DOCTOR
LANE
SURGEON
- ROYAL NAVY
17 June 69 Ap. 4/2/71 Hemsford Times - __________, Ludford
John
Stanley died 17 May 1845 Microzymes
Mat _____
100
Pills contain
Rx ____ Digital P__ = gr _
10 100-31 & ___
Sulph = _oni Exc__ = gr _
10 100-31 & ___
Ce_____ ____ _____
gr _ 1 10-10 grams
Mur = Morphin =
gr _ 1 10-10 grams
E_ Alo_ _ Myr__ =
_._. 200-3_ & ___
_angley
La__
Cosmical force - Molecular forces - Elegant ________
Lesson of Epithelial ____mentary ______-The vessels are
attacked.
24
12 300 The Per_____ - ____ Fox
288 2000
600,000
10
Milford Lane, Sh___
1867
For Fanny at Halifax Nov.
Wm
George W. _orres _______
Co_____
& Ass__ = Agent
30
Bedford Run
Halifax,
N.S.
10
Milford Lane
________
St_______
Rx _____ = Chl__ = 3_
__ B__m =
3__Fu = C__ = _____ = 3_
Oth = Chlor: -- 3___
Ag = Destill = 3 VIII __
C___ = Ma_ = -- 3 - 4 - in die
1860 - Lanesborough Villa, Mahone Bay
12th July
left with Fanny, Halifax in the _________________
arrived at Liverpool on the 22nd. Left for Derry & arrived at Newtown
Limavady on the 24th__ on the 11th of August ______ Fanny to
Bellaghys my son John's place, and on the ____ we went to Armagh, to John
Stanleys' where I left Fanny as on the 20th of September I went down to Bellaghy & from there N.T.L.Vady
_ then with Matilda to Port Ruth on the 27th and on the 28th took
the North Briton Steamer to Quebec where I arrived on the 12th of
October, and on the 14th I was at Perth. I sent Dora my quarterly Bill for September with John Stanleys'
I.O.U. for £6.3-14-0- on the 5th of November I left Perth for Boston and
took the Packet for Halifax and then home.
On November
the 17th I left home with Edward ______________
to Windsor from Halifax _ on December 1st from
Windsor we took the "Emperor" to St Johns & took the
"Admiral" then to _________
put into Portland and from thence by Rail to Por______. We arrived on the 5th at 8:30 p.m. remained he___ ________________
27th of February 1861 - when we left for Portland
& from _______
Boston, ___ Packet to Halifax and took a C______ to Mahone
Bay. At Halifax on the 9th of
March and at _______ on the ______ or morning of the 14th _ On the 17th
of August 1866 I left Halifax and arrived at Liverpool on the 26th
and _________ 27th at noon. I
was at my son Johns' at Bishops Castle in Sh__pshire - per rail - Cost
of S_____________ to Bishops Castle £_-19-0. Got £50 from John ________ sent
Dora £40 with September Quarterly Bill of £__
cost of Post office orders & postage 11/__
_____________________
________________________________ _____
___
September Bill for 1864 £49
December Bill for 1866 £49-15-2
Got John Stanleys' order for £10 on the 12th of
October and Paid Doras' Insurance per Post office order £9-3 and expenses 7/1
_ On the 16 January 1867 _ I sent Dora my December Quarterly for £49-15-2 _ on
the 14th of March 1867 I paid £2-0.0 to Register my name _ on the 15th
of April 1867 I ________ my March quarterly Bill for £40-13-6_ £25 of which I
sent to dora _ on the 25th of May I sent home my September Quarterly in
advance for Edward to go to Boston _______ £49-6-6 _ I sent the
£25- on the 9th of June _ Rosina came here on the 14th
of July & left on the 23 of October _ on the ____ of December I paid the
Insurance £9-3-0- and on the 25th I sent home the December Quarterly for
£19-6-9- for 1867 --
1868 Jan 21. John sent
me a note from my nephew Albert proposing marriage to my daughter Frances _
John is married to his sister & I do not approve of the very close
alliances in blood tho Royalty sets the example. 15th ____ ____ .17. Last night it blew a heavy Westerly
Gale: Drove
to_________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
89
I am beginning to doubt the truth of Christianity and to
believe it a mere myth. I will tell you
why: I see millions of a supposed
Christian Nation commit wanton slaughter upon a neighboring nation at the
command of the man, and the Missionaries of Christ are silent. The surrendering Christian Monarchs are
silent. The whole peoples who submit to
his voice are his __________, agree with him in sentiment, and trample the
commands of Christ have all their fear - Where is Christianity? Of what use is it, when the head man hearing
that thousands have been slain & tens of thousands wounded exclaim,
"God be Thanked"!!! Is this
not a mockery of Religion? Does he
think that God delights in the slaughter of his people. The Wanton, cruel slaughter _ Can he appeal
to Christ as a Mediator in the face of all his dreadful cruelty.
29/9/74 - It is a long time to look back. Sixty years, yes, sixty long, long
years. I can well remember & this
looks well _ it looks but a yesterday _ and friends!!! all dead _ all gone, except a few, a very
few relations I care for , or who care for me _ Tis sad, yes, very sad. I'm now here, Strathallan Crescent No. 7 _
Douglas, Isle of Man, partly for my own, but for my daughter Emmas' health,
writing, and looking out at the angry looking sea. I'm alone _ Emma & Minny are ___ ____. Oh, but it is sad to be old and forgotten
and lonely. At times it is what is commonly
called heart breaking. It wants a kind,
soothing fellow feeling companion. Not
in sadness, but in mirth & joy to raise the _________. To enjoy the time left be filled, and how
soon. At his ___ man knows when the
knock shall come to his door.
12 July 1840 - Fanny and I left Halifax for Ireland via
Liverpool. On 27 of September I left
Portsmouth in the North Briton for Quebec.
On the 20th of this month I left Armagh and had to go by
___________________.
27 May 1862 - Dora left Halifax for Liverpool.
70 to 71 July 11.16.8 - Due on the 28 of June from the
71 to 72 July 11.16.8 - Honorable Wm. Caulfield.
72 to 73 July 11.16.8 -
73 to 74 July 11.16.8 -
74 to 75 July 11.16.8 -
75 to 76 July 5. 11.16.8 - Due 28th June on £200 ___ Hon. Wm
Caulfield.
91 7
Alexander Lane, born the 1st of January 1803:
Dorothea Stanley, born 23rd December 1805:
Married at Glasgow in Scotland on the 30th of October 1834 -
of whom there are issue, as follows - viz. - and married by
the established church near Newtown Limavady 1 Nov. following
|
NAMES |
DATE OF BIRTH |
DEATHS |
WHERE BURIED |
|
Lord George Lane |
17 Aug 1835 |
10 Mar 1859 |
Dibrogher, Upper Assam, India |
|
Lord John William Lane |
15 Mar 1837 |
10 sep 1913 |
Married 17 Mar 1858 |
|
Alexander Lane |
11 Oct 1838 |
3 Oct 1849 |
Halifax, Nova Scotia |
|
Henry Stanley Lane |
1 Mar 1842 |
|
|
|
Francis Margaret Lane |
17 Oct 1843 |
|
Married 6 Aug 1868 in Nova Scotia |
|
Mary Ogilby Fox Lane |
5 Mar 1845 |
|
|
|
Edward Stanley Lane |
7 Feb 1847 |
1 Nov 1896 |
Issac Harbor, Nova Scotia |
|
Emma Fox Lane |
30 Mar 1849 |
|
Married 25 Sep 1879 |
|
|
BORN |
DIED |
|
|
Alexander Lane |
Jan 1, 1803 |
May 5, 1877 |
Kirk Bradden, Isle of Man |
|
Mona Dorothea Lane |
Nov , 1880 |
Feb 18, 1889 |
Kirk Bradden, Man |
|
Edward Stanley Lane |
Feb 7, 1847 |
Nov 1, 1896 |
Issac Harbor, Nova Scotia |
|
Dorothea Lane |
23 Dec 1805 |
Aug 5, 1897 |
Kirk Bradden, Man |
|
John William Lane |
15 Mar 1837 |
10 sep 1913 |
Wykes Regis Cemetery, Weymouth Westham |
11
When you take a calm, clear and comprehensive
view of the past whether from History or tradition, you will discover that man
has existed upon this planet from the most remote age; long before the
dawn of Christianity there existed men of talent and education, their
works have been handed down to us not only by History and tradition, but by his
conviction of nature. We have
the ruins of cities, relics of those great natural convulsions, earthquakes
moving what man did in those days, but, who they were, and what language they
spoke have been buried in oblivion.
They have left us monuments of the skill and of their power with all the
acquisitions of the present day we ____ ____ ____ but children in
comparison: look at the huge blocks of
____ chiseled out by man, and the positions in which they are ____, and
say from whence were they brought and how came they there: Nation after Nation have risen and gone, and
they and the very language they spoke have ages ago long gone by totally
disappeared from the very surface of the earth. It is visionary as to the time when God made this planet and
_____ _______ satellite and when the sun and the whole hosts of stars and
planets were made, and when he made man.
The Mosaic idea that God made but one man to populate this entire
planet is so absurd that it may be considered as exploited by all educated
man. God made man of different colors
at such times and in such places as were most pleasing to Himself, he made man
to suit the particular clime in which he has been found
It has been said that man will live in any clime. ____ ____ ____ not born out by facts for the
nature of the ____ ____ whose black skin was given him to resist the intense
heat could not live in the region of eternal frost; nor could the natives of
the solar region live near the equator. that a black man can live in
high northern latitudes, we have abundant proof, but that man has him to become
a climatized, and yet, plant him ___ ____ amongst the __________ he could not
live. ____ ____ color would kill
him. It has been said, supposed as I
believed, that God at certain distant periods, selected certain men to whom he spoke
not only spiritually but personally and yet his time does not go to very far
back, as it is with history and as some assert tradition, in the East;
but the principal idea is inspiration;
Moses the great Law giver was an African and no one knows what was the
color of his skin, or from whom he descended, and if you look at the whole
human race as it is scattered over our planet and looks the peculiar
particularly the heat and ____ into consideration you can clearly point out
that ____ are not the descendants of one man.
I do not place so much importance in the difference of language, because
the languages we now speak was totally unknown in England six hundred years
ago. Inspired men are allotted to a
particular race and country, as well as time;
as people became enlightened ____ ____ ____
gradually disappeared and what authority have we for their
______ ______! None except their own ____ ____ they believed it then themselves
and such is the peculiar nature of the human understanding what ____ wrote and
preached particularly in all matters theological was believed and greedily
swallowed by the ignorant multitude and passing down from generation to
generation lost nothing in its traditional passage. What became of the people who lived thousands and thousands of
years ago that Christian Era?
God sent a prophet or inspired man amongst them ; ____ ____, at
least some of them, that they had a soul, at all events they had some idea of
it and had some very extraordinary beliefs regarding it and we ourselves know
just as much about it as they did, no one has come from the dead ____ ____
everything about it, therefore we have one the production of the fanatic
(perhaps fertile) imagination.
of certain men who lived at a certain period; certainly they would not ____ believed at the present day, unless
indeed by some enthusiast who are ever ready to take in anything relative to the spiritual world, such
as the Mormons, & but, look into how many sects, religions is divided, and each fancying that the other is wrong; thus, if there is
a religion, there is only one, and as yet God - has not thought proper
to select or point it out as if he did the whole of the human race would
embrace it, and then we would be but one spiritual family.
Such a thing will
never come to pass. It does seem
strange and yet it in a _____ fact that man because of a difference of
theological belief. Millions have been
sacrificed upon the alter of superstition, and to this ______ whom they
have the power no more is thought of taking a life then that
today; and some think that they are justified in so doing is pleasing to the
Almighty, simply upon the authority of someone ________ Religious ____
who wished to hand his name down to posterity - the human brain is wonderfully
and peculiarly formed. To look at it
you observe a material difference. It is in thought and in the action
consequent upon that thought where all the difference lies; but, in what
part or portion, in part or in whole it ______, is far beyond the comprehension
of that very brain; a difference of thought it produces a difference of action,
and it is only in the persecution of the latter that the _____ becomes
visible. If religion was what it ought
to be, and what it is believed to be, the conduct of man should be very different
from what it is. Our conduct through
_____ is proof of what we think of our religion. Take the early walk of man and what do you see? Is religion the belief____ in all
_____ _____? No - religion is the very
_____ thing thought of in the daily routine.
Whereas, by _____ everything, and every action is _____ lip would
be divided. At _____ to man one is it wrong _____ of _____ then ______
more apparent _______ because as one
reason. Those who
should be a guide and an example are the very men who trample upon it. It has become a matter of merchandise it is
put up publicly for sale. The worship
of God and the race for worldly gain to _____ in luxury and _____ than what can
the mass of people believe when they see such _____ in those who should be then
instructors as ____ man was in a church the more careless he becomes of the
______ duties he has to perform and all those are principally _______. Take away ______ these men your
Castles of ______ vanish from the vulgar mind.
You talk about a nation acting generally speaking a very
religious one because it happens to be in a flourishing condition, but, stop
your public _______. Look at your royal
tribunal and ask there is your religion? Must religion have been established in bloodshed if you believe
what has been written concerning them and the Christian religion in ____ _____
and bloodshed. It appears from their
traditional writings that God himself was afraid to establish his prize,
as they call it, religion of Christianity.
It is chiefly founded on what is called the "type of Mosaic
______: Joseph and Mary in life were married, at least it is supposed so, for
there is an account of it, which there should have been. Regarding it consequence means Joseph
departing from the common usages of man, knew not his wife, but found
her pregnant and here they had resource of visions and dreams, to calm Joseph's
fears as to the rectitude of the conduct, which Joseph, it appears,
believed. _____ told at least say so,
just the
Holy Ghost was the Father and that a miracle had been
performed but, how's this acquainted with the Holy Ghost or the Trinity ______
sometime after they ____ _____ attempt to explain the offspring was a son, and
he was supposed to be the son of God, and God himself. Yet, it appears that God left him to
chance for they had _____ from this place to save his life and when he grew up,
he as they say, performed miracles, but, they forgot that God performed
miracles. If he did, man was the
greatest miracle at least amongst the greatest ever God made. After a time, this Jesus took his life in
the usual way of punishing Malefaction, by crucifiction, a cruel _______ mode
of punishment and now a sort of _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____
the body was secured by his friends and the ignorant multitude were told first
that he went up to Heaven in the body, _____ _____: his _____ was _____ amongst
ignorant multitudes Jesus and others.
This is the plain history ______ from all eastern phraseology and
theological jargon. ______ things were
disbelieved by the educated man of the day, but it gradually crept in amongst
the multitude and _______ after a time, most of the other forms of worship, but
much blood has been shed and far more has been shed before it was, ____ became
established at home. In after
ages, man _____ not wanting who _____ _____ _____ of it, they _____ guide the
multitudes who _____ _____ to
anything that was new or gave them a hope that there soul
could be saved thereby. One would
naturally think that if God thought proper to come amongst his people and give
them a pure religion to worship by, that he would appear in his divine
character and sanction it by something more suitable than dreams and visions
and such like as it is passing upon the credibility of the people. We have no contemporary Historian to tell us
anything about this most interesting affair.
Tradition and tradition alone is the sole _____ work of such a very ____
____ ____ ____ and which is all based upon "belief" ___
___. And what is belief? Some were like your _____ believe,
but when you question them they know nothing about it. Some accept in a blind want of
belief. ____ ____ ____ did ____ and
these after all what ____ ____ the most learned know more? The ancients did not seem to have had any
defined notion of a hell, yet, such a place is absolutely requisite in
Christianity ____ ____ it ever _____ before short ______ or not; an
Angel in heaven _____ against it _____ and God ______ had him by sending him to
the Bottomless pit
or hell- did such a place exist before this, or did God make
it expressly for this occasion? Who
tempted the Angels? When did the
tempter get into heaven? Now, as God
____________ where can this place be? And as the Angel must have had a Tempter,
one would think that he was really the Devil or evil spirit. Why did God keep the angel in heaven so long
when he must have known that he was plotting against him? Nothing impure can see God and yet we have
an evil spirit roaming through all space.
If God came on earth in human form to save the souls of the whole human
race, where is the necessity for such a spirit? Why does the Almighty God allow such a spirit to ______ to
deceive his people? What is sin? and
wherefore did God create us to do wrong?
To sin only an idea? Or has the
action of the body anything to do with it?
Did the millions who had existed prior to the Christian era
commit sin? If so ______ were they
punished? Were they not far better off
then we are on this point? If we ____
____ ____ ____ the right of private ______ and to form opinions according to
innate powers which God has given us, but, he put confidence in and _____ _____
the opinions ____ ________ and former by those who lived a few thousand years
before us, we may give up the right of free thought altogether, as it appears
to me _____________. Yet, the opinions
of Gods men adjoin this ______ subject is not
confirmed by any _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____.
Now, it appears that about 1800 years ago, God said that he
would have intercession between himself and his people, and strange as it may
appear that that very intercession was God Himself. For as you must believe in the Trinity Christ, the
second person is God Himself, and _______ and man. Where was the necessity for such a person? When God made the world and man he made laws
that were immutable and unchangeable forever.
It cannot be supposed that God would change his mind, or alter his laws
for man, the creature he made, and yet we have made him to appear like an
______ Judge, to pardon sinners through an intercession and that very
intercession God Himself. No wonder it
is called a mystery, for it is one which no man can solve. The jews who lived at that period did not
believe it, nor do they _______ __ to
this Jesus. It appears from the events
as they are related that God could die for his people. And why?
Wherefore, if it had been Gods pleasure, man could not have prevented
it. The Immaculate Conception one of
these miracles which is the most extraordinary of the whole ________ ________
of ________ wonderful tale. Joseph was
too easily persuaded _______ ________ and upon dreams the whole thing is
founded the ________ in which the mighty event has been
Carried out and _____ never resorted to produce the
designed effect then sought upon the whole proceedings. If God condemned a soul, how could an
intercessor _____ in punishment ____ ____ ____ ____ the whole of God vow
I am – God says I must punish ch___ _____ _____ _____ for my sake. What is _____ sent placing God in _____ _____
of an earthly judge. We have clear
proof that man insisted ages prior to _____ that in fact _____ _____ with the
_____. And why not? Why should you have left the earth so long
without _____? And if you thought that
a religion was absolutely necessary for the _____ of man ______ would have
given him one long
40
1873
A man often sacrifices wealth, health, comfort and happiness
and all the other little etceteras which he ought to enjoy in the decline of
life, in behalf and for the _____ of his wife and children, and he _____
nothing but ingratitude in _____. A
woman, a prudent and shrewd woman can always wind a man around her little
finger; she never offends her husband, never _____ or _____ him, never takes up
anything from the past should there be anything to take up, and when it full in
his face she never opposes his wishes foolishly, she knows better, but, she has
a quiet will innocent way of her won to manage him. A way that few husbands can resist. Yes, a prudent woman knows
41
1874 – Monday 7 September 1874. Edward drove Minny, Emma, Lionel & self from Clun in Salop to
Craven Andes from thence to Liverpool where we slept one night about
10. _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____
_____. Left next day per boat for the
Isle of Man. I arrived at Douglas at 6
p.m. then started for 7 Strathallen Crescent. Two _____ after I was afflicted
with Nyctalopia on the 21 of last _____ (1) Sept – Last night I
was at _____ _____ and on coming out I suddenly found my sight restored. It was when I went out to look at the Comet
I found myself blind. Oct 22 - 8:15
a.m. – Minny left with a _____ Hale for Liverpool. Emma saw her off at Douglas & returned at 10 – 45 – a.m. 23rd – Sent Darrole a P.O.O. for
10/2 – from the Pier Post Office. 29 –
Dora arrived at 2 p.m. – 28th - _____ _____ paid me £ 3-10-
Nov. 6th – 10:40 a.m. – Rented this house from
Miss Pollvek from the 9th
of Dec. till the first of May at eight shillings a week. Nov 7th – Bought one ton of _____
_____ carriage 2/6 – 26 Sent to Medical _____ _____ an account of the so called
Typh Fever, its cause, _____, that it is in reality Gastro _____. Dec 14 – At 11:45 called to see Mr. Hughes
next door
Dec
23 – One ton of Coal 24/ 2/ Christmas
day beautiful fine & clear ___ ___.
1875 – Jan 5 _____ left _____ admiralty about the blood. 18th – Had a tiff with Emma about
certain person _____ _____ but _____.
March 13 – Wrote Sir George E – 29 Mar 75 – Emma again attacked with _____
in the face ____ ____ ____ April 31 – Upper eyelid slightly swollen ______
_____ _____ _____ _____. Tuesday 27th
of April – payed Miss Pallack her rent due since the 8 of Dec last £ 8-0-0 25/
- for cleaning the house per agreement.
28th April – Removed luggage & person to the house of Mr.
Hill No. 5 where we have two bedrooms and the use of the house at 7/6 per week
and find ourselves as usual.
SEE PAGE 168
42
Sick Report of H.M.S. Iphigenia
from 1st of March 1822 to the 31st Oct 1822. West Coast of Africa & West Indies.
Diseases |
March |
April |
May |
June |
July |
August |
Sept. |
October |
Total |
Died |
Cured |
? |
|
Gastro-Enteritis |
19 |
21 |
29 |
40 |
5 |
20 |
113 |
22 |
269 |
16 |
253 |
|
|
Phlogosis
Phlez |
6 |
5 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
4 |
2 |
1 |
22 |
|
22 |
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
Pneumonia |
|
|
1 |
|
|
2 |
|
|
3 |
|
3 |
|
Hepatitis
|
2 |
2 |
1 |
|
|
|
1 |
|
6 |
|
5 |
1 |
|
Rhceumuligmus |
3 |
|
1 |
1 |
|
3 |
|
5 |
13 |
|
13 |
|
Orchitis
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
3 |
|
3 |
|
|
|
4 |
|
1 |
1 |
|
1 |
|
4 |
11 |
|
11 |
|
|
Hamorhois |
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
2 |
|
2 |
|
|
Cephalalgia |
3 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
3 |
3 |
|
1 |
16 |
|
16 |
|
Apoplexia
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
1 |
|
Dyspcpoia
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
1 |
|
Diarrhea
|
1 |
2 |
4 |
3 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
|
14 |
2 |
9 |
3 |
Cholera
|
2 |
|
|
|
|
2 |
|
|
4 |
|
4 |
|
43
Diseases |
March |
April |
May |
June |
July |
August |
Sept. |
October |
Total |
Died |
Cured |
? |
|
Anusarca |
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
Syphiles |
3 |
|
1 |
|
1 |
1 |
|
|
6 |
|
6 |
|
|
Lysecia |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
Obslipatis |
|
1 |
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
|
3 |
|
3 |
|
Gonerrhea
|
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
|
6 |
|
6 |
|
|
Vulnus |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
1 |
7 |
|
6 |
|
Ulcus
|
3 |
|
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
|
5 |
|
5 |
|
|
Herpes |
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
|
2 |
|
2 |
|
|
Tinea |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
|
1 |
|
|
Psora |
|
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
4 |
7 |
|
7 |
|
Fistula
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
|
|
2 |
|
2 |
|
Strictunea
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
1 |
|
Phlhisis
|
1 |
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
|
2 |
|
Conlusio
|
3 |
5 |
2 |
3 |
3 |
5 |
|
9 |
28 |
|
28 |
|
(Please
note that I am not familiar with medical terms; therefore, I am unsure how well
I did at transcribing the medical diseases listed above – Edward Gerald Lane).
44
(Page
44 was left blank by Alexander)
45
I shall
never forget the Slave Prize we took on the West Coast of Africa. I _______ attached to the "Black Joke"
_________. It was in the evening that
she became a Prize after a long and hard sun.
She had upward of 200 slaves and was one of the finest and swiftest in
the trade, and would have escaped had we not overrun by a chance that his ___
_________ mast. As the evening was closing
fast and there was much confusion in landing a crew on board and receiving his
crew as prisoners. Four of them were
armed ___________ to conceal themselves in and under some _______ ________
lying upon the fore castle. Our
Prize officer was a ___ called "Jack Ruddle" a very cross,
vulgar, _______ ________ fellow, about 22 or 23 years of life. He has a sick Uncle in Liverpool and had
always plenty of money: with him three
men, one of them a Creole and a boy, his own servant. I was sent to take the Prize to Sierra
Leone. Ruddle not only came on _______
half drunk, but became so on Prize liquor found in the cabin. The slaves were loose about the deck, and
the iron bar for keeping down ____ hatch could not be found, and moreover, the Spaniard
have needs that poor creatures believe that he would kill them, cook
them, and eat them. I had not been very
long on board until I hailed the Black Joke and ___________ has to keep
close till day light, as I could not get the Slaves below & I did not at
all approve of their conduct. About
midnight they became quarrelsome; but, I was armed. I had a _____ of Pistol, loaded and primed and a good _________
46
of my own. I had
also a _____ and ______ which I kept at the _____; suddenly there was a ______
amongst them and I sent one of the men to see what it was about, he got knocked
down and as I went forward to see and quiet them, I got knocked down also. I got on my feet as soon as I could, drew
one of the pistols and fired amongst them.
The man could not leave the wheel and the boy and Ruddle were in
the cabin, and the two men and myself were left. As I thought at this ______, but the
appearance of the Spaniard _______ me to fury ______ disputed
they would kill and retake the Prize, but I drew the other pistol and
wounded one of them, and with my _______ and the two men we soon cleared the
deck, but the remaining Spaniard had attacked both men in the dark and was
about throwing them overboard when I cut one of them down and disabled
the right arm of another. At this
precise moment, when from the shots I had fired, the Black Joke must had
thought something must be wrong, ran close to and sent a armed boat on board
and we examined the Schooner and sent the prisoners on board of
her. During all this eventful scene,
Jack Ruddle and boy as they said were sound asleep in the cabin. Next morning I had to repair the
damage. I _____ ______ and we had to
get a few men from the "Joke" to put ____ ____ ____ ____ and clean
deck before we shaped our course for Sierra Leone. During our voyage up I had little
47.
or no sleep and Ruddle was continuously drunk. ___ _________ ___ his _________ ____ sights
and worked his safety up, only I ran a few miles past the harbor. On running down to make the harbor Ruddle
came on deck and insisted upon taking the helm. To this I objected, but when I saw object, the men and I removed
him as he wanted to run us upon the sand bank that stretches nearly across the
mouth of the river. He was drunk and
very violent, but at this time a Pilot came on board who wanted to know if we
were all drunk and what brought us so close to the sand bank, but Ruddle was
afraid of me from something I had seen, as six months afterward he was confined
from the service.
To
Daily Telegraph
9/2/71 - I have heard your long article on "Scarlet
Fever" in your paper of the 7 _____.
I am one of the few which prefer calling ____ ____ _____ right name, and
then you are more certain of __________.
The disease called "Scarlet Fever" is simply inflamation of
the _________, as the disease called E is inflamation
of the _________ ______ _______ substance.
54
10/7/1871 – It is unpleasant for a man in his old age to find that the wife of his bosom for whom he sacrificed almost every pleasure and gratification does everything to render him miserable and unhappy for years and years. I have exerted my utmost to make Dora comfortable and happy and what have I had in exchange? Constant fault finding for the most _____ and childish triffles. I used to confide to her all my grievances and misfortunes, but now, I find and for a long time have found from her no consolation so that I must brood over my unhappiness and misery alone, unthought of and uncared for.
1862 – Sept 9 – Dora arrived at noon
May 27 – Dora left for Europe in the
“Niagara”
Nov 28 – Sent Edward five pounds to Boston
1863 – Jan 16 – Drew on John Stanley for twenty-five pounds
which he repudiated “The
Scoundrell
and
Swindler”
1860 – Oct 23 – In “Perth” Canada
1861 – March – At home – Mahone Bay
Nov 14 –
Dora went to Halifax, Nova Scotia
77.
I do not exactly know. I have been reading and reading and thinking and reasoning years upon years and I _____ that I can not believe it. It is hard to give it up. The vision is so very beautiful, so sublime, it so attacks the heart or rather the mind of man so subtilly, so heavenly, so divine that it creates a pang. _____ indescribable feeling that you do not like to part to give up forever. Here we are and there we go and that is the last, the end, the finale of the scene beyond which the human eye ever reached or ever will, nor no human thought can ever penetrate. We imagine, think, hope and believe. Yes, firmly believe what? A heaven, a place of rest, the resting place of the soul. Oh yes. Millions believe in such a place, but where is it? And echo answers where? But man will tell you that they have written proof of the existence of such a place, but what is that proof? Who came back from heaven to tell us? Oh, it has been revealed to us through the mouths of our fellow men. They have been inspired. God spoke to us through them long, long ago. _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____ woefully contradicted themselves. The Mosiac account of the creation is a well devised fable, and nothing else, and because the habits, laws, customs and manners of a people have been woven up with it. Very curious and peculiar ideas have been drawn from it and so strangely have they been worked upon that a faith, a religion has been established upon those contradictory _____ statements. If Adam was to multiply and replenish the earth, what or who was he to replenish or repeople it with. It must be evident here that Moses did
78.
not expect that his ideas would be believed ______ to be really and truly divine. He must had known that if Adam was to replenish or repeople the earth that Adam was not the first man and that the earth had been peopled before him, and how and for what did Cain build a city? When, according to him, there were only five men then on the face of the whole earth. It cannot be believed. It is simply _____, and the whole story with all the names of the descendants of this man, kept with apparent fidelity, amongst a _____ of original savages, is simply beyond human belief. Moses, or whoever wrote it, must have had a most fertile imagination, and he could never have imagined that it would have been credited as it has been by posterity. The Christian religion divided and subdivided as it is, and each sect so evidently _____ in maintaining and supporting its own particular views exclusive almost of all others. I am not surprised to find, very many denying its extraordinary dogmas, miracles and other things. Where I see idolatry mixed up with it & when I hear it affirmed by its ______ and without ceremonies and forms, ridiculous and absurd by themselves, it is no religion at all. I begin to doubt like others that it was never intended by the Creator that to worship Him we should have to resort to some things little short of the ______ or juggler. It is painful to witness such scenes as are often performed like our theatres.
79.
9/7/1871 Disorder of the Intellect
Sir, the above is rather a strange name for those unhappy affections. What is the meaning of the word “disorder” and what is “intellect”? With it, entering into a discussion upon the points, I will suppose the idea is that the “intellect” means the spirit or soul, and that “disorder” means an irregularity of its disposition.
21/4/1874 _____
_____ _____
When God created man he gave him health, strength, motion
and power all contained in matter. He
also gave him knowledge and authority like mice contained in matter. He created each part according to its own
particular use and action. The feet to
support the body. The h____
provides all want and the brain governs and guides the whole. The soul or spirit or whatever it is ____
that which keeps the body in line, but there are _____ other spirits
independent of this one and of each other.
187.
My dear Stanley – There are few persons outside your family
circle who more sincerely ______ the serious loss you all have sustained than
the _____, as the loss of the head of a family can never be replaced; for years
I _____ _____ _____ your late Father, as one of the very best friends I have,
and your aunt Dora and I had admirably placed the most unlimited confidence in
him, as I knew him well in early life as a lad playing marbles on the mall
about the time his Father removed from Scotch _____. However, you must be aware that
circumstances, unforeseen at the time well after _____ to cause a
coolness. If not an open _____ between
the very best of friends, and thought there was nothing serious. Yet, it was unpleasant as I was very anxious
to have your Aunt Dora’s fortune placed in greater security, but, as your
father so often iterated by letters which are now before me, that the money was
safe as in the bank, though the interestwas neither _____ fully paid. At your aunt Dora’s request I _____ to take
legal proceedings to recover the interest.
Yet, still the interest was not only delayed but finally not paid at
all. Your Aunt Dora is now anxious to know
if your father appointed a trustee in his Father’s place and who are his Executors
and she would be pleased as they must have his books and accounts. I have a bank order for the balance of
interest due to her and she would be glad to hear from you.
An archive penned in your paper a short time since from the
pen of Dr. Alexander Lane R.N. relative to the sun, light. I confess I was not prepared for the e____
container therein. For as I had always
believed the sun to have been a huge ball of fire, but, the Newton Theory had
certainly removed that idea. So long
_____ and formally believed in _____ the _____ _____ thought that dark cold
abyss upwards of ninety millions of miles and neither heat or light any part
thereof until they have reached our own atmosphere. I now firmly believe and that no heat or light exists anywhere
except in the atmosphere of _____. I
had thought that the daylight we enjoy had been extended to the sun and all the
Heavenly Hosts, but like man other thoughts it has vanished. I now believe in the plurality of worlds,
_____ as God made man in his own image, of course, those worlds must be
inhabited by people like ourselves, as there can be nothing more sublime than
the image of God and as worlds are scattered like dust throughout all
space. I asked myself, where is Heaven? Viewing space mentally I said, Why not in
our own atmosphere. God is there, his
throne is throughout all space everywhere, and the spirits of the departed of
this _____ enjoy heaven in its own atmosphere and are always looking down upon
us. It cannot be that the departed
spirits leave our planet and _____ their way through an immense dark abyss to
another planet; we might as well say that the spirits of the departed of
Planets at an awful distance seek a heaven in our planet or _____. Assuredly it is a pleasure _____ to fancy
that the spirits or souls of those we have loved and cherished _____
Answered us why should they not be close at hand as well as _____ _____ immeasurable distance, but, we are prone to look for this pleasure, this final happiness. This final retreat where the wicked cease from troubling and where the weary are at rest at a distance from beyond the comprehension of man. We point to Heaven as above us. Our friend at either Poles are nearby pointing at right angles and than at the _____ in a direct opposite direction, but where? Some fancy it is in some beautiful star or planet far, far away. And why? Why not here as well as there.
p. 218
Monday 15, 1877 – Mary Edwards has returned to us from Mrs. Oldfield. Monday 29 Jan – Snowed last night pretty heavy leaving nearly _____ inch depth of snow on the ground and it blew a heavy gale from the ____ ____ R. W. and is blowing _____ 6:30 p.m. very heavy. They are all upstairs in the Drawing Room amusing themselves at a good time. Got another ton of coal today. Feb 17 – Got a barrel of ale 18 gallons. 24/-27th – Sent to Jerome Street a demand for a receipt for $900.00 dated the 4 August 1876. This should have been sent at that time but was forgotten.
p. 219
I really cannot tell what our Parsons are preaching about now. Sometimes out of the Old Testament and sometimes out of the New and sometimes ______ subjects _____ _____ _____ that their Heaven cannot comprehend the _____. A short time since I heard it promulgated from the pulpit that Paradise was not Heaven, but, a place somewhere, where the soul remained until they were actually joined to their bodies at the last day. He said, that when Christ told the thief upon the cross “Today, thou shall be with me in Paradise”, that “that Paradise” was not Heaven, but, this other place; and there He left it. Now, sir, I would like to know if Christ, with the thief is to arrive in this other place to the last day? Or He left the thief there and entered Heaven Himself. 6/ /73 – The _______ mind, intellect or soul shuns the Master Hand of the Creator. The brain of man is most wonderfully constructed and constituted. It is _______ comprehensible mass of matter, Cerebral matter, and this Spirit acting upon it causes thought and speech, and , what is thought? It is the concentration of matter to a point, in which the active Cerebral Matter seems to be engaged.
1874 – 7 Sept - Minniy, Emma, Lionel & self left Clun, Salop
9 “ - arrived at Strathallan Crescent, Isle of Man, Douglas
29 Oct – Dora arrived at 2 p.m.
1875 – 28 April – Removed to No. 5 Strathallen Crescent
21 June – Left the Isle of Man
23 June – arrived at Clun, Salop
1 Nov. – Dora, Emma, Lionel & self left Clun, Salop (via Birkes)
3 Nov. – arrived No. 1 Stanley Terrace, Douglas, Isle of Man
1876 – 24 July – Emma went to live with a Mrs Stewart till his return
1 Augt. – Minnie arrived with a Miss Edwards from Clun
12 May – Took 11 Cambridge Terrace & removed into it
on the 24th May waited for papering and painting.
1 Augt – arrived Minnie from Clun with Mary Edwards
30 Sept – Minnie left for Clun with Mary Edwards
28 Oct – Minnie and Mary Edwards arrived from Clun
p. 222
Alexander Left page 222 of his journal blank . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
p. 223
15/1/77 – I should like of opinion upon the following as
well as an idea about the __________.
Mans being composed of arteries, veins, nerves and Lymphatics (secreting
and absorbing). I had an idea of
publishing a work upon each and all the physical diseases to which he is
subject, and the quickest and safest mode of care upon scientific
________. Each subject will be as
concise as possible and supported by facts. A.
Lane M.D.R.N. To ______ of Med.
_____ Circular.
The Meath Peerage
Dorcas Brabazon daughter of Sir Anthony was married to George Lane created Lord Viscount Lanesborough, was Privy Counselor to King Charles the 2nd and Clerk of the Star Chamber to whom she was first wife. Died 11 Dec 1683 leaving two sons and one daughter.
Clannicarde Peerage
Ulick de Burgh, created Viscount Galway 2nd June 1687, married Francis daughter of Geo: Lane Viscout Lanesborough, and sister to James, Lord Viscount Lanesborough. Thomasine daughter of the 11th Earl of Kerry was grand daughter to Emmeline or Emy daughter and heiress to Cormae B. Farrell, who was married to Capt. George Lane and was mother of Sir Richard Lane of Tulkse, _____ & Bart. Who died 5th Oct 1668. Father of George created Lord Viscount Lanesborough by his first wife Mabel, daughter and heiress of Gerald Fitzgerald Esq.
Blancy Peerage
Thomasine daughter of Lord Blancy married _______ Fox of Craige in the County of Tipperrary by whom he had several children one of them Henry, a 2nd time married Frances daughter of George Lane Lord Viscount Lanesborough, who died August 1684 and sister to James Lord Viscount Lanesborough who died in 1724.
The Butler family, Earl Lanesborough, created Baron of Newtown Butler, Co. Fermanagh 21 Oct 1715 2nd Geo: 1st Viscount Longford; 12 Aug. 1728 2nd Geo 2nd Earl of Lanesborough; 20 July 1756: 30th Geo. 2nd -
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
|
H.M.S. Iphiguria |
Spithead |
|
21 Nov 1821 |
|
|
“ |
Weymouth |
22 Nov 1821 |
6 Dec 1821 |
|
|
“ |
Fox Bay |
19 Dec 1821 |
24 Dec 1821 |
|
|
“ |
Fox Bay |
27 Dec 1821 |
31 Dec 1821 |
|
|
“ |
Plymouth |
1 Jan 1822 |
4 Jan 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Madeira |
11 Jan 1822 |
15 Jan 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Yencriffe |
17 Jan 1822 |
17 Jan 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Saint Jago |
26 Jan 1822 |
28 Jan 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Rio Gambia |
1 Feb 1822 |
5 Feb 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Birds Island |
5 Feb 1822 |
5 Feb 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Cape Roxs |
6 Feb 1822 |
8 Feb 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Rio Noonis |
9 Feb 1822 |
15 Feb 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Sierra Leone |
17 Feb 1822 |
11 Mar 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Dix Bore |
27 Mar 1822 |
27 Mar 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Cape Boast |
28 Mar 1822 |
30 Mar 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Annamaboo |
30 Mar 1822 |
30 Mar 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Apang |
31 Mar 1822 |
1 April 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Accra |
2 April 1822 |
3 April 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Whydak |
6 April 1822 |
6 April 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Lagos |
7 April 1822 |
7 April 1822 |
|
|
“ |
Rio Boring |
14 April 1822 |
26 April 1822 |
|
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES
OF PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Iphiguria |
St. Thomas Equador |
6 May 1822 |
14 May 1822 |
|
“ |
Cape Coast |
22 May 1822 |
26 May 1822 |
|
“ |
Sierra Leone |
11 June 1822 |
26 June 1822 |
|
“ |
Barbadoes |
18 July 1822 |
18 July 1822 |
|
“ |
Saint Lucie |
19 July 1822 |
19 July 1822 |
|
“ |
Martinique |
19 July 1822 |
19 July 1822 |
|
“ |
Port Royal, Jamaica |
25 July 1822 |
6 Aug 1822 |
|
“ |
Havana |
15 Aug 1822 |
15 Sept 1822 |
|
“ |
Sandy Hook, New York |
17 Sept 1822 |
21 Sept 1822 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
13 Oct 1822 |
17 Oct 1822 |
|
“ |
Chatham |
21 Oct 1822 |
|
|
H.M.S. Sparrowhawk |
Chatham |
|
21 Nov 1822 |
|
“ |
Downes |
23 Nov 1822 |
1 Dec 1822 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
4 Dec 1822 |
12 Dec 1822 |
|
“ |
Bermuda |
17 Jan 1823 |
10 Mar 1823 |
|
“ |
Halifax |
18 Mar 1823 |
23 Mar 1823 |
|
“ |
Bermuda |
30 Mar 1823 |
12 May 1823 |
|
“ |
Halifax |
20 May 1823 |
22 May 1823 |
|
“ |
Bermuda |
30 May 1823 |
6 June 1823 |
|
“ |
St. Johns, N.B. |
14 June 1823 |
25 June 1823 |
|
|
St. Johns, N.B. |
22 July 1823 |
6 Aug 1823 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES
OF PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S.
Sparrowhawk |
Digby |
6 Aug 1823 |
10 Aug 1823 |
|
“ |
Halifax |
19 Aug 1823 |
30 Aug 1823 |
|
“ |
Pictou |
4 Sept 1823 |
6 Sept 1823 |
|
“ |
Halifax |
9 Sept 1823 |
13 Sept 1823 |
|
“ |
St. Andrews, N.B. |
3 Oct 1823 |
8 Oct 1823 |
|
“ |
St. Johns, N.B. |
15 Oct 1823 |
25 Oct 1823 |
|
“ |
Halifax |
30 Oct 1823 |
14 Nov 1823 |
|
“ |
Bermuda |
18 Nov 1823 |
1 Dec 1823 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
21 Dec 1823 |
|
|
“ |
Guernsey |
|
|
|
“ |
Falmouth |
|
|
|
“ |
Spithead |
|
17 June 1824 |
|
“ |
Rio Janeiro |
2 Aug 1824 |
10 Aug 1824 |
|
“ |
Gibralter |
26 Sept 1824 |
30 Sept 1824 |
|
“ |
Naples |
|
|
|
“ |
Genoa |
|
|
|
“ |
Marseilles |
|
1 Dec 1824 |
|
“ |
Malta |
|
|
|
“ |
Naples |
|
|
|
H.M.S. Sybille |
Bahia Bay |
|
Mar 1825 |
|
“ |
Malta |
7 Mar 1825 |
|
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Revenge |
Malta |
|
|
|
H.M.S. Cambrian |
Malta |
|
18 May 1825 |
|
“ |
Smyrna |
5 June 1825 |
9 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Bourla |
9 June 1825 |
14 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Scio |
16 June 1825 |
|
|
H.M.S. Sparrowhawk |
Scio |
|
16 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Ticco |
17 June 1825 |
20 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Syra |
21 June 1825 |
22 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Paros |
23 June 1825 |
23 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Andras |
25 June 1825 |
26 June 1825 |
|
“ |
Skgra |
29 June 1825 |
1 July 1825 |
|
“ |
Skaitho |
2 July 1825 |
4 July 1825 |
|
“ |
Smyrna |
6 July 1825 |
10 July 1825 |
|
“ |
Napoli de Romania |
16 July 1825 |
22 July 1825 |
|
“ |
Athens |
24 July 1825 |
26 July 1825 |
|
“ |
Isthmus of Corinth |
27 July 1825 |
9 Aug 1825 |
|
“ |
Marashou |
10 Aug 1825 |
11 Aug 1825 |
|
“ |
Smyrna |
13 Aug 1825 |
8 Sept 1825 |
|
“ |
Malta |
18 Sept 1825 |
21 Sept 1825 |
|
“ |
Gibralter |
5 Oct 1825 |
7 Oct 1825 |
|
“ |
MotherBank |
24 Oct 1825 |
27 Oct 1825 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S.Sparrowhawk |
Portsmouth Harbor |
27 Oct 1825 |
|
|
H.M.S. Victory |
|
|
|
|
H.M.S. Ramilles |
|
|
|
|
The Maxfield |
West India Docks |
|
15 Mar 1827 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
14 May 1827 |
|
|
H.M.S. Magnificent |
Jamaica |
|
|
|
H.M.S. Scrlla |
Jamaica |
|
1 June 1827 |
|
“ |
Ragged Island |
10 June 1827 |
|
|
H.M.S. Speedwell |
Ragged Island |
|
15 June 1827 |
|
“ |
Crooked Island |
17 June 1827 |
21 June 1827 |
|
“ |
Ragged Island |
22 June 1827 |
22 June 1827 |
|
“ |
Neuvitas, Cuba |
26 June 1827 |
29 June 1827 |
|
“ |
Kibarra |
8 July 1827 |
10 July 1827 |
|
“ |
Ragged Island |
12 July 1827 |
13 July 1827 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
14 July 1827 |
1 Aug 1827 |
|
“ |
Cayo Frances, Cuba |
4 Aug 1827 |
11 Aug 1827 |
|
“ |
Segra La Grande |
13 Aug 1827 |
17 Aug 1827 |
|
“ |
Key Sal |
19 Aug 1827 |
20 Aug 1827 |
|
“ |
Cayo Frances |
30 Aug 1827 |
1 Sept 1827 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
6 Sept 1827 |
2 Oct 1827 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
12 Oct 1827 |
30 Oct 1827 |
|
“ |
Naranjos, Cuba |
25 Nov 1827 |
2 Dec 1827 |
|
“ |
Ragged Island |
5 Dec 1827 |
7 Dec 1827 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Speedwell |
Ragged Island |
20 Dec 1827 |
24 Dec 1827 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
19 Jan 1828 |
4 Feb 1828 |
|
H.M.S. Pincher |
Nassau, N.P. |
|
10 Mar 1828 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
21 Mar 1828 |
27 Mar 1828 |
|
“ |
Port Antorico |
29 Mar 1828 |
1 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Anotta Bay |
1 April 1828 |
4 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Port Maria |
4 Apr 1828 |
9 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Ora Cabessa |
10 Apr 1828 |
11 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
St Ann’s Bay |
11 Apr 1828 |
12 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Rio Bueno |
12 Apr 1828 |
14 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Falmouth |
14 Apr 1828 |
20 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Montego Bay |
20 Apr 1828 |
24 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Lucea |
24 Apr 1828 |
27 Apr 1828 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
2 May 1828 |
26 May 1828 |
|
“ |
Cape Nicola Mole (Hagti) |
3 June 1828 |
5 June 1828 |
|
“ |
Crooked Island |
7 June 1828 |
9 June 1828 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
11 June 1828 |
|
|
H.M.S. Kangaroo |
Nassau, N.P. |
|
19 June 1828 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
3 July 1828 |
|
|
H.M.S. Fairy |
Jamaica |
|
18 July 1828 |
|
“ |
St. Andrews |
22 July 1828 |
24 July 1828 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
28 July 1828 |
29 July 1828 |
|
“ |
Carthagena |
5 Aug 1828 |
6 Aug 1828 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Fairy |
Jamaica |
9 Aug 1828 |
12 Aug 1828 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
22 Aug 1828 |
23 Aug 1828 |
|
“ |
Bermuda |
4 Sep 1828 |
11 Sep 1828 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
25 Sept 1828 |
9 Oct 1828 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
15 Oct 1828 |
29 Oct 1828 |
|
“ |
Saint Andrews |
18 Oct 1828 |
21 Oct 1828 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
26 Oct 1828 |
29 Oct 1828 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
4 Nov 1828 |
21 Oct 1828 |
|
“ |
Cauipeche |
17 Nov 1828 |
20 Nov 1828 |
|
“ |
Vera Cruz |
26 Nov 1828 |
2 Dec 1828 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
6 Jan 1829 |
9 Jan 1829 |
|
H.M.S. Herald |
Jamaica |
1 Mar 1829 |
1 Mar 1829 |
|
“ |
Portsmouth |
3 April 1829 |
6 April 1829 |
|
“ |
London |
7 April 1829 |
19 April 1829 |
|
“ |
At Home |
25 April 1829 |
21 Aug 1829 |
|
H.M.S. Victory |
Portsmouth |
27 Aug 1829 |
27 Oct 1829 |
|
“ |
London |
28 Oct 1829 |
18 Nov 1829 |
|
St. Andrews (Freight) |
West India Docks |
19 Nov 1829 |
19 Nov 1829 |
|
“ |
Sierra Leone |
2 Jan 1830 |
|
|
H.M.B. Clinker |
Sierra Leone |
|
16 Feb 1830 |
|
“ |
Accra |
6 Mar 1830 |
|
|
H.M.B. Black Joke |
Accra |
|
16 Mar 1830 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.B. Black Joke |
Sierra Leone |
6 April 1830 |
|
|
H.M.S. Primrose |
Sierra Leone |
|
4 May 1830 |
|
“ |
Accra |
22 May 1830 |
25 May 1830 |
|
“ |
Princes Island |
3 June 1830 |
7 July 1830 |
|
“ |
Ascension |
17 July 1830 |
19 July 1830 |
|
“ |
Annabona |
5 Aug 1830 |
5 Aug 1830 |
|
“ |
Loango |
21 Aug 1830 |
24 Aug 1830 |
|
“ |
Princes Island |
31 Aug 1830 |
4 Sept 1830 |
|
“ |
Annabona |
21 Sept 1830 |
21 Sept 1830 |
|
“ |
Ascension |
5 Oct 1830 |
10 Oct 1830 |
|
“ |
Sierra Leone |
18 Oct 1830 |
30 Oct 1830 |
|
“ |
Gambia |
18 Nov 1830 |
30 Oct 1830 |
|
“ |
Sierra Leone |
27 Nov 1830 |
6 Dec 1830 |
|
“ |
Plymouth |
21 Jan 1831 |
14 Feb 1831 |
|
“ |
At Home |
20 Feb 1831 |
30 Apr 1831 |
|
“ |
London |
5 May 1831 |
6 May 1831 |
|
H.M.S. Pearl |
Portsmouth |
8 May 1831 |
7 July 1831 |
|
“ |
Plymouth |
30 July 1831 |
4 Aug 1831 |
|
“ |
Saint Michaels |
18 Aug 1831 |
18 Aug 1831 |
|
“ |
Terceira |
19 Aug 1831 |
19 Aug 1831 |
|
“ |
Terceira |
31 Aug 1831 |
31 Aug 1831 |
|
“ |
Fagal |
2 Sept 1831 |
5 Sept 1831 |
|
“ |
Saint Michaels |
5 Sept 1831 |
8 Sept 1831 |
|
“ |
Saint Michaels |
12 Sept 1831 |
|
|
“ |
Fagal |
5 Oct 1831 |
11 Oct 1831 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Pearl |
Faqal, Azores |
19 Nov 1831 |
28 Nov 1831 |
|
“ |
Saint Michaels |
25 Dec 1831 |
26 Dec 1831 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
4 Jan 1832 |
6 Jan 1832 |
|
“ |
Portsmouth Harbor |
6 Jan 1832 |
25 Feb 1832 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
25 Feb 1832 |
3 Mar 1832 |
|
“ |
Fox Bay |
4 Mar 1832 |
5 Mar 1832 |
|
“ |
Plymouth |
6 Mar 1832 |
8 Mar 1832 |
|
“ |
Yeneriffe |
20 Mar 1832 |
23 Mar 1832 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
18 Apr 1832 |
19 May 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Antonio |
21 May 1832 |
22 May 1832 |
|
“ |
Ocho Rios |
23 May 1832 |
24 May 1832 |
|
“ |
Montigo Bay |
24 May 1832 |
27 May 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
30 May 1832 |
12 June 1832 |
|
“ |
Santa Martha |
17 June 1832 |
21 June 1832 |
|
“ |
Carthagina |
22 June 1832 |
25 June 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
28 June 1832 |
11 July 1832 |
|
“ |
Belize |
15 July 1832 |
16 July 1832 |
|
“ |
Montego Bay |
1 Aug 1832 |
2 Aug 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Antonio |
6 Aug 1832 |
7 Aug 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
9 Aug 1832 |
21 Aug 1832 |
|
“ |
Saint Jago de Cuba |
23 Aug 1832 |
27 Aug 1832 |
|
“ |
Port au Prince |
1 Sept 1832 |
9 Sept 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
12 Sept 1832 |
29 Sept 1832 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
9 Oct 1832 |
9 Oct 1832 |
|
“ |
Isle of Saint Andrews |
17 Oct 1832 |
20 Oct 1832 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Pearl |
Chagres |
24 Oct 1832 |
26 Oct 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
2 Nov 1832 |
18 Nov 1832 |
|
“ |
Port Antonio |
20 Nov 1832 |
22 Nov 1832 |
|
“ |
Montego Bay |
26 Nov 1832 |
28 Nov 1832 |
|
“ |
Lucia |
28 Nov 1832 |
27 Dec 1832 |
|
“ |
Montego Bay |
27 Dec 1832 |
8 Jan 1833 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
12 Jan 1833 |
8 Feb 1833 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
12 Feb 1833 |
12 Feb 1833 |
|
“ |
St. Juan de Nicaragua |
15 Feb 1833 |
16 Feb 1833 |
|
“ |
Boca del Drago |
20 Feb 1833 |
20 Feb 1833 |
|
“ |
Boca del Toro |
20 Feb 1833 |
23 Feb 1833 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
24 Feb 1833 |
25 Feb 1833 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
7 Mar 1833 |
14 Mar 1833 |
|
“ |
Montego Bay |
17 Mar 1833 |
17 Mar 1833 |
|
“ |
Port Royal |
22 Mar 1833 |
7 Apr 1833 |
|
“ |
Bermuda |
18 Apr 1833 |
22 Apr 1833 |
|
“ |
Halifax |
2 May 1833 |
12 May 1833 |
|
“ |
Barbadoes |
26 May 1833 |
5 June 1833 |
|
“ |
Saint Lucie |
6 June 1833 |
6 June 1833 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
12 June 1833 |
13 June 1833 |
|
“ |
Chagres |
13 Aug 1833 |
1 Sept 1833 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
8 Sept 1833 |
16 Sept 1833 |
|
“ |
Carthagena |
21 Sept 1833 |
28 Sept 1833 |
|
“ |
Santa Martha |
30 Sept 1833 |
5 Oct 1833 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
6 Oct 1833 |
17 Nov 1833 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Pearl |
Jamaica |
18 Nov 1833 |
22 Dec 1833 |
|
“ |
Black River |
22 Dec 1833 |
23 Dec 1833 |
|
“ |
Grand Cayman |
24 Dec 1833 |
27 Dec 1833 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
13 Jan 1834 |
23 Jan 1834 |
|
“ |
Turks Island |
29 Jan 1834 |
30 Jan 1834 |
|
“ |
Nassau, N.P. |
3 Feb 1834 |
20 Feb 1834 |
|
“ |
Jamaica |
4 March 1834 |
9 April 1834 |
|
“Aun Vardill” |
Jamaica |
9 April 1834 |
9 April 1834 |
|
“ |
Quebec |
19 May 1834 |
19 May 1834 |
|
Restitution |
Quebec |
15 June 1834 |
15 June 1834 |
|
“ |
Plymouth |
19 July 1834 |
24 July 1834 |
|
H.M.S. Samarang |
Portsmouth______ xx |
17 Nov 1836 |
16 Dec 1836 |
|
H.M.S. Herald |
Portsmouth |
8 June 1838 |
18 Aug 1838 |
|
“ |
Fox Bay |
21 Aug 1838 |
24 Aug 1838 |
|
(xx) = West direct |
Plymouth |
24 Aug 1838 |
29 Aug 1838 |
|
Home to Ireland |
Madeira |
8 Sept 1838 |
9 Sept 1838 |
|
Through London |
Rio Janeiro |
13 Oct 1838 |
18 Oct 1838 |
|
“ |
Simon’s Bay, (Cape) |
15 Nov 1838 |
24 Nov 1838 |
|
“ |
Colombo, Ceylon |
9 Jan 1839 |
12 Jan 1839 |
|
“ |
Madras |
5 Feb 1839 |
11 Feb 1839 |
|
“ |
Tricomalie, Ceylon |
18 Feb 1839 |
7 Mar 1839 |
|
“ |
South Cocas, |
15 April 1839 |
18 April 1839 |
|
“ |
Swan River |
17 May 1839 |
20 May 1839 |
|
“ |
King Geo. Sound |
25 May 1839 |
4 June 1839 |
|
“ |
Two People Bay |
31 May 1839 |
4 June 1839 |
|
“ |
Adelaida |
15 June 1839 |
19 June 1839 |
|
“ |
Sydney |
26 June 1839 |
29 July 1839 |
|
“ |
Sincapoor |
10 Sept 1839 |
16 Sept 1839 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
H.M.S. Herald |
Anger, Island of Java |
6 Oct 1839 |
7 Oct 1839 |
|
“ |
Hobart Town |
15 Nov 1839 |
22 Nov 1839 |
|
“ |
Port Arthur |
22 Nov 1839 |
24 Nov 1839 |
|
“ |
Sydney, Port Jackson |
28 Nov 1839 |
18 Jan 1840 |
|
“ |
Bay of Islands, New Zealand |
29 Jan 1840 |
21 Feb 1840 |
|
“ |
River Waitemata |
23 Feb 1840 |
4 Mar 1840 |
|
“ |
Bay of Islands, New Zealand |
6 Mar 1840 |
12 Mar 1840 |
|
“ |
Sydney, Port Jackson |
26 Mar 1840 |
12 April 1840 |
|
“ |
Bay of Islands |
23 April 1840 |
28 July 1840 |
|
H.M.S. Buffalo |
Bay of Islands |
27 April 1840 |
5 May 1840 |
|
* wrecked in |
Mercury Bay, N.Z. |
10 May 1840 |
17 May 1840 |
Mercury Bay |
Watarongiri Bay, N.Z. |
17 May 1840 |
24 May 1840 |
|
H.M.S. Buffalo |
Otahuh Bay, N.Z. |
24 May 1840 |
24 May 1840 |
|
“ |
Watarongiri Bay |
21 June 1840 |
24 June 1840 |
|
“ |
Mercury Bay |
24 June 1840 |
30 June 1840 |
|
“ |
Motuhoa |
9 July 1840 |
18 July 1840 |
|
“ |
Mercury Bay |
22 July 1840 |
25 July 1840 |
|
“ |
Mercury Bay |
25 July 1840 |
28 July Ship Wrecked |
|
Hired Vessel Bolina |
Mercury Bay |
7 Aug 1840 |
20 Sept 1840 |
|
“ |
Bay of Islands |
22 Sept 1840 |
19 Oct 1840 |
|
“ |
Rio Janeiro |
2 Jan 1841 |
9 Jan 1841 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
6 Mar 1841 |
15 Mar 1841 |
|
“ |
Home |
20 Mar 1841 |
27 Dec 1846 |
|
S.S. Penelope |
Spithead |
1 Jan 1847 |
9 Jan 1847 |
|
“ |
Madeira |
16 Jan 1847 |
20 Jan 1847 |
|
“ |
Planet Nicholes |
27 Jan 1847 |
30 Jan 1847 |
|
“ |
Port Praya |
2 Feb 1847 |
4 Feb 1847 |
|
“ |
Bea Vista |
5 Feb 1847 |
6 Feb 1847 |
|
NAMES OF SHIPS |
NAMES OF
PLACES |
DATE OF ARRIVAL |
DATE OF SAILING |
|
S.S. Penelope |
Gambia |
10 Feb 1847 |
10 Feb 1847 |
|
“ |
Sierra Leone |
13 Feb 1847 |
23 Dec 1833 |
|
H:M: Brig Cygnet |
“ “ |
16 Feb 1847 |
16 Feb 1847 |
|
“ |
Bananas |
16 Feb 1847 |
19 Feb 1847 |
|
“ |
Spithead |
31 Mar 1847 |
|
|
“ |
London |
4 April 1847 |
6 April 1847 |
|
“ |
Home |
11 April 1847 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia |
|
|
|
|
Bishops Castle, Salop |
|
|
|
|
Worthen, Salop |
12 Feb 1867 |
10 Ma |
|
|
Clun, Salop |
|
|
|
|
Ludlow, Salop |
20 Mar 1872 |
21 Mar 1873 |
|
|
Bucknall, Salop |
21 Mar 1873 |
11 May 1873 |
|
|
Clun, Salop |
11 May 1869 |
7 Sept 1874 |
|
Isle of Man |
7 Strathallen Crescent, Douglas |
8 Sept 1874 |
21 June 1875 |
|
Clun, Salop |
Left 3 Nov 1875 |
23 June 1875 |
|
|
Isle of Man |
1 Stanley Crescent |
|
3 Nov 1875 |
|
“ |
“ “ “ |
5 Nov 1875 |
|
|
Isle of Man |
Cambridge Terrace |
12 May 1876 |
|
4/11/1873 The humble Memorial of
Alexander Lane M.D. retired Surgeon Royal Navy to their Lordships the Lords
Commissionor of the Admiralty, humbly _____ that the value of money has so much
increased since the sudden rise not only in the price of food, but of
everything necessary to protect life, and that having a family to provide for
some of whom will be left penniless at his decease, and that his being past the
age allotted to man and it being now upwards of half a century since he entered
Her Majestys service with no other resource left but that granted to him for
the wear of the best part of his life; therefore, your Lordships most humble
Memorialist most humbly solicits that your Lordships would grant him something
by way of Pension which would enable him to meet those absolutely necessary
expenses to support life which the ______ of the time demand, and which your
most humble Memorialist is unable to supply; your Lordships most humble
Memorialist therefore must humbly solicit that your Lordships will give him
your most favorable consideration for which as in duty bount he will ever pray.
To
the Lordships
The
Lord Commissioners
Of
the Admiralty
Admiralty
Office
Whitehale
London