FOLIO 13.
Wee expresly forbid everie one, of what condition or
[Page 67] qualitie soëver, to transport out of Our Kingdom, any Gold and Silver Coined or Uncoined, nor any other Goldsmith's work, upon penaltie of forfeiting the Materials and Merchandizes, and other things wherein they shall bee found to bee packt up in; besides the penaltie of fiftie pounds, and bodily punishment.
Now that general Laws and Statutes in England
from time to time, have provided against transporting of Gold, or melting down the currant Coin, and buying Silver and Gold at above the price of the Mint, appeareth by these following, viz.
Stat. 9. Edw. 3. Both forbidding the transporting of the Gold of the Nation, and the melting down the currant Silver Coins, by Gold smiths or others into Plate.
Stat. 14 Rich 2. cap. 12. Commissions made through the Realm, for to enquire of such as had conveied the Monie of
England out of the Nation, to the prejudice and damage of the King and Realm.
Stat. 17 Rich. 2. cap. 1. There shall bee no melting of the currant Monie to make any thing by Gold-smiths or others, upon pain of forfeiture.
2 Hen. 4. cap. 4. No person to transport Gold or Silver, either in Coin or Bullion, upon pain of forfeiting as much as they might.
4 Hen. 4. cap. 10. No Gold-smith or other person to melt down the currant Silver Coins of the Nation, upon pain of forfeiting four times the value.
9 Hen. 5. cap. 1. All Statutes heretofore made touching the good and lawful government of Gold and Silver, and not repealed, to bee in force.
2 Hen. 6. cap. 6. Upon a grievous complaint made in Parlament, that great summes of Gold and Silver were transported into
Flanders and
Burdeaux, out of this Kingdom, it was ordered and enacted, that no Gold or Silver should bee transported out of the Realm.
And becaus it is supposed, that the monie of Gold is transported by Merchants-aliens, It is ordeined, that the
[Page 68] Merchants-aliens shall finde securitie with sureties in the Chancerie, that they shall not transport Gold or Monies out of the Kingdom, upon pain of forfeiting the summe or the value; and if any do contrary, and that duly proved, and hee so doing bee gon over Sea, then his pledges shall paie his said forfeiture; whereof hee that the same espied, and thereof gave notice to the Treasurer or the State's Council, shall have the fourth part.
2
Hen 6. ca. 12. To the intent that more monie bee brought into the Mint, It is ordeined, That neither the Master of the Mint, nor Changer for the time beeing, neither sell nor caus to bee sold, nor alien to no other use, but apply the same wholly to Coin, according to the tenure of the Indenture made betwixt the State, and Master of the Mint.
4
Hen. 7. cap. 13. Item, Where in a Parlament begun and holden at
Westminster the 16 of
Januarie, the 17 of
Edw. 4. No person to carrie Gold or Silver either in Bullion or Coin, nor Jewels of Gold, but such persons as bee dispensed with by the Statute of
Hen. 4. upon pain of Felonie, to bee heard and determined as other Felonie is; the which Statute to endure from the Feast of
Easter, the 18 of
Edw. 4. unto the end of seven years next ensuing: Since the which seven years expired, the Gold and Silver Coin of this Realm hath, and daily is conveied into
Flanders, Normandie, Britanie, Ireland, and other parts beyond the Seas, as well by Merchants-Strangers, as by Denisons, to the great impoverishing of the Realm, and greater is like to bee, without remedie thereof bee hastily provided. The King our Sovereign Lord, the premises considered, by the advice of his Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Praiers of the Commons in the said Parlament assembled, and by the Autoritie of the same, have ordeined, and enacted, and established, That the said Statute made in the sixteenth year of
Edw. the fourth, bee, and stand a statute good and effectual, with all the premises in the same observed and kept, and put in due execution, from the Feast of the Purification of our
[Page 69] die, which shall bee in the year of our Lord 1489. to endure to the end of twentie years next ensuing.
1
Hen. 8. cap. 13. An Act made, That whosoëver shall carrie any Gold, or Silver, or Jewels out of the Realm, shall forfeit double the value, the one half to him that shall seiz it, or therefore sue by action of debt at the Common Law. This Act to endure to the next Parlament.
5 & 6
Edw. 6. cap. 16. An Act touching the exchange of Gold and Silver, that whosoëver give's more for Gold and Silver then it is or shall bee declared by the King's Proclamation, shall suffer imprisonment by the space of one year, and make fine at the King's pleasure, the one moitie to his Majestie, the other moitie to bee to the partie that seizeth the same, or will sue for it by Bill, Plaint, or information, or otherwise.
1. A Proclamation against giving for light Gold more then is currant,
21 Julie, 17 Jac.
2. A Proclamation against melting English monie,
18 Maii, 9 Jac.
3. A Proclamation against buying and selling Gold and Silver, at higher prices then the Mint,
14 Maii, 1 Jac.
4. A Proclamation against transporting of Gold,
23 Maii, 1
o Jac.
5. A Proclamation against profit for Gold and Silver, and melting English monie for Plate; Waste in Gold and Silver,
4 Feb. 19 Jac.
6. A Proclamation against transporting Gold and Silver, and melting down the currant Coins of the Nation,
25 Maii, 3 Car.
From all which Statutes and Provisions, it may bee gathered, that the currant Monie and Bullion of the Nation, is the Subjects, onely to use between man and man, but not to abuse: for no man by the Law, can buie or sell them by waie of Merchandize at higher rates then they are Proelaimed; if hee do, hee is finable by the Law: hee that washeth, clippeth, or lesseneth the currant Coins, commit's treason.
[Page 70] Hee that export's the Treasure of the Nation, either in Bullion, or currant Coin, beeing taken, loseth them: hee that melt's down the currant Gold or Silver of the Nation for Plate or other Manufactures, commit's a forfeiture; and transporting of treasure hath formerly been made Felonie, as by the several Statutes and Laws to this purpose appeareth.
By these and divers other Laws and Statutes, our Prededecessors have endeavored the retention and preservation of the Coin and Treasures within this Nation, but could hitherto never effect it.
Nor will these mischiefs ever bee stopped, till there bee Commissions by Act of Parlament according to former presidents, when the Nation was defrauded of their Treasure as now it is, strictly to enquire of the offendors, and bring them to Justice.
For of late, the easie easie of Delinquents for these offences, hath given the boldness to offendors to go on: and Time, the truest School-master, hath taught all ages to know, that little penalties could yet never interpose betwixt the Merchant and his profit.
Whereas the Parlament, by their Ordinance 6 of
Sept. 1647. did descrie all Clipped, Filed, or diminished Monie (by means whereof great quantities were sold to som Goldsmiths) who have made it a Trade to deal with Receivers of Publick Cashes, Grasiers, and several other persons (and in stead of melting of these Monies down) som Gold-smiths have issued these Monies out again in paiment, whereas at the Tower these Clipped Monies would make but five shillings the Ounce Troie, these men have vented out these Clipped Monies to divers ill-affected people at five shillings six pence, and five shillings eight pence, and six shillings the Ounce, who have dispersed the said Clipped Monies so bought from Gold-smiths, up and down the Nation again, to the great enriching of themselvs, and defrauding of the good people of this Nation, by buying up this Clipped Monie
[Page 71] since the Ordinance 1647. at the least twentie times over, and venting it for currant again, which had been helped, if there had been but six words put into the Ordinance, which was, to have required all persons exchanging any Clipt, or uncurrant English monie with any Gold-smith or others, upon forfeiture of double the value, to see it cut in two pieces, or so defaced, that it should not bee passable after. I humbly present this defect of that Ordinance, that it may bee looked after and amended; and I humbly desire, that the Act against transporting Treasure now committed, may bee enacted with such vigor, that the Common-wealth may have the real benefit, and the offendors brought to exemplarie Justice.
There hath been twentie Millions of Monie coined within this twentie five years, as will appear by the Mint-Books, and almost all of it transported out of the Nation, the Gold all gon, the currant Silver culled out, the weightiest melted and transported: and that Silver-Monies which remain's is but little, and all culled Gold is made as pretious in this Common-wealth as Diamonds. What inconveniences will arise by the indirect dealing of private men in this particular to the Common-wealth, I shall humbly leav it to you to consider.
In the Year 1643. It was humbly offered to this Parlament, to have the offendors discovered, and to bring them to Justice, and this mischief stopped; but, by the great Interest of the offendors, that had then power in this Nation, the Proposition was slighted, and these mischiefs ever since daily practised, to the unspeakable damage of this Common-wealth: for it is far easier to keep the Treasure in the Nation, by making strict Laws against Transportation, then when it is gon to bring it back, as too late experience will make this Common-wealth feel. But you have the power to call these offendors to a strict accompt, if you pass the Act fully to enable all people to make their discoveries.
How, and in what manner other Nations do punish these offendors, you have alreadie presented out of their Placarts.
[Page 72] This evil is grown to such an hight, that both our own Laws put in the strictest execution, and the Customs and Laws of other Countries added to them for this particular, with the greatest diligence of expert men, to make the search for what is past, and to prevent these mischiefs for the time to com, will bee little enough: and to make this discoverie is a service of more Importance to the Common-wealth, then at first sight can bee apprehended.
This is a certain rule, No great action in any Commonwealth or State, can bee don but by Monie, which all ages have held to bee the sinews of War, and Garland of Peace; and what occasions we have to use it both for commerce and safetie, is humbly left to you to consider, and in all well-regulated States it hath ever been accompted a great service to discover the offendors and abuses practised upon the Treasure of their Nation; and to prevent the growth of these mischiefs, is the work of everie faithful lover of his Countrie;
And hee or they that shall bee against the discoverie of these offences and offendors, may amongst judicious men bee justly suspected to bee Parties themselvs.
And though som Merchants and other Interested persons may, for their own interest, either for their profit, or fear of punishment for what they have don, speak themselvs, or get others to oppose the Act against Transporting Treasure to pass the Hous, or procure it to bee so altered, as it shall not bee effectual to give a full cure to the Common-wealth of the great inconveniences it is now under, by several abuses practised upon Coin and Bullion.
To give a cure to the Common-wealth of these great inconveniences, and also to take away the great obstructions of your Mint, which will never bee don till this Act pass; and if it were more stricter, it would bee more beneficial to the Common-wealth, especially in these times, when you have so many occasions of Monie, by bringing in presently verie great summes of Monie to the State by the punishment of the offendors.
You have here, with all humilitie, set down to you, the waies and
[Page 73] means whereby your neighbor Countries use to prevent these mischiefs, and to punish the offendors for what is past, with several old Statutes of this Nation: out of which if you extract the quintessence, and make a sharp and vigorous Law, and require all your Officers and others to put it in full execution, you may, in a short time, cure this Common-wealth of these dangerous diseases, which if you let it go on, will prove a Gangrene.
I humbly beseech you to take notice, there hath been, within seven years Coined in ten daies, more Monie in the Tower of
London, then hath been Coined neer upon this three last years. Now if you suffer treasure to go out of the Nation everie daie for want of a Law, to give all people power to discover and examine the offendors, in a short time you will not have any Monie left in the Commonwealth. For experience in all ages sheweth, that little and slight penalties can never stop som Merchants from their profit: so they get to their private, they care not what mischiefs the Common-wealth suffer's:
For a Common-wealth without plentie of Monie, look's like a great Hous unfurnisht; and bare Walls is no handsom sight; and you will finde there will not bee Monie left to paie your just Taxes, Customs and Excise, and to maintain Trade and Commerce, if you clear not the obstruction of the Mint, and take not som effectual cours to set it on work. And this Act is but a preparation and ground work to caus your Mint to go; and till it pass, you will never see your Mint flourish; for to allow any man to out-give the Mint for Bullion, is, to shut up the Mint; for all men will vent their treasure, where they can have the greatest price; and not to make a way for the opening of the Mint at this time, especially when you have such occasions of monie; I shall humbly leav it to you to consider the inconvenience.
The Gold-smiths when they were before the Honorable Committee, by their Counsellor M
r
Recorder, and M
r
Vinstanly, beeing demanded by the Committee, what they could saie why an Act should not pass for discoverie of such as had Transported the Coin and Bullion of the
[Page 74] Nation? did by their Counsel, and by Sir
John Wollaston, Alderman
Viner, and the rest,
declare their willingness to have the offendors brought to punishment: The like they did for all such as culled, or melted down the currant Coin of this Nation for their own private profit, or such as bought up the light Clipped English Monie, descried by an Ordinance of Parlament the sixt of
Sept. 1647. and did not deface it, but contrarie to this Ordinance, did vent it again into several parts of the Nation, and paie it away to the deceit of all the people of the Nation. Upon this answer to the Committee, it put's mee in minde of a custom, which is usual in all men's houses;
If Glasses bee broke, or any other mischief don, No bodie did it: But upon a Commission of enquirie, many times it is found to bee
Som. body. But to the question that was asked the
Gold-smith. by the Honorable Committee, concerning buying Gold and Silver above the price of the Mint, they pleaded,
The Trade was an ancient Trade; that if they were restrained to a price, they, and their families could not subsist, that they could not buie Silver, but somtime the Market was at 5 s. 1 d. 5 s. 2d.
and 5s.
[...]d. and Sir
John Wollaston said,
That hee, and divers others, had given 5 s. 4 d.
nay, 5 s. 5 d.
for Sterling-Silver for their Trade, and for confirmation of the truth of this, hee did appeal to his Brethren, Alderman Viner,
& Alderman Nowel,
and the rest of the Gold smiths at the Committee, and none of them did denie it. Now I shall humbly offer to your consideration, First, Sterling-Silver will make but 5
s. in the Mint; and it is delivered out of the Mint, after it is Coined, at
5 s, 2 d the Ounce. If the Gold-smiths give
5 s. 5 d. for this Sterling Silver, how can any bee brought into the Mint? nay, how is all the heavie Monie culled and melted down, and none left to pass but light and clipped? And this is the true ground why many Gold-smiths are Cashiers to Merchants, and keep servants to receiv men's Monies, without any reward, onely that they might cull, and weigh out the heavie Silver, and melt it or transport it beyond the Seas, for their own private gain, to the high deceit of the Nation.
There is nothing in this Act doth restrain the due and orderly Trade of a Gold-smith, when in is well weighed and considered. But that which is their usual Trade, now discovered to bee so highly destructive to the Nation, ought to bee restrained. The Bakers may as well Petition against all Pillories, or against my Lord Major, for weighing their Bread, as the Gold smiths justly except against the restraining them, for giving for Gold and Silver, above the price of the Mint.
They see it, that it is the Law of the Land, in the 5 and 6
Ed. 6. cap. 13. It is the daily practice of
France, Holland, Flanders, as appear's hereby their Laws. Clothing is the Staple of the Land, and ought most to bee cherished; yet the law propound's for the regulating of the weight, the length, and breadth. Brick-makers, Wood-mongers, Meal-men. and divers other Trades, are restrained and regulated, and yet all these Trades receiv protection and countenance in their orderly working of their Manufactures, from the Common-wealth.
There are people which believ, That if there had been a real intention to give a stop to the transporting of Monie, it had been don before; though for my part I am not of that opinion.
There was (saie they)
notice of it nine years ago, when the Presbyterie had the power: And seven years ago, the grievances of the Transporting of Gold and Silver, with several other abuses, was by mee at large presented to the Parlament, and the same mischiefs foretold, which are now com to pass; that without it were looked after, and a strict Law made against it, to discover the offendors, there would not bee any Gold or Silver left in the Nation. And this hath proved too true; for many millions of Gold and Silver have since been transported, to the unspeakable damage of the Common-wealth.
And upon seizure of several great quantities of Gold and Silver, by M.
Watkins, chief Searcher of the Port of
London, which was shipped to bee transported; the Order of the
[Page 76] Parlament, the 1 of
Septemb. 1647. was made to the Committee of the Navie, to see to prevent it.
After all these Certificates made by the Officers of the Mint and Customs, and the Committee of the Navie, for the speedie putting so good a work in execution, (all which, I have hereafter set down.) The Council of State was pleased to make a Committee of themselvs; and after many great and serious consultations, drew up the draught of an Act of Parlament, with their desire to the Parlament to have it pass with all expedition, for the service of the Common-wealth.
There are others, more unhappie, which saie,
Now the Steed is stoln, shut the stable door: Now there is no more Gold left to transport, to what purpose doth the Parlament make an Act against transporting Gold? this should have been don before; for how can wee maintain Commerce, paie Taxes, when our English Gold is fortie times more plentiful beyond the Seas, then it is in
England, and almost all the Silver Coin of the Nation transported, and scarce any left, but clipped, and light monie.
And som people are so impudent to believ, that there are som Members of Parlament guiltie of transporting monie, or els this Act should not have stuck so long upon their hands.
Others there are, that have transported monie, and committed manie abuses upon the Coins of the Nation, that hope they shall have their pardon for what is past, though they have transported almost all the Gold and Silver of the Nation, that now if they would, they can offend no more; and they have don the Common-wealth that damage, that a Million of monie cannot give them satisfaction. These I humbly conceiv, ought to bee made to restore their unjust gain, which will deter any others hereafter from doing the like.
And there are that saie,
Look how almost all men have sped, that have certified against transporting monie, or lookt to stop the same.
[Page 77] Hath not Sir
Robert Harlow, and M.
Cogan been put out of their places in the Mint? Hath not M.
Watkins, M.
Tomes, Sir
Thomas Daws, and M.
Hollowaie been put out of their places in the Custom-Hous? Were not you
Thomas Violet imprisoned in the Tower four years, becaus you should not tell the truth, and let the Common-wealth know for all that time, most of their monie and treasure was sending out of the Nation?
I shall add somthing more to this. I have observed what the State hath gotten by putting out these men; and I found, First, That upon the putting forth of the old Officers of the Mint, in M.
Swallow's place, who was the Clerk of the Irons, and Surveier of the Melting-Hous for the Mint; a place of great skill and trust, there is a now a Clerk put in, to execute that place, that can neither write nor read; and other Officers put into the places of the old ones in the Mint, that were utterly ignorant of managing the mysteries of that Office. And one of the greatest obstructions of the Mint, com
[...]s through the ignorance of the Officers, and their want of correspondence and acquaintance with such as usually have brought Monie from beyond the Seas.
The old Officers of the Mint, were Masters in this Mysterie, which is not so soon learned as men think. And for son of those that have been turned out of their places out of the Custom-Hous, now the Act is passed for the Council of Trade, there will quickly bee presented the practices of som of the Officers of the Customs, and Petitions for a redress of many abuses practised by som of them, and a Review Petitioned for, to know upon what grounds many of the old Officers were turned out of their places, beeing never charged with any offence, but onely forced out to make waie for others to com into their places; som of the old Officers of the Customs beeing turned out of their places, onely becaus of their activitie in stopping the Gold and Silver of the Nation from beeing transported;
[Page 78] and this is M.
Edward Watkins his case, and others put into his Office, that seize's Gold and Silver before it is forfeited, and when the Merchant recover's it again by Law, the Searcher that made the seizure, take's the
King's Bench, and so the Merchant may go seek his monie, to the great damage of the Merchant.
But according to the former presidents, all Officers of the Customs were to put in securitie for the just performance of their trust to the State, and no Officer was to receiv the Customs, and Monies of the Common-wealth in any Port of this Nation; nor to make any seizure before hee had put in securitie to the Lord Treasurer, to make a true accompt of what monies and goods came to their hands, which I (having more then probable reasons) do believ the Collectors, and other Officers of the Ports, have not don, to the great damage of the Common-wealth, and prejudice of the Merchants, if seizures bee unjustly made, and the Merchants recover their Goods or Monies by a Verdict at Law, and after all their charge and hazard, not to have all their Goods and Monies again. This discoverie I have put in for the service of the Common-wealth, it beeing a caus judged in the
Checquer this last Term, that for the future such abuses of the new Officers of the Customs might bee prevented.
I have to som men replied this Act; it hath been delaied by the Parlament, onely by the multitude of other business, though I must confess there are verie few businesses of the Common-wealth can take place before this, but that all people should see when the Parlament's business was a little over, how zealous in deeds, & not in words, they would bee, for to punish these great offendors, and to make them paic back the unjust gain; which monies should bee emploied for the Publick, and so save the Nation Taxes: That I was confident there was not any Member in the Parlament was guiltie of transporting monie; or if there were, they durst not bee seen to justifie so wicked an Act, but
[Page 79] would bee glad to sleep quiet in a whole skin; and truly if I did know any of them, I would not meddle with them, unless the Act did positively enjoin mee to do it.
It hath been objected to mee, by som Gold-smiths, and others;
That I my self have been a transporter of monie, and melter down of heavie Coin of the Nation, and a furnisher of Gold and Silver to transport out of this Nation, and a buier of Gold and Silver above the price of the Mint. I denie it not, and my answer to them is,
An old Dear-stealer is the best keeper of a Park. And though I had the late King's pardon, I had it not but it cost mee dear; I paid at one time to his Privie Purs, two thousand twentie shillings Pieces in Gold, and I am out at this daie by his command, in making the discoverie of such as transported Gold, nineteen hundred & threescore pounds; both which summes, I have been out of Purs fifteen years: I would not have the greatest offendor (that is a Gold-smith) by my consent, paie so great a summe. And this is my answer to them, to that objection.
I would have them by my example leav off so destructive a Trade to the Common-wealth, as furnishing the transporters with Gold and Silver, culling and melting down the currant Coin. If I had not been convinced in my conscience, that it was bad, I would have followed that trade still. I had as good an Estate, as most of the Gold-smiths to do it. I had as good credit, and I left my trade as fairly; for I challenge all, or any man in
London, that can saie I did not paie all men readie monie to everie pennie and farthing I ought, when I gave over my trade; and the best Alderman of
London can do no more. It is incident to all men to err; happie is hee that repent's; but to persist against the light of a man's conscience, is don by the strong instigation of the Devil.
I do humbly present further, that there have great mischiefs happened to this Nation and their Armie in
Ireland since this Parlament, by the indirect dealing of som Merchants and Gold-smiths in
London, who contracted with
[Page 80] som of the adventurers for
Ireland, to sell them Rials of Eight and Forrain Coins, giving them som small time; but the poor Soldiers that received these monies in
Ireland, lost above twentie pounds in the hundred by the monies so paid them; for first, the Gold-smiths culled out all the weightiest, and delivered none but light and clipped; and then the coursness of the Silver, which was Bead-monie, and adulterated in the West-
Indies in the Mints, somtimes six pence, somtimes more upon everie piece of Eight, as is well known to som Gold-smiths and Merchants, so that by the baseness of the Allaie, and want of Weight there hath been at the least twentie pounds in the hundred loss to the soldiers, if hee would make any return of it to his wife or children in
England, as many of them found by sad experience.
The Gold-smiths are the general Cashiers, for som of the principal Merchants in the Citie; and this rule the Goldsmiths observ; when they receiv monies, to take none that is bad or clipped, (but let any man send to them to receiv monies, they shall have great quantities of clipped monie mixed in their monies they receiv, and som of it constantly will escape the teller's eies) which clipped monies the Gold-smiths buie of several people for Bullion, but never Coin it; the rest that they cannot put off here in
London, they have their Agents to vent it to Grasiers and other people in the Countrie all over the Nation; by which means in many Towns and Cities of this Nation, they are so pestred with clipped monie, that there is little els stirring in paiment, to the unspeakable damage of the receiver, who cannot paie it in
London, but sell it to the Gold-smiths, somtimes at twentie five, and thirtie in the hundred abated: which is by the Gold-smiths returned down into the Countrie next week after; So that this abuse is like an Hors in a Mill, it turn's round, and is a cheat put upon all people of the Nation, and without a strict Act of Parlament against it, will not bee prevented.
All these abuses aforesaid, are so high and transcendent, that the offendors ought to bee used as men usually use Wolvs and Foxes; for if private murther bee so penal, much more is publick murther: now Monie is the Life, Bloud, and Soul of the Common-wealth, without it no great action can bee undertaken, for the service of the Nation; and those that transport it, or adulterate it in weight, may well bee esteemed as the greatest enemies to the Common-wealth. Therefore I humbly praie, that you would bee pleased to give all encouragement to all people, both in the Sea-Ports of this Nation, and in the Citie of
London, for the discoverie of the transporting of Gold and Silver, and such as cull out the heavie Silver Coin of the Nation, and such as have bought Gold and Silver above the price of the mint, to transport; for as the affairs now of this nation stand, you cannot have a greater dis-service don to the Commonwealth; and you will finde the Commissioners and Officers of the Customs certifie to the Commissioners of the Navie in
Sept. 1647. their desires in their fourth Article, that a greater allowance should bee given to such as discover the transporters of Gold or Silver, then by the Statutes in that Case is provided; and the Statute in 1
Henrie 8.
cap. 13. give's double the value, the one half to him that shall seiz it, or therefore sue by action of Debt at the Common Law; and by this draught of the Act, there is but one moitie of what shall bee proved to have been transported, given to the prosecutor.
What Forrain Nations do, you have here the presidents of
France, Holland, Flanders; and what former ages here in this Nation have don, you have in 14
Rich. 2. cap. 12. by Act of Parlament Commissions made through the Realm, to enquire from the beginning of his Reign, which was for fourteen years, of such as had conveied the Monie of
England out of the Nation, to the damage of the Realm; and unless you make the like Commissions, the Common-wealth will bee brought to extreme povertie.
Here are annexed two Certificates of the Officers of the Mint, and Commissioners and Officers for the Customs, grounded upon an Order of Parlament, and an Order of the Commissioners of the Navie,
viz.
Die Mercurii, 1 Sept. 1647.
ORdered by the Commons in Parlament assembled, That it bee referred to the Committee of the Navie to consider of, and take som effectual cours to prevent the transportation of Bullion out of the Kingdom: and speedily to report what they have don herein, to the Hous.
Committee of the Navie,
2 Sept. 1647.
THe Commissioners and Officers of the Customs, with Master Watkins
the head-Searcher, are desired to consider of som cours to bee taken to prevent the transportation of Bullion out of the Nation, according to an Order of the Hous of Commons, hereunto annexed; and to certifie the same to the Committee.
THe Commissioners and Officers for the Customs, having together with the Head Searcher, in the Port of
London, in pursuance of the directions of this Honorable Committee above mentioned, perused sundrie Statutes yet in force, relating, as well to the restraint of the Exportation of Bullion, as the regulation of Merchants-Strangers in their waie of Trade, do humbly conceiv,
1. That if the Statute of 2
Hen. 6. cap. 6. enjoining Merchants-Strangers, to give securitie in Chancerie, not to transport the Monie or Plate of the Realm: And the Statute of 3
Hen. 7. cap. 8. enjoining them to emploie the monie they receiv in the Merchandize of this Nation;
[Page 83]2. And that to the Statute of 5
Rich. 2. cap. 2. and 2
Hen. 4. cap. 5. The Parlament would bee pleased, first, to declare who shall bee reputed Aliens: for that since the sitting of this Parlament, the children of aliens born in this Kingdom, are reputed free born subjects, and do enjoie their privileges accordingly: which in former times was not allowed till the third descent. Secondly, To declare by Ordinance that the Estate of him or them that shall Export Monie or Plate, shall bee immediately sequestred.
3. To impose a severe penaltie upon the Master of such Ship or Vessel, upon which any Monie or Plate shall bee found above his ordinarie charges, hee beeing privie thereunto.
4. To allow to such as shall discover, or finde out any Bullion or Plate, endeavored to bee transported, a greater share and proportion, then by the Statutes in that case is yet provided.
5. And to settle som waie of punishment for such as shall resist, or abuse Officers sufficiently autorized in their endeavors this waie on the State's behalf.
The said Commissioners and Officers, do humbly conceiv, That it would bee a good means to deter such, who by all secret means do daily endeavor the Exportation of the Coin and Bullion of this Kingdom, and much prevent the Exportation thereof. All which, nevertheless they humbly submit to the Wisdom of this Honorable Committee.
-
Tho. Daws, Col.
-
John Hollowaie, Comptr.
-
R. Carmarden, Super. Vis.
-
Edw. Watkins, Searcher.
-
W. Tooms, Super. Vis. Gen.
-
Walter Boothbie.
-
Rich. Bateman.
-
Sam. Averie.
-
Christoph. Pack.
-
Charls Lloid.
[Page 84]
The Officers of the Mint in the Tower of London,
whose names are here under-written, in pursuance of the directions of the Honorable Committee
of the Navie, in relation to their Order dated the third of December
present, do humbly conceiv, and certifie as followeth:
THat to prevent great abuses practised upon the Coin and Bullion of the Nation, which is transported out of the Nation; as also to prevent the culling and melting down the currant Monie of the Nation: and for the discovering of such as have offended, to bee brought to Justice, to deter others from acting the like abuses for the future, do humbly conceiv,
That according to the President of the 14
Rich. 2. cap. 12. a Commission bee granted to make enquirie through the Realm, of such as had conveied the Monies of
England out of the Nation, & to make enquirie after all such as melt and cull out the heavie currant Monie, contrarie to the Statute of the 4
Hen. 4. cap. 10. none to melt the currant Silver Coins of the Nation, upon pain of forfeiture four times the value.
That 2
Hen. 6. cap. 12. It is ordeined, that neither the Master-worker of the Mint, nor the Changer for the time beeing, neither sell or caus to bee sold, nor alien to no other use; but apply the same wholly to Coin, according to the tenure of the Indenture of the Mint, made between the King's Majestie and the Master of the Mint: to declare by Ordinance, That what Gold-smith, or Changer shall buie Gold or Silver, and convert it to any use to transport, shall forfeit the value.
To declare by Ordinance, that according to the 5 and 6
Edw. 6. cap. 19. an Act touching the Exchange of Gold and
[Page 85] That whosoevër give's more for Gold and Silver then it is, or shall bee declared, shall suffer imprisonment by the space of a year, and make fine at the pleasure of the State. The Mint cannot bee emploied, nor the transporting of treasure stopped, if som cours bee not speedily taken to discover these great abuses. And alreadie, almost all the Gold is transported out of the Nation: and the Silver followeth it apace, as is prudently insisted upon in the late Petition of the Citizens of
London, to both Houses of Parlament.
Wee humbly conceiv, that the making of this discoverie throughout the Nation, of such as have, or shall transport Gold and Silver into parts beyond the Seas, and of such as have, or shall melt down the currant Gold and Silver Coins of the Nation; or have, or shall buie Gold and Silver at above the price of the Mint: (the practice of which abuses, if not timely prevented, is likely to bring speedie destruction to the Trade of this Kingdom: which is presidented
Anno 4 Rich. 2. c. 2. when the Nation found the same mischief as wee now suffer under, by transporting of treasure. And
Anno 5 and 6
Edw. 6.
cap. 19. by giving for Gold and Silver above the price of the Mint.) As it will bee a service of great importance to the Publick affairs, and bring great advantage to the trade of this Nation; so it will draw with it a verie great charge. Which if Master
Watkins will undertake, hee will deserv highly to bee encouraged. Nevertheless, wee humbly submit the premises, to the Wisdoms of this Honorable Committee.
-
John S
t John, Warden.
-
Robert Hartlie, Master.
-
Henrie Cogan, Comptr.
- December 20. 1647.
THese Gentlemen by reason of their places in the Custom-Hous, and Mint within the Tower of
London, &
[Page 86] their long experience in Merchandize and Trade of this Nation; I humbly conceiv their Certificates will leav a great Impression upon the Parlament, and on the Honorable Committeee that are appointed to report this Act, that what these Gentlemen have certified, hath been don upon a great deal of consideration, and upon great experience, with all their best skill and judgment for the service of this Nation in this most weightie business, it tending so highly to the safetie and welfare of the publick, and the delaie of passing this Act in its full force and vigor will one daie bee found to bee highly destructive to this Nation, and that the design hath been set on foot, and prosecuted to hinder the Act from passing, is don by som people that have made themselvs fortunes by these wicked practices; and though they dare not speak against the Act, yet they labor to stop it and delaie it, or to procure the altering of it, that it may bee uneffectual, to give a stop to these mischiefs which I hope they shall never bee able to effect; I would have these men to know, Justice is slow, but it is sure, and I am assured they will bee discovered and brought to Justice when they least think of it;
forbearance will bee no paiment: and this Act will bring their dark actions to light when it is passed the Hous. Besides these former Certificates, the Act now committed was drawn up by a Committee of the Council of State, and I was required to attend the Right Honorable Sir
James Harrington in
Januarie last, beeing one of the Committee for taking away the obstructions of the Mint, which I did accordingly, and thereupon by Order of the Honorable Committee, for removing of the obstruction of the Mint, I was desired to send into
Holland for several Coins of Forrain Gold and Silver, and several
Placarts and Weights, and som of the said Gold and Silver, I have delivered to Doctor
Gurden to make Assaies of, for the service of the State, the remainder I have readie to deliver to any that will see mee paid upon the deliverie; I having demanded monie of Doctor
Gurden divers times, who tell's mee,
[Page 87] hee will procure monie, but hath not as yet paid mee for what I delivered him: and if I should not bee paid for the Gold and Silver I writ for from
Holland, the same price as by my friend I paid for it in the Bank in
Holland, there would bee a great loss redound to mee to Coin it here, and lose the Exchange; the Exchange from
Holland, when I writ for these Species, running at about thirtie two shillings
Flemish.
I do humbly desire the Honorable Committee for obstructions of the Mint, to call to the old Clerks of the Mint, for an accompt of what they have don about the Assaies made of Forrain Coins; and I humbly desire you to consider, how much it were for the service of the Nation, both in point of honor, profit, and safetie, to set your Mint on work.
Which upon the peril of my life, if you pass the Act, as it is recommended from the Council of State, I will finde out waies to set your Mint presently a going, or lose both my Estate and Life. I would not make this proffer, but that I am sure of it; it is well known to all the Officers of the Mint, I know as much of Mint-business, as any of them here do; and for the Gold-smiths, I am sure, they think I know too much: and the Merchants have found it, that I know what many did, and do here, and what their Factors did and do beyond Seas; and to bee Master of this secret, cost mee many an hundred pound, besides many years time and pains; and by my intelligence in the Sea-Ports of this Nation, I have caused the transporters of monie to bee fined at four and twentie thousand one hundred pounds. And now as I have laid this business, they shall bee discovered all over this Nation. If I should offer this, and could do the like service in any other State, I humbly conceiv I need not Petition twice, but it would bee accepted at the first time; and the delaie of passing this Act, move's mee not at all for my own particular, but for the Common-wealth. I shall never forget Sir
John Coke
[Page 88] his rule to mee, and hee was Secretarie of State to the late King,
That hee never knew a patient and a vigilant man lose his business, if it were just; for at one time or another, that man will finde an opportunitie to do it; and truly, by observing this rule, I have passed through great business, and som of much difficultie; for all which, I humbly thank God, and attribute it to his mercie.
THere is another caus of the great waste of the Treasure of the Nation, which is the great quantitie of
Flanders Laces, and
French Laces, both in the Thread, and in Silk, which are imported into this Nation, to the value of many scores of thousand pounds a year, which Lace is stoln in without paying any Custom, beeing subtilly packed in commodities of great Bulk.
But what the State lose's by the Custom, is nothing in comparison to what it lose's in Stock; for the returns of this Lace is for the most part sent over in Gold and Silver of the currant Coins of this Nation.
Neither is this mischief all the hurt that cometh to the Common-wealth; for this Lace is made by them in
France and
Flanders, that can afford it far cheaper then any of our poor can do here; for generally it is made in Religious Houses, in their Nunneries; which Nuns, generally bring into the Religious Houses their Dowries when they are admitted, and as long they live, they are well provided for all manner of necessaries to live verie handsomly, both for their diet and apparel, beeing left to their voluntarie choice after their religious Exercises is don, to spend their time as they pleas.
Now many of them beeing excellent Needle-women, spend their time in making Cut-works, for their Altarcloths, Black Laces for Scarffs, and
Flanders Laces, (as they are called) though many of them are made in
France.
These the Nuns make, and sell great quantities of them into
England; which monie is all returned into the use of
[Page 89] the Monasteries, these Nuns thinking they merit most, that can get their Monasteries most monie by their labor.
And truly when I have been in companie of som fine Dames in
London, that profess much; I have told them of their Laces and Gorgets, that if they did know whom they made rich by such vanities, they would laie by the fashion, and give that monie, they spent in
Flanders Laces, to the poor, and not bee instruments of making Nuns and Monasteries rich beyond Seas; and I have desired them to think how contrarie their work was to their Husbands: their Husbands are destroying Bishop's Houses and Lands, and Deans and Chapter's Houses, and Lands, here in
England, beeing Reliques of Poperie; and their Wives by buying up of the Nun's Laces in
England, with the Returns of that Monie, which they produce here, are a building Nunneries, and Religious Houses in
France and
Flanders.
I humbly desire all the
English Gentrie, that are wearers of Lace, both Men and Women, to consider seriously what I saie; it is of concernment. I take God to witness, I have heard
French men, and
Dutch men, saie to mee, above twelv years ago, that have dealt in Cut-work Laces, and in
Flanders Laces, both black and white here in
London, that they did believ there was above five hundred thousand pounds in a year transported in Gold and Silver into
France and
Flanders, onely in Return of Forrain Cut-works, and
Flanders Laces, both Black and White; and I believ in my conscience they spoke truth; and to this daie there are extreme excesses in these vanities; which as your affairs of the Common-wealth stand, highly concern you to look to prevent it; for I humbly desire you to consider, the Nation fling's away so much stock in monie; for
Flanders Lace is of no use but to keep up pride and vanities; Gold and Silver Lace make's somthing upon the Return, one hundred pounds worth may make about fortie pounds when you have don wearing of it: But for thread & silk Laces, that which cost one hundred thousand
[Page 90] pound, when they are worn out, will not make the Common-wealth one pennie.
I do humbly desire you to consider of a strict Law against importing any Forrain Laces, or selling them in
London; the forfeiture of the Laces is nothing, becaus it will not bee discovered, once in one thousand times. But I humbly conceiv, it must bee made Felonie for any to import
Flanders, French, or Forrain Laces, or Cut-works, and loss of any Shop-keeper's Estate that shall knowingly sell any Forrain Laces, either
Flanders, or any other.
By which means you will prevent the transporting many hundred thousand pounds of treasure in a year, and you will stop the trade of making Nunneries rich by our monie; And if the Gentrie will wear Laces, let them on God's name put our own poor on work, and not Forrainers; and by this means, you will give relief to many poor Gentlewomen, which through the calamities of the War, are almost starved, and they are ashamed to beg, and they would bee glad to make Lace, if any would emploie them.
THere is also a great and excessive waste of the Gold of this Nation, in the vanitie of guilding of
Caroches, which is com to that extravagancie, that if a
Bainian of the Fast-
Indies, or a
Chinoes of
China, or any other strange Nation should com to
Hide-Park, in an after-noon, hee would report in his own Countrie such stories, as your Jesuits report of
Perue, and
Mexico, upon the first discoverie of the West-
Indies; That there were Towns that all the houses were covered over with Gold and Silver: So would an
Indian report the Gentrie's wealth of this Nation;
That they were drawn through the streets of this Citie of London,
in Caroches covered over with beaten Gold.
But I shall tell you what a
French Merchant said to mee this Summer in
Hide-Park, as wee were talking of the great quantities of English Gold, which hath been transported into
France and
Flanders, and other Forrain parts;
[Page 91] Saith the
French Merchant to mee,
I have heard you often complain of all the English Gold, beeing transported beyond the Seas, and now wee are again speaking of it, I will demonstrate to you presently, that all is not gon, for you see how many guilded Caroches here are; then laughing, hee told mee,
you see Sir, how you are mistaken, all your Gold is not gon; but if you had said, almost all the English Gold is transported beyond the Seas, that I would have granted you, for you have the shell of the Gold to guild your Caroches, and to make you fine things, but wee in France
have the kernel of your Gold, and thus much I grant you. But wee in France,
and Holland,
and Flanders,
have not all, wee are more conscionable, good Monsieur Violet. I was forced to bite my lip, for I could not denie but that hee spake truth.
THere is another great waste of Gold and Silver in this Common-wealth, and that is, the making of Gold and Silver-Thread and Lace within this Nation: there are som things may bee said for it, and som things against it; I shall impartially put down som things which I know in this business; for I had the principal care of regulating that Manufacture of Gold and Silver-Wier and Thread, for five years together in the late King's time, and paid him about four thousand pounds yearly for it; besides I was enjoined to look to the just standard of the Silver, and to the substantial making of the Manufacture, which now is totally neglected, and the Common-wealth cheated in the coursness of much of the Silver, and in the slight making of it.
If the Manufacture of the Gold and Silver-Thread, was brought in from beyond the Seas, then would the State have the Custom, there beeing a great Impost and Custom laid on it, which would bee a considerable Revenue to the Common-wealth. The Common-wealth in the stock of their treasure would bee augmented; for all Gold and Silver-Thread make's a Return to the melting pot, and so increase's the stock of monie in the Nation; besides, that is an advantageous Trade, which for the Returns of our
[Page 92] Commodities and Manufactures of
England, bring's us Returns in Silver.
There is replied to this, the setting so many thousands of poor people on work, which will starv, if the Manufactures of Gold and Silver-Thread, were brought in from beyond the Seas, or if the State should prohibit the wearing of Gold and Silver-Thread and Lace. Indeed this is of great consideration, and ought to bee considered on. But then if they will have leav to make it here, it should bee don with such restraints and limitations, as the treasure of the Nation should not bee wasted or impaired, the currant monie of the Nation should not bee culled out to make Gold and Silver-Thread, as many hundreds of thousand pounds have been since the making of this Manufacture, which was but begun to bee a Trade in
London, within less then fortie years; also there should bee a restriction of the number of the workers, not to encreas as they have don, and the Wier-drawers should bee a distinct Corporation, and Officers appointed to look after their due and Orderly working, and an accompt kept for the State, of what Silver and Gold is spent everie year in the Manufacture, and the Companie of Gold-Wier-drawers enjoined to bring in the value in Bullion from beyond the Seas, as they waste in this Manufacture; for without doing of this, the trade is wholly destructive to the Common-wealth, and there can bee no just plea to allow their trade to continue.
I humbly conceiv the Common-wealth is not in a condition to suffer fiftie thousand pounds a year in Silver, to bee brushed and blown away out of Gold and Silver Lace: If those that work the Manufacture, will not see to Import Silver from beyond the Seas, and bee bound not to work Silver with a Core of Copper, and sell it for good Silver, (for which cheat I have caused som of them to stand in the Pillorie, when I had the managing of that Manufacture) and also that the Wier-drawers bee bound, not to make any Spangles, Wier, or Thread, under sterling, which heretofore
[Page 93] hath been their daily practice, and I believ is continued still. Therefore ought by a sworn Officer to bee regulated, and that Officer to bee no Trader in the Manufacture.
M.
Jackson the Assaie-Master of Gold smith's Hall, by direction of the Lords of the Council, made many score of Assaies of Gold and Silver-Spangles, Lace, Wier, and Thread, found and taken in Silk-men's shops, which were adulterated, and under the Standard; and this Manufacture will never bee justly made, if there bee not a government settled by a Corporation, and then the Trade might bee so managed by their contracting for Bullion from beyond the Seas, that they may get a great Manufacture here. But I humbly desire that Trade may bee driven with Forrain Silver; Imported, and not with the Stock, or Coin of the Nation.
Die Veneris Decemb. 20. 1650. At the Council for Trade at
White-hall.
Ordered,
THat a Model or Waie for the regulating the Trade of Gold and Silver-Wier, and Thread, and for preventing of all slight or base work, to the abuse and deceit of the Commonwealth, bee tendred to this Council against Fridaie, Januarie 17.
by the Gold Wier-drawers and Refiners of London,
and som of the Women-spinners, who are hereby all required to meet together, and consult about it. And they are to take into their consideration likewise the Papers this daie delivered in, and read before this Council, presented by Master Thomas Violet.
[Page 94]
In obedience to your Honor's Order, directed unto mee 29
November, 1650 concerning the Hand-Spinners of Gold and Silver-Thread, I humbly offer to your grave considerations these few Propositions, for the service of the Common-wealth.
I. THat it bee not lawful for any person, either Wierdrawer, Weaver, or others, to keep any Wheels for the spinning of Gold or Silver-Thread, but within the Lines of Communication of
London; and every person using such Wheels, to give in their names, and their abiding places, and how many Wheels they keep, and their several working places, and a sworn Officer appointed, who by himself and his sufficient Deputies, to view and examine both the Sizes, the Silver so spun, and the fineness, and to deface and burn all under the Standard.
II. That no Wheel bee admitted to spin Gold and Silver-Thread, but onely superfine, and all other sorts and sizes, to bee spun with, and by the Hand-spinners; and som strict penaltie put on the offendors: for if you keep not a sworn Officer that is no Trader in it, and do not restrain the offendors by a penaltie, there will bee no keeping these men within a rule: for few Laws well executed, is better then a multitude of Laws, and none to look after the execution of them. And if this Regulation shall bee left to the Wier-drawers (onely) they beeing parties, and their own profit concerned in it, the Common-wealth will still bee deceived; for
where the Felon make's the Hue and Crie, the Thief will never bee found. I humbly conceiv, the Wier-drawers may do well in having an equal power with the sworn Surveior, to finde out the frauds in the Trade, but not to leav it wholly to them to finde out; for
[Page 95] if you do, I humbly conceiv the Common-wealth will have no benefit, but a mischief, as it is in som other Corporations, which have such privileges, that the Members of them are impowered to oppress and circumvent the Common people of the Nation, and to enrich themselvs and their private interest, to the great damage of the publick. The Regulation of which is left to your Honors in the ninth Article of your Commission.
III. That no Gold-Wier-drawer bee admitted to make Gold and Silver Lace, nor Silver-Ribbon, nor no Weaver to make Gold and Silver-Thread, but either Trade tied to his own Art onely; for by the means of blending these two Trades together, all the bad and slight Stuff is foisted into the Lace, and so cunningly interwoven, interwoven, that Artists themselvs cannot discern it, when it is made into Lace; and by this slight of blending two Trades together, they put into their Silver-Ribbon, much Gold and Silver-Thread, made by the Wheel; som hold's not three Ounces Silver in a pound Venice, which is eight Ounces and four Drams Troie, whereas according to the rule of Merchantable Gold and Silver-Thread, there should bee five Ounces of Silver at the least to three Ounces Silk; a cheat that ought to bee punished with the highest penalties; to couzen the buier of two Ounces in eight Ounces of Silver, and to make them paie for Silver, when the buier hath nothing but Silk, and that many times heavie died, which causeth the color of the Gold to tarnish; and if the late King's Commissioners Books of Orders for the regulating of Gold and Silver-Thread, were returned out of the Parlament Hous to this Council, there it will bee found the Wheels were upon several great complaints of the many abuses thereof totally suppressed. And it was don upon serious deliberation, and much debate before the late King's Counsel at Law, and the Commissioners; and this can bee proved to bee true by the Oaths of many people, and I will
[Page 96] depose it, if I bee required by this Honorable Council.
IV. The poor Women-spinners by the hand spindle, are discouraged from speaking truth by many of their workmasters, or to move for a Regulation of the abuses of their Trade, and dare not speak against the said abuses, left they should bee turned out of their work, as those poor women spinners are, that your Honors commanded to agitate for the whole Companie of Hand-spinners. And som of these poor Women-spinners, besides turning out of their work, have been beaten and abused by their tyrannous work-masters, and reviled with base and odious names by som of the Master Wier-drawers; and this is the true reason why the work-men are retarded, that they do not com and join with the women, and shew their just grievances, and the many abuses daily practised in their Trade, whereby the Common-wealth is, and hath been so grosly abused, and the poor work-men and women oppressed. And indeed if the poor Hand-spinners had not opened som of the abuses of the Trade to your Honors, neither Work-master, Finer, nor Work-man, would have put to their hand for a Regulation. And this I believ in my conscience to bee true.
May it pleas your Honors, the greatest part of the Handspinner's work is fine five-bourn, and the greatest multitude of the poor Petitioners are fine five-bourn-spinners; som of the Wier-drawers are utterly against the Wheels for any sort of work, and many of them for superfine, if they durst speak it: But they all beeing parties, I most humbly leav it to your Wisdoms to take notice, that their self-interest make's many of them speak that with their mouths, which in my conscience their hearts know they speak not the truth in this particular. And as I humbly conceiv, if that the Wheels bee not strictly tied up onely to superfine, many of the Hand-spinners will perish for want of bread: and this I speak, I believ in my conscience is a truth; and
[Page 97] therefore I do most humbly leav it to your Honor's pious and charitable consideration.
That if your Honors would have a speedie Reformation in this Trade, I humbly conceiv, that if any Wier-drawer, Weaver, or others, that make Silver-Thread, or Wier, courser then the Standard, or spin on the Wheels any other sort of Silver-Thread, then such as shall bee appointed by your Honors; and any other persons that shall make any Gold or Silver-Thread, not holding at the least five Ounces Troie upon everie pound weight Venice, which is eight Ounces, and one fift Troie; that strict punishments may bee ordered and inflicted on the offendors; and upon the third time of conviction, besides the loss of the Materials, to bee further punished, either by beeing dis-franchised for a time, or for ever, as to your Honor's shall seem most agreeable to Justice. And that a sworn Officer bee appointed according to the best of his skill, to see to make it his business to go from place to place amongst all the workers of the Manufactures, to see the workers make all fine Silver, and everie sort of this Manufacture to bee according to the rules settled by your Honors. Many other things I could enlarge my self in concerning this Trade, but shall respite them for the present; and humbly submit my self, and all that I have here said to your Honor's grave consideration.
Signed THO: VIOLET.
Decemb. 18. 1650.
WHereas the Gold-Wier-drawers and Refiners of
London, have presented to the Honorable Council for Trade, the draught of a Corporation, as it is desired by them, it is utterly destructive to the Common-wealth; and I do most humbly desire the Honorable Council for Trade, to take notice that som of the Gold-Wier-drawers of
London, in the behalf of themselvs, and divers other Wier-drawers of
London, did Petition the late King for a Corporation, in
March 1634. and in
April 1635. confessing the many abuses practised in the managing of the same Trade, which were then under no government; did desire in their Petition, that by his Majestie's gracious care, they might bee reduced into Government, and made a Corporation; and that they might have one or two Refiners, such as the Wier-drawers should deem fit, to bee added to their Corporation, (and excluding all the rest of the Refiners) that were Hous-keepers or Free-men, and onely themselvs might solely have the Order and Government of the Trade, and the Regulation of the said Manufacture.
And in consideration of this, the Wier-drawers offered the late King for his favor in that behalf, to paie to him and his successors, one thousand pounds
per Annum, and 2
d. the Ounce for everie Ounce of such Bullion and Forrain Species, as they should use in their said Manufacture, over and above the currant price of the Merchants. And about the same time the Companie of Gold-smiths beeing at the late King's Council-Table, did there charge several abuses and high misdemeanors upon som of the Refiners of
London, and other persons, as will appear by the Council-Table-Books, and by the Records and Journal Books at Goldsmith's Hall, if one could com to the sight of them; for it cannot bee imagined, the Companie of Gold-smiths would give so high a charge as they did against som of the Refiners, and som Gold-smiths, but they have the Charge recorded in their Books, which I humbly desire the Council
[Page 99] of Trade may have a Copie of, that so they might see the abuses in the Trade of Refining and Wier-drawing, and who were the offendors; and no question but the same abuses are practised still, if there were an examination, and power given to the Surveior of Gold and Silver-Thread, to finde them out. The truth is, that upon the complaint of the Gold-smith's Companie at the Council Table, of the several abuses in the Trade of Refining and Wier-drawing, the Wier-drawers, conceiving the late King and his Counsel would put down the wearing and working of Gold and Silver-Wier, and Thread, and punish the offendors in Star-Chamber, and knowing what would move, and bee most taken in Court, I saie, the Wier-drawers voluntarily, and of their own accord, did com and petition, and made friends, that their Trade should bee continued. And this Model was laid to have a Monopoly to som Wier-drawers, and Finers as aforesaid; and in the pursuance of this project of the Wier-drawers, they had many meetings with Sir
Ralph Freeman, Sir
Ralph Whitfield, and Master
Nathanaël Tompkins, and divers others, where the whole drift was to exclude all the Refiners but one or two from their trades. And in consideration thereof, that they would for this great grace and favor (their own words) paie two pence the Ounce, and one thousand pounds a year to the late King. It is as true, that upon complaint of som of the Gold-smiths, several Refiners and Gold-smiths were proceeded against in the Exchequer, and Star-Chamber, for melting down the currant Silver Coins of the Nation, for buying Gold and Silver above the price of the Mint, and for refining of Silver contrarie to a Statute made in
Henrie the seventh's time; and it is as true, that I
Thomas Violet was informed against in the Star-Chamber and Exchequer, for all these offences, and beeing to bee examined upon Interrogatories against my self, both at the Council. Table and Star-Chamber, and before Master Atturnie
Noie, and Master Atturnie
Banks, I did refuse to bee examined upon Interrogatories, such
[Page 100] as Master Atturnie General had exhibited against mee in Star-Chamber; for I knew, if I had denied them, the Atturnie General could prove them on mee by som Gold-smiths and others, that had voluntarily confessed against mee, that I had transported Gold, and that I had melted the currant heavie Silver of this Nation, and that I had sold Silver and Gold above the price of the Mint.
Whereupon that most Honorable Gentleman Sir
John Coke, Secretarie of State, after that I had oftentimes been examined at the Council-Table, and at the Star-Chamber Office, and for refusing to answer to their questions, had suffered close imprisonment for above 20 weeks, beeing close prisoner to several Messengers,
viz. Measie, Stockdal, and
Barker, for all that time, to the loss of my Trade, which was then greater then any Gold-smith's in
London. I saie, that great States-man had a noble care of mee, and sent for mee, shewed mee what was proved against mee, and withal a Warrant that hee had signed by Order of the late King, and his Privie Council, for Master Atturnie General to bring mee to the Star-Chamber-Bar, the next sitting of the Court, and there to crave the Judgment of the Court against mee, his Charge beeing taken against mee
pro confesso.
Whereupon Secretarie
Coke became a Petitioner to the late King, that before hee delivered Master Atturnie the Warrant, to proceed against mee, hee might send once again for mee; and hee told the late King, that hee was of an opinion, that when I saw my danger, and how I was discovered by those that held mee fair in hand, and were the men that did betraie mee, I would bee so ingenuous to my self, to keep mee from a ruine, to confess the truth, and all that I knew upon oath against those that had discovered mee; and my so doing, would bee much for the service of the State: and to this effect, when I spake with Secretarie
Coke, was his Discours to mee, not giving mee a quarter of an hours time to return him my answer, nor suffering mee to go
[Page 101] out of his sight. When I saw the Snare, I blest the Fowler, (which was Sir
John Coke) who had traversed mee in
France, (and intercepted my Letters, though not written to mee by name) knew a great part of my proceedings there, about my Transporting Gold, and hee had many Goldsmiths that hee sent for, which confessed to him that weekly I had bought great quantities of Light English Gold of many Gold-smiths of
London, and I was to bee forced to give an accompt what I did with it.
And som other of my Factors that I had dealt with in
France, Sir
John Coke had gotten them upon their coming over at
Rie, and at
Dover apprehended, and they confessed they did receiv Light English Gold of mee, and other Forrain Gold and Silver in
France. And all the papers that discovered any thing against mee, hee shewed mee, and told mee my danger: When I saw it, I was astonished, not imagining that any man did know my proceedings in this business, or that I was betraied by those that spoke mee fair, and was as faultie as my self; for if it were a crime in mee to buie this Light Gold, it was as great an one in the Goldsmiths to sell it; and if it were a crime in mee to transport Gold, it was as great a crime in English men to bee my Factors and Partners, though at
Roan, Calice, Deep, or
Paris. And when I found these were the men that abused mee to currie favor, and to get their own discharge, I besought God in my heart, so to direct mee, that I might overcom this Philistim; and I was an humble sutor to Sir
John Coke, to make my peace with the late King upon any terms, and that I might have the late King's pardon; and in humble requital, I would really discover to him what Transporters of Gold I knew, and what Gold-smiths I knew had sold Gold and Silver above the price of the Mint, and Culled and Melted down the currant Monie of this Nation, and paie him two thousand pounds in Gold to his Privie Purs, which I did accordingly paie into his Privie Purs, and had my pardon under the Great Seal.
And I was forced before I could get my pardon, to bring in all my Books and Accompts to Sir
John Coke, and by them I proved that I had Imported into this Nation more Silver in value, then I had Exported Gold. By which Accompts, I made it clearly appear, that the benefit and advantage was to bee made by understanding the weight and fineness of all Forrain Coins, and what proportion their Silver hath to our Gold, and our Silver to their Gold; for this was the Accompt in
France 1632, 1633, 1634. that all our English Gold whether Light or Weight, (for they went all at one price without weighing the twentie shillings piece) passed in currant paiment in
France for twentie six shillings, and the Cardecu in
France went then at 16 Sols, as all men know which were then in
France; so that upon this accompt, I made my reckoning 16 Sols in
France, is 19
d. ob. English for everie Cardecu, what will these Cardecues make mee in
London, beeing all full weight, six pennie weight Troie at the least, which in the Mint in the Tower of
London would make 18
d. sterling. By this accompt, I found there was above twentie in the hundred got by transporting our English Gold, and returning of heavie Cardecues, which then at those times there was as much of them to bee had both at
Calice, Paris, Roan, and
Deep, amongst the Bankers, as a man would desire. Then for the most part the lightness of the Gold paid for the Portage, and a man might make his return once everie moneth, and I have don it somtimes in fourteen daies, and got above twentie in the hundred.
When the late King saw my Accompts in this manner made up for many thousand pounds, hee commended my ingenuitie, but hee would share stakes with mee a little; for hee commanded mee to bring him two thousand pounds in Gold, and then I should have my pardon; which I did verie willingly, and humbly thanked him for his mercie to mee.
But that which pleased the late King, and brought mee
[Page 103] into his service, was, when I shewed him several processes attested out of
France, under publick Notarie's hands, that som of those French men that dealt with mee for English Gold, were sued in the Parlament of
Paris, for sending out of
France the heavie Cardecues at an under-value, and for bringing into
France English Gold at a greater value. Much about this time, the refiners & wier-drawer's business beeing under examination; the late King finding by what I before had declared, my skill in managing Mint-business, and the Bullion of this Nation, appointed mee to have the view and surveying of all the Manufacture of Gold and Silver-Wier, and Thread, and to confirm it to mee for three lives; the Grant cost near fifteen hundred pounds, to the Lord Treasurer, Lord
Cottington, Master Secretarie
Coke, and others; and I make no question to shew the justness of the Grant to the Honorable Council of Trade, and what service it is to the Common-wealth to have mee restored to that office again, which all the while I had it, I caused the Manufacture all to bee justly made, and according to the Standard, and that there was never so good Gold and Silver, Thread made in the Common-wealth before I had the Office, nor since the Office was sequestred from mee; and this I can prove by many people that are Artists in the Trade.
That a little before this time, upon the information of som of the Companie of Gold-smiths to the late King and his Council, a Commission did issue out to make inquirie of the deceits and abuses of the Refiners of Gold and Silver, and in transporting Gold and Silver; whereupon as I said before, Sir
John Wollaston, Will. Gibs, Walter Hill, Henrie Patrickson, Refiners;
Henrie Foot, John Perin, Timothie Eman, Tho. Violet, Gold-smiths, were made Defendants in the Star-Chamber. The Refiners had that good fortune, they all got off without a sentence, by their wit, which was to out-bid the Wier-drawers; for the Wier-drawers bid as appear's but one thousand pounds a year, and two pence an
[Page 104] Ounce, and a few humble words,
viz. And the Corporation of Gold-Wier-drawers, for your Majestie's grace and goodness to them, in continuing their Trades, and reducing the same to Government, humbly offer to paie to your Majestie, your heirs, and successors, for ever, one thousand pounds a year, and two pence an Ounce, in lieu of your Customs, from Michaelmas
next; and for and towards their Provision and Importation of such Bullion as the Members of this Corporation shall use; and this was in
March 1634. and in
April 1635.
And thereupon Master Atturnie General had many treaties with the Wier-drawers, and others, and modelled the draught of a Certificate; and truly I know not whether hee ever delivered it to the late King; but the pithiness and brevitie of it, will shew it must bee his: and that this Certificate was made upon many arguments of all hands, and treatie with all parties; for Master Atturnie had drawn a Certificate fit for a King to look on, containing so much matter in so few words; and if the Honorable Council of Trade will bee pleased to consider of this Certificate, they will finde a great part of the Regulation of the Trade settled in this Certificate, if they pleas to consider of everie branch of it, for it is all matter of State.
A Copie of Sir
John Bank's Certificate to the late King, hee beeing his Atturnie General.
May it pleas your most Excellent Majestie,
I Have taken consideration of the several Petitions of
Henrie Earl of
Holland, Jane Countess of
Roxborough, and of
Joseph Simmons, and other Gold-Wier-drawers of the Citie of
London, to mee referred. And after several hearings of their Counsel, and of the Companie of Gold-smiths, and the Refiners, I humbly conceiv,
[Page 105]I. That many abuses have been committed in the consumption of the Gold and Silver of this Kingdom, which are fit to bee reformed.
II. I do not discern any inconvenience that the Gold-Wier-drawers (who offer unto your Majestie one thousand pounds
per Annum, and two pence upon everie Ounce of Bullion which shall bee used by them) should bee incorporated for their better Government, so that they bee tied unto these conditions, or such other conditions as your Majestie in your Wisdom shall think fit.
1. That they shall use in their Trades none but Forrain Bullion or Species, and no more thereof yearly, then shall bee yearly Imported, by their means, or by others, whom your Majestie shall emploie in that service.
2. That the Bullion Imported, shall not bee bought with English Coin, to bee Exported, but for Commodities.
3. That the Importation of Bullion or Forrain Species by others, shall not bee restrained, nor accompted any part of their said Forrain Bullion or Species, so undertaken to bee yearly Imported.
4. That the Gold and Silver-Thread, Purls, Plate, Oes, Spangles, &c. shall bee made according to the Standard, or better.
5. That under color of these summes given unto your Majestie, they may not in any undue proportion inhaunce the price of their Commodities.
III. Touching the Assaie of the work of the Gold-Wier-drawers claimed by the Earl of
Holland, by a former intended Grant, and desired by the Countess of
Roxborough's Petition; I finde upon the perusal of the Grant unto the Earl of
Holland, dated 12
Novembr. 3 Car. Reg. (which passed onely the Privie Seal, and not the Great Seal) that
[Page 106] there was thereby intended to pass unto him the Assaie of Gold and Silver-Thread, Purls, Oes, Spangles, &c. after the same was made into work. But the thing desired by the Countess, is to have the Assaie of Gold and Silver-Wier at the Bar before the same bee made into work, which is an Assaie of a differing nature. I conceiv that an Assaie is necessarie to prevent the adulterating of the work: All which I humbly submit to your Majestie's great Wisdom.
Whereupon the Refiners, as Sir
John Wollaston, Master Alderman
Gibs, and others, seeing the Wier-drawers go about to exclude them of their Trade, and to get a Corporation upon the terms aforesaid; they (I saie) did serv the Wier-drawers, as the Merchant-Adventurers served the Cloth-workers, out-bid them; for they to have their pardons, and to bee freed of the complaints of the Gold-smiths in the Star-Chamber, and to have the Trade onely in their own hands, that none but the Refiners of
London might bee his Majestie's Agents in the new waie of Regulation, for the furnishing, and preparing, fining, refining, and selling Gold and Silver-Wier, to bee used and emploied in the Manufactures. First, they did covenant with the late King, to bring all the Gold and Silver by them prepared for the Manufactures, to an Hous called the
Golden Fleece in
Little Britain, or to such other place as the late King's Commissioners should appoint; there to sell and utter the same, and not elswhere. That all Silver so provided, should bee assaied before the same was put to sale, by such as the late King should appoint in that behalf; not to sell the Gold and Silver so provided, but to persons by the late King's Commissioners allowed to work and use the same, and to none other, unless to known Gold-smiths, for the augmentation and amendment of Plate, or to, or for the use of the Mint; and not sell the same to persons allowed, unless they would paie the duties limited to the late King,
viz. for
[Page 107] everie Ounce of Silver guilt, six pence; and for everie Ounce of Gold, six pence; So that upon the finishing of this agreement between the late King and the Refiners, the Wierdrawers which would have excluded the Refiners from their Corporation, are by these Articles debarred their Trade; and both Gold-smiths, and Wier-drawers, or any other but these Agents, were debarred to prepare any Silver for any of the Manufactures of Wier-drawers; and becaus they came off so freely, and bid the late King roundly six pence the Ounce on all the Wier, the late King was pleased to gratifie them with a Courtly title, calling them his wellbeloved subjects, the Refiners of
London, his Agents; and to requite them, settled such a price certain for fine Silver, and refine Silver, and such a price certain for ordinary guilt, and rich guilt, and no person should presume to have or make any of these Materials, but to give these the late King's Agents their own price, and none to sell, but these Refiners, lately created the late King's Agents.
Whereupon Captain
Williams, the late King's Father's Gold-smith, in the behalf of the Companie of Gold-smiths, hee beeing one of the late King's Commissioners, oftentimes did desire, that the Gold-smiths might bee heard against the Monopoly of the Refiners; and hee beeing a rich man, worth at least fiftie thousand pounds, did offer in the behalf of the Companie of Gold-smiths, to give any securitie to the late King; that if the Trade were left open to a free Market for all the Gold-smiths as formerly, the Gold-smiths would sell all the Silver to the Wier-drawers of
London, in everie Ounce of guilt Silver-Wier, two pence, and in Silver-Wier one pennie cheaper, then the late King's Agents made them paie.
The like Propositions was made by
Henrie Footer Goldsmith, then a man of great credit, and by
William Simmonds Wier-drawer of
London, and divers others, for a free Trade, that they might not bee restrained to buie their Silver of the Refiners of
London onely, but to bee at libertie as formerly
[Page 108] to buie their Silver where they will, and to refine their own Silver.
But these offers after many disputes, the Refiners opposed, and then said it was their Trade, and none should fine and prepare Gold and Silver for any Manufactures used by the Gold-Wier-drawers, but themselvs, the late King's Agents, which was, as I take it, onely to eight Refiners of
London.
The Wier-drawers seeing themselvs over powered by these the late King's Agents, a little before the Parlament, and at the beginning of this Parlament, complained and clamored at the Regulation; when, if the Refiners had left the Market open for all men equally to prepare his own Silver, paying the late King the duties, it is well known the Wier-drawers could never have hindered the sealing and surveying of the Manufacture of Gold and Silver-Thread; for by that waie, the Manufacture was warranted to the Common-wealth: and if it had been continued, it would have avoided and prevented the many abuses since, in making slight and cours Silver-Thread, and Spangles, and Wier. And if I had had the managing of my Office, as I had formerly, the State should have had twentie thousand pounds in their Coffers for Excise, more then they have received within these four years, due to them upon four pence the Ounce Excise; which monie is in the hands of som of the Wier-drawers and Refiners.
Now when this busines came to bee examined in Parlament, these Agents that would not before part with their Title, would not let the Gold-smiths have a free Market to prepare Silver for Gold and Silver-wier; would not suffer the Wier-drawers to prepare their own Silver, they offering to paie the late King's duties in the Office. I saie, these Agents finding som of the Members in Parlament to resent a restraint in Trade to a few Refiners, and knowing none but themselvs guiltie of the offence, cunningly put in a Petition into the Parlament, the twentie fourth of
November 1640. as though the prices allowed to them to sell their
[Page 109] Silver, and they onely to bee the Agents to sell, was forceably put upon them, and against their wils; and if they should not have furnished the Silver at the place appointed, and bee readie alwaies at fit and convenient times to sell and utter the same to the persons so allowed, desiring to buie the same at the rates limited by their Indenture, but should fail therein for the space of eight daies. Then upon proof thereof before six of the Commissioners, whereof one should bee of his Majestie's Privie Council, & upon their Certificate his Majestie might give libertie to others to do the same; the consequence whereof would have been to deprive the Refiners of their Trade.
This shew's clearly, if this Agencie had not been for their profit, and to make an advantage, the Refiners might have forfeited their Agencie everie eight daies. But they kept it up for their own profit; for if they had laid it down, the Companie of Gold-smiths, and the Wier-drawers, would have had a free Market, and the duties still reserved to the late King, would have been paid by the Wier-drawers and Gold-smiths as was offered. And whereas they are so injurious to saie, that they were fettered with the late King's Covenants and Agents, I knew the time when they said otherwise, and when som of them were most humble Petitioners to the late King for his mercie, which hee gave, at my Intercession freely, to som of them, and his pardon under the Great Seal of
England; and that courtesie I did for them freely, without one pennie reward. In requital to saie they were fettered with his Agencie; truly it was such a fetter, that I upon my own knowledg do know both the Silk-men of
London, the Wier-drawers of
London, and the Gold-smiths of
London, did oppose the restraining of the Trade of selling Gold and Silver-wier onely to the Refiners, and desired to have a free Market; and som of them did offer to sell it two pence in the Ounce in guilt-wier, and one pennie the Ounce in Silver-wier cheaper then the late King's Agents, and to put in good securitie to perform
[Page 110] the same to the Nation, and to paie the late King's duties, which at six pence the Ounce in Wier, is not above two pence the Ounce in Venice Gold and Silver-Thread.
This I can saie, what the Finers called a Fetter, would have been an Ornament, if the Wier-drawers had not complained of them in Parlament, both for their title of the late King's Agents, and the many hundred pounds a year they received for their Silver, more then it was offered to bee sold to the Wier-drawers at, by the persons before named; and this I know to bee true.
That upon many daies examination of the whole business, by Master Atturnie General, and all the rest of the late King's Council at Law, and before the Lords of the Council, it was unanimously upon many great and grave disputes carried, that the intrusting of the Regulation of this Manufacture of Gold and Silver-wier, and Thread, was not to bee don by waie of Corporation, neither to the Refiners, nor Wier-drawers of
London; and the principal reasons were.
1. That upon a trial of above one hundred several assaies of Gold & Silver bought up in several Silk-men's, and Wierdrawer's shops, both of Spangles, plated wier, Gold and Silver-Thread, and made by Master
Jackson the Assaie-Master of Gold-smith's Hall; the Gold and Silver-Thread, Spangles, & Wier, were found to bee made cours and adulterated, and under the sterling; and I had all these Assaies attested under Master
Jakson's hand, the Assaie-Master of Gold-smith's Hall; and for his pains in making these Assaies, I had order from the Lords of the Council, to paie Master
Jackson five pounds, which I did accordingly, and I delivered the Reports of these Assaies to the Lords of the Council; and Master
Jackson the Assaie-Master of Goldsmith's Hall, cannot denie this to bee true.
2. It was proved that the Manufacture of Gold and Silver-Thread, was slightly made, and not so substantial and serviceable as the Gold and Silver-Thread which was Imported
[Page 111] from
Venice, and other Forrain parts; all of the Gold and Silver-Thread coming from
Venice, holding two parts Silver, or within a verie little, as six Ounces Silver to three Ounces Silk.
3. Thereupon a rule was set by the Lords of the Council upon many debates, that no Gold and Silver-Thread should bee made under five Ounces Silver, to three Ounces Silk at the least; and for Needle Gold-Thread, according to the standard of
Venice, six Ounces Silver to three Ounces Silk.
4. That all the Gold and Silver-Thread Imported from beyond Seas, beeing of so strong a plate, was made up in scanes, that so the buier might but turn it in his hand, and see it was all perfectly good; a great advantage to the Manufacture, to have it all justly made for the fineness of the standard, and to have such a bodie of Silver on the Silk, as it was serviceable to the Common-wealth; and when it was worn out, almost all returned into the melting pot for Bullion; and upon this reason the slight stuff was prohibited,
viz. that it was almost all wasted, and not a tenth part returned to the melting pot, to the waste of the treasure of the Nation, above fiftie thousand pounds in a year.
5. The Lords of the Council after many debates with the King's Council, and they with the Silk-men and Wierdrawers, set this rule for all the Manufactures of Gold and Silver-Thread, That it should all bee made up in scanes, of about an Ounce weight, according to the commendable waie of
Venice, which make's this Manufacture so justly both for the weight and fineness, that in one hundred Cases of
Venice Gold-Thread, there is not one six pence difference, but according to the seals or burns, it passe's all the world over. A gallant thing to manage a Manufacture so exactly, and to keep up the reputation of it.
The late King and his Council appointed mee a Seal, which was the
Rose and
Crown, to seal all Gold and Silver-Thread in scanes, at one end of the scane, and to warrant it
[Page 112] to bee good Silver to the Nation, with a Prohibition to any to presume to counterfeit that Seal: The other end of the scane of Silver-Thread, the work-man was to put to his seal; by which waie, the Nation had the Gold and Silver-Thread warranted to them, and if any Gold or Silver-thread were sealed with the seal of the Office, and had the workman's seal to it; which seal of the work-mans, was put in a Table in the Office for any man to see, by which means if any man should have counterfeited the Office-seal, and the Thread was found courser or worser then the standard, and not to have five Ounces to one pound
Venice, the partie offending was to bee punished; and if any Clerk of mine should have sealed any cours Silver with the seal of the Office, then I
Thomas Violet was to make it good to the Common-wealth, or any partie grieved, what they were damnified; and to warrant this Manufacture right, both for to have five Ounces Silver on a pound
Venice, and that to bee good Silver. I had no more then four pence the pound weight
Venice for my pains and hazard, which was little more then one farthing an Ounce; and if any person did complain, then I
Tho. Violet was to make all the damage good to the partie or parties grieved; and out of this fee I was to paie Clerk's wages and other Officers for their attendance in sealing the Thread, and for wax for sealing.
Besides, it is no small trouble to have daily conversation with people of such several humors, and som of them of such uncivil and cours behavior, that the Honorable Council for Trade have had more patience to hear their speeches one to another at the board, then I believ they ever had with any people that came before them; then they must needs bee clamorous when the Officer doth his dutie to see they make all good work; and this place I
Thomas Violet was required to execute. And I have the Grant of this Office under the Great Seal of
England for two lives; and though I was commanded to deliver my Patent to the Honorable Gentleman Sir
Robert Harlow, who was then Master
[Page 113] of the Mint, and Chair-man for this business, but as yet hee hath not made any report concerning this business. I stand upon my Grant as a good Patent, and for the benefit of the Common-wealth; for the fee was not 10
s. in 100 pounds for all Gold and Silver Manufactured in Silverthread, Silver-spangles, Oes, and Purl, and Wier, and for that fee I was to run the hazard to make all the Manufacture good to this Nation, that was bought in the Office, or had the seal appointed by the State put to the thread; and I shall humbly appeal to all the wearers of Gold and Silver-Lace in this Nation, whether they would not bee glad to paie ten shillings in the hundred pounds now, to have their Gold and Silver-thread, and wier warranted to them to bee good Silver, and the Silk truly covered with a substantial Bodie of Silver, and to the Thread everie pound
Venice to weigh at the least five Ounces of Silver, by which order and rule, their Silver-Lace would last six times as long as it doth, and never lose the color; and when they had don wearing it, it would yield above one third pennie it cost to the melting pot, whereas now upon som Silver-Lace that is made in
London, when it is worn out, that Silver that cost ten pounds, will not yield twentie shillings to the melting pot; and this is known by slight Wheel-work, and slight Laces; a great deal of difference upon the return to the melting pot, of rich Lace made by the Hand spinners, and slight Wheel-work made by your Wheel-men; and this can bee proved by many Trades-men, as Tailors and Silk-men, and Silver-spinners, who are best able to judg the Manufacture, that the Gold and Silver-Thread, and Wier, was never so well made in
England, before nor since, as during all the time I had the regulating of the Manufacture; and it did concern mee to look to have it well made, or els I might have been undon, for I was to make it all good. It was not to receiv a fee, and never to look how the Manufacture was made; but my fee was to bee earned with a great deal of attendance, and charge, and
[Page 114] hazard, and my constant searching to see the Manufacture was vvell made.
The Wier-drawers and Silk-men knew I would spare none of them that made bad ware; for I caused
Gares to stand in the Pillorie, that made Gold and Silver-Thread vvith a Core of Copper; I caused slight vvork to bee unspun again, that was not covered vvith five Ounces Silver to one pound
Venice; and this I did to
Archer that was the Clerk of the Commission, though hee brought mee a Letter from a Privie Counsellor, to deliver the Silver-Thread without defacing; yet I valued the keeping my trust, before a Lord's Letter, and hee was no mean man in power then.
I questioned Master
Bradbourn the Queen's Silk-man, for putting in Copper into an Honorable Ladie's Silver-Lace, and selling it her for good Silver; and a second time for putting Copper into my Lord
Carlile's Suit and Cloak, and selling it to him for good Silver; and if the Queen had not sent to mee, and laid her commands on mee not to proceed farther, I had made him an example. Many other Silkmen sold Silver-Thread with a Core of Copper, and som sold Copper for Silver, vvhich as long as I had the Trust, I vvould not spare any man.
I seized on fiftie pounds of Silver-Lace, mixed with Copper, in Master Alderman
Garrawaie's custodie, when hee was Lord Major of
London, and brought it away from him against his will, as Sir
George Sands knoweth, and the vvorld know's hee had spirit enough: and upon that seizure, I found twentie men had an hand in it, for it was sent to
Russia, and there the Emperor's Council seized it, and laid Master
Sands in prison, Sir
George Sand's brother, who had brought the adulterate Silver-Lace into the Countrie. And upon examination and proof, that Master
Sands was cousened by buying this Silver-Thread for good Silver in
London, it was sent over to the
Russia Companie to have the offendors found out, vvhere upon examination before the Commissioners, twentie men run away.
By these good waies, I so ordered the Regulation of the Manufactures during the time of the Regulation, that the stuff was made all good Silver, and five Ounces to one pound
Venice; and if any did work in Corners, that which was with a Cote of Copper, or against the rule, my Instruments were sure to finde them out one time or another. And for doing of this service, I had Warrants directed to several people for to discover the offendors; and becaus I was true to my trust, I would not suffer the Common-vvealth to bee cousened in this Manufacture (som men that have deceived the Common-vvealth in making of slight Gold and Silver-Thread, fear, if a Regulation should bee settled by Parlament, to have no Silver-thread spun, either by the Hand or Spindle, but such as is covered vvith a good Plate of Silver, and five Ounces Troie at the least, to the pound Venice, that then they shall bee suffered to cousen no more; and this is the true reason of their anger against any that stand's for a Regulation; then they know their own guilt in so notorious defrauding the State in the Excise, and how much monie they owe the State in Arrears vvithin this four years, beeing above twentie thousand pounds, vvhich is in the hands of fewer then thirtie men; and they know, if I bee commanded by the Parlament, I will give a good accompt of this business.
I do humbly desire Sir
Robert Harlow, that my Grant might bee delivered to the Honorable Council for Trade, and that hee would pleas to report vvhat hee found concerning it to your Honors; and that if I cannot maintain my Grant for the surveying the Manufacture of Gold and Silver-Wier, and Thread, for the good of the Common-wealth, and for the service of the wearer, and honor of the Manufacture, I shall with all humilitie laie my self at the Honorable Council for Trade's feet, so to regulate my Grant, as they in their great Wisdoms shall finde most advantageous to the Common-vvealth.
And I do humbly farther propound to the Council
[Page 116] for Trade, that they would bee pleased to take notice that there is an Ordinance of Parlament of the sixt of
August, 1646. for all Gold and Silver-Wier, to paie four pence on the Ounce Troie, at the disgrossing at the Bar; and this Ordinance follow's in these words,
viz. That four pence shall bee paid by waie of Excise, for everie Ounce of Silver Troie weight, and so for a greater or lesser quantitie proportionable of Silver and Gold; that any Refiner, Gold-smith, or Gold-Wier drawer, or other that shall prepare, melt down, or disgross for Wier; the same to bee paid by everie Refiner, Gold-smith, Gold-Wier-drawer, or other, at the Bar, where the same shall bee disgrossed. And that all Gold and Silver to bee disgrossed for Wier as aforesaid, bee brought to one certain place, or places appointed, or to bee appointed by the Commissioners of the Excise, and not elswhere; and that no Bars, Benches, Screws, Engins, or other Instruments for disgrossing of Silver, bee used or allowed in any other place; this is in the Book of Ordinances;
fol. 1114.
That for almost four years this four pence the Ounce did not make to the State above one thousand pounds for all that time, of near upon four years. And during these four years, the Refiners of
London beeing named in the Act, many of these Refiners durst not sell Guilt and Silver-Wier, without taking and securing the dutie of four pence the Ounce to the State; whereupon rather then they would run into contempt of this Act, som of them gave over their trades, and others of them lost their customers; for many of the Wier-drawers drew and refined all their own Silver, and never paid the State the duties reserved by the Ordinance; and there remain's in the hands of som of the Gold-Wier-drawers, & Refiners above twentie thousand pounds, contrarie and in contempt of this Ordinance of Parlament, and which som of the said Wier-drawers and Refiners are in Arrears to the State.
The Wier-drawers, and divers other Trades, having with great advantage made the wearer paie four pence the Ounce Venice for Excise, vvhen any bought it in Lace; and this
[Page 117] which I now put in writing, is, that the Gentrie may know what to paie for the future; for upon a true accompt, four pence an Ounce Troie in Silver-Wier, is not above one pennie farthing upon everie Ounce Venice in Silver. Thread: So though the Wier-drawers made a great advantage of the Excise, collecting far more from the Gentrie of this Nation, then four pence the Ounce Troie, yet they have not paid these Arrears to the State; a business of great concernment, now there is occasion for monie, and require's a speedie examination.
That for this last year, the Wier-drawers and Refiners did paie but one pennie the Ounce, which pennie make's now fifteen hundred pounds a year; so that four pence the Ounce would have been above six thousand pounds a year, if the four pence had been justly gathered.
Now upon examination, it may bee proved there was more Silver-Wier disgrossed and made into Thread, and small Wier, by the Refiners and Wier-drawers in everie of the years 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649, then in this last year 1650; so that by this accompt, there will clearly remain in the Refiner's, and Master Wier-drawer's hands, above twentie thousand pounds, and the number of them is not above thirtie men, which owe this monie, for which summe, they are tied by an Ordinance of Parlament, and no discharge can bee given them of this debt, but by an Act of Parlament; for all that drew Silver at the Bar, are upon the drawing of it, bound to paie the State four pence the Ounce for vvhat they drew, and no persons have any power to discharge this debt, but the Parlament; and if I bee required and impowered, I make no question to give the State a good accompt of this debt.
I do most humbly desire the Honorable Council for Trade, to take notice that by the eighth Article of their Commission, they are to consider what Excise is fit to bee laid on all goods and commodities, and so equally and evenly laie it, that the State may not bee made uncapable to defraie
[Page 118] publick charges. Now I humbly desire the Hon
ble Council for Trade, to take especial notice of this my humble Proposition, which is, that one pennie on the Ounce Troie upon all Gold and Silver-Wier disgrossed at the Bar, and made into Gold and Silver. Thread, is no equal Excise in proportion to other commodities that are rated with Excises which are far more serviceable to the Common-wealth.
Besides, the Gold-Wier-drawers before any Excise was thought of, did offer unto the late King, and his heirs for ever, one thousand pounds a year, and two pence the Ounce, to have a Corporation, as I shall make it appear. But the deceits so grosly practised by many of them, was so clearly proved that then at that time the State would not trust them with a Corporation, as I have formerly declared. Neither would the late King and his Council trust the Finers, but under a Regulation by Commissioners, though they saw paid the late King six pence the Ounce for all Gold and Silver disgrossed at the Bar, upon sale of the Silver. Now I saie, after the Excise of one pennie the Ounce upon Silver and Guilt Wier, when it is Manufactured into Thread, it is not above ten shillings the hundred pounds Excise for som sorts, and not above fifteen shillings in one hundred pounds worth upon any sort of Gold and Silver. Thread, when it is Manufactured. And other sorts of goods that are for use, and not superfluous, paie's five pounds in the hundred.
Now if the State pleas to laie six pence on the Ounce for all Gold and Silver-Wier, that is disgrossed at the Bar, it is not above three pounds in one hundred for som sorts of Gold and Silver-Thread, and four pounds ten shillings in the hundred pounds Excise for the heaviest; when it Manufactured, and it is a superfluous commoditie, that if any will wear it, they ought to paie so much Excise as other commodities doth; and if the rules desired in the Silverspinner's last printed Petition to your Honors, with som few other Observations on Master Atturnie General
Bankes
[Page 119] his Certificate, for the Regulating the Manufacture, the State will make six thousand pounds a year of it, and the Manufacture all made right, both for the fineness of the Silver, and the just covering of the Thread, with a good plate, and to settle a comfortable livelihood for the labor of all the poor working Wier-drawers, and Silver-spinners, that have a right to the Trade by service or seven years usage; and the supernumerarie Master-Wier-drawers, and Work-men, to bee excluded the Trade, that have not served for it, or not wholly followed it for seven years.
I humbly desire your Honors to take notice by the Ordinance of Parlament, that laie's four pence upon all Silver disgrossed at the Bar, dated the sixt of
August 1646. all Gold and Silver-Thread was to bee made up in scanes, and to bee sealed without any fee: and this no doubt was moved to bee put in by som people who knew verie well, if there were no fee allowed, there could bee no service don; and that which hath made the Citie of
London so full of slight Silver-Thread, is the neglecting the surveying of it: For how could any Sealer give his attendance, warrant the Silver to the Nation, and to any Merchants, to bee good Silver, both according to the Standard of the Silver, and that it contain's in one pound Venice, five Ounces of Silver; (and without this warrant to the buier, what good doth the sealing of it?) While I had the surveying of this Manufacture, which was above four years, I warranted it all to the Common-wealth; and I challenge any Wier-drawer, or Finer, or Silk-man in
London, to produce one pound of bad or slight Silver, I ever sealed at the Office, or that any man could ever fasten one pennie on mee, or other reward, for conniving at any man that did not work good Silver.
It is well known, I did alwaies stand to reliev the poor work-men, and work-women, while I had the Office, against their oppressing work-masters, in causing their workmasters not to deliver them bad Silver, or such as would not work by reason of the not refining of it well, and made
[Page 120] the Refiners change it, though it were good according to the Standard, yet not beeing well drietested, it would bring the poor work-men a great deal of trouble and loss, by reason of the Quick-Silver.
That I was strict to see all men work good Silver, and to caus those that did not to bee punished, I confess it ot bee true, and it did concern mee to do it, for els I had brought a scandal on the Manufacture, and my Office, and I might have been undon in warranting the commoditie to bee all right that was sealed in the Office. And if the Wier-drawers could have proved but any Gold and Silver-Thread, with all their vigilant search throughout the Citie, that had been sealed, that was cours Silver, or held not five Ounces to everie pound Venice, it had gon in to the Parlament with a full crie: but though they sought, and sought carefully, to finde it out, that either I or my servants had sealed any bad Silver, they could not finde one Ounce; though I am sure I and my servants in the time I had the Office, sealed above one Million of Scanes of Gold and Silver; and it was a great mercie of God to mee, the Wierdrawers vvith all the tricks they used, could get no cours or slight Silver-Thread to produce to the Parlament. But missing their mark in that design, they with som Refiners, whose tongues I have found more sharp then a two-edged sword, with the greatest industrie, subtilly spit out the poison of Asps, which naturally grow's in som of their mouths, or els so much untruth could not bee invented as they bestowed upon mee; the poison of their mouths and tongues beeing to mee as venomous as the
Aqua-Fortis they make: For in the beginning of this Parlament, som of them cast about the Citie of
London, and to people that never knew mee, as if I had been the worst man living.
And though the Finers and Wierdrawers of
London both Petitioned the late King for their Trade, as I said before, and each striving which of them should set their trade in such a waie that might bring them in the most for their particular
[Page 121] profit; vvhen they had moulded all their Regulation, then I was nominated Surveyor and Sealer of all the Manufacturie by the late King, which I did discharge faithfully, in seeing they should not cousen the Common-vvealth; for my doing thereof, som of them clamored most lewdly against mee about the Citie of
London. And som which I know did use these unworthie vvaies to defame and slander mee, are now discovered, and held themselvs unworthie men, and in as much contempt with the Citie of
London, as they put upon their neighbors. It is not their removing out of the Citie of
London, can make their cursed remembrance bee forgot: These restless spirits have left no stone unmoved to do mee a mischief, and to present mee as a Malignant, and dis-affected to this Common-wealth.
Truly I will declare to all the world, I ever loved and honored the late King with all my heart, as long as hee bad breath in his bodie, and would have don him any just service; and nothing beyond that I would have don, and I am confident no gallant man will condemn mee for speaking this truth. Now hee is dead, I am free with the same faith and humble dutie, and somthing more, by reason my afflictions hath got mee som more experience, I will constantly serv this Parlament and the Common wealth of England,
as it is now settled without King or Lords, to the last drop of bloud in my bodie, against any person that oppose's them, and will do the Parlament all just service for the Common-wealth.
And I thank God I never by any was desired farther; and if I should, I would bid any that ask's mee to do it, do it themselvs. Yet these Moles, som of the Refiners, and som of the Wier-drawers, vvould introduce to som of my friends, that I am a dangerous Instrument for som of the State; so that these men's tongues are like saws, with cross teeth, (if I bee of the King's side, I shall bee blasted, when the King is dead; if I serv the State, I shall not scape them) but if they had rested with words, I should better have born their malice: But this last
Michaëlmas Term, they fell on mee with deeds, took mee upon an Execution at the suit
[Page 122] of one Widow
Simonds, wife of one
Joseph Simonds, when I never vvarranted any Atturnie to appear for mee, and I had a Releas of the said
Joseph Simonds for to withdraw all Actions; and thereupon I delivered him an Ingot of Silver which was seized on by the late King's Commissioners, by order of the Lords of the Council, and this was don eleven years ago. I never owed this woman or her husband one pennie, and I make no question but I shall have reparation, and to finde out the confederacie against mee.
This
Joseph Simonds brought the same Action against Sir
John Wollaston, Alderman
Gibs, Sir
William Becher, Master Alderman
Harison, and divers others, and they all non-suited him several times; and if I had known the declaration against mee, I would have pleaded and gotten off as well as others; but I was in the Countie of
Darbie-shire, and never knew of it till there was Judgment entred upon a
Nihil Dicit, and a Writ of Inquirie of Damages, when I had the said
Joseph Simond's Releas attested by five witnesses, and I found this Releas by a strange accident after I had lost this Acquitance, about ten years, the tenth of this present
Januarie; this I put down openly, that as I was affronted publickly on the Exchange, by beeing arrested there, upon an unjust Action all men should know I cannot bee arrested for a just Debt.
REceived the 19 daie of Octob. 1640.
of Thomas Violet
by vertue of an Order of the Lords at White-Hall,
the 18 of Octob. 1640.
one Ingot of Silver-Guilt, weighing 17 pound weight, one Ounce and five pennie weight; and I do promise to withdraw all Actions that have been commenced either against Robert Amerie, Thomas Violet,
or any other, for seizing and deteining of the said Silver-Guilt; In witness whereof I have bereunto set my hand,
- Joseph Symonds.
-
Witness wee,
- M. Blunt.
- Andrew Heitly.
- Will. Creswell.
- Will. Crosbie.
- Will. Bourne.
Beyond Seas it is not permitted to a Sergeant to arrest any man on the Exchange, and it were verie fit it should bee so here in
London; for many Merchants are crazie commodities, and their reputation's not to bee touched, lest they fall in pieces. I speak not for my self, for I owe not one hundred pounds in the world, that any bodie can justly ask mee, though I have had taken from mee by Order of Committees above eight thousand four hundred pounds, and I have left off trading this ten years: But I know there is a great necessitie at this time for Merchants not to bee arrested on the Exchange, for the humor of many English Usurers and som others is, that if they finde a man sinking, everie man enter's his Action, and pul's somtimes a good Estate in pieces; whereas they should do as they do in
Holland, if their debtors have losses at sea, or by fire, or bad debts, they plaie the good
Samaritan, binde up their wounds, and instead of adding affliction to their debtor, comfort him, and by this careful usage, many a score of men beyond seas have recovered their Estates, and been gallant Merchants again; whereas here they fling them into prisons, and ruine them. But for such Merchants or others, that break out of knaverie, to cousen men by their Composition, as too many do, or such as have Diced or Whored away their Estates, and then break in other men's debts, I desire from my heart, and humbly praie, a Law may bee made to make it Felonie in any that hath, or shall do it; I am credibly told it is so in
France, and other Forrain parts.
But that which was the Master-piece of all the Refiner's plots to destroie mee, was, when by the subtiltie of two of them they put mee into the Tower for three years and eleven months, and did engage great and honorable men against mee, for what som of them knew themselvs long before I did, and I did nothing but by warrant of publick Officers. By which fals information, they caused mee to bee sequestred of my Estate, and damnified, and plundered to the value of eight thousand pounds, and kept close
[Page 124] prisoner in a room in the Tower for nine hundred twentie eight daies, and never could bee heard to make my just defence; and had not God sent Sir
Thomas Fairfax his Armie to
London, I had never got out of the Tower, but been buried there alive.
For the true Examination of all the transaction of that business, I am an humble suitor to the Parlament to have Justice, and that the truth of this business might bee found out, and that it may bee referred to the Honorable Committee of Examinations, and then it will bee found this design was to blast and undo mee, and by that means, to prevent mee that I should not tell the State what I knew to bee true, and should never com to bee heard in what I could serv the State; for as they had laid the design for my life and good name, it was one hundred to one, that ever I escaped their mortal snare.
An Accompt of what hath been taken from mee, for which I humbly desire reparations and satisfaction.
1.
WHen I was sent to the Tower the sixt of Januarie 1643,
my mother had of my Goods, Bonds, and Bils, in her hands, taken away from her at several times, viz.
to the value of one thousand three hundred and odd pounds, besides many of my Papers and Accompts of a great value, and consideration to mee seized, and many of my Papers were of great concernment to the Commonwealth, and as yet I cannot com to the knowledg who hath them; but this I am sure of, if there had been any thing in them that could have made against mee, there had then use been made of them.
2.
My mother had at another time a Privie Seal taken from her, wherein the late King acknowledged hee owed mee for my expences in the Discoverie of the Transporters of Gold and Silver,
nineteen hundred threescore and eight pounds, which monie I laid out everie pennie out of my own purs.
[Page 125]3.
The Committee of Essex,
put mee out of possession of the Mannors of Battels
and Paton
Hall in Essex,
as appear's by their Warrants here annexed; of which Land, I had an extent to the just value of one thousand pounds due to mee in 1643. and Master Philip Cage
was in possession of the premises for my use, as hereafter follow's.
4.
The Committee of Shropshire,
seized in my sister's hands in London,
three bonds due to mee in two thousand pounds, for the paiment of mee Thomas Violet
one thousand pounds by the Ladie Wade, Edmond Lenthal
Esquire, Philip Cage
Esquire, Charls Mordent
Esquire, as appear's under the band of Philip Cage
Esquire.
5.
I had the Leases of ten several Houses at the Postern in little More-Fields,
and the Tenants owed mee when I was committed to the Tower, in arrears for rent, about one hundred pounds, and for this seven years I received no rent of them, but Master Elconhead
hath received the rent ever since.
6.
Som of the Wier-drawers by their clamor, caused my Office to bee sequestred from mee, which was for the surveying and sealing of all Gold and Silver-Thread, by which means they have made slight Silver-Thread, to the deceit of this Nation ever since: which office for the surveying and sealing of all Gold and Silver-Thread, and Wier, I had from the late King, for three lives, and it hath cost mee near fifteen hundred pounds to my Lord Treasurer, Lord Cottington,
Sir John Cook,
Sir John Banks,
before I could get the Grant to pass under the Great Seal of England;
and that Office made mee above three hundred pounds a year, besides an Hous rent-free; the necessitie of having that Office, I have shewed before.
7.
I had one quarter part of the Ladie Viller's
Farm for the importation of all Forrain Gold and Silver-Thread, Hat-bands or Lace, and Copper-Thread throughout England
and Wales;
sor fourteen years, which cost mee a little before I was sequestred seven hundred pounds, and it was worth one hundred and fiftie pounds per annum
to mee.
8.
I spent in my imprisonment in the Tower for almost four years seven hundred pounds, and could never get my Caus to bee heard.
[Page 126]
An Order of the Committee of Shropshier.
WHereas by Vertue of an Ordinance of Parlament, autorizing us, the Committee for the Countie of
Salop, to seiz, sequester, and secure the Estates of Papists, and Delinquents, for the raising of Monies for the service of the Parlament in the Countie of
Salop, which wee shall discover; wee have seized and taken into our possession three several Bonds or Obligations, whereby you amongst others, stand bound to
Thomas Violet, a Delinquent and Prisoner in the Tower of
London, for paiment unto him of several summes of Monie therein mentioned. It is therefore Ordered by the said Committee, That you paie such Monies as are due upon the said Bonds, unto the said Committee, or to such as they shall appoint, and unto none other, until further order bee taken therein by the said Committee. And further, you are desired to bee present at the said Committee at Salter's Hall, in
Bread-street in
London, upon Tuesdaie next, at three of the Clock in the afternoon.
Dated
the tenth daie of
October, Anno Dom. 1644.
-
H. Mackworth.
-
Jo. Corbet.
-
Tho. More.
-
Ch. Meredith.
To Master
Philip Cage, of Great
Harwel in the Countie of
Hartford Esquire.
Memorand. That the 21 of
December, 1646. this Warrant was shewed unto Master
John Corbet, at the Tower, in the presence of us, and hee did acknowledg it to bee his hand, and that the said Bonds were seized upon according to their Order, and were in the hands of one
Brome, belonging to the Committee of
Shropsheir. And that the said three bonds were in two thousand pounds for the paying of
Thomas Violet one thousand pounds.
-
Henrie Cogan.
-
William Bourn.
[Page 127]
Two Orders of the Committee of Essex.
WHereas
Thomas Violet a Delinquent, is imprisoned in the Tower of
London, for a Conspiracie against the Parlament, and that his Estate is seized and sequestred, and that it appear's to the Parlament, that there is an extent of the Lands of
James Waad Esquire, at the suit of the said
Violet, or som others to his use, of the penaltie of one thousand pounds, for the paiment of five hundred pounds charged upon the Manors of
Battels, and
Paton Hall, with their appurtenances within this Countie of
Essex. The high Court of Parlament taking the same into consideration, have been pleased to order the benefit and advantage of the said extent to the use of this Countie. Now wee the Committees of the Countie aforesaid, have assigned, and do by these presents assign the said extent and all the benefits thereof unto
Edward Elconhead Esquire, giving him hereby full power and autority, to take and receiv all and singular the profits and rents of the said Manors of
Battels, and
Paton Hall, with their and everie of their appurtenances: And wee do also hereby appoint the said
Edward Elconhead Esquire, to take into his hands and possession, the said
Battels and
Paton- Hall, with their appurtenances. And wee do hereby further Order and Appoint all and singular, the Tenants and Land-holders thereof, respectively, to paie their several rents with the arrearages thereof, as the same are, or from time to time shall grow due unto the said
Edward Elconhead: And wee do hereby require all Captains, and all other forces, as also all High Constables and Pettie Constables within this Countie, to bee aiding and assisting to the said
Edward
[Page 128] Elconhead, in gaining, preserving, and keeping him in the quiet possession of the premises aforesaid.
At the standing Committee at Chelms-ford
the 17
of August 1644.
-
Thomas Barington.
-
Will. Goldingham.
-
Rich. Harlakenden.
-
H. Holcrost.
-
William Roe.
-
Robert Smith.
-
S. Sparrow.
WHereas wee the Committee for the said Countie, now sitting at
Chelms ford, have assigned the extent of the Manors of
Battels and
Paton-Hall, with their appurtenances (made not long since by
Thomas Violet, now prisoner in the Tower of
London) unto
Edward Elconhead, of the said Countie Esquire. Wee do also hereby Order and Appoint, that if any differences shall happen to arise betwixt him the said
Edward Elconhead, and any of the Tenants of the aforesaid Lands, that then wee refer the consideration and settling thereof unto
Timothie Middleton Esquire, High Sheriff of the aforesaid Countie, and Sir
Thomas Barington Knight and Baronet, or either of them, who are hereby desired to mediate therein, or in case of refusal, or obstinacie of any of the said persons, to make their return to us thereof, whereupon wee shall proceed as to the demerit of the caus shall appertain.
At the standing Committee at Chelmsford,
the 17
of August 1644.
- Will. Roe.
- Will. Goldingham.
- Rich. Harlakenden.
- H. Holcrost.
- Rob. Smith.
These two are true Copies of the Committee of
Essex Orders,
witness our hands
this first daie of
August 1646.
-
Philip Cage.
-
Thomas Conningsbie.
-
Christ. Hatton.
[Page 129]
A DECLARATION OF PHILIP CAGE,
Esquire, Shewing by virtue of the Committee of Essex
Order, dated 17 August 1644.
Hee was forcibly driven out of the possession of the Manors of
Battels, and
Paton-Hall, which hee held for and to the use of THOMAS VIOLET.
Attested by Thomas Conningsbie
Esquire, of Hartford-shier, and
Christopher Hatton of
London, Gentleman.
UPon this Order of the Committee, I
Philip Cage beeing in possession of both the Manors of
Battels, and
Paton-Hall, with the appurtenances, in the Countie of
Essex, by vertue of a Leas, of an extent from his Majestie, assigned to mee and others, by M.
Thomas Violet, in trust of those Lands, with divers other Lands and Tenements in
London and
Middlesex, for the use of
Thomas Violet, I
Philip Cage, and my Family, were forcibly driven out of possession about the 20 of
August 1644. and had above three hundred pounds worth of Corn standing on the ground with Hops, with other the Corn and Haie in the Barns, inned; which several Barns and Houses was all forcibly broken and taken from mee by virtue of this Order; and I do acknowledg, that there is now due to Master
Thomas Violet, the summe of one thousand pounds, which
Edmund Lenthal Esquire,
Charls Mordant Esquire, and I
Philip Cage Esqwith Dame
Anne Waad, late of
Battels in the Countie of
Essex, are bound in two thousand pounds, to
Thomas Violet,
[Page 130] for the paiment of one thousand pounds: which debt wee entred into bonds for my brother
James Waad's debt to Master
Violet, and then Master
Violet had all my brother's Lands in extent, and assigned them over to mee and others in trust, in consideration of our entring into bonds to paie him one thousand pounds, at or after the death of my Ladie
Waad, which Monie is now due. And I
Philip Cage am readie to paie it, so as I may have the Sequestration of the Lands taken off, and enjoie the Extent.
Witness my hand,
this first daie of August 1646.
PHIL. CAGE.
Witness us underneath, that M.
Cage signed this.
- THO. CONNINGSBIE.
- CHR. HATTON.
An Order of the Committee of ESSEX. JULIE II. 1649.
IT is Ordered that
Edward Elconhead Esquire, bee desired to attend this Committee upon Thursdaie the six and twentieth of this instant
Julie, at the Black-Boie in
Chelms-ford, and bring with him the Charge against Master
Thomas Violet, somtimes prisoner in the Tower of
London, for Conspiracie against the Parlament, and Delinquencie, as the said Master
Elconhead hath formerly informed. The Order of this Committee, by which the Estate of the said Master
Violet was Sequestred, the caus thereof, with the witnesses and proofs, to testifie the Conspiracie and Delinquencie of the said Master
Violet. As also the Composition made with the Committee of
Essex, for the Extent of the said Master
[Page 131]
Violet, and the Discharge made by this Committee upon paiment of that Composition; That so this Committee may give an accompt of the whole business to the right Honorable the Barons of the Exchequer, according to their Order dated 28
Maie last.
By the standing Committee for the Countie of
Essex.
- THO. COOK.
- THO. HONYVVOOD.
- W. ROVVE.
- ROBERT SMITH.
- BARNARD DESTON.
- J. MATTHEVVS.
- JOHN FEINING.
An Acknowledgment of M
rs
Mordant, concerning
Tho. Violet's Bonds and Extent on the Manors of
Battels, and
Paton-Hall, in
Essex.
IArmenigilda Mordant,
daughter to the late Ladie Anne Waad,
of Battels-
Hall, in the Countie of Essex,
and sister to James Waad
Esquire; Do declare and testifie, that my brother in Law, Philip Cage
Esquire, and my late Husband Charls Mordant
Esquire, had an Extent of the Manors of Battels
and Paton
Hall, in Essex,
and divers other Lands in London
and Middlesex,
assigned over to them in trust to, and for the use of Thomas Violet
of London
Gold smith, until the summe of one thousand pounds were paid unto Thomas Violet,
which they both entred into bonds in two thousand pounds, for the paiment of one thousand pounds, within three years after the death of my mother, the Ladie Anne Waad, viz.
in this manner. The first year after my mother's death, four hundred of pounds to bee paid; the second year, three hundred pounds; the third year, three hundred pounds more, in all the summe of one thousand pounds; and this bond was sealed and signed
[Page 132] by my late Husband Charls Mordant, Philip Cage,
& Edmund Lenthal
Esquires, and my mother Dame Anne Waad,
the sixt of Julie, 1638.
and I Armenegilda Mordant,
and Jone Campion,
and divers others, are witnesses to the aforesaid Bonds, and that the assignment of the Extent from Master Violet
of the Manors of Battels,
and Paton-
Hall, was but in trust until Master Violet
had received the summe of one thousand pounds, and then such debts as my brother Philip Cage,
and my Husband Charls Mordant,
were engaged for, were afterwards to bee answered out of my brother Waad's
lands, and my foresaid mother the Ladie Anne Waad
died about June
the third, one thousand six hundred fortie three.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand
this 15
of August, 1649.
per me Armenigilda Mordant.
Witness on the signing hereof
Vincent de la Bare Gerrard Whorwood.
Another Order of the Committee of ESSEX, JULIE 28. 1649.
IT is Ordered, that Master
Edward Elconhead, do return to this Committee, upon Thursdaie the 23 of
August, the caus of the Sequestring the Estate of M.
Thomas Violet, within this Countie.
By the standing Committee of
Essex.
-
Bernard Deston.
-
Tho. Honiwood.
-
Robert Smith.
-
William Harlackenden.
-
Jo. Eldred.
Upon Master
Elconhead's several times attending the Committee of
Essex, and not proving his Charge against mee before the Committee; according to these Orders I did Petition the Committee of
Essex, that they would require the Tenants of
Battels and
Paton. Hall, to forbear to paie
Edward Elconhead any more rent, and to require
Ed. Elconhead presently to bring into the Committee of
Essex, all summes of monie that hee had received by vertue of their Order or Orders, on the Manors of
Battels and
Paton-Hall, to bee deposited into the Committee's hands, till my caus was examined in Parlament; for Master
Edward Elconhead finding I was in the displeasure of the Parlament, thought at once to give mee a paiment both for Master
Waad's debt, and my life; and therefore M.
Elconhead charge's mee with a Conspiracie against the Parlament before the Committee of
Essex, as appear's under the Committee's hands by the two aforesaid Warrants; then Master
Elconhead compound's with the Committee of
Essex for three hundred pounds, that which I had all Master
Waad's Lands under Extent, worth one thousand pounds Land a year, to paie mee one thousand pounds due to mee in 1643. which Lands of Master
James Waad, upon color of this Sequestration of the Committee of
Essex, Master
Elconhead ever since hold's in his hands, and keep's Master
Waad's Creditors without their Monie; and though Master
Waad hath a great Estate, more then will paie his debts, if it were well managed, to live like a Gentleman, yet Master
Waad is kept in prison in great want, and Master
Elconhead receiv's his Estate without any Accompt. And I had three several Bonds in two thousand pounds as aforesaid, for securing my monie. Now if I had forfeited my Estate to the use of the Countie of
Essex, the Committee for the Countie of
Essex were not good husbands for the Countie, to let Master
Elconhead have one thousand pounds good Estate for three hundred pounds; for they had Lands tied for it in their own Countie of
Essex, of above three hundred pounds a year value. But the truth is, I have enquired whether
[Page 134] ever any monie was paid into the use of the Countie by Master
Edward Elconhead of this three hundred pounds, and I cannot finde any paid for the use of the Countie. I humbly desire the Committee for the Accompts of the Common-wealth, would take notice of it, and have it examined. I shall leav Master
Elconhead to the world, to judg of him, to give mee a Charge of Treason, and then by that means to get my Estate for a quarter of the pretended summe hee compounded for, when I was close prisoner in the Tower, and could not make my defence; and then M.
Edward Elconhead the 28 of
Julie 1649. to denie before the Committee of
Essex that hee ever charged mee with a Conspiracie against the Parlament, though it bee attested by the Committees of
Essex Warrant as aforesaid; and that Honorable Gentleman Sir
Will. Rowe, told then to M.
Elconhead before the Committee, that if hee could not prove my conspiracie against the Parlament, hee had don mee
Tho. Violet wrong, and the Committee of
Essex wrong; for it was onely upon M.
Elconhead's Information to the Committee of
Essex, that the Committee certified any thing against mee to the Parlament, and wished M.
Elconhead to bring the Acquitance of the Committee, for what monie hee had paid for this Extent, and hee said the Ordinance of Parlament for giving my Estate away, which I had in that Countie, beeing an Extent on the Manors of
Battel and
Paton-Hall, was made on the Committee's Information to the Parlament against mee, and their information was onely grounded on M.
Elconhead to the Committee; and if hee could not prove his Charge, the Sequestration would ceas, and what monie M.
Elconhead could prove hee paid to the use of the Countie, should bee paid him back; for if Master
Elconhead failed in the foundation, all that was don on that Charge against mee would ceas, and I ought to bee restored to the possession of my Lands in the Countie, but as yet I could not get the Committee of
Essex to restore mee to my possession, Master
Elconhead desiring further
[Page 135] time of the Committee; therefore I am an humble suitor to bee relieved in Parlament.
Here followeth the Copie of the late King's Letter.
To Our Trustie and Well-beloved, Our Lord Major and Aldermen of Our Citie of London,
and all other our well affected Subjects of the Citie. It is Superscribed, Charls Rex.
And beneath, By His Majestie's Command, George Digbie.
TRustie and Well-beloved, Wee greet you well. When Wee remember the many Acts of Grace and Favor Wee and Our Roial Predecessors have conferred upon that Our Citie of
London, and the manie Examples of eminent Dutie and Loialtie, for which that Citie hath been likwise famous, Wee are willing to believ, notwithstanding the great defection Wee have found in that place, that all men are not so far degenerated from their affection to Us, and to the Peace of the Kingdom, as to desire a continuance of the miseries they now feel; and therefore beeing informed, that there is a desire in som principal Persons of that Citie to present a Petition to Us, which may tend to the procuring a good understanding between Us, and that Our Citie, whereby the Peace of the whole Kingdom may bee procured: Wee have thought fit to let you know, That Wee are readie to receiv any such Petition, and the Persons who shall bee appointed to present the same to Us, shall have a safe conduct; And you shall assure all Our good subjects of that Our Citie, whose hearts are touched with any sens of dutie to Us, or of Love to the Religion and Laws established, in the quiet and peaceable fruition whereof they and their. Ancestors have enjoied so great Happiness, That Wee have neither passed any Act, nor made any Profession or Protestation for the Maintenance and Defence of the true Protestant Religion, and the Liberties of the Subject,
[Page 136] which Wee will not most strictly and religiously observ; and for the which Wee will not bee alwaies readie to give them any securitie that can bee desired. And of these Our Gracious Letters Wee exspect a speedie Answer from you. And so Wee bid you farewell.
Given at Our Court at Oxford,
in the nineteenth year of Our Reign: 26 Decemb. 1643.
Two Letters fo Master Read's,
sent to M. Theophilus Rilie,
Scout-master of the Citie of London,
from Oxford.
I Wrote to you formerly, but never had any answer, I assure you faithfully I have not been wanting to do what you desired (as you may perceiv by the effects) and if you have not your desire, blame your self, but give mee leav to tell you, that if you neglect the opportunitie now offered to you, it may bee you shall never have the like again; for I have made those whom you have given just occasion to bee your worst friends, to bee your best, and the onely instruments to procure what here is sent you, and bee you confident shee shall still bee so, provided you do your part; consider I beseech you, what a gap is opened by bringing in of the
Scots, for the destruction of this Kingdom, if there bee not a Peace, (which I praie God Almightie to send speedily) you must exspect Armies of Strangers from several places, who are now preparing, who certainly at their coing in will over-run the whole Kingdom, and when it is past remedie, you will see your own errors, and therefore to prevent more miserie then I am able to express to this deplorable Kingdom, and the effusion of the bloud of Millions of men, women, and children, which must inevitably
[Page 137] bee this Summer; apply your selvs in an humble and submissive waie to his Majestie, whom I know you will finde readie with arms out-stretched to receiv you to favor and mercie, and grant you favors, even beyond your exspectation. Defer no time (for God's sake) and what you will do, do it speedily; I saie again, do it speedily, for reasons, I may not write.
The direction of the Letter by the same hand that it is written within, is for the Man in the Moon, without date.
I Assure you I have not been wanting to further your good desires, and if it bee not your own faults, I make no doubt but things will have an happie issue; for I finde those that are most concerned in it, forward enough. Reflect now upon the miserie of the times, and upon the groans and sufferings of those you see not, which yet have been nothing to what they will bee, if not speedily prevented by a Peace; which to obtain, I beseech you, let it not onely bee your own care, but the care of all those you love, or have power with; otherwise bee confident of a general ruine, which certainly will bee inevitable both to your selvs and posteritie; and therefore take it into your serious consideration, and let not causless jealousies hinder you to apply your selvs in an humble and submissive manner to his Majestie, who I am sure will yet look upon you with a gracious eie; lose no time, for the longer you delaie, it may prove the more difficult, no doubt.
This last Letter I Tho. Violet
delivered from Read
to Master Rilie,
in November 1643.
UPon the bringing up to
London of the aforesaid Letter of the late King, I
Thomas Violet was examined before an Honorable Committee at Gold-smith's Hall the third of
Januarie 1643. where I made the Honorable Committee acquainted, that the later of Master
Read's Letters I delivered to Master
Theophilus Rilie Scout-Master of the Citie of
London, who was autorised by Ordinance of both Houses of Parlament, and by Act of the Common-Council of the Citie of
London, to hold Intelligence in any of the King's Quarters; and that the said
Theophilus Rilie did daily emploie Intelligencers into the King's Quarters by Order of the Citie of
London, and by autoritie of the Parlament, as hee told mee
Tho. Violet; and that the said
Theophilus Rilie, by virtue of his place, did procure my Pass from the then Parlament to go to
Oxford, the twentie fift daie of
December, 1643. as appear's by the Journal-Books in the Hous of Commons; and my Lord General
Essex did give mee a Pass to go to
Oxford in Exchange for Master
Haslerig, then prisoner in
Beaver Castle, and this Warrant of my Lord General's, Sir
Arthur Haslerig procured mee by means of Master
Rilie, I beeing prisoner, committed by the Parlament for my Twentie part; both which Warrants were procured for mee
Tho. Violet by
Theophilus Rilie Scout-Master of the Citie of
London, and I
Tho. Violet did before the Honorable Committee plead Justification for my doing what I did, having the Warrant and Approbation of the Common-wealth's Scout-master for what I had don.
And I then told the Honorable Committee that I conceived my Warrant from Master
Rilie for what I did, was as sufficient as if I had had Master
Elsing's Warrant: for M.
Rilie was as hee told mee approved on by Order of Lords & Commons, and I knew by the consent of the Common-Council of the Citie of
London, to bee Scout-master for the Citie; and if hee were a man unfit for such a trust & power, it was the fault in those that chose him, and not in mee w
ch
[Page 139] was not to question his power, abilities, or trust, but to act according to his directions, as long as hee had the Office of Scout-Master.
Moreover I told the Honorable Committee, that before I went to
Oxford, I desired Sir
David Watkins Knight, to make the Committee of both Nations, who sate then at
Darbie-Hous, acquainted with what I had don with Master
Rilie the Scout-master of the Citie of
London, that so I might do nothing but by the approbation of the Committee of both Kingdoms; and Sir
David Watkins did make som of them acquainted with what I had don with Master
Rilie, and I had their approbation to go to
Oxford for the late King's Letter, and my Lord General's Pass as aforesaid.
Moreover I declared to the Honorable Committeee at Gold-smith's Hall, that there was not then at the time of my bringing up of the late King's Letter, (beeing the 2
d of
Januarie 1643.) any Ordinance or Order to forbid mee or any other person to bring up a Letter of Peace from the late King as ever I then heard of; and that by God's Law,
where there is no Law, there can bee no Transgression; and my bringing then the late King's Letter up to
London, before a Law made to shew mee my rule to walk by, I humbly conceived could bee no offence.
And the reason wherefore I was willing to go to
Oxford, for the late King's Letter, was, becaus I was told that som in
London had procured the late King to send mee his Commands, that I should not discover the
Transporters of Gold &
Silver to the Parlament, which I offered then the Parlament to do. And if I had not then been by the subtiltie of som Finers, and som Transporters of Gold, having incensed the Honorable Committee against mee, (& cast mee into the Tower) but had been emploied by the Parlament to make the Discoverie of the Transporters of Treasure, I saie, that all the Gold and Silver that since hath been Transported (which hath been a greater mischief to the Nation then can bee expressed) had never been sent away; and by
[Page 140] the fines of the offendors, would have com to the State a great and considerable summe to paie publick debts, and such a Regulation settled by the Parlament, that none should have presumed to have Transported Gold or Silver for the future.
Here followeth the late King's Letter verbatim,
viz.
TRustie and Wel beloved, Wee Greet you well. Whereas Wee have formerly emploied you for the Discoverie of all such as Transported Gold and Silver Coin beyond the Seas, and all such likewise who contrarie to the Laws, and for their own private gain, have Melted down great quantities of Silver; Wherein Wee acknowledg you did Us good and acceptable service, for which (when God shall enable Us) Wee do hereby promise to give you full satisfaction. And for that VVee understand that you are pressed by Our Two Houses of Parlament to proceed in the said Discoverie, Wee do hereby strictly Command you that you intermeddle no further therein, without Our special Direction, As you will. answer the contrarie at your peril. And for so doing, this shall bee your sufficient Warrant. Given at Our Court at Oxford
the nineteenth daie of November 1643.
in the nineteenth year of Our Reign, &c.
By his Majestie's Command, GEORGE DIGBIE.
To Our Trustie and Well-beloved
Thomas Violet Gold-smith in
London.
And to get the late King to take off his Commands which hee sent mee by the aforesaid Letter, and to give mee leav to Discover the Transporters of Gold & Silver, was the onely reason that I went to
Oxford: When I came to
Oxford
[Page 141] I besought the late King to give mee leav to make the Discoverie to the Parlament against the Transportes of Gold, but hee would not, and told mee hee reserved that business for himself, for it would make him good store of monie when hee came to
London. Then I praied him to give mee leav to paie my Twentie part to the Parlament, and that it should bee no damage to mee, in regard the late King owed mee one thousand nine hundred sixtie eight pounds for what I had laid out in discovering the Transporters of Gold, which hee readily consented to do, and bid mee paie all Taxes laid on mee, and that should not prejudice my debt hee owed mee, nor his favor to mee, and that hee would see mee paid as soon hee was able.
I do humbly desire the Committee of
Essex and
Shropshier, and all others that have my Estate, to take notice that everie one that is committed to the Tower by the Parlament, is not guiltie of a Conspiracie against the Parlament. Col.
Monk hee was committed to the Tower, and cleared, and at this daie a most gallant man in the Northern Armie; Sir
Tho. Bendish in the Tower, and cleared, and now Embassador at
Constantinople; and many Honorable Members of this Parlament have been committed upon displeasure of the Parlament, and yet restored to sit in Parlament again; I am sure of it I am, and can bee more serviceable to the Parlament of
England, then any Finer or Transporter of Gold hath, or can bee, that malitiously have charged mee to bee a Malignant, for I will bring the State in fiftie thousand pounds, if they will pass the Act against Transporting of Gold. And I humbly conceiv, no man ought to have his Estate taken from him, and given away, before hee bee convicted by Martial Law, or the Common Law of the Land. If those that have malitiously informed the Honorable Committee that examined mee at Gold-smiths Hall, could have made good their Charge, or have proved any thing to my prejudice, they would have brought mee to my Trial in the compass of four years, while I was prisoner
[Page 142] in the Tower; I could not have avoided a Trial, or kept it off one daie, and I know they left no stone unrolled, for they sate many daies to have don mee a mischief, and I have it from good hands; that worthie Gentleman Doctor
Doreslaws told them, I had don nothing but what I could justifie, having M.
Theophilus Rilie's approbation and Warrant, hee beeing a publick Officer of Trust; and if any were in fault, it was M.
Theophilus Rilie, who had abused his place and Trust, if hee had don any thing beyond his Commission. But the truth was, they looked more to keep mee close prisoner in the Tower, (that so I should not discover them that sent away the Treasure of the Nation) then any thing els; for they knew if I were abroad, I would have served the Parlament in that Discoverie.
To the Honorable Council for Trade I am an humble suitor, for restoring mee to my Office for the Regulating the Manufacture of Gold and Silver-Thread, the Regulation is now depending before them, and with all my heart I humbly shall laie it at those grave Senator's feet, to regulate mee and my fee, as they shall see the Office just and necessarie, and for the benefit of the Common-wealth, and no further.
For the Goods, Bonds, and Accompts taken at several times from my mother while I was in the Tower, J shall humbly desire any persons that did sequester them, to let mee know of it, whither they were carried, and how disposed of, and J shall bee bound to praie for them; and if they bee inferior Officers, or others, that can tell mee, they shall bee well rewarded by mee and God's blessing; for as yet J cannot hear who hath them, and my mother died in my close imprisonment in the Tower; and though by the great favor of Master
Henrie Martin one of the Right Honorable Council of State, J had libertie to go and see my mother whilst J was prisoner in the Tower, with two keepers, yet when J came to her, shee was so spent, and her heart broke for my oppressions, shee beeing threescore and
[Page 143] seventeen years old, that shee could not tell mee any thing of my business, nor give mee the least notice in the world who had taken my Goods, Bonds, and Accompts away, other then that shee was plundered several times; and this old Master
White the Warder of the Tower, Master
Axtel, and Master
Jackson, keepers in the Tower, know's to bee true, who were with mee all the times J saw her.
For my Farm in the Custom-Hous, & for the late King's debt, with all my aforesaid losses, J do most humbly leav it to the Parlament, for my satisfaction; and J praie that the Committee of
Shrop-shier may bee Ordered to restore mee my Bonds they seized of mine from my sister in
London, beeing three Bonds in two thousand pounds for the paying mee
Tho. Violet one thousand pounds as aforesaid; and that J may bee enabled by Order of Parlament to sue the said Bonds, and any other Bonds or Debts J have due to mee; and the parties owing mee any monie that I can justly prove due to mee, may bee required by the Parlament to paie it to mee, notwithstanding any Ordinance or Order of Parlament heretofore made; and my humble suit is to the Parlament, that the Committee of
Essex bee Ordered to put mee into possession of the Manors of
Battels. Hall, and
Paton. Hall, they having forcibly driven
Philip Cage out, when hee was in possession for the use of mee
Tho. Violet, as appear's by their own Orders, and that I may enjoie all the said Lands till the rent of sixteen hundred pounds bee paid mee, for so much I am out of purs.
The truth is, this envie of som of the Finers, and som of the Wier-drawers, came upon mee becaus I would not let the Wier-drawers cousen the late King of his dutie while I had the Office, but to the uttermost of my power made them make all good Silver-Thread, and to have five Ounces to the pound Venice, and right Silver; and I have heard som of the Wier-drawers confess, that they had rather the State should chose fortie Officers to look after the Excise,
[Page 144] and Regulation of this Manufacture, then one
Violet. And this, though it bee a crime to them, is a service to the State, to have such an Officer, which know's all the waies how they are cousened in their Excise in this Manufacture, and to prevent it: and had not my place of surveying of this Manufacture been but I had still enjoied it, the State should have had twentie thousand pounds in their purs more then they have, onely by the Excise on the commoditie of Gold and Silver-Wier; and all this monie is lost through the ignorance of the Officers of Excise, who know not how to manage the business; for I know the State many times hath Officers put into such places through the interest and affection of friends, that are utterly uncapable of such places they enjoie; whereby the State is at great charges in fees and salaries to ignorant men. But that is not the tenth part of the mischief the Commonwealth suffer's by their fees; for through these men's ignorances, the State is cousened of the duties that should support the Common-wealth, as is notoriously visible in the Excise of Gold and Silver-Wier, which at four pence the Ounce at the Bar, which is laid on it by Ordinance aforesaid, would have made the State six thousand pounds a year: and by the ignorance and negligence of the Officers of Excise, it hath made the State not three hundred pounds a year for almost four years, which is not the twentie pennie of what ought to have been collected. And if I had had my place, I would have seen everie pennie the Wier-drawers then paid for Excise, made twentie pence to the State.
And this the Refiners and Wier-drawers know to bee true, and that make's som of them so unwilling that I should have my Office again; they fear I should bee commanded by the State to use my uttermost endeavors for the collecting of those Arrears that are in the Wier-drawer's and Refiner's hands, and to restrain them for the future, many of them having bought Lands and grown rich with
[Page 145] the monie they owe to the State, which is fitter to paie the Arrears of the Armie, then to lie in their hands.
Now whereas the dispute is, which can afford it cheapest, the Wheels or the Hand-spinners, I saie, the best is best cheap; the Hand-spinners, work will make two shillings eight pence, and three shillings the Ounce to the melting pot, and last six times as long in Lace, as som of the Wheel-work will do; and when this Wheel-work return's to the melting pot, it make's not one shilling six pence the Ounce, nay, som of it not twelv pence the Ounce, the Silver beeing most of it galled and brushed off the Silk. And this the Gold-smiths and Tailors know to bee true, that within this ten years all the slight Wheelwork came up, which make's not half so much to burn, as it did formerly in Lace. And whereas it is objected that som of the Hand-spinners work and spin Silver-Thread, as slight as the Wheels, which I believ cannot bee don; but if it bee don, they ought both Wheel-spinners, and Handspinners, to bee severely punished, if they do not put into one pound Venice of Thread, at least five Ounces Troie of Silver-plate; and a sworn Officer that is no Trader in the Manufacture to Regulate the Trade, for whatsoever they put less in Silver then five Ounces Troie to one pound Venice, is a damage to the wearer, and the wearer is cheated by paying for Silver, when hee Silk for his monie, by which means the Lace will not wear a quater so long as if the Silver were bound in with a strong plate of Silver; for you may observ your slight Silver Laces, one part where it com's to wearing, that look's like Silk Laces, the Silver beeing all stripped and galled off the Silk; but make it with a strong plate, you shall have the Silk wear away, and the Silver remain.
I do humbly desire in the behalf of the poor Womenspinners, and som of the working Wier-drawers of
London, that their printed Petition for a Regulation of the trade may bee considered; And for the service of the Common-wealth,
[Page 146] that a rule may by your Honors bee set, what fineness of Silver all the Gold and Silver emploied in the Wierdrawer's Trade, shall bee made, and that it bee all assaied at the Bar, and that what person soever, that shall sell Gold or Silver-Wier, before it bee assaied, and the duties paid, which shall bee settled by your Honors, and approved on by the Parlament, shall for the first offence lose all the Silver so wrought to the State, and the partie that shall discover it to have one tenth part for his service; and for the second offence, to lose his or their freedom, and bee dismissed of his and their Trades for ever.
The like penalties for such as work Silver courser then the Standard, and such as paie not the duties at the Bar reserved to the State, and such as do not put five Ounces of Silver at the least upon everie Venice pound of Gold and Silver-Thread.
Then I humbly commend unto your Honors as an Excellent pattern for a Regulation, the Copie of Sir
John Bank's Certificate (the late King's Atturnie General) to the late King; which if you tie the Wier-drawers and Refiners to that rule, the Trade will bee maintained here to the Profit and Honor of the Nation.
And whereas it is objected, that som of the Spinners by the Hand make as slight Gold and Silver-Thread, as the Wheels: Truly if they do, they ought to bee punished, any Hand-spinner that put's less Silver in a pound Venice, then five Ounces Troie of Silver; for whether the slight Thread bee made by hte the Hand-spinners or Wheels, is not so much to the point, for which of them soever doth it, cousen's the Common-wealth: and therefore a sworn Officer to look to them both, is for the service of the Commonwealth,
But if it bee left to the Refiners, and Wier-drawers, to melt up the Plate and heavie Coin of this Nation, as they have don, for this Manufacture, the Trade so managed is a canker to the Common-wealth, and will in time eat out
[Page 147] the bowels of the stock of Monie of this Nation.
I my self when I was an Apprentice, delivered to Alderman
Gibs for my Master, in little more then one above twentie thousand heavie shillings and six pences melted into Ingots; and when I told his brother
Richard Gibs within this two moneths, that hee knew it to bee true, for at that time hee was his brother's Apprentice, hee replied it was not in Coin, but in Ingots, and that hee conceiv's might excuse his brother.
The truth is, as this Trade is managed, it is a great waste of the treasure of the Nation, for this is the usual waie of it to furnish som of the Refiners and som of the Wier-drawers with Silver; som of the Gold-smiths they are general Cashiers for many Merchants, they receiv this monie for nothing, then when they have it in their houses, they cull it and melt down that which is the weightiest, and melt it into Ingots, which is bought up by som of the Refiners, and som Wier-drawers, and fined for Gold and Silver Lace; and according as som of the Manufactures are made by the Wheels, five parts of six are swept away and wasted, and never return's to the melting pot, and this is known and seen to many men.
And for this, and other abuses practised on the Coin and Bullion of the Nation, there is the draft of an Act of Parlament commended from the Council of State, and twice read in the Hous, which when it is past, I shall with all humilitie give the State a true discoverie of all these abuses, and prevent the like for the time to com, which will bee a great service to the Nation.
Then that there may bee an accompt kept of all the Silver made in this Manufacture, and such Merchants contraoted with, that once in the compass of a year, what is spent in this Manufacture, may bee coined, or at least so much, as upon a calculation of the surveior of the Manufacture, shall bee delivered to the State that hee conceiv's the Bullion and Treasure is wasted: But for your Honors
[Page 148] to settle the Trade of Refining of Gold and Silver, and Wier-drawing, in a Corporation, as it is now desired by the Wier-drawers, it were to make all the speed possible, that that little Silver in Coin which is yet left in the Nation, should bee culled and melted up for Gold and Silver Lace, and leav it to their good discretions and honesties, to manage the other parts of their Trade. The poor Spinners and som work-men, desire your Honors to the contrarie; for as they have beaten them down in the prices, that many of them are readie to starv, so if the whole power of governing the Trade were left to sixteen of their wisdoms and discretions, which is a Master, and Wardens, and Assistants, then should the work-men and work-women's face bee ground and opprest. These Master-work-men that desire this Corporation, are not fortie, and the work-men and work-women thousands; I shall with all humilitie tell you what Forrain Nations do to Regulate their Monie and Bullion, & these Manufactures: and unless you have the like rule here, I humbly conceiv it will be impossible to restore the Mint, to keep the Gold-smiths within compass, or the Wier-drawers in any rule; for many of them have got to licentious height and pride, having got great Estates by culling Monie, selling Gold and Silver to transport, buying of clipped Monie, and paying it away again, and twentie other tricks, that they are so proud, they know not whether they stand on their heels or their head; but the Act against transporting these, when it com's forth, will regulate them all.
I saie, if you will have these abuses rectified as in
France, Flanders, Spain, Germanie, and other Countries, I humbly conceiv, you must erect a Council for Monies and Bullion; for in
France I have seen great Volumes of Arguments of the Government and Management of Monie and Bullion, and the due Regulation is of mightie importance as your affairs now stand; and in all Forrain Countries, the States, that are Kings, or Common-wealths, have a particular
[Page 149] care, and make the mysteries of managing their treasure, matter of the greatest state and policie; and Gold and Silver, either in Coin or Bullion, the late Kings & Queens in
England, did ever appropriate the especial management of them to themselvs, as beeing a business of State.
And though now by the blessing of God, wee are a free State, and the Nation a free Nation, I humbly conceiv, not so free, that the Bullion and Coin of the Commonwealth should bee Manufactured and wasted without any accompt, and without any regard for the bringing in Forrain Bullion for the proportion is spent here, in the making Gold and Silver-Thread, without offering the State an Excise fit for to bee imposed on so superfluous a commoditie; when these Wier-drawers voluntarily offered the late King one thousand pound a year, and two pence an Ounce, and the Refiners did give the late King six pence the Ounce; and this to bee don in a King's time, in a time when the Common-wealth had no Armies to paie; which six pence the Ounce, almost all of it was given by the late King to a couple of Courtiers, the Earl of
Holland two thousand pounds a year, the Countess of
Roxborough twelv hundred pounds a year. If the Wier-drawers would paie the Arrears they owe to the State, and submit to a Regulation for the present, and binde themselvs to work good Silver, well covered with five Ounces Silver to a pound Venice, seal all the Gold and Silver-Thread as formerly, and paie the duties shall bee imposed on them by the State for Excise, and keep an accompt of all the Silver Manufactured by a Comptroler, there might bee som hopes that this Manufacture might bee regulated: if they will not, I humbly conceiv, if the Parlament pass the Act against Transporting Gold and Silver, and have a Council for Monies, according as it is in other Countries, it will regulate the abuses of this Trade, and all others that trade in Gold and Silver.
If the State had had a Council for Monies eight years ago, as they have in Forrain Countries, I believe
Cheapside-Cross
[Page 150] would have yielded them more Monies then it made the State: I do humbly desire that it may bee examined, how many fodder of Lead was made of the Cross; for all the figures were Lead, and who bought it, and what they paid a fodder, and the total summe in monie was paid for it.
Then I do humbly desire to have the partie or parties that bought the Lead of the Cross examined upon Oath, whether they did ever fine or refine the Lead, and parted the Gold from the Lead, by blowing it down in an Almondfurnace, and then refining it on attest; and what Gold they extracted out of it, to give a just accompt of the pound weights and Ounces of Gold, hee or they refined and extracted out of the Lead of
Cheapside-Cross.
Then that all men would bee pleased to take notice of the long continuance of
Cheapside-Cross, since it was made, and in how many King's and Queen's Reigns it was guilt, the Citie-Books I believ will shew, this verie Cross with the Leaden figures.
And then that they take notice that the Rain and Weather decaie's not the Gold, for it will sink into the Lead; and though it change color, and tarnish with the Weather, yet the Bodie of Gold is in the Lead. And all men know the superstition of former times did not care what Gold they laid on Popish Reliques; and I believ the Citie-Books will shew many thousand pounds laid out in Gold for guilding
Cheapside-Cross upon several occasions.
I do humbly conceiv that when the Cross was sold, it was sold by the State onely for Lead, and the State had no more for it but for Lead; and if any did refine, and part that Lead, and converted the Gold to their own use, (that all that Gold w
ch was sold for two pence the pound weight, the State ought to have an accompt for it) and my desire to them that bought it, is, that they would give the just value of all the Gold they extracted out of
Cheapside-Cross, to the poor maimed soldiers, towards their relief and maintenance,
[Page 151] they having never paid the State for it.
The taking away of Crosses, and Superstition, and plucking of them down, I thank God for; but withal, I would not that the State should sell Gold at two pence the pound weight to any person, upon what pretence of service or well-deserving soëver; for after that rate the Parlament may have servants too many for their profit, and in managing business in this manner, the whole Common-wealth suffer's, and som private persons get mightie Estates, to the great damage of the Common-wealth in general. I humbly saie, what is the Common-wealth's, ought to bee sold at the best advantage and improvement for the publick, and and not for private respects, sold at an under value, upon any pretence to any private person whatsoëver. I know for speaking this truth. I shall have envie, but my comfort is, it will bee by or from none but interested parties; and all those that are not, vvill thank mee for speaking truth.
The Parlament heretofore made many Provisional Acts, som onely to continue to the next Sessions of Parlament, which was somtimes three, five, seven, ten, fifteen years before a Parlament vvas called, and no remedie could bee had out of Parlament, if that these Acts were found prejudicial to the State till the next Sessions of Parlament. Now by the blessing of God on this Nation, these inconveniences are remedied, for the Parlament sit's alwaies; so that if the Parlament pass any Act, vvhich they shall finde upon just grounds either to add to it, or take from it, they have it in their own power to alter it upon the trial, if a Law should pass vvhich vvere not for the general good of the Nation.
I beeing required to attend the Committee of the Council of State, about the Act now presented to the Parlament, I did see, and vvas privie upon vvhat grave consideration everie branch of the Act now depending before the Honorable Committee, vvas framed and put down by the Committee of the Council of State, before ever it vvas recommended
[Page 152] to the Parlament. And I do humbly desire for the service of the Common-wealth, if any alteration bee made in the Act, those that drew the draft of the Act, may bee required to attend the Committee to give their reasons for the whole Act, or any part of it; for upon the effectual passing of this Act, much doth depend for the safetie of this Nation, and it is of an higher concernment to the Nation, then I can express; and I humbly conceiv, there ought to bee no respect of private interest, where the safetie of the Nation is so highly concerned.
I humbly desire the Honorable Committee, that the Certificate of the Officers of the Mint may bee taken into your serious considerations, there beeing verie few men in the Nation, can speak so much upon their own experience of these abuses concerning the Treasure of the Nation, as these Gentlemen, the Officers of the Mint have certified, which ever since their Certificate, hath been found in everie part to bee true.
The Mint standing still and neglected, the Treasure that hath been Imported, was never brought into the Mint, but Exported out again; by which means for the private gain of a few men, the Nation is ruined and impoverished, and a Trade Inwards and Outwards, driven without paying of Custom, and the Stock of Treasure of the Nation almost all Exported in these times, now there is so much occasion for monie, to the admiration and astonishment of many lovers of the Common-wealth, that truly understand the secrets and mysteries of Trade,
And what mischiefs these doings will in the end bring upon this Common-wealth, is deeply apprehended by many wise men, and can have no stop but by a vigorous Act to bring the Offendors to Exemplarie Justice, vvhose Fines and Compositions, throughout the Nation, will amount to many scores of thousands of pounds to the States, for the paiment of publick debts, if Commissions of enquiries according to former presidents bee granted
[Page 153] by Act of Parlament throughout the Nation, to enquire for the last ten years of these abuses.
If in declaring what hath passed at the Committee, and of other Transactions, bee not usual, I shall, and do humbly desire to have my pardon; for if my silence might not have endangered the Common-wealth, this that I have said, should never have com to publick view; for I know how to keep secrets as well as som other men.
I have read of one that was born dumb, and so continued for many years; seeing one coming to kill his Father, cried out,
God save my Father, and so gave timely warning for his Father to prevent the danger. A happie speaking of the Childe for the Father. Truly I count the Obligation to my Countrie, above the Obligation to my Father.
I have seen this danger many years coming upon the Nation. Though I am but young, and ignorant in other business, I am sure there are but few, if any in the Nation, that have had those waies and means to finde out, and discover these mischiefs, which I have. I know and apprehend more then I vvill or can express.
The great mischiefs Transporting Gold and Silver bring's on this Nation, I apprehend.
The condition of your Armie, which must bee burthensom, if they have not monie to paie for Quartering, I apprehend the danger and damage.
The necessitie of Trades-men, and Handie-Crafts men will bee put to for want of emploiment, upon the scarcitie of monie, making all Trade to decaie, I apprehend.
The sad condition of poor people, vvho will bee enforced for vvant to part with their clothes, their bedding, their dishes they eat their meat in, I apprehend.
The danger the want and povertie of the poor will bring upon this State, if there bee not waies found out to bring Monie into the Nation, I do verie sadly and seriously apprehend the inconveniences.
And therefore I crie,
God save the Common-wealth.
God put it into the hearts of the Parlament, to see to keep that little monie wee have yet left; and to finde out and punish those that have cheated, and robbed the Common-wealth of their Treasure, and to studie vvaies how to bring in monie into the Nation; for if this bee not don speedily, in all probabilitie, greater inconveniences then I dare write, will com on the Common-wealth.
Much more I could saie, but if these Reasons before recited, nor the Certificates of the Officers of the Customs, and the Certificate of the Officers of the Mint, & several reasons of som Aldermen of the Citie of
London, for the stopping of the Transporting of Gold & Silver, and the Citie of
London's Petition to the Parlament, presenting the great inconveniences Transporting Treasure hath brought upon this Citie of
London, and the Nation; I humbly saie, if all these will not prevail, I have don: For if I should write a Volume as big as
Speed's Chronicle, I cannot give more clear satisfaction of the necessitie of passing this Act.
If God hath decreed this Nation shall bee cousened of all it's Treasure, and the Offendors not questioned, nor diligent enquirie made after it, and such means as our Ancestors and other Nations (having far less occasion for monie then wee have) do daily practise; to prevent these mischiefs, and discover the Offendors, I shall with all humilitie submit to God's Providence, and rest satisfied.
I have clearly discharged my dutie to my Countrie, in declaring this business to the Common-wealth, that so they may know the true reasons of the scarcitie of Gold and Silver in the Nation, and the damage they sustein by the want thereof, and how the Mint com's to bee obstructed, that almost no Monie hath been Coined for these three last years.
For som men that have clamored at mee for first engaging to discover the Transporters of Gold and Silver in the
[Page 155] year 1635. in the late King's time, I shall desire them to consider, that I was first complained of by the Gold-smiths themselvs, beeing at the Council-Table, 1634. for buying up of Light Gold, and Transporting of it into
France, as M
r
Perin the Gold-smith in
Cheapside told mee the same daie that som Gold-smiths complained of mee at the Council-Table; I going then up to
White-Hall, to see what the Gold-smiths did, and upon their complaint, I was committed close prisoner for twentie weeks; and yet for all that, death would have been more welcom to mee then to have discovered the Merchants at that time, and this Doctor
Amies, Master
Turner, and Master
White, all of
London, and now living, know. But when I found the Merchants joined against mee, that were Transporters of Gold themselvs, I was willing to make my peace, though it cost mee dear, and not suffer longer for ungrateful men.
When I was engaged in the late King's service, I was ever faithful to all his just Commands, and to the uttermost of my power did serv him in all lawful waies, and beyond that I would never go.
Now with all humilitie I have humbly tendred my self to the Parlament, for I think & believ, & I speak as in the presence of God, I living under their protection, I am as much bound to serv them faithfully, as ever I did the late King; and I have this advantage in the change, Kings die, but the Parlament of
England, as it is now established, never die's: so that here I humbly fix and prostrate, laie my self, and all my endeavors to the uttermost of my power to improve the interest and service of the Parlament, as it is now established, without King or Lords, against any person whomsoëver.
It may bee objected by som men, that I have not don prudently in declaring so much for the service of the State, as I have don, before I knew my conditions, what the State
[Page 156] would do for mee; for by these informations, I have given light enough to have others to go on, and laie the foundation of the Regulating of the Trade of this Nation, and it may bee now don by others as well as by my self. This in part I grant to bee true; but my caus, is not everie man's caus; I was blasted by the devillish invention of som men, and to the Citie of
London, Armie, and the Parlament, presented as a Malignant, a Papist, one dis-affected to the Parlament and present Government, as it now established, without King, or Hous of Lords: So that beeing under this cloud, and hard opinion of the State, and suffering so long time in the Tower, as before J have said, and my Estate still under Sequestation, it did highly concern mee to take any opportunitie to remove this hard opinion off mee, and that the Parlament might see from the bottom of my heart my seal in deeds, and not in words, to do them service.
J have with all humilitie-truly and plainly stated this business, and J hope have laid the ground-work for the setting of other more learned heads on work, for the perfecting what I have roughly begun; and that the Common-wealth will receiv a great advantage by it: and if the Parlament shall pleas to command mee to serv them in any of these particulars, they shall not finde many men will do them service on the terms I shall, and do with all humilitie offer them; for I will willingly, so I may have my Estate, & Offices restored again to mee, or their value, which have been taken from mee, upon mis-information of som malitious people, give the maimed soldiers that have fought in the Parlament's service since the death of the late King, one half of my Estate I shall die possessed of; and to the maimed Sea-men, that are emploied in the State's service, since the death of the late King, one quarter-part of my Estate, which I shall die possessed of; and the other quarter-part, I will, and do reserv to give to
[Page 157] som friends; so that three parts of four of what I have, or shall have, com's to those that have, or shall have ventured their lives in the State's service; and I am, and shall bee no more but a faithful Steward to improve my Estate to their advantage. And for the true performance of this, I will willingly give a perfect Accompt to the Master's of Trinitie-Hous, and of Saint
Thomas Hospital in
Southwark once everie year, and give them a perfect Invoies of my Estate, and where it remain's, with securitie not to pass any of it away, other then for my expences for my maintenance; and to have the disposing of one intire quarter-part to som kindred or friends of mine, at my death; the other three parts to bee freely given to the relief of maimed soldiers and sea-men, that have or shall bee emploied in the Parlament's service, provided J may be restored to my Estate.
And this J do not as J am conscientious of any evil wittingly or willingly, I ever acted against the State (for J stand upon my innocence) but J do it really, that it may bee a pattern to som that have blasted mee to the State as a Malignant, and a Delinquent, they having no children, and have got som scores of thousands of pounds by the Parlament's service; that they in humble thankfulness to God for his mercie, would bestow a good part on the poor, and for the future bee ashamed of scandalizing mee, when the reality of my words and deeds disprove them to the whole world; for Malignants make not such free will-offerings to the poor maimed soldiers, and maimed sea-men, that have, and shall lose their limbs in the defence of their Countrie and Liberties, as it is now settled, without King, or Lords: and though it may not bee above a mite in comparison to the State, J cannot possibly express my real intentions in the Parlament's service, more then by these my words and deeds. And J will upon the peril of my life, bring the
[Page 158] Parlament in fiftie thousand pounds by the Fines and Compositions of the Transporters of Gold and Silver, and such as have practised many abuses on the Coins and Bullion of the Nation, within the compass of one year, besides what summes hereafter, if Commissions according to former presidents bee granted, and if the Parlament pleas to pass the Act as it is now drawn, against Transporters of Gold; which Act was recommended by the Council of State to the Parlament, and hath been twice read in the Parlament Hous, and committed; and when it passe's the Hous, the Mint in the Tower of
London will again flourish, a business of the greatest honor, profit, and safetie to the Nation in general, that can bee, as your affairs now stand.
What is here said, is with all humilitie presented to the Parlament for the service of the Common-wealth, by a faithful lover of his Countrie; beeing desired to state my Reasons by som in Autoritie for passing the aforesaid Act, I humbly conceiv (if it were made stricter then it is) it were far better for the Common-wealth: For Transporting Treasure heretofore hath been made Felonie, when the Commonwealth, I humbly conceiv, had not so much occasion to see to keep their Treasure in the Nation, and the Mint going, as now they have.