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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Dec. 31, 1852
  • Page 44
  • HISTORIC DOUBTS ON THE BIRTH-PLACE OF CELEBRATED MEN;
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Dec. 31, 1852: Page 44

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    Article HISTORIC DOUBTS ON THE BIRTH-PLACE OF CELEBRATED MEN; ← Page 6 of 10 →
Page 44

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Historic Doubts On The Birth-Place Of Celebrated Men;

Right Honourable B , obert King ( commonly called Lord Kingsborough ) , the Honourable Edward Moore ( commonly called Lord Moore , ) the Right Honourable Sir Henry Cavendish , the Honourable Chichester Sherrington , the Honourable John Loftus , Sir Fred . Flood , William Hancock ( afterwards Lord Castlemaine ) John E ( afterwards Judge of

, gan the Co . Dublin , ) Christopher Armitage Nicholson , Sherrington Thompson , George Hatton , Win . Todd Jones , Richard Griffith , Abraham Morris , and John Moore , Esqrs . " All these individuals were confessedly upright and independent characters : men wiio were not less distinguished for their private virtues than for their public worth ; nevertheless , each

and every of them were , on that occasion , declared by committees of the House of Commons , " not duly elected , nor duly returned to Parliament . " That the parliamentary agents of that day , like some of those of subsequent times , were not overscrupulous in fighting the political battles of their clients , will be fully apparent from the following statement , which is by no means without its parallels : —

"The Chairman of the Select Committee appointed to try the merits of the Petition against tho return for Antrim , reported to the House : ' It is the unanimous opinion of the Committee , that Mr . Dennis O'Brien , Mr . Matthew O'Brien , and Mr . Benjamin Bradshaw , agents for the sitting Members , have been guilty of repeated gross acts of contempt of the said Committee in their conduct before them by producing numbers of frivoloussuspiciousand unnecessary

, , witnesses , <§ -c . All which acts have been productive of grievous and unnecessary expense to the sitting Member and Petitioner , and have tended in the strongest degree to delay and obstruct the course of justice . "—See The Journals of the House of Commons for the Kingdom . of Ireland , . D . 1791 ..

We may add that the same records announce the numerous and frequent committals of witnesses to the gaol of -Newgate , for prevarication and other similar offences ; therefore , with such facts as these before us , we feel warranted in placing the testimony of the witness Daly in the category of ordinary election witnesses' evidence . It is quite manifest , that if the

Honourable Arthur Wesley was born in May , 1769 , he could not have been of age when returned for Trim , in April , 1790 . But in former days the Commons even of England do not appear to have been over strict as to the admission of juveniles into their Senate . " Fox took his seat for Midhurst in ] 768 , being then scarcely ticenty years of age . " See The Earl of Albemarle ' s Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham , vol . ii . p . 295 . And Wm . Pitt , we are told , was designated " the boy-minister , " ' —

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1852-12-31, Page 44” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31121852/page/44/.
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Title Category Page
THE FEEEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 1
BROTHER OR NO BROTHER; OR, WHICH WAS THE WISER ? Article 3
MASONRY IN THE MIDDLE AGES. Article 7
OPENING ODE.* Article 8
THE REVELATIONS OF A SQUARE. Article 9
THE ACCOMPLISHED MASTER. Article 25
LONDON PLATITUDES. Article 26
HISTORIC DOUBTS ON THE BIRTH-PLACE OF CELEBRATED MEN; Article 39
0 D E.* Article 48
THE HISTORY OF MAGIC. Article 49
FROM ÆTNA. Article 63
SANTERRE. * Article 65
CANZONE.—BY FILICAJA. Article 80
TRANSLATION— BY M. H. RANKIN, ESQ. Article 80
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 81
Obituary. Article 85
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 87
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 89
ROYAL FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 93
METROPOLITAN. Article 93
ROYAL ARCH. Article 95
PROVINCIAL. Article 96
SCOTLAND. Article 122
IRELAND. Article 123
COLONIAL. Article 126
INDIA. Article 129
AMERICA. Article 129
FOREIGN. Article 134
LITERACY NOTICES. Article 135
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 139
INDEX. Article 141
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Page 44

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Historic Doubts On The Birth-Place Of Celebrated Men;

Right Honourable B , obert King ( commonly called Lord Kingsborough ) , the Honourable Edward Moore ( commonly called Lord Moore , ) the Right Honourable Sir Henry Cavendish , the Honourable Chichester Sherrington , the Honourable John Loftus , Sir Fred . Flood , William Hancock ( afterwards Lord Castlemaine ) John E ( afterwards Judge of

, gan the Co . Dublin , ) Christopher Armitage Nicholson , Sherrington Thompson , George Hatton , Win . Todd Jones , Richard Griffith , Abraham Morris , and John Moore , Esqrs . " All these individuals were confessedly upright and independent characters : men wiio were not less distinguished for their private virtues than for their public worth ; nevertheless , each

and every of them were , on that occasion , declared by committees of the House of Commons , " not duly elected , nor duly returned to Parliament . " That the parliamentary agents of that day , like some of those of subsequent times , were not overscrupulous in fighting the political battles of their clients , will be fully apparent from the following statement , which is by no means without its parallels : —

"The Chairman of the Select Committee appointed to try the merits of the Petition against tho return for Antrim , reported to the House : ' It is the unanimous opinion of the Committee , that Mr . Dennis O'Brien , Mr . Matthew O'Brien , and Mr . Benjamin Bradshaw , agents for the sitting Members , have been guilty of repeated gross acts of contempt of the said Committee in their conduct before them by producing numbers of frivoloussuspiciousand unnecessary

, , witnesses , <§ -c . All which acts have been productive of grievous and unnecessary expense to the sitting Member and Petitioner , and have tended in the strongest degree to delay and obstruct the course of justice . "—See The Journals of the House of Commons for the Kingdom . of Ireland , . D . 1791 ..

We may add that the same records announce the numerous and frequent committals of witnesses to the gaol of -Newgate , for prevarication and other similar offences ; therefore , with such facts as these before us , we feel warranted in placing the testimony of the witness Daly in the category of ordinary election witnesses' evidence . It is quite manifest , that if the

Honourable Arthur Wesley was born in May , 1769 , he could not have been of age when returned for Trim , in April , 1790 . But in former days the Commons even of England do not appear to have been over strict as to the admission of juveniles into their Senate . " Fox took his seat for Midhurst in ] 768 , being then scarcely ticenty years of age . " See The Earl of Albemarle ' s Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham , vol . ii . p . 295 . And Wm . Pitt , we are told , was designated " the boy-minister , " ' —

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