. 21 m; SANTA FE GIVES ANDREWS BACK REBELS HAVE ALBUOUEROU E SANTA S E FATAL BLAST STATE'S GLORY MAJORITY IN HII SWEEPING PLANS IN IRE LEAD IS REVERSED AT FE IS DESCRIBED Votes In County For Con- Indian Appropriation Bill Will Concentrate Tneir Ef- Census Bureau Announces Verdict in Lower Court Two Killed and Three Others Orators Thrill Ratification stitution Were 2621; Goes to Conference With forts in Sonora at Its Population to Be of Anti-Tru- st Injured in Mine Ac- Gathering Held at Against 295 Bridge Clause Present 11,020 Violation cident Court House LICENSE FOB DUCK HUNTING TROUBLE OVER BftLLlKGER PLAN CAPTURE Of Tt TWICE TIT OF SANTA FE i PIERCE JUDGMENT SUSTAINED FIFTEEN MEN WERE AT WQRKjTERRITORYISM AT AN END In Class With Queries Pour In Game Warden Delay in Printing Report of Expect to Seize Custom Houses Same Tucson, Former Superintendent of Blind Verdict of Accidental Death and Judges ' Gable's Office As Two Committee to Be Along the Arizona Border Phoenix, and Cheyenne, Asylum Must Serve His Company Was Col. Prichard, Messes Wood W Years Ago. Very Soon. yomir.g. Term. and Larrazclo Speakers- D. Jan. 26. The The corrected returns from several Special to the New Mexican. Douglas, Aria., Jan. 20 The Insur- - Washington, C, The supreme court was in session Two moil wore killed and three in- iiita Fe rejoiced last ni,ht at is ; pres-jure- of a available the returns D. Jan. 26 -- The In-- i recto leader who directed the Population, of Albuquerque 11,020, atlain today, the following being by a premature explosion ''in img held at the court house over counties are and Washington, C, lately ' inldian j of with 6.208 in 1 :mo, a gain j ent, Chit lection Saturday and eloquent; from Santa Fe county show that appropriation passed the Senate, smuggling ten thousand rounds of compared . "-- . lies were delivfi-e- Chief Jus- - ammunition and some rifles nf A 7X9. in ten vears or almost SO tier M,rle. tTvlfZ.r'T''. uaj by the election Saturday this county to conference. The Attn!-- ' t t it provision . n 1 ;., I,. 1 SlutM Th, o,.r.i.l..n ' - g0es , ... 4 I C .11 , , Ifclll, r,,.l.,.....IVJ , L HULU Ulimu ....... Ul.lllVt.b occurred at William If. Pope, Associate Jus- vote of for con- - m B w gave a total 2,021 the cent. Tins assure, .uuuime.uue j for tw0 bridgca at Isleta, and San Fe " , TL saving mvjd Lwlhv, AUOrney General o'cloc k in the SB mine operated under 29o ..no od- - j, stitution, and only against it, lie as in .New Mexico V i. .v - to cost $55,000, remain in the .c.uiuuuuisio, rank the nrsi city Frank Deputy Marshal lease by the Colorado Fuel and Iron torney Francis Wood of Albu- of lipe, of Clancy, the comfortable majority serts is the general plan the rebel 10.-- 1 ci- I - leaving bill. Delegate W. H. Andrews has anrl the only one with more than ('haves ronresenting Marshal Foraker Cornnanv. Just what caused the a r.;uf , o. A. I.arrazoio of jib Ve- ' 2,326' one - ""-"- ! - p for the constitution, only arrived. tam'""i'u " ooo people within the territory's Urn.! and Jose 1). Sena, supreme cour .1 t ,,r,Jnl,W- nf.t-o- t,rt known iL'nc unit I'd C.f.n. T,.;,.1. ., ..,? nr con- rebels found could'"- - precinct, Otto, voting against the Stirred Hornet's Nest. the they cope suc its more than Uvif.e the The court disposed of the fol Piucido Salcido, who was acting as! this city. Former Mayor I. Up wnn me being Sparks stitution. Washington, Jan. 20. Representa- cessiuuy ietterai lorces in Iation of Santa Fe, and about five lowing; powder man, was charging a hole. He of Santa Fe. who is chairman of the fol- The corrected returns are us Chihuahua state, he said, they j be-t- 'had a hoard of tive Hitchcock of Xebraska, sprang a began thousand more than Roswcll, it is ('me N'o mil United States of inserted the dynamite and keg county commissioners and lows: restrict their in that not inc lude the pop-stat- was it. manaL'er o! sensation today by demanding an in operations iieVed. This does America appellee vs. Santa Rita Store of black pow der and tamping tn lira Fe Telephone Santa Fe. of with the ultimate object of suburbs us old Al- - a the explo- d at vestigation the "irregular proceed- nlation of such Company, and the Santa Rita .Mining when without warning Exchange presidi the meting and 3. Sonora and not which will were about fif- in Pojoaque for, 92; against, ings" which have resulted in a delay making Chihuahua, buquerque, Barelas, etc., Company, on appeal from the United sion occurred. There giaceful pbran"s introduced the anti-Dia- z 1. forty-nin- e seat of to more in The Rio Tesuque, for, 45; against, of days in getting reports the the government, probably increase the total States court, third judicial district. teen men at work the immediate speakers. interpreters were of 14. assist-contusio- n Santa Fe (3) for, 443; against, of the Balinger-Pincho- t investigating This, because In Sonora they will be than 15,000. The census bureau also Reversed. vicinity and a scene of the greatest (the best, Hon. Acasio Cai'.egos, 385; 20. into the hands in more direct communication with announces the of Tucson, ensued. An alarm was at ant of instruc-one- e Santa Fe (4) for, against, committee printed and population This is the rioted case in which superintendent public Agua Fria for, 77; against, 34. of members of the House. An acri Sinaloa and other states of the west Arizona, to be 13,193 compared with given and willing rescuers went Jt ion, and Hon. Jose i Sena, former Attorneys Harllee and Barnes and the - La for, 31; gainst 26. monious debate followed in which coast where discontent iB known to 7,531 in 1900, and of Laramie, Wyom- to work under the direction of Super- mayor of Santa Fe and supreme court Cienega late W. B. Childcrs wererfor the ap- for 89; 24. Cannon took active re- To out this the to be 8,237 compared with 8,207 intendent Timothy McNaniara. As clerk, rapidly translating the speech-soo- Cerrillos against, Speaker part prevail. carry plan, ing, and Major V. H. H. Lle- 0 an of ten In New .Mexico, the; pellants, as like order could es. It was noticeable that while the Galisteo for, 6G; against, senting what he termed implied rebels gave up the city Guerrero years ago. assistant to the at- something wellyn, special j audience c San Ildefonso 93; 13 criticism of the chair. The House and moved across a onlv other cities whose population has be restored it was found that one was not a apacity house for, against, the mountains, torney general of the United States, 14. after to various of been thus far announced are Santa Fe man, Macedonio Ojila, had been killed there were many ladies present and Stanley for, 27; against, listening explanations seasoned body troops which ap- was for the appellee. al- and 1.864. Placido the pow-- their presence the - Golden for, 32; against, 3. of the court of the delay, voted peared before Sahuaripa, which was 5,072, Raton 4,528, Deming outright. Salcido, encouraged speak- the is 11,13 i, The opinion is written by Associate and three ers to make occasional aerial excur- Canoncito for, 112; against, 1. most unanimously in support of surrendered to the insurgents. Among Jhat of Phoenix, Arizona, der man, fatally injured in 1900, and Justice Merritt M. C. Mechem and it Dr. Williams, the sions in oratory. Glorieta for, 97; against, 2. resolution ordering an investigation the arms given up there were the against 5,544 Cheyenne, others hurt. pbysi by the committee on rules. Wyoming, 11,320 against 14,087 ten is concurred in ny (.met justice rope, (.iau of tne Colorado Fuel and Iron The First Infantry band ciseoursed Chimayo for, 86; 18. machine the - against, only guns government Associate Justices McFie, Ira A. Ab- and did music and Cruz 41. Some More Rottenness Exposed. years ago. rolllpanv was summoned stirring patriotic helped Santa for, 123; against, had in that vicinity. According to - Jan. 26. Alfred W. Census Returns. and Edward R. Wright. Judge. 'possible to relieve the In- make the evening a very enjoyable Santa Fe (17) for, 221; against, 21. Washington, this information, the rebel forces in (I.vtiling Dodsworth, business manager of the Jan. 26. The director Parker Having tried tne case ueiow jured. one. Santa Fe (18) for, 251; against, 19. the Sahuarpa district now number a Washington, New York Journal of Commerce be- of the census has issued certificates did not take part in the decision and Salcido lived about an hour and a The first speaker was Chief Justice Madrid for, 161; against, 0.
Recommended publications
  • To Download The
    $10 OFF $10 OFF WELLNESS MEMBERSHIP MICROCHIP New Clients Only All locations Must present coupon. Offers cannot be combined. Must present coupon. Offers cannot be combined. Expires 3/31/2020 Expires 3/31/2020 Free First Office Exams FREE EXAM Extended Hours Complete Physical Exam Included New Clients Only Multiple Locations Must present coupon. Offers cannot be combined. 4 x 2” ad www.forevervets.com Expires 3/31/2020 Your Community Voice for 50 Years PONTEYour Community Voice VED for 50 YearsRA RRecorecorPONTE VEDRA dderer entertainment EEXXTRATRA! ! Featuring TV listings, streaming information, sports schedules, puzzles and more! July 2 - 8, 2020 has a new home at INSIDE: Phil Keoghan THE LINKS! The latest 1361 S. 13th Ave., Ste. 140 hosts “Tough as house and Jacksonville Beach homes listings Nails,” premiering Page 21 Wednesday on CBS. Offering: · Hydrafacials Getting ‘Tough’- · RF Microneedling · Body Contouring Phil Keoghan hosts and · B12 Complex / produces new CBS series Lipolean Injections Get Skinny with it! (904) 999-0977 1 x 5” ad www.SkinnyJax.com Kathleen Floryan PONTE VEDRA IS A HOT MARKET! REALTOR® Broker Associate BUYER CLOSED THIS IN 5 DAYS! 315 Park Forest Dr. Ponte Vedra, Fl 32081 Price $720,000 Beds 4/Bath 3 Built 2020 Sq Ft. 3,291 904-687-5146 [email protected] Call me to help www.kathleenfloryan.com you buy or sell. 4 x 3” ad BY JAY BOBBIN Phil Keoghan gives CBS a T competition What’s Available NOW On When Phil Keoghan created “Tough as Nails,” he didn’t foresee it being even more apt by the time it aired.
    [Show full text]
  • Kentucky Ancestors Genealogical Quarterly of the Kentuckyhistoricalsociety
    Vol. 39, No. 4 Summer 2004 kentucky ancestors genealogical quarterly of the KentuckyHistoricalSociety Kentucky Abstracts from the The Alvey Family of African American Kentucky Statesman, England, Maryland, Immigrants to March 20, 1850 and Kentucky, Liberia, 1820-43 Part Five Vol. 39, No. 4 Summer 2004 kentucky ancestors genealogical quarterly of the KentuckyHistoricalSociety Thomas E. Stephens, Editor kentucky ancestors Dan Bundy, Graphic Design Kent Whitworth, Director James E. Wallace, Assistant Director administration Betty Fugate, Membership Coordinator research and interpretation Nelson L. Dawson, Team Leader management team Kenneth H. Williams, Program Leader Doug Stern, Walter Baker, Lisbon Hardy, Michael Harreld, Lois Mateus, Dr. Thomas D. Clark, C. Michael Davenport, Ted Harris, Ann Maenza, Bud Pogue, Mike Duncan, James E. Wallace, Maj. board of Gen. Verna Fairchild, Mary Helen Miller, Ryan trustees Harris, and Raoul Cunningham Kentucky Ancestors (ISSN-0023-0103) is published quarterly by the Kentucky Historical Society and is distributed free to Society members. Periodical postage paid at Frankfort, Kentucky, and at additional mailing offices. Postmas- ter: Send address changes to Kentucky Ancestors, Kentucky Historical Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601-1931. Please direct changes of address and other notices concerning membership or mailings to the Membership De- partment, Kentucky Historical Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601-1931; telephone (502) 564-1792. Submissions and correspondence should be directed to: Tom Stephens, editor, Kentucky Ancestors, Kentucky Histori- cal Society, 100 West Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601-1931. The Kentucky Historical Society, an agency of the Commerce Cabinet, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, religion, or disability, and provides, on request, reasonable accommodations, includ- ing auxiliary aids and services necessary to afford an individual with a disability an equal opportunity to participate in all services, programs, and activities.
    [Show full text]
  • Medieval Shipping
    Medieval Shipping A Wikipedia Compilation by Michael A. Linton Contents 1 Caravel 1 1.1 History ................................................. 1 1.2 Design ................................................ 1 1.3 See also ................................................ 2 1.4 References ............................................... 2 1.5 External links ............................................. 2 2 Carrack 6 2.1 Origins ................................................ 8 2.2 Carracks in Asia ........................................... 10 2.3 Famous carracks ............................................ 10 2.4 See also ................................................ 12 2.5 References ............................................... 12 2.6 Further reading ............................................ 12 2.7 External links ............................................. 12 3 Cog (ship) 13 3.1 Design ................................................. 14 3.2 History ................................................. 14 3.3 Gallery ................................................. 15 3.4 See also ................................................ 15 3.5 References ............................................... 15 3.5.1 Footnotes ........................................... 15 3.5.2 Bibliography ......................................... 15 3.6 External links ............................................. 15 4 Fire ship 16 4.1 History ................................................. 16 4.1.1 Ancient era, first uses ....................................
    [Show full text]
  • Roundtable Proceedings
    A ‘Sustainable’ Population? — Key Policy Issues Roundtable Proceedings Canberra, 21-22 March 2011 © Commonwealth of Australia 2011 ISBN 978-1-74037-358-6 This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, the work may be reproduced in whole or in part for study or training purposes, subject to the inclusion of an acknowledgment of the source. Reproduction for commercial use or sale requires prior written permission from the Productivity Commission. Requests and inquiries concerning reproduction and rights should be addressed to Media and Publications (see below). This publication is available from the Productivity Commission website at www.pc.gov.au. If you require part or all of this publication in a different format, please contact Media and Publications. Publications Inquiries: Media and Publications Productivity Commission Locked Bag 2 Collins Street East Melbourne VIC 8003 Tel: (03) 9653 2244 Fax: (03) 9653 2303 Email: [email protected] General Inquiries: Tel: (03) 9653 2100 or (02) 6240 3200 An appropriate citation for this paper is: Productivity Commission 2011, A ‘Sustainable’ Population? — Key Policy Issues, Roundtable Proceedings, Productivity Commission, Canberra. JEL code: J11 The Productivity Commission The Productivity Commission is the Australian Government’s independent research and advisory body on a range of economic, social and environmental issues affecting the welfare of Australians. Its role, expressed most simply, is to help governments make better policies, in the long term interest of the Australian community. The Commission’s independence is underpinned by an Act of Parliament. Its processes and outputs are open to public scrutiny and are driven by concern for the wellbeing of the community as a whole.
    [Show full text]
  • Naval Engagements of the Revolutionary and 1812 Wars in Maryland
    NATIONAL PARK SERVICE AMERICAN BATTLEFIELD PROTECTION PROGRAM GRANT AGREEMENT NO. GA‐2255‐09‐015 NAVAL ENGAGEMENTS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY AND 1812 WARS IN MARYLAND BY MARYLAND MARITIME ARCHAEOLOGY PROGRAM MARYLAND HISTORICAL TRUST AND NEW SOUTH ASSOCIATES, INC. FINAL TECHNICAL REPORT VOLUME I – TEXT SEPTEMBER 2013 For future copies: Kristen L. McMasters Government Technical Representative DOI – National Park Service American Battlefield Protection Program 1201 Eye Street NW (2255) 6th floor Washington, DC 20005 This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Maryland Maritime Archaeology Program (MMAP) wishes to express its appreciation to the American Battlefield Protection Program, especially Kristen McMasters and Paul Hawke, for their guidance, advice and patience as we worked through unfamiliar bureaucratic processes, vast geographic areas, changes in staff, equipment failures, and inclement weather. Evie Cohen, the Maryland Historical Trust’s Chief, Operations Management/Grants Manager, managed all the finances for the project and ensured that fiscal reports were completed and submitted on time; a daunting task for which we are eternally grateful. We would also like to thank former MMAP staff member Brian Jordan for his efforts, early in the project, in crafting and submitting the various work plans requiring approval to begin fieldwork. Like many agencies, MMAP is understaffed and has been operating with only 2/3 of the required personnel. Therefore, the assistance provided by the large number of volunteers, many of them loyal supporters for years, is more than gratefully received, it is critical to the undertaking and completion of most projects.
    [Show full text]
  • In the Age of Climate Change Matthew
    Canada’s Carbon Capitalism: In the Age of Climate Change Matthew Dow A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in Political Science York University Toronto, Ontario November 2019 © Matthew Dow, 2019 Abstract: This historically and critically informed dissertation investigates the question why Canada has become one of the world’s leaders in promoting fossil fuels through its unconventional hydrocarbon industry in spite of the science and growing awareness of climate change. Using a critical historical political economy approach that encompasses both ecological or biophysical scientific realities and historical materialism, I examine this contradictory developmental trajectory as embedded in both the historical structures of everyday life and within Canadian and the wider global political economy. This dissertation argues that Canada’s current situation should be understood in a broader context as a morbid symptom that is embedded within the current global organic and leadership crises, since current leadership appears to support the contradiction of supporting carbon-based globalized social reproduction and preventing climate change. In doing so, this dissertation critiques both fields of international and Canadian political economy for largely sidestepping the importance of energy and energy systems in the production and reproduction of the global political economy. Using the conceptual lenses of carbon capitalism, petro-market civilization, and social reproduction, I demonstrate that energy or energy systems are just as foundational and inseparable from labour, technology, capital and war in the making and remaking of the global political economy. I show how growing energy demand, the peaking of conventional oil, potential energy insecurities, and a debt-based monetary system perpetuates and is dependent on unlimited growth.
    [Show full text]
  • Portland Daily Press: November 03,1882
    _PORTLAND DAILY ESTABLISHED JU»E 23, is«a~-YOL. 20, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1882. _PORTLAND, iffiZHEitfSKSKIi PRICE 3 CEIHK THE PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, THAT KENTUCKY MOB. Published MISCELLANEOUS THE BRIBERY CASE. CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. every day (Sundays excepted,) by th' THE PRESS. FOREIGN. FINANCIAL PORTLAND PUBLISHING CO AND^COMMERCIAL The Portland Daily AT 97 FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8. Meeting at Woodford's Last Evening Wheleaale market. Exchange St., Portland, Me Further Particulars Concerning POBTLUTD, Nor. a. TEttrsifi; ftigbt Dollars a Yea;. To mai* sabscrib Ike following are to-day’* quotation* at Flour era S Avon .Voliars a If METEOROLOGICAL He was Friendly to Dorsey and the Alfair. Grain, Froyiaion*. *o. Year, paid in advance The Civil Service Reform Association held INDICATIONS FOE THa NEXT TWENTY-FOUR AFFAIRS IN ORIENTAL ritir. Mrrnm. an adjourned at Lewis Hall, Siperfine.4 2 5®4 75 H. M. Corn, car THE MAINE STATE PFSSS HOUSE. Ingersoll. meeting Deering, last Ettra Spring..6 76®« 26 loti, 92J is evening,President E. H. Elwell XI ouhlishftd every J'horsday MoRNi!-cat $2 00 a Wak Dep’t Office Chief Signal LANDS. presiding. 8prfng....0 00&6 60 Mixed Corn, if ) year, paid in advance $8.00 a year. Officer, Washington, D. 0., > BOTH SIDES OP THE STORY. The committee on constitution and by-laws Patent Spring oar loti, 90 Nov. 1 A. M. Wheat*.8 76@9 60 Oati, •• 60 Know 3, ) reported a constitution to govern the associa- Win- Michigan Saoked Bran 60 For 00®21 New England, tion, which was and ter beet.6 60 Midi.
    [Show full text]
  • College of Heralds Administration Policy
    The Trimaris College of Heralds Administrative Policies What follows are the updated Administrative Policies as stipulated by Baroness Mayken van der Alst, OL, by warrant of the Laurel Sovereign-at-Arms and the will of Their Majesties Tri- maris, Triskele Principal Herald. These policies are effective beginning Martinmas Moot 2018 The Trimarian College of Heralds A. Purpose: The Trimarian College of Heralds and Scribes exists to provide a)heraldic and scribal services to the Crown and the populace of the Kingdom of Trimaris b) to allow individuals interested in heraldry and scribal arts to improve their knowledge and skills while serving the Kingdom c)to continue to advance the Kingdoms and the Society’s knowledge and practice of heraldry and scribal arts. B. Structure: The Trimarian College of Heralds consists of the Triskele Principal Herald, Triskele's Staff, all warranted heralds, and The College of Scribes in the Kingdom of Trimaris. The current struc- ture of the College of Heralds can be found on the Trimarian College of Heralds website (https://www.trimaris.org/officers/office-of-the-triskele-herald/) 1) The Triskele Principal Herald is the administrative head of the Trimarian College of Her- alds, and is warranted jointly by the Crown of Trimaris, the Kingdom Seneschal, and the Soci- ety Herald as a Great Officer of State. The responsibilities of the Triskele Herald are defined in the Corpora for the SCA Inc. (Section VI.C.2.b), the CoA Administrative Handbook (Section X), and the Kingdom Law of Trimaris (Section VII.B). 2) The Triskele Principal Herald is responsible for overseeing heraldic and scribal activities within the Kingdom of Trimaris, and for reporting to the Crown of Trimaris, the Kingdom Seneshal, and the Society Herald as a Great Officer of State.
    [Show full text]
  • IRE) Linamix BAY FILLY (IRE) Clodora April 16Th, 2009 Cloche D'or Soviet Star Ashkalani Valluga (IRE) Ashtarka (1998) Sovereign Path Sovereign Dona Dogana E.B.F
    Consigned by Rathasker Stud 1 1 Danzig Danehill Razyana Clodovil (IRE) Linamix BAY FILLY (IRE) Clodora April 16th, 2009 Cloche d'Or Soviet Star Ashkalani Valluga (IRE) Ashtarka (1998) Sovereign Path Sovereign Dona Dogana E.B.F. Nominated. 1st dam VALLUGA (IRE): unraced; dam of 5 previous foals; 4 runners; 1 winner: Chiara Edelfa (IRE) (04 f. by Night Shift (USA)): placed twice at 3 in Italy. Super Ratatuille (IRE) (07 c. by Desert Prince (IRE)): 2 wins at 2 and 3, 2010 in Italy and placed 6 times. Heart In Motion (IRE) (08 f. by Mujadil (USA)): 2-y-o unraced to date. 2nd dam SOVEREIGN DONA: 4 wins at 2 and 3 at home and in France and 150,000 fr. inc. Prix de Psyche, Gr.3; dam of 15 foals; 12 runners; 7 winners inc.: FORESEE (GB) (c. by Vision (USA)): 7 wins at home and in U.A.E. and £171,528 inc. Blandford S., Gr.2 and EBF Leopardstown S., Gr.3, placed 2nd Great Voltigeur S., Gr.2, 3rd Budweiser Irish Derby, Gr.1, Jefferson Smurfit Mem. Irish St Leger, Gr.1 and Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial S., Gr.3. ROYAL TOUCH (f. by Tap On Wood): Champion older mare in Germany in 1989, 5 wins at home, in West Germany and in U.S.A. and £301,601 inc. Grosser Preis von Dusseldorf, Gr.2, San Gorgonio H., Gr.2 and Preis von Koln, L., placed 2nd Prix de la Foret, Gr.1, Santa Ana H., Gr.1, Santa Barbara H., Gr.1, Buena Vista S., Gr.3, Fluorocarbon Marshall S., L., 3rd Yellow Ribbon H., Gr.1, Matriarch S., Gr.1, Oettingen-Rennen, Gr.3, Beverly D S., L.
    [Show full text]
  • “Pirates, Robbers and Other Malefactors”
    “Pirates, robbers and other malefactors” The role played by violence at sea in relations between England and the Hanse towns, 1385 – 1420 Submitted by William Marcus Edward Pitcaithly to the University of Exeter as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Maritime History, February 2011 This thesis is available for Library use on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgment. I certify that all material in this thesis which is not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. Signed: 1 ABSTRACT The period 1385 – 1420 was an eventful and significant one in Anglo-Hanseatic relations. At its beginning, the English mercantile presence in the Hanse towns was only a few years old, and no real basis for a trading and diplomatic relationship had been arrived at, when an English act of aggression brought into play the issue of piracy and other violence at sea, which would henceforth be one of vital importance in Anglo- Hanseatic relations; it saw the heyday of several notorious pirates, and new policies for their suppression on both sides of the North Sea. Hitherto these years have been treated in this context only as part of examinations of much longer periods. I approach the subject thematically, with some chronological divisions within chapters, examining separately violence by English, Hansards, and third parties, non- violent reprisals, regional and social divisions within England and the Hanse, the Vitalienbrüder, the role of the law, and other factors.
    [Show full text]
  • Innumerabyll Shotying of Gunnys and Long Chasyng One Another:” Heavy Artillery and Changes in Shipbuilding in Northern Europe in the Early Modern Period
    “INNUMERABYLL SHOTYING OF GUNNYS AND LONG CHASYNG ONE ANOTHER:” HEAVY ARTILLERY AND CHANGES IN SHIPBUILDING IN NORTHERN EUROPE IN THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD THESIS Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts in the Graduate School of the Ohio State University Colin Andrew O’Bannon Graduate Program in History * * * * * 2011 Master’s Examination Committee: Dr. John F. Guilmartin, Jr., Adviser Dr. Geoffrey Parker Dr. Christopher Reed Copyright by Colin Andrew O’Bannon 2012 ABSTRACT At the beginning of the early modern period in northern Europe, there occurred a transformation from shell-based to frame-based methods of ship construction. It has been demonstrated that in many places, the medieval Mediterranean, for instance, similar transitions were slow ones that occurred in stages. This was not the case in Northern Europe. In only seventy-five years, methods based on lapstrake, shell-based construction were abandoned in favor of methods that produced frame-based, flush-planked ships. This coincided in time with the application of the developing technology of artillery to warfare at sea. Shortly after guns, particularly heavy guns, were placed on ships in Northern Europe, shipbuilding methods began to change. The technological factors that brought about this rapid and fundamental change in the way that shipbuilders conceived of ships can be observed through examination of the archaeological record. Numerous vessels from the late medieval and early modern period have been excavated in the past eighty years. The primary goal of this work shall be to collect information from these sites in a single work in order to demonstrate a chronology for late medieval/early modern vessels-of-war built in Northern Europe.
    [Show full text]
  • Mariner's Mirror
    THE MARINER'S MIRROR THE JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR NAUTICAL RESEARCH IND EX TO VOLUMES 6-6 lq.¡a' - \cil\l' Compiled by ELIZABETH ROLFE, ¡.A., A.L.A GREENWICH 198 I PREFACE 6 Index ls entlrely based on'the 10 Annual Indexes produced ¡g the perlod. Tbeir entrles have. been edited, cunulated sub-divided where necessary to form a single coherent Index, forn of entry follows Dr. R.C' Andersonts Index to Volumes as closely as posslble and the rules are as set out in Vo1. page 22O' aphlcal references have been lndexed only Úhen the text arqicle discusses the work of a particular author at some In doubtful cases, preference has been glven to foreign early works following changes have been made in preparlng thfs Index:- Books Reviewed now form a central section of the Index. I¡ the interests of clarlty the Index of Shipsr Names 1s set in Roman tyPe. Underlining has ¡Len employed to denote volume numbers. 1981 E.M. ROLFE NOTE eounctl of the Soclety gratefully acknowledges generous help the Lily Lanbert McCarthy Foundation ln defraying the costs and dlstrlbuting thls thfrd Cunulative fndex. GENERAL INDEX 1 fishing, 63, 48-9 Ahmuty, Surgeon , 59 , 29O Aicha, Sidi Abdallab ben, 62, 276 Aiguillon, Armand Duc d', 59, 4! et seq -*, ATMONE, A. C. ;#1fi i',,' l The Cruise of the U,S, Sloop Hoxnet ;lÍ;ill'1fi in 1815 , 67, 377-83 Aix, Isle of , M, 268-9 ;i3ne an chor Akrostolion , 56, 327, p1.6 *gi :i;i*'l?'i¿,#i"?l' Minoan paintings, discovery, 65, L4L et seq Akrotiri, hieroglyphs of Ancient Egyptian 99, t50; 64, 125-33,135-7 ^.#,1=, 103 rig' 7 Al6lzzi,
    [Show full text]