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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: December 27, 1860., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.

Found 38 total hits in 10 results.

Plymouth, N. C. (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 10
on of affection was recently seen in the anxiety and alarm which he had been told prevailed in this country respecting the safety of his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. [Cheers.] From the manner in which that anxiety was displayed, her Majesty might be fully convinced of the ardent attachment of her people. Nor was this less strikingly demonstrated when his Royal Highness reached these shores; for he met with a reception most enthusiastic in its nature at every railway station between Plymouth and Windsor. In conclusion, he asked them to drink "Health to the Queen, and Prosperity to the Craft," and to give the toast all the Masonic honors. [Loud and protracted cheering.] His Grace, in proposing "The Rest of the Royal Family," said that it had been the lot of the Prince of Wales, at the age of nineteen, to render to his country a great and essential service. Many a man born of a royal family has descended into the grave rendering to his fellow-men much less good service t
Canada (Canada) (search for this): article 10
The Duke of Newcastle on America. A Masonic banquet was given at Nottingham, Eng., on the 8th inst., on the occasion of the installation of the Duke of Newcastle as Grand Master of Nottinghamshire. After mentioning briefly his visit to Canada with the Prince, he said: After leaving that country he went to another, which, it was true, did not at present own the sceptre of Great Britain, and therefore, throughout the many thousand miles through which he had traveled, there was not the same loyalty, because there was not the call for it in a country which was not subordinated to the Crown of England; but there was an amount of respect, of attachment, of veneration and love for the Queen of this country, which far transcended anything that could possibly have been expected. [Cheers] It was a tribute on the part of the American people; it was a demonstration of their veneration for female excellence, and it was also a proof of their deep and lasting attachment to the mother co
Nottingham (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 10
The Duke of Newcastle on America. A Masonic banquet was given at Nottingham, Eng., on the 8th inst., on the occasion of the installation of the Duke of Newcastle as Grand Master of Nottinghamshire. After mentioning briefly his visit to Canada with the Prince, he said: After leaving that country he went to another, which, it was true, did not at present own the sceptre of Great Britain, and therefore, throughout the many thousand miles through which he had traveled, there was not the same loyalty, because there was not the call for it in a country which was not subordinated to the Crown of England; but there was an amount of respect, of attachment, of veneration and love for the Queen of this country, which far transcended anything that could possibly have been expected. [Cheers] It was a tribute on the part of the American people; it was a demonstration of their veneration for female excellence, and it was also a proof of their deep and lasting attachment to the mother co
United States (United States) (search for this): article 10
of of their deep and lasting attachment to the mother country. He had no hesitation in saying that the feeling towards the Queen of Great Britain in the United States of America could not be designated by any other word he knew of but a passion. [Cheers.] He had the gratification in the Lodge that morning of seeing a brother — h which had been so generally exhibited elsewhere. Having now referred briefly to the attachment exhibited towards her Majesty in the Colonies and in the United States of America, he might notice the fact that a no less striking demonstration of affection was recently seen in the anxiety and alarm which he had been told prevailed tponed by that which has taken place.--[Cheers.] This he could say of this extraordinary visit, that they witnessed in New York, and in every other city of the United States, an amount of enthusiasm which was perfectly extraordinary from the moment at which they entered Detroit till their departure from Portland. [Cheers] With one
that which has taken place.--[Cheers.] This he could say of this extraordinary visit, that they witnessed in New York, and in every other city of the United States, an amount of enthusiasm which was perfectly extraordinary from the moment at which they entered Detroit till their departure from Portland. [Cheers] With one solitary exception, they met with nothing but enthusiasm; and, in fact, he did believe that the visit of the Prince of Wales to America has done more to cement the good feeling between the two countries than could possibly have been effected by a quarter of a century of diplomacy. The two great peoples on either side of the Atlantic have disclosed those feelings of fraternity which they entertain towards each other. --[Cheers] His grace concluded by proposing "The health of the Rest of the Royal Family," with which he coupled the name of his Royal Highness the Prince Frederic William of Prussia. The toast was drank with great enthusiasm and the usual honors.
New Castle, Ky. (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 10
The Duke of Newcastle on America. A Masonic banquet was given at Nottingham, Eng., on the 8th inst., on the occasion of the installation of the Duke of Newcastle as Grand Master of Nottinghamshire. After mentioning briefly his visit to Canada with the Prince, he said: After leaving that country he went to another, which, it was true, did not at present own the sceptre of Great Britain, and therefore, throughout the many thousand miles through which he had traveled, there was not thNewcastle as Grand Master of Nottinghamshire. After mentioning briefly his visit to Canada with the Prince, he said: After leaving that country he went to another, which, it was true, did not at present own the sceptre of Great Britain, and therefore, throughout the many thousand miles through which he had traveled, there was not the same loyalty, because there was not the call for it in a country which was not subordinated to the Crown of England; but there was an amount of respect, of attachment, of veneration and love for the Queen of this country, which far transcended anything that could possibly have been expected. [Cheers] It was a tribute on the part of the American people; it was a demonstration of their veneration for female excellence, and it was also a proof of their deep and lasting attachment to the mother
England (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 10
f the Duke of Newcastle as Grand Master of Nottinghamshire. After mentioning briefly his visit to Canada with the Prince, he said: After leaving that country he went to another, which, it was true, did not at present own the sceptre of Great Britain, and therefore, throughout the many thousand miles through which he had traveled, there was not the same loyalty, because there was not the call for it in a country which was not subordinated to the Crown of England; but there was an amount of the American people; it was a demonstration of their veneration for female excellence, and it was also a proof of their deep and lasting attachment to the mother country. He had no hesitation in saying that the feeling towards the Queen of Great Britain in the United States of America could not be designated by any other word he knew of but a passion. [Cheers.] He had the gratification in the Lodge that morning of seeing a brother — he did not know whether he was in the room at that moment
Windsor, Conn. (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): article 10
on was recently seen in the anxiety and alarm which he had been told prevailed in this country respecting the safety of his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. [Cheers.] From the manner in which that anxiety was displayed, her Majesty might be fully convinced of the ardent attachment of her people. Nor was this less strikingly demonstrated when his Royal Highness reached these shores; for he met with a reception most enthusiastic in its nature at every railway station between Plymouth and Windsor. In conclusion, he asked them to drink "Health to the Queen, and Prosperity to the Craft," and to give the toast all the Masonic honors. [Loud and protracted cheering.] His Grace, in proposing "The Rest of the Royal Family," said that it had been the lot of the Prince of Wales, at the age of nineteen, to render to his country a great and essential service. Many a man born of a royal family has descended into the grave rendering to his fellow-men much less good service than has been
Frederic William (search for this): article 10
that which has taken place.--[Cheers.] This he could say of this extraordinary visit, that they witnessed in New York, and in every other city of the United States, an amount of enthusiasm which was perfectly extraordinary from the moment at which they entered Detroit till their departure from Portland. [Cheers] With one solitary exception, they met with nothing but enthusiasm; and, in fact, he did believe that the visit of the Prince of Wales to America has done more to cement the good feeling between the two countries than could possibly have been effected by a quarter of a century of diplomacy. The two great peoples on either side of the Atlantic have disclosed those feelings of fraternity which they entertain towards each other. --[Cheers] His grace concluded by proposing "The health of the Rest of the Royal Family," with which he coupled the name of his Royal Highness the Prince Frederic William of Prussia. The toast was drank with great enthusiasm and the usual honors.
The Duke of Newcastle on America. A Masonic banquet was given at Nottingham, Eng., on the 8th inst., on the occasion of the installation of the Duke of Newcastle as Grand Master of Nottinghamshire. After mentioning briefly his visit to Canada with the Prince, he said: After leaving that country he went to another, which, it was true, did not at present own the sceptre of Great Britain, and therefore, throughout the many thousand miles through which he had traveled, there was not the same loyalty, because there was not the call for it in a country which was not subordinated to the Crown of England; but there was an amount of respect, of attachment, of veneration and love for the Queen of this country, which far transcended anything that could possibly have been expected. [Cheers] It was a tribute on the part of the American people; it was a demonstration of their veneration for female excellence, and it was also a proof of their deep and lasting attachment to the mother co