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JUfcT 7, 1855.] ^^ THE E E AJ) 33 R. 6*1
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WAR MISCELLANEA. General La Marmora writ...
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THE SUNDAY DEMONSTRATION IN HYDE PARK. N...
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OUli CIVILISATION. Attempt to upset a Ra...
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.
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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.
The War. The Death Of Lord Raglan, Thoug...
( jiief topic of conversation in the Baltic Fleet is the infernal machines , of which at least forty-six have been discovered and picked up off Cronstadt during the last ten days . One of them lately burst on the poop of the Esmouth . Admiral Seymour , Captain Louis , R . M ., Flag Lieutenant Pearce , and four others were examining it ' at the time , and most -wonderful it is that they were not all killed on the spot . Admiral Seymour is severely injured , especially in the left eye ; Captain Louis , R . M ., fa both legs ; and the others have also all suffered more or leggfrom the explosion . I am , however , only too happy to be able to state , on the best authority , that all the severe cases are progressing favourably .
" . On the 21 st inst ., the Amphion , 36 , screw-frigate , Captain Key , while employed in reconnoitring the fortifications at Sweaborg , accidentally mistook the channel , and in consequence grounded . The boats were immediately despatched in all directions to sound ; and while 80 employed , one of the nearest forts opened a brisk fire upon the frigate . Four shots struck her , killing one man and wounding two otHers . Captain Key , however , nothing daunted , returned the compliment -with such energy and precision , that he succeeded in blowing up s large Russian powder magazine , and occasioned other serious damage to the fort . "
BOMBARDMENT OF SWEABORG . A despatch from Dantzig says that Sweaborg has been bombarded . Some magazines were blown up and various buildings fired . Narva also has been attacked with Success , several cannon having been dismounted and shipping destroyed . The small town of Nystadt , in the Gulf of Bothnia , has been destroyed by bombardment ; but at Sandham ( an island situated to the east of Sweaborg , near the coast of the mainland ) we have met with a reverse . A frigate approached the batteries on the island , and opened fire . The Russian batteries replied with success , destroyed a launch which preceded the frigate and was taking soundings , and lodged a shell and some cannon-balls in the frigate itself .
Jufct 7, 1855.] ^^ The E E Aj) 33 R. 6*1
JUfcT 7 , 1855 . ] ^^ THE E E AJ ) 33 R . 6 * 1
War Miscellanea. General La Marmora Writ...
WAR MISCELLANEA . General La Marmora writes from Kadikoi ( Crimea ) , Tinder date of the 27 th , that the cholera has almost disappeared from the Piedmontese camp . The Cholera is now almost as fatal in the English camp as when the army lay in Bulgaria , -where they lost two hundred men in a short space of time . The Guards have lost eighty-seven within a month . The Grenadiers lost ten in one day , and six in another . This regiment has lost thirty-four men and two sergeants . The Coldstream Guards have been more fortunate , only losing eighteen men and one sergeant . The Scots Fusilier Guards have lost twenty-three men and two sergeants . These numbers are beginning to make wide gaps in the ranks . —Morning Post Correspondent .
Anapa . —The French Admiral Bruat , in writing to his Government , says that though Anapa was safe from tkcoupde main , he can understand the reason for the Russians abandoning it , since it is provided with only a few wells of brackish water ; and , once shut in , this cause alone would have compelled the garrison , to surrender . " The Adventurous Lady mentioned as having , in an hour of no ordinary peril , paid a visit to the Mnmelon Tower , was , it is said , the wife of Lord George Paget , the commanding officer of the 4 th Light Dragoons . Miss Nightingale is about to return home . Miss Stanley has already arrived ..
Letters of Marshal St . Arnaud . —The family of Marshal St . Arnaud have published at Paris a selection from his correspondence , written during the time in Which he held the chief command of the French army in Turkey . The tone of these letters is very gloom 3 ' . Writing to his brother from Varna , on August 9 th , he ¦ ays : — 44 If I were to give way to my impressions , to my turn of mind nud the feelings of my heart , I should never have written you a sadder letter . 1 am in the midst of one vast tomb , resisting the scourge that is decimating my army , seeing my bravost soldiers succumb jit the very moment 1 most want thcMii , and yet continning-, for all that , the preparations for a formidable
expedition . Have there been many such situations as Mine in history ? My courage and energy alia II at least JWve equal to the occasion . God , who strikes me with COehnnd , raises me up with the other . For a long time , Oy health has not been tetter , in the midst of cares and ittletioa that fret mo , and which I devour in secret , With death at my heart , culm on my brow . Such is my Wdatencc . " In a letter to bin lister , he observes : — "Cholera , conflagration , plague , ( ire , and water—1 have b jMn ^ . thom all . " To hit * wife , h < i expresses his hope of iwta ( r her in tho spring , and retiring into ( ho culm of jpvate life . More than once , the Marshal complaint * of ; W » yi owing to tho English not being ready . v ! ? rivatjb : John Lyonhof tho Grenadier < iuaidrt , bus
, Performed an act of groat courage at the Quarry works . W ' BClzcd a thirty-two pounder shell , which had fallen JPOng a group of men , nnrt hurled it over tho parapet iIW works . Tho fii . hu wim burning , and tho shell Van , Mp > ftr explosion that it hurst tho instant after it wan IPWoyer . The man'H unnio and action worn reported W * ord Raglan ; but vro < lo not hoar that Lyons ha * . rfp rewarded . * 4 .
Captain Ltoks was buried on the 25 th of June . The Foreign Legion . — A Hamburg letter of the 28 th ult . in the Independance Beige says : — " The officer who directs the recruiting operations in the isle of Heligoland having informed the English Government that the number of men enlisted in Germany was sufficient to organise a battalion , Lord . Panmure directed his agent at our port to freight the vessels necessary to convey those men to Folkestone , -where they are to be equipped , armed , and drilled . " A Medical Officer writes to the Times from before Sebastopol , to complain of the disgracefully deficient preparations for receiving the wounded after the action on the 18 th of June . During the whole of that day , the wounded had nothing to eat , and very little to drink ! On the 19 th , matters were very little better .
The Sunday Demonstration In Hyde Park. N...
THE SUNDAY DEMONSTRATION IN HYDE PARK . Notwithstanding the advertisements and placards put forth by the police authorities , in which any further demonstration of the working classes in Hyde Park was forbidden , large numbers , belonging to all classes of society beneath the very highest , assembled last Sunday long before three o ' clock , the hour at which the proceedings Avere advertised to commence , and for some time all went off peaceably . A few persons at different parts of the park proceeded to address the people , until the
arrival of the police at the particular locality would scatter the auditory and cause the orator to vanish . One time , however , the people rushed at the police , and knocked their hats oft "; at which the constables made a vigorous use of their truncheons , and several persons were ser iously injured . A little child was forced down , and trampled upon ; and a man who , to avoid being taken into custody , leaped into the Serpentine , and endeavoured to swim across , was nearly drowned . Being rescued by the Humane Society ' s men , he was ultimately handed over to the police .
The hooting at the carriages and their occupants , ana the cries of "Go to church ! " and '' Take the horses out ! " which formed a distinguishing feature of the preceding Sunday ' s ceremony , were repeated ; a :-. the police immediately began to arrest the hooters . Two or three severe scuffles ensued ; several heads were broken , and it was found necessary to dress the wounds of some of the prisoners at the Humane Society ' s Receiving House , and of others at St . George ' s Hospital , before They were finally removed to the station , handcuffed . Some attempts at rescue were made ; but they failed . A very serious collision between the police and a number of soldiers seemed at one time imminent . The
police—whose conduct all accounts agree in representing ; as extremely brutal — made a sudden and unprovoked attack upon a group of respectably dressed men and women , several of whom were knocked down . Some soldiers , chiefly belonging to the Guards , were present ; and one , wearing the Crimean medal , observed that the conduct of the police was as bad as that of the Russians at Inkerman . The speaker was immediately seized ; his comrades rushed to the rescue ; and , after a scuffle , the police thought it prudent to relinquish their prisoner . The people , of course , cheered the soldiers , who appeared so greatly excited that the police sent to
the guard-house , and procured the assistance of a scrjeant , by whom several of the soldiers were induced to return to their barracks . Those who remained behind , however , seemed greatly irritated with the police , and expressed their opinion of them with much freedom . By eight o ' clock , the crowd began to leave the park ; but it was not until long after that hour that the ground was entirely cleared . Several persons expressed their intention of making a demonstration outsido LorJ Robert Grosvenor ' s house ; but it does not appear that anything of importance occurred there . His lordship , it was stated , had left town , and had placed two hundred policemen in his house to protect it in case of attack .
About one hundred-and-four persons were taken in custody ; and on Monday the investigation of their cases commenced nt Marlborough-street . A very large crowd of persons assembled outside the police oftice ; and several men were apprehended for stone-throwing and riotous conduct . On tho arrival of the magistrate , ho was greeted with cries of " Act with justice ! " and one or two stones were ( lung , which fortunately missed him . Mr . llallautinc appeared for some of the accused ; but , owing to a very discreditable delay on tho part of the police or of the Government , tho proceedings did not commence until about a quarter to five o ' clock . Kvidonro wn . s then received with respect to a youth named
K . I ward Copas , and an elderly gentleman , Mr . Francis Henry Mair , who was described jus a clerical agent and editor of a . periodical . Both were charged with assaulting tho poliee . Mr . Bnllnntine , in addressing tho magistrate in their behalf , said tho people had gone to the liurk with tho laudable desire of driving a little sense into the ridiculous bead of tho author of that most ridiculous measure , the Sunday Trading Mil ; and , with respect to Mr . Mair , he Haiti he was prepared to prove that tho polieo bad perjured thomnelves . Mr . Clarkson said liu was instructed by Government to B « y that all persona , not engaged in committing nets of violence ,
who were then in custody , might be set at liberty ; and finally , Mr . Hardwick , the magistrate , adjourned the proceedings until the following day . A strong patrol watched the streets in the neighbourhood of the police office the whole of Monday , and remained there during the night . At midnight , there were still two or three score of loungers in and about Marlborough-street , who seemed to have come there from motives of curiositv . On Tuesday , the proceedings were resumed , when ten of the prisoners were discharged , while those accused of stone-throwing were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment , and several pickpockets were also committed . Mr . Hardwick was decidedly of opinion that
the meeting was unlawful . In the course of the day , two or three persons came to complain of the conduct of the police the preceding evening . One gentleman said he had witnessed many scenes of ferocity in foreign countries , but nothing so dreadful as the violence of the police , who attacked indiscriminately men , women , and children . The outrages on the people appeared entirely unprovoked . Several letters , containing similar complaints , have appeared in the Times and other morning papers . One correspondent says that the people , on seeing the constables striking women and" children , exclaimed , " Oh , you brutes . ' wait till next Sunday . " A writer in the Daily Ntics suggests that a penny subscription should be got up for prosecuting the police .
A riotous mob again assembled before the Marlborough-street Police-office on Tuesday , and broke several windows . On Wednesday afternoon , Lord Robert Grosvenor ' s house was besieged by a large crowd ; and , on the same day , two Frenchmen were remanded on a charge of attacking the police on Monday in Silverstreet , Golden-square , and inciting the people to proclaim a Republic .
Ouli Civilisation. Attempt To Upset A Ra...
OUli CIVILISATION . Attempt to upset a Railway Train . —A little boy , dressed in a pinafore , and apparently about eleven years of age , was committed for trial , last Saturday , at Worship-street , * for placing an iron railway " chair" on the Xorth London line . The fireman fortunately perceived the obstruction some way in advance , screwed down the break as hard as he could' and saved the train from destruction . The boy was seen to place the iron on the rail deliberately , and then to conceal himself that he might watch the effect ! He has since been acquitted at the Central Criminal Court ; the Recorder having ruled that the jury before they could convict must be satisfied that the boy had placed the obstruction on the line with an evil purpose . Wulxiam Barnes , a well-dressed young man , has been committed for trial on no less than nine charges of fraud and forgery . The mode by which the prisoner effected his purpose was tbis : —He ascertained by some means or other the ironmongers with whom several of the respectable builders in the metropolis dealt for nails and ironmongery , and by means of forged orders , purporting to be written by the latter , obtained several tons of nails and other property from the former . He has twice before been tried and convicted of similar offences . Mr . Edmond O'Flaherty . —Our readers will recollect the scandal which was created about a year ago by the appointment of this gentleman as Irish Commissioner of Income-tax , from which he was removed on certain discreditable facts being brought to light against him .
An action has just been tried in the Court of Queen s Bench , Dublin , to recover the value of two bills of exchange for 500 / . and 300 / ., the first being the draft of the defendant , Mr . Gregory , upon Lord Dunkellin , and endorsed by Mr . Edmond O'Flaherty ; and the other the acccptauce of the defendant . The defence was that both the names of Mr . Gregory , as acceptor , and of Lord Dunkellin , were forgeries ; and , after a trial of two daj's , this was proved to the satisfaction of the jury . Both tho bills were cashed by Mr . Gregory for Mr . O'Flaherty , who had become deeply involved owing to unsuccessful turf transactions . It is believed that he is at present holding the office of clerk to a " store" at New York ; and it would seem that , though a warrant for his apprehension was issued nearly a year ago , no effort has ever been made towards hia pursuit and capture .
A Storm in aTka-ci : f . —An action has been brought in th « j Court of Queen's Bench , by which RoseJiannah Fray , recently lady ' a maid to Lady Zetland , sought to recover damages for defamation of character from Sarah Potter , her ladyship ' s housekeeper . Tho evidence exhibited an amusing interchange of crimination und recrimination , each litigant accusing tho other of being " a biid woman . " It seoms that the plaintiff and the defendant never agreed well ; and at length the latter accused the former to Lady Zetland of being a drunkard ,
and of making improper solicitations to Gunn , the groom of tho chambers , "in every holo and corner of the house "—tho young man being , in fact , " a second Joseph in her hands . " This was the account given by tho plaintiff ; but Mrs . Potter considerably qualitied it , though still making assertions damaging to I ' ray fl character . Mrs . Potter , on her * id <' , asserted that the plaintiff had accused her of improper conduct with respect to tho samo Guiin , of whoso attentions to Fray she wua euid to be jealous . Mrs ,
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), July 7, 1855, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_07071855/page/5/
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