Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 14, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Yorkshire (United Kingdom) or search for Yorkshire (United Kingdom) in all documents.

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e, Burns and Bunyan were all men of low degree; but kings and nobles are proud to do them reverence. Some of the brightest lights of the English bar and Parliament were men of humble extraction. Lord Eldon was the son of a barge maker; Lord Stovell, of a small coal dealer; Lord Tenteeden, of a barber; Lord Gifford, prior to his being called to the bar, was the poor clerk of a solicitor; Sir Jno. Williams, one of the Judges of the Queen's Bench, was the son of a very poor horse dealer in Yorkshire; Lord Truro (who married a first cousin of Queen Victoria,) was son of a very poor man in Cornwall; Mr. Baron Gurney, son of a poor lady in London; Lord Campbell, the present Lord Chancellor, was for many years reporter to the Morning Chronicle; Lord St. Leonards was son of a barber; Chief Justice Saunders was a beggar boy; Lord Kenyon, boot-black and errand boy; Lord Hardwick, an errand boy; Geo. Canning, son of a poor strolling player. Hundreds of others, titled and untitled, have risen