Treatise Letter To Mr Baily
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-mr-baily-011 |
| Words | 200 |
Com plaint was made of this to William Holmes, Esq., the present Mayor of Cork. But there was no removal of the thing complained of; the riots were not suppressed: Nay, they not only continued, but increased. 15. From the beginning of February to the end, His Majesty's peace was preserved just as before; of which it may be proper to subjoin two or three instances, for the information of all thinking men "WILLIAM JEwBLL, clothier, of Shandon Church-Lane, deposes, "That Nicholas Butler, with a riotous mob, several times A name first given to Mr. Cennick, from his first preaching on those words: "Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger." assaulted this deponent's house: That particularly on the 23d of February, he came thither with a large mob, armed with clubs and other weapons: That several of the rioters entered the house, and swore, the first who resisted, they would blow their brains out: That the deponent's wife, en deavouring to stop them, was assaulted and beaten by the said Butler; who then ordered his men to break the deponent's windows, which they did with stones of a considerable weight. "MARY PHILIPs, of St.