Lord John Russell by Stuart J. Reid (books that read to you .txt) 📕
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s connection to seek examples outside the House of Bedford, since the name of Lord William Russell in the seventeenth century and that of Lord John in the nineteenth stand foremost amongst the champions of civil and religious liberty. Hugh du Rozel, according to the Battle Roll, crossed from Normandy in the train of the Conqueror. In the reign of Henry III. the first John Russell of note was a small landed proprietor in Dorset, and held the post of Constable of Corfe Castle. William Russell, in the year of Edward II.'s accession, was returned to Parliament, and his lineal descendant, Sir John Russell, was Speaker of the House of Commons in the days of Henry VI. The real founder, however, of the fortunes of the family was the third John Russell who is known to history. He was the son of the Speaker, and came to honour and affluence by a happy chance. Stress of weather drove Philip, Archduke of Austria and, in right of his wife, King of Castile, during a voyage from Flanders to Spain in the year 1506, to take r
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Bill of 1852, 196;
defence of Lord Clarendon, 196;
edits ‘Memoirs and Journal of Thomas Moore,’ 204;
accepts Foreign Secretaryship in the Aberdeen Administration, 206;
his vacillation in taking office under Lord Aberdeen not due to personal motives, 205;
retires from Foreign Office, 210, 221;
on the projects of Russia, 218, 224, 225;
and the Vienna Note, 227;
speech at Greenock on the prospects of war, 227;
memorandum to the Cabinet on the eve of the Crimean War, 228;
Reform Bill of 1854, 236, 239, 241;
resignation, 241;
resumes his seat in the Cabinet, 242;
speech in the House of Commons on withdrawing his Reform measure, 242, 243;
proposes a rearrangement of the War and Colonial departments, 244, 248, 251;
presses Lord Aberdeen to take decisive action with regard to the Crimean War, 248;
memorandum on the Crimean War, 251;
proposed resignation, 251, 252;
resignation on Roebuck’s motion to inquire into the condition of the Army in the Crimea, and his speech on the question, 254-257;
becomes Colonial Secretary in Palmerston’s Government, 258;
plenipotentiary at second Congress of Vienna, 259-263;
consents at Palmerston’s request to remain in the Ministry, 263;
explanations in the House of Commons regarding the failure of the Vienna Conference, 264, 265;
announces his resignation (1855), 265;
speech in defence of his late colleagues against Roebuck’s motion of censure, 266;
his mistake in joining the Coalition Ministry, 271;
leisure, travel, &c., 272;
literary labours, 272-281, 354;
and the pension for Moore, 278;
remarks on his own career in ‘Recollections and Suggestions,’ 281, 336;
allusions to Joseph Lancaster, 282;
work in the cause of education, 282-285, 339;
scheme of National Education (1856), 284;
opposes Lord Palmerston on the ‘Arrow’ question, 287;
speech in the City and re-election, 287, 288;
supports Palmerston at the Indian Mutiny crisis, 288;
on the Conspiracy Bill, 289, 290;
supports Lord Derby in passing the India Bill, 290;
thanked by Jews for his aid in removing their disabilities, 291;
attacks Disraeli’s Reform Bill, 292;
renewal of friendly intercourse with Palmerston, 293;
relations with Cobden and Bright, 294;
joins Palmerston’s Administration (1859) as Foreign Secretary, 295;
introduces a new Reform Bill, 296;
raised to the Peerage, 297;
acquires the Ardsalla estate, and receives the Garter, 298;
his work at the Foreign Office, 299, 300;
intervention in Italian affairs, 304, 339;
protests against the annexation of Savoy by France, 305;
receives Garibaldi at Pembroke Lodge, 307;
his reception in Italy, 307;
and the ‘Trent’ affair, 311;
and the ‘Alabama’ case, 313-319, 341;
on the Polish revolt, 321;
and the Schleswig-Holstein difficulty, 322, 323;
as Foreign Secretary, 323, 324;
on Palmerston’s vivacity, 325;
second Premiership on the death of Palmerston, 325;
tribute to Lord Palmerston, 327;
defeated on the questions of Reform and Redistribution of Seats, 331;
Mr. Lecky’s reminiscences of him, 335-339;
relations with colleagues and opponents, 336, 337, 347;
speech on the maintenance of the independence of Belgium, 340;
letter on the claims of the Vatican, 341, 342;
letters to the ‘Times’ on the government of Ireland, 343;
and Home Rule, 338, 343, 344;
independent attitude towards the throne, 344;
relations with Lord Aberdeen, 346, 347;
Lord Selborne’s impressions of him, 345;
his private secretaries’ impressions of him, 347, 348;
life at Pembroke Lodge, 351-353;
stories about doctors, 350;
visit of Bulgarian delegates, 352;
friendships, 355;
his use of patronage, 355;
his children, 356;
home life, and his children’s reminiscences, 356-361;
Dr. Anderson’s recollections, 361;
a meeting with Carlyle, 362;
Lord Dufferin’s recollections, 363;
religious faith, 364;
interview with Spurgeon, 365;
at Cheshunt College, 365;
Nonconformist deputation, 366;
‘Golden Wedding,’ 367;
death, 367;
opinion of Lord Shaftesbury, 368;
a remark of Sir Stafford Northcote’s, 369
Russell, Hon. Rollo, 360, 367
Russell, William, Member of Parliament in the reign of Edward II., 2
Russell, Lord William (of the seventeenth century), 1;
Lord John Russell’s Biography of him, 274
Russell, Lord William, Lord John Russell’s brother, 6;
wounded at Talavera, 14, 34;
letter to Lord John, 49
Russia, and India, 31, 218;
projects and demands with regard to Turkey, 223, 224;
occupation of Moldavia and Wallachia, 224, 229;
rejection of the Vienna Note, 226;
destroys Turkish fleet at Sinope, 230;
evacuates the Principalities, 243;
operations in the Crimea, 246-252;
death of the Emperor Nicholas, 259;
fall of Sebastopol, and losses in the war, 268;
and the Polish revolt, 321
Salamanca, battle of, 16, 17
Sardinia, and the Crimean War, 267
Schleswig-Holstein question, the, 172, 322, 323
Scott, Sir Walter, Lord John Russell’s first acquaintance with, 9;
and the Edinburgh Speculative Society, 13, 91, 355
Sebastopol, siege and fall of, 246, 247, 268
Secret Memorandum, the, 216, 225
Sefton, Lord, 75
Selborne, Lord, on the ‘Alabama’ case, 312-319;
impressions of Lord Russell, 345
Seymour, Sir Hamilton, 214
Seymour, Lord Webb, 12
Shaftesbury, Lord, and factory children, 89;
and Lord John Russell’s support of Peel, 129, 130;
and the Factory Bill, 159;
special constable in 1848, 167;
and Cardinal Wiseman’s manifesto, 187;
on the Coalition Government, 211, 212, 368
‘Shannon’ and the ‘Chesapeake,’ battle between the, 22
Shelley and the Peterloo massacre, 38
Sheridan, Mr., 25
Sidmouth, Lord, 21, 40, 63, 85
Simpson, General, 267
Sinope, destruction of Turkish fleet at, 230, 232, 233
Slave trade, 22, 48, 89
Smith, Rev. —, Vicar of Woodnesborough, a tutor of Lord John Russell’s, 6
Smith, Dr. Southwood, and the Public Health Act, 162
Smith, Sydney, friendship with Lord John Russell, 8;
on Reform, 27;
on the political situation after Canning’s accession to power, 50, 51;
and ‘Dame Partington,’ 80;
hopeful of the triumph of Reform, 84;
and ‘Lord John Reformer,’ 90;
on Lord John’s influence in the Melbourne Government, 113
Society of the Friends of the People, 25, 63
Solferino, battle of, 303
Spain, Lord John Russell’s visit with Lord and Lady Holland, 9-11;
Lord John’s sympathy, 9, 10;
Lord John’s second visit, 14, 15;
Lord John’s third visit and adventures, 16-20;
entry of Wellington into Madrid, 16;
the Spanish marriages, 171, 172;
Lord Palmerston’s interference, 174
Spencer, Lord, on the alliance of England with France, 120
Spurgeon, C. H., 365
Stanhope, Colonel, 14, 15
Stanley, Lord, and Irish affairs, 92, 93;
Secretary for the Colonies, 93;
and the Irish Church, 95;
withdraws from Lord Grey’s Cabinet, 95;
Secretary for the Colonies under Peel, 124, 134;
succeeds to the House of Lords, 141;
challenges Palmerston’s foreign policy, 176;
fails to form a Ministry on the resignation of Lord John Russell, 193
Stanmore, Lord, 118, 119, 211, 231, 233, 347
Stansfeld, Mr., 327
Stewart, Dugald, 12
Stockmar, Baron, 101, 216
Sussex, Duke of, and the claims of Dissenters, 53
Sweden, and the Crimean War, 267
Syllogism, a merry canon’s, 19
Tahiti incident, the, 125
Tavistock, monastic lands granted to the first Earl of Bedford, 2;
election of Lord John Russell as member for, 20, 62
Tavistock, Lord, elder brother of Lord John Russell, 6, 11
Tennyson, Mr., 90
Tennyson, Lord, his appointment as Poet Laureate, 355
Test and Corporation Acts; agitation for their total repeal, 53, 54;
speech of Fox, 54, 55;
their provisions, 54;
jubilee of repeal, 366
Tithe Acts (Ireland): Mr. Littleton’s Bill, 93, 94;
Bill of 1835, 105, 107;
Bill passes through Parliament, 112
Tithe Commutation Act, 106, 107
Tooke, Horne, 26
Trafalgar Square demonstration on the Reform question, 332
Treason Felony Act, 157
Treaty of Paris (1856), 268
‘Trent’ affair, the, 310-312
Turkey, war with Egypt, 119;
and the custody of the Holy Places in Palestine, 213;
the ‘sick man’ of Europe, 214, 215;
oppression of Christian subjects, 217;
reception of Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, 222;
and the Vienna Note, 224-227;
ultimatum to Russia, 229;
destruction of fleet by Russia at Sinope, 230;
and the second Congress at Vienna, 259-262;
and the Treaty of Paris, 268, 269
University of London, 106, 107;
proposed enfranchisement of, 296
Vansittart, Mr., 21
Vaughan, Cardinal, on Romish
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