Search
History of Newspapers Video (see more)
Email Subscription
Sign up to receive our latest blog updates!Buy Historic Newspapers
-
Recent Posts
- Larger Than Life… The Death of Jessie James
- Snapshot 1903 – “Jack the Ripper” in America?
- You’ve Come A Long Way Baby. . . from the Pony Express to the internet…
- Great Story Telling is Essential to Life… Hans Christian Anderson’s Mastery of Creating the Fairytale…
- “Collecting Newspapers – The Basics” (Part V) – Reprints…
Most Viewed Post
- Do Old and Antique Newspapers Have Any Collectible Value?
- "Collecting Newspapers - The Basics" (Part IV) - Setting Values...
- Genuine or reprint?
- Framing and Storing Newspapers… the ongoing story…
- Nobody like me, everybody hates me... 1863...
- More on printing newspapers in the 1700's...
- More on printing newspapers in the 1700's...
- The reprint issues of the “Honolulu Star-Bulletin” Pearl Harbor issue…
- Why Hawaii Became the 50th State...
- The Traveler... Ismay on "speed"... war of the roses...
Recent Comments
Rare Newspapers Recent Items
Categories
Tags
18th Century 19th century 20th century 1700's 1800's 1865 1966 Abraham Lincoln baseball black americana catalog Catalog announcements civil war collecting newspapers Confederate Food for Thought George Washington Great Headlines harper's weekly historic newspapers holidays humor humorous illustrated newspapers Inventions Jewish journalism Judaica just for fun literature London newsletter newspapers old newspapers old west politics President Lincoln Presidents rare newspapers religion Revolutionary War slavery sports war of 1812 www.rarenewspapers.comArchives
Blogroll
The Traveler… the Goree Merchants… Weales or Weasles…
October 6, 2016 by The Traveler · Leave a Comment
Today I journeyed to London by the way of The London Chronicle dated October 4, 1766. I found a short article stating that they write from Senegal “… there have been lately upwards of two hundred French trading ships on the coast of Africa; — which was a principal cause of the price of slaves being so high, the Goree Merchants having contracted to supply the Spanish West India settlements with negroes.”
In Cambridge, the last Monday was the day that the new Mayor for the succeeding year was to be sworn into office. However, he was currently in North America on his Majesty’s service. Consequently with not appearing, no mayor was sworn in for the next year and the late mayor will continue to until another is chosen and sworn in. The name of the late mayor? Mr. Alderman Weales, but it certainly looks close enough to “weasles” now doesn’t it??
~The Traveler
Filed under: The 1700's, The Hobby, Unusual, Fun & Bizarre
Tagged: 1700's 18th century, 1766, The Traveler