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The Ripon Diary, 1878–80: III

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2016

Extract

Monday 29th Sept.

Went out stalking with Finlay got nothing, had 2 chances & wounded the fist stag but could not find him – a wild day & the wind very bad on the hill – Monro saw my stalk through a glass & says that the stag was badly wounded & turned down just behind us – There is not much news in the papers, except an account of a successful attack by the tribes on one of our convoys.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Catholic Record Society 1973

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References

1 Professor Shairp, Robert Burns (London, 1879). English Men of Letters Series.Google Scholar

2 The Ameer and his chief advisers arrived on 28 September. The Times, 29 September 1879

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7 Ripon gave the main address and distributed prizes at this meeting.

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9 The Times, 13 October 1879.

10 Lord Salisbury spoke to a Conservative Party rally at the Manchester Free Trade Hall

11 Ripon spoke at the dinner on the armed forces volunteers and the conduct of the Government's foreign policy, especially what he called its ‘mishandling’ of Afghanistan. The Times, 24 October 1879.

12 In memory of his former estate manager, Ripon established the Mason Memorial Scholarship, open to the sons of tenants on his estate.

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15 Hartington's two speeches were delivered on the evening of 24 October and the evening of the 25th. The first was essentially a call for Liberal unity. Toward the end of his address Hartington turned to questions of foreign policy but he became bogged down in what could only be called minor matters, i.e., Russian acquisition of Batoum. The Times of 27 October labelled this speech ‘inadequate’. The second speech was merely a rehash of the year's political events.

16 Bright followed Hartington at Manchester and launched into a broad attack on Beaconsfield's foreign policy. In typical Bright fashion, he dwelt at length on the tremendous expenditure of money the government had lavished on an unjust war, especially at a time when the country was going through serious distress. The Times, 21 October 1879.

17 The Conservative speakers were Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, Mr Henry Chaplin and the Marquis of Hertford,

18 The Times article was largely based upon three sources: a Government Blue Book ‘The Condition of the Population in Asia Minor and Turkey’, a report by Sir Henry Layard of his tour of Syria, and material from its own correspondents. 28 October 1879.

19 Cowper spoke at an agricultural dinner in Moor Green, Nottinghamshire. He called for a thorough reform of the Land Laws as a step toward solving the problem of agricultural distress.

20 James spoke before his constituents at Taunton largely on the question of foreign policy.

21 Ripon spoke at the meeting on the subject of the Agricultural depression. The Times, 31 October 1879.

22 Charles Robert Carrington, 3rd Baron and 1st Earl Carrington (1843-1928), was a Liberal peer.

23 The Times called Roberts’ proclamation merely a recognition of exisiting facts and denied that it was designed to lead toward annexation. The Times, 31 October 1879.

24 The home of Lord Derby.

25 Lieutenant-General R. Strachey, a member of the Council of India.

26 General Sir Frederick Paul Haines.

27 The fleet was sent to Vourla, to await orders to go to Besika Bay. The Times, 4 November 1879.

28 Forster, Northbrook, and Ripon.

29 The Turkish government was headed by the supposed Russophile, Said Pasha.

30 The Times stated that Yakub Khan was in communication with the forces that massacred the British garrison at Cabul and that it was now obvious that he had played some part in this uprising. 10 November 1879.

31 The Lord Mayor's Day speech.

32 ‘We have strengthened and secured our north-west frontier; (cheers); we have asserted our supremacy in Central Asia; and the general result of our operations … will be to establish tranquillity in those regions and increase the welfare of the inhabitants.’ The Times, 11 November 1879.

33 Lewis Fry, MP for Bristol.

34 The Anchor Society was the Liberal society of Bristol.

35 Ripon attacked the government on the issue of the Burial Bills and defended the Washington treaty, saying that it was a Liberal policy to search for ways of peace rather than to threaten war. He ended with a long attack on the government's foreign policy, especially recent developments in the-Middle East.

36 Ripon's speech was basically a survey of foreign policy developments. He dealt mostly in generalities, saying that it was still the policy of the Liberals to be the peace party, to support financial retrenchment and political reform. Peace, he said, was still the first interest of England. The Times, 15 November 1879.

37 In an editorial, The Times accused Argyll of everything but lying, preferring, as they said, not to use the word that the Duke would have used. 15 November 1879.

38 Those arrested for anti-rent speeches were Michael Davitt, J. B. Killen, a barrister, and James Daly, editor of a Nationalist journal in Mayo.

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41 This marked the opening of Gladstone's first Midlothian campaign. The speech was devoted to the inequities of Disraeli's foreign policy. Gladstone called the Duke of Buccleuch ‘in all respects what a British nobleman should be’ and one who set an example in discharge of duty and responsibility that all Englishmen could follow profitably.

42 The Very Reverend W. C. Lake.

43 The Times, 27 November 1879, speech at Corn Exchange, Dalkeith.

44 This refers to a series of Fenian outrages committed in 1867 in which over a dozen people were killed.

45 Her doctors.

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53 Published in Daily News, 18 December 1879.

54 The Times, 18 December 1879.

55 Ripon's anger was directed at an article analysing the situation in Afghanistan which appeared in the Daily Telegraph, 18 December 1879.

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57 Pall Mall Gazette, 19 December 1879.

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62 The Treaty of Gandamak was signed on 26 May 1879. By it the Afghans gave up military control over the Eastern passes along the Indian frontier and they further agreed to accept an English Minister at Cabul. The English were to maintain some control over Afghanistan's foreign policy. The English sent as their first commissioner Sir Louis Cavagnari. After being in residence only a few weeks the entire mission was massacred in September.

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76 Ripon presided at the meeting and gave the principal address. Most of his speech was concerned with the need to improve the quality of education available to the people in the countryside. He felt that an improved educational standard would aid England in her agricultural and industrial competition throughout the world.

77 Robert Cornthwaite.

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85 Charles Anderson-Pelham, 3rd Earl of Yarborough (1835-1927).

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87 Dean Fremantle of Ripon and his wife.

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89 Bright spoke at the annual meeting of the Birmingham Liberal Association.

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91 Lord Derby spoke at the annual distribution of scholarships granted by the Liverpool Council of Education. The Times, 26 January 1880.

92 Cardinal Newman spoke before the annual Catholic Reunion meeting. His speech largely dwelt on the changes that had taken place in relations between Roman Catholics and other Englishmen. He admitted Roman Catholic errors in the past and tried to show how Prostestants could take such a distorted view of the Catholic Church.

93 Sandon spoke in support of the Conservative by-election candidate, Edward Whitley.

94 Henry John Wood, Lieutenant-Colonel in the Army and fourth son, Frederick George Lindley Wood, and his wife Lady Mary.

95 Russia before and after the War, by the author of Society in St Petersburg [Julius Eckardt] translated from the German (with later additions by the author) by Edward Fairfax Taylor (London, 1880).

96 Lord Ramsay was the Liberal candidate at the by-election in Liverpool. His decision in favour of Home Rule was widely believed to have been an open invitation to win the Irish vote there. It was regarded by many Liberals as a miscalculation that would alienate many English voters.

97 G. Shaw Lefevre, Freedom of Land, Practical Politics Series no. 3, published by Macmillan for the Liberal Party; Grant Duff, M. E., Foreign Policy, Practical Politics Series no. 2, (London, 1880).Google Scholar

98 Viscount Monck, retired soldier, who had served as Governor-General of Canada.

99 Hansard, House of Lords, 5 February 1880, cols. 1-62. Disraeli stated that England's sole aim in Afghanistan was to ‘secure an adequate and powerful frontier for our Indian Empire’. England's policy was opposed to annexation. Col. 42.

100 Sir William Rathbone was a Liberal MP.

101 Published in The Times, 4 February 1880. Hartington's letter was a straightforward statement of support for Lord Ramsay, despite his pronouncements in favour of Home Rule. Gladstone's was a classic of tortured prose which rendered his support less effective.

102 The final vote was: Mr Edward Whitley, the Conservative, 26,106; Lord Ramsay, the Liberal candidate, 23,885. The Conservative majority was 2,221.

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105 The Times, Editorial, 10 February 1880.

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107 The questions referred to the statement made in The Times of that morning that the British Government had released Persia of her obligations in regard to Herat. Both Disraeli and Northcote in the House of Lords said there was no foundation to the statement. Hansard, House of Lords, 10 February 1880, col. 375, and House of Commons, cols. 382-3.

108 Hansard, House of Lords, 12 February 1880, cols. 487-506.

109 The final returns on the Barnstaple poll showed that the Liberal candidate, Lord Lymington, drew 817 votes to 721 for the Conservative candidate, Sir Robert Carden. The result was somewhat discouraging for the Liberals, however. Since the 1874 election, the Liberals had added sixty votes to their poll while the Conservatives had increased their poll by ninety-nine.

110 Fitzjames Stephens was a Conservative intellectual and writer who had been a major contributor to the Saturday Review.

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117 The attempt was made on 17 February, while Czar Alexander and his guests, including the Duke of Edinburgh, were about to dine. One hundred and twenty-four pounds of dynamite were exploded in a cellar beneath the royal dining-room. Twelve members of the royal household were killed and some fifty were injured.

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119 Hansard, House of Lords, 26 February 1880, cols. 1021-1098. Ripon took the Government to task for lacking any straightforward foreign policy and being forced to improvise as events unfolded. The result has been to leave Afghanistan weak and the desired ‘scientific frontier’ costly in blood. Cols. 1076-9.

120 They were captured near Salonica by Greek bandits. The incident touched Ripon and his wife very deeply because of its similarity to the capture and murder of Lady Ripon's brother in 1870.

121 They were introduced on 23 February. The Bill was designed to give tenants for life power to sell and to lease land in which they had an interest. Furthermore, the Bill simplified the procedure for conveyance. Legal fees were also to be brought into a more realistic form. The Bill never reached the House of Commons.

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127 Lowther was Chief Secretary for Ireland. His speech painted a grim picture of conditions in Ireland.

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131 Lord Braye of Stanford Hall, Rugby, was a fellow-Roman Catholic and friend of Ripon's.

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134 James Russell Lowell (1819-91), American author and poet. He served as American Minister to London from 1880 to 1885.

135 Not identified.

136 The French translation of Turgenev's Virgin Soil, published in 1879.

137 Lord Stanley Alderley (1827-1903) was a well-known English nobleman who had served briefly in the diplomatic service. He was quite an eccentric, having been converted to the Moslem faith during his travels in the East.

138 The letter to Lord Sefton in which Derby definitely announced his severing of all ties with the Conservative Party.

139 The Conservative election manifesto took the form of a letter to the Duke of Marlborough on 9 March, by Disraeli. In it, Disraeli made the menace of Home Rule and Irish terror as the main theme of the forthcoming election.

140 The debate was on the Eastern Question. Hansard, House of Lords, 15 March 1880, cols. 973-1007.

141 Thomas Weld-Blundell was a prominent Roman Catholic landowner in south-west Lancashire. His open support for the Tory cause was considered by Lord Granville to have been instrumental in explaining the failure of the Liberals there. Ripon personally wrote to Weld-Blundell asking him to return to the Liberal camp but was unsuccessful in his efforts. Ripon Papers, British Museum, Add. MSS. 43626, Mgr John Fisher to Ripon, 4 April 1880.

142 Mr Gladstone on the Budget.

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144 Sir Henry Thompson's election for Knaresborough was challenged early in 1880 and he was unseated.

145 Two Liberals, Sir Arthur Hayter and Edward Wodehouse, were returned for Bath.

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148 Goschen defeated the Conservative candidate, Francis Darwin, very handily.

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151 Tennyson's famous poem.

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153 George, Joachim Goschen, Reports and Speeches on Local Taxation (London, 1874).Google Scholar

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155 Lawson's resolutions called for legislation that would allow each locality by a two-thirds majority to stop the public sale of intoxicating drinks.

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157 Lord Henry was an old friend of Disraeli's and he badgered the Prime Minister for this important post. Disraeli submitted his name but ultimately had to withdraw it because of opposition to Lord Henry as not being competent for this post. Buckle, , Disraeli, vol. 6, p. 532.Google Scholar

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160 Donald James Mackay, 11th Lord Reay, was a Dutchman who became a naturalized British subject in 1877.

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