hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 128 results in 53 document sections:

1 2 3 4 5 6
est which crowd the columns of the leading journals we clip the following. The London News says: The bouquet-holder, in which the bouquet will be presented to the Princess Alexandra, on her leading in England, by the lady of the Mayor of Gravesend, in form will resemble a cornucopia, and is so arranged that by torching a spring ingeniously contrived it may be rested in an upright position. The ornamentation will consist of the arms of England and Denmark, surmounted by Prince of Wales feathers, issuing from a gold crown set with sapphires. On the reverse will be represented the motto of the corporation of Gravesend. The gold work of the cornucopia will be nourished with sink coral and pearls, being the national colors of Denmark. A Manchester paper says: The Princess Alexandra is to be received in the city by a bevy of blooming belles, the brightest gracefullest, and most fascinating of the beauties of the city; and the mode of the reception, and all the p
The Queen, accompanied by her Royal Highness Princess Helena, walked and drove in the grounds this morning. The Portuguese Minister and the Right Hon. E. and Mrs. Cardwell left the Castle this morning, and returned to London. Count Lavradio had the honor of dining with Her Majesty the Queen, the King of the Belgian, and the Royal family yesterday. Mr. Henry O'Nell has had the honor of a sitting from his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales for his picture of the Landing at Gravesend, and Mr. H. Weigall has been honored by a sitting from the Princess for his full-length portrait. The Right Hon. Sir. George Grey, M. P., left town yesterday for Stratton-park. Windsor Castle, March 30. The Queen, accompanied by her Royal Highness Princess Helena, went to London this morning. Her Majesty travelled by special train to the Paddington Station of the Great Western Railway, and proceeded thence to South Kensington, and visited the Horticultural gardens.
an for double-screws and Government gunboats, is very fast, having made seventeen knots an hour. There is no doubt she is now owned by rebel agents here. She may be intended either for a blockade-runner or a pirate; in the latter case receiving her armament when away from an English port, in accordance with — I had almost said the suggestion of the Attorney-General, when defending the Government for permitting the Georgia to take refuge in Liverpool. They have also, at Mayer's yard, Gravesend, thirty miles down the river, and very nearly completed, the Viper, a side-wheel steamer, wide and of shallow draught, admirably calculated for blockade-running. The evidence is perhaps less palpable in this case than that of the Rattlesnake, but warrants much more than suspicion. Perhaps the only person beside the rebel agents thoroughly well informed on the subject is our consul, Mr. Morse, who could, I imagine, write a curious volume on the Secret History of British Neutrality as conc
1 2 3 4 5 6