hide Matching Documents

Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 23, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Fitzgerald or search for Fitzgerald in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 1 document section:

f the President to call the new Congress together, in extra , to consider what measures ought to be adopted in the event of a with Great Britain. The Prime Minister only insinuates a throat, but ostentatiously refuses, without being asked, to consent to such allocation in the neutrality laws as would render them effective, though the admits that, interpreted literally, they are wholly important. The tone of the speech of the Solicitor was equally combative, and a violent was made by Mr. Fitzgerald touching the capture, by Admiral Wilkes, of the British on a lawful , which the speaker regards as a affair. The London press, too, are fierce on the subject. The Shipping Gazette urges that, as a portion of the cargo was French property, the Emperor ought to unite with the English Government to "compel a respect for neutral rights."--The London Times states that the law officers of the crown bad declared the seizure illegal, and that the West India squadron would be ordered forthwit