Belize (nation)
Found in 167 Collections and/or Records:
Private Accounts with Messers Greenwood, 1813-04-17 - 1828-04-25
Private Letter Book No. 7, 1817-11-06 - 1822-10-27
Proclamations, 1814 - 1822
Copies of proclamations issued by Arthur.
Regent Street, Belize [i.e. Belize City], 1911
127 x 101 mm. A view looking along the narrow grass-lined road, lined with palm trees and wooden framed domestic houses, with the junction with Cockburn's Lane at the left of the photograph.
'Report of the Royal Commissioners of Legal Inquiry on the case of the Indians at Honduras, with appendix', 1826
This is a printed document of 8 pages, apparently issued in the year 1826. The appendix is kept with RCMS 269/12.
Residence at the estate 'Never-delay', Old river, 1911
152 x 101 mm. Showing a wooden two-storey house with verandas on the estate, with horses and a bull in the foreground.
Self-government for British Honduras, 1963-07
155 x 202 mm. (2 copies) Mr Nigel Fisher, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for the Colonies (centre), chats with Sir Peter Stallard (left), Governor of British Honduras and (right) Mr. G.C. Price, First Minister and Minister of Finance, British Honduras, after agreement had been reached on full internal self-government for British Honduras.
Self-government for British Honduras, 1963-07
154 x 203 mm. (2 copies) Watched by a television newsreel cameraman, Mr. G.C. Price, First Minister and Minister of Finance, British Honduras, signs the agreement which will give British Honduras full internal self-government. He is also watched by (left to right) Mr. W.H. Courtenay, Speaker of the Legislative Assembly and Adviser, and Mr. C.L. Rogers, Minister of Labour, British Honduras.
Self-government for British Honduras, 1963-07
Self-Government for British Honduras, 1963-07
151 x 202 mm. Mr Nigel Fisher, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for the Colonies (left), shakes hands with Mr. G.C. Price, First Minister and Minister of Finance, British Honduras, after agreement had been reached in London on full internal self-government for British Honduras.
Showing offices on left, of 'United Fruit Co', Belize [i.e. Belize City], B. Hon. [i.e. British Honduras] [signed] Avery, 1911
139 x 88 mm. A postcard (original photograph) by Avery looking across the Belize River to the 'United Fruit Co' buildings; with boats in the foreground.
Sir George Arthur, Superintendent of British Honduras: papers
Southern foreshore, Belize [i.e. Belize City], typical residences, 1911
127 x 101 mm. Showing houses on the foreshore in Belize City with small fishing boats in the foreground.
St. John's Cathedral, Belize, 1911
101 x 77 mm. Showing the rather squat Cathedral buildings. Consecrated in 1812, and situated behind Government House at the southern end of Belize City, St. John's was the first Protestant Church in Central America. The church has its place in the traditional friendship between the English and the Mosquito Indians, who helped in the struggle against the Spanish. After 1816, several of the Mosquito kings were crowned in the Cathedral.
Stann Creek [i.e. Dangriga], 1911
126 x 121 mm. Showing Honduran women doing their laundry among the beached boats on the banks of the river at Stann Creek, with a bridge and various buildings in the background. Stann Creek lies on the coast of the island of Belize about 50 miles south of Belize City.
Stann Creek [i.e. Dangriga], 1911
127 x 101 mm. Showing European and Honduran children on the bank of the river at Stann Creek. With a bridge at the extreme left of the picture.
Stann Creek [i.e. Dangriga], 1911
127 x 101 mm. A village scene showing Honduran women and children standing among thatched huts.
Stann Creek [i.e. Dangriga], 1911
126 x 101 mm. A view looking along a grass verged lane with houses on either side in the town of Stann Creek.
Statements of Bills drawn by Lt. Col. Arthur, 1814-12-31 - 1822-08-13
Street view, Stann Creek [i.e. Dangriga] [signed] Avery, 1911
138 x 88 mm. A postcard (original photograph) by Avery showing Carib villagers standing amongst thatched huts at Stann Creek.
Supreme Court decisions, 1859-1860, 1859 - 1890
The first extract records Chief Justice Temple's reasons for his decision of 12 Sept. 1859 in a dispute over a license to cut logwood granted by the government to John Lodge. The second extract records Acting Chief Justice R.J. Walcott's decision of 8 Sept. 1860 in a dispute over rent due to the government for the occupation and use of land by John Lodge.
Supreme Court decisions, 1870-1875, 1870 - 1890
Supreme Court decisions, 1878-1881, 1878 - 1890
The first section records Chief Justice William Parker's decision in the case of the wrecked ship, the 'Adele et Marie' in Mar. 1878. The second extract records Parker's judgement in the case of Hannah Oswald vs Alfred Seaman Kindred, Manager of the Belize Estate and Produce Company in June 1879. The final extract concerns Parker's decision in the appeal of David Gentle against a conviction for illegal export of spirits, delivered on 4 Mar. 1881.
The Belise Merchants Unmasked; or, a Review of Their Late Proceedings against Poyais, by Colonel G.A. Low (London, 1824), 1824
The Defence of the Settlers Against the Unjust and Unfounded Representations of Colonel George Arthur, Late Superintendent of that Settlement (Jamaica and London, 1824), 1824
Three copies.