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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: July 29, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 19 total hits in 9 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 4
Canada (Canada) (search for this): article 4
The Anglo-Saxon race.
The Enquirer attributes the first use of this term to Sharon Turner.
The first time we ever saw it was in one of Barke's speeches in the House of Commons, on a bill to settle the Government of Canada.
This was delivered about the year 1790.
Fox, in commenting upon the bill, had said that the Canadians were entitled to more liberty, in the article of self-government, than it gave them.
That they were in fact capable of self-government.
He pointed to the neighboring country — the United States--as affording an example of the capacity of man to govern himself.
Burke in reply said that the example was not to the point — that the United States were peopled by the "Anglo-Saxon race," whom he esteemed peculiarly capable of self-government, whereas the Canadians were a mongrel race, principally French, who, he said, were every day proving themselves more and more unworthy to be entrusted with that power.
He then launched into a tirade against the French revo
Scotchmen (search for this): article 4
Sharon Turner (search for this): article 4
The Anglo-Saxon race.
The Enquirer attributes the first use of this term to Sharon Turner.
The first time we ever saw it was in one of Barke's speeches in the House of Commons, on a bill to settle the Government of Canada.
This was delivered about the year 1790.
Fox, in commenting upon the bill, had said that the Canadians were entitled to more liberty, in the article of self-government, than it gave them.
That they were in fact capable of self-government.
He pointed to the neighboring country — the United States--as affording an example of the capacity of man to govern himself.
Burke in reply said that the example was not to the point — that the United States were peopled by the "Anglo-Saxon race," whom he esteemed peculiarly capable of self-government, whereas the Canadians were a mongrel race, principally French, who, he said, were every day proving themselves more and more unworthy to be entrusted with that power.
He then launched into a tirade against the French rev
Fox (search for this): article 4
Burke (search for this): article 4
French (search for this): article 4
Saxon (search for this): article 4
The Anglo-Saxon race.
The Enquirer attributes the first use of this term to Sharon Turner.
The first time we ever saw it was in one of Barke's speeches in the House of Commons, on a bill to settle the Government of Canada.
This was delivered about the year 1790.
Fox, in commenting upon the bill, had said that the Canadians were entitled to more liberty, in the article of self-government, than it gave them.
That they were in fact capable of self-government.
He pointed to the neighboring country — the United States--as affording an example of the capacity of man to govern himself.
Burke in reply said that the example was not to the point — that the United States were peopled by the "Anglo-Saxon race," whom he esteemed peculiarly capable of self-government, whereas the Canadians were a mongrel race, principally French, who, he said, were every day proving themselves more and more unworthy to be entrusted with that power.
He then launched into a tirade against the French re
1790 AD (search for this): article 4
The Anglo-Saxon race.
The Enquirer attributes the first use of this term to Sharon Turner.
The first time we ever saw it was in one of Barke's speeches in the House of Commons, on a bill to settle the Government of Canada.
This was delivered about the year 1790.
Fox, in commenting upon the bill, had said that the Canadians were entitled to more liberty, in the article of self-government, than it gave them.
That they were in fact capable of self-government.
He pointed to the neighboring country — the United States--as affording an example of the capacity of man to govern himself.
Burke in reply said that the example was not to the point — that the United States were peopled by the "Anglo-Saxon race," whom he esteemed peculiarly capable of self-government, whereas the Canadians were a mongrel race, principally French, who, he said, were every day proving themselves more and more unworthy to be entrusted with that power.
He then launched into a tirade against the French revo