... on their estates, and they were assisted to the extent of the loan fund placed by Parliament at the disposal of the Government. The proprietor or his agent has the strongest interest in seeing that the work is well done, and can exercise the most... The Irish Crisis - Side 158av Charles Edward Trevelyan - 1848 - 201 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| 1848 - 632 sider
...the landed proprietors were held to their responsibility for the well-being of the people xesiding on their estates, and they were assisted to the extent...improved, and was it to be left to the discretion of Commiseioners to take any bog-land they pleased at a valuation ; to single out, for instance, a tract... | |
| Robert Montgomery Martin - 1848 - 490 sider
...states, that " The plan of reclaiming waste lands by the direct agency of the Government did not surmount the objections made to it on the score of its interference with the rights of private property." The greater part of these wastes belong to the Dukes of Leinster and Buckingham; the Marquesses of Lansdowne,... | |
| Robert Montgomery Martin - 1848 - 482 sider
...who would require to be aided by loans from the State. Mr. Trevelyan in his work states, that " The plan of reclaiming waste lands by the direct agency of the Government did not surmount the objections made to it on the score of its interference with the rights of private property."... | |
| Robert Montgomery Martin - 1848 - 488 sider
...who would require to be aided by loans from the State. Mr. Trevelyan in his work states, that " The plan of reclaiming waste lands by the direct agency of the Government did not surmount the objections made to it on the score of its interference with the rights of private property."... | |
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