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R. Barry (Richard Barry) O'Brien.

The life of Lord Russell of Killowen

. (page 27 of 29)

made payments to compensate persons who had been injured in
the commission of crime, that they did make such payments.

IX. As to the allegation that the respondents invited the
assistance and co-operation of and accepted subscriptions of
money from known advocates of crime and the use of dynamite,
we find that the respondents did invite the assistance and co-
operation of and accepted subscriptions of money from Patrick
Ford, a known advocate of crime and the use of dynamite, but

384



REPORT OF SPECIAL COMMISSION

that it has not been proved that the respondents or any of them
knew that the Clan-na-Gael controlled the League or was col-
lecting money for the Parliamentary Fund. It has been proved
that the respondents invited and obtained the assistance and
co-operation of the Physical Force Party in America, including
the Clan-na-Gael, and, in order to obtain that assistance,
abstained from repudiating or condemning the action of that
party.

There remain three specific charges against Mr. Parnell,
namely :

(a) ' That at the time of the Kilmainham negotiations Mr.
Parnell knew that Sheridan and Boyton had been organising
outrage, and therefore wished to use them to put down outrage.'

We find that this charge has not been proved.

() ' That Mr. Parnell was intimate with the leading Invin-
cibles, that he probably learned from them what they were about
when he was released on parole in April 1882, and that he
recognised the Phcenix Park murders as their handiwork.'

We find that there is no foundation for this charge. We have
already stated that the Invincibles were not a branch of the
Land League.

(c) 'That Mr. Parnell, on 23rd January 1883, by an oppor-
tune remittance enabled F. Byrne to escape from justice to
France.'

We find that Mr. Parnell did not make any remittance to
enable F. Byrne to escape from justice.

The two special charges against Mr. Davitt, viz. : (a) ' That
he was a member of the Fenian organisation, and convicted as
such, and that he assisted in the formation ot the Land League
with money which had been contributed for the purpose of out-
rage and crime ' ; (b) ' That he was in close and intimate
association with the party of violence in America, and was
mainly instrumental in bringing about the alliance between that
party and the Parnellite and Home Rule Party in America ' ;
are based on passages in the Times leading articles of the 7th
and I4th March 1887. 'The new movement was appropriately

3 8 5 CC



LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN

started by Fenians out of Fenian Funds ; its " father " is
Michael Davitt, a convicted Fenian.' ' That Mr. Parnell's
" constitutional organisation " was planned by Fenian brains,
founded on a Fenian Loan, and reared by Fenian hands.'

We have shown in the course of the report that Mr. Davitt
was a member of the Fenian organisation, and convicted as
such, and that he received money from a fund which had been
contributed for the purpose of outrage and crime, viz., the
Skirmishing Fund. It was not, however, for the formation of
the Land League itself, but for the promotion of the agitation
which led up to it. We have also shown that Mr. Davitt re-
turned the money out of his own resources.

With regard to the further allegation that he was in close
and intimate association with the party of violence in America,
and mainly instrumental in bringing about the alliance between
that party and the Parnellite and Home Rule Party in America,
we find that he was in such close and intimate association for
the purpose of bringing about, and that he was mainly instru-
mental in bringing about the alliance referred to.

ALL WHICH WE HUMBLY REPORT TO YOUR MAJESTY.

JAMES HANNEN.
JOHN C. DAY.
ARCHIBALD L. SMITH.

HENRY HARDINGE CUNYNGHAME, Secretary.
Royal Courts of Justice, I3th February 1890.



386



APPENDIX B.

(Mayor and Corporation of Salford v. Lever (1891). L.R. 1891,
i Q.B. 168; 60 L.J. Q.B. 39 ; 63 L.T. 658 ; 39 W.R. 85 ;
7 'Times' Rep. 18.)

Head Note. When one party to a contract of sale, or any
other contract, bribes the agent of the other party in respect of
the contract, the party whose agent has been bribed has a right
of action (i) against his agent for damages for fraud and for
return of secret profits (the amount of the bribe), and (2) against
the other party who has bribed the agent for damages for fraud,
in which action he will recover whatever pecuniary loss has
been occasioned to him through the fraudulent dealing with
his agent. These rights of action against two persons are not
alternative, but may be both separately pursued in respect of
the same transaction.

The plaintiffs employed H. as manager of their gas-works,
and it was part of his duty to examine and report on tenders
for the supply of coal. The defendant, who was a coal
merchant, induced H. to accept his tender of coal by an offer of
a secret commission of is. a ton on the coal purchased from
him and recouped himself by adding is. to the price of every
ton charged to the plaintiffs. By the transactions in coal which
took place the plaintiffs paid about 2,3297. in excess of what they
would have paid had it not been for the secret arrangement about
commission. H. received similar secret commissions from other
coal merchants. When they found out the frauds that had
been practised upon them, the plaintiffs brought an action
against H. to recover the moneys he had received as secret
commissions, but for their own reasons they allowed this action
to stand over and sued the coal merchants instead under an
agreement with H. that he was to give them full assistance,
and guarantee the recovery of at least io,ooo/. from the coal
merchants, depositing securities with bankers to cover that
amount. It was also agreed that on receipt by the plaintiffs of

387 C C 2



LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN

io,ooo/., together with costs and expenses, whether as the result
of the actions or paid under the guarantee of H., the latter was
to be discharged from all liability. In pursuance of that agree-
ment actions were brought against some coal merchants, and
4,ooo/. recovered. Then came the action against Lever for
2,3 29/. as money obtained from the plaintiffs by fraud, or, alter-
natively, as money wrongfully detained by the defendant. The
defendant set up in his defence that he and H. were joint
wrong-doers, that the agreement between the plaintiffs and H.
amounted to payment and satisfaction in respect of the wrong
of H., and, consequently, also payment and satisfaction in
respect of his (Lever's) wrong. The Court was not satisfied
with the validity of the agreement, but, supposing the agree-
ment to be a valid satisfaction in respect of the wrong of H., it
held that such was no bar to the action against Lever, which
was an action in respect of a separate wrong. Verdict and
judgment were for the plaintiffs for the full amount claimed.
There was an unsuccessful application in the Queen's Bench
Division for a new trial, when Mr. Justice Charles said : l
' Their right against Lever was to recover the excess price he
had received over the market price, either as damages for
the fraud he had committed jointly with Hunter, or, if the
excess price had been exactly ascertained before action, as
money received for the plaintiffs' use. Their right against H.
was to recover from him the bribe or commission which had
actually been paid, and is based upon the well-known and
frequently enumerated rule that no agent shall make a secret
profit for himself in any transaction he conducts for his
principal (Parker v. McKenna ; Emma Silver Mining Company
ZA Grant).

' It is the latter right which they have compounded for with
H., and the arrangements which they have thought fit to make
with him cannot, in our opinion, be treated as payment or
satisfaction of the tort which Lever has committed.'

This decision was confirmed in the Court of Appeal, when

1 L.R. 25, Q.B. 372.
388



CORPORATION OF SALFORD v. LEVER

Lord Esher, Master of the Rolls, in his judgment said : ' H.,
their agent, had received money from the defendant for the
performance of a duty which he was bound to perform without
any such payment. Nothing would in law be more fraudulent,
dangerous, or disgraceful, and therefore the law has struck at
such conduct in this way. It says, that if an agent takes a
bribe from a third person, whether he calls it a commission or
by any other name, for the performance of a duty which he
is bound to perform for his principal, he must give up to his
principal whatever he has by reason of the fraud received
beyond his due. It is a separate and distinct fraud of the
agent. He might have received the money, without any fraud,
of the person who was dealing with him. Supposing that
person thought that the agent was entitled to a commission, he
would not be fraudulent, but the agent would be, and it is
because of his separate and distinct fraud that the law says he
must give up the money to his principal. It signifies not what
it may be called whether damages or money had and received
the foundation of the claim of the principal is that there is a
separate and distinct fraud by his agent upon him, and therefore
he is entitled to recover from the agent the sum which he has
received.' But does this prevent the principal from suing the
third person also, if he has been fraudulent, because of his
fraud ?



;8 9



INDEX



ACHILLI v. Newman, 148
Ackroyd v. Smithson, 112-113
'Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,'

333
Agrarian outrages, 216-220, 246,

250, 254, App. A 383
Aird, John, 170
Alaska, 265
Allen, Mr. 119

Alma-Tadema, Sir Lawrence, 150
Althorp, Lord, 333
America, 84, 142, 178, 340

Russell in, 10 ; first visit to,
!59-i77;andtheBehring
Sea Arbitration, 265 ;
Russell's second visit to,
283-90 ; and France, 362
American Bar Assoc. 174, 283-4
Diary, 158, 159-17?
Fenians, 84
Anderton's hotel, 232
Annual Register, 311
Anonymous letter, 192-3
Anstie, James, 154
Appleby, 363
Aquarium Company, 126
Arizona, 172
Armagh Co. 162, 172
Armstrong, Serjeant, 99, 100
Army and Navy Gazette, 286
Arrears Act of 1882, 222
Aspinall, Mr. 93
Asquith, Mr. 258, 311
Aughrim, battle of, 14
Aurore newspaper, 316
Austin's ' Jurisprudence,' 92
Australia, 67
Ayland, T. 171



BACON, Vice-Chan cellor, 146, 264
Badier, Mons. 35, 63
Bagot, Dean, 31, 56, 343
Ballantine, Serjeant, 124, 126
Ballygallagh, 14
Ballymena road, 50
Ballystrew, lands of, 15, 1 6

Russells of, 14, 15, 17
Bally vaston, lands of 14, 15

Russells of, 14, 15
Baltimore, 172
Bangor, 376 377
Bar Association of New York, 174,

283-4

Barima Point, 305, 311
Baring, Major, 173
Barmouth, 374
Barnes, George, 298
Barnwall, Rev. Mr. 145
Basevi, Father, 382
' Battle, Mrs.' 334
Bay Chapel, Glenariff, 55
Baylis, Mr. 123
Beaconsfield, Lord, 139
Beaumaris, 376, 377
Becket, Sir Edmund (now Lord

Grimthorpe), 141, 147
Behring Sea Arbitration, 265-7,

284, 306
Beleck, 172
Belfast, 8-10, 269, 342

Russell family in, 20, 27, 36

52-8, 83, 90, 1 20-1

Belfast & County Down Railway, 9
Belt, Mr. 149, 150
Belt v. Lawes, 149-151
Benjamin, J.P. 93, 163, 335
Berryer, Mons. 286



391



LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN






Big Ben, 147

Biggar, Mr. 153

Biggins, Alexander, 292

Bill of Rights, 252

Birmingham, 171

Birrell, Augustine, no

Bismarck, Prince, 7

Bismarck city, 162

Blackburn, Mr. Justice, 39

Blake, Dr. 26

Block, Mr. 333

Blunt, Mr. 209

Bodleian Library, 17, 1 8

Boer war, 370-2

Boffin Island, 67-8

Boru, Brian, 13

Bowen, Lord Justice, 268 ; on Russell,

95, 103-4; on James Anstie, 154;

with Russell in America, 173
Bowyer, Sir George, 81-2, 85
Boyle, Mrs. 53
Boyne, battle of the, 14
Boyton, Mr., App. A 385
Bradford, 300
Bradly, Pat, 162
Brampton, Lord, 272
Brehon laws, 244
Brett, Isaac, 81, 93, 154
Brewster, Abraham, 153
Brick Court, Temple, 1 1 8, 1 54-7, 1 84-5
Bright Castle, 14

Russells of, 14, 15
Bright, John, 120, 175, 186, 210
Bristol, 103

British Association, 342
British Guiana, 105 et seq.
Broadbent, Sir William, 381
Brock, Mr. 149
Brussels, 57
Bryan, Mr. 289
Bulkeley, Sir Richard, 376
Burke, Mr. 178, 211
Busch, 7

Butler, Alban, 22, 25
Butt, Isaac, 81, 93, 154
Buxton, Mrs. Sydney, 241
Byrne, F., App. A 385
Byron memorial, 150



CAHILL, Dr. 29

Cairns, Sir Hugh, 20, 26, 74



California, 59

Callen, Mr. 82, 85, 117, 131
Cambridge Road, Newmarket, 350
Campbell, Mr. 38, 41-4
Lady, 206-7
Lord Colin, 206
Lord Chief Justice, 345
Campbell -v. Campbell and Marl-
borough, 206-7
Canada, 265

Prime Minister of, 20
Cape Colony, 370
Cape of Good Hope, 178
Cape Town, 179-182
Carey (alias Power), James, 178-185

Mrs. 180-5
Carington, Lord, 173
Carlingford, 20

Castle, 34
Lough, 19, 21, 158
Mountains, 19
Carlisle, 363
Carlsbad, 213, 359
Carnarvon, 375, 376, 378
Castle, 375
negotiations, 222
Carte MSS. 18
Carter, Mr. 266, 306, 308
Cases referred to :

without name, 98, 109, 114, 146
Achilli v. Newman, 148
Behring Sea Arbitration, 265-7,

284, 306

Belt -v. Lawes, 149-151
Campbell v. Campbell and

Marlborough, 206-7
Chamberlayne v. Barnwall, 141,

145-6, 148-9
Chavasse, ex parte, 80
Chetwynd v. Durham, 372
Cushendall trials, 38-50
Dreyfus case, 314-25
Grazebrook, in re, 80
Hyland v. Biggar, 153
Lambri Pasha v. Labouchere,

127-9

Maybrick case, 259-63
Mayor and Corporation of Sal-
ford v. Lever, 291, App. B

387-9

Nobel v. Regina, 344
Nuttall -v. Wildes, 1 14



392



INDEX



Cases referred to :

Oetzman v. Long, 291-3
Parnell Commission, 101, 208-

258, 273
Regina v. O'Donnell, 178-85,

217
Robertson v. Labouchere, 126,

264

Saurin v. Starr, 86-7
Scott v. Sampson, 141, 147-9
Steinbank v. Becket, 141, 147
Tichborne trial, 1 19
Venezuelan Arbitration, 305-13
Whalley will case, 372
Wilberforce v. Philp, 141-5,

264, 372
Windham lunacy case, 72-4,

76

Wood v. Cox, 372
Wood v. Durham, 372
Castlereagh, Lord, 72, 368
Castlewellan, 27
Cavendish, Lord Frederick, 178, j

2IO-II

Cecil, Lord Robert, 344
Celtic s.s. 159
Cesarewitch race, 350
Chamberlain, Rt. Hon. Joseph, 186
Chamberlayne, Rev. Mr. 145

z/. Barn wall, 141, 145-

146, 148-9
Chambers, Mr. 73-4
Charing Cross, 92
Charles II, King, 16
Charles, Mr. Justice, App. B 388
Chatham, Earl of, 333
Chavasse, ex parte, 80
Chester, 378-80
Chetwynd -v. Durham, 372
Chicago, 1 6 1, 173, 345, 346

Mayor of, 162
Chichester, 353
Churchill, Lord Randolph, 186, 257,

.354

Civil Court, Liverpool, 78
Claims, Court of, 16
Clan-na-Gael, 226, 249, App. A 385
Clanbrassel, Earls of, 15
Clarke, Sir Edward, 282
Clemenceau, Mons. 316
Clerk, S. H. 360
Clerkenwell, 368



Cleveland, President, 285, 308

Clifden, 67

Cobden, Richard, 175

'Cock,' the, 121

Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice, tries
Saurin v. Starr, 87 ; on Mac-
Mahon, 119; on Russell's cross-
examination in Robertson v.
Labouchere, 264 ; Lord James of
Hereford on, 272

Code Napoleon, 319

Coercion Act, 162

Bill of 1881, 136, 141

Coleman, Miss, 32

Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice, 272 ;
in the Windham lunacy case, 74 ;
in Saurin v. Starr, 87 ; on Russell
as an advocate, 103 ; on Dr.
Russell of Maynooth, 131; on
' New Views on Ireland,' 139 ;
offers Russell a puisne judgeship,
151 ; visit to America, 159, 161 ;
as a raconteur, 173; speech before
the Bar Association of New York,
174-5 > warning to Russell on
overwork, 200-1 ; letters to Russell
on the Parnell case, 243, 257 ;
death, 270 ; Russell on, 345-6

Collins, Lord Justice Henn, on the
Northern Circuit, 94 ; Venezuelan
arbitrator, 310 ; tribute to Russell,

313, 356

Collins, Miss, 53
Colthard, Dr. 381
Companies Acts, 295
Compensation for Disturbance Bill,

138

Compton, Mr. 93
Conciliation Hall, Dublin, 24
Confederated Catholics, General

Assembly of, 15
Coniamston, lands of, 16, 17

Russells of, 14, 15
' Coningsby,' 333

Conseil de Guerre, Rennes, 314, 319
Contemporary Review, 301
Convent of Mercy, Newry, 9, 22

San Francisco, 82, 167
Corbett, Mr. 47
Cork, 1 60

Comely, Mons. 325
Cornu, Mons. 62



393



LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN



Cotton, Mrs. 75

County Palatine, Attorney-General

for the, 93

Cour de Cassation, 325
Courcel, Baron de, 265
Court of Passage, Liverpool, 69, 75-8
Assessorshipof, 123
Coward, Lewis, 149
Cowes, 379, 381
Crackenthorpe, Montague, 275
Crofter, Colonel, 75
Crommelin, Mr. 38-9, 48-9
Crompton, Mr. Justice, 78-80, 123
Cromwell, Oliver, 16
Cromwell Road, 372
' Cromwellian Settlement in Ireland,'

18

Cross-examinations by Lord Russell :
of Mr. Campbell at Cushendall,

38, 44-48

of Lambri Pasha, 127-8
of Miss Wilberforce in Wilber-

force v. Philp, 142-5
of Mr. Sampson in Scott v. Samp-
son, 148

of Mr. Belt in Belt v. Lawes, 150
of Pigott in the Parnell case,

225-40

of Mr. Wybrow Robertson in
Robertson v. Labouchere, 126,
264

Crystal Palace, 62
Cubitt, Robert, 180
Cullen, Cardinal, 86
Cultra, co. Down, 20
Cuming, Dr. 67

Cunynghame, Mr. 241, App, A 386
Curoe, Rev. D. 170
Cushendall trials, 38-50

village, 37, 38, 50, 54



Daily Telegraph on Russell, 113-14;

Russell's letters on the Irish Land

Question in the, 138 ; Mr. Scott,

dramatic critic of, 147
Darling, Charles (now Mr. Justice),

opposes Russell at South Hackney

elections, 194, 205 ; letters to

Russell, 198, 209
Davey, Mr. Horace (now Lord

Davey), 165



Davis, Thomas, quoted by Russell,
2 9> 33 2 5 his poem, ' Sweet and
Sad,' 34 ; Russell on, 51-2, 133

Davitt, Michael, 1 39 248, App . A 383-6

Dawson, Colonel Douglas, 324

Day, Mr. Justice, 214, App. A 386

De Courcy, 13

Delaney, Mr. 251

Demange, Maitre, 320

Denman, Mr. Justice, encounter with
Russell, 113-14; in Belt v. Lawes,

151

Denver, Cornelius, 29, 32

Deptford, 209

Deny, 47

Devoy, John, 249

Diary, Russell's American, 159-177

Dickson, T. A. 130

Dillon, John, 176

Dinas, 374

Disraeli, Benjamin, 210 ; Russell on,
63-4 ; on the legal mind, 94

Dobbs, Mr. 48-9

Dr. Johnson's Buildings, Temple,
154, 156, 205

Dolgelly, 374

Drapers' Record, 292

Dreyfus case, Russell's paper on the,
314-25 ; harsh judgment of the
English and Foreign press, 315-
318 ; laws of evidence in France,
319-20 ; want of unanimity in the
lines of defence, 320- 1 ; impressions
of Dreyfus and his judges, 321-3 ;
good effects of the trial, 323-4

Drogheda, 132

Dromore, Protestant Dean of, 32

Drummond, Thomas, 136, 223-4

Duane Street, New York, 175

Dublin, 24, 58, 60, 82, 132, 168, 178,
211, 352

Dublin Review, Dr. Russell as joint
editor, 18 ; article by Russell on
the Civil Correspondence of the
Duke of Wellington, 71-2 ; Mac-
Mahon's contributions, 125

Duff, Grant, 361

DufFerin, Lord, 12, 20

Duffy, Sir Charles Gavan, 20, 64, 67,
133 ; letter to Barry O'Brien on
MacMahon, 122, 124-5 > assists
in the Parnell case, 224



394



INDEX



Duncaine, 55

Dundalk, 193 ; elections of 1868, 82 ;

1874, 117; 1880, 131, 138, 338
Dungannon, 52, 130
Dunseath, Rev. Mr. 42
Durham, 117
Dwyer, James, 171



EARL'S Court Gardens, 68, 76

Echlin, General, 17

Edinburgh University Liberal
Association, 263

Egan, Patrick, 229-30, 242, 248

Eldon, Lord, 112-13

Elections : Dundalk, 1868, 82 ; 1874,
117; 1880, 131, 138; South
Hackney, 1885, 194-6 ; 1886, 199

Elizabeth, Queen, 14

Ellenborough, Lord, 75

Ely, 352

Emmanuel, Rev. Mother (n/e Sarah
Russell), 9, 21, 53 ; early reminis-
cences, 22-26

Esher, Lord, 209, App. B 389

Essequibo river, 305

Esterhazy, Colonel, 319

Etat Major, 315 et seq.

Euston, 283, 352, 372

Evarts, W. M. : speeches at Spike
Point, 163-4 ; Portland, 166 ;
before the Bar Association of New
York, 174

Exeter Hall, 62



FALLOON, Rev. Mr. 41

Farren, Mr. 375

' Father Davies' Chapel,' 376

Favre, Jules, 286

' Federal Union with Ireland,' A,

197
Felbrigg Estates, 73

Hall, 72
Fenianism, 84, 224, 247-8 ; and the

Times, 221, 249, App. A 385-6
Field, Mr. Justice, in the Windham

lunacy case, 74 ; tries Wilberforce

v. Philp, 142-5, 264
Findlater, Mr. 130
Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, 134
FitzSimon, Father, 54-5



Flamerens, Marquis de, 17
Florence, 20
Fontenoy, battle of, 205
Ford, Patrick, 173, 384
Foreign Enlistment Act, 279
Forster, Mr. 140, 21 1
Fort Sumter, 176
Fox, James, 289
Free Trade, 252
Freeman's journal, 152
French, General, 371
Fry, Sir Edward, 371 ; on the Secret
Commissions Bill, 291, 300-1, 330

GABORIAU, Emile, 332

' Gallery of Nature,' the, 30

Galliffet, Mons. de, 324

General Elections: 1868, 82-5 ; 1874,
117 ; 1880, 129-31 ; 1885, 193-6

George, Mr. 165

Germany, 318

Giffard, Sir Hardinge (now Lord
Halsbury), 124, 260, 272 ; in
Lambri Pasha v. Labouchere, 127,
148 ; in Belt?/. Lawes, 149-51

Gilbert, Lady (nte Rosa Mulholland),
363-4 ; early reminiscences of
Russell, 32-5

Gilbert, Sir John, 363-4

Givan, Mr. 130

Glacier Point, 167-70

Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W. E. 55, 63,
125, 137, 175, 210, 222, 264, 368 ;
and Russell's letter on Home
Rule, 152 ; refuses to intervene on
behalf of O'Donnell, 184-5 5 takes
up Home Rule, 196-7 ; appoints
Russell Attorney-General, 198 ;
and the law excluding Roman
Catholics from the Chancellorship,
268, 270 ; conversation with Russell,
362

Glanrye river, 19

Glasgow, 170

Glenariff, 55

1 Glyn, Admiral Carr, 147
| Godkin, Mr. 289
! Godolphin, 333
! Goschen, Mr. 263

Government of Ireland Bill, 199

Grant, General, 166



395



LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN



Grattan, Henry, 51, 132

Gray, Mr. 152

Grazebrook, in re, 80

Grey, Lord, 134

Grimthorpe, Lord (see under Becket,

Sir Edmund)
Grimwade, Mr. 195
Groom's Coffee House, 5
Gully, Mr., practising in Passage

Court, Liverpool, 76-7 ; on the

Northern Circuit, 93-4 ; and Lord

Coleridge, 139



HABEAS Corpus Act, 83
Habershon, Dr. 381
Hackney, 194, 198, 199
Down, 195
Elections : 1885, 194-6 ;

1886, 199
Mercury, 195
Radical Association, 195
Town Hall, 196
Wick, 195
Halsbury, Lord (see under Giffard,

Sir Hardinge)
Hamill, John, 18

Mrs. 1 8, 60

Hamill and Denver, 29
Hamilton, Captain, 15

Mr. 41

Hannen, Sir James, voyage to New
York, 159-61 ; speech at Spike
Point, 164 ; President of the
Parnell Commission, 214, App. A
386 ; Note of congratulation to
Lord Russell (facsimile), 256
Hansard, 185
Harcourt, Sir William, 140-1, 209,

222

Harkam, Captain, 75

Harkins' School, 27

Harley Street, 89, 93

Harrisburg, 172

Harrison, Ex-President, 311

Hawkins, Mr. Justice, 124, 272, 279

Haymarket Theatre, 61

Hemans, Mrs. 33

Herbert, Sidney, 41

Herschell, Lord, practising at Pas-
sage Court, Liverpool, 76-7;
Russell's competitor at the Bar,



89 ; on the Northern Circuit, 93-
94; member for Durham, 117;
Venezuelan Arbitrator, 310
Historical MSS. Commission, 18
Hoey, John Cashel, 224
Holker, Sir John, 76, 89, 92-4, 124,
272 ; in Chamberlayne v. Barnwall,
146 ; in Steinbank v. Becket, 147
Holland, Denis, 51-2, 55
Holms, Charlie, 372
Eveleen, 372
Jack, 372

Holyhead, 16, 60, 376-7

Home Rule, 205, App. A 385-6 ;
Russell's views on, 137-8, 155,
194, 197, 367-70 ; Russell's letter
to Mr. Gladstone on, 152 ; taken
up by Mr. Gladstone, 196 ;
Russell's speech on, 199-200; and
support of, 208-10

Home Rule Union, 208

House of Commons, 77, 94-5, 130,
159, I95> 198, 211, 335; Russell's
first visit to, 63; gallery of the, 77,
210 ; Patrick MacMahon in the,
125 ; Russell's room at the, 203 ;
Committee on Outrages, 1852, 220;
Committee on Legal Education,
1846, 275

House of Lords, 136, 268, 342 ;
Secret Commissions Bill intro-
duced, 299-302

Houston, Mr. 225, 242

Huddleston, Baron, 150

Hunter, Chief Justice, 171
Mr., App. B 387-9

Hurst Park, 354

Huxley, Professor, 342

Hyde Park Corner, 81

Hyland, Miss, 153

Hyland v. Biggar, 1 53



' IMITATION of Christ,' 332

Incorporated Law Society, 275-8

Inglis, Mr. 251

Ingram, John Kells, 58-9, 341

Inns of Court, 275-8

' International Law and Arbitration '

address, 286-9
4 Invincibles,' the, 178, 211, App. A

385



396



INDEX



Irish Bar, 66-7, 99
Irish Catholic Club, Liverpool, 85
Church Missionary Society, 37,

44

* Irish Disturbances,' 134, 220
Irish Land Act of 1 88 1, 152, 155, 216,

222, 369 ; of 1885 and 1887, 222
Irish Land Bill, 84, 137-8, 332, 362

Court, 20

Irish Literary Society, 6, 12
Irish Local Government Act, 367-70
Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union,

225-6

Irish Nationalists, 138, 140, 367
Irish Parliament, 137-8, 197
Irish Tenant Right Act, 125
Irish World, 173, App. A 384
Irwin, Colonel Richard, 38



JAMES, Edward, 88-9, 93
Edwin, 79

Sir Henry, 124, 145, 257
James of Hereford, Lord, on Russell

as an advocate, 270-3

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