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" Sarnia, and along the borders of our magnificent river ; upon the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie — wherever the tide of emigration has extended, are to be found the final resting-places of the sons and daughters of Erin ; one unbroken chain of graves,... "
Monthly Retrospect of the Medical Sciences - Page 24
1848
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Self-paying Colonization to North America: Being a Letter to Captain John P ...

M. Wilson Gray - 1848 - 104 pages
...magnificent river, upon the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie, and wherever the tide of immigration has extended, are to be found the final resting-places of the sons and daughters of Erin — one unbrokea chain of graves, where repose fathers and malherí, sisfers and brothers, in one comminuted...
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The Southern Medical and Surgical Journal, Volume 5

1849 - 466 pages
...and Erie, and wherever the tide of immigration has extended, are to be found the final resting places of the sons and daughters of Erin — one unbroken...immediately interested, 'like a tale that is told.' " Dr Smith advocates the identity of typhus and typhoid fever, which we now think is abundantly established....
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A Dictionary of Domestic Medicine and Household Surgery

Spencer Thomson - 1852 - 606 pages
...magnificent river, upon the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie, and wherever the tide of immigration has extended, are to be found the final restingplaces...mothers, sisters and brothers, in one commingled heap.' " The disease of which the emigrant passengers, and in many instances the officers and crews of ships,...
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A dictionary of domestic medicine and household surgery. Revised

Spencer Thomson - 1866 - 786 pages
...magnificent river, upon the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie, and wherever the tide of immigration has extended, are to be found the final restingplaces...graves, where repose fathers and mothers, sisters and brother«, in one commingled heap.1 * " The disease of which the emigrant passengers, and in many instances...
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New Ireland, Volume 1

Alexander Martin Sullivan - 1877 - 450 pages
...our magnificent river ; upon the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie — wherever the tide of emigration has extended, are to be found the final resting-places...commingled heap, without a tear bedewing the soil or a stone marking the spot. Twenty thousand and upwards have thus gone down to their graves." I do not...
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New Ireland

Alexander Martin Sullivan - 1878 - 544 pages
...our magnificent river; upon the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie,—wherever the tide of emigration has extended, are to be found the final resting-places...commingled heap, without a tear bedewing the soil or a stone marking the spot. Twenty thousand and upwards have thus gone down to their graves." I do not...
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The History of the Highland Clearances

Alexander Mackenzie - 1883 - 592 pages
...and Erie — wherever the tide of emigration has extended, are to be found the final resting places of the sons and daughters of Erin ; one unbroken chain...commingled heap, without a tear bedewing the soil or a stone marking the spot. Twenty thousand and upwards have thus gone don-, to their graves."* LAND...
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The Nineteenth Century, Volume 15

1884 - 1108 pages
...the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie, -wherever the tide of emigration has extended, are to be found one unbroken chain of graves, where repose fathers and mothers, sisters and brothers, in a commingled heap, no stone marking the spot. Twenty thousand and upwards have gone down to their graves...
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The Reign of Queen Victoria: A Survey of Fifty Years of Progress, Volume 1

Thomas Humphry Ward - 1887 - 624 pages
...extended, the final resting-places of the sons and daughters of Ireland were to be found in a melancholy chain of graves, ' where repose fathers and mothers,...commingled heap, without a tear bedewing the soil or a stone marking the spot.' These are the circumstances which explain the hatred of the American-Irish...
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Parnellism and Crime: Mr. Davitt's speech

1889 - 280 pages
...of Lakes Ontario and Erie, wherever the tide of emigration has extended, are to be found the filial restingplaces of the sons and daughters of Erin ;...commingled heap, without a tear bedewing the soil or a stone marking the spot. Twenty-thousand and upwards have thus gone down to their graves." Dpon all...
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