The New York Herald Newspaper, December 4, 1851, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY: | very zerty inet be shold po convicted ina | the a . ates Toone My. “Glen . jistory ef Ci ae cetee The legailty ana en . See ‘not with ‘TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. ‘The Rev. Dr, Bacon on the Turkish Em- vs Teldsioofentletesk to his! In fhe Henatp of the 8th ult., one of your cer- ¥ those commissions, and 2 arned Few | respondents, writing from Chagres, and giving an On Tuesday evening a lecture was delivered at Index of Newspapers; Scone. intended to have piven tome 2 ‘the | pocount of the recent riet which occurred there, be- the Brooklyn Institute, before the members of the As we stated in eur edition yesterday, the pro- | final disposition of the Oulda/, Merchant, which has Demeter is | tween the American and Jamaica boatmen, has | Philomathean Sosiety, by the Rev. Dr. Bacon, ef | mineoould be imm tcedings of this socicty, at ite stated meeting on | ever since remained in obscurity, Kidd certainly not ution mitted New Har The having stated it fairly in saying she was at Hi committed some errors of rather a grave character, | New Haven. Subject of the lecture consisted ‘Seaiag-araning, wore exemely interesting. | Sicia.” Bas be had. ciuady’ oovupled which I beg leave to correct through the medium | of remarks on the Turkish empire, and comprised ® | yield ‘The Hon. Luther Bradish presided, and time, and, as he thought, shown sufficieatly the of your columas. In the first place, he reprosents | sketch of his recent wanderings in Western Asis, | voted to ite working, and science hed been Bbraty raom of the society, at the University, was Fonscus that had mase “Kid's name #0 famous on that the difficulty existed bet the ‘native and | The Rev. Dr. began his discourse by a fe to filled. yisiters were many | both sides of the Atlantic. ie ye jween . Dr. yurse by a few prefatory European Gompletely : Sane Bradish is the best | Mr. Luruen R. Marsu, inmovinga vote ofthanks, American boatmen,”*wnen {t is well known that | observations, explaining to the audience that he | jecturer. ‘There, ania Beery ne. Mz. had. The late | ®2d that the gentleman be requested to farnish « UBLIC. | there was not # single native citizen of the country | had not expected to meet such an assemblage as | the mines to certain companies Bpereing, oPicer the soclety at ere een ae nie | ene te be Jn,the aphives of ts engeged in it. Tho trouble was wholly confined to | that now present, aa his lecture was rather intended | Te#erved to them; ‘but that o Uearnat Doctor Eicenck was no} 100 @ gang of Jamaica negroes and Americans, the na- | for » meeting ot young people. He, however, saw Ieoted by the State To X erica, yurteay to the younger members, and but little ET Ne ibe socincs under his auspices. The | i tives taking no part whatever im the matter. I | that there were gray hairs present, as well as the | much neglected; for i the ae 3 make this correction in justice to the native citizens | more youthful members of society, for which latter | were sen: ‘venerable Albert Gallatin was too old and infirm to | he oxp! tee factured rast]: A Isthmus, who are exceedingly sensitive on | the present discourse was more particularly in- of the new world, the latter contained mines takes very ne bay Dasnane Eeiiene Would ake placa pebicopnie wouldprababiy nt x of thie point, and who pride themselves on their | tended. He had, therefere, come unprepared with | mush xi valuable ore, and in quantities re ON hod a2, | only rescue his name from oblequy, but elevate him ' Pescesble character, which thoy in us | the usual details requisite te form s regular lecture, | inexhaustible. A knowledge of wo who, as Vice President, sometimes officiated as | +, the fame of a hero; and % was 9 striking exam- | 2 ain in all their intercourse and dealings with the statistics, and other information, connected | Vent: this. 5 ¢bairman of the meetings, had an eye, among other | ple of the justice generally rendered by posterity. Americans. things, to Rhode Island, where he is now either | aN ESSAY, BY EDWIN WILLIAMS, OF NEW YORK, ON Lieatenant-Governor or acting Governor. ‘THE IMPORTANCE OF A #ENERAL INDEX TO AMERI- which a sense of common justice requires correcting. t , in ‘and then subjoin s ‘The minutes of the last meeting and the annual Mn Eowin Wiruta xs, being called on by the Itis the charge made Harvey Gleason, Esq., during the past year, in Asia, bjo! oo rs or more copiously furnish: 8. d tained in | few remarks on the present condition of the Turkish E ne having been read an approved, the librarian re- | President, read to the meeting the following com- | ith foreigs int nee. In October, 1773, Rie * ae: ane) ok neres a * earner iS covica, Tha Siok plone ha, vstied ta Jala, Bidteoete onal progress were, rogarteg. The lensranee of ported eoveral acquisitions, particulary an meee to ie ees bye ie sug- i ton informed his readers et sacs impression remarks of your correspondent : ing part of the world was Beyrout, anciently called fares carts EARLY HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA. ol a erican | o weekly Gazetteer amoun' 000 copies. * * * * * * - Society bei ession of files of it taken, and Buetus, situated at the foot of Mount Lebanon, the This was, he said, a very rare book—it was the tulle i aed key to the ey of the country hy br AM RK ats ‘aay “Shots were fired, however, at the office of the pare ch Ghd CAeiiidilen at Einitova aad ‘Mesias . Ficatata, pare he 8 Roe Maat was hey History of California, written by: the Abbé Clavi- | for the last one bandred and t' only oe years: — Rivington, who wasan Englishman(trom London) | American Consul, Mr. Gleason, against whom with the East. Beyront, like all the other cities of | Gcrune’ bel whore — — ee parent cdg ot ee Se tnt eet hn ur tthe wed fr | TES oo | eaten Cmammm een: Ae | O°D el Rae raert et acenal Se | ae eam, Seer ia So oe ne | Seen es tal toe et Be 8 jety:— continu: soen after the peace o! » : Jun y skilful treatment. The bad and injarious resulta mary years, andthe work contained many curious G te failed for want rts 4 ok part with and sustained the foreign boatmen in 3 and other represen: was, in fact, ve particulars as to the aboriginal inhabitants, and | "The nature of my pursuits, and my researches aah teuded largely Hy cs Ao aeaied: their unjust assumptions.” ‘ ‘ Fray the stores very small. ‘The platform on which rey: ae Rie) eas at ed Cle the early settisment of the country. Ina brief pre- | into the reestds of tho past, have given me some | ory several years afterwards. Ho finally failed in 2 he stood contained more square feet than a Syrian iy mst ng acco! yay ry Was | experience,and enabled mo'to estimate the impor- | {r2eusinese: andretived, Ho died in July 1802, | “But if their conduct was sible, how | dry goods store. The Turkish storekeeper has but | of the neglect with which the British mines had faoo it was stated that the origin of the namo was of pablio journals and newspapers, as sources | Sethe adven of 78 years. * much to be condemned is that of the United States | one price, and in this respect was superior to the | been treated fer a long series of years; and he eon- ston and his interesting ‘times, we There is, however, another error or misrerepre- | with the subject, as all that hehad proposed to do sentation of greater and importance, | was merely to point out the places he had visited . tance 5 Cy i Bi xploration of the woa- soppoeed to be Calida Fornex, afterwards corrupted | of American history. The histories of our country, Consul at Chagres, who, so far from doing aught | Christian tradesmen of the piace, whoare very extor- | cluded with an expressive o: " viated; a title given it by Cortes, (who | which hove appeared from time to time, sinee the Le our list of new: rs. In the ap- | toprevent the outrage perpetrated that morning, | tionate, and appear never satisfied with what they | derful wealth with which the mines in the imme- or abrov 3 [3 y ' . pros pe: has his countenance and s od when the A: diate vicinity of New York were stored. But @ iged himself on his Latinity,) on account of tho | revolution, aro mainly madeup from abstracts ofthe | tymn of 1783, John Holt, who had published m | stems rather to have given it have obtained. At the when tho American ; Lord Stuliag "of Beotland’ be Hiv crite diuate. sa ht proceedings of Mee aoegs of our State Legislatures, | patriotie paper in New York until the English took | port? He undoubtedly knew of the meeting held | mission was first formed, Beyrout contained aoac | few years rice tee bene “The volumes (ewo small octavo ones) had been in | and otier public bodies, or the personal histori of | PesriGuahepen in New, vrs unl the agian took | 20% tit yefore, agit was publicly known on that | Cieuon.was Aree formed. Heyrout contained, so0at Ported to the Untied Kingdom, from Now Jersey, micmiee celta \ineioncitbes our prblic men. The newspapers may be said to | fame the war—first at Esopus n,) | side, and it cortainly was his duty, as it was, with- | This rapid increase of population he attributed to | fevera eae of meatal lok, from aaa ‘the posession of the historian Gi : preseat the only picture of the times in which they | and then at 'Poughkeepsie—commenced the publi- | out doubt, in his powor, by the influence of his Po: the impetus given to commerce by the steamers | 'ance of the custom house . fa Ms oe C ane CAPTAIN KIDD. were printed—less complete, it is true, in the early cation, in this city, res Intependent Gazette ; or, | sition, to discountenance the resolution adop' that now ply about the Mediterranean, and come to | to waste upon the wharves of London, bu’ whish, read one of the papers ef theeve- | history of the American press in the New York ged. Revivel. Aftor his death, | that night. Knowing, as he did, that there was Beyrout, which, like Tyre of old, was the seaport of | Upon being submitted to scientific men, was found ry interesting account, compiled | bu’ still a picture from which Daguerrootypes, #0 to following year, (1784,) the Journal was con- | 80 late an amount of American treasure on the | all the country about Mount Lebanon. In travel- | to be ® material agent in the cultivation of the sources, of the renowned Captain oe. may be taken, by an ingenious writer, in OS by his widow, and afterwards by Oswald, a | other side, and, above all, that there were Ameri- ling through the country, the greatest hardship was | earth. nded to throw what will, no doubt, to | tke shape of facts and inferences, the vivid prosen~ | kinsman of Mrs. Holt. Oswald had been a colonel | can lives there to be hazarded, in consequonce of | the badnew of the roads, white was occasioned by | _ Dr. Jackson intends to deliver a course of ty of our readers, be @ new light on the | tation of which renders the historical sketches of | gy the American arm In January, 1787, Eliza | such violent measures, it is impossible to blame too | the ne, ef the government, and the worst of mu- | lectures on Geology M g, in all their dif- rubject ‘ere were, the learned Judge said, two | Mr. Macauley so vivid, impressive, and delightful. | oth Holt, and} Oswald, (who in 1795,) sold | much the conduct of # man, who, in such a posi- | nicipal liberty. In Turkey, there was no municipal | ferent aspects snd reiation pames which were known all over the world, wher- Doctor Jobnson classes the writers of dictionaries | their right in the Jowrna/ and the printing esta- | tion, would first let bis own petty interests as con- | jiberty—no mayor, no corporation, nor any other | adequate jount of subsorip ever the English language was spoken, and had | among those Sher Sri whom mankind have | plisbment, to Thomas Greenleaf. Fhe Journal, | nected with the boating oy and afterwards his | municipal officera for the cities. There was, to be | commences school. The lecture of last night been the theme of innumerable ballads and nursery considered not as the pupils, but the alaves of | under his control, opposed the administration of | resentments, in consequence of the attack the day | sure, a» Pasha, who governed the place, but all | 2n introductory onc, was highly Wher teape o rbymes; yet, strange to say, nothing of the men but | science, the pioneers of literature, doomed only to Washington with great virulence. Under Mrs. | before, cause him se far to forgot his manifest duty. wer emanated from Constantinople. Agaio, | g@ve satisfaction to an auditory ovidently att their names were known to the masges. Ho allud- | remove rabbish, and clear obstructions from the | Folt and Oswald, it had opposed the adoption of Had he believed his fellow boatmen to be wronged, ere was no such thing among the people as patriot- | and intelligent. heen in Judge Camper i b Robin Hood and Captain Kidd, who flourished | paths through which learning and 38 for- ‘ion. (an absurdity, by the way,) there were other ways | ism; no attachment to the country ; no attachment = St widely different periode,—the one supposed to be | ward to conquest and glory. Thaker of the federal ceaaieatin. aud enleat was, Som ia | Kiwhich hagheald have soaghs redress for thers; | ita D?.nieeohment to the o feeling seems to exist | The Particulars of the Loss of the British & freebooter on the land, and the other on the { indexes undoubtedly belongs to the same oategory | of a printer, by the celobrated Tsaiah “Thomas, the writer believes that he expresses the opin- | which was to be found in America, which makes a ship Unicorn, e water. Of Robin very little was known. The | of labor saving mortals, or rather those who are the ‘an ty at Worsester. | ion of most of his fellow passengers, when he says | man proud of belon; , for example, to Old Ken- vom Capt. O” piace of his burial was still preserved in almost the | the means of ga the labor and time of their fel- fran r of the Ant eg cnbisee 4 daily and semi- | that the fatal occurrence might easily have beon feces ec the Bay cing. or the Erm re State. The Basal a - Piped me! Sgt eran Samy same wild state as in the days when Sherwood forest | low creatures. A k without an index, if on an | week ly paper, under different names, was continued | prevented by the Consul, had he sought to do so.” | (Applause.) No such feeling existed there. Ina | Particulars of the loss o} ship Unicorn, resounded with the notes of his bugle, and historical subject, may be said to be nearly useless, by Greenleaf until his death by yellow fever, in | , So far from these paragraphs being true, they are | similar manner, there existed no attachment among | on her voyage from Liverpool to St. John, N. B., with the shouts of his ‘merry men all.” Ti and should not be patronised by the = lie; yet, t the age of 42 years. After his decease, his | false in articular. Mr. Gleason dees not | the people to the sovereign—to the Sultan. The | 9 brief account of which we have already pub- sepulchre was in the neighborhood of Hudders- | perhaps, a majority of historical and biographical widow published the Journal for a time, b own a oat of any description, except the | Christians did not like him, for they were slaves; iit feld, ana ‘near the ruins of the priory whioh tho | Works are published without them. Fe authors ually sold the establishment to James Cheetham, | steamer which bears bis own name, and which runs | the Mohammedans did not like him, for they were : Je bold outlaw had sought as a sanctuary, and where | are found who are willing to index their own works; an, who d the title of both the | between Chagres and Gorgona on the Chagres | suspicious of his government. Ini their fanata- Left Liverpool en the morning of Ootober 18, he died. He was claimant to the proud Earldom ig, Probably ef the feeling against statistios aay a ent weekly ae The daily he | river. He has nota sale Boatman in his employ; any was nearly Ly ous, and the Sultan himself | with two hundred and cighty-two omigrante, three ef Huntingdon, and the following iption has tir xes can be called statistics), as sneeringly | calied the American Citizen, and the somi-weekly | nor has he any interest in any boat employed for | was looked ‘upon as no better than he should be. | cabin passengers, anda crew of twenty-four per- been carefully peemarees +—~ expressed by a learned lecturer, in the course of Bis | bore the title of the American Batch Tower. | embarking and disembarking the steamers’ passen- | There was, therefore, a general dissolution of 30: Maas prepa by “Underneath this little stone remaiks on the gonius and works of Cervantes. I | Cheetham wrote with aforco and style that occa- | g¢T8- ciety, and it was only kept together by the sectarian | £008, including officers. The afternoonafter loaving, Lier Robert, Earl of Huntingdon; am sure that the membors of this society, however, | sionally closely rosembled the renowned letters of | _ Whenthe disturbance occurred, Mr. Gleason en- feeling still predominant, and which stood ia place | it commenced b'owing heavily from west-southwest, No archer wases he so ea ‘ require no argument to convince them of the im-| Junius The American Citizen existed from 1901 | desvored by all honorable means to suppress it. | of patriotism, of love of home, or of loyalty to the | and veered round to west-northwest, the rhip un- An eae rer” ortance of indexes to the voluminogs works which | to 1810, and was decidedly democratic in its charac- | He did not shrink from exposing himself to danger, | sovereign. Yet thore existed a love of liverty in Bueb ar as he and his men 3 accumulated in our archives. The catalogue i and in doing far more than his duty as an Ameri- | this mountainous country, and the inhabitants were | 4¢F Close-reefed toprail and foresail. Moderate on England py ee ond ng] jared by the Librarian, when published, will ey, geet ards eno het ay toeon a can Consal. or as an American, required him to do. | with difficulty kept in poss by the Turkish govern- | the following morning, with the wind at southwest. . astaenpe beeen aul supply the means of ready reference to the books Biinvon, Dewitt Clinton, and their friends, and v He was in the midst of an oxcite gang of men, | ment. They consisted of tworaces—the Maronites, | Tried the North channel; but when abreast of Bel- He had laid in this grave more than four centarios | and manuscripts preserve oy the society. An in- lently attacked Aaron Burr and his associates. But, | Who, with their passions roused to high pitch, | who are Christians, and speak the Arabic ; and the fast lough encountered a heavy squall, anda shift when William Kidd commenced his career, in the | dex to the newspaperg, or such of them as are ro- beyond all doubt, tho best democratic paper of the | Would not have hesitated to wreak their vengoan:s Drews, a kind of heretical Mahomitan, who are td Ae pps ey art of the reign of William and Mary: | quired to fill up the cMsms of eons isthedoside- | times in which Cheetham flourished, was Duane's | upon him, at any moment. Yet, he stood his | » more energetic people than the former, and | °f Wind to the northward. Bore up again, with Kidd had always, from his earliest years, followed | ratum whieh, it appears to me, would be one of the Aurora, published in Philadelphia; a ‘file of which the profession of the sea; had been @ naval officer | most useful services tho society could perform to is to be found in our library. < Frior to the year 1691, when he had married in this | the jublic, and be certain to extend its benefits to | f° Hosgund sicunaed te publication of Me- grainy — agp as “e hay lo ore. woald destroy thom, at for, the interference | squally, unsettled weather—the wind from all pointe 6 of doing; and, in his manly efforts to quell the | of Turkey, assiste other European powers. ay 1 f pea Priflty gt ring sbouk a ceafal sbabe ott teen noe eetate lees nat tase on Dd be of the compaes—and got clear of the land on tha country, and commanded a merchant ship, belong- | the present and future generations. ‘a New ¥% things, he, at the same time, defonded andustained st visited by Americans. At that time a residence | 2th inst ; after which nothing particular occurred ing to Ne Robert Livingston, and was in high ro- ‘Auittle reflection atisfy all of the vast im- ko ieetens he Fane gag remy the honor of his country’s flag His position was ~ netball city was very dangerous, but now | till the morning of the 7th November, in latitude puration andesteem. A resolation was Iith | portance of this subject. Tho lawyer who searches | G4" ‘TheeUiasate continued to b ished until | an exceedingly amkard and painful one. His owa | it is as safe for an American as Vienna or Beyrout. | 42 degrees 22 minutes north, longitude 55 degrees April, » commending him for services rendered | after facts and dates, to prove or strongthen his case % ra ubscription | ccuntrymen had been the cause of tho riot, and, | The only danger was of being attacked on the road 13 minutes west, when it commenced blowing hea- the pul and tho Council awarded him therfor | in court, the agent for revolutionary or other pension- list was purchased by t ietors of the Journal | although the community and your correspondent | by robbers, a circumstance which made the route td the fum of one hundred and fifty pounds, onthe lith | ers, the inquirer after his rights to a legacy, and of Commurce, in 1340; nded the Gazette, | hadno claim whatever upon him, or his services in | more interesting, provided you come off with a | Vily from south-southwest. We furled topgaliant May following. About 1986 the ocean had become | the seeker after the periods when a marriage or nee haifa century. The | settling the difficulty, still, like true and good | whole skin. The district called Anti-Lebanon was | sailsand double reofed tho topsails. The gale con- covered with pirates, and the subject obtained, as | death took place, are frequently at a loss for some er va tage am dag La <n L. Wayland and | man, he stepped forth and hazarded his life in the | filled with ruins of the various epochs in the history | tinned increasing, and the wind veered to south« it demanded, serious consideration by the govern- | clue which.would lead to the point ofinyuiry. The Matthew L. Davis, was started in 1 ‘but lasted | attempt. of the world, but the inhabitants could not under- fihenahs- filed: watueatis-iiby-nad spethetvand L:ngland; but all their available ships | propored index would be an answer to these sad only about a year. The Commercial Advertiser was Your correspondent has either been misinformed | stand why the Franks, as Americans and Europeans | *utheast; furle jpanker, ployed in the war, the only thing that they | many more important queries, which it is impossi- established in 1797; and in 1801 was commenced | in relation te the matter, or elso he labors under | are called, should feel such interest in examining | close-reofed fore and mizen topsails. The baro- eat mas a private expedition. | Kidd was | bie now to foresee or ani e. Let such an index | the New York Evening Post, tho same establish. | the very prevailing, but not less erreneous idea, | them. On his return to Beyrout, from visiting that | meter was now falling fast, and we made every at this time in London, and it was said he would | be printed, and I am satisfied its circulation ‘would nt which is continued to our own times; still | that United States Consuls are quite as potent 2s | region, he sailed in company with a missionary and preparation for bad weather; sesured all the have bad the command, if a government expedition | be extensive, and even, Laer Temunerative to | 5 dding the lights of wisdo: xperience, and | ministers plenipoten , and that they havo the | family, and # native teacher, who spoke English er; 006 were fitted out. the society, were the expense of incurring and print- arning upon its admirers. care and custody, not only of the honor of our flag | to Scanderoos, the sea port of Aleppo. The voyage | batches, and close-reefed maintopsail. The sea at Judge Caxrpert then referred to a very rare | ing it assumed by them. But this is a minorsubjec: | "The “jaltowing are the dates when the daily | and the interests of our nation in their hands, but | was performed inan Arabschooner,without compass | this time was running at a prodigious height and “ saphlet, waleh “ — be Ther reg veel 2 of (ame gmap Surely, among ae on ae r3 published in this city on or previous to the aan} their ce require = vada d riot a or ol arty nfo little was she art of Bevigation wader: in every direction, causing the ship to roll and lavor 701, and entitled “ i citizens of New York, , indoe ol laces, 85) vizi— juell outbreaks, suppress mobs, and make especie! | gtocd in the country o! lent Tyre, where it firs! Belmont, Ke” It was anonymous, but the author | for all intelligent Americans aro interested Ii FM vahivase’ licines Darn agec agua Thy Hrovisions for the pi ably ‘and convenience of all | took its raise. pide ‘at the ime ofhis visit, was | ‘Temendourly. Thesbip making water, the pumps refeesed to derive all his information from the | matter, a suflicient amount may be easily raised to , MORNING PAPERS. Jenestaen twovelions fo the & cautteles 18'| ta saheds dns sonait ot tha aenich: boteoee! tho | Wars Kigh csastaall) ging. Ths wid ned Yomne Fini, ana there were good reaons to suppose it | Provide for the seposns of the prepeeed iealee, ine | Journl of Commerce: iablishod in 1827 foreign ruins, the res 3 Courier and Enquirer. which they may reside. Ho has certainly shot very | Christian and Mahomitan population, and which | quite unsteady ard squally, and blowing wich fear- Pee ns git ingame lua | TaD an ecard {soa point ou | The Sa de HBS | Site ke Marian’ Curt at Cspot vas | ee fsboung coer Bn Hangrianttn | ‘vincent romucng tendy mor oan ow ovecnor of the Province of New Ingland, it was | mode by which the object proposed may be brought The Expre _ 1836 | ettimation of thot who know him, for @ moro | garian leader observed tos American gentleman, | minutes, ard veering to all points of the compass. because bo considered him staunch and determined, | about, and not left, as come of our statesmen pro- The Tribune. 4 do. 18iL faithful, eflicient, and estimable public officer is sel- | frat he owed Horace Mann no ill feeling, but he | Clewed upfore and mizon topeails. The ship, from — er Ba ae ote. ya pony pose to leave our public works, a, and | The Morning Ster do. 1848 | dom, if ever, to be found in the service of the | heartily wished that the Austrian government had | the terrific sea which now broke over her, became teak, Gnd ein teqpaning on thie theese Te Oe =e 2m. somplees Peelerlty icera | ‘The Day Book ... do. 1849 | United States. Pasa. | hung him, for it would have boon the last aot ofthe | perfectly unmanageable, having her decks entirely Earl of Belmont’ coming out, Col. Li ry a etnee Giaule “Ge Rade: aalins to coe, EVENING PAPERS. Court of General Sessions. Re. a neers. Visited by an American, | {WePt save of tho long boat. ke ay ve were rcught him, and had an iaterviow, in whic fienco the work, under the’ supervision of the | Commercial Advertiser........ do. 1797 | Before Judge Beebe and Aldermen Oakley and Dodge. arbeker, a Place rarely visiied by an American, | kept constantly going. At abou 11 A. M, @ told him be had talked with Kidd, ia whom he ex- | librarian, or a committee of the shelety, sompored | Evening Post do: 1801 | | Morpa, Dee, 1—the December Term in this Ooart | S0d4ailed down the Tigris one raft. « modo of | dreadful equall struck ship, and literally tore the Fressed great confidence, and who had said, that | of individuals femilias with tach labors or who | Evening Mirr do. 1844 | commenced to day. The following were sworn | travelling nooessary trom tho rapidity of the cur- | furled sails from the yards. The fore topgallant mast with & good ship of thirty guns, and about one hun- cae the ingenuity to direct the manner in which | The New Yorker “ do. 1850 > — tf eocdeg he hig af & pone Hernia way: pel wes tert Aenean besarte eet + Ape dred and Gfty men, he could capture most of the | the work should rformed. Let four or five In the above list, it will be observed, no notice is | Crosman, Charles J. . Andrew Carrigas, James Here Mr. Layard has labored with indefatigable | few minutes the foro and fore topsail yards ante Pirates : be knew many that had been out roving, | young men of and tact be constantly em- | taken of the evening editions of the morning papers. | Cushing, John Galina z Test Garneey, Charles Lind- | indi , and brought to light the ruins of ancient | the cross jack and mizen yards went soon after tho- and many that were going, and that, though there loyed on the work, and lot them be required to T have thus, gentlemen, endeavored to present to ley, Enoch Mi James F. La ‘Wdward Prince, | Ny its immense masses of sculpture, ancient | main topsail. Another heavy squall striking the yet they had no large ships; and he ae the task, from the rising to the setting of | you, very briefly, and I egret in so imperfect @ | Istae B Bmith. Wililam B. T George Valentine, | objects of worship, and the various emblematic ro- | Ship catvied away the main aud wires ee, by (Coionel Livingston) proposed that, ifthe govern- | the sun, leaving the evenings only for recreation | manner, from the many calls upon my time at pre- | William W. Wynans, and William V. Weod. resentations of the old Assyrian race. From thes d, the laiter taking away the whole ment would commission Kidd, and provide him a | and amusem A salary of five hundred dollars | sent; a my to which my atte: has been ‘The calerdar contained one case ref eee, Rien 1, ho attempted to cross the mountains into | boerd side of they wheel, bnostn camaeiens they (Livingston and Kidd) would pay one | each, would be sufficient to secure the services of | called, by the influence of circumstances connested pag antes Ape gy ok ier, Persia, to a mission that had beenestablished there, | ge leuving the digo dw Meme the pg wn dapentes., The Earl of Belmont sub- | competent young men; and probably two years | with my vocation aa a writer of history. If it | robbery, three forgery, two perjury, goods under | but was seized,iand made his escape, byjthe help of | immediately and cutaway the main ad mizen face ship at his diapsval, ad be aRerwerds; wits | (homsabe ame cucuah t0 fiat thane thon hare | that it may be referred to w committee, to report a | fae pretences tro receiving sialen goods ‘Tela 6@ | Providence, trom the hands of thoes, Yio Tatented ging; nothing could now be done but to Keep ¢ lace a ship at his disposal, and he afterwards, w: ry . in c turn ther ncbieneh therds ‘ Kor eT Halifax, sees lh hep Gateund, dollars, ‘and a,similar sum | plan of action for so useful awork. Gwalting thetr trial’ remaining in prison, 15 murder. On his re' travel y going as fast as possible, asthe water was Orford, and others,) contributed the fan pb i iety to print and Epwin Wittiass. ‘The, inel the grand ji after remarking id Greeks, to Erzeroum, bea entered into articles with Kidd and. Livi Sempiat woth. Teme hee sea carve ie their bis senthensend Greats, to, Erasreas, route that had been traversed by sever ao Rog on us, having six ane ee hold, and paper was received Lith precented the ueual sariely ef cries Steps emasreticn: | tifully situated in the midstof an extensive Plain, | was it th ht, tion, the water publish the work. Thus, for ten thousad dollars The reading of th out the night, y great exertion, . ve kept under. At midnight the weather be, All this was done with the sanction of govern: | would the task be accomplished, and e service per- | marked attention by the meeting, and th age olty like eure, 4 them upon what was | 5,000 feet above the level of the sea, high- | to stim ht nies much finer, but Fhene artictes Hom the Earl communionted, and | formed tothe public quite as useful, perhaps, as | tions of Mr. Williams wore warmly a very gratitying to his mfod—the diminution epecrvavie | er than the white mountains, surrounded by otuer | guill's heavy sem, the ship. rolling with, fomrfut vio, thore articles (not set out in th» phiet) were | some of the echomes tor which we s¢o constant ap- Sas of tap Trusses otra Oe a8 Hills Comotory, | steht time of the crime of assault and battery | mountains, on which snow was visible in Juno. | j¢ ri} 30°A.M., a sail was observed bear- filed in the State Paper Office, whence the Hon. als made to public liberalit; being present, moved that the paper of Mr. Wil- | Wit jown on us, which proved to be the Harriet, . i, r jent to kill, Never sine he had had the honor of | Thence to Trebizon, and from there, ina Turkish ing Judge had obtained a copy, which he read, toge- But fow of the members of the society are aware, | lisms be referred to the Executive Committee. The | sliting at that Bench, had be known the time when so | steamer, te Constant » and so home. The | Capt. Marston, of Portland, for New York, tho ther with those of the bonds given, simultaneously. hape,of the vaat range of historical eventeembrao- | motion being carried, Mr. Joseph P. Simpson, who | few as three had beon charged with that offence. He | reverend lecturer, after this account of his travels | captain of which kindly proffored his assistance. They bear date Uct. 10, 1085, and in pursuance | ¢d in the files of the newspapers in our library, but | has been lose fortunate in his operations and move- bepes it sprang from the Saat thet the ey, aoe remarked that the Turkish empire was in s state of | On lowering a boat to board her, Ifound the whole them acommission (a copy of which was also | which are now a sealed book, except to an extreme- | ments in the Historical Society than he has been in ob mentees wi 0 tse dangerous eaoens 5 yo dissolution; it was only kept from falling by the | stern frame of the shi started, and as she wae ai) was obtained from the Court of Admiralty, ly limited number of inquirers and seekers after Jlechanics’ Society, where he is an old member, Shay the habit of ng 4ongeaea dbo ole mutual jealousies of the ot) European powers. making great quantities of water, considered the dated lith Dec. following, authorizing Kidd, as @ | historical knowledge. he files of New York | remarked (in conversation), that the Paper ae be | them on all pbk malig jnowm 00 Sen theribie evi On the nerth the vast Russian em upon | only step to be taken was to abandon her, the 7 er, to tak t | cruisers and! the | newspapers in the posession of the society extend | considered as dead and buried. This, he anid, from | The sober citizens and strangers having any its limits, of which the followers of the Greek reli- captain of the brig, inthe most hacdsome manner, - aud a ship called the Ad: over a period of one hundred and twonty-five years, | his own experience of the killing care of said Exo- | of the morality of our city, would have di fn all through Turkey, was the advanced } | consenting to remain by us, and offering every as- tare Galley was provide The King hims - | and there are many valuable files of papers printed | cutive Committee, when lately in their clutchos,with | in belirving that no less than eighteen persons had been | Tn like manner, those yt 4 Catholicism, | sistance. Sbort) after, another sail was descried Pressed hit approbation of the expedition ; and, | in other States in the library, which would matori- | q patriotic resolution of hisown. Mr. Barnabas | tried fer seurder. within the past year, and case after | looked for aid to Austria or France, as semo other m, which proved to be the American promising to contribute £3,000, reserved a certa’ ally aid in the work of making the proposed indox, | Hates, the champion, of cheap postage, remarked, one aseault with intent to kill, had been brought for- | Catholic powers, that might bring back the times Webster, m Boston for Liverpool, 101 cl thare of tke expected prizes to himself, and enrich its pages by the cotemporary history of | that the paper have gone to a Select Com- But the law had been used witha band, | of the It was, however, the hope of «i- nder of which also offered his assist- cipally to show that he wasa partner. He a! 8. tant F 5 distant State ‘ , according to parli usage, | sad the result wes, that he found ——] jamanity, that the Turkish govern- wards excused himself, however, from advanc a 3 conmeeats 20 the newspapers in t! the author of the paper wed. of verse, hove been | cane cae, See a charged i homaevy prevent, might tend, asit was the guar on ret the peoweaget. “We py got ail iad ealcd frum Lacon tn Neel 2008 ory: oF nich wore printed in this city, may ¢:v: | placed. Mr. W. thereupon ‘said, that it would | t0t Sestdes thone cares to them they had the | dian of eivil and religions liborty_in those barbar- | the availabe beats alot, as id the other vessels, re uw! ameliorations | and comme: transfe: the passengers on fferent ae to the mongst which was the condition of our public | that had been introduced wore chiefly owing to | board both ships, which could be done Dat slowly, matter in charge. buildings and institutions, upon which the Court would | that most excellent and nll man, Sir owing to th ‘ate of the wreck. We got them bservod, was com- | feel cbiiged for any suggestions in aid of the public’au- | Stratford Canning, the Bri Ambassador, | clear of tho fast sinking ship at abou: 4 30 P. M. thorities. Ww boat, whore influence was very powerful with the then, with the aesistance of the bri time, and eailed for the It was known, at ‘pain was receiving large amount: an idea of the jo which constitute a continu- jo very well to have the plan oo: hain, reaching through the years required to | jie in the Hurat be century and a quarter. committee who rat newspaper on our files, published in the | The Executive ( was prin’ m. Bradford. It posed of -om: before the pub- - | ous and wretched countries. te New York, where he rem ‘od P right and it ee ete jnty to inquire into other mat. of treasure from American and West Indian pos- ce Oct. 16, 1725, and was entitled | gociety, and After some further general remarks on the nature h nment. He mentioned this, be- wate provisions, wh: temions ; ard Kidd captured one—the Cuilad | the New York Gasette, from Monday, Oct. 18, to | thorezernie and importance of thelr provines, and the umualand | Sunath.. Sctroed Canning ought to be ‘hold | ccDunt comly taupe, ing tothe Merchant, sailing, bs alleged, under a French pass, | Cot. 23,1725. With this weekly sheet our index | ¢o Ey Ay ' asi in respect by all ‘Americans, for the kindaess exhi- | of laying alongside. We, however, succeeded in and carrying a large amount. The Adventure | should commence. Bradford was near sevent | ,,, This matter having beon put at rost, the society | “The panel of Petit Jurors was then called,and several | bited to their countrymen, when there was no jetting & scant supply, having labored till about Salley; baviog from come cause besome dis. | years of age when ho began the publication of this | turned their attention again to the curiosities of fined for non-attendance. Bixty four answered to their lomatic intercourse between the United States , when, deeming it unsafe to remain lovger, wo led, ber armament was transferred to the Cuidad | Gosette—alesson to us that it ie never too late to | histo names. Turk In his jion nothing could keep w lett the ship, which shortly after went down, at Fea seatl te ac tminued his | gommence a good work, destined for historic wie. | | INTRODUCTION OF PRINTING INTO NEW YORK. Ploeied Guilty <enty A. Ott pleated guilty of Tarkich Empire—it was attempting to pat life | about 6 45. '‘The brig now having on board about T selte, Wi seon tothe New Yor (3 eny, and was sentenced years 5 mo i the fledson fiver, that’ the senrehee hare cc ute. ne v4 second paper established ta the eine Becanrany reed etter from Dr. O'Callaghan | Grand larceny, and wae under the ri re one hundred of the passengers, the catire of been made for Kamors now became rife that Kidd had turned t ind them ceeded on he: @ subject, by which it a - dis ‘ a new ideas, and a now faith, to bi my crew, pro: ‘on her course. peared that the introduction of the prose into thle Pn Ne go yn a before they could omerge from 7, ofliccrs and eabin passengers, with my~ country was entirely due to Governor Fietcher, wwe charged with rtealing a watch chain from « boardi sent state of chacs. It was the people self, desire to ieturn most sincerd thanks to previous to whore time it was strictly prohibited, | Rouse im Beckman street. “Me and another man had | the countiy, and they bad been #0 de Captain Mareton for the kindness and humanity and Massachusetts and l’enn:ylvania had outstri called and agreed to become boarders; they were shown | destroyed by absolute despotism an: shown to ail, givin, his own cabin and afordin, this State. But Fletcher's active mind could not | some rooms, and, on pretence of changing their linen, | anism, that there was no hope for th every possible relief, placing himself, officers sak roceed without it; and having brought the eabject | were allowed to go up stairs. where they were left un- | must consequently fall under the dominion of | crew on short allowance of provisions, and decla: ; Before the Council, he prevailed Spon William | ¥stebed for a short time The Viiclet stolotoe at | other races Of ail the various descriptions the | he would shire the Jast with all. Fortunately: encil,and opposed the Governor | Bradford, of Philadelphia, to come here, in 1602, to | b#e, broken open, and some articles one Mahometane were tho worst 5 i guslaved Popa. | however, We fe in, with the t ship Star Kidd woald make Lis innoce , andthat do the government printing, for which he received , and he sentenced t ir ry a | the West, Capt Bowne, on the 17th. Capt. B; gundiee an tam in 6 loop, haviee lef the Carian | by Bradford, was then under the control of the | 3%) sterling per acnum, and the privilege of print- Sep inks Dotson tos pecans By A vee wen, liars abeats sea steal, ut be found | humanely received about seventy of tho paangere Merchant in a creek in Hispanicia.” Tho Karl gu Newspapers were not at that time burthoned with ing on bis own account. A proslamation of this ‘The Court then adjourned till to morrow morning | the oe as es g-§ iS be weeae whey and nine of the crew, and kindly offered me @ pas ee ie ane 1M Tha ere be landed ia | pacer bad been cstablished coven of eight yeare, | fe the Smpeint, ° Selbee ineciitgenes. - ; ratty dan I oon of the 23th. Histon let Jane, 16000. Tho writer of the pamphlet ‘y 7 . | liam Bradford, at New York, printer to their Ma es | jee in igence. able corruption, that it subvérte. the Christian in- Icannot conclude wi: hout returning thanks to staces tbat the I'arl having, from the ovolast of baa aptears to have unvorsiood hie bubiases, acta to | tet, & 9.” and is in itelf curious, belog a warning | CE Aah Git tere: —A boy named | stitution of family—that conju reistion, which | roy eabin Pascoogers, Mr. Riches and Mr. Fra, Kidd and Livingston, on to doubt ticir geod | have been n.eoholar, but he was not corroet in using | % the people to erect a beacon, to be fired ase sig- bes of] » ‘weed: Was a security that Mabometaniam could fot give. | who behaved nobly, using every means in their 4 , York. lt made its appearance It was establiohed for » politi- nd for three years it was in a state of f Governor Cos Nes | of Ni vember 5, cal purpore, pirate, and the East India ( company represented to gcvercment that some Moorish ships bh wartare with the administr been taken, they feared reprisale would be made on b 4 his successor Lieut ernor Clarke theire. Orders were thereupon sent to all colonial | } euppored to be published fT the pttrom Governors, and others, to seiao Kidd, if possible tip V o At thie juneture, one Emmet waived on the | ari of heat of he Ceunstitend event tae Goveen Belmont, and told him if be could come in eafety, successor. The Nar York Gaseite, printed which, & chain, was found on the prisoner, The jary | fone might have ¢ faith zh with the concurrenes weer ~ nal, on the approach of tho French fleet, then ox- sin forging orders for money. | }i9 would advise some of our social rsforuers to | power to resoue the passengers, and but for wh ; in all things, inel the disposi. | ‘4 Sill wow pace scp tily cures the lint ot pepezs | Pected as an invading force, and for all te hold | Fhe Mowing se copy of ene of the orders:— go into Turkey, and examine into the system o. | «xgrttome MADY Would bare sullered severely, nt” tion of th erare bro he in, to ae omens pe | constituting the chain of history, 2eaving, of course, eae ee Le > nal a Bane’ tne ‘Sin. — Will you cbiige me by & loan of ten dollars tit Jo ene Ran ghee tL orabees — A ON Eite, 410,000, caused Kidd to be seized on the lay 0 “ 4 ound e reprint a lon Gazette, neon. bank? fee a m sufficien' annihilate socioty—a Late Commander Unicorn June, and he wae afterwards sont to Eagland, whore | Ze abelves of the hbeasy amcubiiate in 1606, which Governor Fletcher caused to be r@ pap 1 ea pelcae Be cere of, murder and poisoning—the husband and ’ N he arrived just three years after he had sailed so proudly. Inthe meantime, Halifax Summers and ctbere had been impeached, and tbe principal article You will greatly oblige, whi Post Bor printed here, contained an account of an ongage- J. H. FULLERTON, No. 60 Cortlandt street. | wife opposed in interost—the wife stealing from the | ag "Seema, re, | ment with the French. The above request for ® loan of ten dollars, pur- | husband to make a provision for horself—there var York Gacdte, The Kev. Dr. Haws observed, with regard to ting to come from Mr. Fall » Mr Otte do. would be seen two Interests in every family, and so y Jeenes P . — @ time thas diord diseoatinued the ‘ | C. Wife against Lisstck’ against them was che granting of that commission It fue , bi this subject, that the prohibition mentioaed was not be business in the same street, at No. 46, therefore | di! i society to its lowest foundation. | 1. Sim, ont Li 4 Atver the exhibition of the arcioles of impesohment, | «4 Weyman. A paper eallad ewe} | confined to this State. The classe formed « por | knowing him to bos neighbor, and supposing ites | Let them thenk Ged that no such improvements | cw and Lisewk HS Jr—Thie was an action to recover $1,000 damay or for using he trials intho Hewse of Lorde, whore | ine Post appeared in 17 tion of the instructions to ali Governors of States bea genuine ‘was cont “ plication for loan, gave the | could take place in their country as to separate the | the trade mark of patty, : known those noblemen wore acquitted, | about a year ite Si "s ob diven and colonies; and as an instance of what he termed | money to the bearer. A similar ap lication was f the husband and wife, the foundation of | predeceseors have en itt chenah he cout belt as brought to trial at the Old Bailey, London, | com menced in 1752, and 1 to be put ““@ governmental confederation in favor of stu: | made to Mr. Fullerton, fo in of $3, the writer mm happii | Reentury, the manufacturers and exp at La ar piracy sad murder, in May, 1701. | with » short intermia ion, : | pidity,” mentioned that the Governor of Virginia, | stating that his ebild was siok, and be had not any The reverend lecturer was much applauded at | Rochelle, of & brandy koown as A. Se! dran- which shat triai was conducted, | tion; having oxisted thirty-one | in the time of the Protectorate, used these terns of | money in the house—sig * Harvey.” On this | the clote of his intoresting and instructive account. | dy, and withthe breed "A. Seiguetto” impressed circumstances and exeite- | New York Gazeier, and afe { Conarstala I thank God there is not » print | last forgery, the accused failed to obtain the money, - upon tho casks. Plaintiffs allege, and proved on learly there was something (4). are papers well known t ing press o} chool within my province was detected and taken into custody, and convoyed | Dr, Jackson's Lecture on Geology. the trial, that the defendants sold a cask of brandy mere trial of a common American history. Tho publication The Society then adjoursed; tho neat stated | before Justice Osborn, whon he admitted to one of be dowbt that the re- exterded from 1773 to ed R Dr. ©. T. Jackson, of Boston, delivered in- | a8 “A. Seignette” b 4 | monthly meeting being on Tuesday, the 6th of | the witncercs his guilt, in forging the n>mos of the a en oe eal Min the ated ote ek rim nf ‘er M toresti q i Sock tiffs residing in the city of New York, etamined ‘ ° influence tho approaching ““jaring the Revolutionary fnnuary above partion, for the purpose of obtaining the ry ae eas wee eres Soolety | aster the sale, and proacunsed le of as interior one in the House of Peert. Captain Kidd city of New York was in the occ ‘ | money. ‘The evidence of his guilt being conclusive, | Library, Broadway. @ subjects chosen were | quality; and tbat the cask cut of whish it wes taken poe ae il and shiny. Td, defended himself with tisk army, a newspaper was pu IA AND THE Bat the magistrate committed him to prison for trial. | geology and mining, and the object of tho lecturer | had on it the brand of "A Seignolte,” some. other but with minateaens Tre’ bettioulars ate allset | under the following arta e Zcwung makes mou on = - is the laudable ono of establishing in the city of New | brand having been proviousl, ‘The defenso out with minuteness. The charge of murder he Reval Gasate, on Wednesday and i r charge Quarantine Hospital. Y * ould be | #8 that the liquor was sold ‘Seig: justified as an ast of self-defence, and that of piracy G t as we Aarere, os ; fited) New Yonrs, December 1, 1851. | York @ school wherein these sciences should be merely, acd that there wore. othee on the ground, that if the shi t 7 lls, and Bla Royal Amervan Gast . i TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD taught. Dr. Jackson, in commencing, spoke em- | Rechello of the name of Seignette, were sailing under the prot p ; Lowi’ Fee York Macare end |° be —Perm't mo to direct attention to the burial » (and if so a ~ re Phatienlly on the importance of the studies in their | Seignette and Arsae Seignette; relation to agriculture, manufactures, and com. | brendy exported to this country from al Was of an equally good quality; that th question was not inferior to A. Soign nation to be relf-dependent so far as they wero abdthat the defeadanta, if it were in < | concerned. By way of illustration, he cited tho | ignorant thereof. The Judge, in his Eo, Te marked that the great question in the cive was and were. therefore, lawful pri undoubtedly were.) He was unable to 108 hove passes on his trial, having delivered them to the Earl of Belmont. He prodused several wit nestes, many of tems gave etioers, to prove the com honorable nature of his previous character; and {\™ é Rat he was condemned, Rivington, who had a g and Le Hospital, on : ing bat credit , soeme to be | Merce, and on tho necessity thore existed for every ho hospisal— Fr 3 © of those pxpors ~ | on the off - | the receptacle for all the rub! und, or the little | ard at this moment an imme are the stations named. | pies the centre i the § the title of fr to the there was little question ment ap Bat even if D Wore indaced to relinjuish | of many cartloads of nebo covers the monu- | Peinful straits to which the French peopio wore | whetner the brand “A. Soignette not for being in bad company, but in vory distin- | ms pense tee Conseco ieiome, Th eof.e tt er of there p Cogland, and perhaps mente, whiehafigction has erected to the 4 reduced, when, through war, their foroiga supplies | breney; the tellin "in i. ¥ was ny matter avished eompany. It the intopost of the | scot Sritain me longer appeared; it was no morg | France too, would opp ¢ cougeesjon. OpseRyER. | of aktpetre, &o., were out off In thy extremity, | Vordiet for p'aintise $100. -, . ors

Other pages from this issue: