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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: November 9, 1860., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 21 total hits in 11 results.
Canterbury (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): article 2
Self-made Nobility.
--There are thirteen eminent Englishmen who have risen to high stations in life from obscurity.
We have the following enumeration:
Lords Eldon and Stowell--sons of a barge maker and small coal dealer at Newcastle.--Lord Tenderden--son of a barber at Canterbury; he received a very poor education, but obtained the means to go to college; while there he enjoyed from a company in the city of London an exhibition of £3 per year until he took his degree.
Lord Gilford--prior to his being called to the bar, was many years a poor clerk to a solicitor near Exeter.
Lord Langdale, the master of the rolls, was many years a poor practicing surgeon.
Sir John Williams, one of the judges of the Queen's bench — son of a very poor horse dealer in Yorkshire Lord Truc--son of a very poor man in Cornwall, married a first cousin of Queen Victoria, Mr. Baron Gurney--his mother kept a small bookstore for pamphlets in a court in the city of London. Lord Campbell, the present Lo
Yorkshire (United Kingdom) (search for this): article 2
Exeter, N. H. (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): article 2
New Castle, Ky. (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): article 2
Self-made Nobility.
--There are thirteen eminent Englishmen who have risen to high stations in life from obscurity.
We have the following enumeration:
Lords Eldon and Stowell--sons of a barge maker and small coal dealer at Newcastle.--Lord Tenderden--son of a barber at Canterbury; he received a very poor education, but obtained the means to go to college; while there he enjoyed from a company in the city of London an exhibition of £3 per year until he took his degree.
Lord Gilford--prior to his being called to the bar, was many years a poor clerk to a solicitor near Exeter.
Lord Langdale, the master of the rolls, was many years a poor practicing surgeon.
Sir John Williams, one of the judges of the Queen's bench — son of a very poor horse dealer in Yorkshire Lord Truc--son of a very poor man in Cornwall, married a first cousin of Queen Victoria, Mr. Baron Gurney--his mother kept a small bookstore for pamphlets in a court in the city of London. Lord Campbell, the present L
Cornwall, Conn. (Connecticut, United States) (search for this): article 2
Saint Leonard (search for this): article 2
Baron Gurney (search for this): article 2
John Williams (search for this): article 2
Robert Saunders (search for this): article 2
George Canning (search for this): article 2