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Google This is a digital copy of a book that was preserved for generations on library shelves before it was carefully scanned by Google as part of a project to make the world's books discoverable online. It has survived long enough for the copyright to expire and the book to enter the public domain. A public domain book is one that was never subject to copyright or whose legal copyright term has expired. Whether a book is in the public domain may vary country to country. Public domain books are our gateways to the past, representing a wealth of history, culture and knowledge that's often difficult to discover. Marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume will appear in this file - a reminder of this book's long journey from the publisher to a library and finally to you. Usage guidelines Google is proud to partner with libraries to digitize public domain materials and make them widely accessible. 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About Google Book Search Google's mission is to organize the world's information and to make it universally accessible and useful. Google Book Search helps readers discover the world's books while helping authors and publishers reach new audiences. You can search through the full text of this book on the web athttp://books.google.com/ (Fx - de la Libris' Dipulación Biblioteca Provincial Central IN 1 Barcelona no Digitized.by Google 9980 A DICTIONARY, PRACTICAL, THEORETICAL, AND HISTORICAL, OF COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL NAVIGATION. BY J. R. M°CULLOCH, ESQ. EDITED BY HENRY VETHAKE, LL.D. ONE OF THE PROFESSORS IN THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA ; MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN PHI- LOSOPHICAL SOCIETY AUTHOR OF A TREATISE ON POLITICAL ECONOMY; ETC. Tutte le invenzioni le più benemerite del genere umano, e che hanno svillupato l'ingegno e la facoltà dell' animo nostro, sono quelle che accostano l' uomo all' uomo, e facilitano la communica- zione delle idee, dei bisogni, dei sentimenti, e riducano il genere umano a massa. BRRI. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. I. PHILADELPHIA: THOMAS WARDLE, 15 MINOR STREET. STEREOTYPED BY L. JOHNSON. 1840. Digitized by Google R:312746 "Though immediately and primarily written for the merchants, this Commercial Dictionary will be of use to every man of business or of curiosity. There is no man who is not in some degree R mer- chant; who has not something to buy and something to sell, and who does not therefore want such instructions as may teach him the true value of possessions or commodities. The descriptions of the productions of the earth and water which this volume contains, may be equally pleasing and useful to the speculatist with any other Natural History. The descriptions of ports and cities may instruct the geographer as well as if they were found in books appropriated only to his own science; and the doctrines of funds, insurances, currency, monopolies, exchanges, and duties, is so necessary to the politician, that without it he can be of no use either in the council or the senate, nor can speak or think justly either on war or trade. We, therefore, hope that we shall not repent the labour of compiling this work, nor flatter our- selves unreasonably. in predicting a favourable reception to a book which no condition of life can render useless, which may contribute to. the advantage of all that make or receive laws, of all that buy or sell, of all that wish to keep or improve their possessions, of all that desire to be rich, and all that desire to be wise." JOHNSON, Preface to Rolt's Dict. & Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1839, by THOMAS WARDLE, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Digitized by Google PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN EDITOR. IN offering to the public an American edition of Mr. McCulloch's valuable Commercial Dictionary, it is unnecessary to add any thing, concerning the object and plan of the work, to what will be found in the subjoined extracts from the author's prefaces to the several editions of it which have appeared in England. With respect to the labours of the present editor, he has for the most part con- fined himself to matters relating to his own country, or of especial interest to its citizens. Considerable information of this nature will be found appended to° the articles Aliens, Banking, Coal, Coins, Cotton, Importation and Exportation, Imports and Exports, Iron, Roads, Silk, and Tariff, as well as others. A few articles have been inserted on subjects not treated by the author; such as Admi- ralty Courts, Liverpool, London, &c. There is, generally speaking, an extreme difficulty in the United States of procuring statistical information, which may be depended upon for its accuracy. Besides the reports, from time to time made to Congress, by the Secretary of the Treasury, and by committees of that body, the principal sources that have been consulted for the purpose are the commercial newspapers published in some of our large cities, particularly the Philadelphia Commercial List,-Mr. Raguet's " Financial Register,-and the " United States Commercial and Statistical Re- gister," edited by Samuel Hazard. The former of the two works just mentioned contains a greater mass of facts, mingled with much valuable disquisition, respect- ing the subjects to which it is devoted, than is to be found elsewhere. Mr. Hazard's work has just reached the close of its first volume. It is published in weekly numbers, abounds in useful information, and is deserving of extensive patronage. It is proper to mention that this American has been reprinted from the last English edition. The supplement to this, however, not having been received in time, a page or two was unavoidably omitted to be incorporated with the rest of it in the body of the work, but will be found in a supplement at the end of the second volume. In the same supplement, too, the reader will find further addi- tions by the American editor; some of which, relating to the United States, (the article Fish, for example,) could not be prepared for an earlier insertion; and others, again, consist of the statistics of the commerce of certain foreign ports, brought down to a later date than is given by the author. iii Digitized by Google Digitized by Google EXTRACTS FROM THE PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION IT has been the wish of the Author and Publishers of this Work, that it should be as extensively useful as possible. If they be not deceived in their expectations, it may be advantageously employed, as a sort of vade mecum, by merchants, traders, ship-owners, and ship-masters, in conducting the details of their respective businesses. It is hoped, however, that this object has been attained without omitting the consideration of any topic, incident to the subject, that seemed calculated to make the book generally serviceable, and to recom- mend it to the attention of all classes. Had our object been merely to consider commerce as a science, or to investigate its prin- ciples, we should not have adopted the form of a Dictionary. But commerce is not a science only, but also an art of the utmost practicable importance, and in the prosecution of which a very large proportion of the population of every civilised country is actively engaged. Hence, to be generally useful, a work on commerce should combine practice, theory, and history. Different readers may resort to it for different purposes and every one should be able to find in it clear and accurate information, whether his object be to make himself familiar with details, to acquire a knowledge of principles, or to learn the revolu- tions that have taken place in the various departments of trade. The following short outline of what this Work contains may enable the reader to estimate the probability of its fulfilling the objects for which it has been intended :- I. It contains accounts of the various articles which form the subject matter of com- mercial transactions. To their English names are, for the most part, subjoined their synony- mous appellations in French, German, Italian, Russian, Spanish, &c. and sometimes, also, in Arabic, Hindoo, Chinese, and other Eastern languages. We have endeavoured, by con- sulting the best authorities, to make the descriptions of commodities as accurate as possible and have pointed out the tests or marks by which their goodness may be ascertained. The places where they are produced are also specified the quantities exported from such places; and the different regulations, duties, &c. affecting their importation and exportation, have been carefully stated, and their influence examined. The prices of most articles have been given. sometimes for a lengthened period. Historical notices are inserted illustrative of the rise and progress of the trade in the most important articles ; and it is hoped, that the in- formation embodied in these notices will be found to be as authentic as it is interesting. II. The Work contains a general article on COMMERCE, explanatory of its nature, prin- ciples, and objects, and embracing an inquiry into the policy of restrictions intended to pro- mote industry at home, or to advance the public interests by excluding or restraining foreign competition. Exclusive, however, of this general article, we have separately examined the operation of the existing restrictions on the trade in particular articles, and with particular countries, in the accounts of those articles, and of the great sea-port towns belonging to the countries referred to. There must of course, be more or less of sameness in the discussion of such points, the principle which runs through them being identical. But in a Dictionary this is of no consequence. The reader seldom consults more than one or two articles at a time; and it is of infinitely more importance to bring the whole subject at once before him, than to seek to avoid the appearance of repetition by referring from one article to another. In this Work such references are made as seldom as possible. IIL The articles which more particularly refer to commercial navigation are AVERAGE, BILLS OF LADING, BOTTOMRY, CHARTERPARTY, FREIGHT, MASTER, NAVIGATION Laws, OWNERS, REGISTRY, SALVAGE, SEAMEN, SHIPS, WRECK, &c. These articles embrace a pretty full exposition of the law as to shipping we have particularly endeavoured to exhibit the privileges enjoyed by British ships; the conditions and formalities, the observance of which is necessary to the acquisition and preservation of such privileges, and to the trans- ference of property in ships; the responsibilities incurred by the masters and owners in their capacity of public carriers; and the reciprocal duties and obligations of owners, mas- a 2 Digitized by Google vi PREFACE. ters and seamen. In this department, we have made considerable use of the treatise of Lord Tenterden on the Law of Shipping,-a work that reflects very great credit on the learning and talents of its noble author. The Registry Act and the Navigation Act are given with very little abridgment. To this head may also be referred the articles on the CoD, HERRING, PILCHARD, and WHALE fisheries. IV. The principles and practice of commercial arithmetic and accounts are unfolded in the articles BOOK-KEEPING, DISCOUNT, EXCHANGE, INTEREST AND ANNUITIES, &c. The article BOOK-KEEPING has been furnished by one of the official assignees under the new bankrupt act. It exhibits a view of this important art as actually practised in the most extensive mercantile houses in town. The tables for calculating interest and annuities are believed to be more complete than any hitherto given in any work not treating professedly of such subjects. V. A considerable class of articles may be regarded as descriptive of the various means and devices that have been fallen upon for extending and facilitating commerce and naviga- tion. Of these, taking them in their order, the articles BANKS, BROKERS, Buors, CANALS, CARAVANS, CARRIERS, COINS, COLONIES, COMPANIES, CONSULS, Convor, Docks, FAC- Tors, FAIRS AND MARKETS, LIGHT-HOUSES, MONEY, PARTNERSHIP, PILOTAGE, POST- OFFICE, RAIL-ROADS, ROADS, TREAT'ES (COMMERCIAL), WEIGHTS AND MEASURES, &c. are among the most important. In the article BANKS, the reader will find, besides an ex- position of the principles of banking, a pretty full account (derived principally from official sources), of the Bank of England, the private banks of London, and the English provincial banks; the Scotch and Irish banks; and the most celebrated foreign banks: to complete this department, an account of Savings' Banks is subjoined, with a set of rules which may be taken as a model for such institutions. There is added to the article COINS a Table of the assay, weight, and sterling value of the principal foreign gold and silver coins, deduced from assays made at the London and Paris mints, taken, by permission, from the last edition of Dr. Kelly's Cambist. The article COLONIES is one of the most extensive in the work it contains a sketch of the ancient and modern systems of colonisation an examination of the principles of colonial policy; and a view of the extent, trade, population, and resources of the colonies of this and other countries. In this article, and in the articles CAPE OF Good HOPE, HALIFAX, QUEBEC, SYDNEY, and VAN DIEMEN'S LAND, recent and authentic information is given, which those intending to emigrate will find worthy of their attention. The statements in the articles LIGHT-HOUSES and PILOTAGE have been mostly fur- nished by the Trinity House, or derived from Parliamentary papers, and may be implicitly relied upon. In the article WEIGHTS AND MEASURES the reader will find tables of the equivalents of wine, ale, and Winchester measures, in Imperial measure. VI. Besides a general article on the constitution, advantages, and disadvantages of Com- panies, accounts are given of the principal associations existing in Great Britain for the purpose of conducting commercial undertakings, or undertakings subordinate to and con- nected with commerce. Among others (exclusive of the Banking and Dock Companies already referred to) may be mentioned the EAST INDIA COMPANY, the GAS COMPANIES, the INSURANCE COMPANIES, the MINING COMPANIES, the WATER COMPANIES, &c. The article on the East India Company is of considerable length it contains a pretty complete sketch of the rise, progress, and present state of the British trade with India a view of the revenue, population, &c. of our Indian dominions; and an estimate of the influence of the Company's monopoly. We have endeavoured, in treating of Insurance, to supply what we think a desideratum, by giving a distinct and plain statement of its principles, and a brief notice of its history with an account of the rules and practices followed by individuals and companies in transacting the more important departments of the business; and of the terms on which houses, lives, &c. are commonly insured. The part of the article which peculiarly respects marine insurance has been contributed by a practical gentleman of much knowledge and experience in that branch. VII. In addition to the notices of the Excise and Customs regulations affecting particular commodities given under their names, the reader will find articles under the heads of Cus- TOMS, EXCISE, IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION, LICENSES, SMUGGLING, WAREHOUSING, &c. which comprise most of the practical details as to the business of the Excise and Cus- toms, particularly the latter. The most important Customs' Acts are given with very little abridgment, and being printed in small letter, they occupy comparatively little space. The article TARIFF contains an account of the various duties, drawbacks, and bounties, on the importation and exportation of all sorts of commodities into and from this country.-(See Preface to Second Edition.) We once intended to give the tariffs of some of the principal Continental states; but from the frequency of the changes made in them, they would very soon have become obsolete, and would have tended rather to mislead than to instruct. But the reader will notwithstanding find a good deal of information as to foreign duties under the articles CADIZ, DANTZIC, HAVRE, NAPLES, NEW YORK, TRIESTE, &c. VIII. Among the articles of a miscellaneous description, may be specified ALIENS, Ap- PRENTICE, AUCTIONEER, BALANCE OF TRADE, BANKRUPTCT, CONTRABAND, CREDIT Digitized by Google PREFACE. vii HANSEATIC LEAGUE, IMPORTS AND Exports, IMPRESSMENT, IONIAN ISLANDS, MARITIME Law, PATENTS, PAWNBROKING, PIRACY, POPULATION, PRECIOUS METALS, PRICES, Par- VATEERS, PUBLICANS, QUARANTINE, REVENUE AND EXPENDITURE, TALLY TRADE, TRUCK SYSTEM, &c. IX. Accounts are given, under their proper heads, of the principal emporiums with which this country has any immediate intercourse of the commodities usually exported from and imported into them of their monies, weights, and measures; and of such of their institu- tions, customs, and regulations, with respect to commerce and navigation, as seemed to de- serve notice. There are occasionally subjoined to these accounts of the great sea-ports, pretty full statements of the trade of the countries in which they are situated, as in the in- stances of ALEXANDRIA, AMSTERDAM, BORDEAUX, CADIZ, CALCUTTA, CANTON, COPEN- HAGEN, DANTZIC, HAVANNAH, HAVRE, NAPLES, NEW YORK, PALERMO, PETERSBURGH, Rio DE JANEIRO, SMYRNA, TRIESTE, VERA CRUZ, &c. To have attempted to do this systematically would have increased the size of the work beyond all reasonable limits, and embarrassed it with details nowise interesting to the English reader. The plan we have adopted has enabled us to treat of such matters as might be supposed of importance in Eng- land, and to reject the rest. We believe, however, that, notwithstanding this selection, those who compare this work with others, will find that it contains a much larger mass of au- thentic information respecting the trade and navigation of foreign countries than is to be found in any other English publication. The reader may be inclined, perhaps, to think that it must be impossible to embrace the discussion of so many subjects in a single octavo volume, without treating a large propor- tion in a very brief and unsatisfactory manner. But, in point of fact, this single octavo contains about as much letter-press as is contained in two ordinary folio volumes, and more than is contained in Macpherson's Annals of Commerce, in four large volumes quarto, pub- lished at 8/. 8s.! This extraordinary condensation has been effected without any sacrifice either of beauty or distinctness. Could we suppose that the substance of the book is at all equal to its form, there would be little room for doubt as to its success. Aware that, in a work of this nature, accuracy in matters of fact is of primary import- ance, we have rarely made any statement without mentioning our authority. Except, too, in the case of books in every one's hands, or Dictionaries, the page or chapter of the works referred to is generally specified experience having taught us that the convenient practice of stringing together a list of authorities at the end of an article is much oftener a cloak for ignorance than an evidence of research. Our object being to describe articles in the state in which they are offered for sale, we have not entered, except when it was necessary to give precision or clearness to their de- scription, into any details as to the processes followed in their manufacture. Such is a rough outline of what the reader may expect to meet with in this Dictionary. We do not, however, flatter ourselves with the notion that he will consider that all that has been attempted has been properly executed. In a work embracing such an extreme range and diversity of subjects, as to many of which it is exceedingly difficult, if not quite impossible, to obtain accurate information, no one will be offended should he detect a few errors. At the same time we can honestly say that neither labour nor expense has been spared to render the work worthy of the public confidence and patronage. The author has been almost incessantly engaged upon it for upwards of three years and be may be said to have spent the previous part of his life in preparing for the undertaking. He has derived valuable assistance from some distinguished official gentlemen, and from many eminent merchants; and has en- deavoured, wherever it was practicable, to build his conclusions upon official documents. But in very many instances he has been obliged to adopt less authentic data; and he does not suppose that he has had sagacity enough always to resort to the best authorities, or that, amidst conflicting and contradictory statements, he has uniformly selected those most worthy of being relied upon, or that the inferences he has drawn are always such as the real circum- stances of the case would warrant. But he has done his best not to be wanting in these respects. Not being engaged in any sort of business, nor being under any description of obligation to any political party, there was nothing to induce us, in any instance, to conceal or pervert the truth. We have, therefore, censured freely and openly whatever we consi- dered wrong but the grounds of our opinion are uniformly assigned 80 that the reader may always judge for himself as to its correctness. Our sole object has been to produce a work that should be generally useful, particularly to merchants and traders, and which should be creditable to ourselves. Whether we have succeeded, the award of the public will show and to it we submit our labours, not with frigid indifference," but with an anxious hope that it may be found we have not misemployed our time, and engaged in an undertaking too vast for our limited means. The following notices of some of the most celebrated Commercial Dictionaries may not, perhaps, be unacceptable. At all events, they will show that there is at least room for the present attempt. The Grand Dictionnaire de Commerce, begun and principally executed by M. Savary, Digitized by Google viii PREFACE. Inspector of Customs at Paris, and completed by his brother, the Abbé Savary, Canon of St. Maur, was published at Paris in 1723, in two volumes folio : a supplemental volume being added in 1730. This was the first work of the kind that appeared in modern Europe; and has furnished the principal part of the materials for most of those by which it has been followed. The undertaking was liberally patronised by the French government, who justly considered that a Commercial Dictionary, if well executed, would be of national importance. Hence a considerable, and, indeed, the most valuable, portion of M. Savary's work is com- piled from Memoirs sent him, by order of government, by the inspectors of manufactures in France, and by the French consuls in foreign countries. An enlarged and improved edition of the Dictionnaire was published at Geneva in 1750, in six folio volumes. But the best edition is that of Copenhagen, in five volumes folio; the first of which appeared in 1759, and the last in 1765. More than the half of this work consists of matter altogether foreign to its proper object. It is, in fact, a sort of Dictionary of Manufactures as well as of Commerce; descriptions being given, which are, necessarily perhaps, in most instances exceedingly incomplete, and which the want of plates often renders unintelligible, of the methods followed in the manufacture of the commodities described. It is also filled with lengthened articles on subjects of natural history, on the bye laws and privileges of different corporations, and a variety of subjects nowise connected with commercial pursuits. No one, however, need look into it for any development of sound principles, or for enlarged views. It is valuable as a repertory of facts relating to commerce and manufactures at the commencement of last century, collected with laudable care and industry ; but the spirit which pervades it is that of a customs officer, and not that of a merchant or a philosopher. "Souvent dans ses réflexions, il tend plutôt à égarer ses lecteurs qu'à les conduire, et des maximes nuisibles au progrès du commerce et de Pindustrie obtiennent presque toujours ses éloges et son approbation." The preceding extract is from the Prospectus, in one volume octavo, published by the Abbé Morellet, in 1769, of a new Commercial Dictionary, to be completed in five or pro- bably six volumes folio. This Prospectus is a work of sterling merit; and from the ac- knowledged learning, talents, and capacity of its author for laborious exertion, there can be no doubt that, had the projected Dictionary been completed, it would have been infinitely superior to that of Savary. It appears (Prospectus, pp. 353-373.) that Morellet had been engaged for a number of years in preparations for this great work and that he had amassed a large collection of books and manuscripts relative to the commerce, navigation, colonies, arts, &c. of France and other countries. The enterprise was begun under the auspices of M. Trudaine, Intendant of Finance, and was patronised by Messrs. 'Averdy and Bertin, Comptrollers General. But whether it were owing to the gigantic nature of the under- taking, to the author having become too much engrossed with other pursuits, the want of sufficient encouragement, or some other cause, no part of the proposed Dictionary ever ap- peared. We are ignorant of the fate of the valuable collection of manuscripts made by the Abbé Morellet. His books were sold at Paris within these few years. A Commercial Dictionary, in three volumes 4to, forming part of the Encyclopédie Méthodique, was published at Paris in 1783. It is very unequally executed, and contains numerous articles that might have been advantageously left out. The editors acknowledge in their Preface that they have, in most instances, been obliged to borrow from Savary. The best parts of the work are copied from the edition of the Traité Général de Commerce of Ricard, published at Amsterdam in 1781, in two volumes 4to. The earliest Commercial Dictionary published in England, was compiled by Malachy Postlethwayt, Esq., a diligent and indefatigable writer. The first part of the first edition appeared in 1751. The last edition, in two enormous folio volumes, was published in 1774. It is chargeable with the same defects as that of M. Savary, of which, indeed, it is for the most part a literal translation. The author has made no effort to condense or combine the statements under different articles, which are frequently not a little contradictory at the same time that many of them are totally unconnected with commerce. In 1761, Richard Rolt, Esq. published a Commercial Dictionary in one pretty large folio volume. The best part of this work is its Preface, which was contributed by Dr. Johnson. It is for the most part abridged from Postlethwayt; but it contains some useful original ar- ticles, mixed, however, with many alien to the subject. In 1766, a Commercial Dictionary was published, in two rather thin folio volumes, by Thomas Mortimer, Esq., at that time Vice-Consul for the Netherlands. This is a more commodious and better arranged, but not a more valuable work than that of Postlethwayt. The plan of the author embraces, like that of his predecessors, too great a variety of objects; more than half the work being filled with geographical articles and articles describing the processes carried on in different departments of manufacturing industry ; there are also ar- ticles on very inany subjects, such as architecture, the natural history of the ocean, the land- tax, the qualifications of surgeons, &c., the relation of which to commerce, navigation, or manufactures, it seems difficult to discover. In 1810, a Commercial Dictionary was published, in one thick octavo volume, purporting Digitized by Google PREFACE. ix to be by Mr. Mortimer. We understand, however, that he had but little, if any thing, to do with its compilation. It is quite unworthy of the subject, and of the epoch when it appeared. It has all the faults of those by which it was preceded, with but few peculiar merits. Being not only a Dictionary of Commerce and Navigation, but of Manufactures, it contains accounts of the different arts: but to describe these in a sa'isfactory and really useful manner, would require several volumes, and the co-operation of many individuals : so that, while the accounts referred to are worth very little, they occupy so large a space that room has not been left for the proper discussion of those subjects from which alone the work derives whatever value it possesses. Thus, there is an article of twenty-two pages technically describing the various processes of the art of painting, while the general article on commerce is comprised in less than two pages. The articles on coin and money do not together occupy four pages, being considerably less than the space allotted to the articles on engraving and etching. There is not a word said as to the circumstances which determine the course of exchange; and the important subject of credit is disposed of in less than two lines! Perhaps, however, the greatest defect in the work is its total want of any thing like science. No attempt is ever made to explain the principles on which any operation depends. Every thing is treated as if it were empirical and arbitrary. Except in the legal articles, no authorities are quoted, so that very little dependence can be placed on the state- ments advanced. In another Commercial Dictionary, republished within these few years, the general article on commerce consists of a discussion with respect to simple and compound demand, and simple and double competition luckily the article does not fill quite a page; being consi- derably shorter than the description of the kaleidoscope. Under these circumstances, we do think that there is room for a new Dictionary of Com- merce and Commercial Navigation and whatever may be thought of our work, it cannot be said that in bringing it into the field we are encroaching on ground already fully occupied. EXTRACTS FROM THE PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. THE first impression of this Dictionary, consisting of 2,000 copies, was entirely sold off in less than nine months from the date of its publication. We feel very deeply indebted to the public for this unequivocal proof of its approbation and we have endeavoured to evince our gratitude, by labouring to render the work less undeserving a continuance of the favour with which it has been honoured. In the prosecution of this object, we can truly affirm we have grudged neither labour nor expense. We have subjected every part of the work to a careful revision ; have endeavoured to eradicate the errors that had crept into it; to improve those parts that were incomplete or defective ; and to supply such articles as had been omitted. We dare not flatter ourselves with the idea that we have fully succeeded in these objects. The want of recent and accurate details as to several important subjects, has been an obstacle we have not, in all cases, been able to overcome; but those in any degree familiar with such investigations will not, perhaps, be disposed severely to censure our deficiencies in this respect. The changes in the law bearing upon commercial transactions have been carefully speci- fied. Copious abstracts of all the late Customs Acts are contained in the articles COLONIES AND COLONY TRADE, IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION, NAVIGATION Laws, REGISTRY, SMUGGLING, WAREHOUSING, &c. The abolition of the East India Company's commercial monopoly, and the great and growing interest that has in consequence been excited amongst all classes as to the com- mercial capabilities and practices of India, China, and other Eastern countries, have made us bestow peculiar attention to this department. The articles BANGKOK, BATAVIA, BoM- BAY, BUSHIRE, Bussora, CALCUTTA, CANTON, COLUMBO, EAST INDIA COMPANY AND EAST INDIES, INDIGO, Масло, MADRAS, MANILLA, MOCHA, MUSCAT, NANGASACKI, RAN- GOON, SINGAPORE, TATTA, TEA, &c. contain, it is believed, a greater mass of recent and well-authenticated details as to the commerce of the vast countries stretching from the Arabic Gulf to the Chinese Sea, than is to be found in any other English publication. Digitized by Google X PREFACE. In compiling these and other articles, we derived much valuable assistance from John Crawfurd, Esq. The article BANKING is mostly new. Besides embodying the late act prolonging the charter of the Bank of England, and the more important details given in the Report of the Select Committee on the Renewal of the Bank Charter, this article contains some novel and important information not elsewhere to be met with. No account of the issues of the Bank of England has hitherto been published, that extends farther back than 1777. But this deficiency is now, for the first time, supplied; the Directors having obligingly furnished us with an account of the issues of the Bank on the 28th of February and the 31st of August of each year, from 1698, within four years of its establishment, down to the present time. We have also procured a statement, from authority, of the mode of transacting busi- ness in the Bank of Scotland and have been able to supply several additional particulars, both with respect to British and to foreign banks. We have made many additions to, and alterations in, the numerous articles descriptive of the various commodities that form the materials of commerce, and the historical notices by which some of them are accompanied. We hope they will be found more accurate and complete than formerly. & The Gazetteer department, or that embracing accounts of the principal foreign emporiums with which this country maintains a direct intercourse, was, perhaps, the most defective in the old edition. If it be no longer in this predicament, the improvement has been princi- pally owing to official co-operation. The sort of information we desired as to the great sea- port towns could not be derived from books, nor from any sources accessible to the public and it was necessary, therefore, to set about exploring others. In this view we drew up a series of queries, embracing an investigation of imports and exports, commercial and ship- ping regulations, port charges, duties, &c., that might be transmitted to any port in any part of the world. There would, however, in many instances, have been much difficulty in getting them answered with the requisite care and attention by private individuals; and the scheme would have had but a very partial success, had it not been for the friendly and effectual interference of Mr. Poulett Thomson. Alive to the importance of having the queries properly answered, he voluntarily undertook to use his influence with Lord Palmer- ston to get them transmitted to the Consuls. This the Noble Lord most readily did and answers have been received from the greater number of these functionaries. There is, of course, a considerable inequality amongst them ; but they almost all embody a great deal of valuable information, and some of them are drawn up with a degree of skill and sagacity, and display an extent of research and a capacity of observation, that reflect the highest credit on their authors. The information thus obtained, added to what we received through other, but not less authentic channels, supplied us with the means of describing twice the number of foreign sea-ports noticed in our former edition ; and of enlarging, amending, and correcting the accounts of such as were noticed. Besides much fuller details than have ever been previ- ously published of the nature and extent of the trade of many of these places, the reader will, in most instances, find a minute account of the regulations to be observed respecting the entry and clearing of ships and goods, with statements of the different public charges laid on shipping, the rates of commission and brokerage, the duties on the principal goods imported and exported, the prices of provisions, the regulations as to quarantine, the practice as to credit, banking, &c., with a variety of other particulars. We have also described the ports; and have specified their depth of water, the course to be steered by vessels on entering, with the rules as to pilotage, and the fees on accounts of pilots, light-houses, &c. As it is very difficult to convey a sufficiently distinct idea of a sea-port by any description, we have given plans, taken from the latest and best authorities, of about a dozen of the principal foreign ports. Whether we have succeeded, is more than we can venture to say ; but we hope we have said enough to satisfy the reader, that we have spared no pains to furnish him with authentic information on this important department. The TARIFF, or Table of Duties on Imports, &c., in this edition, is highly important and valuable. It is divided into three columns the first containing an account of the existing duties payable on the importation of foreign products for home use, as the same were fixed by the act of last year, 3 & 4 Will. IV. cap. 56. The next column exhibits the duties pay- able on the same articles in 1819, as fixed by the Act 59 Geo. III. cap. 52. and the third and last column exhibits the duties as they were fixed in 1787 by Mr. Pitt's Consolidation Act, the 27 Geo. III. cap. 13. The duties are rated throughout in Imperial weights and measures; and allowances have been made for differences in the mode of charging, &c. The reader has, therefore, before him, and may compare together, the present customs' duties with the duties as they stood at the end of the late war, and at its commencement. No similar Table is to be met with in any other work. We are indebted for it to J. D. Hume, Esq., of the Board of Trade, at whose suggestion, and under whose direction, it has been prepared. Its compilation was a work of great labour and difficulty ; and could not Digitized by Google PREFACE. xi have been accomplished by any one not thoroughly acquainted with the customs acts, and the various changes in the mode of assessing the duties. Its accuracy may be relied on. The article SLAVES AND SLAVE TRADE contains a full abstract of the late important statute for the abolition of slavery. Among the new articles of a miscellaneous description, may be specified those on ALIENS, IONIAN ISLANDS, POPULATION, TALLY TRADE, TRUCK SYSTEM, &c. On the whole, we trust it will be found, that the work has been improved throughout, either by the correction of mistakes, or by the addition of new and useful matter. Still, however, we are well aware that it is in various respects defective; but we are not without hopes that those who look into it will be indulgent enough to believe that this has been owing as much to the extreme difficulty, or rather, perhaps, the impossibility, of obtaining accurate information respecting some of the subjects treated of, as to the want of care and attention on our part. Even as regards many important topics connected with the commerce and manufactures of Great Britain, we have had to regret the want of authentic details, and been obliged to grope our way in the dark. Nothing, indeed, can exceed the accuracy and luminous arrangement of the customs accounts furnished by the Inspector General of Imports and Exports. But, owing to the want of any details as to the cross-channel trade between Great Britain and Ireland, the value of these accounts is much diminished. The condition and habits of the people of Ireland and of Great Britain are SO very different, that conclusions deduced from considering the trade or consumption of the United Kingdom en masse, are generally of very little value; and may, indeed, unless carefully sifted, be the most fallacious imaginable while, owing to the want of any account of the trade between the two great divisions of the empire, it is not possible accurately to estimate the consump- tion of either, or to obtain any sure means of judging of their respective progress in wealth and industry. As respects manufactures, there is a still greater deficiency of trustworthy, comprehensive details. We submitted the articles relating to them in this work, to the highest practical authorities; so that we incline to think they are about as accurate as they can well be rendered in the absence of official returns. It is far, however, from creditable to the country, that we should be obliged, in matters of such importance, to resort to private and irresponsible individuals for the means of coming at the truth. Statistical science in Great Britain is, indeed, at a very low ebb: and we are not of the number of those who suppose that it will ever be materially improved, unless government become more sensible, than it has hitherto shown itself to be, of its importance, and set machinery in motion, adequate to procure correct and comprehensive returns. The statistical Tables published by the Board of Trade embrace the substance of hun- dreds of accounts, scattered over a vast mass of Parliamentary papers. They seem to be compiled with great care and judgment, and are a very valuable acquisition. We have fre- quently been largely indebted to them. But their arrangement, and their constantly in- creasing number and bulk, make them quite unfit for being readily or advantageously consulted by practical men. Most part of the returns relating to the principal articles given in this work, go back to a much more distant period than those published by the Board of Trade. We have seen no reason to modify or alter any PRINCIPLE OF COMMERCIAL POLICY ad- vanced in our former edition. In some instances, we have varied the exposition a little, but that is all. In every case, however, we have separated the practical, legal, and historical statements from those of a speculative nature; so that those most disposed to dissent from our theoretical notions will, we hope, be ready to admit that they have not been allowed to detract from the practical utility of the work. The important service done to us, or rather to the public, by Mr. Poulett Thomson, in the obtaining of the Consular Returns, is a part only of what we owe to that gentleman. We never applied to him for any sort of information which it was in his power to supply, that he did not forthwith place at our free disposal. That system of commercial policy, of which the Right Honourable gentleman is the enlightened and eloquent defender, has nothing to fear from publicity. On the contrary, the better informed the public become, the more fully the real facts and circumstances relating to it are brought before them, the more will they be satisfied of the soundness of the measures advocated by Mr. Thomson, and of their being eminently well fitted to promote and consolidate the commercial greatness and prosperity of the empire. It is proper, also, to state, that besides the Board of Trade, all the other departments of government to which we had occasion to apply, discovered every anxiety to be of use to us. We have been particularly indebted to Mr. Spring Rice; Sir Henry Parnell; Mr. Wood, Chairman of the Board of Stamps and Taxes; Mr. Villiers, Ambassador at Madrid; and Mr. Mayer, of the Colonial Office. Digitized by Google ADVERTISEMENT To THE LAST ENGLISH EDITION. IN this edition all the more important returns and accounts as to the TRADE, NAVIGA- TION, and CONSUMPTION of Great Britain and other countries, have been brought down to the latest period. In some instances, too, the form of the returns has been changed, and new ones, drawn up on a more comprehensive plan, and embracing various additional parti- culars, have been substituted for those previously embodied in the work. In illustration of this, the reader is referred to the tables now given under the article IMPORTS and EXPORTS they will, it is believed, be found to contain, within a brief space, the completest view hitherto laid before the public of the recent trade of the empire. A few articles have also been rewritten, among which may be specified those on LIGHTHOUSES, BOMBAY, MALTA, SYDNEY, &c. The SUPPLEMENT given with this edition has been greatly enlarged, and, it is hoped, materially improved. It contains as much matter as would fill, if printed with types of medium size, a large octavo volume, and embraces a good deal of important information not elsewhere to be met with. Neither labour nor expense has been spared to render it in- structive and trustworthy. It embodies the principal part of the Supplement issued in De- cember, 1836, and has, among others, articles on the following subjects; viz. AUSTRIAN TABIFF, and COMMERCIAL TREATY with AUSTRIA ; JOINT-STOCK BANKS, embracing a complete list of these establishments, with an examination of the principles on which they should be founded; New CUSTOMS AcT for BENGAL; NEW COINAGE of AMERICA and INDIA; State of the BRITISH COTTON MANUFACTURE from 1816 to 1838, both inclusive; Tables showing the extent of the FOREIGN TRADE of the Country during each of the ten years ending with 1838, with remarks; TRADE with PRUSSIA, PRUSSIAN COMMERCIAL LEAGUE and TARIFF; RAILWAYS and RAILWAY LEGISLATION; CLASSIFICATION of SHIPS; State of the SUGAR TRADE; ALTERATIONS in the BRITISH and RUSSIAN TARIFFS; COMMERCIAL TREATY with TURKEY; with notices of CIVITA VECCHIA, GALACZ, GUAY- AQUIL, PORT LAMAR, MONTEVIDEO, MOULMEIN, ROSTOCK, &c. The author has been able to avail himself, in preparing this edition, of some very valuable communications. In this respect, he is under especial obligations to the govern- ment of Prussia. With a liberality of which there are a few (if any) examples, it has not merely taken pains to supply him with ample and authentic details as to the Commerce, Population, Finances, &c., of that flourishing kingdom, but has authorised him to make any use he pleased of the information so communicated, without stipulation or condition of any kind. We have also been indebted to various private and official gentlemen, at home and abroad, for many useful hints and valuable statements. Mr. Porter, of the Board of Trade, allowed us the use of several unpublished returns belonging to his department; Mr. Wood, Chair- man of the Board of Excise, and Mr. Mayer, of the Colonial Office, gave us every assist- ance in their power; the intervention of Mr. Hall, late vice-consul for the republic of Uruguay, at Liverpool, and of Mr. Kreeft, consul for Mecklenburg, has enabled us to furnish the commercial world with accurate details as to the ports of Montevideo, Rostock, &c.; and gentlemen resident in Bombay, Calcutta, Malta, Singapore, &c., have supplied im- portant information. We are sorry that our limits will not permit of our specifying the different parties to whom we have been indebted; but we beg them to accept our best thanks for their attentions. We are most anxious to have the means of correcting the errors into which we may have fallen, and of rendering our book as accurate as possible. This, however, can only be effected by gentlemen apprising us of the changes that are con- stantly taking place in the regulations under which commerce is conducted, and in the channels in which it is carried on. This information, so important to the mercantile world, might, sometimes, be communicated without much trouble, and will always be most grate- fully received by us. xii Digitized by Google DICTIONARY or COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL NAVIGATION. AAM, AUM, or Ann, a measure for liquids, used at Amsterdam, Antwerp, Hamburgh, Frankfort, &c. At Amsterdam it is nearly equal to 41 English wine gallons, at Antwerp to 364 ditto, at Hamburgh to 384 ditto, and at Frankfort to 39 ditto. ABANDONMENT, in commerce and navigation, is used to express the abandoning or surrendering of the ship or goods insured to the insurer. It is held, by the law of England, that the insured has the right to abandon, and to compel the insurers to pay the whole value of the thing insured, in every case "where, by the happening of any of the misfortunes or perils insured against, the voyage is lost or not worth pursuing, and the projected adventure is frustrated; or where the thing insured is so damaged and spoiled as to be of little or no value to the owner; or where the salvage is very high ; or where what is saved is of less value than the freight; or where further expense is necessary, and the insurer will not undertake to pay that expense," &c.-(Marshall, book i. cap. 13. § 1.) Abandonment very frequently takes place in cases of capture; the loss is then total, and no question can arise in respect to it. In cases, however, in which a ship and cargo are recaptured within such a time that the object of the voyage is not lost, the insured is not entitled to abandon. The mere stranding of a ship is not deemed of itself such a loss as will justify an abandonment. If by some fortunate accident, by the exertions of the crew, or by any borrowed assistance, the ship be got off and rendered capable of continuing her voyage, it is not a total loss, and the insurers are only liable for the expenses occasioned by the stranding. It is only where the stranding is followed by shipwreck, or in any other way renders the ship incapable of prosecuting her voyage, that the insured can abandon. It has been decided, that damage sustained in a voyage to the extent of forty-eight per cent. of the value of the ship, did not entitle the insured to abandon. If a cargo be damaged in the course of a voyage, and it appears that what has been saved is less than the amount of freight, it is held to be a total loss.-(Park on Insurance, cap. 9.) When by the occurrence of any of the perils insured against, the insured has acquired a right to abandon, he is at liberty either to abandon or not, as he thinks proper. He is in no case bound to abandon; but if he make an election, and resolve to abandon, he must abide by his resolution, and has no longer the power to claim for a partial loss. In some foreign countries specific periods are fixed by law within which the insured, after being informed of the loss, must elect either to abandon or not. In this country, however, no particular period is fixed for this purpose; but the rule is, that if the insured determine to abandon, he must intimate such determination to the insurers within a reasonable period after he has got intelli- gence of the loss,-and unnecessary delay in making this intimation being interpreted to mean that he has decided not to abandon. No particular form or solemnity is required in giving notice of an abandonment. It may be given either to the underwriter himself, or the agent who subscribed for him. The effect of an abandonment is to vest all the rights of the insured in the insurers. The latter become the legal owners of the ship, and as such are liable for all her future outgoings, and entitled to her future earnings. An abandonment, when once made, is irrevocable. In case of a shipwreck or other misfortune, the captain and crew are bound to exert them- selves to the utmost to save as much property as possible and to enable them to do this without prejudice to the right of abandonment, our policies provide that, " in case of any loss or mis- A 1 Digitized by Google 2 ABATEMENT. fortune, the insured, their factors, servants, and assigns, shall be at liberty to sue and labour about the defence, safeguard, and recovery of the goods, and merchandises, and ship, &c., without prejudice to the insurance to the charges whereof the insurers agree to contribute, each according to the rate and quantity of his subscription." " From the nature of his situation," says Mr. Serjeant Marshall, " the captain has an im- plied authority, not only from the insured, but also from the insurers and all others interested in the ship or cargo, in case of misfortune, to do whatever he thinks most conducive to the general interest of all concerned and they are all bound by his acts. Therefore, if the ship be disabled by stress of weather, or any other peril of the sea, the captain may hire another vessel for the transport of the goods to their port of destination, if he think it for the interest of all concerned that he should do so or he may, upon a capture, appeal against a sentence of condemnation, or carry on any other proceedings for the recovery of the ship and cargo, provided he has a probable ground for doing so; or be may, upon the loss of the ship, invest the produce of the goods saved in other goods, which he may ship for his original port of destination for whatever is recovered of the effects insured, the captain is accountable to the insurers. If the insured neglect to abandon when he has it in his power to do so, be adopts the acts of the captain, and he is bound by them. If, on the other hand, the insurers, after notice of abandonment, suffer the captain to continue in the management, he becomes their agent, and they are bound by his acts." As to the sailors, when a misfortune happens, they are bound to save and preserve the merchandise to the best of their power; and while they are so employed, they are entitled to wages, so far, at least, as what is saved will allow : but if they refuse to assist in this, they shall have neither wages nor reward. In this the Rhodian law, and the laws of Oleron, Wisby, and the Hanse Towns, agree. The policy of the practice of abandonment seems very questionable. The object of an insurance is to render the insurer liable for whatever loss or damage may be incurred. But this object does not seem to be promoted by compelling him to pay as for a total loss, when, in fact, the loss is only partial. The captain and crew of the ship are selected by the owners, are their servants, and are responsible to them for their proceedings. But in the event of a ship being stranded, and so damaged that the owners are entitled to abandon, the captain and crew become the servants of the underwriters, who had nothing to do with their ap- pointment, and to whom they are most probably altogether unknown. It is admitted that a regulation of this sort can hardly fail of leading, and has indeed frequently led, to very great abuses. We, therefore, are inclined to think that abandonment ought not to be allowed where any property is known to exist; but that such property should continue at the dis- posal of the owners and their agents, and that the underwriters should be liable only for the damage really incurred. The first case that came before the British courts with respect to an abandonment was decided by Lord Hardwicke, in 1744. Mr. Justice Buller appears to have concurred in the opinion now stated, that abandonment should not have been allowed in cases where the loss is not total. For further information as to this subject, see the excellent works of Mr. Serjeant Marshall (book i. cap. 13) ; and of Mr. Justice Park (cap. 9) on the Law of Insurance. [The law of abandonment has been pronounced by Lord Eldon to be one of the most uncertain branches of the law; and Mr. Benecke, in his work on Indemnity, expresses the opinion-an opinion sanctioned by Chancellor Kent-that little reliance is to be put on any general principles in determining what that law is in a particular case, but that recourse must be had, for this purpose, to actual decisions. See Kent's Commentaries, Lecture 48. -Am. Ed.] ABATEMENT, or REBATE, is the name sometimes given to a discount allowed for prompt payment it is also used to express the deduction that is sometimes made at the custombouse from the duties chargeable upon such goods as are damaged. This allowance is regulated by the 6 Geo. 4 C. 107. & 28. No abatement is made from the duties charged on coffee, currants, figs, lemons, oranges, raisins, tobacco, and wine. (No abatement is to be made, on account of damage on the voyage, from the duties pay- able on the following drugs, viz cantharides, cocculus Indicus, Guinea grains, ipecacuanha, jalap, nux vomica, opium, rhubarb, sarsaparilla, and senna.-4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 89, s 5.- Sup.) [ In the United States, in respect to all articles imported, that have been damaged during the voyage, whether subject to a duty ad valorem, or which are chargeable with a specific duty, either by number, weight or measure, the appraisers (appointed for the purpose) shall as- certain and certify to what rate or per centage the said goods, wares, or merchandise, are damaged, and the rate or per centage of damage, so ascertained and certified, shall be deducted from the original amount subject to a duty ad valorem, or from the actual or original number, weight, or measure, on which specific duties would have been computed Provided that no at lowance for the damage on any goods, wares, and merchandise, that have been entered, and on which the duties have been paid, or secured to be paid, and for which a permit has been granted to the owner or consignee thereof, and which may, on examining the same, prove to Digitized by Google ACACIA-ACIDS. 8 be damaged, shall be made, unless proof, to ascertain such damage, shall be lodged in the customhouse of the port or place where such goods, wares, or merchandise, have been landed, within ten days after the landing of such merchandise. And every person who shall be ap- pointed to ascertain the damage, during the voyage, of any goods, wares, or merchandise, shall take and subscribe an oath or affirmation for the faithful performance of the duties assigned him. See Act 2d March, 1799, " to regulate the collection of duties on imports and tonnage," sec. 52, where the form of the oath or affirmation just mentioned may be found. The mode of appraisement is pointed out in the act of March 1st, 1823, supplementary to that of March 2d, 1799.-Am. Ed.] ACACIA. See GUM ARABIC. ACAPULCO, a celebrated seaport on the western coast of Mexico, in lat. 16° 50H N., long. 99° 46' W. Population uncertain, but said to be from 4,000 to 5,000. The harbour of Acapulco is one of the finest in the world, and is capable of containing any number of ships in the most perfect safety. Previously to the emancipation of Spanish America, a galleon or large ship, richly laden, was annually sent from Acapulco to Manilla, in the Philippine Islands: and at her return a fair was held, which was much resorted to by strangers. But this sort of intercourse is no longer carried on, the trade to Manilla and all other places being now conducted by private individuals. The exports consist of bullion, cochineal, cocoa, wool, indigo, &c. The imports principally consist of cotton goods, hardware, articles of jewellery, raw and wrought silks, spices, and aromatics. Acapulco is extremely unhealthy and though it be the principal port on the west coast of Mexico, its commerce is not very considerable. The navigation from Acapulco to Guayaquil and Callao is exceedingly tedious and difficult, so that there is but little intercourse between Mexico and Peru. The moneys, weights, and measures, are the same as those of Spain for which see CADIZ. [Ruschenberger, who visited Acapulco in 1836, states its population to be about 3000 ; and this he asserts to be greater than it ever was previous to the separation of Mexico from Spain.-Am. Ed.] ACIDS are a class of compounds which are distinguished from all others by the following properties. They are generally possessed of a very sharp and sour taste; redden the infu- sions of blue vegetable colours are often highly corrosive, and enter into combination with the alkalies, earths, and metallic oxides; forming compounds in which the characters of the constituents are entirely destroyed, and new ones produced differing in every respect from those previously existing. The quality or strength of an acid is generally ascertained, either by its specific gravity, which is found by means of the hydrometer, if the acid be liquid, or by the quantity of pure and dry subcarbonate of potass or soda, or of carbonate of lime (marble) which a given weight of the acid requires for its exact neutralization. This latter process is termed Acidimetry, or the ascertaining the quantity of real acid existing in any of the liquid or crystallized acids. The principal acids at present known are, the Acetic, Benzoic, Boracic, Bromic, Carbonic, Citric, Chloric, Cyanic, Fluoric, Ferroprussic, Gallic, Hydrobromic, Hydriodic, Iodic, Lactic, Malic, Margaric, Meconic, Muriatic or Hydrochloric, Nitrous, Nitric, Oleic, Oxalic, Phospo- ric, Prussic or Hydrocyanic, Purpuric, Saccholactic, Suberic, Sulphurous, Sulphuric, Tartaric, Uric, and many others which it would be superfluous to detail. It is the most important only of these, however, that will be here treated of, and more particularly those employed in the arts and manufactures. Acetic or pyroligneous acid.-This acid, in its pure and concentrated form, is obtained from the fluid matter which passes over in distillation, when wood is exposed to heat in close iron cylinders. This fluid is a mixture of acetic acid, tar, and a very volatile ether; from these the acid may be separated, after a second distillation, by saturating with chalk, and evaporating to dryness; an acetate of lime is thus procured, which, by mixture with sulphate of soda, (Glauber's salt,) is decomposed, the re- sulting compounds being an insoluble sulphate of lime, and a very soluble acetate of soda these are easily separated from each other by solution in water and filtration; the acetate of soda being ob- tained in the crystalline form by evaporation. From this, or the acetate of lime, some manufacturers employing the former, others the latter, the acetic acid is obtained by distillation with sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol ;) as thus procured, it is a colourless, volatile fluid, having a very pungent and refresh- ing odour, and a strong acid taste. Its strength should be ascertained by the quantity of marble re- quired for its neutralization, as its specific gravity does not give a correct indication. It is employed in the preparation of the acetate of lead (sugar of lead) in many of the pharmaceutical compounds, and also as an antiseptic. Vinegar is an impure and very dilute acetic acid, obtained by exposing either weak wines or in- fusions of malt to the air and a slow fermentation; it contains, besides the pure acid, a large quantity of colouring matter, some mucilage, and a little spirit; from these it is readily separated by distilla- tion. The impurities with which this distilled vinegar is sometimes adulterated, or with which it is accidentally contaminated, are oil of vitriol, added to increase the acidity, and oxides of tin or copper, arising from the vinegar having been distilled through tin or copper worms. These may be easily detected; the oil of vitriol by the addition of a little solution of muriate of barytes to the distilled vinegar, which, should the acid be present, will cause a dense white precipitate and the oxides of tin or copper by the addition of water impregnated with sulphuretted hydrogen. Vinegar is employed in many culinary and domestic operations, and also very largely in the manufacture of the carbonate of lead, (white lead.) Benzoic acid-exists naturally, Tormed in the gum benzoin, and may be procured either by sub- mitting the benzoin in fine powder to repeated sublimations, or by digesting it with lime and water, Digitized by Google 4 ACIDS. straining off the clear solution, and adding muriatic acid, which enters into combination with the lime, and the benzoic acid, being nearly insoluble in water, falls as a white powder; this may be further purified by a sublimation. Benzoic acid is of a beautiful pearly white colour when pure, has a very peculiar aromatic odour, and an acrid, acid, and bitter taste; it is used in making pastilles and perfumed incense. This acid also occurs in the balsams of Tolu and Peru, and in the urine of the horse and cow. Boracic acid-is found in an uncombined state in many of the hot springs of Tuscany, as also at Sesso in the Florentine territory, from whence it has received the name of Sessolin. In Thibet, Per- sia, and South America, it occurs in combination with soda, and is imported from the former place into this country in a crystalline form, under the name of Tincal. These crystals are coated with a rancid, fatty substance, and require to be purified by repeated solutions and crystallizations; after which it is sold under the appellation of borax (bi-borate of soda from a hot solution of this salt the boracic acid is readily obtained, by the addition of sulphuric acid in slight excess; sulphate of soda is formed, and the boracic acid crystallizes as the solution cools. When pure, these crystals are white, and have an unctuous greasy feel they are soluble in alcohol, communicating a green tinge to its flame; when fused it forms a transparent glass, and has been found by Mr. Faraday to unite with the oxide of lead, producing a very uniform glass, free from all defects, and well adapted for the purpose of telescopes and other astronomical instruments. Borax is much employed in the arts, particularly in metallurgic operations as a flux; also in enamelling, and in pharmacy. Carbonic acid.-This acid occurs very abundantly in nature, combined with lime, magnesia, barytes, aerial acid, fixed air, mephitic acid; from any of these it is easily separated by the addition of nearly any of the other acids. In its uncombined form, it is a transparent, gaseous fluid, having a density of 1.53, atmospheric air being unity it is absorbed to a considerable extent by water, and when the water is rendered slightly alkaline by the addition of carbonate of soda, and a large quantity of gas forced into it by pressure, it forms the well-known refreshing beverage, soda water. This gas is also formed in very large quantities during combustion, respiration, and fermentation. Carbonic acid gas is destructive of animal life and combustion, and from its great weight accumulates in the bottoms of deep wells, cellars, caves, &c., which have been closed for a long period, and numerous fatal accidents arise frequently to persons entering such places incautiously the precaution should always be taken of introducing a lighted candle prior to the descent or entrance of any one for should the candle be extinguished, it would be dangerous to enter until properly ventilated. The combinations of carbonic acid with the alkalies, earths, and metallic oxides are termed carbonates. Citric ucid-exists in a free state, in the juice of the lemon, lime, and other fruits, combined how- ever with mucilage, and sometimes a little sugar, which renders it, if required to be preserved for a long period, very liable to ferment on this account, the crystallized citric acid is to be preferred. It is prepared by saturating the lemon juice with chalk; the citric acid combines with the lime, forming an insoluble compound, while the carbonic acid is liberated the insoluble citrate, after being well washed, is to be acted upon by dilute sulphuric acid, which forms sulphate of lime, and the citric acid enters into solution in the water; by filtration and evaporation the citric acid is obtained in colourless transparent crystals. The chief uses to which it is applied are as a preventive of sea scurvy, and in making refreshing acidulous or effervescing drinks; for which latter purpose it is peculiarly fitted from its very pleasant flavour. Fluoric acid-is found in the well-known mineral fluor spar in combination with lime from which it is procured in the liquid form, by distillation with dilute sulphuric acid in a leaden or silver retort; the receiver should be of the same material as the retort, and kept cool by ice or snow. This acid is gaseous in its pure form, highly corrosive, and intensely acid it is rapidly absorbed by water, communicating its properties to that fluid. Its chief use is for etching on glass, which it cor- rodes with great rapidity. For this purpose a thin coating of wax is to be melted on the surface of the glass, and the sketch drawn by a fine hard-pointed instrument through the wax; the liquid acid is then poured on it, and after a short time, on the removal of the acid and coating, an etching will be found in the substance of the glass. A very excellent application of this property, possessed by fluoric acid, is in the roughing the shades for table lamps. All the metals, except silver, lead, and platina, are acted upon by this acid. Gallic acid.-The source from which this acid is generally obtained is the nut gall, a hard protube- rance produced on the oak by the puncture of insects. The most simple method of procuring the acid in its pure form, is to submit the galls in fine powder to sublimation in a retort, taking care that the heat be applied slowly and with caution; the other processes require a very long period for their completion. When pure, gallic acid has a white and silky appearance, and a highly astringent and slightly acid taste. The nut galls, which owe their properties to the gallic acid they contain, are em- ployed very extensively in the arts, for dyeing and staining silks, cloths, and woods of a black colour this is owing to its forming with the oxide of iron an intense black precipitate. Writing ink is made on the same principle a very excellent receipt of the late Dr. Black's is, to take 3 oz. of the best Aleppo galls in fine powder, 1 oz. sulphate of iron, (green vitriol,) 1 oz. logwood finely rasped, 1 oz. gum arabic, one pint of the best vinegar, one pint of soft water, and 8 or 10 cloves ; in this case the black precipitate is Kept suspended by the gum. Hydriodic acid,-a compound of iodine and hydrogen, in its separate form is of very little importance in the arts; its combinations with potass, soda, and other of the metallic oxides, will be treated of hereafter. Malic acid-exists in the juices of many fruits, particularly the apple, as also in the berries of the service and mountain ash. Meconic acid-is found in opium, in combination with morphia, forming the meconate of morphia, on which the action of opium principally depends. Muriatic acid, or spirits of salts.-This acid (the hydrochloric of the French chemists) is manufactured from the chloride of sodium (dry sea salt) by the action of sulphurie acid, (oil of vitriol.) The most economical proportions are 20 pounds of fused salt, and 20 pounds of oil of vitriol previously mixed with an equal weight of water; these are placed in an iron or earthen pot, to which an earthen head and receiver are adapted, and submitted to distillation; the muriatic acid passes over in the vaporous form, and may be easily condensed. The liquid acid thus obtained should have a specific gravity of 1.17, water being equal to 100; it has a strong acid taste, and a slight yellow colour; this is owing to a small quantity of oxide of iron. By redistillation in a glass retort at a low temperature, it may be obtained perfectly pure and colourless. It sometimes contains a little sulphuric acid this is detected by a solution of muriate of barytes. Muriatic acid, in its uncombined state, is an invisible elastic gas, having a very strong affinity for water that fluid absorbing, at a temperature of 40° Fahrenheit, 480 times its volume, and the resulting liquid acid has a density of 121. So great is this attraction for water, that when the gas is liberated into the air, it combines with the moisture always present in that me- dium, forming dense white vapours. Its combinations with the alkalies, &c. are termed muriates those of the greatest importance are, the muriates of tin, ammonia, barytes, and sea salt. The test for the presence of muriatic acid in any liquid is the nitrate of silver, (lunar caustic,) which causes a curdy white precipitate. Nitric ucid, or aquafortis.-This, which is one of the most useful acids with which the chemist is Digitized by Google ACIDS. 5 acquainted, is prepared by acting upon saltpetre (nitre or nitrate of potass) with oil of vitriol the proportions best suited for this purpose are, three parts by weight of nitre and two of oil of vitriol or 100 nitre, and 60 oil of vitriol previously diluted with 20 of water; either of these proportions will produce a very excellent acid. When submitted to distillation, which should be conducted in earthen or glass vessels, the nitric acid passes over in the form of vapour, and a bisulphate of potass (sal mixum) remains in the retort. Nitric acid of commerce has usually a dark orange-red colour, giving off copious fumes, and having a specific gravity of 150, water being 100. It is strongly acid and highly corrosive. It may be obtained perfectly colourless by a second distillation, rejecting the first portion that passes over. It is much employed in the arts, for etching on copper-plates for engraving also, for the separation of silver from gold, in the process of quartation. In pharmacy and surgery it is extensively used, and is employed for destroying contagious effluvia. Combined with muriatic acid, it forms aqua regia, (nitro-muriatie acid,) used as a solvent for gold, platina, &c. This acid is frequently contaminated with the muriatic and sulphuric acids these may be detected by the following methods.-A portion of the suspected acid should be diluted with three or four times its volume of distilled water, and divided into two glasses; to one of which nitrate of silver (lunar caustic in solution) is to be added, and to the other, nitrate of barytes; if muriatic acid be present, a white curdy precipitate will be thrown down by the former and if sulphuric, a white granular precipitate by the latter. Oxalic acid-occurs in combination with potass as binoxalate of potass in the different varieties of sorrel, from whence the binoxalate of potass has been termed salt of sorrel. This acid is usually prepared by the action of nitric acid upon sugar, evaporating the solution, after the action has ceased, to the consistence of a syrup, and redissolving and recrystallizing the crystals which are thus procured. It is sold in small white acicular crystals, of a strongly acid taste and highly poisonous, and some- times in its external appearance bears a strong similarity to Epsom salts, (sulphate of magnesia,) which it has been unfortunately frequently mistaken for. It is instantly distinguished from Epsom salts by placing a small crystal upon the tongue; when its strong acid taste, compared with the nauseous bitter of the sulphate of magnesia, will be quite a sufficient criterion. In cases of poisoning, however, by this acid, lime, or chalk, mixed with water to form a cream, should be immediately administered, the combinations of oxalic acid with these substances being perfectly inert. It is employed in removing ink stains, iron moulds, &c. from linen and leather; the best proportions for these purposes are, 1 oz. of the acid to a pint of water. The most delicate test of the presence of oxalic acid is, a salt of lime or lime-water, with either of which it forms a white precipitate, insoluble in water, but soluble in acids. Its combinations are termed oxalates. Phosphoric acid-is of very little importance in a commercial point of view, except as forming with lime the earth of bones, (phosphate of lime.) It is prepared by heating bones to whiteness in a furnace; from this phosphoric acid is obtained by the action of sulphuric acid, still combined, how- ever, with a small quantity of lime. The action of nitric acid upon phosphorus, the latter being added gradually and in small pieces, yields this acid in a state of purity; its combinations are termed phosphates. Prussic acid, or hydrocyanic acid.-This acid, which is the most virulent and poisonous acid known, is contained in peach blossoms, bay leaves, and many other vegetable productions, which owe their peculiar odour to the presence of prussic acid. For the purposes of medicine and chemistry, this acid is prepared either by distilling one part of the cyanuret of mercury, one part of muriatic acid of specific gravity 1.15, and six parts of water, six parts of prussic acid being collected or, by dissolving a certain weight of cyanuret of mercury, and passing a current of sulphuretted hydrogen through the solution, until the whole of the mercury shall be precipitated; if an excess of sulphuretted hydrogen should be present, a little carbonate of lead (white lead) will remove it on filtering, a colourless prussic acid will be obtained. By the first process, which is the one followed at Apothecaries' Hall, the acid has a density 995, water being equal to 1,000; by the latter, it may be procured of any required strength, depending on the quantity of cyanuret of mercury dissolved. The best test for the presence of this acid is, first to add a small quantity of the protosulphate of iron (solution of green vitriol,) then a little solution of potass, and lastly diluted sulphuric acid if prussic acid be present, prussian blue will be formed. Its combinations are called prussiates or hydrocyanates; when in its concentrated form, it is so rapid in its effects that large animals have been killed in the short space of 80 seconds, or from a minute to a minute and a half. Sulphurous Acid-is formed whenever sulphur is burnt in atmospheric air: it is a suffocating and pungent gas, strongly acid, bleaches vegetable colours with great rapidity, and arrests the process of vinous fermentation. For these purposes it is therefore very much employed, especially in bleaching woollen goods and straws. Fermentation may be immediately arrested by burning a small quantity of sulphur in casks, and then racking off the wine while still fermenting into them this frequently gives the wine a very unpleasant taste of sulphur, which is avoided by the use of sulphate of potass, made by impregnating a solution of potass with sulphurous acid gas. Sulphuric acid, or oil of vitriol-called oil of vitriol from its having been formerly manufactured from green vitriol, (sulphate of iron.) In some parts of the Continent this process is still followed. The method generally adopted in this country, is to introduce nine parts of sulphur, intimately mixed with one part of nitre, in a state of active combustion, into large leaden chambers, the bottoms of which are covered with a stratum of water. Sulphurous and nitrous acid gases are generated, which enter- ing into combination form a white crystalline solid, which falls to the bottom of the chamber the instant that the water comes in contact with it, this solid is decomposed with a hissing noise and ef- fervescence, sulphuric acid combines with the water, and nitrous gas is liberated, which combining with oxygen from the air of the chamber, is converted into nitrous acid gas, again combines with sul- phurous acid gas, and again falls to the bottom of the chamber this process continues as long as the combustion of the sulphur is kept up, or as long as atmospheric air remains in the chamber the nitrous acid merely serving as a means for the transference of oxygen from the atmosphere to the sulphurous acid, to convert it into sulphuric acid. The water is removed from the chamber when of a certain strength, and replaced by fresh. These acid waters are then evaporated in leaden boilers, and finally concentrated in glass or platina vessels. As thus manufactured, sulphuric acid is a dense oily fluid, colourless, intensely acid, and highly corrosive, and has a specific gravity of 1,846, water being equal to 1,000. This acid is the most important with which we are acquainted it is employed in the manu- facture of the nitric, muriatic, acetic, phosphoric, citric, tartaric, and many other acids; also in the preparation of chlorine, for the manufacture of the bleaching powder, (oxymuriate of lime or chloride of lime,) for the preparation of sulphate of mercury, in the manufacture of calomel and corrosive sub- limate, and in innumerable other chemical manufactures. In the practice of physic it is also very much employed. It usually contains a little oxide of lead, which is readily detected by diluting the acid with about four times its volume of water, and allowing the sulphate of lead to subside. Its com- binations are denominated sulphates. The fuming sulphuric acid, as manufactured at Nordhausen, contains only one-half the quantity of water in its composition. Tartaric acid.-This acid is procured from the cream of tartar, (bitartrate of potass.) obtained by purifying the crust which separates during the fermentation of wines by solution and crystallization. 2 Digitized by Google 6 ACORNS-ADJUSTMENT. When this purified bitartrate is dissolved, and lime or carbonate of lime added, an insoluble tartrate of lime falls, which after washing should be acted upon by sulphuric acid; sulphate of lime is thus formed, and the tartaric acid enters into solution, and may be obtained by evaporation and crystalli- zation. It is employed very much in the arts, in calico-printing, as also in making effervescing draughts and powders in pharmacy. Uric acid-is an animal acid of very little importance, except in a scientific point of view; it exists in the excrements of serpents, to the amount of 95 per cent., and forms the basis of many of the urinary calculi and gravel. N. B. This article, and that on alkalies, have been furnished by an able practical chemist. ACORNS (Ger. Eicheln, Eckern; Fr. Glands; It. Ghiande; Sp. Bellotas; Rus. Schedudii; Lat. Glundes), the seed or fruit of the oak. Acorns formed a part of the food of man in early ages, and frequent allusion is made in the classics to this circumstance. (Virgil, Georg. lib. i. lin. 8.; Ovid. Met. lib. i. lin. 106, &c.) In some countries they are still used, in periods of scarcity, as a substitute for bread. With us they are now rarely used except for fattening hogs and poultry. They are said to make, when toasted, with the addition of a lit- tle fresh butter, one of the best substitutes for coffee. Their taste is astringent and bitter. ACORUS (Calamus aromaticus), sweet flag, or sweet rush, a red or knotty root, about the thickness of the little finger, and several inches long. The root of the sweet flag has a pleasant aromatic odour, similar to that of a mixture of cinnamon and allspice. The taste is warm, pungent, bitterish, and aromatic."-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) The root, which is used in medicine, was formerly imported from the Levant, but it is now obtained of an equally good quality from Norfolk. ACRE, a measure of land. The Imperial or standard English acre contains 4 roods, each rood 40 poles or perches, each pole 2724 square feet; and consequently each acre-43,560 square feet. Previously to the introduction of the new system of weights and measures by the act 5 Geo. IV. cap. 74, the acres in use in different parts of England varied considerably from each other and from the standard acre; but these customary measures are now abolish- ed. The Scotch acre contains four roods, each rood 40 falls, and each fall 36 ells; the ell being equal to 37.06 Imperial inches. Hence the Imperial is to the Scotch acre nearly as 1 to 14, one Scotch acre being equal to 1-261 Imperial acres. The Irish acre is equal to 1 acre 2 roods and 19 31 poles; 301 Irish being equal to 49 Imperial acres. [The standard English acre is the acre in use in the United States.-Am. Ed.] ADAMANTINE SPAR (Hind. Corundum), a stone so called from its hardness, found in India, Ava, China, &c., crystallized, or in a mass. It is ascertained to be a species of sap- phire. The Indian variety is the best. Colour grey, with shades of green and light brown fracture foliated and sparry, sometimes vitreous. It is brittle, and so hard as to cut rock crystal and most of the gems. Specific gravity from 371 to 4-18. The Chinese variety differs from the Indian in containing grains of magnetic iron ore disseminated through it, in being gene- rally of a darker colour, and having externally a chatoyant lustre; its specific gravity is greater, and its hardness somewhat inferior. It is employed to polish gems. ADJUSTMENT, in commercial navigation, the settlement of a loss incurred by the insured. In the case of a total loss, if the policy be an open one, the insurer is obliged to pay the goods according to their prime cost, that is, the invoice price, and all duties and expenses in- curred till they are put on board, including the premium of insurance. Whether they might have arrived at a good or a bad market, is held by the law of England to be immaterial. The insurer is supposed to have insured a constant and not a variable sum and in the event of a loss occurring, the insured is merely to be put into the same situation in which he stood be- fore the transaction began. If the policy be a valued one, the practice is to adopt the value- tion fixed in it in case of a total loss, unless the insurers can show that the insured had a colourable interest only, or that the goods were greatly overvalued. In the case of all partial losses, the value of the goods must be proved. "The nature of the contract between the insured and insurer is," says Mr. Justice Park, that the goods shall come safe to the port of delivery or, if they do not, that the insurer will indemnify the owner to the amount of the value of the goods stated in the policy. Wher- ever then the property insured is lessened in value by damage received at sea, justice is done by putting the merchant in the same condition (relation being had to the prime cost or value in the policy) in which he would have been had the goods arrived free from damage; that is, by paying him such proportion of the prime cost or value in the policy as corresponds with the proportion of the diminution in value occasioned by the damage. The question then is, how is the proportion of the damage to be ascertained It certainly cannot be by any measure taken from the prime cost; but it may be done in this way :-Where any thing, as a hogshead of sugar, happens to be spoiled, if you can fix whether it be a third, a fourth, or a fifth worse, than the damage is ascertained to a mathematical certainty. How is this to be found out? Not by any price at the port of shipment, but it must be at the port of delivery, when the voyage is completed and the whole damage known. Whether the price at the lat- ter be high or low, it is the same thing; for in either case it equally shows whether the damaged goods are a third, a fourth, or a fifth worse than if they had come sound; conse- quently, whether the injury sustained be a third, fourth, or fifth of the value of the thing. Digitized by Google ADMEASUREMENT-ADMIRALTY COURTS. 7 And as the insurer pays the whole prime cost if the thing be wholly lost, so if it be only a third, fourth, or fifth worse, he pays a third, fourth, or fifth, not of the value for which it is sold, but of the value stated in the policy. And when no valuation is stated in the policy, the invoice of the cost, with the addition of all charge, and the premium of insurance, shall be the foundation upon which the loss shall be computed." Thus, suppose a policy to be effected on goods, the prime cost of which, all expenses in- cluded, amounts to 1,000/.; and suppose further, that these goods would, had they safely reached the port of delivery, have brought 1,200l., but that, owing to damage they have met with in the voyage, they only fetch 800/.; in this case it is plain, inasmuch as goods that would otherwise have been worth 1,200/. are only worth 800/.; that they have been deterior- ated one-third, and hence it follows, conformably to what has been stated above, that the in- surer must pay one-third of their prime cost (1,000L), or 333/. 6s. 8d. to the insured. In estimating the value of goods at the port of delivery, the gross and not the nett proceeds of the sales are to be taken as the standard. A ship is valued at the sum she is worth at the time she sails on the voyage insured, in- cluding the expenses of repairs, the value of her furniture, provisions, and stores, the money advanced to the sailors, and, in general, every expense of the outfit, to which is added the pre- mium of insurance. When an adjustment is made, it is usual for the insurer to endorse upon the policy " ad- justed this loss at (so much) per cent.," payable in a given time, generally a month, and to sign it with the initials of his name. This is considered as a note of hand, and as such is primâ facie evidence of the debt, not to be shaken, but by proving that fraud was used in ob- taining it, or that there was some misconception of the law or the fact upon which it was made. See, for a further discussion of this subject, the article MARINE INSURANCE, Park on the Law of Insurance (cap. 6.), and Marshall (book i. cap. 14.). [See also Kent's Commentaries, Lecture 48.-Am. Ed.] ADMEASUREMENT. See TONNAGE. [ADMIRALTY COURTS have authority to try and determine all maritime causes, or such injuries, which, though they are in their nature of common law cognizance, yet, being committed on the high seas, out of the reach of the ordinary courts of justice, are therefore to be remedied in a peculiar court of their own. When the court of admiralty has not original jurisdiction of the cause, though there should arise in it a question that is proper for the cognizance of that court, yet this does not alter or take away the exclusive jurisdiction of the ordinary courts of law. And so, vice versa, if it has jurisdiction of the original, it has also jurisdiction of all consequential questions, though properly determinable at common law. If part of any contract, or other cause of action, arises upon the sea, and part upon the land, the common law excludes the admiralty court from its jurisdiction. Seamen's wages, how- ever, though the contract for them be made upon land, as is nearly always the case, are re- garded as a proper object of the admiralty jurisdiction; that is, provided the contract be to receive their wages in the usual manner, and be not under seal. The criminal jurisdiction of the admiralty courts, as well in England as in the United States, has been conferred upon them by statute; in the former country by the act of the 28th of Henry VIII. c. 15.; and in the latter by the judiciary act of 1789, and other subsequent acts, explaining or enlarging its provisions. By one of these additional acts (that of 1825), the jurisdiction in question is made to comprehend all offences which shall be committed on board of any ship or vessel, belonging to any citizen or citizens of the United States, while lying in a port or place within the jurisdiction of any foreign state or sovereign," by any per- son whose offence, if committed on board of such ship or vessel on the high seas would be cognizable by the courts of the United States; provided, " that if such offender shall be tried for such offence, and acquitted or convicted thereof, in any competent court of such foreign state or sovereign, he shall not be subject to another trial." This act also provides that the admiralty jurisdiction shall extend, or it is perhaps more proper to say that it assumes that such jurisdiction does actually extend, to certain crimes committed " in any arm of the sea, or in any river, haven, creek, basin, or bay" of the United States, out of the jurisdiction of any particular state. In case of prizes in time of war between our own nation and another, or between two other nations, which are taken at sea and brought into our ports, the courts of admiralty have an exclusive jurisdiction to determine the same according to the law of nations. The prize jurisdiction extends also to captures made in foreign ports, and to all captures made on land by any force or armament, should a portion of it partake of a naval character. The court of admiralty in England is held before the lord high admiral, or his deputy, who is called the judge of the court, for the trial of civil causes, which are determined by the judge without the aid of a jury. The proceedings bear much resemblance to those of the civil law, but are not entirely founded thereon; and the court likewise adopts and makes use of other laws, as occasion requires; such as the Rhodian laws and the laws of Oleron the whole being-corrected, altered, and amended, by acts of parliament and common usage, and a body of jurisprudence being thus formed, which owes its authority only to its reception by consent of the crown and people. Digitized by Google 8 ADVANCE-AGIO. For the trial of persons charged with the commission of crimes, three or four commissioners (among whom two common law judges are usually appointed) are added to the admiral or his deputy; and an indictment being first found by a grand jury of twelve men, they are to be tried by a petit jury. The proceedings should be according to the laws of the land. Admiralty jurisdiction in the United States is vested in the federal courts, and is exercised by them on principles altogether analogous to those by which the English courts of admiralty are guided. By the act of 1789, before referred to, the trial of all causes shall be by jury, excepting civil causes of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction. See Blackstone's Commenta- ries, book 3. c. 5 and 7. and book 4. c. 19. Also Kent's Commentaries, Lecture 17.-Am. Ed.] ADVANCE implies money paid before goods are delivered, or upon consignment. It is usual with merchants to advance from a half to two-thirds of the value of goods consigned to them, on being required, on their receiving invoice, bill of lading, orders to insure them from sea risk, &c. ADVERTISEMENT, in its general sense, is any information as to any fact or circum- stance that has occurred, or is expected to occur; but, in a commercial sense, it is under- stood to relate only to specific intimations with respect to the sale of articles, the formation and dissolution of partnerships, bankruptcies, meetings of creditors, &c. Until last year, a duty of 3s. 6d. was charged upon every advertisement, long or short, inserted in the Gazette, or in any newspaper, or literary work published in parts or numbers. This duty added about 100 per cent. to the cost of advertising, for the charge (exclusive of the duty) for inserting an advertisement of the ordinary length in the newspapers rarely exceeds 3s. or 4s. In 1832, the duty produced 155,401Z in Great Britain, and 15,249/ in Ireland. Last year (1833) the duty on advertisements was reduced to 1s. 6d.; and this, we have no doubt, will occasion such an increase of advertising as to prevent the revenue from being materially injured by the reduction. But, instead of being modified merely, this is a duty that ought to be wholly repealed. Its operation is necessarily most unequal, and, in many instances, most oppressive. Can any thing be more glaringly unjust than to impose the same duty on a notice of the publication of a sixpenny pamphlet, or of a servant being out of place, as on an intimation of the sale of a valuable estate But as it is altogether impossible to impose the duty on an ad valorem principle, this injustice cannot be obviated so long as it is maintained. In a commercial country, a duty on advertisements is peculiarly objectionable, inasmuch as it checks the circulation of information of much importance to mercantile men. We, therefore, hope that this unjust and impolitic tax may be speedily given up. Its abandon- ment would not cause any diminution of revenue ; for it is abundantly certain that its loss would be more than made up by the increased productiveness of the duties on paper and newspaper stamps. For an account of the operation of the stainp duty on literature, see Books. ADVICE is usually given by one merchant or banker to another by letter, informing him of the bills or drafts drawn on him, with all particulars of date, or sight, the sum, to whom made payable, &c. Where bills appear for acceptance or payment, they are frequently refused to be honoured for want of advice. It is also necessary to give advice, as it prevents forgeries: if a merchant accept or pay a bill for the honour of any other person, he is bound to advise him thereof, and this should always be done under an act of honour by a notary public. AGARIC, a fungus growing on the trunks of trees. That produced in the Levant from the larch is accounted the best. It is brought into the shops in irregular pieces of different magnitudes, of a chalky whiteness, and very light. The best is easily cut with a knife, is friable between the fingers, and has no hard, gritty, or coloured veins. It is used in medicine and dyeing.-(Leuis, Mat. Med.) AGATE (popularly CORNELIAN), (Ger. Achat; Du. Achaat; Fr. Agate; It. Agata; Rus. Agat; Lat. Achates). A genus of semi-pellucid gems, so called from the Greek axxrx, because originally found on the banks of the river of that name in Italy. It is never wholly opaque like jasper, nor transparent as quartz-crystal it takes a very high polish, and its opaque parts usually present the appearance of dots, eyes, veins, zones, or bands. Its colours are yellowish, reddish, bluish, milk-white, honey-orange, or ochre-yellow, flesh- blood, or brick-red, reddish-brown, violet-blue, and brownish-green. It is found in irregular rounded nodules, from the size of a pin's head to more than a foot in diameter. The lapidaries distinguish agates according to the colour of their ground; the finer semi-trans- parent kinds being termed oriental. The most beautiful agates found in Great Britain are commonly known by the name of Scotch pebbles, and are met with in different parts of Scotland, but principally on the mountain of Cairngorm; whence they are sometimes termed Cairngorms. The German agates are the largest. Some very fine ones have been brought from Siberia and Ceylon. They are found in great plenty at the eastern extremity of the settlement of the Cape of Good Hope; and are still met with in Italy. But the principal mines of agate are situated in the little principality of Rajpepla, in the province of Gujrat, fourteen miles, distant from the city of Broach, where they are cut into beads, crosses, snuff-boxes, &c. They are exported in considerable quantities to other parts of India, and to this country; and hence, perhaps, the jewellers' term " broach." AGENT. See FACTOR. AGIO, a term used to express the difference, in point of value, between metallic and paper money; or between one sort of metallic money and another. Digitized by Google ALABASTER-ALE AND BEER. 9 ALABASTER (Ger. Alabaster ; It. Alabastro; Fr. Albâtre; Rus. Alabastr; Lat. Alabastrites). A kind of stone resembling marble, but softer. Under this name are con- founded two minerals, the gypseous and calcareous alabasters; they are wholly distinct from each other when pure, but in some of the varieties are occasionally mixed together. The former, when of a white, or yellowish, or greenish colour, semi-transparent, and capable of receiving a polish, is employed by statuaries. It is very easily worked, but it is not susceptible of a polish equal to marble. Calcareous alabaster is heavier than the former; it is not so hard as marble, but is notwithstanding susceptible of a good polish, and is more used in statuary. The statuaries distinguish alabaster into two sorts, the common and oriental. Spain and Italy yield the best alabaster. That produced at Montania, in the papal states, is in the highest esteem for its "beautiful whiteness. Inferior sorts are found in France and Germany. Alabaster is wrought into tables, vases, statues, chimney-pieces, &c. ALCOHOL (ARDENT SPIRIT), (Fr. Esprit de Vin; Ger. Weingeist; It. Spirito ardente, Spirito di Vino, Acquarzente), the name given to the pure spirit obtainable by distillation, and subsequent rectification, from all liquors that have undergone the vinous fermentation, and from none but such as are susceptible of it. It is light, transparent, colourless, of a sharp, penetrating, agreeable smell, and a warm stimulating taste. It is quite the same, whether obtained from brandy, wine, whiskey, or any other fluid which has been fermented. The specific gravity of alcohol when perfectly pure is from .792 to 800, that of water being 1,000; but the strongest spirit afforded by mere distillation is about 820; alcohol of the shops is about 835 or 840. Alcohol cannot be frozen by any known degree of cold. It boils at 174°. It is the only dissolvent of many resinous substances; and in extensively used in medicine and the arts.—(Drs. A. T. Thomson, Ure, &e.) ALDER, the Betula alnus of botanists, a forest tree abundant in England and most parts of Europe. It thrives best in marshy grounds, and on the banks of rivers. It rarely attains to a very great size; its wood is extremely durable in water or in wet ground; and hence it is much used for piles, planking, pumps, pipes, sluices, and generally for all purposes where it is kept constantly wet. It soon rots when exposed to the weather or to damp; and when dry, it is much subject to worms. The colour of the wood is reddish yellow, of different shades, and nearly uniform. Texture very uniform, with larger septa of the same colour as the wood. It is soft, and works easily.-(redgold's Principles of Carpentry.) ALE and BEER, well-known and extensively used fermented liquors, the principle of which is extracted from several sorts of gain, but most commonly from barley, after it has undergone the process termed malting. 1. Historical Notice of Ale and Beer-The manufacture of ale or beer is of very high antiquity. Herodotus tells us, that owing to the want of wine, the Egyptians drank a liquor fermented from barley (lib. ii. cap. 77.). The use of it was also very anciently introduced into Greece and Italy, though it does not appear to have ever been very extensively used in these countries. Mead, or metheglin,was probably the earliest intoxicating liquor known in the North of Europe. Ale or beer was, however, in common use in Germany in the time of Tacitus (Morib. Germ. cap. 23.). All the nations," says Pliny, " who inhabit the West of Europe have a liquor with which they intoxicate themselves, made of corn and water (fruge madida). The manner of making this liquor is somewhat different in Gaul, Spain, and other countries, and it is called by many various names; but its nature and pro- perties are everywhere the same. The people of Spain, in particular, brew this liquor so well that it will keep good for a long time. So exquisite is the ingenuity of mankind in gratifying their vicious appetites, that they have thus invented a method to make water itself intoxicate."-(Hist. Nat. lib. xiv. cap. 22.) The Saxons and Danes were passion- ately fond of beer; and the drinking of it was supposed to form one of the principal enjoy- ments of the heroes admitted to the hall of Odin.-(Mallet's Northern Antiquities, cap. 6, &c.) The manufacture of ale was early introduced into England. It is mentioned in the laws of Ina, King of Wessex; and is particularly specified among the liquors provided for a royal banquet in the reign of Edward the Confessor. It was customary in the reigns of the Norman princes to regulate the price of ale; and it was enacted, by a statute passed in 1272, that a brewer should be allowed to sell two gallons of ale for a penny in cities, and three or four gallons for the same price in the country. The use of hops in the manufacture of ale and beer seems to have been a German invention. They were used in the breweries of the Netherlands, in the beginning of the fourteenth century but they do not seem to have been introduced into England till 200 years afterwards, or till the beginning of the sixteenth century. In 1530, Henry VIII. enjoined brewers not to put hops into their ale. It would, however, appear that but little attention was paid to this order; for in 1552 hop plantations had begun to be formed.- (Beckmann's Hist. Invent. vol. iv. pp. 386-341. Eng. ed.) The addition of hops renders ale more palatable, by giving it an agreeable bitter taste, while, at the same time, it fits it for being kept much longer without injury. Generally speaking, the English brewers employ a much larger quantity of hops than the Scotch. The latter are in the habit of using, in brew- 2 Digitized by Google 10 ALE AND BEER. ing the fine Edinburgh ale, from a pound to a pound and a half of hops for every bushel of malt. 2. Distinction between Ale and Beer, or Porter.-This distinction has been ably eluci- dated by Dr. Thomas Thomson, in his valuable article on Brewing, in the Supplement to the Encyclopedia Britannica :-" Both ale and beer are in Great Britain obtained by fer- mentation from the malt of barley but they differ from each other in several particulars. Ale is light-coloured, brisk, and sweetish, or at least free from bitter; while beer is dark- coloured, bitter, and much less brisk. What is called porter in England is a species of beer and the term " porter" at present signifies what was formerly called strong beer. The original difference between ale and beer was owing to the malt from which they were prepared. Ale malt was dried at a very low heat, and consequently was of a pale colour while beer or porter malt was dried at a higher temperature, and had of consequence acquired a brown colour. This incipient charring had developed a peculiar and agreeable bitter taste, which was communicated to the beer along with the dark colour. This bitter taste rendered beer more agreeable to the palate, and less injurious to the constitution than ale. It was consequently manufactured in greater quantities, and soon became the common drink of the lower ranks in England. When malt became high priced, in consequence of the heavy taxes laid upon it, and the great increase in the price of barley which took place during the war of the French revolution, the brewers found out that a greater quantity of wort of a given strength could be prepared from pale malt than from brown malt. The conse- quence was that pale malt was substituted for brown malt in the brewing of porter and beer. We do not mean that the whole malt employed was pale, but a considerable proportion of it. The wort, of course, was much paler than before and it wanted that agreeable bitter flavour which characterized porter, and made it 80 much relished by most palates. The porter brewers endeavoured to remedy these defects by several artificial additions. At the same time various substitutes were tried to supply the place of the agreeable bitter com- municated to porter by the use of brown malt. Quassia, cocculus indicus, and we believe even opium, were employed in succession but none of them was found to answer the purpose sufficiently. Whether the use of these substances be still persevered in we do not know but we rather believe that they are not, at least by the London porter brewers." 3. Adulteration of Ale and Beer-substitution of Raw Grain for Malt.-The use of the articles other than malt, referred to by Dr. Thomson, has been expressly forbidden, under heavy penalties, by repeated acts of parliament. The act 56 Geo. 3. c. 58, has the following clauses :- " No brewer or dealer in or retailer of beer shall receive or have in his possession, or make, or use, or mix with, or put into any worts or beer, any liquor, extract, calx, or other material or preparation for the purpose of darkening the colour of worts or beer; or any liquor, extract, calx, or other mate- tial or preparation other than brown malt, ground or unground, as commonly used in brewing; or shall receive, or have in his possession, or use, or mix with, or put into any worts or beer, any mo- lasses, honey, liquorice, vitriol, quassia. oocculus indicus, grains of paradise, Guinea pepper, or opium, or any extract or preparation of molasses, honey, liquorice, vitriol, quassia, cocculus indicus, grains of paradise, Guinea pepper, or opium, or any article or preparation whatsoever for or as a substitute for malt or hope, upon pain that all such liquor, extract, calx, molasses, honey, vitriol, quassia, cocculus indicus, grains of paradise, Guinea pepper, opium, extract article, and preparation as aforesaid, and also the said worts and beer, shall be forfeited, together with the casks, vessels, or other packages, and may be seized by any officer of excise; and such brewer of, dealer in, or retailer of beer, so offend- ing, shall for each offence forfeit 2001. No druggist, or vender of or dealer in drugs, or chemist, or other person whatever, shall sell, send or deliver to any licensed brewer of, or dealer in, or retailer of beer, knowing him to be so licensed, or reputed to be 80 licensed, or to any other person for, or on account of, or in trust for, or for the use of such brewer, dealer, or retailer, any colouring, from whatever material made, or any other material or preparation other than unground brown malt, for the purpose of darkening the colour of worts or beer or any liquor or preparation heretofore or hereafter made use of for darkening the colour of worts or beer, or any molasses or other articles, as mentioned in the first section, for or as a substitute for malt or hops respectively; and if any druggist, or vender of or dealer in drugs, or any chemist, or other person whatever, shall 80 do, all such liquor called colouring, and material or preparation for the purpose aforesaid, and liquor and preparation used for darkening the colour of worts or beer, mo- lasses, and article or preparation to be used as a substitute for malt or hops, shall be forfeited, and may be seized by any officer of excise; and the druggist, vender, dealer, chemist, or other person so offend- ing, shall forfeit 5001." By the act 1 Will. 4. c. 51, for the repeal of the ale and beer duties, it is enacted ($17), " that no brewer shall have in his brewery, or in any part of his entered premises, or in any mill connected with such brewery, any raw or unmalted corn or grain; and all unmalted corn or grain which shall be found in such brewing premises or mill, and all malted corn or grain with which such unmalted corn or grain may have been mixed, shall be forfeited, and may be seized by any officer, together with all vessels or packages in which such raw or unmalted corn or grain shall be contained, or in which such unmalted corn or grain, and the malted corn or grain with which the same may have been mixed, shall be contained; and every brewer shall for every such offence forfeit 2001." 4. Descriptions of Ale and Beer.-Previously to 1823, there were only two sorts of beer allowed to be brewed in England, viz. strong beer, that is, beer of the value of 16s. and up- wards the barrel, exclusive of the duty and small beer, or beer of the value of less than 16s. a barrel, exclusive of the duty. In 1823, however, an act was passed (4 Geo. 4. c. 51,) authorizing the brewing, under certain conditions, of an intermediate beer. But this sort of beer was either not suited to the public taste, or, which is more probable, the restrictions laid on the brewers deterred them from engaging extensively in its manufacture. This limitation and classification of the different sorts of ale and beer, according to their Digitized by Google ALE AND BEER. 11 strength, originated in the duties laid upon them and now that these duties have been repeal- ed, ale and beer may be brewed of any degree of strength. This is an immense advantage. 5. Regulations as to the Manufacture of Ale and Beer-Since the abolition of the beer duties these regulations are very few and simple; and consist only in taking out a license, entering the premises, and abstaining from the use of any article, other than malt, in the preparation of the beer. A brewer using any place or mash-tun, for the purpose of brewing, without having made an entry thereof at the nearest excise office, forfeits for every such offence 200L and all the worts, beer, and materials for making the same, together with the mash- tun, are forfeited, and may be seized by any officer. Brewers obstructing officers shall, for every such offence, forfeit 100L-(1 Will. 4. c. 51. § 15, 16.) 6. License Duties.-Number of Brewers.-The license duties payable by brewers of ale and beer, under the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 81, and the numbers of such licenses granted during the years 1829 and 1832 are as follows :- Number of Licenses Sums charged granted. for Licenses. 1829. 1832. £ 8. d. Common brewers of strong beer, not exceeding 20 barrels - 0 10 0 2,854 8,593 Exceeding 20 and not exceeding 50 barrels - 100 4,871 6,844 - 50 - 100 - - - - - 1 10 0 6,997 9,162 - 100 - 1,000 - - - - - 2 0 0 11,562 16,828 - 1,000 - 2,000 - - - - - 300 297 619 - 2,000 - 5,000 - - - - - 7 10 0 249 488 - 5,000 - 7,500 - - - - - 11 5 0 63 124 - 7,500 - 10,000 - - - - - 15 0 0 24 71 - 10,000 - 20,000 - - - - - 30 0 0 32 89 - 20,000 - 30,000 - - - - - 45 0 0 5 23 - 30,000 - 40,000 - - - - - 60 0 0 2 6 Exceeding 40,000 - - - - 75 0 0 12 16 Brewers of table beer only, not exceeding 20 barrels - - 0 10 0 22 51 Exceeding 20 and not exceeding 50 barrels - - 1 0 0 8 9 - 50 - 100 - - - - - 1 10 0 13 12 Exceeding - 100 - - - - - 2 0 0 111 27 Retail brewers of strong beer - - - - 550 1,279 50 The great increase in the number of brewers in 1832, as compared with 1829, is to be ascribed to the abolition of the beer duties in 1830. The increase since 1832 has not been very material. N.B. The barrel contains 36 gallons, or 4 firkins of 9 gallons each, Imperial measure. It is enacted (1 Will. 4. c. 51. 1 7.), that, from the 10th of October, 1830, brewers are to pay their license duty ac- cording to the malt used by them in brewing, and that every brewer shall be deemed to have brewed one barrel of beer for every two bushels of malt used by such brewer. Account of the Number of Brewers, Licensed Victuallers, Persons licensed for the sale of Beer, to be drunk on and off the Premises, &c.; with the Quantities of Malt used by such Brewers, &c. in Eng- land, Scotland, and Ireland, during the Year 1835.-(Parl. Paper, No. 259. Sess. 1836.) Number who brew their Number of Bushels of Malt consumed by each own Beer. Class. Persons licensed to Persons licensed to Persons licensed to sell Beer. sell Beer. sell Beer. Collections. Brewers. Victuallers. To be Not to be Victuallers. To be Not to be drunk on drunk on drunk on drunk on Brewers. Victuallers. To be Not to be drunk on drunk on the the the the the the Premises. Premises. Premises. Premises. Premises. Premises. England 2,099 54,551 35,536 4,118 25,962 14,840 987 16,412,440 9,521,797 3,702,417 218,616 Scotland 242 17,026 - - - - 335 - - - - 988,800 149,380 Ireland 245 - - - - - - - - - - - 1,829,587 United Kingdom. 2,586 71,577 35,536 4,118 26,297 14,840 987 19,230,827 9,671,177 3,702,417 218,616 It is enacted, (1 Will. 4. c. 51.,) that every person who shall sell any beer or ale in less quantities than four and a half gallons, or two dozen reputed quart bottles, to be drunk elsewhere than on the premises where sold, shall be deemed a dealer in beer. 7. Progressive Consumption of Ale and Beer.-Malt liquor early became to the labouring classes of England what the inferior sorts of wine are to the people of France, at once a necessary of life and a luxury ; the taste for it was universally diffused. There are, however, no means by which an estimate can be formed of the quantity actually consumed previously to the reign of Charles II. But duties, amounting to 2s. 6d. a barrel on strong, and to 6d. a barrel on small ale or beer, were imposed, for the first time, in 1660. These duties being farmed until 1684, the amount of the revenue only is known; and as there are no means of ascertaining the proportion which the strong bore to the small beer, the quantities that paid duty cannot be specified. But, since the collection of the duty was intrusted to officers em- ployed by government, accurate accounts have been kept of the quantities of each sort of beer on which duty was paid, as well as the rate of duty and its amount. Now, it appears, that, at an average of the ten years from 1684 to 1693 inclusive, the amount of ale annually charged with duty was as follows :-Strong ale 4,367,293 barrels. Small do. . - 2,376,278 do. Digitized by Google 12 ALE AND BEER. Soon after the Revolution several temporary duties were imposed on ale and beer; but in 1694 they were consolidated, the established duties being then fixed at 48. 9d. a barrel on the strong, and at 1s. 3d. on the small beer, instead of 2s. 6d. and 6d., which had been the rates previously to 1690. This increase of duty had an immediate effect on the consumption, the quantity brewed during the ten years from 1694 to 1703 being as follows:- Strong ale 3,374,604 barrels. Small do. - 2,180,764 do. The whole of this decrease must not, however, be ascribed to the increase of the beer duties only ; the duties on malt and hops having been, at the same time, considerably increased, operated partly, no doubt, to produce the effect. During the five years ending with 1750, the ale brewed amounted, at an average, to 3,803- 580 barrels of strong, and 2,162,540 barrels of small.-(Hamilton's Principles of Taxation, p. 255.) The ale brewed in private families for their own use has always been exempted from any duty and it may, perhaps, be supposed that the falling off in the consumption, as evinced by the statements now given, was apparent only, and that the decline in the public brewery would be balanced by a proportional extension of the private brewery. But, though there can be no doubt that the quantity of beer brewed in private families was increased in con- sequence of the peculiar taxes laid on the beer brewed for sale, it is abundantly certain that it was not increased in any thing like the ratio in which the other was diminished. This is established beyond all dispute, by the fact of the consumption of malt having continued very nearly stationary, notwithstanding the vast increase of population and wealth, from the be- ginning of last century down to 1750, and, indeed, to 1830!-(See MALT.) Had the fact, as to malt, been different, or had the demand for it increased proportionally to the increase of population, it would have shown that the effect of the malt and beer duties had not been to lessen the consumption of beer, but merely to cause it to be brewed in private houses instead of public breweries; but the long continued stationary demand for malt completely negatives this supposition, and shows that the falling off in the beer manufactured by the public brewers has not been made up by any equivalent increase in the supply manufactured at home. I. An account of the Quantity of the different Sorts of Beer made in England and Wales, in each Year from 1787 to 1825, both inclusive, the Rate of Duty, and the total Produce of the Duties (English Ale Gallons). Strong Beer. Table Beer. Small Beer. Years ended Total amount of Rate of Rate of Rate of 5th July. Barrels. Duty. Barrels. Barrels. Duty. Duty. Duty. 1787 4,426,482 8s. Od. 485,620 3s. Od. 1,342,301 1s. 4d. £1,932,922 10s.8d 1788 4,304,895 - 524,176 - 1,334,947 - 1,889,580 17 4 1789 4,437,831 - 514,900 - 1,244,046 - 1,935,303 16 0 1790 4,525,950 - 546,260 - 1,282,157 - 1,977,796 2 8 1791 4,754,588 - 579,742 - 1,347,086 - 2,078,602 4 8 1792 5,082,293 -1 625,260 - 1,401,870 - 2,220,164 4 0 1793 5,167,850 - 620,207 - 1,414,255 - 2,254,454 14 4 1794 5,011,320 - 586,554 - 1,446,939 - 2,188,973 14 0 1795 5,037,804 - 576,464 - 1,453,036 - 2,198,460 5 4 1796 5,504,453 - 565,630 - 1,479,130 - 2,385,234 7 4 1797 5,839,627 - 584,422 - 1,518,512 - 2,524,748 4 8 1798 5,784,467 - 622,064 - 1,547,570 - 2,510,267 14 8 1799 5,774,311 - 611,151 - 1,597,139 - 2,507,872 19 8 1800 4,824,306 - 574,995 - 1,360,502 - 2,106,671 15 8 1801 4,735,574 - 500,025 - 1,191,930 - 2,048,695 7 0 1802 5,345,884 95 392,022 - 976,787 - 2,321,198 0 4 1803 5,582,516 - 1,660,828 - 2,782,263 13 4 1804 5,265,623 10 0 1,779,570 - 2,810,768 10 0 1805 5,412,131 - 1,776,807 - 2,883,746 4 0 1806 5,443,502 - 1,771,754 - 2,898,926 8 0 1807 5,577,176 - 1,732,710 - 2,961,859 0 0 1808 5,571,360 - 1,710,243 - 2,956,704 6 0 1809 5,513,111 - 1,682,899 - 2,924,845 8 0 1810 5,753,319 - 1,635,588 - 3,040,218 6 0 1811 5,902,903 - 1,649,564 - 3,116,407 18 0 1812 5,860,869 - 1,593,395 - 3,089,774 0 0 1813 5,382,946 - 1,455,759 - 2,837,048 18 0 1814 5,624,015 - 1,432,729 - 2,955,280 8 0 1815 6,150,544 - 1,518,302 - 3,227,102 4 0 1816 5,982,379 - 1,514,867 - 3,142,676 4 0 1817 5,236,048 - 1,453,960 - 2,763,420 0 0 1818 5,364,009 - 1,434,642 - 2,825,468 14 0 1819 5,629,240 - 1,460,244 - 2,960,644 8 0 1820 5,296,701 - 1,444,290 - 2,792,779 10 0 1821 5,575,830 - 1,439,970 - 2,931,912 0 0 1822 5,712,937 - 1,492,281 - 3,005,696 12 0 1823 6,177,271 - 1,419,589 - 3,230,594 8 0 1824 6,188,271 - 1,401,021 - 3,234,237 12 0 Intermediate Beer. 1825 6,500,664 - 1,485,750 - 9,559 50 3,401,296 15 0 Digitized by Google ALE AND BEER. 13 It appears from the foregoing table, that the quantity of strong beer manufactured by the public brewers had increased about a third since 1787; but the quantity of malt consumed in 1787 was quite as great as in 1828; a fact, which shows conclusively, either that the quality of the beer brewed in the public breweries has been deteriorated since 1787, or that less, comparatively, is now brewed in private families; or, which is most probable, that both effects have been produced. II. An account of the Quantity of all the different Sorts of Beer, stated in Barrels, made in each Year. from 5th of January 1825, to 5th of January 1830; the Rates of Duty per Barrel in each Year, and Total Amount thereof in each Year in England and Scotland.- (Parl. Paper, No. 190. Bess. 1830.) ENGLAND. Years ended Number of Barrels, Imperial Measure. 5th January. Rate per Total Amount of Strong. Table. Rate per Barrel. Barrel. Intermediate. Rate per Barrel. Duty. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. £ 8. d. 1826 7,008,143 9 10 1,606,899 1 111 6,160 4 11 3,492,779 10 4 4,177,225 9 0 1827 1,040,726 1 91 2,512,767 9 10 562,927 1 111 7,707 - 3,265,441 14 6 1 3,895,226 9 0 989,827 1 1828 91 2,500,043 9 10 542,481 17,158 - 1 11t 3,128,047 9 0 3,941,519 9 0 1829 977,962 1 91 2,617,691 9 10 1 62,617 - 552,457 111 3,217,812 2 11 3,569,364 9 0 1830 879,879 1 91 9 10 500,590 1 111 55,498 - 2,379,930 2,917,828 8 4 SCOTLAND. 8. d. s. d. 8. d. £ 8. d. 1826 133,903 9 10 264,035 1 111 - - - 91,731 2 2 1827 116,594 9 0 219,722 1 91 5,545 - 9 10 - 51,613 - 1 111 79,931 4 7 102,769 9 0 1828 187,873 1 94 - - - 9,250 9 10 53,420 1 111 72,855 4 4 1829 101,475 9 0 178,530 1 91 17,248 9 10 68,913 1 111 - - - 76,885 9 11 1830 94,387 9 0 161,488 1 91 16,566 9 10 - - - 67,896 1 111 71,733 17 5 N. B. The duty on beer being repealed in 1830, there are no later accounts of the quantity brewed. III. An account of the Number of Barrels of Strong Beer exported in each Year, from 5th of January 1825 to 5th of January 1830. Number of Barrels (Imperial Measure) exported from England. Scotland. Ireland. 1826 - 53,013 1,827 9,855 1827 - 42,602 1,679 10,000 Years ended 5th of January - 1828 - 59,471 2,509 11,261 1829 - 71,842 3,304 14,499 1830 - 74,902 3,131 15,207 The exports in 1832 were 70,130 barrels. It has been contended by some, that the condition of the bulk of the people has declined since the commencement of the late French war; and that this decline, and not the duties and restrictions on the manufacture and sale of malt and beer, has been the real cause that the consumption of malt liquors continued stationary during the thirty years ending with 1830. But nearly four millions of persons were added to the population of England and Wales during the eighteenth century, and it is admitted, on all hands, that the condition of the middle and lower classes was, at the same time, vastly improved. Instead, however, of increasing, as no doubt it would have done but for some very powerful counteracting cause, we have seen that the consumption of malt liquor continued stationary during the whole of last century, 80 that the fair presumption is, that it continued stationary during that period of the present century already referred to, not because the people have become less able to purchase beer, but because the same causes which formerly prevented the increase of con- sumption have continued to operate. If we except a portion of the peasantry in some of the southern counties, where the pernicious practice of paying wages out of the poor's rates has been introduced, it will be found that the condition of the labouring classes has been, speak- ing generally, changed very much for the better during the last thirty years. Their health has been remarkably improved a result which could hardly have taken place without an improvement in their habits as to cleanliness, and in their ordinary accommodations and, independent of this circumstance, the fact that the lower classes have lodged upwards of fif- teen millions sterling in Savings' Banks, and that upwards of a million of them are members than the former. The ale gallon contains 282 cubic inches, and the Imperial gallon 2774 the latter being 0'o part less B Digitized by Google 14 ALE AND BEER. of Friendly Societies, shows pretty clearly that, though they may not be anywhere so com- fortable as could be wished, and though, in Kent, Hampshire, and some other southern coun- ties, they are exposed to very great privations, their condition is, on the whole, superior to what it has ever previously been. It has further been contended, that if the decline in the consumption of beer cannot be ascribed to any falling off in the condition of the people, or in their power to purchase malt liquors, the fair inference is, that it has originated in a change of taste; and the increased consumption of spirituous liquors that has taken place of late years has been appealed to in proof that such is the fact. But this increase has been very greatly exaggerated: admitting, however, that the circumstances are really such as have been represented, the question instantly recurs, to what is this change of taste owing ? How comes it that the people of England should be less partial than heretofore to that palatable and nutritious beverage to which they have been long accustomed, and that they should be resorting to ardent spirits and other deleterious compounds, destructive alike of their health and morals If we mistake not, it will be found to be wholly owing to the duties and restric- tions that have been laid on the manufacture and sale of beer. 8. Duties on Ale and Beer : old licensing System.-The duty on malt is 20s. 8d. a quar- ter; on hops 2d. a pound; and on strong beer, which forms five-tenths of the whole quantity brewed, the duty was 9s. 10d. a barrel. It is commonly estimated, that from three to three and a half barrels of beer are manufactured from a quarter of malt and that each quarter of malt requires twelve pounds of hops. Now, supposing that three and a quarter barrels of beer are produced from a quarter of malt, the duties affecting it, down to the 10th of October, 1830, were 8. d. Duty laid directly on malt 20 8 Beer duty on three and a quarter barrels 31 11 Hop duty 2 0 54s. 7d. and dividing this sum of 54s. 7d. by 31, the duties affecting each barref of beer will be 17s. Such duties are obviously oppressive. The price of barley does not at an average exceed 35s. per quarter. But the duties on malt or beer produced from a quarter of barley (exclu- sive of the hop duty) amounted to 52s. 7d., being equal to 150 per cent. upon the cost of the barley employed ! Need we seek elsewhere for the cause of the stationary demand for malt liquors ? The taxes on wine, British spirits, tea, and coffee, do not, in any case, exceed 100 per cent. Nor can there be a doubt that the disproportionately heavy burden that has thus been imposed on the natural and healthy beverage of the lower classes has principally con- tributed to lessen its consumption, and to cause them to resort to less salubrious substitutes. In another point of view, the beer duties were still more indefensible. They affected only that description of beer which was brewed for sale; and as all the higher classes brewed their own beer, the duty fell only on the lower and middle ranks of the community, and particularly the former. It is singular, that a tax so grossly unequal and oppressive should have been so long submitted to. Should the public necessities require, at any future period, that an effort should be made to increase the revenue from beer, the fair and proper method would be to increase the malt duties. They affect alike those who brew the beer which they consume, and those who buy it from a public brewer. Their increase would not require the employ- ment of any additional officers for it is obvious, that the same officers and regulations that serve to collect a duty of 20s. 8d. would equally serve to collect a duty of 30s.; and, what is most important, an increase of this sort would not require any interference with the process of brewing. But besides the obstacles to the consumption of beer arising from the oppressive duties with which it was burdened, the system recently in force of granting licences for its sale, op- posed obstacles that were hardly less formidable. Previously to 1830, no one could open a house for the sale of beer without first obtaining a licence renewable annually from the magis- trates; and as these functionaries were accustomed only to grant licences to the occupiers of particular houses, the brewers naturally endeavoured, in order to ensure the sale of their beer, either to buy up those houses or to lend money upon them and in many extensive districts a few large capitalists succeeded in engrossing most of the public houses so that even the appearance of competition was destroyed, and a ready market and good prices secured for the very worst beer ! We, therefore, look upon the abolition of the beer duties, and the granting permission to all individuals to retail beer upon taking out an excise licence costing 2L 2s, as highly advan- tageous measures. The repeal of the duty has put an end to the unjust distinction that previous- ly obtained the poor man is no longer burdened with a heavv tax, from which the noble and affluent of the land were exempted but all classes are placed, in so far at least as the duties on beer are concerned, in the same situation. The fall of price caused by the abolition of the duty, by rendering beer more easily obtainable, will do much to check the consump- tion of spirits; and will, at the same time, powerfully contribute to the health and comfort of Digitized by Google ALE AND BEER. 15 the poor. The change in the mode of licensing houses for the retail of beer has introduced into the trade that system of free competition that is so advantageous. It is no longer in the power of any combination of brewers to maintain the price of beer at an unnatural eleva- tion and the public may now depend on being supplied with malt liquors at the lowest price that will serve to indemnify the brewers. 9. Complaints of the Increase of Beer Shops.-In despite, however, of what has now been stated, it is strenuously objected to the late measure for licensing houses for the sale of beer, that it has led to their excessive multiplication in different parts of the country, and has, in consequence, had a most pernicious influence on the public morals: but there do not seem to be any good grounds for such statements. The whole number of public houses licensed for the sale of beer and ale only in England and Wales, during the year ended 31st of March 1833, was 4,821 while 47,286 houses were licensed, during the same year, for the sale of beer, ale, and spirits.-(Par!. Paper, No. 426. Sess. 1833.) Whatever, therefore, may be the inconveniences arising from the number of the latter, it does seem ludicrous to imagine that they can be materially increased by the opening of the beer shops. On the contrary, we should think that every measure which has a tendency to substitute beer shops for spirit must be advantageous; and such is the precise effect of the act 1 Will. 4. cap. 64. Its privileges are acquired by those only who confine themselves to the sale of beer; and until it has been shown that the drinking of beer is less advantageous, or more pernicious, than the drinking of spirits, we shall not be inclined to lay much stress on the complaints so frequently put forth as to the number of beer shops. In order, however, to check their unnecessary multi- plication, and to ensure as far as possible the maintenance of good order in them, it might be expedient, perhaps, to increase the licence duty, and the security required from those apply- ing for a licence, and to facilitate the suppression of disorderly houses: but we protest against any attempt to lessen the number of public houses by reviving the old licensing system, with the injustice and jobbing inseparable from it, and from every modification of it. 10. Existing Regulations with respect to the Sale of Beer.-Th sale of ale, beer, &c. by retail in England, is now regulated by the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64., of which we subjoin a pretty full abstract. Licenses to be granted by commissioners of excise, or by persons authorised by them; to cost 21. 2s. a year; not to authorise the sale of wine or spirits: not to be granted to sheriffs' officers, nor to any person executing the legal process of any court of justice, nor to any person not being a householder assessed to the parish.- 2. The party requiring such licence to enter into a bond to the commissioners, with one sufficient surety in the penalty of 201., or with two sufficient sureties in the penalty of 10%. each, for the payment of any penalty or sum of money, not exceeding the amount of such 201. or 101. respectively, which shall be incurred for any offence against this act by the party to whom such licence shall be granted; and no person licensed to sell beer by retail, or not being a householder paying the poor rates, shall be surety in any such bond.-> . 4, 5. Every person who shall be licensed under this act, shall cause to be painted, in letters three inches at least in length, in white upon a black ground, or in black upon a white ground, publicly visible and legible, upon a board, to be placed over the door of the house in which such person shall be licensed, the christian and surname of the persons mentioned in such licence, at full length, together with the words Licensed to sell Beer by Retail and every such person shall keep up such name and words during all the time that such person shall continue so licensed, upon pain of forfeiting for every omis- sion 104.-0 6. No person to sell any beer by retail, under this act, after the expiration of any licence granted, nor in any house not specified in such licence and any person selling beer by retail, not being duly licensed, as the keeper of a common inn, ale-house, or victualling-bouse or if any such person, so licensed, shall deal in or retail any wine or spirits, be shall, for every such offence, forfeit 201., half to go to the informer and half to the king; such penalty to be recovered as other excise penalties; and the powers of the excise act 7 & 8 G. 4 c. 53, &c. extended to this act.- a 7, 8, 9. Persons trading in partnership, and in one house, shall not be obliged to take out more than one licence in any one year provided also, that no one licence shall authorise any person to sell beer, in any other than the house mentioned in such licence.- 10. In cases of riot or expected riot or tumult, every person licensed under this act, and keeping any house situate within their jurisdictions, shall close his house at any time which the justice or justices shall direct and every such person who shall keep open his house at or after any hour at which such justices shall have so ordered or directed such house to be closed, shall be deemed to have not main- tained good order and rule therein, and to be guilty of an offence against the tenor of his license.- 11. Every person licensed to sell beer by retail, shall sell (except in quantities less than a half pint) by the gallon, quart, pint, or half pint measure, sized according to the standard and in default thereof, he shall for every such offence forfeit the illegal measure, and pay not exceeding 40s., together with the costs of the conviction, to be recovered within thirty days next after that on which such offence was committed, before two justices; such penalty to be over and above all penalties to which the of- fender may be liable under any other act.-d 12. Every seller of beer by retail, having a licence under this act, who shall permit any person to be guilty of drunkenness, or disorderly conduct, in the house mentioned in such licence, shall forfeit the sums following for the first offence, not less than 40s. nor more than 5l. RS the justices, before whom such retailer shall be convicted, shall adjudge and for the second offence, any sum not less than 51. nor more than 101.; and for the third offence, any sum not less than 201. nor more than 501.; and it small be law for the justices, before whom any such conviction for such third offence shall take place, to adjudge, if they shall think fit, that such offender shall be disqualified from selling beer by retail for the space of two years next ensuing such conviction, and also that no beer shall be sold by retail, by any person in the house mentioned in the licence of such offender; and if any person so licensed shall, knowingly, sell any beer, ale, or porter, made otherwise than from malt and hops, or shall mix, or cause to be mixed, any drugs or other pernicious ingredients, with any beer sold in his house, or shall fraudulently dilute, or in any way adulterate, any such beer, such offender shall, for the first offence, forfeit not less than 10% nor any more than 201., and for the second such offence such Digitized by Google 16 ALE AND BEER. offender shall be adjudged to be disqualified from selling beer, ale, or porter, by retail, for the term of two years, or to forfeit not less than 201. nor more than 50Z., and shall be subject to a like penalty at every house where he shall commit such offence; and if any person shall, during any term in which it shall not be lawful for beer to be sold by retail on the premises of any offender, sell any beer by re- tail on such premises, knowing that it was not lawful to be sold, such offender shall forfeit not less than 10L. nor more than 201.; every person suffering the conditions of the licence to be infringed to be deemed guilty of disorderly conduct.-d 13. Retailers' houses not to be open before four in the morning, nor after ten in the evening; nor be- tween the hours of ten in the forenoon and one in the afternoon, nor at any time between the hours of three and five in the afternoon, on any Sunday, Good Friday, Christmas-day, or any day appointed for a public fast or thanksgiving; and any person offending herein shall forfeit 40s. for every offence every separate sale to be deemed a separate offence.-> 14. All penalties under this act, except for selling beer by any person not duly licensed, shall be reco- vered, upon the information of any person before two justices in petty sessions; and every such pe- nalty shall be prosecuted for within three calendar months next after the offence; and every person licensed under this act, who shall be convicted before two justices, shall, unless proof be adduced to the satisfaction of such justices, that such person had been theretofore convicted before two justices, within the space of twelve calendar months next preceding, be adjudged by such justices to be guilty of a first offence against this act, and to forfeit and pay any penalty by this act imposed for such of- fence, or if no specific penalty be imposed, then any sum not exceeding 51., together with the costs of the conviction; and if proof be adduced to the satisfaction of such justices, that such person had been previously convicted, within the space of twelve calendar months next preceding, of one such offence only, such person to be adjudged guilty of a second offence against this act, and to forfeit and pay any penalty by this act imposed for such offence, or if no specific penalty be 80 imposed, then any sum not exceeding 10L., together with the costs of conviction; and if proof shall be adduced that such person had been previously convicted within the space of eighteen calendar months next preceding, of two such separate offences, and if proof be adduced that such person, SO charged, is guilty of the offence charged against him, such person shall be adjudged to be guilty of a third offence against this act, and to forfeit and pay any penalty imposed by this act, in respect of such offence, or if no such specific penalty shall be imposed, then to forfeit and pay the sum of 501. together with the costs of convic- tion.- 15. The party, convicted of any such third offence, may appeal to the general sessions, or quarter ses- sions, then next ensuing, unless held within twelve days after conviction, and in that case, to the then next subsequent sessions ; and, in such case, the party convicted shall enter into a recognizance, with two sureties, personally to appear at the said general or quarter sessions, to abide the judgment of the court; and to pay such costs as shall be by the court awarded: or, in failure of the party convicted entering into such recognizance, such conviction shall remain good and valid and the said justices who shall take such recognizance are also required to bind the person who shall make such charges to appear at such general or quarter sessions, then and there to give evidence against the person charged, and, in like manner, to bind any other person who shall have any knowledge of such offence and it shall be lawful for the said general or quarter sessions to adjudge such person to be guilty of such third offence against this act, and such adjudication shall be final: and it shall be lawful for such general or quarter sessions to punish such offender by fine, not exceeding 100L., together with the costs of such appeal, or to adjudge the licence to be forfeited, or that no beer be sold by retail in the house for the term of two years, and if such licence shall be adjudged to be forfeited, it shall hence- forth be void and whenever, in such case, the licence of such offender shall be adjudged to be void, such offender shall be deemed incapable of selling beer, ale, or porter, by retail, in any house kept by him, for the space of two years, to be computed from the time of such adjudication and any licence granted to such person during such term shall be void.-Φ 16. In default of payment of penalties, proceedings may be had against the sureties. 19. Any person summoned as a witness, who shall neglect or refuse to appear, and not make such rea- sonable excuse for such neglect, &c. as shall be admitted by such justices of sessions, or who, appear- ing, shall refuse to be examined, shall, on conviction, forfeit not exceeding 101.-Φ 20. Offenders refusing or neglecting, within seven days after conviction, to pay the penalty imposed, and any costs assessed, such justices may issue their warrant, tolevy the amount by distress and sale, together with the costs of distress and sale and in every such case, such offenders, if in custody, shall be forthwith discharged but if the goods and chattels are not sufficient, such justices may commit the offender to the common gaol or house of correction for not exceeding one calendar month, if the pe- nalty shall not be above 51. for not exceeding three calendar months, if the penalty shall be above 51. and not more than 102. and for not exceeding six calendar months, if the penalty shall be above 102.; provided, that whenever such offender shall pay to the gaoler or keeper, or to whomsoever such jus- tices shall have appointed, the penalty and costs, together with all the costs of apprehension and con- veyance to gaol, at any time previous to the expiration of the time for which such offender shall have been committed, such offender shall be forthwith discharged.- 21. No conviction under this act, nor any adjudication made upon appeal therefrom, shall be quashed for want of form, nor removed by 27. Every action against any justice, constable, or other person, for any thing done in execution of his duty under this act, to be commenced within three calendar months, and not afterwards; and if any person be sued, he may plead the general issue, and give the special matter in evidence.- 28, This act not to affect the two universities, nor the vintners' company in London; nor to prohibit the sale of beer at fairs, as heretofore. 11. Scotch Ale and Beer Duties.-The duties on ale and beer in Scotland have been for a lengthened period the same as in England. At the union in 1707, the English duties on ale and beer were introduced into Scotland. But, besides strong and small beer, the Scotch had an intermediate species, which they called two-penny, and which was their favourite beverage. The duty on this description of beer was fixed, at the union, at 2s. 14d. a barrel. For thirty years after its imposition, the quan- tity of two-penny that paid duty was always above 400,000, and sometimes exceeded 500,000 barrels a year. But in 1760 the duty on two-penny was increased to 3s. 41d. and the consumption immediately fell off to between 100,000 and 200,000 barrels ! The quan- tity that paid duty in 1800 amounted to 149,803 barrels. The manufacture of this species of beer ceased entirely in 1802. No account has been kept of the quantity of beer brewed in Ireland since 1809, when it amounted to 960,300 barrels.-(Morewood on Intoxicating Liquors, p. 353.) Perhaps it may now amount to from 1,000,000 to 1,200,000 barrels. Digitized by Google ALE AND BEER. 17 12. Regulations as to the Exportation of Beer.-Ale or beer exported to foreign parts as merchandise is allowed a drawback of 5s. the barrel of 36 gallons, Imp. meas. But before any debenture for the above drawback shall be paid, the exporter or his principal clerk or manager shall make oath thereon, before the proper officer of excise, that such ale or beer was put on board the exporting ship as merchandise to be sent beyond seas, and no part thereof for the ship's use and that, according to the best of his knowledge and belief, the same has been brewed wholly from malt which has been charged with and paid the duty of 2s. 7d. a bushel, and shall also specify in such oath the time when and the place where and the brewer, being an entered and licensed brewer for sale, by whom such beer or ale was brewed, and that the quantity of malt used in brewing was not less than two bushels (Imp. meas.) for every 36 gallons of such beer or ale. Persons making false statements forfeit the sum of 200/. and the debenture is void.-(1 Will. 4. cap. 51. § 11.) In consequence of the complaints, whether well or ill founded, of the inconveniences arising from the increase of beer shops-(see Dict. p. 14), a material change has been made in the mode of licensing houses for the sale of beer. Under the act 1 Will. 4. C. 64.-(Dict. p. 14), the commissioners of excise, or other persons duly authorised, were bound to grant licenses, costing 21. 2s. a year, to all persons not excepted in the act, empowering them to sell ale, beer, porter, cider, &c. to be drunk indifferently either on or off the premises. But the act of 1834, 4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 85. made the obtaining of a licence to retail beer to be drunk on the premises contingent on the applicant being able to produce a certificate of good character, subscribed by certain persons rated at a certain amount to the poor: it has also raised the cost of such licence to 3/. 3s. ; and reduced the cost of a licence to sell beer not to be drunk on the premises to 1/. 1s. We subjoin a full abstract of the act :- Persons upplying for a Licence to sell Beer to be drunk on the Premises, to deposite a certificate of good Character, &c.-Every person applying for a licence to sell beer or cider by retail, to be drunk in the house or on the premises, shall, in addition to the application setting forth the particulars required by the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64., annually produce to and deposit with the commissioners of excise, collector, or other person authorised to grant such licence within the parish or place in which the person applying intends to sell beer or cider by retail, a certificate signed by 6 persons residing in and being and de- scribing themselves to be inhabitants of such parish, place, &c. and respectively rated therein to the poor at not less than 61., or occupying a house therein rated to the poor at not less than 61., none of whom shall be maltsters, common brewers, or persons licensed to sell spirituous liquors or beer or ci- der by retail, nor owners or proprietors of any houses licensed to sell liquors, beer, or cider by retail, stating that the person applying for the licence is of good character; and at the foot of such certificate one of the overseers of the parish, township, or place shall certify (if the fact be so) that such 6 per- sons are inhabitants respectively rated as aforesaid and such certificate shall respectively be in the form of the schedule annexed to this act provided always, that in any parish, township, or district maintaining its own poor, in which there are not 10 inhabitants rated to their relief to the amount of 61. each, or not occupying houses respectively rated to the poor at 61. each (not being maltsters, com- mon brewers, or persons licensed to sell spirituous liquors or beer or cider by retail,) the certificate of the majority of the inhabitants of such parish, township, or district maintaining its own poor, as are rated to the amount of 61. each, shall be deemed to be a sufficient certificate for the purposes of this act.- 2. Penalty on Overseers.-Any overseer who shall, without due cause, refuse to certify that the persons who have signed the certificate are respectively rated to the poor's rate as aforesaid, to forfeit not more than 51.- 3. Beer drunk in Sheds.-Any person licensed under the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64., to sell beer, cider, &c. not to be consumed on the premises, who shall employ, permit, or suffer any person or persons to take or carry any beer, &c. from his house or premises, to be drunk or consumed for his benefit or profit, in any other house, tent, shed, &c. belonging to, or hired, used, or occupied by such licensed person, such beer, &c. shall be held to have been consumed on the premises, and the person selling the same shall be subject to the like forfeitures and penalties as if it had been actually drunk or consumed in a house or upon premises licensed only for the sale thereof.-d 4. Billetting.-Provisions for billetting soldiers under mutiny acts to extend only to those licensed to sell beer or cider to be drunk in the house or on the premises, and not to extend to those licensed to sell beer not to be consumed on the premises -d 5. Justices to regulate the Opening and Closing of Houses.-Justices in petty sessions are authorised to fix the hours at which houses and premises licensed to sell beer under this act shall be opened and closed but any person thinking himself aggrieved by any such order may appeal at any time, within months from its date, to the justices in quarter sessions, on giving the justices making the order 14 days' notice of his intention and the decision of the justices in quarter sessions shall be final pro- vided, however, that the hourito be fixed for opening any house shall not in any case be earlier than 5 o'clock in the morning, nor for closing the same later than 11 o'clock at night, or before 1 o'clock in the afternoon on Sunday, Good Friday, Christmas-Day, or any day appointed for a public fast or thanksgiving; and the hours so fixed by the justices, with reference to the districts within their juris- dictions, shall be taken to be the hours to be observed and complied with under this act as fully as if the same had been specially appointed by it.-d 6. Constables, &c. to risit licensed Houses.-All constables and officers of police are authorised to enter into all houses licensed to sell beer or spirituous liquors to be consumed upon the premises whenever they shall think proper; and if any person licensed as aforesaid, or any servant or person in his em- ploy or by his direction, shall refuse to admit such constables, &c. into such house or premises, the person having the licence shall for the first offence forfeit and pay any sum not exceeding 51., together with the costs of conviction, to be recovered within 20 days before one or more justices and it shall be lawful for any two or more justices, upon any person being convicted of such offence for the second time, to adjudge (if they think fit) that such offender be disqualified from selling beer, ale, porter, ci- der, or perry, by retail, for 2 years after such conviction, or for such shorter space as they may think proper.- 7. Penalty for making or using fulse Certificates.-Persons certifying any matter having reference to this act as true, who know the same to be false, or using any certificate, knowing the same to be forged, shall, on conviction of such offence before2 or more justices, forfeit and pay the sum of 201.; and every licence granted to any person making use of any certificate to obtain the same, such person knowing such certificate to be forged, or the matters certified therein to be false, shall be void to all B 2 3 Digitized by Google 18 ALE AND BEER. intents and purposes; and any person using such certificate shall be disqualified for ever from ob- taining a licence to sell beer or cider by retail.- 8. No licence to be granted without a Certificate.-No licence for the sale of beer or cider by retail to be consumed or drunk in the house or on the premises shall be granted, except upon the certificate hereby required provided, that in all extra-parochial places the certificate required by this act may be signed and given by inhabitants rated to the poor at 61. in any adjoining parish or parishes.- 9. Retailers to produce their Licences on Requisition of 2 Magistrates.-In case any complaint be laid be- fore 2 justices against any licensed person for an offence against the tenor of his licence, or against this act or the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64., the said justices may require such person to produce his licence be- fore them for their examination and if he wilfully neglect or refuse so to do, he shall forfeit for such offence any sum, not exceeding 51., the said justices shall think proper; and such person may be con- victed, proceeded against, and dealt with for such offence in the same manner, mutatis mutundis, as is directed by the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64. with regard to persons guilty of a first offence against said act and the penalty imposed for such offence is to be applied in the manner that a penalty for a first of- fence against said act is directed to be applied.-d 10. Continuance of Powers, &c.-The powers, provisions, and penalties of 1 Will. 4. c. 64. to apply to persons licensed under this act, and to their sureties, &c.- 11. Act 1 Will. 4. c. 64, to continue in force, except as hereby altered.- 12. Duties on Beer Licences under the 1 Will. 4. c. 64. repealed, and new Duties granted in lieu thereof.- From and after the passing of this act, the duties payable on excise licences for the sale of beer by re- tail under the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64. shall cease, and in lieu of such duties there shall be paid upon the licences hereby authorized to be granted the duties following; viz.: For and upon every licence to be taken out by any person for the For and upon every licence to be taken out by any person for the sale of beer by retail, not to be drunk or consumed in or upon sale of beer by retail, to be drunk or consumed in or upon the the house or premises where sold, the annual sum of IL la house or premises where sold, the annual sum of 3d. 3r.-Sec. 13. The duties to be under the management of commissioners of excise, and to be recovered and ac- counted for under the provisions of the act 1 Will. 4. C. 64.-0 14. Not to affect Duty on Licences to Retail Cider and Perry.Nothing in this act shall affect the amount of duty payable under the 1 Will. 4. c. 64. on licenses to retail cider and perry but every such licence shall specify whether it be granted for the sale of cider and perry by retail not to be drunk in the house or premises where sold, or for the retail of the same to be drunk in the house or premises where sold. 15. Licences under this Act not to authorise Persons to sell Wine.-No licence granted under the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64. and this act shall authorise any person to take out or hold any licence for the sale of wine, spirits, or sweets or made wines, or mead or metheglin and if any person licensed under the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64. and this act shall permit or suffer any wine, spirits, &c. to be brought into his house or premises to be drunk or consumed there, or shall suffer them to be drunk or consumed in his house or premises, he shall, over and above any excise penalties to which he may be subject, forfeit 201.-0 16 Penalty on unlicensed Persons.-Such persons selling beer and cider by retail to be drunk off the pre- mises, 101. ; to be drunk on the premises, 201-0 17. Board over the Door.-Every person licensed to sell beer, cider, or perry, by retail, under the autho- rity of the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64. and this act, shall, on the board required by the former act to be placed over his door, paint and keep thereon, after the words "licensed to sell beer or cider by retail," the additional words not to he drunk on the premises," or to be drunk on the premises,' as the case may be, on pain of forfeiting the penalty imposed by such act for not having such board over the door. 18. What is retailing of Beer, &c.-Every sale of beer, or of cider or perry, in any less quantity than 41 gallons, shall be deemed and taken to be a sale by retail.- 19. Penalties for selling Spirits or Wine without Licence.-Persons licensed to sell beer or cider under the act 1 Will. 4. c. 64. and this act, who sell spirits or wine, sweets, &c. without being licensed, are lia- ble to the penalties imposed by the laws of excise for selling spirits or wine, sweets, &c. without li- cence. 20. Certificate not to be required for Houses in certain Situations, if Population exceed 5,000.-The before- mentioned certificate shall not be required as to any house situated within the cities of London and Westminster, or within any parish or place within the bills of mortality, nor within any city or town corporate, nor within the distance of 1 mile from the place used at the last election as the place of election or polling place ofany town returning a member to parliament, provided that the population, determined according to the last parliamentary census taken in such city, town, &c. shall exceed 5,000 : provided, that no licence for the sale of beer, ale, porter, cider, or perry by retail on the premi- ses in the cities of London and Westminster, or in any parish within the bills of mortality. or in any such city or town corporate, or town returning a member to parliament as before mentioned, shall be granted after the 5th day of April, 1836, unless the house or premises specified as those in which beer or cider is intended to be sold shall be of the value of 10/. per annum.-d21. Service of Summons.-Summonses or orders not legally served, unless by some constable or other peace officer.-Q 22. Commencement.-Act shall commence and take effect from and after the 10th day of October, 1834.- è 23. Form of Certificate referred to in 1 2. We, the undersigned, being inhabitants of the parish [or township, as the case may be] of and respectively rated to the poor at not less than 6/. per annum, and none of us being maltsters, common brewers, or persons licensed to sell spirituous liquors, or being licensed to sall beer or cider by retail, do hereby certify, that A. B., dwelling in street [here specify the street, lane, de] in the said parish (or township, &c.] is a person of good character. [Here insert the day of signing the certificate.) (Signed) E. F. G.H. I.K. [Here state the residence of each of the par- L.M. sons signing.) N. O. P. Q. do hereby certify, That all the above-mentioned persons whose names are subscribed to this certificate are inhabitants of the parish [or township, &c.] of rated to 61. to the relief of the poor of the mid parish. C. D. [Overseer of the parish or township, &c] Date. Sup.) [Ale, porter, and beer, are made in the United States in large quantities; and their con- sumption appears to be steadily increasing. The early emigrants from Great Britain brought with them their tastes and habits; and we find, at an early period, that breweries were established on a small scale in all the princi- pal seaports. Their success to the south of the Potomac was prevented by the heat of the Digitized by Google ALEXANDRIA. 19 climate, together with the short duration of the winter. In Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, however, they have succeeded, and continue to flourish. Breweries are also to be found in large numbers throughout the state of New York and there is scarcely a village in it where good ale cannot be procured. Along the banks of the Hudson river, almost every town has one or more breweries, and some of these are of a considerable size. At Al- bany, the business is carried on to a great extent. Beer was brewed in Philadelphia previous to the revolutionary war. The manufacture of porter was introduced here after the peace which was soon followed by that of ale. These two articles are now generally manu- factured; and beer, properly 80 called, is rapidly going into disuse. A continued extension of the business of brewing has been taking place in Pennsylvania, and throughout the western country. We find breweries at all the principal towns along the banks of the Ohio. At Pittsburg, Wheeling, and Cincinnati, there are a number, which not only supply those places and the surrounding country, but furnish large quantities for export down the Ohio and the Mississippi. And large quantities are exported from the northern to the southern states generally, where their consumption is fast taking the place of that of ardent spirits. The quality of the malt liquors manufactured in the United States has improved in the last few years, and will now not suffer by a comparison with the best foreign. From the great abun- dance and low price of the staple articles from which they are made, no temptation exists to adulterate them. The public, consequently, are furnished with a pure and wholesome beverage. Nearly all the beer, ale, and porter, which are imported in the United States, is brought to us from Great Britain. A small portion of what is imported is re-exported, for the most part to the island of Cuba. The countries to which the corresponding articles of domestic pro- duction are chiefly exported, we have no means of stating with any accuracy since they are classed together with cider in the annual statements of the commerce of the United States, made to Congress by the Secretary of the Treasury. We may mention that this class of our products is chiefly exported to the British North American Colonies, Cuba, Texas, the Bri- tish West Indies, and Mexico.-Am. Ed.] ALEXANDRIA, so called from its founder, Alexander the Great, the principal sea-port of Egypt, on the coast of the Mediterranean. It is situated about 12 miles W. of the Canopic mouth of the Nile the Pharos being in lat. 31° 12} N., long. 29° 53 ¥ E. The situation of this famous city was most admirably chosen. Until the discovery of the route to India by the Cape of Good Hope, Egypt formed the natural seat of the commerce between the eastern and western worlds; and Alexandria was placed in the most favourable position in Egypt for an emporium. It is the only port on the whole northern coast of that country where there is, at once, deep water, and security for shipping throughout the year. The ports of Rosetta and Damietta, the former on the west, and the latter on the eastern arm of the Nile, are both difficult of entrance, each having a bar, upon which there is always a dangerous surf. Ships bound for Alexandria avoid this serious inconvenience and by means of an artificial navigation, stretching from the city to the western branch of the Nile, it has for a while at least, almost the same facilities of internal navigation that are enjoyed by the cities referred to. It may be proper, however, to mention that this artificial communication with the Nile has not always been open. It existed in antiquity, but fell into decay during the barbarism of more modern times. After being shut up for some centuries, it has been re-opened by Mohammed Ali, who has dug a canal from Alexandria to Foûah on the Nile, about 27 miles above Rosetta. This important work is 48 miles in length, 90 feet in breadth, and from 15 to 18 feet deep. It was opened in 1819 but owing partly to the nature of the ground, partly to some defects in its construction, and partly to the mud deposited by the water of the Nile, it is difficult to keep in repair; and cannot now, it is said, be navigated except during the period of the inundation. Its free navigation at all periods would, however, be of the greatest advantage, not to Alexandria only, but to all Egypt; and it is believed that this might be secured by facing the canal with brick, and putting it otherwise into good order. Ports, &c.-The ancient city was situated a little more inland than the modern one, opposite to the small island of Pharos, on which was erected the lighthouse, so celebrated in antiquity.-( de Bello Civili, lib. iii. cap. 112.) This island was, partly by artificial means, and partly by natural causes, gradually joined to the land by a mound, and on this the new town is principally built. The isth- mus and island have now the form of a T, its head being N. E. and S. W. A square castle or tower, built on a small islet or rock, at the extremity of a mole projecting from the north-east angle of the city, is still called the Pharos, and a light is regularly exhibited upon it. On each side of the city there is a port. That on the western, or African side, called the Old Port, is by far the largest and best. It stretches from the town westwards to Marabout, about six miles, and is about R mile and a half wide. It is bounded on the north, partly by the western tongue or angle of the island on which the city is partially built, and partly by rocks and sand banks. It has three entrances. The first, or that nearest the city, having 17 feet water, is about two miles S. W. from the large building, situated a little to the westward of the town, called the palace; but it is too narrow and difficult to be attempted by any one not thoroughly acquainted with the port. The eastern side of the second or middle entrance is marked by buoys which lie about two miles and three quarters S. W. from the palace it is about a quarter of a mile wide, and has, where shallowest, 27 feet water. The third or western entrance has its west- ern boundary within about three-eighths of a mile from the east end of Marabout island it is about half a mile wide, and has from 25 to 27 feet water in its shallowest places. This last is the best en- Digitized by Google 20 ALEXANDRIA. trance. Ships, when in, may anchor close to the town in from 22 to 40 feet water, and there is good anchorage in deep water all along the shore. Foreigners were formerly excluded from this port but this prohibition no longer exists. The new or Asiatic harbour is on the eastern side of the town. A rock called the Diamond hes a little to the east of the Pharos tower ; and ships entering the port ought to have this rock about a ca- hle's length on the right. If they get much further to the left, they will come in contact with a shoal which stretches westward from the Pharillon, or little tower, on the east side of the port. The water immediately within the port S. W. from the Pharos is from 30 to 40 feet deep; but the space for an- chorage is very limited, and is exposed to the northerly gales; and the ground being foul and rocky, hempen cables are very apt to chafe, and several accidents have happened in consequence to ships un- provided with iron cables. Ordinary tides rise 2 feet but during the overflow of the Nile the rise is 4 feet. Variation 13° west.-(See Plan of Alexandria, by Lieut. Falbe.) Ancient and Modern City.-Under the Ptolemies and Romans, Alexandria was the first commercial city in the world. It suffered greatly by its reduction by the Saracens in 640; but it continued to be a place of considerable commercial importance till the despotism of the Mamelukes and Turks, and the discovery of the route to India by the Cape of Good Hope, completed its ruin. Under the Ptolemies, the population is believed to have amounted to about 300,000, and the city was adorned by a vast num- ber of magnificent structures. At present the population varies with the seasons of the year, but, when greatest, it is not supposed to exceed 25,000; and may vary between this amount and 16,000 or 18,000. The appearance of the modern town is most unpromising. It may be justly said, that in the new city of Alexandria we find a poor orphan, whose sole inheritance has been the venerable name of its father. The vast extent of the ancient city is contracted in the new, to a little neck of land be- tween the two ports. The most superb temples are changed into plain mosques the most magnificent palaces into houses of a bad structure; the royal seat is become a prison for slaves an opulent and numerous people has given way to a small number of foreign traders, and to a multitude of wretches, that are the servants of those on whom they depend a place formerly so famous for the extent of its commerce, is no longer any thing more than a mere place of embarking, in fine, it is not a phoenix that revives from its own ashes, it is, at most, a reptile, sprung from the dirt, the dust, and corruption with which the Alcoran has infected the whole country."-(Norden's Travels, Eng. trans. 8vo ed. p. 37.) There is reason, however, to think that this striking description, though accurate at the time when it was written (1737), conveys too unfavourable an idea of the present state of Alexandria. The vigorous go- vernment of Mohammed Ali, by introducing comparative security and good order into Egypt, has lat- terly revived the commerce of Alexandria, which has again become a place of considerable importance in the trading world. Trade of Alexandria.-The imports principally consist of cotton stuffs, timber, hardware, iron and tin, tobacco, machinery, ammunition, silk goods, woollens, staves, &c. The exports consist of raw cotton, wheat and barley, rice, linen, flax, linseed, sugar, coffee (from the Red Sea), drugs, gums, sal- ammoniac, saffron, wax, &c. The principal articles of importation into this country from Egypt are cotton, flax and linseed, senna, and gum. Of these, cotton is by far the most important. We began to import it in 1823; and since then the imports have been as follows :- Years. Bales. Years. Bales. Years. Bales. 1824 38,022 1827 22,450 1830 14,752 1825 111,023 1928 32,889 1831 38,124 1826 47,621 1829 24,739 1832 41,183 In 1832, the French imported 25,807 bales of Egyptian cotton the imports at Trieste during the same year were about 50,000 bales; and those at Leghorn and Genoa were, together, about the same as at Trieste. The bale of Egyptian cotton weighs about 220 lbs. This important trade owes its existence almost entirely to the exertions of the Pacha, by whom the cotton plantations have been established. The cotton exported is all long-staple, but of two sorts one called in Egypt makko, and in England common Egyptian; the other, the produce of sea-island seed, called in Egypt Sennaar, and in England sea-island Egyptian. Besides these two descriptions, Egypt produces from 15,000 to 20,000 bales of short-staple cotton, similar in quality to that of Smyrna, and chiefly consumed in the country. The cotton brought from Egypt is found to be amongst the most useful that is grown that raised from sea- island seed ranks next to American sea-island. The exports from this country to Egypt principally consist of cotton goods and twist, earthenware, iron and steel, arms and ammunition, &c. Their real value amounted, in 1831, to 122,8321. but besides what goes direct, a good deal of British produce finds its way to Egypt at second-hand from Malta, Smyrna, &c. Constantinople and the islands of the Archipelago are the great markets for the wheat and other grain exported from Egypt, the quantity sent to them being sometimes very large. The supplies are, however, extremely uncertain. Every thing in Egypt depends on the Nile; and when it does not rise to the usual height, the crops are very much below an average. Beans are extensively cultivated, and have sometimes been brought to England, but rarely, if ever, with advantage to the importers. They are very Inferior to English beans, and are peculiarly subject to the worm. No oats are raised in Egypt, the horses being entirely fed upon barley. Besides cotton, the Pacha has turned his attention to the culture of sugar, indigo, &c. The first has long been raised in Egypt, but the exports are not very considerable. Silk is grown to some extent. The date-palm thrives in every part of Egypt, and the fruit is largely exported. It is singular, that notwithstanding the luxuriance of many of its vegetable productions, Egypt should be entirely destitute of timber.-(Lords' Report of 1827, on the Price of Foreign Corn, Min. of Evid. p. 120., and private information.) In 1831, there entered the port of Alexandria 1,215 ships, of the burden of 198,299 tons. Of these, the Austrian were the most numerous; next, the English and Ionian; and then the French, Sardi- nian, Spanish, &c. Money.-Accounts are kept at Alexandria, as at Cairo, in current piastres, each piastre being equal to 40 paras, or medini, and each medino to 30 aspers. The medino is also divided into 8 borbi, or 6 forli. A purse contains 25,000 medini. The piastres struck in 1826 contain a great deal of alloy 15+ or 16 piastres = 1 Spanish dollar hence 1 piastre = 3jd. sterling, very nearly. Payments in transac- tions of any importance are generally made in Spanish dollars. Weights and Measures.-The yard, or pik, = 26.8 English inches hence 100 pike = 74.438 English yards. The measures for corn are the rhebebe, and the quillet or kislor; the former =4'364 English bushels, the latter - 4.729 ditto. The cantaro or quintal = 100 rottoli, but the rottolo has different names and weights: 1 rottolo furforo - 9347 lb. avoirdupois; 1 rottolo zaidino = 1:335 lb. ditto; 1 rottolo zaure or zaro 2.07 lbs. ditto 1 rottolo mina = 167 lb. (Manuel Universel de Nelkenbrecher.) Duties.-With the exception of the commercial monopolies of the Pacha, and the arbitrary principles on which he fixes the prices of commodities, there is nothing objectionable in his policy as to commerce. The duties on imports are only 3 per cent. We believe, however, that a small increase of the customs duty would compensate the Pacha for the abolition of most of his monopolies; and there can be little doubt that his subjects would be materially benefited by the change. Digitized by Google ALEXANDRIA. 21 Policy of the Pacha.-It is to be regretted that Mohammed Ali, who, in many respects, is one of the most extraordinary persons of the age, should have no just idea of the principles, by the adoption of which his plans of improvement might be perpetuated, and industry be rendered really flourishing. He leaves nothing to the discretion and enterprise of individuals. He may, indeed, be said to be the sole proprietor, manufacturer, farmer general, and whole- sale merchant of Egypt. He has monopolised the entire foreign trade of the country and has fixed the price to be paid for every article to the cultivator, and the price at which it is to be sold to the foreigner. Hence the extension of cultivation, and the growth of commerce and manufactures, have been of no real advantage to the bulk of the nation; and hence, also, the risk, in the event of the reins of government falling into less vigorous or able hands, that the fabric of apparent prosperity which the Pacha has been attempting to raise, may fall to pieces: but we would fain hope that the influence of the many intelligent Europeans now in Egypt, and the observations which the Egyptians sent to England and France by the Pacha cannot fail to have made upon the advantages resulting from the security of property and the freedom of industry, may be instrumental in paving the way for the gradual introduction of a more enlarged and liberal system. Ancient Trade of Alexandria.-As already remarked, Alexandria was, for a long series of years,-first under the Greek successors of Alexander, and subsequently under the Ro- mans,-the principal entrepôt of the ancient world. Most part of the traffic between Asia and Europe that had at a more early period centered at Tyre, was gradually diverted to this new emporium. An intercourse between the ports on the eastern coast of Egypt, and those on the opposite coast of Arabia, had subsisted from a very early period. That between Egypt and India was more recent. It was at first carried on by ships, which having sailed down the Red Sea from Myos Hormos and Berenice, coasted along the Arabian shores till they reached Cape Rasselgate, whence a short course brought them to India near the mouth of the river Indus. This was the course followed during the dynasty of the Ptolemies: but about 80 years after Egypt had been annexed to the Roman empire, Hippalus, the com- mander of an Egyptian ship trading to India, having observed the regular shifting of the trade winds, ventured to sail with the western monsoon from the Straits of Babelmandeb right across the Arabian Ocean; and was fortunate enough, after a prosperous voyage, to arrive at Musiris, in that part of India now known by the name of the Malabar coast. Having taken on board a cargo of Indian produce, Hippalus returned in safety with the eastern monsoon to Egypt. This discovery was deemed of so much importance, that the name of the discoverer was given to the wind which had carried him across the ocean to India and how trifling so- ever this voyage may now appear, those who consider that Hippalus had no compass by which to direct his course, and that owing to this circumstance, and the otherwise imperfect state of the art of navigation, the ancients seldom ventured out of sight of land, even in seas with which they were well acquainted, will be forward to admit that his enterprise and dar- ing were nowise inferior to his success; and that he was well entitled to the gratitude of his contemporaries and the respect of posterity. From the epoch of this discovery, fleets traded periodically from Egypt to Musiris, convey- ing the products of Europe to India, and conversely. The Indian goods having been landed at Myos Hormos and Berenice, were thence conveyed by caravans to Coptos (the modern Kenné), on the Nile, where they were put on board lighters and sent to Alexandria, whence they were distributed all over the western world. The goods sent to India were conveyed to Myos Hormos and Berenice by the same route. Myos Hormos was situated on the shore of the Arabian gulf, about a degree to the north of the modern port of Cosseir. The dis- tance from it to Coptos, in a straight line, is about 70 English miles. Berenice was situated a good way further to the south, being nearly under the tropic. It was built by Ptolemy Philadelphus. Its distance from Coptos is stated by Pliny at 258 Roman miles; the different resting places on the road were determined by the wells, and the journey occupied about 12 days. Ptolemy seems to have preferred this station to Myos Hormos, though the land car- riage to Coptos was so much further, from its greater proximity to the Straits of Babelmandeb, and its lessening the voyage up the Red Sea. Pliny says that the cost of the Indian commodities brought to Rome through Alexandria was increased a hundred fold (centuplicato veneant) by the expence of carriage, &c. We suspect that this is a rhetorical exaggeration, meaning merely that their price was very ma- terially enhanced. If the increase was to any thing like the extent mentioned, it must have been owing to the imposition of oppressive tolls and duties, for it could not possibly have been occasioned by the mere expenses of conveyance.*-(Plin. Hist. Nat. lib. vi, cap. 23.; Ameilhon, Commerce des Egyptiens, pp. 161-176. &c.; Robertson's Ancient India, note 20. &c.) Besides this important traffic, which supplied Rome and the western world with the silks, * In the 16th century, the cost of Indian commodities brought to Western Europe by way of Alex- andria and Aleppo was about three times the cost of those brought by the Cape of Good Hope.-(See post, EAST INDIA COMPANY, History But Egypt was then occupied by the Mamelukes and Turks, who threw every sort of obstacle in the way of commerce, and loaded it with the most oppressive exactions. Digitized by Google 22 ALICANT. spices, precious stones, and other products of Arabia and India, a great trade in corn was carried on from Alexandria to Rome. Egypt, for a lengthened period, constituted the granary from which Rome, and afterwards Constantinople, drew the principal part of their supplies; and its possession was, on that account, reckoned of the utmost consequence. Augustus employed merchantmen of a larger size than any that had previously traded in the Mediter- ranean, to convey the corn of Egypt to Ostia. They were escorted by ships of war. The fleet received the names of sacra and felix embole; and enjoyed several peculiar privileges. The ships belonging to it were the only ones authorised to hoist the small sail called sup- parum, when they drew near the coasts of Italy. Some of the fast-sailing vessels attached to the fleet were sent on before, to give notice of its approach; and a deputation of senators went down to Ostia to receive the ships, which anchored amid the acclamations of an im- mense number of spectators. The captains were obliged to make oath that the corn on board their ships was that which had been delivered to them in Egypt, and that the cargoes were entire as shipped.-(Huet, Commerce et Navigation des Anciens, cap. xlviii.; Senecae Epist. cap. 1xxvii. &c.) Intercourse with India by Alexandria.-Theso few details will, perhaps, serve to give a faint idea of the importance of Alexandria in the commerce of antiquity. It is impossible, indeed, for any one to glance at a map of the world, or of the ancient hemisphere, and not to perceive that Egypt is the natural entrepôt of the commerce between Hindostan and Europe. Nothing but the barbarism in which it has been so long involved, could make the intercourse with India and the East be wholly carried on by the Cape of Good Hope. The difficulty of navigating the Red Sea seems to have been much exaggerated. Generally speaking, its western side is shallow and infested with coral reefs; but on the Arabian side the water is deep and unobstructed; and vessels availing themselves of the proper seasons for sailing up and down the sea, may navigate it expeditiously, and in perfect safety.-(See Captain Chesney's Report in Papers relating to India, printed by order of the House of Commons, August 16, 1832.) We have, therefore, little doubt that, in the event of good order and civilisation being again established in Egypt, some considerable portion of the Indian trade will revert to its ancient channel. There is not, we apprehend, much reason to think that the project entertained by the Ptolemies, of cutting a canal across the Isthmus of Suez, will ever succeed. The distance is not great, but, notwithstanding this circumstance, and the flatness of the ground, the fact of its consisting almost wholly of moveable parched sand, presents obstacles to the undertaking, that Volney (Voyage en Syrie, &c. cap. xiv.) and other good judges, have declared insuperable. The route by Cosseir (nearly the same as that by Myos Hormos) seems, all things considered, to present the fewest obstacles. The water in the port of Cosseir is deep, and the anchorage pretty good.-(Chesney's Report.) The distance from Cosseir to Kenné (Coptos) may be taken at about 70 English miles and it would not be very difficult to construct a road between these points. After reachingKenné, the goods would, as of old, be embarked on the Nile for Alexandria, &c. Hence the im- portance, in a general point of view, of the civilisation of Egypt. Even were it productive of no other consequences than the facilitating of the correspondence between Europe and the East, it would not be easy to overrate its importance but the fair presumption undoubt- edly is, that other results would follow and that the Mediterranean ports would in future derive the principal part of their Indian commodities by way of Alexandria. The more westerly European ports would continue, we believe, to use the present channel of inter- course with India. Whether these anticipations are ever destined to be realised, it is impossible to say; but the progress already made by Mohammed Ali in introducing a better order of things into Egypt, and the present state of the Ottoman empire, which seems fast falling to pieces, would appear to warrant the conclusion that important changes may be expected in the East. At all events, the brief statements now made, can hardly be deemed out of place in a work in- tended to exhibit, however imperfectly, the history, principles, and channels, as well as the details of commerce. ALICANT, a sea-port town of Spain, in Valencia, in lat. 38° 20' 41" N., long. 0° 30' W. Population about 14,500, and declining. The port is an open and spacious bay, between Cape de la Huerta on the north-east, and Isla Plana on the south, distant from each other S. W. and N. E. about 10 miles. Ships may enter on any course between these points, steering direct for the castle, which stands on an eminence about 400 feet high. Those of considerable burden moor N. and S., distant from t to 1 mile from shore, in from 4 to 8 fathoms water; they are exposed to all winds from E. N. E. to S. by W.; but the holding ground is good, and there is no instance during the last twenty years of a ship having been driven from her moorings. Small craft lie alongside the mole, which is already 320 yards in length, and is to be projected still further into the sea. There are no pilots. The trade of Alicant, though still considerable, has declined much within the last few years; a consequence partly of the emancipation of America from the Spanish yoke, but more of the oppressive duties laid on the importation of most articles of foreign produce in Spain—(see BARCELONA), and the extensive smuggling carried on from Cadiz and Gibraltar. Its exports Digitized by Google ALIENS. 23 consist principally of barilla, almonds, wine, and raisins, with small quantities of olives, olive oil, brandy, figs, salt, wool, silk, anise, &c. The barilla of Alicant, which is of the finest quality, is almost wholly taken off by England. The exports amount to from 50,000 to 90,000 quintals.* The celebrated sweet wine, tent (vino tinto), is exported from this port, principally for Brazil; a little dry wine goes to Gibraltar. Almonds, of which about 10,000 quintals are exported, go mostly to Hamburgh. The raisins are not of the finest quality those brought to England are principally used in confectionary. Oil, which was formerly sent in large quantities to South America, is now comparatively neglected. Dates are ex- ported, and are not unfrequently sold here as Barbary dates. The imports consist princi- pally of linen, salted fish, tobacco, grain, iron, timber, sugar, coffee, indigo, cochineal, cotton and cotton stuffs, &c. The linens, of which from 350,000 to 500,000 yards are annually imported, are furnished almost wholly by France and Genoa. In 1831, there entered the port of Alicant 157 foreign vessels, of the burden of 16,715 tons; of these were British 54, burden 5,719 tons; French 45, burden 3,080 tons; Sardinian 40, burden 4,166 tons; Swedish 5, burden 1,350 tons, &c. It was stated in the former edition of this work, that large quantities of Benicarlo wine were shipped at Alicant for Cette: but this is a mistake; almost all the Benicarlo being shipped from the northern ports of Valencia, and principally from Benicarlo, whence it has its name.-(Ingliss's Spain in 1830, r. 342.) Shipping Charges.-These varv accerding to the burden of the ship, and the country to which she belongs. On a ship of 300 tons unloading and loading mixed cargoes, they would be, including consul- age, as follows:- £ s. d. £ 8. d. Spanish - - - 694 Swedish - - - 15 I 104 British - - - 11 12 44 Russian - - 14 11 104 French - - - 15 7 10 Dutch - - - 13 19 64 Danish - - - 15 16 104 American - - - 13 17 104 Custom-House Regulations.-A manifest of the cargo, the ship's tonnage, and number of crew, must be presented within 24 hours after pratique being given, when two officers are put on board to prevent smuggling. The consignees then make entry of the articles consigned to them, and obtain an order to land and bring them to the Custom-house, where they are inspected, and the duties ascertained but before obtaining this order, the consignees must produce a certificate of origin from the Spanish consul at the port of lading, if it be in a foreign country, for without this the entry is not allowed, and the goods are deposited in the Custom-house until it be obtained. When the discharge is completed, the vessel is searched by the surveyor, who reports having done so to the collector. To load the whole or part of an outward cargo, the master has to report his intention to the collector, who gives his order permitting goods to be shipped, and the shippers make their specific entries. When the vessel is loaded, the waiting officers make their return to the collector; who, on being presented with the receipts of the captain of the port and of the Pratique office for their respective charges, grants his clearance, upon which a bill of health is obtained, and the vessel is clear for sea. Warehousing System.-Goods that may be legally imported, may be deposited in bonded warehouses for twelve months, paying, in lieu of all charges, 2 per cent. ad valorem, but at the end of the year they must be either taken for home consumption or re-shipped. The 2 per cent. is charged, whether the goods lie for a day or the whole year. In charging duties, no allowance is made for waste or damage in the warehouses. Rates of Commission are usually 21 per cent. on sales and purchases t per cent. is commonly charged on the negotiation of bills. Goods are commonly sold at three months' credit. Ordinary discount at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum. Alicant is not a favourable place for repairing ships, and provisions of all sorts are scarce and dear. Vessels with foul bills of health, or coming from an infected or suspected place, though with clean bills, are usually ordered to Port Mahon to perform quarantine. But vessels coming with clean bills obtain, under ordinary circumstances, immediate pratique. Money.-Accounts are kept at Alicant in libras of 20 sueldos; each sueldo containing 12 dineros ; the libra, also called the peso, = 10 reals: and a real of Alicant= 27-2 maravedis of plate, or 51-2 ma- ravedis vellon. The libra may be valued at 3s. 6d. sterling, and the real at 4d. ditto. Weights and Measures.-The cargo= 2f quintals= 10 arrobas. The arroba consists either of 24 large pounds, or of 36 small ditto; the latter having 12 Castilian ounces to the pound, the former 18. The arroba- 27 lbs. 6 oz. avoirdupois; but at the Custom-house the arroba = 25 lbs. of 16 oz. each, The principal corn measure is the cahiz or caffise, containing 12 barchillas, 96 medios, or 192 quar- tillos. The cahiz= 7 Winch. bushels, nearly. The principal liquid measure is the cantaro of 8 medios, or 16 quartillos. The cantaro= 3.05 Eng- lish wine gallons. The tonnelada or ton contains 2 pipes, 80 arrobas, or 100 cantaros. The yard or vara, divided into 4 palmos, is 29.96, or very nearly 30 English inches. (Consul's Answer to Circular Quories; Ingliss's Spain in 1830, vol. ii. p. 304. &c.; Kelly's Cambist, &c.) ALIENS. According to the strict sense of the term, and the interpretation of the com- mon law, all individuals born out of the dominions of the crown of England (alibi natus) are aliens or foreigners. It is obvious, however, that this strict interpretation could not be maintained without very great inconvenience and the necessity of making exceptions in favour of the children born of native parents resident in foreign countries was early recognised. The 25 Edw. 3 stat. 2. enacts, that all children born abroad, provided both the parents were at the time of their birth in allegiance to the king, and the mother had passed the seas by her husband's con- sent, might inherit as if born in England. And this relaxation has been carried still fur- ther by several modern statutes: 80 that all children born out of the king's legiance, whose fathers, or grandfathers by the father's side, were natural born subjects, are now deemed to be themselves natural born subjects; unless their ancestors were outlawed, or benished This is the consul's statement. Mr. Inglise represents the exports as considerably greater, Digitized by Google 24 ALIENS. beyond sea for high treason, or were at the birth of such children, in the service of a prince at enmity with Great Britain. Naturalisation of Aliens.-Aliens may be naturalised by act of parliament, which puts them in exactly the same condition as natural born subjects, except that they are incapable of being members of the Privy Council, of being elected to serve in parliament, or of holding any office of trust under the crown. A denizen is an alien born, who has obtained letters patent, ex donatione regis, to make him an Eng- lish subject. He occupies a kind of middle station between a natural born subject and an alien. He may acquire lands by purchase or device, but not by inheritance and may transmit such lands to his children born after his denization, but not to those born before.-(Blackstone's Com. book i. cap. 10.) An alien may also be naturalised by serving on board any of his Majesty's ships of war, in time of war, for three years, or, if a proclamation has been issued to that effect, for two years.-(6 Geo. 4. cap. 109. 0 0 16, 17.) Influence of the Residence of Aliens.-There can be no doubt that, generally speaking, the resort of foreigners to a country, and their residence in it, are highly conducive to its interests. Those who emigrate in order to practise their calling in an old settled country, are pretty uniformly distinguished for activity, enterprise, and good conduct. The native inhabitants have 80 many advantages on their side, that it would be absurd to suppose that foreigners should ever come into any thing like successful competition with them, unless they were acquainted with some branch of trade or manufacture of which the others were ignorant, or possessed superior skill, industry, or economy. But whether aliens practise new arts, or introduce more perfect processes into the old, or display superior economy, &c., their influx cannot fail to be of the very greatest advantage. They practically instruct those among whom they reside in what it most concerns them to know, that is, in those depart- ments of art and science in which they are inferior to others; and enable them to avail themselves of whatever foreign sagacity, skill, or practice has produced that is most perfect. It is not easy, indeed, to overrate the benefits conferred on most countries by the resort of aliens. Previously to the invention of printing there was hardly any other way of becoming acquainted with foreign inventions and discoveries and even now it is far easier to learn any new art, method, or process, from the example and instruction of those familiar with its details, than from the best possible descriptions. The experience, indeed, of every age and country shows that the progress of nations in the career of arts and civilisation depends more on the freedom of commerce, and on the liberality with which they have treated foreigners, than on almost any thing else. English Legislation as to Aliens.-But, notwithstanding what has been stated above, an antipathy to resident foreigners seems to be indigenous to all rude and uncivilised nations. Whatever is done by them appears to be so much taken from the employment, and, conse- quently, from the subsistence of the citizens; while the advantages resulting from the new arts or improved practices they introduce, for the most part manifest themselves only by slow degrees, and rarely make any impression on the multitude. Hence the jealousy and aver- sion with which foreigners are uniformly regarded in all countries not far advanced in civilisation. The early Greeks and Romans looked upon strangers as a species of enomies, with whom, though not actually at war, they maintained no sort of friendly intercourse. " Hostis," says Cicero, " apud majores nostros is dicebatur, quem nunc peregrinum dici- Off. lib. i. cap. 12.) It may, therefore, be considered as a striking proof of the good sense and liberality of those by whom it was framed, that a clause is inserted in Magna Charta which has the encouragement of commerce for its object; being to the effect, that " all merchants (if not openly prohibited before) shall have safe and sure conduct to depart out of and to come into England, to reside in and go through England, as well by land as by water to buy and sell without any manner of evil tolls, by the old and rightful customs, except in time of war; and if they be of a land making war against us, and such be found in our nation at the beginning of the war, they shall be attached without harm of body or goods, until it be known unto us, or our chief justice, how our merchants be entreated in the land making war against us; and if our merchants be well entreated there, shall be so likewise here." But until the era of Edward I. the stipulation in the Great Charter as to foreign mer- chants seems to have been little attended to. It is doubtful whether, previously to his reign, they could either hire houses of their own, or deal except through the medium of some Englishman. But this intelligent prince saw the advantage that would result to the trade and industry of his subjects from the residence and intercourse of Germans, Flemings, Italians, and other foreigners, who, at that time, were very superior to the English in most branches of manufactures and commerce. He, therefore, exerted himself to procure a repeal of some of the more oppressive restrictions on aliens, and gave them a charter which con- veyed considerable privileges." Down, however, to the reign of Edward III., it continued to be customary to arrest one stranger for the debt, and even to punish him for the crimes This charter was confirmed by Edward III. in 1328. Among other clauses, it has the following, viz: 1st, That on any trial between foreigners and Englishmen, the jury shall be half foreigners ; 2d, That a proper person shall be appointed in London to be justiciary for foreign merchants and 3d, That there shall be but one weight and measure throughout the kingdom.-(Andersen, anno 1302.) Digitized by Google ALIENS. 25 and misdemeanors of others! It may appear extraordinary that the gross injustice of this barbarous regulation ever permitted it to be adopted and yet it was probably, at one period, the common law of most European states. As soon, however, as the foundations of good order and civilisation began to be laid, its operation was seen to be most pernicious. In 1325, Edward II. entered into a convention with the Venetians, in which it was expressly stipulated that they should have full liberty to come to England to buy and sell commodities, without being liable for the debts or crimes of others. Conventions to the same effect were entered into with other foreigners. At length, in 1353, this disgraceful practice was put an end to by 27 Edward 3. stat. ii. cap. 17.; it being provided in this statute, not only that no stranger shall be impeached for the trespass or debt of another, but that, in the event of a war breaking out with any foreign power, its subjects, residing amongst us, shall be warned thereof by proclamation, and be allowed forty days to arrange their affairs, and to depart out of the kingdom; and that, under special circumstances, this term may be extended. There are few acts in the statute-book that reflect more credit on their proposers, or that have been more advantageous than this. In consequence of the encouragement given by Edward III. to such of the woollen manufacturers of Flanders as chose to immigrate to England, a good many came over and it is from their immigration that we may date the improvement and importance of the woollen manufacture in this country.-(See WOOLLEN MANUFACTURE.) But this policy, however wise and judicious, was exceedingly unpopular. The foreigners were openly in- sulted, and their lives endangered, in London and other large towns; and a few of them in consequence returned to Flanders. Edward, however, was not to be driven from his purpose by an unfounded clamour of this sort. A proclamation was issued, in which every person accused of disturbing or attacking the foreign weavers was ordered to be committed to New- gate, and threatened with the utmost severity of punishment. In a parliament held at York, in 1335, an act was passed for the better protection and security of foreign merchants and others, by which penalties were inflicted on all who gave them any disturbance. This seems to have had the effect, for a while, at least, of preventing any outrages. The corporations of London, Bristol, and other great towns, have been at all times the principal enemies to the immigration of foreigners. Perhaps, indeed, they were not more hostile to them than to such of their own countrymen, belonging to another part of the king- dom, as should have attempted to settle amongst them without being free of their corporation. But in denouncing foreigners they had the national prejudice on their side and their attempts to confirm and extend their monopolies by their exclusion were regarded as the noblest efforts of patriotism ! Edward III. was fully aware of the real motives by which they were actuated, and steadily resisted their pretensions. But in the reigns of his succes- sors they succeeded better some of these were feeble and unfortunate, whilst others enjoyed the crown only by a disputed title, and in defiance of powerful competitors. The support of the great towns was of the utmost consequence to such princes, who, whatever might be their own opinion as to its policy, could hardly venture to resist the solicitations of such powerful bodies to exclude strangers, and to impose restrictions on commerce. From the death of Edward III. to the reign of Elizabeth, the progress made by the country was not inconsiderable, but it was little promoted by legislative enactments. Throughout the whole of this period, the influence of corporations seems to have predominated in all matters relating to trade and the treatment of foreigners; and our legislation partook of the selfish, monopolizing character of the source whence it was principally derived. Were the acts and proceedings as to aliens the only memorials of our policy from 1377 to 1560, we should certainly seem to have retrograded materially during the interval. Some of these acts were passed with so little consideration, and were so very absurd, that they had to be immediately repealed. Of this sort was the statute of the 8 Henry 6. cap. 24., to the effect " that no Englishman shall within this realm sell, or cause to be sold, hereafter, to any merchant alien, any manner of merchandises, but only for ready payment in hand, or else in merchandises for merchandises, to be paid and contented in hand, upon pain of forfeiture of the same." But as an enactment of this sort was very speedily found to be more injurious to ourselves than to the foreigner, it was repealed in the following sessions. The more tyrannical their conduct in other respects, the more were our princes disposed to humour the national prejudice against foreigners. If not a cheap, it was, at least, an easy method of acquiring popularity. In the very first parliament after the accession of Richard III., a statute was passed full of the most ridiculous, contradictory, and unfounded allegations as to the injury sustained by the influx of foreigners, and laying them under the most oppressive restraints. Considering, indeed, the sort of treatment to which aliens were then exposed, it may excite surprise that they should ever have thought of visiting the country and, in point of fact, it appears that the resort of foreign merchants to our ports was materially impaired by the statutes referred to, and others of the same description. This is evident from the act 19 Henry 7. cap. 6., where it is stated that " woollen cloth is not sold or uttered as it hath been in divers parts," and that foreign commodities and merchandises are at so dear and exceeding high price, that the buyer cannot live thereon." But in despite of this authorita- C 4 Digitized by Google 26 ALIENS. tive exposition of the mischiefs arising from the restraints on aliens, and on trade, they were both increased in the reign of Henry VIII. And it was not till the reign of Elizabeth that the pretensions of the corporations seem to have been disregarded, and an attempt made to act, not by starts, but consistently, on the policy of Edward III. The influx of foreigners during the reign of Elizabeth was occasioned chiefly by the per- secutions of the Duke of Alva and the Spaniards in the Low Countries. The friends of the reformed religion, which, at the time, was far from being firmly established, and the government, were glad to receive such an accession of strength and from the superiority of the Flemings in commerce and manufactures, the immigrants contributed materially to the improvement of the arts in England. It would seem, however, that the ministers of Elizabeth contented themselves, perhaps that they might not excite the public prejudice, with declining to enforce the laws against aliens, without taking any very active steps in their favour. In the reign of James I. the corporation of London renewed with increased earnestness their complaints of aliens. In 1622, a proclamation was issued, evidently written by James himself, in which, under pretence of keeping a due temperament" between the interests of the complainants and those of the foreigners, he subjects the latter to fresh disabilities. Since the revolution, more enlarged and liberal views as to conduct to be followed with respect to aliens have continued to gain ground several of the restraining statutes have fallen into disuse, while others have been so much modified by the interference of the courts, which have generally been inclined to soften their severity, that their more offensive provi- sions are become inoperative. In 1708, an act was passed, notwithstanding the strenuous opposition of the corporations, for the general naturalisation of all foreign protestants; but the prejudice against them was still so powerful that it wasrepealed within about three years. Some unsuccessful attempts have since been made to carry a similar measure. One of these, about the middle of last century, occasioned the publication by Dr. Tucker of two excellent pamphlets, in which the policy of the naturalisation act is most ably vindicated, and the argu- ments against it successfully exposed.* But no such statute has hitherto been passed, and aliens still continue subject to various disabilities. Disabilities of Aliens.-The principal of these regards the possession of fixed property. It is ruled that lands purchased by an alien for his own use, may be seized by the king. "If," says Blackstone, "he could acquire a permanent property in lands, he must owe an allegiance, equally permanent with that property, to the king of England; which would probably be inconsistent with that which he owes to his own natural liege lord; besides that, thereby the nation might in him be subject to foreign influence, and feel many other inconveniences. Wherefore by the civil law such contracts were made void, but the prince had no such advantage of forfeiture thereby as with us in England. (Commen- taries, book i. cap. 10.) An alien cannot take a benefice without the king's consent, nor can he enjoy a place of trust, or take a grant of lands from the crown. Aliens may, however, acquire property in money, goods, or other personal estate, and may have houses for the purpose of their habitation, and for carrying on their business. They may bring actions as to their personal effects, and may dispose of them by will. The droit d'aubaine (jus albinatus, 1. e. alibi natus), or the right of the crown to succeed to the effects of an alien at his death, so long the custom in France, never obtained in England. If an alien abroad die intestate, his whole property here is distributed according to the law of the country where he resided; but such residence must have been stationary, and not occasional, otherwise the foreign municipal regulations will not apply to the property, Aliens may trade as freely as natives; and for these many years past, the duties of package and scavage in the port of London, repealed in 1833, were the only peculiar duties with which they were burdened. The statutes of Henry VIII. restraining alien artificers from working for themselves, are understood to have been repealed by the Stat. 5 Eliz. cap. 7.; and they are quite at liberty to employ themselves as they please. Aliens indicted for felony or misdemeanor are tried by a jury of which half are foreigners; a privilege they have enjoyed, as already seen, with some partial interruptions, from the reign of Edward I. Conditions of Residence.-During the late war, aliens were placed under the surveillance of the police; they were obliged to send frequent reports of their residence, and of the mode in which they were employed and were liable to be sent out of the kingdom at any moment by an order from the secretary of state. The conditions under which they now reside amongst us are embodied in the 7 Geo. 4. cap. 54. This act requires every master of a vessel arriving from foreign parts to declare in writing the names, rank, occupations, &c. of all aliens on board such vessel, or who have been landed from it any where within the realm. Such declaration to be made immediately on arrival: neglecting or refusing to make it, or making a false one, is punished by the forfeiture of 201., and a further sum of 10/. for each alien in such vessel, or landed from it within the realm. Aliens bona Ade employed in the navigation of the vessel are excepted.-1. The act then goes on to lay down the conditions of residence, which are merely that every alien is required to make a declaration and registry, renewed half yearly, or oftener if required by the secre- tary of state, of his name, abode, and occupation. Aliens neglecting to make such declaration, or making a false one, are, for every such offence, to forfeit any sum not exceeding 501., or be imprisoned any time not exceeding six months, at the discretion of two justices. Policy of the Laws as to Aliens.-The reasons assigned by Mr. Justice Blackstone and others for preventing aliens from acquiring fixed property seem to be very unsatisfactory. In small states there might be grounds, perhaps, for fearing lest the easy admission of aliens to the rights of citizenship should give them an improper bias; but in a country like Eng- land, such apprehensions would be quite futile. In this respect the example of Holland seems * Historical remarks on the late Naturalization Bill, 1751 ; Queries occasioned by the late Naturali- sation Bill, 1752. Digitized by Google ALIENS. 27 quite decisive. Notwithstanding the comparatively limited population of that country, it was the constant policy of the republic to make Holland a perpetual, safe, and secure asylum for all persecuted and oppressed strangers; no alliance, no treaty, no regard for, nor solicitation of any potentate whatever, has at any time been able to weaken or destroy, or make the state recede from protecting those who have fled to it for their own security and self-preservation."-(Proposals for amending the Trade of Holland, printed by authori- ty. Lond. 1751.) A short residence in the country, and a small payment to the state, was all that was re- quired in Holland to entitle a foreigner to every privilege enjoyed by a native. And it is of importance to remark, that it has not been so much as insinuated that this liberal conduct was in any instance productive of a mischievous result. On the contrary, all the highest authorities consider it as one of the main causes of the extraordinary progress made by the republic in wealth and commerce. It is said in the official paper just quoted, that Through- out the whole course of all the persecutions and oppressions that have occurred in other countries, the steady adherence of the republic to this fundamental law has been the cause that many people have not only fled hither for refuge, with their whole stock in ready cash, and their most valuable effects, but have also settled and established many trades, fabrics, manufactures, arts, and sciences, in this country; notwithstanding the first materials for the said fabrics and manufactures were almost wholly wanting in it, and not to be procured but at a great expense from foreign parts." (Ibid.) With such an example to appeal to, we are warranted in affirming that nothing can be more ridiculous than to suppose that any number of foreigners which it is at all likely should ever come to England under the most liberal system, could occasion any political inconve- nience and in all other respects their immigration would be advantageous. A general natu- ralisation act would, therefore, as it appears to us, be a wise and politic measure. It might be enacted, that those only who had resided three or four years in the country, and given proofs of their peaceable conduct, should be entitled to participate in its advantages. (Some parts of this article have been borrowed from the Treatise on Commerce written for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, by the author of this Work.) (The act 7 Geo. 4 cap. 54. referred to in the Dictionary (p. 26.), has been repealed by the act 6 Will. 4. cap. 11., which enacts in its stead some new regulations of which the principal are, that- Every master of a ship arriving from foreign parts shall, to the best of his knowledge and belief, immediately declare, in writing, to the chief officer of customs, the name or names, rank, occupation, &c. of any alien or aliens on board his ship, or who may have landed therefrom at any place within the realm, under a penalty of 201. for omission or false declaration ; and of 101. for every alien omitted in the declaration: this regulation does not, however, extend to foreign mariners navigating the vessel.-Φ. On arrival in this country, the alien is to declare his name, description, &c. and to produce his pase- port which declaration is to be registered by the officer of customs, who is to deliver a certificate to the alien. A copy of this declaration is to be transmitted, within two days, to the secretary of state, or (if the alien land in Ireland) to the chief secretary of the Lord Lieutenant. The original certificate given to the alien is to be transmitted to the secretary of state on his leaving the country. New cer- tificates to be granted in lieu of such as may be lost, without fee, under a penalty of 201. Forging certificates, or falsely personating aliens, punishable by imprisonment, not exceeding three months, or by fine, not exceeding 1001.-0 e 3, 4, 5, &c.-Sup.) [There are no denizens in the United States. Every inhabitant of the country is either a citizen or an alien. Citizens are either natives, or such persons as have become citizens in accordance with the laws which have been enacted by Congress on the subject of naturalization. Native citizens again are, first, all persons who have been born within the jurisdiction of the United States since the declaration of American Independence, en the 4th of July, 1776; and secondly, every person who was a native of the territory of the United States previous to that date, provided he remained in the country afterwards. Naturalized citizens are, in the first place, all persons who fulfil or comply with the con- ditions prescribed in the acts of Congress, concerning naturalization, of the years 1802, 1804, 1813, 1816, 1824, and 1828. These conditions are, first, that the person applying to be na- turalized be a free white person, of the age of 21 years or more. Secondly, he must, on oath or affirmation, before some federal or state court, or its clerk, two years at least previous to his application to become a citizen, have declared his intention to take this step un- less be has been a resident in the United States before and ever since the 18th day of June, 1812, the date of the declaration of war against Great Britain; or unless he has resided here during the last three years of his minority, with the intention, during the last three years of his residence, of becoming a citizen. Thirdly, he must have resided with- in the United States five years at least, and within the state or territory, where the court to which he applies is at the time held, one year at least; but the oath of the applicant shall, in no case, be allowed to prove his residence. Fourthly, he must cause it to appear to the satisfaction of the court that, during the time of his residence, he has behaved as a man of a good moral character, attached to the principles of the constitution of the United States, and well disposed to the good order and happiness of the same. Fifthly, he must renounce every title or Digitized by Google 28 ALKALIES. order of nobility which he may have held in the kingdom or state from which he came. Sixthly, he must make oath or affirmation that he will support the constitution of the United States, and renounce and abjure all allegiance to any foreign sovereign or state. No alien, however, who shall be a native citizen, denizen, or subject, of any sovereign or state, with whom the United States shall be at war, at the time of his application, shall be then admit- ted to be a citizen of the United States. Besides the persons who may have complied with or fulfilled the conditions above enume- rated, their children, as also the children of such persons as, previous to the passing of any law on the subject by the government of the United States, may have become citizens of any one of the said states, under the laws thereof, being under the age of 21 years, at the time of their parents being so naturalized or admitted to the rights of citizenship, shall, if dwelling in the United States, be considered as citizens of the United States; and the children of persons who, on or before the 14th day of April 1802, were citizens of the United States, shall, though born out of the limits and jurisdiction of the United States, be considered as citizens of the United States. And again, it is enacted that if any person, who shall have made the preliminary declara- tion of intention to become a citizen as required by law, shall die before he is actually natu- ralized, his widow and children shall be considered as citizens of the United States and they shall be entitled to all rights and privileges as such, upon taking the oaths which the law pre- scribes. Every citizen of the United States enjoys the same rights and privileges excepting only that a naturalized citizen must have been such for seven years to be eligible as a member of the House of Representatives, and for a period of nine years to be eligible as a member of the Senate of the Union, and that none but a natural born citizen, or a citizen at the time of the adoption of the federal constitution, can be elected to the office of President of the United States, or of Governor in some of the states. Aliens cannot act as jurors; they have not the right of voting at elections; and they are disabled from holding any office, either in the states, or under the government of the United States. In many of the states (chiefly the older ones) they are incapable of acquiring and holding any real estate. If an alien purchase land, or take it by devise, it is at once liable to be forfeited to the state. His rights to and power over personal or moveable property are the same precisely as those of citizens. (See Kent's Commentaries, Lecture 25.) The general reader may also, for an abstract of the law relating to aliens, as it regards their right of holding and conveying property in the different states of the Union, consult the " American Almanac," for 1838.-Am. Ed.] ALKALIES. The distinguishing characters of these bodies are, a strong acrid and power- fully caustic taste; a corrosive action upon all animal matter, destroying its texture with con- siderable rapidity exposed to the atmosphere, when in their caustic state, they absorb car- bonic acid with great rapidity, and become carbonated (or mild). Their action upon vegeta- ble colours also affords us means by which the presence of an uncombined or carbonated alkali may be detected the yellow colour of turmeric is changed to a red-brown tint when immersed into solutions containing them the blue colour of the litmus, after being reddened by an acid, is again restored; the infusions of the red cabbage, the violet, and many other purple vegetable colours, are converted to green. Litmus paper reddened by carbonic acid is, however, the most delicate test of the presence of an alkali. With the various acids they also combine, forming the very important and extensive class of compounds generally called salts; a salt being any compound formed by the union of an acid with an alkali or a metallic oxide. Alkalimotry.-The method by which the value of the alkalies, or carbonated alkalies, is determined, being of considerable importance in a commercial point of view, we shall here treat it somewhat in detail. It is an established fact, that 49 parts by weight of oil of vitriol of the specific gravity 1-8485, are exactly equivalent to the neutralisation of 70 parts by weight of pure carbonate of potash, or 48 of pure potass, or 54 of carbonate of soda, or 32 of soda; and that 70 parts of oil of vitriol will there- fore be necessary to neutralise 100 parts of carbonate of potass; hende, by employing a glass tube of about two ounces' capacity, and accurately divided into 100 equal parts, taking 70 grains of oil of vitriol, and diluting it with water, to make the 100 measures complete, every measure of this dilute acid must be equal to a grain of pure carbonate of potass. The per centage of real carbonate of potass existing in any sample of pearlash may be at once ascertained by taking 100 grains of the sam- ple, dissolving it in hot water, straining, and adding by degrees 100 measures of the test acid above mentioned the point of neutralisation (when it ceases to affect litmus paper or reddened litmus) being accurately ascertained, the residual acid will give the per centage of impurities: for instance, say that 75 measures of the dilute acid have been employed to render 100 grains of a sample of pearl- ash perfectly neutral, then we have ascertained that it contains 25 per cent. impurities. The same process of course must be followed in examining samples of barilla or kelp, except that the alkali contained in them, being carbonate of soda, 90.75 of oil of vitriol must be employed instead of 70. The process recommended by Mr. Faraday, and in which he uses only one test acid, is as follows :- Into a tube about three-quarters of an inch in diameter, and nine and A half long, and as cylindrical as possible throughout its whole length, 1,000 grains of water are to be weighed, and the space occu- pied marked on the tube by a fine file; this space is then divided from above downwards into 100 equal parts. At 23:44, or 76.56 parts from the bottom, an extra line should be made, and soda marked opposite to it; at 48:96 potass should be marked in the same way; at 54.63, carbonate of soda ; and at 65, carbonate of potass. A diluted acid is now to be prepared, which shall have a specific gravity 1.127; and this is made by mixing intimately together 19 parts by weight of oil of vitriol, and 81 of Digitized by Google ALKALIES. 29 water. The method to be followed in the employment of this acid is as follows :-The dilute acid is to be measured in the tube up to the line opposite to which the alkali sought for is marked ; if barilla, which contains carbonate of soda, 54.63 measures are to be taken. The 100 measures are then made up by the addition of water, and is then ready for use, following the method before stated. The alkalies are four in number, namely, ammonia (or volatile alkali), potass (or vegetable alkali), soda (or mineral alkali), and lithia; which last is of so little importance that we shall not treat of it here. The combinations of these alkalies with the various acids, whenever they form compounds of any importance, will be noticed. Ammonia, or Spirits of Hartshorn, or Volatile Alkali,-in its uncombined form, is an elastic gaseous body, having a very pungent and suffocating odour, destroys animal life, converts the yellow of tur- meric paper to a brown, which, from the volatility of the alkali, is again restored by a gentle heat to its original colour. This gas is rapidly absorbed by water, which takes into solution about 780 times its volume, forming the liquid ammonia, or what is commonly called hartshorn. Ammonia is liberated whenever any of the compounds of this alkali are acted upon by potass, soda, lime, and many other alkaline earths. Lime, from its being the most economical, is generally employed the best propor- tions for its preparations are equal weights of sal ammoniac (muriate of ammonia), and fresh slaked lime. When these are introduced into a retort, and heat applied, ammonia is liberated in the gaseous form, and is conducted by a Wetter's safety tube into a vessel of water, by which the gas is instantly absorbed. Muriate of lime remains in the retort sometimes water is added to the mixture, and then distilled. As thus obtained, it has a specific gravity of 930 or 940, water being equal to 1:000. The most concentrated solution of ammonia has the specific gravity 875. Carbonate of Ammonia, or Volutile Salt, or Subcarbonate of Ammonia.-This salt, which is very much employed in various processes of the arts, was formerly obtained by the action of chalk (carbonate of lime) upon muriate of ammonia; a double decomposition takes place. Carbonic acid and ammo- nia are sublimed in vapour, and muriate of lime remains in the vessel. A much less expensive pro- cess is, however, now followed, namely, from the waste gas liquors obtained in the purification of coal gas; these are evaporated, and the black impure sulphuric acid added. By this means a sulphate of ammonia is formed, and the carbonate procured from it by the action of powdered chalk, as in the former process. Its uses are principally in forming other compounds of ammonia, as smelling salts ; and it is like- wise employed rather extensively by pastry-cooks for making light pastry, which is caused by the volatile carbonate of ammonia escaping and raising up the pastry by the heat of the oven. It is en- tirely dissipated during the baking, so that no ill effect can arise from its use. Both this compound and the preceding act as violent stimulants on the animal system. Muriate of Ammonia, or Sul Ammoniac-was formerly brought to this country from Egypt, where it was procured by submitting the soot of camels' dung (there employed for fuel) to sublimation in closed vessels it is, however, at present manufactured in very large quantities in this country in a variety of ways. The most economical processes are either submitting sulphate of ammonia mixed intimately with muriate of soda (sea salt) to sublimation, or by substituting the bittern of sea water, which consists chiefly of muriate of magnesia, for the sea salt. In the first process a sulphate of soda is formed, and the muriate of ammonia, which, being volatile, rises in the vaporous form, and is condensed in the cool parts of the apparatus: in the latter process, a sulphate of magnesia (Epsom salts) results. It is generally from this salt (muriate of ammonia) that the liquid ammonia is manu- factured it is also employed in tinning and soldering, to preserve the metals from oxidation. It is a semi-transparent, tough salt, having an acrid and cool taste, and is usually met with in the form of hemispherical masses. Sal ammoniac is made at Calcutta, and is thence exported to Great Bri- tain, the United States, and the Arabian and Persian gulfs. In 1824-25, the exports amounted to 114 tons. Sulphate of Ammonia.-The preparation of the sulphate has been already given under the head of ammonia ; it is employed in the manufacture both of the carbonate and muriate. Acetate of Ammonia.-The spirit of Mindererus is obtained by acting upon the carbonate of ammo- nia by acetic acid; the carbonic acid escapes with effervescence, and an acetate of ammonia is formed it is employed in medicine as a febrifuge. All these salts of ammonia have the following properties ;-they are volatile at a low red heat the fixed alkalies decompose them, combining with their acid, and the ammonia is liberated. When combined with a fixed acid, such as the boracic or phosphoric, they are decomposed, the am- monia alone being volatilised, and the acid remaining pure. This process was described for obtaining pure phosphoric acid. Potass, or Vegetable Alkali.-The original source of this alkali is in the vegetable kingdom, whence is derived its name of vegetable alkali. When wood is burnt, and the ashes lixiviated with water, boiled, strained, and evaporated to dryness, an intensely alkaline mass is obtained, which is known by the name of potash, from this process being conducted in iron pots. It is then removed to a re- verberatory furnace, and submitted to heat, and a current of air. This burns out extractive matter and other impurities, and the salt assumes a pearly white colour, and is hence called pearlashes. Care should be taken, during this process, that the potashes do not enter into fusion, as this would destroy the full effect of the operation. Pearlashes.-Pearlashes generally contain about from 60 to 83 or 84 per cent. of pure carbonate of potass. Its uses in manufactures are numerous and important. It is employed in making flint-glass, of which it constitutes about one-sixth of the materials employed in soap-making, especially for the softer kinds of soap for this purpose, however, it is first rendered caustic by means of lime. In the rectification of spirits, large quantities are employed to combine with the water previously in union with the spirit. Subcarbonate of Potass, or Salt of Turtar-is used in preparing the subcarbonate of potass of the Pharmacopoeia (carbonate of potass of the chemical nomenclature), and likewise in rendering hard spring waters soft, and in cleansing substances from grease; it is sometimes called salt of worm- wood. When made by the deflagration of two parts of tartar of argol and one of nitre, it is called black flux, and is used extensively in metallurgic operations. From the subcarbonate of potash the pure and uncombined potass is obtained, by adding an equal weight of fresh burnt lime, previously slaked, and boiling them with half their weight of water. By this process the lime combines with the carbonic acid, and the potass remains in solution in its caustic state; by boiling the clear solution rapidly in iron vessels, and submitting it to fusion, we obtain the fused potass. If it be required perfectly pure for chemical purposes, it is necessary to evaporate in silver vessels, and dissolve in strong alcohol. This takes up the pure potass, and leaves any portion of the subcar- bonate that may not have been acted upon by the lime then the alcohol is to be distilled off, and the potass fused at a red heat, and poured out in its liquid state on a cold slab. As thus procured, it is a white, brittle mass, highly deliquescent, absorbing moisture and carbonic acid rapidly from the atmos- phere. When evaporated in iron vessels it has a dirty colour, and lets fall a quantity of oxide of 1 on, when dissolved in water, from its having acted upon the iron boilers. c 2 Digitized by Google 30 ALKALIES. Potass acts with great rapidity upon animal substances, destroying their texture, and is on this ac- count employed as a caustic, and was formerly called lapis infernalis. Carbonate (or, in the chemical nomenclature, Bicarbonate) of Potass-is prepared by passing car- bonic acid gas through a solution of the subcarbonate: and evaporating at a temperature below 212°, and crystallising. It is used in making effervescing draughts. It loses one proportion of its carbonic acid when heated, and is converted into the subcarbonate. Sulphate of Potass, or Sal Polychrest, or Vitriolated Tartar-is obtained by submitting the salt, which remains after the manufacture of nitric acid from nitre and sulphuric acid, to a red heat, or by neutralising the excess of acid contained in that salt by subcarbonate of potass. Bisulphate of Potass, or Sal Enizum.-This is the salt mentioned above, as the residue from the process for obtaining nitric acid. It is employed, in very large quantities, in the manufacture of alum; also in tinning iron, for pickling, as it is termed; it is sometimes also used as a flux. Nitrate of Potash, Nitre, or Saltpetre.-This salt, which is of so much importance in every branch of the arts, is found native in many parts of the world, especially in the East Indies. It is obtained from soils composed of decomposing granite, the felspar of which gives rise, as is supposed, to the potass. The nitric acid is not so easily accounted for, except it is by a union of the nitrogen and oxygen gases in the atmosphere taking place in those hot climates; for, from authenticated accounts, no decaying animal or vegetable matter exists in the nitre districts of India. By lixiviation with water the nitre is dissolved from the soil, which is again thrown out into the air, to be washed the following year; so that it is formed continually. These lixiviations are then evaporated and when of a certain strength, a quantity of common salt separates, which is removed as it falls; and the nitre is then crystallised and imported to this country, always containing a certain quantity of im- purities, which are deducted in the purchase of large quantities of the article, being termed its refrac- tion. It is generally used for the manufacture of gunpowder and pure nitric acid, refined or recrys- tallised. Nitre may be also made artificially, in beds of decaying vegetable or animal substances, mixed with old mortar, or other refuse calcareous earth; these are watered occasionally, too much moisture being hurtful; after a certain period, depending on the rapidity with which the process has gone on, the whole is submitted to lixiviation together with wood-ashes, which contain subcarbonate of potass, and which decomposes any nitrate of lime formed, of which there is generally a considerable quantity. After the lixiviation is complete, which takes some time, the solution is separated and boiled down the salt separates as in the other process, and the nitre is then crystallised. It was from this source that the whole of the nitre, nearly, employed by the French during the long protracted war with the continental powers, was obtained. Nitre has a cold, penetrating, and nauseous taste enters into igneous fusion at a gentle heat, and is then moulded into round cakes called sal prunella. It is employed in the manufacture of nitric acid; of gunpowder, which is composed of 75 parts by weight of nitre, 16 of charcoal, and 9 of sul- phur (the nitre for this purpose should be of great purity); and in the manufacture of oil of vitriol as a flux it is one of the most powerful we possess; it is also used for the preservation of animal food, and in making frigorific mixtures: 1 oz. of nitre dissolved in 5 oz. of water lowers its tempera- ture 15 degrees of Fahrenheit's thermometer.- (See SALTPETRE.) Oxalute and Binoxalate of Potass.-The binoxalate of potass, or salt of lemon, or sorrel, by both which last names it is very commonly known, is procured from the juice of the common sorrel (Ru- mex Acetosa), or the wood sorrel (Oxalis Acetosella), by crystallisation, after the feculent matter has been separated by standing a few days. Its chief uses are, in removing ink spots or iron moulds ; and also as a refreshing beverage when mixed with sugar and water. The neutral oxalate is obtained from the salt by combining the excess of acid which it contains with a solution of subcarbonate of potass. Is very much used in chemistry, as the best test of the presence of lime. Tartrate and Bitartrate of Potass.-Bitartrate of potass, or cream of tartar, is, when in its crude and impure state, called argol, and is deposited in the interior of wine casks during fermentation, and from this source the whole of the cream of tartar is obtained. It is generally of a very dark brown colour, but may be purified and rendered perfectly white by solution and crystallisation. It is employed very extensively in dyeing, hat-making, and in the preparation of tartaric acid, and many of the compounds of tartaric acid, as tartar emetic, soluble tartar (tartrate of potass) when heated to redness it is con- verted into carbonate of potass and charcoal mixed with half its weight of nitre and thrown into a red hot crucible it forms the black flux, and with its own weight of nitre the white flux, both of which are very much employed in metallurgic operations. The tartrate is made by the addition of subcar- bonate of potass to a solution of the bitartrate until perfectly neutral it is used in medicine as a mild purgative. Ferrocyanate or Prussiate of Potass.-This salt is obtained by the action of subcarbonate of potass, at a low red heat, upon refuse animal matter, such as hoofs, horns, skin, &c., in the proportion of two of subcarbonate, to four or five of the animal matter. But the process recommended by M. Gautier is preferable he finds, that when animal matter is heated with nitre, it yields a much larger quantity of the ferroprussiate than when either potass or subcarbonate of potass are employed the proportions he finds most economical are, 1 part by weight of nitre, 3 parts of dry blood, and iron scales or filings equal to a fiftieth of the blood employed. The coagulum of blood is mixed intimately with the nitre and iron filings, and dried by exposure to the air; they are then submitted to a very low red heat, in deep iron cylinders, as long as vapours continue to be liberated; when cold, the contents are dissolved in 12 or 15 times their weight and strained. On evaporation, till of the specific gravity 1-284, and allowing it to cool, a large quantity of bicarbonate of potass crystallises, and by further evaporation till of the specific gravity 1:306, the fer- roprussiate of potass crystallises on cooling. This is to be recrystallised. It is a beautiful yellow salt, very tough, having a tenacity similar to spermaceti, and is decomposed at a red heat. It is em- ployed very extensively in dyeing blues, and in calico printing; also in the manufacture of Prussian blue, which is a compound of the ferroprussic acid and oxide of iron, prepared by adding I part of lution. the ferroprussiate of potass dissolved in water, to one part of copperas, and 4 parts of alum in so- Chromate of Potass.-This salt is obtained from the native chromate of iron by the action of-nitre at a full red heat in equal proportions. By solution, filtration, and evaporation, a beautiful lemon-yel- low coloured salt results. It is very much employed in dyeing, calico printing, and calico making, from its producing bright yellow precipitates with solutions of lead. Bichromate of Potass-is prepared from the above-mentioned salt, by the addition of nitric acid to the yellow solution obtained from the heated mass by the action of water; on evaporating this, a dark red coloured salt crystallises, which is the bichromate. This is also very largely employed by the calico printers, and when mixed in solution with nitric acid, possesses the property of destroying vegetable colours; on this account it is of great importance, as it at the same time removes a vegeta- ble colour, and forms a base for a yellow dye. Chlorate or Hyperozymuriute of Potass.-The preparation of this salt is attended with some little difficulty, and requires a great deal of nicety. It is obtained by passing a current of chlorine gas Digitized by Google ALKANET, ALLOWANCES. 31 through a solution of caustic potass; then boiling and evaporating; the first salt that separates is the chlorate of potass and by further evaporation, muriate of potass is obtained. It is used in making matches for instantaneous light boxes, which are prepared by first dipping the wood in melted sulphur, and then into a thin paste, formed of 3 parts chlorate of potass, 2 parts starch, and a little vermilion; with sulphur it forms a very explosive compound, generally employed for filling the per- cussion caps of fowling-pieces. Soda, or Mineral Alkali.-The sources of this alkali in nature are various. It is obtained in combi- nation with carbonic acid, when plants which grow by the sea-side are burnt. The ashes thus ob- tained are called barilla and kelp; and also in some countries it is found as an efflorescence upon the surface of the earth, and is called nitrum or natron; this occurs particularly in Egypt and South America. Trona is also another native carbonate of soda, and is exported from Tripoli. In combi- nation with muriatic acid it is also found in immense abundance, forming the rock salt, and sea salt, or muriate of soda. It is obtained from the carbonate exactly in the same way as potass is obtained from its carbonate, namely, by boiling it with fresh burnt lime previously slaked, decanting the clear solution, and evaporating and fusing. It is a white brittle substance, and by exposure to the air be- comes converted into a dry carbonate. Its uses in the arts and manufactures are of considerable im- portance. In soap-making it is employed in very large quantities, and for this purpose is generally procured from barilla or kelp, by mixing them with lime, and by the infusion of water procuring a caustic soda ley this is mixed with oil and fatty mattersin various proportions, and boiled the sa- ponification of the fatty matter takes place, and the soap formed rises to the surface the ley is then drawn from beneath, and fresh leys added, until the soap is completely free from oil it is then allowed to dry. Soda is also employed in the manufacture of plate, crown, and bottle glass, though for this purpose it is generally in the form of carbonate or sulphate. Subcarbonate of Soda. (In the chemical nomenclature it is called carbonate.)-This is generally prepared from barilla, which contains about from 16 to 24 per cent. Barilla is procured by incinerat- ing the salsola soda, and other sea-side plants; it is made in large quantities on the coast of Spain. Kelp is another impure carbonate of soda, but does not contain more than 4 or 5 per cent. it is the ashes obtained from sea weeds by incineration, and is made on the northern shores of Scotland. From these, the crystallised carbonate (or subcarbonate, as it is more frequently called) is made by the addition of a small quantity of water, boiling, straining, evaporating, and skimming off the com- mon salt as it forms on the surface; on cooling, the subcarbonate of soda crystallises. Another me- thod is by heating the sulphate of soda with carbonate of lime and charcoal, and then dissolving out the soluble carbonate; also, by the action of carbonate of potass (pearlash) upon solutions of sea salt.-See BARILLA and KELP.) Bicarbonate of Soda-is procured by driving a current of carbonic acid gas through solutions of the carbonate, and then evaporating at a temperature below 212° Fahrenheit; it is chiefly employed in making soda water powders. This is the carbonate of soda of the Pharmacopæia. By the applica- tion of a red heat it loses carbonic acid, and is converted into the subcarbonate. Sulphate of Sodu, or Glauber Salts.-This salt, which has received the name of Glauber, from its dis- coverer, is the residue of a great many chemical processes for instance, when muriate of soda is acted upon by oil of vitriol, muriatic acid and sulphate of soda result ; in making chlorine gas for the manufacture of the chloride of lime, or bleaching powder, sulphate of soda and sulphate of manganese result; the materials employed being sea salt, sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol), and black oxide of man- ganese; also, in the preparation of acetic acid from the acetate of soda, and in the preparation of mu- riate of ammonia from sea salt and sulphate of ammonia. Sulphate of soda is a colourless, trans- parent salt, effloresces readily when exposed to the air, and becomes converted into a dry powder it has a cold, bitter taste. It is used for the preparation of carbonate of soda, and as a medicine. It is found native in some countries, particularly in Persia and South America-frequently as an efflo- rescence upon new walls. Nitrate of Soda.-This salt is found native in some parts of the East Indies, and is called from its square form, cubic nitre; it is, however, very little used. Muriate of Soda, or Sea Salt.-This compound is found in immense quantities in the earth, and is called from this circumstance rock salt, or sal gem. The mines of Cheshire and Droitwich, in this country, and those in Poland, Hungary, and Spain, and many others, afford immense quantities of this compound. It is also obtained by the evaporation of sea water, both spontaneously in pits formed for the purpose, and in large iron boilers; the uncrystallisable fluid is called the bittern; basket salt is made by placing the salt after evaporation in conical baskets, and passing through it a saturated solution of salt, which dissolves and carries off the muriate of magnesia or lime. Pure salt should not become moist by exposure to the air it decrepitates when heated it is employed for the prepa- ration of muriatic acid, carbonate of soda, muriate of ammonia, and many other operations also in glazing stone-ware, pottery, &c.; and from its great antiseptic properties, is used largely for the pre- servation of animal food ; as a flux also in metallurgy. Borate of Soda, or Boraz.-This salt is found in Thibet and Persia, deposited from saline lakes; it is called tincal, and is imported into this country, where it is purified by solution; the fatty matter with which the tincal is always coated being removed ; and the solution evaporated and crystallised its principal uses are as a flux, from its acting very powerfully upon earthy substances. ALKANET, OR ANCHUSA (Ger. Orkanet; Du. Ossetong; Fr. Orcanette; It. An- cusa i Sp. Arcaneta), a species of bugloss (Anchusa tinctoria Lin.). It has been culti- vated in England; but is found of the finest quality in Siberia, Spain, and more particularly in the south of France, in the vicinity of Montpellier. The roots of the plant are the only parts that are made use of. When in perfection, they are about the thickness of the finger having a thick bark of a deep purplish red colour. This, when separated from the whitish woody pith, imparts a fine deep red to alcohol, oils, wax, and all unctuous substances. To water it gives only a dull brownish hue. It is principally employed to tint pomatums and unguents, wax used in the making of fancy candles, oils employed in the dressing of ma- hogany, rose-wood, &c. The alkanet brought from Constantinople yields a more beautiful but less permanent dye than that of France.-(Lewis's Mat. Med.; Magnien, Dictionnaire des Productions.) The duty, which was previously very oppressive, was reduced in 1832 to 2s. a cwt. In that year it produced 1,7871. 4s. 8d. This, supposing it to have been all charged with the 2s. duty, shows a con- sumption of 17,872 cwt. The price varies from 27s. to 32s. a cwt. ALLOWANCES, TARES, &c. In selling goods, or in paying duties upon them, cer- tain deductions are made from their weights, depending on the nature of the packages in which they are enclosed, and which are regulated in most instances by the custom of mer- Digitized by Google 32 ALMONDS. chants, and the rules laid down by public offices. These allowances, as they are termed, are distinguished by the epithets Draft, Tare, Trett, and Cloff. Draft is a deduction from the original or gross weight of goods, and is subtracted before the tare is taken off. Tare is an allowance for the weight of the bag, box, cask, or other package, in which goods are weighed. Real or open tare is the actual weight of the package. Customary tare is, as its name implies, an established allowance for the weight of the package. Computed tare is an estimated allowance agreed upon at the time. Average tare is when a few packages only among several are weighed, their mean or average taken, and the rest tared accordingly. Super-ture is an additional allowance, or tare, where the commodity or package exceeds a certain weight. When tare is allowed, the remainder is called the nett weight; but if trett be allowed, it is called the suttle weight. Trett is a deduction of 4 lbs. from every 104 lbs. of suttle weight. This allowance, which is said to be for dust or sand, or for the waste or wear of the commodity, was formerly made on most foreign articles sold by the pound avoirdupois; but it is now nearly discon- tinued by merchants, or else allowed in the price. It is wholly abolished at the East India ware- houses in London; and neither trett nor draft is allowed at the Custom-house. Cloff, or clough, is another allowance that is nearly obsolete. It is stated in arithmetical books to be a deduction of 2 lbs. from every cwt. of the second suttle; that is, the remainder after trett is sub- tracted; but merchants, at present, know cloff only as a small deduction, like draft, from the original weight, and this only from two or three articles.-(See Kelly's Cambist, art. "London.") For an account of the tares and allowances at London, see TARE; for the tares and allowances at the great foreign trading towns, see their names. ALMONDS (Ger. Mandeln; Du. Amandelen; Fr. Amandes; It. Mandorli; Sp. Al- mendra; Port. Amendo; Rus. Mindal; Lat. Amygdalæ amaræ, dulces), a kind of medi- cinal fruit, contained in a hard shell, that is enclosed in a tough sort of cotton skin. The tree (Amygdalus communis) which produces this fruit nearly resembles the peach both in leaves and blossoms; it grows spontaneously only in warm countries, as Spain, and par- ticularly Barbary. It flowers early in the spring, and produces fruit in August. Almonds are of two sorts, sweet and bitter. They are not distinguishable from each other but by the taste of the kernel or fruit. " The Valentia almond is sweet, large, and flat-pointed at one extremity, and compressed in the middle. The Italian almonds are not so sweet, smaller, and less depressed in the middle. The Jordan almonds come from Malaga, and are the best sweet almonds brought to England. They are longer, flatter, less pointed at one end and less round at the other, and have a paler cuticle than those we have described. The sweet almonds are imported in mats, casks, and boxes; the bitter, which come chiefly from Moga- dore, arrive in boxes."-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) An Account of the different Descriptions of Almonds imported into the United Kingdom in the Years 1831 and 1832, the Rates of Duty thereon, the Produce of the Duties, with the countries from whence the Almonds were brought, and specifying the Quantities brought from each.-(Obtained from the Custom-house for this Work.) Quantities Imported. Countries from which imported. Bitter Almonds. Jordan Almonds. Almonds of other sorts. 1831. 1832. 1831. 1832. 1831. 1832. Crot. qrs. lbs. Germany Crot. qrs. lbs. Cwt. qrs. lbs. Crot. qrs. lbs. Crot. grs. lbs. Crot. qrs. lbs. - - - 22 2 5 - - - - The Netherlands 103 3 2 508 - - - 21 2 24 - - - - - - France 0 1 9 - - 56 1 22 43 1 24 - - - - 550 0 22 549 1 12 Portugal, Azores, and Madeira in 1 2 24 - - 1 2 10 0 1 8 331 2 25 339 3 2 Spain - - - 1 3 6 2 2 16 2,361 23 1,333 3 11 Gibraltar 2,618 2 10 1,835 3 17 - - 193 3 7 - 130 0 23 0 0 18 232 0 22 86 1 12 Italy - - - 22 2 6 18 2 24 0 2 0 0 0 2 151 3 15 140 0 5 Malta - - - - - - - 0 1 5 0 0 6 0 0 27 - - Turkey - - - - - - - - - - 0 0 13 - - Tripoli, Barbary, and Morocco 3,115 3 24 2,697 0 21 - - - - 5,138 2 11 6,018 3 15 Cape of Good Hope a - - - - - - - - 0 0 6 0 0 14 East Indies - - - - - - - - 1 0 23 0 1 24 U. States of America - - 101 3 13 - - - - - - - - Isles of Guernsey, Jersey, and Man - - - - - - 1 27 7 0 1 25 3 14 Total - 3,392 15 2,908 0 15 2,494 0 13 1,335 3 16 9,135 29 9,002 0 20 Rates of Duty per Cwt. £ 8. d. £ S. d. £ s. d. (£ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ S. d. From Foreign Countries 1 11 8 0 4 0 4 15 0 200 2 7 6 1 0 0 From British Possessions 0 15 10 040 276 100 276 1 0 0 Nett produce of the Duties. 2,260 6 2 1,068 17 1 7,830 5 11 5,092 0 6 7,850 17 6 5,466 5 7 Digitized by Google ALOES-ALUM. 33 Duties on Simonds.-Previonsly to 1832, almonds were among the most grossly overtaxed articles in the British tariff; but the subjoined statement shows that the duties were then materially reduced. It further appears from it, that though the duty on bitter almonds in 1832 amounted to only about one- eighth part of its amount in 1831, the revenue derived from them did not fail off more than about half, showing that the consumption had increased in a fourfold proportion The revenue from Jordan almonds in 1831 was 7,8301. ; and in 1832, 5,0921. ; though the duty in the latter year was less than half what it had been in the former. The results of the reduction of the duty on other sorts of almonds are exactly similar. This, therefore, is a striking instance of the beneficial influence of reasonable duties. The fair presumption is, that in a few years the revenue from almonds, under the present moderate duties, will be much greater than it has ever been under the high duties. Barbary (bitter), 31s. per ditto; Valencia (sweet), 72s. to 75s. per ditto. Almonds were worth, in bond, in the London market, in August 1833, Jordan, 75a. to 100s. per cwt.; [Almonds are chiefly imported into the United States from the Mediterranean ports of France and Spain; and only an inconsiderable amount is re-exported, for the most part to Mexico.-Am. Ed.] ALOES (Du. Aloe; Fr. Aloés; Ger. and Lat. Aloe; Rus. Sabir; Sp. Aloè; Arab. Mucibar), a bitter, gummy, resinous, inspissated juice, obtained from the leaves of the plant of the same name. There are four sorts of aloes met with in commerce viz. Socotrine, Hepatic, Caballine, and Cape. 1. Socotrine-so called from the island of Socotra, in the Indian Ocean, not very distant from Cape Guardafui, where the plant (Aloe-spicata), of which this species is the produce, grows abundantly. It is in pieces of a reddish brown colour, glossy as if varnished, and in some degree pellucid. When reduced to powder, it is of a bright golden colour. Its taste is extremely bitter; and it has a peculiar aromatic odour, not unlike that of the russet apple decaying. It softens in the hand, and is adhesive yet is sufficiently pulverulent. It is imported by way of Snlyrna and Alexandria, in chests and casks, but is very scarce in England. 2. Hepatic.-The real hepatic aloes, so called from its liver colour, is believed to be the produce of the Aloe perfoliata, which grows in Yemen in Arabia, from which it is exported to Bombay, whence it finds its way to Europe. It is duller in the colour, bitterer, and has a less pleasant aroma than the Socotrine aloes, for which, however, it is sometimes substituted. Barbadoes aloes, which is often passed off for the hepatic, is the produce of the Aloe vulgaris. It is brought home in calabashes, or large gourd shells, containing from 60 to 70 lbs. It is duskier in its hue than the Bombay, or real he- patic aloes, and the taste is more nauseous, and intensely bitter. The colour of the powder is a dull olive yellow. 3. Caballine, or Horse, Aloes seems to be merely the coarsest species or refuse of the Barbadoes aloes. It is used only in veterinary medicine; and is easily distinguished by its rank foetid smell. 4. Cape Aloes is the produce of the Aloe spicata, which is found in great abundance in the interior of the Cape colony, and in Melinda. The latter furnishes the greater part of the extract sold in Eu- rope under the name of Socotrine aloes. The odour of the Cape aloes is stronger and more disagree- able than that of the Socotrine they have, also, a yellower hue on the outside ; are less glossy, softer, and more pliable; the colour of the powder is more like that of gamboge than that of the true Socotrine aloen.-(Ainslic's Mat. Indica ; Thomson's Dispensatory and Mat. Medica.) Last year the duty on aloes was reduced to 2d. per lb. on those from a British possession, and to 8d. on those from a foreign country. The duty produced 1,8101. 5a. 2d. of nett revenue but as the old rates of duty existed during a part of the year, it does not afford the means of determining the con- sumption. ALOES-WOOD (Ger. Aloeholz; Du. Aločhout, Paradyshout; Fr. Bois d' Aloés; It. Legno di Aloe; Sp. Aloè chino; Lat. Lignum Aloes; Sans. Aguru; Malay, Agila; Siam. Kisna), the produce of a large forest tree, to be found in most of the countries be- tween China and India, from the 24th degree of north latitude to the equator. It seems to be the result of a diseased action confined to a small part of a few trees, of which the rest of the wood is wholly valueless. It appears to be more or less frequent according to soil and climate, and from the same causes to differ materially in quality. It is produced both in the greatest quantity and perfection in the countries and islands on the east coast of the gulf of Siam. This article is in high repute for fumigations, and as incense, in all Hindu, Mohammedan, and Catholic countries. It formerly brought a very high price, being at one time reckoned nearly as valuable as gold. It is now comparatively cheap, though the finest specimens are still very dear. The accounts of this ar- ticle in most books, even of good authority, are singularly contradictory and inaccurate. This is more surprising, as La Loubère has distinctly stated, that it consisted only of certains endroits corrompus dans des arbres d'une certaine espèce. Tonte arbre de cette espèce n'en a pas; et ceux qui en ont, ne les out pas tous on тêтe endroit." (Royaume de Siam, t. i. p. 45. 12mo ed.) The difficulty of finding the trees which happen to be diseased, and of getting at the diseased portion, has given rise to the fables that have been current as to its origin. The late Dr. Roxburgh introduced the tree which yields this production into the Botanical Garden at Calcutta, from the hills to the eastward of Sylhet, and de- scribed it under the name of Aquillaria Agalocha. ALUM (Ger. Alaun; Du. Aluin; Fr. Alun; It. Allume; Sp. Allumbre; Rus. Kwasszd; Lat. Alumen; Arab. Sheb), a salt of great importance in the arts, consisting of a ternary compound of aluminum, or pure argillaceous earth, potass, and sulphuric acid. Alum is sometimes found native; but by far the greater part of that which is met with in commerce is artificially prepared. The best alum is the Roman, or that which is manufactured near Civita Vecchia, in the Papal territory. It is in irregular, ochtahedral, crystalline masses, about the size of a walnut, and is opaque, being covered on the surface with a farinaceous efflorescence. The Levant, or Roch alum is in fragments, about the size of the former, but in which the crystalline form is more obscure; it is externally of a dirty rose-colour, and internally exhibits the same tinge, but clearer. It is usually shipped for Europe from Smyma; but it was anciently made at Roccha, or Edessa, in Syria; and hence its name, Roch alum. English alum is in large, irregular, semi-transparent, colourless masses, having a glassy fracture; not efflorescent, and considerably harder than the others. It is very 5 Digitized by Google 84 AMBER-AMIANTHUS. inferior to either the Roman or Roch alum. The principal use of alum is in the art of dyeing, as a mordant for fixing and giving permanency to colours which otherwise would not adhere at all, or but for a very short time but it is also used for a great variety of other purposes. Beckmann has shown (History of Inventions, vol. 1. art. Alum") that the ancients were unac- quainted with alum, and that the substance which they designated as such was merely vitriolic earth. It was first discovered by the Orientals, who established alum works in Syria in the thirteenth or fourteenth century. The oldest alum works in Europe were erected about the middle of the fifteenth century. Towards the conclusion of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, Sir Thomas Chaloner established the first alum work in England, near Whitby, in Yorkshire, where the principal works of the sort in this country are still carried on. There is a large alum work at Hurlett, near Paisley. Alum is largely manufactured in China, and is thence exported to all the western Asiatic countries. In 1831, 11,779 piculs (785 tons) were exported from Cauton. AMBER (Ger. Bernstein, Du. Barnsteen; Da. Bernsteen, Rav. ; Fr. Ambre jaune It. Ambra gialla; Sp. Ambar; Rus. Jantar; Pol. Bureztyn Lat. Succinum, Electrum), a brittle, light, hard substance, usually nearly transparent, sometimes nearly colourless, but commonly yellow, or even deep brown. It has considerable lustre. Specific gravity 1-065. It is found in nodules or rounded masses, varying from the size of coarse sand to that of a man's hand. It is tasteless, without smell, except when pounded or heated, when it emits a fragrant odour. It is highly electric. Most authors assert that amber is bituminous but Dr. Thomson states, that it is undoubtedly of a vegetable origin and though it differs from resins in some of its properties, yet it agrees with them in 60 many others, that it may with- out impropriety be referred to Chemistry, vol. iv. p. 147. 5th ed.) Pieces of amber occasionally enclose parts of toads and insects in their substance, which are beau- tifully preserved. It is principally found on the shores of Pomerania and Polish Prussia; but it is sometimes dug out of the earth in Ducal Prussia. It is also met with on the banks of the river Gia- retta, in Sicily. Sometimes it is found on the east coast of Britain, and in gravel pits round Lon- don. The largest mass of amber ever found was got near the surface of the ground in Lithuania. It weighs 18 lbs., and is preserved in the royal cabinet at Berlin. Most of the amber imported into this country comes from the Baltic, but a small quantity comes from Sicily. Amber was in very high estimation among the ancients, but is now comparatively neglected. AMBER-GRIS, OR AMBER-GREASE (Ger. Amber; Du. Amber; Fr. Ambergris; It. Ambma-grigia; Sp. Ambar-gris, Lat. Ambra, Ambra grisea), a solid, opaque, gene- rally ash-coloured, fatty, inflammable substance, variegated like marble, remarkably light, rugged and uneven in its surface, and has a fragrant odour when heated it does not effer- vesce with acids, melts freely over the fire into a kind of yellow resin, and is hardly soluble in spirit of wine. It is found on the sea-coast, or floating on the sea, near the coasts of India, Africa, and Brazil, usually in small pieces, but sometimes in masses of 50 or 100 lbs. weight. " Various opinions have been entertained respecting its origin. Some affirmed that it was the concrete juice of a tree, others thought it a bitumen but it is now considered as pretty well established that it is a concretion formed in the stomach or intestines of the Physeter macrocephalus, or spermaceti whale.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) Ambergris ought to be chosen in large pieces, of an agreeable odour, entirely grey on the outside, and grey with little black spots within. The purchaser should be very cautious, as this article is easily counterfeited with gums and other drugs. AMETHYST (Ger. Amethyst; Fr. Amethyste; It. Amatista; Sp. Ametisto; Lat. Amethystus), a precious stone, of which there are two species differing widely in quality and value. The Oriental amethyst is a gem of the most perfect violet colour, and of extraordinary brilliancy and beauty. It is said to be as hard as the sapphire or ruby, with which it also corresponds in its form and specific gravity-(See SAPPHIRE), differing in colour merely. It has been met with in India, Per- sia, Siam, and other countries; but it is exceedingly scarce. That found in India is said by Pliny to be the best. (Principatum amethysti Indice tenent.-Nat. Hist. lib. xxxvii. cap. 9.) Mr. Mawe, says he had rarely seen an oriental amethyst offered for sale, unless small and inferior in colour. Mr. Hope, the author of Anastasius, had in his cabinet the finest gem of this sort in Europe. This exqui- site specimen exceeds an inch in its greatest diameter; in daylight it exhibits the most beautiful vio- let colour, while by candle-light it is a decided blue. The Occidental amethyst is merely coloured crystal or quartz.- When perfect, its colour resembles that of the violet, or purple grape but it not unfrequently happens that the tinge is confined to one part of the stone only, while the other is left almost colourless. When it possesses a richness, clear- ness, and uniformity of hue, it is considered a gem of exquisite beauty ; and as it occurs of consider- able size, it is suited to all ornamental purposes. In specific gravity and hardness it bears no com- parison with the oriental amethyst it is also inferior in beauty and lustre though I have often seen the common amethyst offered for sale as oriental. Brazil, Siberia, and Ceylon produce very fine ame- thysts they are found in rolled pieces in the alluvial soil, and finely crystallised in fissures of rock. From the first of these localities, they have lately been imported in such quantities, as considerably to diminish their value but as they are the only coloured stones, except garnets, that are worn with mourning, they still retain, when perfect, a distinguished rank among the precious gems. The pre- sent price of inferior light-coloured stones, in the rough state, is about 20s. per pound, while those of good quality sell at 10s. or 12s. per ounce. Amethysts calculated for brooches or seals may be pur- chased at from 15s. to two or three guineas each, for which, ten years ago, treble that sum would have been given."-(Mawe on Diamonds, 2d ed. pp. 115-117.) AMIANTHUS, ASBESTOS OR MOUNTAIN FLAX, a mineral of which there are several varieties, all more or less fibrous, flexile, and elastic. It is inconsuamble by a high degree of heat and in antiquity the art was discovered of drawing the fibres into threads, Digitized by Google AMMONIACUM-AMSTERDAM. 35 and then weaving them into cloth. Pliny says that he had seen napkins made of this sub- stance, which, when soiled, were thrown into the fire, and that they were better cleaned by this means than they could have been by washing Hence it obtained from the Greeks the name of Auarros (undefiled). Its principal use, as stated by Pliny, was to wrap the bodies of the dead previously to their being exposed on the funeral pile, that the ashes of the corpse might not be mixed. with those of the wood. And in corroboration of this statement we may mention, that in 1702, a skull, some calcined bones, and a quantity of ashes, were found at Rome, in a cloth of amianthus nine Roman palms in length by seven in width. Its employment in this way was, however, confined to a few of the very richest families, incom- bustible cloth being very scarce, and bringing an enormously high price. Rarum inventu, difficile textu propter brevitatum. Cum inventum est æquat pretia excellentium marga- ritarum.-(Plin. Hist. Nat. lib. xix. cap. 1.) The disuse of the practice of cremation, or of burning the dead, caused the manufacture of amianthine cloth to be neglected. Several moderns have, however, succeeded in making it but, if it be not lost, the art is now rarely practised.-(For further particulars, see Rees's Cyclopædia.) AMMONIACUM (Fr. Gomme Ammoniaque; It. Gomma Ammoniaco; Sp. Goma Ammoniaco; Lat. Ammoniacum; Arab. Feshook), a concrete resinous juice obtained from a plant resembling fennel, found in the north of Africa, Arabia, Persia, the East Indies, &c. Pliny says that it derived its name from its being produced in the vicinity of the temple of Jupiter Ammon in Africa.-(Hist. Nat. lib. xii. cap. 23.) It has a faint but not ungrateful smell and a bitter, nauseous, sweet taste. The fragments are yellow on the outside and white within, brittle, and break with a vitreous fracture their specific gravity is 1-207. The best ammoniacum is brought from Persia by Bombay and Calcutta, packed in cases and chests. It is in large masses, composed of small round fragments or tears, or in separate dry tears, which is generally considered a sign of its goodness. The tears should be white internally and externally, and free from seeds or other foreign substances. Reject that which is soft, dark-coloured, and foul. It is used principally in the materia medica, and the quan- tity imported is but small.-Rees's Cyclopædia; Thomson's Dispensatory ; Milburn's Orient. Com. &c.) AMMONIAC (SAL). See ALKALIES (Muriate of Ammonia). AMMUNITION, a term expressive of the various implements used in war. No ammunition can be imported into the United Kingdom by way of merchandise, except by licence from his Majesty, and such licence is to be granted for furnishing his Majesty's stores only, under penalty of forfeiture.-(6 Geo. 4. c. 107.) His Majesty may forbid, by order in council, the exportation of any saltpetre, gunpowder, or any sort of ammunition. Any master of a vessel exporting ammunition when so forbidden, shall for every such offence forfeit 100/- (29 Geo. 2. c. 16.) AMSTERDAM, the principal city of Holland, situated on the Y, an arm of the Zuyder Zee, in lat. 52° 25' N., and long. 4° 40' E. From 1580 to 1750, Amsterdam was, per- haps, the first commercial city of Europe; and though her trade has experienced a great falling off since the last-mentioned epoch, it is still very considerable. In 1785, the popula- tion is said to have amounted to 235,000; in 1814, it had declined to 180,000, but at present it exceeds 200,000. The harbour is spacious and the water deep but on account of a bank (the Pampus) where the Y joins the Zuyder Zee, large vessels going or coming by that sea, are obliged to load and unload a part of their cargoes in the roads. The navigation of the Zuyder Zee is also, by reason of its numerous shallows, very intricate and difficult and as there were no hopes of remedying this defect, it became necessary to resort to other means for improving the access to the port. Of the various plans suggested for this pur- pose, the preference was given to the scheme for cutting a canal capable of admitting the largest class of merchantmen, from the north side of the port of Amsterdam to Newdiep, opposite to the Texel, and a little to the east of the Helder. This canal has fully answered the views of the projectors, and has proved of signal service to Amsterdam, by enabling ships to avoid the Pampus, as well as the difficult navigation of the Zuyder Zee, where they were frequently detained for three weeks, and to get to Newdiep without any sort of risk in less than 24 hours. The canal was begun in 1819, and completed in 1825. The ground between its extremities being nearly level, it has only a lock at each end ; and the dues and charges on account of towing, &c. are very moderate. At Newdiep the water is deeper than in any other port on the coast of Holland, and ships are there in the most favourable position for getting expeditiously to sea.-(See CANALS.) The imports princi- pally consist of sugar, coffee, spices, tobacco, cotton, tea, indigo, cochineal, wine and brandy, wool, grain of all sorts, timber, pitch and tar, hemp and flax, iron, hides, linen, cotton and woollen stuffs, hardware, rock salt, tin plates, coal, dried fish, &c. The exports consist partly of the produce of Holland, partly of the produce of her possessions in the East and West Indies and other tropical countries, and partly of commodities brought to Amsterdam, as to a convenient entrepôt, from different parts of Europe. Of the first class are cheese and butter (very important articles), madder, clover, rape, hemp, and linseeds, rape and linseed oils, Dutch linen, &c. Geneva is principally exported from Schiedam and Rotterdam oak bark Digitized by Google 36 AMSTERDAM. principally from the latter. Of the second class are spices, Mocha and Java coffee; sugar of Java, Brazil, and Cuba cochineal, indigo, cotton, tea, tobacco, and all sorts of Eastern and colonial products. And of the third class, all kinds of grain, linens from Germany, timber, and all sorts of Baltic produce; Spanish, German, and English wools; French, Rhenish, and Hungarian wines, brandy, &c. The trade of Amsterdam may, indeed, be said to comprise every article that enters into the commerce of Europe. Her merchants were formerly the most extensive dealers in bills of exchange. And though London be now, in this respect, far superior to Amsterdam, the latter still enjoys a respectable share of this business. The Bank of the Netherlands was established at Amsterdam in 1814. It is not, like the old Bank of Amsterdam, which ceased in 1796, merely a bank of deposit, but a bank of deposit and circulation formed on the model of the Bank of England.-(See BANKS, FOREIGN.) For an account of the Dutch fisheries, see the articles HERRING FISHERY and WHALE FISHERY. Ships entering the port of Amsterdam during the three Years ending with 1831, specifying the Coun- tries whence they came. Countries. 1829. 1830. 1831. Ships. Ships. Ships. Ports of Norway and North Sea - - - - - 496 788 601 Baltic and Archangel - - - - 1,134 801 565 Mediterranean, France, Spain, and Portugal - - - - 113 105 99 South America - - - - - 7 10 10 North America - - - - - - - 46 57 40 West Indies - - - - - - - - 79 95 77 Great Britain - - - - - - - - 82 114 209 East Indies and China - - - - - - - 18 26 23 Total - 1,975 1,996 1,624 There are no means of ascertaining the tonnage and the crews of these vessels. About 220 or 230 large ships belong to Amsterdam; they are employed in the East and West India trades, and in trading to the Baltic, the Mediterranean, &c. There is comparatively little coasting trade at Am- sterdam, the communication with most other ports in the vicinity being principally kept up by canals, and that with Friesland by regular packets. The total number of ships of all sorts annually entering the port amounts, at an average, to about 2,200. Account of some of the principal Articles, specifying their Quantities and Values, imported into Amsterdam by Sea during the Years 1829, 1830, and 1831. 1829. 1830. 1831. Denomination of Mer- Descrip- tion of chandise. Value in Value Value in Value Value in Value Package. Quantity. Dutch in Ster- Quantity. Dutch in Ster- Quantity. Dutch in Ster- Money. ling. Money. ling. Money. ling. Florins. £ Florins. £ Florins. £ Coffee, East India Bags 100,000 2,016,000 168,000 84,470 1,667,437 138,953 121,500 2,704,590 - West India 225,388 Casks 1,970 397,152 33,100 2,270 436,180 36,250 1,190 299,880 24,990 - Ditto Bags 43,700 2,796,800 233,060 50,770 3,096,970 258,080 24,280 1,942,400 Sugar, West India 161,860 Casks 19,000 8,351,600 279,300 21,560 3,380,608 281,717 19,850 3,223,640 Havannah 268,637 - Chests 22,200 1,758,240 146,520 8,820 579,474 48,290 - Brazil 17,690 1,082,628 90,219 Do. 1,370 369,900 30,825 1,060 218,625 Mauritius 18,220 1,260 255,150 21,263 - Bags 2,550 53,760 4,480 11,400 191,520 15,960 27,800 486,500 40,540 - East India Chests 810 68,000 5,666 1,800 - Ditto 122,130 10,177 Canisters 1,980 122,859 10,240 2,530 - Ditto 126,879 10,573 Bags 7,430 457,875 38,154 1,840 36,846 3,076 6,630 Cotton Wool, American 110,389 9,200 Do. 5,190 656,016 54,670 3,740 Egyptian 466,752 38,896 1,490 178,800 14,900 - Do. 220 24,310 2,026 40 4,680 390 West India 300 31,980 2,655 - Do. 2,900 419,050 34,900 4,270 East India 609,756 50,813 2,590 348,837 29,070 - Do. 1,800 142,200 11,850 490 Tobacco, Maryland 44,120 3,677 660 63,610 5,300 Casks 7,400 Virginia 1,476,300 123,080 5,520 1,033,620 86,137 5,220 963,743 80,312 - Do. 620 90,613 Kentucky 7,550 5,330 673,712 56,143 6,050 821,469 68,455 - Do. 2,230 298,150 24,846 580 Hides 72,007 6,000 180 23,550 1,963 28,200 359,550 Pepper 29,960 48,600 577,125 48,094 42,000 493,500 41,125 Bags 680 33,320 2,777 1,150 Rice 35,220 2,935 2,060 118,244 9,854 Casks 12,200 924,638 77,050 7,570 487,129 40,594 5,830 408,508 34,042 - Bags 12,600 167,895 13,990 8,800 100,200 8,342 2,260 4,576 380 13,380 equal to 10,870 Linseed 3,170 Lasts 140,500 3,211,200 267,000 or 114,135 2,250,090 187,500 or 33,285 656,190 54,683 quarters quarters quarters 12,870 Wheat equal to 10,940) 13,300 Do. 135,135 4,350,060 362,505 or 114,870 3,183,540 265,295 or 139,650 4,402,300 366,858 quarters quarters quarters 12,260 Rye equal to 15,340 18,290 Do. 128,730 2,022,900 168,575 or 161,070 2,515,760 209,646 or 192,045 3,840,900 320,075 quarters quarters quarters 1,100 Barley equal to 2,770 290 Do. 11,550 146,300 12,192 or 29,085 396,110 33,009 or 3,045 42,340 3,528 quarters quarters quarters During the year 1831, there were shipped from France for Holland, according to the official accounts given by the French Custom-bouse, 5,488,572 litres, or 1,372,188 wine gallons of wine. The total im- ports of Amsterdam in 1831 are estimated in the Archives du Commerce (tom. i. p. 236.), at 85,169,700 francs (3,400,000L. sterling), and the exports at 72,760,000 francs (2,910,000Γ. sterling). During 1831, 93,324 lbs. (English) of cheese, 380 tons of oil cake, 2,182 tons of oak bark, and 23,100 quarters of wheat, were exported from Amsterdam for Great Britain. The exports for England of butter, flax Digitized by Google AMSTERDAM. 37 and tow, cloves and nutmegs (of which articles the Dutch have a monopoly), smaltz, linens, hides, &c., were very considerable. Expenses of Ships in Amsterdam.-The expenses of a ship of 300 English tons, or 158 Dutch lasts, with a mixed cargo on board, inwards and outwards, coming and departing by the canal, were, in 1832, as follows:- Arriving from Arriving from the Great Britain. Mediterranean. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. Lock dues in the canal, and charges-inwards - 4 10 0 8 10 0 Ditto - - outwards - 2 10 0 5 10 0 Measuring the ship - - - 1 10 0 1 10 0 Tonnage dues, inwards and outwards - - - 25 12 0 25 12 0 A charge called Port money - - - - 1 12 0 2 0 0 Haven money - - - - 0 13 6 0 13 6 Quay or key money - - - - - 1 2 0 1 2 0 Permit to consume provisions free of excise dues - 0 8 0 0 8 0 Clearance - - - 0 5 0 0 12 6 Expenses of clearing, fees, &c. - - - - 2 18 0 2 18 0 Total - £41 0 6 £48 16 0 There is besides, the merchants' and brokers' commission on recovering and procuring freights, generally settled by agreement. The tonnage duty is 45 cents (9d.) the Netherlands ton (nearly equal to the British) inwards, and the same outwards, with the addition of the Syndicate tax of 13 per cent. It is payable only once a year by shipe bearing the following flage, viz. Netherlands, British, North American, Danish, Hanover- ian, Hamburgh. Bremen, Lubeck, Mecklenburg, Oldenburg, Russian, Portuguese, Austrian, Syrian, Salonica, Swedish, Norwegian, Prussian, Turkish, Rio de la Plata. Others pay 57f cents (11fd.) per ton inwards, and the same outwards every voyage. The charge called Port money is payable half on entry, and half on departure; and that called ha- ven money the same. The hire of a horse for towing along the whole line of the canal amounts to 12 flor. 40 cents, or about 11. 1s. Quarantins.-The quarantine station is at the island of Wierengen, near the Helder. Commission.-The usual rate of commission or factorage on the purchase or sale of goods is 2 per cent., and on bill transactions 1 and t per cent. according to their nature. Provisions of all sorts are abundant at Amsterdam, and reasonably cheap. The wages of ships' carpenters vary from 1 flor. 20 cents to 1 flor. 80 cents; that is from about 2s. to 3s. a day. For an account of the prices of corn at Amsterdam, see CORN TRADE AND CORN LAWS. Custom-house Regulations.-Cuptains of ships are bound to make, within 24 hours of their arrival at Amsterdam, or any Dutch port, a declaration in writing of the goods of which their cargo consists. If the captains be not acquainted with the goods of which the cargo consists, they must make their declaration under the general term of merchandise, and exhibit the bills of lading along with the decla- ration. The Custom-house officers are instructed to inform the captains of all formalities required by law. All goods, whether for home consumption or transit, may be deposited in bonded warehouses. If re-exported by sea, they pay no duty; but if re-exported by canals or otherwise for the interior, they are subject to a transit duty. The warehouse rent chargeable per month on a quarter of wheat (Imp. meas.) is, on an upper loft, 1 2-5thd., on an under do. ltd.; on & ton (Eng.) of sugar in casks, the charge is 8d.; in chests or mats, 6d. The business of insurance is extensively practised at Amsterdam; the premiums are moderate, and the security unexceptionable. The high duty imposed in this country on policies of insurance has contributed to the increase of this business in Holland. Credit, Discount, &e.-Holland is, and has always been, a country of short credit. A discount is usually given for prompt payment, at the rate of 1 per cent. for six weeks, and of two per cent. for two months; but the terms of credit on most articles, and the discount allowed for ready money, have been fixed by usage, and are regarded as essential conditions in every bargain. Some of the more important of these terms and discounts are specified in the following table. In consequence of the preference given in Holland to ready money transactions, It is not a country in which adventurers without capital have much chance of speedily making a fortune. Rien, en effet, de plus facile que de s'établir à Ainsterdam; mais rien de plus dificile que de s'y soutenir sans des grandes ressources. Dans cette ville, où l'argent abonde, où on le prête contre des sûretés à si bon marché, il est pour- tant impossible les'en procurer a crédit; et sans argent il n'y a plus de possibilité d'y travailler, que de trouver quelqu'un qui veuille de se charger d'un papier nouveau qui ne seroit pas appuyé dun crédit que l'opinion, la protection, ou des effets réels feroient valoir A la bourse. Les Hollandois sui- vent IA-dessus des maximes très austères, même à l'égard des maisons d'une certaine considération." -(Encyclopédie Mothodique, Commerce, t. ii. p. 650.) But this austerity is not a disadvantage, but the reverse. It prevents commerce from degenerating, as it has too often done in other places, into gam- bling adventures, and places it on a comparatively solid foundation. And it should be mentioned to the honour of the Dutch, and as a proof of the excellence of this system, that, notwithstanding the distress and loss of trade occasioned by the invasion and occupation of their country by the French, the bankruptcies in 1795 and subsequent years were not, comparatively, so numerous as in England in ordinary seasons! The regulations in the Code Napoleon as to bankruptcy are enforced in Holland. It bas long been the practice in Holland to make, on selling articles, considerable deductions from their weight, particularly from those of large bulk, as compared with their value. These tares and drafts, as they are termed, are now fixed by ancient usage: and the most important amongst them are here specified. Two and Alleroances on the principal Articles sold of Cocoa, Caracas 42 lbs. 1 per cent. Ameterdem. Maranham ditto Cayenne ditto Tares. Allowances. Martinique ditto (Draft and Discount.) Surinam 6 per cont Coffee, East and West In- bags 3 dia is general I per cent., 8 per cont. and 2 18 months die- cashs real tare Asbas per cent. 48 lbs. per cask count, and 1 Bourbon 10 lbs. per original per cont. mat farills per cost. $ per cent. and $ Java 14 lbs. per guany per cent. Moeba D 94 lbs, per bale Digitized by Google 38 AMSTERDAM. Cotton, Surat and Bengal 8 per cent. 2 per cent. and 1 Allowances for leakage are made upon all liquids, including trea- all other kinds 6 per cent. per cent. cle and honey, as follows, viz. Cotton yarn twist per cent. Coming from England, the northern ports of Europe, and France, per cent. 9 per by inland navigation, 6 per cent. Indigo, Bengal real tare cent. and 1 per From France by Be3, and from other countries by the rivers Rhine cent. and Waal, 12 per cent. 4 per cent. aug. From any other port or place, 14 per cent. Cochineal 3à lbs. ment. Finally, from whatever place the same may come, upon train oil, per cent. deduct. 12 per cent. ; blubber, 6 per cent. Galls 2 6 lbs. or 20 lbs. per cent. and 2 In case liquids shall have experienced, upon the voyage, such leak- per cent. age as shall cause the importer to be dissatisfied with the allowance Gums, Senegal 6 lbs. 14 lbs. or 21 Barbary lbs. 2 per cent. and 2 before specified, he is permitted to pay the duty upon the actual per cent. quantity, to be ascertained by the officers at the importer's expense. Arabic 14 lbs. or 30 lbs. Logwood 2 and 3 per cent. 2 Fustic per cent. Money.-Accounts used to be kept at Amsterdam by the pound 2 per cent. Flemish=6 florins - 20 schillings=120 stivers=240 groats= 1920 Hides, Buenos Ayres, &c. 2 lbs. per hide 2 per cent. and 1 pennings. But in 1820, the decimal system was introduced. In per cent. order, however, to cause as little inconvenience as possible, the florin Linens, Flemish 2 per cent. and 1 =1s. 84d. sterling, was made the unit of the new system. The florin per cent. is supposed to be divided into 100 equal parts or cents; and the other all other kinds per cent. silver coins are equal multiples or sub-multiples of it. The new Oils, per cent. gold coin is called the florin piece, and is worth 16s. 6sd. very Rice, Carolina real tare per cent. and 2 nearly, But accounts are still sometimes kept in the old way or by East India 6 lbs. per cent. the pound Flemish. Par of exchange between Amsterdam and Lon- Saltpetre 8 14 lbs. 1 per cent. and 11 don is 11 flor. 58 cents per pound sterling. per cent. 1 Liquorice real tare and 4 lbs. 2 per cent. and Weights and Measures.-In 1820, the French system of weights per cent. and measures was introduced into the Netherlands, the names only Spices, pepper 25 lbs. or 13 lbs being changed. cinnamon The pond is the unit of weight, and answers to the French kilo- cloves and mace 1 per cent. gramme. Its divisions are the ons, lood, wigtje, and korrel. pimento 42 lbs. and above The elle, which is the unit or element of long measure, equals the 100 nutmegs 1 per cent. French mètre. Its decimal divisions are the palm, duim, and streep; 12 per cent. and its decimal multiples, the roede and mijle. ginger 8 lbs. à 16 lbs. 2 per cent. The vierkante elle, or square ell, is the unit of superficial mea- Sugars, Martinique sure; and answers to the centiare or mètre carre of France. Its di- St. Domingo 18 per cent. visions are the vierkante palm, vierkante duim, and the vierkante St. Croix streep and its multiples, the vierkante roede and vierkante bunder. Surinam English colonies 20 per cent. 2 per cent. and OR The kubicke elle is the unit of measures of capacity and equals the French stère. Its divisions are the kubicke palm, kubicke duim, Demerara per cent. and kubicke streep. Berbice Essequibo 18 per cent. The term wisse is given to a kubicke elle of firewood. The kop is the unit of measures for dry wares, and is the cube of Brazil, white the palm: answering to the French litre. Its division is the maatje, 18 months' dis- and its multiples the schepel and mudde the latter is also called the Ditto, Muscovado count, 2 per zak, and equals the French hectolitre. 30 mudden make 1 last. cent. and 2 per The kan is the unit for liquid measure, and is the cube of the cent. Havannah 80 lbs. 2 per cent. and 2 palm it corresponds to the French litre. Its divisions are the maatje and vingerhoed, and 100 kans make a vat or cask, which equals the Java 48 lbs. per cent. French hectolitre. Salt 1 per cent. The apothecary's new pound is 12 ounces, 96 drachms, 288 scru- Tea, bohea ples, or 5,760 grains; and answers to 375 grammes, or 5,787 English congo souchong 21 lbs. à 24 lbs. grains. By the old method of calculating, which is not yet entirely super- campoi per cent. seded, the pound of Amsterdam was = to 1-09 lbs. avoirdupois, or hyson 18 lbs. 100 lbs. Amsterdam = 108-923 lbs. avoirdupois. pekoe tonquin 18 lbs. à 42 lbs. The last or measure for corn =27 mudden = 10 qurs. 51 bushels Winchester measure. The aam liquid measure = 4 ankers=8 2 per cent. and 1 Tobacco, Maryland per cent. da- steckans = 21 viertels = 64 stoops or stoppen = 128 mingles 256 casks tared pints = 41 English wine gallons. Virginia 2 and 8 per cent. maged, and 1 The stoop contains 5 1-8th pints English ine measure. per cent. 100 mingles are equal to 32 English wine gallons, or 26 1-5th Tin plates 2 per cent. per cent. 21 months' dis- English beer gallons, or 26 2-3d Imperial gallons. French wine is sold per hogshead of Wool, Spanish bags tared, and 24 180 mingles. count, and 1 lbs. per 175 lbs. Spanish and Portuguese wine, per pipe of 349 ditto. per cent. French brandy, per hogshead of 30 viertels. Wines 1 per cent. Beer, per barrel (equal to the aam) of 128 mingles. Madder 10 lbs. per cask, casks tared Vegetable oils, per aam, of 120 ditto. and 2 per cent. Whale oil, per ditto 16 ditto. 1 per cent. 2 per Herrings Rum is sold per anker of 2 steckan = 10+ English wine gallons. 3 or 5 per cent. cent. and 2 per The foot of Amsterdam = 11 1-7th English inches. cent. The Rhineland foot = 12 ditto. Smaltz 36 lbs. 2 per cent. The ell, cloth measure = 27 1-12th ditto. Flax, hams, seeds, geneva, 1 per cent. Rock salt is sold per hondert of 404 maaten, making 20 tons, or grain 4,000 lbs. Dutch. Butter none. 2 and 1 per cent. Pit coal is sold per hoed of 38 maaten : nine hoeds are five chal- Hides 2 per cent. drons of Newcastle, or six hoeds are five chaldrons of London. Cheese, Edam Gouda I per cent. Butter is sold per barrel the barrel of Leyden is 320 lbs. nett.- that of Friesland 28 lbs. nett-and the common Dutch barrel 336 lbs. The above are the customary tares and other allowance made by gross. the merchants in their transactions with each other. But in paying A last of herrings 18 reckoned at 12, 13, or 14 barrels. the import duties at the Custom-house, the tare upon goods paying A last of pitch is 12 barrels. duty by weight is, with the exceptions undermentioned, fixed at 15 A last of tar 13 barrels. per cent. for such as are in casks or barrels, and at 8 per cent. for A bag of seed = 2 1-2 Winchester quarters. such as are in packages, canisters, mats, baskets, &e. Merchants A last for freight is reckoned 4,000 lbs. equal to two English tons. dissatisfied with these allowances may pay the duty according to the Eight hogsheads (or oxhofts) of wine Twelve barrels of pitch are reckoned real weight, ascertained by the customs officers at their expense. Thirteen barrels of tar as one last Exceptions.-The tare upon grain imported in sacks is fixed at 2 Twenty chests of lemons, &c. in settling per cent. 4,000 lbs. of iron, copper, and colonial produce the freight Porcelain, 15 per cent. 4,000 lbs. of almonds of ships. Indigo in chests, 25 per cent. 2,000 lbs. of wool or feathers in serons, 15 per cent. A last of wheat is considered 10 per cent. higher than one of rye, chests from Havannah, 18 per cent., other places 20 per and the latter 20 1-2 per cent. higher than oats, and 10 per cent. higher cent. than seed. A last of ballast is only 2,000 Ibs.-These details have Sugar canisters, 10 per cent. been derived from the answers by the British consul to the circular casks and packages, 15 and 8 per cent. The tare upon queries, the Dictionnaire du Commerce, (Ency. Méthod.) tom. ii. sugar refined in the interior and exported, is 12 per pp. 554-650., Kelly's Cambist, private information, &e. cent. per barrel, 8 per cent. per package. Magnitude of the Commerce of Holland in the seventeenth Century.-Causes of its Prosperity and Decline.-We believe we need make no apology for embracing this oppor- tunity to lay before our readers the following details with respect to the commerce and com- mercial policy of Holland. It forms one of the most instructive topics of investigation; and it is to be regretted that so little attention should have been paid to it in this country. Previously to the commencement of the long-continued and glorious struggle made by the Dutch to emancipate themselves from the blind and brutal despotism of Old Spain, they had a considerable marine, and had attained to distinction by their fisheries and commerce and the war, instead of being injurious to the trade of the republic, contributed powerfully Digitized by Google AMSTERDAM. 39 to its extension. After the capture of Antwerp by the Spaniards, in 1585, the extensive commerce of which it had been the centre was removed to the ports of Holland, and prin- cipally to Amsterdam, which then attained to the distinction she long enjoyed, of the first commercial city of Europe. In 1602, the Dutch East India Company was formed; and notwithstanding the perni- cious influence of that association, the Indian trade increased rapidly in magnitude and importance. Ships fitted either for commercial or warlike purposes, and having a consider- able number of soldiers on board, were sent out within a few years of the establishment of the company. Amboyna and the Moluccas were first wrested from the Portuguese, and with them the Dutch obtained the monopoly of the spice trade. Factories and fortifications were in no long time established, from Bussorah, near the mouth of the Tigris, in the Per- sian Gulf, along the coasts and islands of India as far as Japan. Alliances were formed with several of the Indian princes; and in many parts, particularly on the coasts of Ceylon, and in various districts of Malabar and Coromandel, they were themselves the sovereigns. Batavia, in the large and fertile island of Java, the greater part of which had been con- quered by the Dutch, formed the centre of their Indian commerce; and though unhealthy, its port was excellent, and it was admirably situated for commanding the trade of the Eastern Archipelago. In 1651, they planted a colony at the Cape of Good Hope, which had been strangely neglected by the Portuguese. Every branch of commerce was vigorously prosecuted by the Dutch. Their trade with the Baltic was, however, by far the most extensive and lucrative of which they were in possession. Guicciardini mentions that the trade with Poland, Denmark, Prussia, &c., even before their revolt, was so very great, that fleets of 300 ships arrived twice a year at Amster- dam from Dantzic and Livonia only; but it increased prodigiously during the latter part of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth centuries. The great population of Holland, and the limited extent and unfruitful nature of the soil, render the inhabitants dependent on foreigners for the greater part of their supplies of corn. The countries round the Baltic have always furnished them with the principal part of those supplies; and it is from them that they have been in the habit of bringing timber, iron, hemp and flax, pitch and tar, tallow, ashes, and other bulky articles required in the building of their houses and ships, and in various manufactures. Nothing, however, redounds so much to the credit of the Dutch, as the policy they have invariably followed with respect to the trade in corn. They have, at all times, had a large capital embarked in this business. The variations which are perpetually occurring in the harvests, early led them to engage very extensively in a sort of speculative corn trade. When the crops happened to be unusually productive, and prices low, they bought and stored up large quantities of grain, in the expectation of profiting by the advance that was sure to take place on the occurrence of an unfavourable year. Repeated efforts were made, in periods when prices were rising, to prevail on the government to prohibit exportation; but they steadily refused to interfere. In consequence of this enlightened policy, Holland has long been the most important European entrepôt for corn; and her markets have on all occasions been furnished with the most abundant supplies. Those scarcities which are so very disastrous in countries without commerce, or where the trade in corn is subjected to fetters and restraints, have not only been totally unknown in Holland, but become a copious source of wealth to her merchants, who then obtained a ready and advantageous vent for the supplies accumulated in their warehouses. 'Amster- dam," says Sir Walter Raleigh, is never without 700,000 quarters of corn, none of it of the growth of Holland; and a dearth of only one year in any other part of Europe enriches Holland for seven years. In the course of a year and a half, during a scarcity in England, there were carried away from the ports of Southampton, Bristol, and Exeter alone, nearly 200,000/.; and if London and the rest of England be included, there must have been 2,000,000/. Observations touching Trade and Commerce with the Hollander, Miscel. Works, vol. ii.) The very well informed author of the Richesse de la Hollande, published in 1778, observes, in allusion to these circumstances, Que la disette de grains regne dans les quatre parties du monde; vous trouverez du froment, du seigle, et d'autres grains à Amsterdam; ils n'y manquent jamais."-(Tome i. p. 376.) The Bank of Amsterdam was founded in 1609. The principal object of this establish- ment was to obviate the inconvenience and uncertainty arising from the circulation of the coins imported into Amsterdam from all parts of the world. The merchants who carried coin or bullion to the bank obtained credit for an equal value in its books: this was called bank-money; and all considerable payments were effected by writing it off from the account of one individual to that of another. This establishment continued to flourish till the invasion of the French in 1795. Between the years 1651 and 1672, when the territories of the republic were invaded by the French, the commerce of Holland seems to have reached its greatest height. De Witt estimates its increase from the treaty with Spain, concluded at Munster in 1643, to 1669, at fully a half. He adds, that during the war with Holland, Spain lost the greater part of her Digitized by Google 40 AMSTERDAM. naval power; that since the peace, the Dutch had obtained most of the trade to that country, which had been previously carried on by the Hanseatic merchants and the English; that almost all the coasting trade of Spain was carried on by Dutch shipping that Spain had even been forced to hire Dutch ships to sail to her American possessions; and that so great was the exportation of goods from Holland to Spain, that all the merchandise brought from the Spanish West Indies was not sufficient to make returns for them. At this period, indeed, the Dutch engrossed, not by means of any artificial monopoly, but by the greater number of their ships, and their superior skill and economy in all that regarded navigation, almost the whole carrying trade of Europe. The value of the goods exported from France in Dutch bottoms, towards the middle of the fourteenth century exceeded 40,000,000 livres; and the commerce of England with the Low Countries was, for a very long period, almost entirely carried on in them. The business of marine insurance was largely and successfully prosecuted at Amsterdam and the ordinances published in 1551, 1563, and 1570, contain the most judicious regula- tions for the settlement of such disputes as might arise in conducting this difficult but highly useful business. It is singular, however, notwithstanding the sagacity of the Dutch, and their desire to strengthen industrious habits, that they should have prohibited insurance upon lives. It was reserved for England to show the advantages that might be derived from this beautiful application of the science of probabilities. In 1690, Sir William Petty estimated the shipping of Europe at about 2,000,000 tons, which he supposed to be distributed as follows :-viz. England, 500,000 France, 100,000 Hamburgh, Denmark, Sweden, and Dantzic, 250,000 Spain, Portugal, and Italy, 250,000 that of the Seven United Provinces amounting, according to him, to 900,000 tons, or to nearly one half of the whole tonnage of Europe! No great dependence can, of course, be placed upon these estimates; but the probability is, that, had they been more accurate, the preponderance in favour of Holland would have been greater than it appears to be for the official returns to the circulars addressed in 1701 by the commissioners of customs to the officers at the different ports, show that the whole mercantile navy of England amounted at that period to only 261,222 tons, carrying 27,196 men.-(Macpherson's Annals of Com- merce, anno 1701.) It may, therefore, be fairly concluded, that, during the seventeenth century the foreign commerce and navigation of Holland was greater than that of all Europe besides; and yet the country which was the seat of this vast commerce had no native produce to export, nor even a piece of timber fit for ship-building. All had been the fruit of industry, economy, and a fortunate combination of circumstances. Holland owed this vast commerce to a variety of causes: partly to her peculiar situation, the industry and economy of her inhabitants, the comparatively liberal and enlightened system of civil as well as of commercial policy adopted by the republic; and partly also to the wars and disturbances that prevailed in most European countries in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and prevented them from emulating the successful career of the Dutch. The ascendancy of Holland as a commercial state began to decline from about the com- mencement of last century. After the war terminated by the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, the attention of the government of Holland was forcibly attracted to the state of the ship- ping and foreign commerce of the republic. The discovery of means by which their decline might be arrested, and the trade of the republic, if possible, restored to its ancient flourishing condition, became a prominent object in the speculations of every one who felt interested in the public welfare. In order to procure the most correct information on the subject, the Stadtholder, William IV., addressed the following queries to all the most extensive and intelligent merchants, desiring them to favour him with their answers :- 1. What is the actual state of trade ? and if the same should be found to be diminished and fallen to decay, then, 2. To inquire by what methods the same may be supported and advanced, or, if possible, restored to its former lustre, repute, and dignity ?" In discussing these questions, the merchants were obliged to enter into an examination, as well of the causes which had raised the commerce of Holland to the high pitch of pros- perity to which it had once attained, as of those which had occasioned its subsequent de- cline. It is stated, that, though not of the same opinion upon all points, they, speaking generally, concurred as to those that were most important. When their answers had been obtained, and compared with each other, the Stadtholder had a dissertation prepared from them, and other authentic sources, on the commerce of the republic, to which proposals were subjoined for its amendment. Some of the principles advanced in this dissertation apply to the case of Holland only but most of them are of universal application, and are not more comprehensive than sound. We doubt, indeed, whether the benefits resulting from religious toleration, political liberty, the security of property, and the freedom of in- dustry, have ever been more clearly set forth than in this dissertation. It begins by an enumeration of the causes which contributed to advance the commerce of the republic to its former unexampled prosperity these the authors divide into three classes, embracing under Digitized by Google AMSTERDAM. 41 the first those that were natural and physical; under the second, those they denominated moral; and under the third, those which they considered adventitious and external; re- marking on them in succession as follows :- The natural and physical causes are the advantages of the situation of the country, on the sea, and at the mouth of considerable rivers; its situation between the northern and southern parts, which, by being in a manner the centre of all Europe, made the republic become the general market, where the merchants on both sides used to bring their superfluous commodities, in order to barter and exchange the same for other goods they wanted. " Nor have the barrenness of the country, and the necessities of the natives arising from that cause, less contributed to set them upon exerting all their application, industry, and utmost stretch of genius, to fetch from foreign countries what they stand in need of in their own, and to support themselves by trade. The abundance of fish in the neighbouring seas put them in a condition not only to supply their own oceasions, but with the overplus to carry on a trade with foreigners, and out of the produce of the fishery to find an equivalent for what they wanted, through the sterility and narrow boundaries and extent of their own country. "II. Among the moral and political causes are to be placed, The unalterable maxim and funda- mental law relating to the free exercise of different religions: and always to consider this toleration and connivance as the most effectual means to draw foreigners from adjacent countries to settle and reside here, and so become instrumental to the peopling of these provinces. The constant policy of the republic to make this country a perpetual, safe, and secure asylum for all persecuted and oppressed strangers. No alliance, no treaty, no regard for or solicitation of any potentate whatever, has at any time been able to weaken or destroy this law, or make the state re- cede from protecting those who have fled to it for their own security and self-preservation. Throughout the whole course of all the persecutions and oppressions that have occurred in other countries, the steady adherence of the republic to this fundamental law has been the cause that many people have not only fled hither for refuge, with their whole stock in ready cash, and their most valuable effects, but have also settled, and established many trades, fabries, manufactories, arts, and sciences, in this country, notwithstanding the first materials for the said fabrics and manu- factories were almost wholly wanting in it, and not to be procured but at a great expense from foreign parts. "The constitution of our form of government, and the liberty thus accruing to the citizen, are further reasons to which the growth of trade, and its establishment in the republic, may fairly be ascribed; and all her policy and laws are put upon such an equitable footing, that neither life, estates, nor dignities, depend on the caprice or arbitrary power of any single individual; nor is there any room for any person, who, by care, frugality, and diligence, has once acquired an af- fluent fortune or estate, to fear a deprivation of them by any act of violence, oppression, or in- justice. The administration of justice in the country has, in like manner, always been clear and impar- tial, and without distinction of superior or inferior rank,-whether the parties have been rich or poor, or were this a foreigner and that a native ; and it were greatly to be wished we could at this day boast of such impartial quickness and despatch in all our legal processes, considering how great an influence it has on trade. To sum up all, amongst the moral and political causes of the former flourishing state of trade, may be likewise placed the wisdom and prudence of the administration; the intrepid firmness of the councils; the faithfulness with which treaties and engagements were wont to be fulfilled and ratified; and particularly the care and caution practised to preserve tranquillity and peace, and to decline, in- stead of entering on a scene of war, merely to gratify the ambitious views of gaining fruitless or ima- ginary conquests. By these moral and political maxims was the glory and reputation of the republic so far spread, and foreigners animated to place so great a confidence in the steady determinations of a state so wisely and prudently conducted, that a concourse of them stocked this country with an augmenta- tion of inhabitants and useful hands, whereby its trade and opulence were from time to time in- creased. "III. Amongst the adventitious and external causes of the rise and flourishing state of our trade may be reckoned- That at the time when the best and wisest maxims were adopted in the republic as the means of making trade flourish, they were neglected in almost all other countries; and any one, reading the history of those times, may easily discover, that the persecutions on account of religion throughout Spain, Brabant, Flanders, and many other states and kingdoms, have powerfully promoted the esta- blishment of commerce in the republic. To this happy result, and the settling of manufacturers in our country, the long continuance of the civil wars in France, which were afterwards carried on in Germany, England, and divers other parts, have also very much contributed. "It must be added, in the last place, that during our most burthensome and heavy wars with Spain and Portugal (however ruinous that period was for commerce otherwise), these powers had both neglected their navy; whilst the navy of the republic, by a conduct directly the reverse, was at the same time formidable, and in a capacity not only to protect the trade of its own subjects, but to an- noy and crush that of their enemies in all quarters." We believe our readers will agree with us in thinking that these statements reflect the greatest credit on the merchants and government of Holland. Nothing, as it appears to us, could be conceived more judicious than the account they give of the causes which princi- pally contributed to render Holland a great commercial commonwealth. The central situation of the country, its command of some of the principal inlets to the continent, and the necessity under which the inhabitants have been placed, in consequence of the barren- ness of the soil and its liability to be overflowed, to exert all their industry and enterprise, are circumstances that seem to be in a great degree peculiar to Holland. But though there can be no doubt that their influence has been very considerable, no one will pretend to say that it is to be compared for a moment with the influence of those free institutions, which, fortunately, are not the exclusive attributes of any particular country, but have flourished in Phoenicia, Greece, England, and America, as well as in Holland. The Dissertation was translated into English, and published at London in 1751. We have quoted from the translation. D 2 6 Digitized by Google 42 AMSTERDAM. Many dissertations have been written to account for the decline of the commerce of Hol- land. But, if we mistake not, its leading causes may be classed under two prominent heads, viz. first, the natural growth of commerce and navigation in other countries; and second, the weight of taxation at home. During the period when the republic rose to great eminence as a commercial state, England, France, and Spain, distracted by civil and religious dissen- sions, or engrossed wholly by schemes of foreign conquest, were unable to apply their energies to the cultivation of commerce, or to withstand the competition of so industrious a people as the Dutch. They, therefore, were under the necessity of allowing the greater part of their foreign, and even of their coasting trade, to be carried on in Dutch bottoms, and under the superintendence of Dutch factors. But after the accession of Louis XIV. and the ascendency of Cromwell had put an end to internal commotions in France and England, the energies of these two great nations began to be directed to pursuits of which the Dutch had hitherto enjoyed almost a monopoly. It was not to be supposed, that when tranquillity and a regular system of government had been established in France and England, their active and enterprising inhabitants would submit to see one of their most valuable branches of industry in the hands of foreigners. The Dutch ceased to be the carriers of Europe, without any fault of their own. Their performance of that function necessarily terminated as soon as other nations became possessed of a mercantile marine, and were able to do for themselves what had previously been done for them by their neighbours. Whatever, therefore, might have been the condition of Holland in other respects, the natural advance of rival nations must inevitably have stripped her of a large portion of the commerce she once possessed. But the progress of decline seems to have been considerably accelerated, or rather, perhaps, the efforts to arrest it were rendered ineffectual, by the ex- tremely heavy taxation to which she was subjected, occasioned by the unavoidable expenses incurred in the revolutionary struggle with Spain, and the subsequent wars with France and England. The necessities of the state led to the imposition of taxes on corn, on flour when it was ground at the mill, and on bread when it came from the oven ; on butter, and fish, and fruit; on income and legacies; the sale of houses; and, in short, almost every article either of necessity or convenience. Sir William Temple mentions that in his time- and taxes were greatly increased afterwards-one fish sauce was in common use, which directly paid no fewer than thirty different duties of excise; and it was a common saying at Amsterdam, that every dish of fish brought to table was paid for once to the fisherman, and six times to the state. The pernicious influence of this heavy taxation has been ably set forth by the author of the Richesse de la Hollande, and other well-informed writers; and it has also been very forcibly pointed out in the Dissertation already referred to, drawn up from the communica- tions of the Dutch merchants. " Oppressive taxes," it is there stated, "must be placed at the head of all the causes that have co-operated to the prejudice and discouragement of trade; and it may be justly said, that it can only be attributed to them that the trade of this country has been diverted out of its channel, and transferred to our neighbours, and must daily be still more and more alienated and shut out from us, unless the progress thereof be stopped by some quick and effectual remedy nor is it difficult to see, from these contemplations on the state of our trade, that the same will be effected by no other means than a diminution of all duties. " In former times this was reckoned the only trading state in Europe; and foreigners were content to pay the taxes, as well on the goods they brought hither, as on those they came here to buy; without examining whether they could evade or save them, by fetching the goods from the places where they were produced, and carrying others to the places where they were consumed: in short, they paid us our taxes with pleasure, without any farther inquiry. " But, since the last century, the system of trade is altered all over Europe: foreign nations, seeing the wonderful effect of our trade, and to what an eminence we had risen only by means thereof, they did likewise apply themselves to it; and, to save our duties, sent their superfluous products beside our country, to the places where they are most con- sumed ; and in return for the same, furnished themselves from the first hands with what they wanted." But, notwithstanding this authoritative exposition of the pernicious effects resulting from the excess of taxation, the necessary expenses of the state were so great as to render it im- possible to make any sufficient reductions. And, with the exception of the transit trade carried on through the Rhine and the Meuse, which is in a great measure independent of foreign competition, and the American trade, most of the other branches of the foreign trade of Holland, though still very considerable, continue in a comparatively depressed state. In consequence principally of the oppressiveness of taxation, but partly too, of the exces- sive accumulation of capital that had taken place while the Dutch engrossed the carrying trade of Europe, profits in Holland were reduced towards the middle of the seventeenth century, and have ever since continued extremely low. This circumstance would of itself have sapped the foundations of her commercial greatness. Her capitalists, who could hardly Digitized by Google AMSTERDAM. 43 expect to clear more than two or three per cent. of nett profit by any sort of undertsking carried on at home, were tempted to vest their capital in other countries, and to speculate in loans to foreign governments. There are the best reasons for thinking that the Dutch were, until very lately, the largest creditors of any nation in Europe. It is impossible, indeed, to form any accurate estimate of what the sums owing them by foreigners previously to the late French war, or at present, may amount to; but there can be no doubt that at the former period the amount was immense, and that it is still very considerable. M. Demeunier (Dictionnaire de l'Economie Politique, tome iii. p. 720.) states the amount of capital lent by the Dutch to foreign governments, exclusive of the large sums lent to France during the American war, at seventy-three millions sterling. According to the author of the Richesse de la Hollande (ii. p. 292.), the sums lent to France and England only, previously to 1778, amounted to 1,500,000 livres tournois, or sixty millions sterling. And besides these, vast sums were lent to private individuals in foreign countries, both regularly as loans at interest, and in the shape of goods advanced at long credits. So great was the difficulty of finding an advantageous investment for money in Holland, that Sir William Temple mentions, that the payment of any part of the national debt was looked upon by the creditors as an evil of the first magnitude. They receive it," says he, " with tears, not knowing how to dis- pose of it to interest with such safety and ease." Among the subordinate causes which contributed to the decline of Dutch commerce, or which have, at all events, prevented its growth, we may reckon the circumstance of the commerce with India having been subjected to the trammels of monopoly. De Witt ex- presses his firm conviction, that the abolition of the East India Company would have added very greatly to the trade with the East; and no doubt can now remain in the mind of any one, that such would have been the case.* The interference of the administration in regu- lating the mode in which some of the most important branches of industry should be car- ried on, seems also to have been exceedingly injurious. Every proceeding with respect to the herring fishery, for example, was regulated by the orders of government, carried into effect under the inspection of officers appointed for that purpose. Some of these regulations were exceedingly vexatious. The period when the fishery might begin was fixed at five minutes past twelve o'clock of the night of the 24th of June ! and the master and pilot of every vessel leaving Holland for the fishery, were obliged to make oath that they would respect the regulation. The species of salt to be made use of in curing different sorts of herrings, was also fixed by law; and there were endless regulations with respect to the size of the barrels, the number and thickness of the staves of which they were to be made the gutting and packing of the herrings; the branding of the barrels, &c. &c.-(Histoire des Pêches, &c. dans les Mers du Nord, tom. i. chap. 24.) These regulations were intended to secure to the Hollanders that superiority which they had early attained in the fishery, and to prevent the reputation of their herrings from being injured by the bad faith of individuals. But their real effect was precisely the reverse of this. By tying up the fishers to a system of routine, they prevented them from making any improvements; while the facility of coun- terfeiting the public marks opened a much wider door to fraud, than would have been open- ed had government wisely declined interfering in the matter. In despite, however, of the East India monopoly, and the regulations now described, the commercial policy of Holland has been more liberal than that of any other nation. And in consequence, a country not more extensive than Wales, and naturally not more fertile, con- quered, indeed, in a great measure from the sea, has accumulated a population of upwards of two millions; has maintained wars of unexampled duration with the most powerful monarchies; and, besides laying out immense sums in works of utility and ornament at home, has been enabled to lend hundreds of millions to foreigners. During the occupation of Holland by the French, first as a dependent state, and subse- quently as an integral part of the French empire, her foreign trade was almost entirely destroyed. Her colonies were successively conquered by England, and in addition to the loss of her trade, she was burdened with fresh taxes. But such was the vast accumulated wealth of the Dutch, their prudence, and energy, that the influence of these adverse circum- stances was far less injurious than could have been imagined; and, notwithstanding all the losses she had sustained, and the long interruption of her commercial pursuits, Holland continued, at her emancipation from the yoke of the French in 1814, to be the richest coun- try in Europe ! Java, the Moluccas, and most of her other colonies were then restored, and she is now in the enjoyment of a large foreign trade. Her connection with Belgium was an unfortunate one for both countries. The union was not agreeable to either party, and has been injurious to Holland. Belgium was an agricultural and manufacturing country ; and was inclined, in imitation of the French, to lay restrictions on the importations of most sorts of raw and manufactured produce. A policy of this sort was directly opposed to the interests and the ancient practice of the Dutch. But though their deputies prevented the restrictive system from being carried to the extent proposed by the Belgians, they were una- For proofs of this, see the article on the Commerce of Holland in the Edinburgh Review, No. 102, from which most part of these statements have been taken. Digitized by Google 44 ANCHOR. ble to prevent it from being carried to an extent that materially affected the trade of Holland. Whatever, therefore, may be the consequences as to Belgium, there can be little doubt that the late separation between the two divisions of the kingdom of the Netherlands will redound to the advantage of Holland. It must ever be for the interest of England, America, and all trading nations, to maintain the independence of a state by whose means their productions find a ready access to the great continental markets. It is to be hoped that the Dutch, pro- fiting by past experience, will adopt such a liberal and conciliatory system towards the natives of Java, as may enable them to avail themselves to the full of the various re- sources of that noble island. And if they do this, and freely open their ports, with as few restrictions as possible, to the ships and commodities of all countries, Holland may still be the centre of a very extensive commerce, and may continue to preserve a respectable place among mercantile nations. Even at this moment, after all the vicissitudes they have under- gone, the Dutch are, beyond all question, the most opulent and industrious of European nations. And their present, no less than their former state, shows that a free system of government, security, and the absence of restrictions on industry, can overcome almost every obstacle; 'can convert the standing pool and lake into fat meadows, cover the barren rock with verdure, and make the desert smile with flowers." (Principal articles of Merchandise imported into Amsterdam in 1834 and 1835, with the Stocks on hand on the 31st December each year. (Circular of Labouchere & Co.) Stocks on Stocks on Imports in 1834. 31st December, 1834. Imports in 1835. 31st December, 1835. Teas qr. chests 16,000 10,100 5,290 3,320 Coffee kilogs. 20,000,000 11,000,000 18,250,000 10,125,000 hhds. 19,027 700) 28,509) 1,200 boxes 23,178 kilogs. 2,000 kilogs. 26,470 kilogs. 4,400 kilogs. Sugar mais, &c. 15,448 28,000,000 1,100 canist. 2,750,000 21,723 40,674 7,500 34,000,000 3,480 44,355 17,569 5,750,000 chests. 2,792 700 2,820 323 Tobacco M. hhds. 10,203 7,176 7,369 4,664 V and K. 58 58 882 852 Cotton bales, &c. 13,523 1,418 11,718 1,697 Rice, Carolina casks 9,000 2,000 5,800 300 Java bags 34,000 24,000 13,000 2,300 Pepper - 2,953 1,200 3,300 800 Ashes barrels 4,469 440 2,585 20 Hides number 105,400 26,000 120,800 46,700 Indigo cases 750 470 1,493 1,215 serons 60 100 66 116 Dyewoods kilogs. 2,840,000 2,725,000 12,294,000 4,210,000 Sup.) [The principal imports from Amsterdam, as also from Rotterdam, into the United States, are gin, madder, linseed oil, nutmegs, Rhenish and Moselle wines, and sailcloth or duck. This last article has a decided superiority to the corresponding article of any other country. We may make the same remark concerning the bolting cloths which are manufactured in Holland. Our millers give them a preference to all others. The herrings of the Dutch fisheries have long been accounted superior to those caught elsewhere. They are of small size, but very fat and the Dutch surpase all other nations in the art of curing them. They are well known to epicures, but are, nevertheless, imported into the United States only in small quantities. The cheese of Holland is another article in much repute yet, like the herring of that country, it is imported by us only to a very limited extent. It may be here added that, while we export a certain amount of coffee to Holland, we also import thence a quantity of old Java, commonly called government coffee." The wealthier portion of the inhabitants of our large cities are its principal consumers. Our exports to Holland, which very much exceed in value our imports from that country, are, in the order nearly of their relative importance, tobacco, cotton, whale and other fish oils, rice, brown sugar, teas, coffee, pot and pearlash, raw hides, &c.-Am. Ed.] ANCHOR (Fr. Ancre; Lat. Anchora; Gr. Aznuga), a well-known maritime instru- ment used in the mooring or fastening of ships. It consists of a shank having two hooked arms at one end, and at the other end a bar, or stock, at right angles to the arms, with a ring to which the cable is fastened. The arms, shank, and ring should be made of the very best and toughest iron the stock is for the most part of oak, but it is frequently also, especially in the smaller anchors, made of iron. On being let go, or cast into the water, the anchor sinks rapidly to the bottom, and is thrown by the stock into such a position that the fluke, or point of one of the arms, is sure to strike the ground perpendicularly, and being kept in that direction, unless the bottom be particularly hard or rocky, sinks into it, and cannot be dislodged, where the ground is not soft or oozy, without a violent effort. When the anchor is dislodged, it is said, by the sailors, to come home. Seeing that the safety and preservation of ships and crews are very frequently dependent on their anchors and cables, it is needless to say that it is of the utmost importance that these should be of the most approved quality and construction. Every ship has, or ought to have, three principal anchors; viz. 1st, the sheet anchor, the largest of all, and only let down in cases of danger, or when the vessel is riding in a gale of wind ; 2d, the best bower anchor; and 3d, the small bower anchor. There are, besides, Digitized by Google ANCHORAGE, ANCHOVY. 45 smaller anchors for mooring in rivers, ports, &c. The largest class of men-of-war have six or seven anchors. The weight of an anchor is determined principally by the tonnage it being usual to allow, for every 20 tons of a ship's burthen, 1 cwt. for the weight of her best bower anchor so that this anchor in a ship of 400 tons should weigh about 20 cwt., or a ton. Tb cast, or let FO, the anchor, is to let the anchor fall from the ship's bows into the water, so that It may take hold of the ground. To drag the anchor, is to make it come home; that is, to dislodge it from its bed, and to drag it over or through the ground. This may be occasioned by the anchor being too light, by the violent strain- ing of the cable in n storm or a current, by the too great hardness or softness of the ground, &c. To weigh the anchor, is to dislodge it from its hold, and heave it up by means of the capstan, &c. Law as to Anchors left, parted from, &c.-By the 1 & 2 Geo. 4. c. 75., pilots and other persons taking possession of anchors, cables, and other ship materials, parted with, cut from, or left by any vessel, whether in distress or otherwise, shall give notice of the same to a deputy vice-admiral, or his agent, within forty-eight hours, on pain of being considered as receivers of stolen goods; and if any person shall knowingly and wilfully purchase any such anchor, 3c. that shall have been so obtained, with- out its being 80 reported, he shall be held to be a receiver of stolen goods, and suffer the like punish- ment as for a misdemeanour at common law, or be liable to be transported for seven years, at the discretion of the court. Any master of a ship or vessel outward-bound finding or taking on board any anchor, &c. shall make a true entry of the circumstance in the log-book of such ship or vessel, reporting the same by the first possible opportunity to the Trinity House, and on his return shall deli- ver the article to the deputy vice-admiral, or his agent, nearest to the port where he shall arrive, under a penalty of not more than 100/. nor less than 301., on conviction before a magistrate on the oath of one witness; one half to go to the informer, the other half to the Merchant Seaman's Society, established by 20 Geo. 3. c. 38.: he shall also forfeit double the value of the article to the owner. And every pilot, hoveller, boatman, &c. who shall convey any anchor, &c. to any foreign harbour, port, creek, or bay, and sell and dispose of the same, shall be guilty of felony, and be transported for any term not exceeding seven years.-(See SALVAGE.) Invention of the Anchor.-This instrument, admirable alike for its simplicity and effect, is of very considerable antiquity. It was not, however, known in the earliest ages. The President de Goguet has shown that it was not used by the Greeks till after the Trojan war and that they were then accustomed to moor their ships by means of large stones cast into the sea, a practice which still subsists in some rude nations.-( Origin of Laws, vol. ii. p. 330. Eng. trans.) Pliny ascribes the invention of the anchor to the Tyrrhenians-(Hist. Nat. lib. vii. cap. 56.) At first it had only one arm, the other being added at a subsequent period; some authors say, by Anacharsis the Scythian-(Origin of Laws, vol. i. p. 293.) Since this remote epoch, the form and construction of the instrument seem to have under- gone very little change. ANCHORAGE, OR ANCHORING GROUND. Good anchoring ground should nei- ther be too hard nor too soft; for, in the first case the anchor is apt not to take a sufficient hold, and in the other to drag. The best bottom is a stiff clay, and next to it a firm sand. In a rocky bottom the flukes of the anchor are sometimes torn away, and hempen cables are liable to chafe and be cut through. It is also essential to a good anchorage that the water be neither too deep nor too shallow. When too deep, the pull of the cable, being nearly per- pendicular, is apt to jerk the anchor out of the ground; and when too shallow, the ship is exposed to the danger, when riding in a storm, of striking the bottom. Where a ship is in water that is land-locked, and out of the tide, the nature of the ground is of comparatively little importance. The anchorage of ships, especially ships of war, being a subject of great importance to the naval and commercial interests of the kingdom, several statutes have been enacted with respect to it. The first which it is necessary to notice here is 19 Geo. 2. c. 22. It prohibits masters of ships from casting out ballast, or rubbish of any kind, into any harbour or channel, except on the land where the tide never comes, on pain of forfeiting not more than 51. nor less than 50s. on conviction before a justice on view, or on the oath of one witness, or of being committed to prison for two months; which penalty is increased to 101., over and above the expense of removing the same, by 54 Geo. 3. c. 159. In pursuance of the same object, 54 Geo. 3. C. 159. enables the Lords of the Admiralty to establish regulations for the preservation of the king's moorage or anchorage, as well as for those of merchant ships, in all the ports, harbours, channels, &c. &c. of the United Kingdom, as far as the tide flows, where or near to which his Majesty has, or may hereafter have, any docks, dock-yards, arsenals. wharfs or moorings. It probibits all descriptions of private ships from being moored, or anchored, or placed in any of his Majesty's moorings, &c. without special licence obtained from the Admiralty, or other persons appointed to grant such licenses, on pain of forfeiting not exceeding 10Γ., one molety to his Majesty, the other to the informer, on conviction before any justice of the peace or commissioner of the Navy. It further prohibits the breaming of private vessels in such places, otherwise than appointed by the said authority of the Admiralty and the receiving or having gunpowder, beyond a certain limited quantity, under a penalty of 51. for every five pounds' weight of such powder beyond the quantity allowed. It prohibits, likewise, all such private vessels, in any such places, having any guns on board shotted or loaded with ball, as well as firing and discharging any such before sun-rising and after sun-setting, under a penalty of 51. for every gun so shotted, and 101. for every gun so fired. It further gives to every officer of vessels of war, to harbour-masters, and others in their aid, a right of search in all private vessels so moored in such places, and inflicts a penalty of 10l. on resistance. ANCHORAGE also means a duty laid on ships for the use of the port or harbour. ANCHOVY (Fr. Anchois; It. Acciughe; Lat. Encrasicolus), a small fish (Clupea enerasicolus Lin.), common in the Mediterranean, resembling the sprat. Those brought from Gorgona in the Tuscan Sea are esteemed the best. They should be chosen small, fresh pickled, white outside and red within. Their backs should be round. The sardine, a Digitized by Google 46 ANGELICA-ANTWERP. fish which is flatter and larger than the anchovy, is frequently substituted for it. About 120,000 lbs. are annually entered for home consumption. ANGELICA, a large umbelliferous plant with hollow jointed stalks, of which there are several varieties. It grows wild, and is cultivated in moist places near London, and in most European countries from Lapland to Spain. Its roots are thick, fleshy, and resinous have a fragrant agreeable smell, and a bitterish pungent taste, mixed with a pleasant sweetness glowing on the lips and palate for a long time after they have been chewed. To preserve them, they must be thoroughly dried, and kept in a well-aired place. The other parts of the plant have the same taste and flavour as the roots, but in an inferior degree. The leaves and seeds do not retain their virtue when kept. The London confectioners make a sweet- meat of the tender stems. The faculty used to direct that none but the roots of Spanish angelica should be kept by the druggists, In Norway the roots are sometimes used as bread, and in Iceland the stalks are eaten with butter. Here the plant is used only in confec- tionary and the materia medica.-(Lewis's Mat. Med. ; Rees's Cyclopædia, &c.) The duty of 4s. per cwt. on Angelica produced, in 1832, 2751. 2s. 10d., showing that 1,375 cwt. had been entered for home consumption. ANISE, OR ANISUM (Fr. Anis; It. Anice; Lat. Anisum), a small seed of an oblong shape. It is cultivated in Germany, but the best comes from Spain. It is also a product of China, whence it is exported. It should be chosen fresh, large, plump, newly dried, of a good smell, and a sweetish aromatic taste. ANKER, a liquid measure at Amsterdam. It contains about 10} gallons English wine measure. ANNOTTO, OR ARNOTTO (Fr. Rocou ; Ger. Orlean; It. Orianu), a species of red dye formed of the pulp enveloping the seeds of the Bixa orellana, a plant common in South America, and the East and West Indies; but dye is made, at least to any extent, only in the first. It is prepared by macerating the pods in boiling water, extracting the seeds, and leav- ing the pulp to subside; the fluid being subsequently drawn off, the residuum, with which oil is sometimes mixed up, is placed in shallow vessels and gradually dried in the shade. It is of two sorts, viz. flag or cake, and roll annotto. The first, which is by far the most im- portant article in a commercial point of view, is furnished almost wholly by Cayenne, and comes to us principally by way of the United States. It is imported in square cakes, weigh- ing 2 or 3 lbs. each, wrapped in banana leaves. When well made, it ought to be of a bright yellow colour, soft to the touch, and of a good consistence. It imparts a deep but not durable orange colour to silk and cotton, and is used for that purpose by the dyers. Roll annotto is principally brought from Brazil. The rolls are small, not exceeding 2 or 3 OZ. in weight; it is hard, dry, and compact, brownish on the outside, and of a beautiful red colour within. The latter is the best of all ingredients for the colouring of cheese and butter; and is now exclusively used for that purpose in all the British and in some of the continental dairies. In Gloucestershire it is the practice to allow an ounce of annotto to a cwt. of cheese in Cheshire, 8 dwts. are reckoned sufficient for a cheese of 60 lbs. When genuine, it neither affects the taste nor the smell of cheese or butter. The Spanish Americans mix annotto with their chocolate, to which it gives a beautiful tint-(Gray's Supplement to the Pharmaco- poeias; Loudon's Encyc. of Agriculture, and private information.) At an average of the three years ending with 1831, the annotto entered for home consumption amounted to 128,528 lbs. a year. Previously to 1832, the duty on flag annotto was 18s. 8d. a cwt., and on other sorts 51. 12s. ; but the duty is now reduced to Is. a cwt. on the former, and to 4s. on the lat- ter. This judicious and liberal reduction will, we have no doubt, be followed, by a considerable in- crease of consumption. The price of flag annotto varies in the market from 6d. to 1s. per lb., and of roll from 1s. to 1s. 6d. ANNUITIES. See INTEREST AND ANNUITIES. ANTIMONY (Ger. and Du. Spiesglas; Fr. Antimoine; It. Antimonio; Rus. Anti- monia, Lat. Antimonium), a metal which, when pure, is of a greyish white colour, and has a good deal of brilliancy, showing a radiated fracture when broken it is converted by exposure to heat and air into a white oxide, which sublimes in vapours. It is found in Saxony and the Hartz, also in Cornwall, Spain, France, Mexico, Siberia, the Eastern Islands, and Martaban in Pegu. We are at present wholly supplied with this metal from Singapore, which receives it from Borneo it is imported in the shape of ore, and commonly as ballast. It is about as hard as gold; its specific gravity is about 6.7; it is easily reduced to a very fine powder; its tenacity is such that a rod of Tnth of an inch diameter is capable of sup- porting 10 lbs. weight. Antimony is used in medicine, and in the composition of metal types for printing. The ores of antimony are soft, and vary in colour from light lead to dark lead grey their specific gravity varies from 4.4 to 68; they possess a metallic lustre, are brittle, and occur in the crystallised massive forms.-(Thomson's Chemistry, and private information.) ANTWERP, the principal sea-port of Belgium, long. 4° 22' E., lat. 51° 14' N. A large, well built, and strongly fortified city, situated on the Scheldt. It has about 65,000 inhabi- tants. Previously to its capture by the Spaniards, under Farness, in 1585, Antwerp was one Digitized by Google ANTWERP. 47 of the greatest commercial cities of Europe; but it suffered much by that event. In 1648, at the treaty of Westphalia, it was stipulated by Spain and Holland, that the navigation of the Scheldt should be shut up; a stipulation which was observed till the occupation of Belgium by the French, when it was abolished. In 1803, the improvement of the harbour was begun, and extensive new docks and warehouses have since been constructed. Ships of the largest burden come up to the town, and goods destined for the interior are forwarded with the greatest facility by means of canals. Almost all the foreign trade of Belgium is at present centred in Antwerp, which has again become a place of great commercial importance. By a decree issued in 1814, all goods are allowed to be warehoused in Antwerp en entrepôt, and may be exported on paying a charge of 1 per cent. ad valorem. The exports chiefly consist of corn, seeds, linen, lace, carpets, flax, tallow, hops, &c. The imports principally consist of cotton, wine, hardware, sugar, tobacco, coffee, and all sorts of colonial produce. Money.-Accounts are now commonly kept in florins of 1816, worth 1s. 81d. sterling. The florin is divided into 20 sous, and the sou into 5 cents. Formerly accounts were kept in the pound Flemish = 21 rix dollars = 6 florins = 20 schillings= 120 stivers = 240 groats = 1,920 pennings.-(See TABLE OF COINS.) The par of exchange between Antwerp and London is 11 florins 58 cents per pound sterling. Weights and Measures.-By a law of 1816, the French system of weights and measures was adopted in the Netherlands on the 1st of January, 1820; but the old denominations are retained. The pond is the unit of weight, and answers to the French kilogramme.-(See AMSTERDAM.) Of the old weights, which are still occasionally referred to, the quintal of 100lbs. is equal to 103} lbs. avoirdupois, 100 lbs. avoirdupois being consequently equal to 96.8 lbs. of Antwerp. A schippound is equal to 3 quintals, or 300 lbs. a stone is equal to 8 lbs. Of the old measures, a viertel of corn =4 macken; 371 viertels = last and 40 viertels = 101 Impe- rial quarters very nearly. The aam of wine contains 50 stoopen, or 36 English wine gallons. Of the weights and measures now current, 50% lbs. = 112 lbs. English; 100 lbs. = 100 kilogrammes of France, or 2121 Antwerp old weight. One barrel 261 gallons English= 100 litres French. Custom-house Regulations.-Captains of ships arriving at Antwerp, or any of the Belgian ports, must make, within 24 hours, a declaration in writing, of the goods of which their cargo consists specifying the marks and numbers of the bales, parcels, &c.; their value, according to the current price at the time when the declaration is made; the name of the ship or vessel, as well as that of the captain, and of the country to which she belongs, &c. Shipping.-The ships entering the port of Antwerp, during the five years ending with 1828, have been as follows Years. Ships. Years. Ships. 1824 681 1827 822 1825 800 1828 - 955 1826 928 Of the 800 ships entering Antwerp in 1825, 114 were from Liverpool, 119 from London, 44 from Hull, 48 from Havre, 41 from Bordeaux, 24 from Petersburgh, 24 from New York, 25 from Cuba, 26 from Rio Janeiro, 11 from Batavia, &c.-(Bulletin des Sciences Geographiques, for January, 1829, and February 1826.) The commerce of Antwerp suffered much, in 1831 and 1832, from the hostilities between the Bel- gians and Dutch. In 1831, there were only 388 arrivals of foreign ships. Comparative statement of the Imports of the undermentioned Goods, at Antwerp, since 1827, and of the Stocks at the Close of each year. Imports. Stocks, 31st December. Articles. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. Ashes, U.S. barrels 7,158 9,647 11,642 6,951 7,452 8,506 600 800 2,950 214 650 1,800 - Russia casks 4,420 1,501 3,987 1,639 728 3,558 1,000 200 1,200 250 550 750 Coffee tons 23,100 22,900 23,050 21,110 10,300 14,700 8,250 8,650 8,430 4,000 2,700 1,900 Cotton bales 23,108 18,324 33,985 21,845 13,720 28,687 4,420 5,563 6,155 4,700 1,050 900 Hides, S. No. 211,349 148,584 462,577 340,507 228,896 362,878 4,000 1,350 43,600 22,500 38,500 92,000 Indigo chests 1,367 2,103 1,846 1,063 433 649 287 606 717 286 175 210 - serons 599 380 725 206 120 252 247 268 360 101 55 65 Pimento bags 1,819 1,870 1,340 2,220 576 562 500 500 200 100 200 200 Pepper, small do. 22,149 6,340 11,522 12,999 6,406 4,960 12,500 6,000 8,400 3,000 4,000 1,000 Race tierces 14,505 13,961 18,712 23,221 6,029 14,458 2,300 1,200 5,000 4,500 700 300 - bags 16,897 38,889 98,827 41,530 16,483 10,153 9,400 30,000 13,500 2,500 3,500 1,600 Sugar tons 18,000 17,800 24,730 10,511 9,800 12,200 3,370 2,600 8,050 1,250 1,400 1,450 Tex packages 1,564 91 186 1,253 814 3,778 2,255 1,878 1,335 391 155 1,600 Tobacco hhds. 1,101 2,328 1,552 2,253 8,361 12,825 375 717 225 40 1,119 3,200 Logwood tons 706 2,260 855 952 1,250 1,200 700 900 350 130 500 380 Fustie do. 573 822 1,639 2,033 255 315 220, 300 490 570 340 25 In the Imports of 1831 and 1832, are included those received through Ostend which were destined for this port. The stocks of these goods now at Ostend, or on their way thence, are also included. The following goods were imported at Antwerp in 1832 from all places Coffee. Sugar. Hides. Cotton Places. Casks. Barrels. Bags. Casks. C. Braz. Bx.Hav. Can. Barrels' Baga. Ox & Cow. Bales. Great Britain 211 15 101,285 623 992 8,103 2,451 443 16,316 66,164 12,789 S. America and W. Indian 8 71,424 1,375 495 30,088 147 314 208,756 1,623 United States 90 162 60,102 841 1,732 908 13,602 66,079 13,754 Continent of Europe 11,680 291 960 1,078 20,962 581 East Indies 19,200 Jenuy and Guarancy 86 7,616 Totals 301 179 246,769 2,839 1,490 40,299 2,451 1,058 31,850 368,878 28,687 Digitized by Google 48 APPLES, APPRENTICE. Pepper. Pimento Ashes. Rice. Indigo. Tobac. Tea. Dyewoods. Places. Baga. Bags. U. Stat. Russia. Tierces. Bags. Chests. Serms. Hbds. Pack. C.Tons. F. Tons. Great Britain 960 218 779 1,592 1,936 9,958 596 71 1,103 8. America and W.Indies 150 United States 6,000 850 7,792 10,731 45 61 173 10,839 1,456 Continent of Europe 25 2,046 1,791 21 S 883 2,289 1,200 315 East Indies 41 Jersey and Guerneey Totals 6,960 562 8,596 3,568 14,458 10,153 649 252 12,825 3,738 1,200 315 Conditions under which Goods are sold-On goods generally 2 per cent. is allowed for payment in 20 days, and If per cent. on credit of 6 weeks or 2 months. On cottons, at 20 days' credit, 3 per cent. are allowed, and If per cent. on a credit of 2 or 3 months. On ashes, hides, and sugar, 3 per cent. for 20 days, and It per cent. for 3 months' credit. Tares.-West India, Brazil, and Java coffee, in single bags, 2 per cent., and Havannah in joncs, t 1b. per bag extra. Bourbon, in whole bags, 41 lbs., and in t do. 21 lbs. Pimento, pepper, and ginger in bags, 2 per cent. ; on these articles, as also coffee, in casks and barrels, real tare. Cassia lignea, and cinnamon in bales, 10 per cent.; and in chests, 6 to 61 lbs. per chest. Ashes, 12 per cent. Quer- citron bark, 10 per cent. Cotton in bales, 4 per cent., exclusive of ropes; and in serons, 6 lbs. per seron. Horse bair, real tare. Indigo, in chests or barrels, real tare ; and in serons, of to 7 lbs. per seron. Rice, in casks, 12 per cent.; and in bags, 2 per cent. Muscovado sugars, in casks and barrels, and Havennah clayed, in boxes, 14 per cent.; Brazil, in chests, 16 per cent.; Java in canisters and baskets, 9 per cent.; Siam and Manilla, in bags, 3 per cent.; Bengal, in triple bags, 5lbs. each: Bour- bon, in mats, 6 per cent. Bohea tea, exclusive of wrappers, 46 lbs. per chest, 24 lbs. per t ditto, and 13 lbs. per 1 ditto, 14} lbs. per t ditto; fine black and green tea, 12 to 13 lbs. per t chest, 9 lbs. per 1-6th ditto, 7 lbs. per t ditto, 5 lbs per 1-12th ditto, 3 lbs. per 1-16th ditto, and 2 per cent. in boxes. Tobacco, real tare: no draft or other deduction allowed.-(From the Circular of Jollie, Clibborn, and Co.) [Our imports from Belgium, although they have been steadily on the increase, are not of much moment. Their annual value, taking the average of five years, amounts to no more than about 330,000 dollars; which is only a fourth part of the value of the exports from the United States to that country. Few of the products of Belgium can compete in our markets with the similar products of England, France, or Germany. The principal article imported by us from Antwerp is firearms, and these chiefly, if not exclusively, fowling pieces and pistols, manufactured at Liege. Zinc, for roofing, is another article which may deserve to be mentioned. Although dearer than that imported from Ham- burg, and which is brought to that place from Silesia, it is preferred to the latter, on account of its superior pliability. To these articles may be added linseed oil, window glass, and cloths and kersimeres, the finest descriptions of which are manufactured at Vervins. Brussels and Mechlin laces come to us also from Antwerp, but only to an inconsiderable amount. We export to Belgium cotton, pot and pearl ash, coffee, tobacco, whale and other fish oil, raw hides, &c.-Am. Ed.] APPLES, the fruit of the Pyrus Malus, or apple tree. It is very extensively cultivated in most temperate climates. An immense variety and quantity of excellent apples are raised in England, partly for the table, and partly for manufacturing into cider. Those employed for the latter purpose are comparatively harsh and austere. The principal cider counties are Hereford, Monmouth, Gloucester, Worcester, Somerset, and Devon. Mr. Marshall calculates the produce of the first four at 30,000 hhds. a year, of which Worcester is supposed to sup- ply 10,000. Half a hogshead of cider may be expected, in ordinarily favourable seasons, from each tree in an orchard in full bearing. The number of trees on an acre varies from 10 to 40, so that the quantity of cider must vary in the same proportion, that is, from 5 to 20 hhds. The produce is, however, very fluctuating and a good crop seldom occurs above once in three years.-(Loudon's Encyc. of Agriculture, &c.) Besides the immense consumption of native apples, we import, for the table, considerable supplies of French and American apples, especially the former; the entries of foreign apples for home con- sumption having amounted, at an average of the three years ending with 1831, to 36,012 bushels a year. Were it not for the oppressive duty of 4s. a bushel, there can be little doubt that the imports would be decidedly larger. The apples produced in the vicinity of New York are universally admitted to be the finest of any; but unless selected and packed with care, they are very apt to spoil before reaching England. The exports of apples from the United States during the year ended the 30th of September, 1832, amounted to 6,928 barrels, valued at 15,314 dollars. or these, 1,370 barrels were shipped for England.- (Papers published by the Board of Trade, p. 106.; Papers laid before Congress, 15th of February, 1833.) (Duty on apples reduced from 4a. to 2s. a bushel.-(4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 89. s 15.)-Sup.) [The apples in most esteem are the various sorts of pippins; and the best of these are pro- duced in New York and New Jersey. From an average of four years, ending in 1837, the annual export of apples from the United States may be stated to amount to 19,462 barrels, valued at 35,866 dollars. Of this quantity, 8,237 barrels were shipped for England 6,782 wore sent to British North American Colonies; and 4,280 to the island of Cuba-Am. Ed.] APPRENTICE, a young person of either sex, bound by indenture to serve some parti- cular individual or company of individuals, for a specified time, in order to be instructed in some art, science, or trade. According to the common law of England, every one has a right to employ himself at Digitized by Google aqua FORTIS-ARANGOES. 49 pleasure in every lawful trade. But this sound principle was almost entirely subverted by a statute passed in the fifth year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, commonly called the Statute of Apprenticeship. It enacted that no person should, for the future, exercise any trade, craft, or mystery, at that time exercised in England and Wales, unless he had previously served to it an apprenticeship of seven years at least; so that what had before been a bye-law of a few corporations, became the general and statute law of the kingdom. Luckily, how- ever, the courts of law were always singularly disinclined to give effect to the provisions of this statute; and the rules which they established for its interpretation served materially to mi- tigate its injurious operation. But though its impolicy had been long apparent, it was con- tinued till 1814, when it was repealed by the 54 Geo. 3. c. 96. This act did not interfere with any of the existing rights, privileges, or bye-laws of the different corporations; but wher- ever these do not interpose, the formation of apprenticeships, and their duration, is left to be adjusted by the parties themselves. The regulations with respect to the taking of apprentices on board ships, the only part of this subject that properly comes within the scope of this work, are embodied in the 4 Geo. 4. c. 25. They are as follows:- From the 1st of January, 1824, every master of a merchant ship exceeding the burden of 80 tons shall have on board his ship, at the time of such ship clearing out from any port of the United King- dom, one apprentice or apprentices, in the following proportion to the number of tons of her admea- surement, according to the certificate of registry ; viz: For every vessel exceeding 80 tons, and under 200 tons, 1 apprentice at least, 200 400 - 2 400 500 3 500 700 4 700 and upwards - - 5 who shall, at the period of being indentured, respectively be under the age of 17 years provided that every apprentice so to be employed on board any vessel, as above described, shall be duly indented for at least four years; and the indentures of every such apprentice shall be enrolled with the collector and comptroller at the Custom-house of the port whence such vessel shall first clear out after the execution of such indentures.-> 2. Every apprentice so enrolled is hereby exempted from serving in his Majesty's navy until he shall have attained the age of years; provided he is regularly serving his time either with his first mas- ter or ship-owner, or some other master or ship-owner to whom his indentures shall have been regu- Barly transferred; and every owner or master neglecting to enrol such indentures, or who shall suffer any such apprentice to leave his service, except in case of death or desertion, sickness, or other una- voidable cause, to be certified in the log book, after the vessel shall have cleared outwards on the voyage upon which such vessel may be bound, shall for every such offence forfeit 10l., to be paid in manner following; that is to say, one moiety by the owners of such versel, and the other molety by the master thereof, to be levied, recovered, and applied, in manner hereinafter mentioned.- Every person to whom such apprentice shall have been bound may employ him, at any time, in any vessel of which such person may be the master or owner and may also, with the consent of such appprentice, if above 17, and if under that age, with the consent of his parents or guardians, transfer the indentures of such apprentice, by endorsement thereon, to any other person who may be the mas- ter or owner of any registered vessel.- 5. No stamp duty shall be charged on any such transfer by endorsement.- 6. And by 6 Geo. 4. c. 107. . 138. it is enacted, that no person shall be deemed to be an apprentice for the purposes of the preceding act (4 Geo. 4. c. 25.), unless the indenture of such apprentice shall have been enrolled with the collector and comptroller of the port from which any such apprentice shall first go to sea after the date of such indenture or in default of such enrolment, until the same shall have been enrolled at some port from which the ship in which such apprentice shall afterwards go to sea shall be cleared. By stat. 7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 56. 1 7. it is enacted that no higher duty than 2s. shall be charged upon the indenture of any apprentice bound to serve at sea in the merchant service. [It may be stated, as a general rule, that apprentices in the United States may be bound to serve some master or mistress, if a male, till the age of twenty-one years, and if a female, till the age of eighteen. Every person, however, has the right, in accerdance with the principles of natural equity, as well as of the common law of England, to employ himself at pleasure in every lawful occupation, even though he should not have served an apprenticeship to it. This is, at least, the case in all but a very few occupations, such as that of an auctioneer, and the professions of law and medicine, the door of the admission into which is guarded, either by requiring a previous apprenticeship, or by restrictions and regulations of a different descrip- tion, and is thus guarded on the ground of securing to the public, in the most effectual man- ner, the due performance of the services to be rendered.-Am. Ed.] AQUA FORTIS. See ACID (Nitric). AQUAMARINE. See BERYL. AQUA VIT E. (Ger. Aquavit; Fr. Eau vie, It. Acqua vite; Sp. Agua de vida; Rus. Wodka; Lat. Aqua vita), a name familiarly applied to all native distilled spirits; equiva- lent to the cau de vie, or brandy, of the French, the whiskey of the Scotch and Irish, the geneva of the Dutch, &c. In this way it is used in the excise law relating to the distilleries. ARANGOES, a species of beads made of rough cornelian. They are of various forms, as barrel, bell, round, &c., and all drilled. The barrel-shaped kind, cut from the best stones, are from two to three inches long, and should be chosen as clear as possible, whether red or white, having a good polish, and free from flaws. The bell-shaped are from one to two inches long, being in all respects inferior. Considerable quantities were formerly imported from E 7 Digitized by Google 50 ARCHANGEL, ARGOL. Bombay, for re-exportation to Africa; but since the abolition of the slave trade, the imports and exports of arangoes have been comparatively trifing.-(Milburn's Orient. Com.) ARCHANGEL, the principal commercial city of the north of Russia, in lat. 64° 34' N., long. 38° 59' E. It is situated on the right bank of the Dwina, about 30 English miles above where it falls into the White Sea. Population, 7,000 or 8,000. The harbour is at the island of Sollenbole, about a mile from the town. The bar at the mouth of the Dwina has generally 14} feet water so that ships drawing more than this depth must be partially loaded outside the bar from lighters. The Dwina being a navigable river, traversing a great extent of country, renders Archangel a considerable entrepôt. It was discovered in 1554, by the famous Richard Chancellor, the companion of Sir Hugh Willoughby in his voyage of discovery and from that period, down to the foundation of Petersburgh, was the only port in the Russian empire accessible to foreigners. Though it has lost its ancient importance, it still enjoys a pretty extensive commerce. The principal articles of export are grain, tallow, flax, hemp, timber, linseed, iron, potash, mats, tar, &c. Deals from Archangel, and Onega in the vicinity of Archangel, are considered superior to those from the Baltic. Hemp not so good as at Riga, but proportionally cheaper. Tallow is also inferior. Iron same as at Petersburgh, sometimes cheaper and sometimes dearer. The quality of the wheat exported from Archangel is about equal to that from Petersburgh. The imports are not very exten- sive. They consist principally of sugar, coffee, spices, salt, woollens, hardware, &c. The merchants of Archangel are said by Mr. Coxe to be distinguished for honesty and intelligence. (Travels in the North of Europe, vol. iii. p. 150.) Account of the Quantities of the principal Articles exported from Archangel during each of the six Years ending with 1832. Articles. 1827. 1828. 1629. 1830. 1831. 1832. Flax - - poods 49,855 54,877 131,160 162,383 266,485 120,719 Grain, Barley chets. 3,670 550 11,765 1,897 8,657 323 Oats - do. 308,810 47,137 352,792 84,639 226,109 27,779 Rye do. 44,108 39,106 96,460 157,645 174,102 189,486 Wheat do. 2,017 11,777 113,738 83,400 104,037 37,728 Hemp - - poods 46,979 45,693 57,317 63,057 53,855 51,142 Iron - - - do. 64,319 65,013 117,261 116,372 89,675 47,369 Linseed- - chets. 78,612 131,804 136,968 149,158 95,039 103,494 Mats - - pieces 1,363,334 530,353 651,438 674,481 424,119 841,450 Pitch - barrels 13,460 9,973 8,407 17,917 8,237 13,434 Potashes - poods 10,166 3,967 3,209 10,065 12,823 9,205 Tallow - - do. 100,634 186,126 156,778 135,157 119,264 100,263 Tallow candles 2,815 3,422 3,773 4,756 3,491 2,937 Tar - barrels 91,226 70,985 37,764 92,548 52,467 58,014 Train oil - poods 21,217 17,004 16,534 19,169 4,129 8,989 Wood, Deals pieces $92,245 246,526 260,771 415,989 238,660 234,313 Battens do. 84,745 73,133 75,335 121,426 63,175 43,354 Deal ends do. 74,644 56,620 64,160 101,285 53,363 44,535 The total value of the exports in 1831 was estimated at 14,750,756 rubles, while that of the imports was estimated at only 1,155,872 rubles. During the same year there arrived at Archangel 443 ships ; of which 349 were British, 12 Dutch, 14 Prussian, 12 Mecklenburg, &c. Account of the Number of Ships that sailed from Archangel during each of the Six Years ending with 1832. Years 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. Ships - - 386 290 450 505 445 364 The trade of Archangel is very much influenced by the demand from the more southerly parts of Europe, and especially from England, for corn. When a brisk demand is anticipated, oats are brought in large quantities from the interior, sometimes even from the distance of 1,500 miles, in covered barks capable of holding several hundred quarters. But as there are few extensive mercan- tile establishments here, the supplies are scanty, except when a large demand has been expected for some time previously to the season for bringing them down.-(Oddy's European Commerce, and pri- vate information.) Monies, Weights, and Measures, same as at Petersburg; which see. ARGOL, ARGAL, OR TARTAR, (Ger. Weinstein; Du. Wynsteen; Fr. Tartre ; It. Sp. and Port. Tartaro; Rus. Winnui kamen; Lat. Tartarus), a hard crust formed on the sides of the vessels in which wine has been kept; it is red or white according to the colour of the wine, and is otherwise impure. On being purified, it is termed cream or crystals of tartar. It consists principally of bitartrate of potash. White argol is preferable to red, as containing less drossy or earthy matter. The marks of good argol of either kind are, its being thick, brittle, hard, brilliant, and little earthy. That brought from Bologna is reckoned the best, and fetches the highest price. Argol is of considerable use among dyers, as serving to dispose the stuffs to take their colours the better. Pure argol, or cream of tartar, is ex- tensively used in medicine. It has an acid and rather unpleasant taste. It is very brittle, and easily reduced to powder: specific gravity 195. The duty on argol, which was judiciously reduced in 1832, from 2s. a cwt. to 6d. produced in that year 6784. 3s. 7d. of nett revenue. This, supposing the whole to have been charged with the low duty, Digitized by Google ARISTOLOCHIA-ARSENIC. 51 would show an importation of 27,127 cwt. The price of argol in the London market, in August, 1833, varied, Bologna from 52s. to 58s. per cwt., Leghorn 48a. to 50s. per ditto, Naples 42a. to 48s., Rhenish 48a. to 50e. ARISTOLOCHIA (Fr. Serpentaire; Ger. Schlangenuurzel; It. Serpentaria ; Lat. Aristolochia serpentaria), the dried root of Virginia snake-root, or birthwort; it is small, light, and bushy, consisting of a number of fibres matted together, sprung from one com- mon head, of a brownish colour on the outside, and pale or yellow within. It has an aro- matic smell something like that of valerian, but more agreeable; and a warm, bitterish, pungent taste, very much resembling camphor.—(Ency. Metrop.) ARMS. See FIRE-ARMS. ARQUIFOUX (Ger. Bleyglanz; Fr. Arquifou ; It. Archifoglio; Lat. Galena), a sort of lead ore, very heavy, easily reduced to powder, and hard to melt; when it is broken, it parts into shining scales of a whitish colour. The potters use it to give their works a green varnish; and in England it is commonly called potters' are. Arquifoux is exported from England in large lumps; it should be chosen heavy, the scales bright and resembling tin- glass. ARRACK, OR RACK (Fr. Arac; Ger. Arrack, Rack; Du. Arak, Rak; It. Araco; Sp. Arak; Port. Araca; Rus. Arak), a spirituous liquor manufactured at different places in the East. Arrack is a term applied in most parts of India, and the Indian islands, to designate every sort of spirituous liquor; a circumstance which accounts for the discrepancy in the state- ments as to the materials used in making it, and the mode of its manufacture. The arrack of Goa and Batavia is in high estimation; that of Columbo or Ceylon has been said to be inferior to the former; but this is doubtful. Goa and Columbo arrack is invariably made from the vegetable juice, toddy, which flows by incision from the coco nut tree (Cocos nuci- fera). After the juice is fermented, it is distilled and rectified. It usually yields about an eighth part of pure spirit. Batavia or Java arrack is obtained by distillation from molasses and rice, with only a small admixture of toddy. When well prepared, arrack is clear and transparent; generally, however, it is slightly straw-coloured. Its flavour is peculiar; but it differs considerably, no doubt in consequence of the various articles of which it is prepared, and the unequal care taken in its manufacture. In England, arrack is seldom used except to give flavour to punch formerly the imports were quite inconsiderable; but they have recently increased so as to amount, at an average of the years 1829 and 1830, to above 30,000 gallons a year. In the East its consumption is immense. It is issued to the soldiers in India as part of the established rations; and it is supplied, instead of rum, to the seamen of the royal navy employed in the Indian seas. It is one of the principal products of Ceylon. Its prime cost in that island varies from 8d. to 10d. a gallon; and from 600,000 to 700,000 gallons are annually exported, principally to the presidencies of Bengal, Madras, and Bom- bay. It is sold in Ceylon by the legger of 150, and in Java by the legger of 160 gallons. In 1829, the first quality of Java arrack sold in Batavia at 160 florins the legger, or 1s. 82d. per gallon. The second quality fetched 125 florins. Parish-arrack is a phrase used to designate a spirit distilled in the peninsula of India, which is said to be often rendered unwholesome by an admixture of ganga (Cannabis sativa), and a species of Da- ture, in the view of increasing its intoxicating power. But it is not clear whether the term parish- arrack be meant to imply that it is an inferior spirit, or an adulterated compound. This liquor is sometimes distilled from coco nut toddy, and sometimes from a mixture of jaggery, water, and the barks of various trees.-(Seé Milburn's Orient. Com.; and Mr. Marshall's valuable Essay on the Coco Nut Tree, p. 18.) ARROW-ROOT, the pith or starch of the root Maranta arundinacea. It has received its common name from its being supposed to be an antidote to the poisoned arrows of the Indians. The powder is prepared from roots of a year old. It is reckoned a very wholesome nutritious food; it is often additerated, when in the shops, with the starch or flour of pota- toes. It is a native of South America; but has been long introduced into the West Indies, where it forms a pretty important article of cultivation. An excellent kind of arrow-root, if it may so be called, is now prepared in India from the root of the Curcuma angustifolia. The plant is abundant on the Malabar coast, where the powder is made in such quantities as to be a considerable object of trade. Some of it has been brought to England. The Maranta arundinacea has been carried from the West Indies to Ceylon, where it thrives extremely well, and where arrow-root of the finest quality has been manufactured from it. (Ainslie's Mat. Indica.) At an average of the three years ending with 1831, the arrow-root entered for home consumption amounted to 441,556 lbs. a year. Previously to last year (1832), the duty on arrow-root from a British possession was 9a. 4d. a cwt. ; but as it is now reduced to 1s. a cwt., a considerable increase of con- sumption may be expected. It was quoted in the London market, in August, 1833, at from 9d. to 1s. 10d. per lb. ARSENIC (Ger. Arsenik; Fr. Arsenic; It. and Sp. Arsenico; Rus. Müschjah , Lat. Arsenicum). This metal has a bluish white colour not unlike that of steel, and a good deal of brilliancy. It has no sensible smell while cold, but when heated it emits a strong odour of garlic, which is very characteristic. It is the softest of all the metallic bodies, and so brittle Digitized by Google 52 ASAFETIDA-ASSIGNEE. that it may easily be reduced to a very fine powder by trituration in a mortar. Its specific gravity is 5.76.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) Metallic arsenic is not used in the arts, and is not, therefore, extracted from the ore, except for the purposes of experiment or curiosity. The arsenic of commerce is the white oxide, or arsenious acid, of chemists. It is a white, brittle, compact substance, of a glassy appearance is inodorous has an acrid taste, leaving on the tongue a sweetish impression; and is highly corrosive. In its metallic state, arsenic exerts no action on the animal system; but when oxidised, it is a most virulent poison. The arsenic of the shops is sometimes adulterated with white sand, chalk, or gypsum the fraud may be detected by heating a small portion of the suspected powder ; when the arsenic is dissipated, leav- ing the impurities, if there be any, behind. Though the most violent of all the mineral poisons, the white oxide of arsenic, or the arsenic of the shops, is yet, when judiciously administered, a medicine of great efficacy. It is also used for various purposes in the arts. It is principally imported from Saxony and Bohemia.-(Thomson's Chemistry A. T. Themson's Dispensatory.) ASAFCETIDA (Ger. Teufelsdrech; Du. Duivelsdreck; Fr. Assa-fetida; Sp. Asa- fetida; Lat. Asa-fætida; Per. Ungoozeh), a gum resin, consisting of the inspissated juice of a large umbelliferous plant, the Ferula asafætida. It is produced in the southern pro- vinces of Persia, and in the territory of Sinde, or country lying at the mouth of the Indus. It is exported from the Persian gulf to Bombay and Calcutta, whence it is sent to Europe. It has a nauseous, somewhat bitter, biting taste, and an excessively strong, foetid, alliaceous smell the newer it is, it possesses its smell and other peculiar properties in the greater perfection. It is imported, packed in irregular masses, in mats, casks and cases; the last being, in general, the best. It should be chosen clean, fresh, strong-scented, of a pale reddish colour, variegated with a number of fine, white tears: when broken, it should somewhat resemble marble in appearance; and, after being ex- posed to the air, should turn of a violet red colour. That which is soft, black and foul, should be re- jected. The packages should be carefully examined, and ought to be tight, to prevent the smell from injuring any other article. In 1825, the Imports of asafostida amounted to 106,770 lbs., but they have not been so large since ; and in 1830, only 8,722 lbs. were imported. We have not learned the quan- tity cleared for consumption, but it must be trifling. In this country, it is used only in the materia medica. In France, it is used both in that way, and to some extent, also, as a condiment. It is worth in bond, in the London market, from 21. to 81. per cwt.-(Milburn's Orient. Com.; Parl. Papers; and private information.) ASARUM (Fr. Asaret; Ger. Hazehwurzel; Sp. Asaro de Europa), the root or dried leaves of the asarabacca. The leaves are nearly inodorous; their taste slightly aromatic, bitter, acrid, and nauseous. The powder of the leaves is the basis of most cephalic snuffs. A good deal of their acrimony is lost in keeping they should, consequently, be used in as recent a state as possible, and dried without the application of much heat. Asarabacca grows in several parts of England, particularly Lancashire and Westmoreland. ASH (COMMON), the Fraxinus excelsior of botanists, a forest tree of which there are many varieties. It is abundant in England, and is of the greatest utility. The ash is of very rapid growth; and, unlike most other trees, its value is rather increased than diminished by this circumstance. Like the chesnut, the wood of young trees is most esteemed. It grows on a great variety of soils, but is best where the growth has been most vigorous. It is infe- rior to the oak in stiffness, and is more easily split; but in toughness and elasticity it is far superior to the oak, or to any other species of timber. Hence its universal employment in all those parts of machinery which have to sustain sudden shocks, such as the circumference, teeth, and spokes of wheels, ship-blocks, &c. and in the manufacture of agricultural implements; in the latter, indeed, it is almost exclusively made use of. The want of prolonged durability is its greatest defect; and it is too flexible to be employed in building. The wood of old trees is of a dark brown colour, sometimes beautifully figured the wood of young trees is brownish white, with a shade of green. The texture is alternately compact and porous ; where the growth has been vigorous, the compact part of the several layers bears a greater proportion to the spongy, and the timber is comparatively tough, elas- tic, and durable. It has neither taste nor smell ; and, when young, is difficult to work. The moun- tain ash (Pyrus aucuparia) is quite a different tree from the common ash, and its timber is far less (Tredgold's Principles of Curpentry Timber Trees and Fruits, in Lib. of Entertaining Knowledge, &c.) ASHES (Fr. Vedasse; Ger. Waidasche; Du. Weedas; Da. Veedaske; It. Feccia bru- ciata; Sp. Alumbre de hez; Rus. Weidasch; Lat. Cineres infectorii), the residuum or earthy part, of any substance after it has been burned. In commerce, the term is applied to the ashes of vegetable substances; from which are extracted the alkaline salts called potash pearlash, barilla, kelp, &c.; which see. ASPHALTUM. See BITUMEN. ASS (Fr. Ane; Ger. Esel, It. Asino; Lat. Asinus), the well-known quadruped of that name. ASSETS, in commerce, a term used to designate the stock in trade, and the entire prop- erty of all sorts, belonging to a merchant or to a trading association. It is also applied to goods or property placed, for the discharge of some particular trust or obligation, in the hands of executors, assignees, &c. ASSIENTO, a Spanish word signifying a contract. In commerce, it means the contract or agreement by which the Spanish government ceded first to a company of French, and afterwards (by the treaty of Utrecht) to a company of English merchants, the right to im- port slaves into the Spanish colonies.-(Brougham's Colonial Policy, vol. i. p. 439.) ASSIGNEE, a person appointed by competent authority to do, act, or transact some busi- ness, or exercise some particular privilege or power, for or on account of some specified individual or individuals. Assignees may be created by deed, or by law by deed, where the lessee of a farm assigns the same to another; by law, where the law makes an assignee without any appointment of Digitized by Google ASSIZE-AUCTIONEER. 53 the person entitled, as an executor is assignee in law to the testator, and an administrator to an intestate. The term is most commonly applied to the creditors of a bankrupt appointed to manage for the rest, and who consequently have the bankrupt's estate assigned over to them.-(See BANKRUPT.) ASSIZE. See BREAD. ASSURANCE. See INSURANCE. AUCTION, a public sale of goods to the highest bidder. Auctions are generally notified by advertisement, and are held in some open place. The biddings may be made either by parties present, or by the auctioneer under authority given to him; the sale is usually termi- nated by the fall of a hammer. AUCTIONEER, a person who conducts sales by auction. It is his duty to state the conditions of sale, to declare the respective biddings, and to terminate the sale by knocking down the thing sold to the highest bidder. An auctioneer is held to be lawfully authorised by the purchaser to sign a contract for him, whether it be for lands or goods. And his writing down the name of the highest bidder in his book is sufficient to bind any other per- son for whom the highest bidder purchased, even though such person be present, provided he do not object before entry. Every auctioneer must take out a licence, renewable annually on the 5th of July, for which he is charged 51.; and if he sell goods for the sale of which an excise licence is specially required, he must also take out such licence, unless the goods be the property of a licensed person, and sold for his behalf and on his entered premises, in which case such additional licence is not required.-(6) Geo. 4. c. 81.) Auctioneers within the limits of the chief excise office in London are bound, when they receive their licence, to give security to the excise by bond, themselves in 1,000L. and two sureties in 2001. each, to deliver in within twenty-eight days of any sale a true and particular account of such sale, and to pay the duties on the same. Auctioneers refusing or delaying to pay the duties within the specified time, forfeit their bond and the bonds of their sureties, and double the amount of the duties. -(19 Geo. 3. c. 56.) Auctioneers carrying on their trade without the limits of the head office give bond, themselves in 5001. and two sureties in 501. each, to render an account of the duties accruing on sales, and to pay them within six weeks, under the penalties already mentioned.-(19 Geo. 3. c. 56, and 38 Geo. 3. c. 54.) A licensed auctioneer going from town to town by a public stage coach, and sending goods by a pub- lic conveyance, and selling them on commission by retail or auction, is a trading person within the 50 Geo. 3. e. 41. $ 6., and must take out a hawker's and pedlar's licence. The following duties are payable on goods sold by auction For every 20s. of the purchase money arising or payable by virtue of any sale at auction for the benefit of the growers or first purchasers respectively of any sheep's wool, the growth or produce of any part of the United Kingdom, 2d. For every 20s. of the purchase money arising or payable by virtue of any sale at auction of any in- terest in possession or reversion in any freehold, customary, copyhold, or leasehold lands, tenements, houses, or hereditaments, and any share or shares in the capital or joint stock of any corporation or chartered company, and of any annuities or sums of money charged thereon, and of any ships and vessels, and of any reversionary interest in the public funds, and of any plate or jewels, and 80 in proportion for any greater or less sum, 7d. For every 20s. of the purchase money arising or payable by virtue of any sale at auction of furni- ture, fixtures, pictures, books, horses, and carriages, and all other goods and chattels whatsoever, and SO in proportion for any greater or less sum, 1s. The duties to be paid by the auctioneer, agent, factor, or seller by commission. By stat. 29 Geo. 3. c. 63. 1 1 1, 2., no duty shall be paid for piece goods sold by auction, wove or fa- bricated in this kingdom, which shall be sold entire in the piece or quantity as taken from the loom, and in lots of the price of 201. or upwards, and so as the same be sold in no other than entered places, and openly shown and exposed at such sale. And the auctioneer shall, besides the bond given on receiving his licence, give a further bond in 5,000Z. with two sureties, that he will, within fourteen days after every such sale, deliver an account thereof at the next excise office, and will not sell by auction any goods woven out of this kingdom, or woven in this kingdom, which shall not be sold in the entire piece, without payment of the proper duty. 1 6. By stat. 41 Geo. 3. C. 91. 1 8., all corn and grain of every sort, flour, and meal, and all beef, pork, hams, bacon, cheese, and butter, imported into Great Britain, shall be free of the duty on the first sale thereof by auction on account of the importer, so as the same be entered at some custom- house at the port of importation, and the sale thereof be within twelve months and by a licensed auctioneer. By stat. 30 Geo. 3. c. 26., all goods imported by way of merchandise from Yucatan, and by 32 Geo 3. c. 41., all whale-oil (and by 41 Geo. 3. c. 42., all elephant-oil, produced from sea-cows or sea-ele- phants, and commonly called elephant's oil,") whalebone, ambergris, and head-matter, and all skins of seals and other animals living in the sea, and also elephant's teeth, palm-oil, dyeing-wood, drugs, and other articles for dyers' use, and all mahogany and other manufactured wood for the use of cabinet-makers and other manufacturers, imported in British ships from Africa and (by 42 Geo. 3. c. 93. 1 3.) America, or any British settlement abroad, shall be free of the excise duty on the first sale thereof at auction by or for the account of the original importer to whom the same were consigned, and by whom they were entered at the Custom-house, so as such sale be made within twelve months after such goods are imported, and the same be sold by a licenced auctioneer. By stat. 19 Geo. 3. C. 56. 1 13., no duties shall be laid (1.) on any sale by auction of estates or chat- tels made by order of the Court of Chancery or Exchequer, or courts of great sessions in Wales: (2.) on any sale made by the East India or Hudson's Bay companies (3.) by order of the commissioners of customs or excise: (4.) by order of the Board of ordnance: (5.) by order of the commissioners of the navy or victualling offices (6.) on any such sales made by the sheriff, for the benefit of creditors, in execution of judgment: (7.) on sales of goods distrained for rent: (8.) on sales for non-payment of tithes: (9.) on sales of effects of bankrupts sold by assignees: (10.) on goods imported by way of merchandise from any British colony in America, the same being of the growth, produce, or manu- facture of such colony, on the first sale thereof on account of the original importer to whom they were consigned, and by whom they were entered at the Custom-house, so as such sale be made within twelve months after importation (see 59 Geo. 3. c. 54. e 3.): (11.) on any ships or their cargoes E 2 Digitized by Google AUCTIONEER. 54 condemned as prize, and sold for the benefit of the captor (12.) on any ships or goods wrecked of stranded, sold for the benefit of the insurers or proprietors: (13.) on the sale of any goods damaged by fire, and sold for the benefit of the insurers (14.) on any auction to be held on the account of the lord or lady of the manor for granting any copyhold or customary messuages, lands, or tenements for the term of a life or lives, or any number of years (15.) on any auction to be held for the letting or demising any messuages, lands, or tenements for the term of a life or lives, or any number of years to be created by the person on whose account such auction shall be held (16.) on the sale of any wood, coppice, produce of mines or quarries, or materials for working the same; or on the sale of any cattle, and live or dead stock, or unmanufactured produce of land, so as such sale of woods, coppices, produce of mines or quarries, cattle, corn, stock or produce of land, may be made whilst they continue on the lands producing the same, and by the owner of such lands, or proprietor of or adventurer in such mines or quarries, or by their steward or agent. By stat. 52 Geo. 3. c. 53. 1 1., all coffee imported in any British ship from any British colony in Ame- rica may be sold by auction, free of the auction duty, whilst the same shall remain in warehouses un- der the act 43 Geo. 3. c. 132. or any other act. Certain articles from the United States, as regulated by the act 59 Geo. 3. c. 54. 3., and goods from Portugal imported under stat. 51 Geo. 3. c. 47., may also be sold by auction free of duty, if on account of the original importer, and within twelve months of their importation. By stat. 19 Geo. 3. c. 56. 1 9., the auctioneer, if the sale be within the limits of the chief office of excise in London, shall give two days' notice at the said office, elsewhere three days' notice to the collector or at the next excise office, in writing, signed by him, specifying the particular day when such sale shall begin; and shall at the same time, or within twenty-four hours after, deliver a writ- ten or printed catalogue, attested and signed by such auctioneer or his known clerk, in which cata- logue shall be particularly enumerated every article, lot, parcel, and thing intended to be sold at such auction. And if he shall presume to make such sale without delivering such notice and catalogue, or sell any estate or goods not enumerated therein, he shall forfeit 201. By stat. 32 Geo. 3. c. 11., every auctioneer who shall have delivered such notice or catalogue shall, within 28 days (if within the limits of the chief office of excise, elsewbere within six weeks) after the day specified in such notice for such sale, deliver at such chief office, or to the collector of excise in whose collection such sale has been or was intended to be, a declaration in writing, setting forth whether or not any such sale had been or was opened or begun under such notice, or any article, lot, parcel, or thing contained in such catalogue was bid for or sold at such auction; and such auctioneer, or person acting as his clerk as aforesaid, shall make oath to the truth of such declaration before the said commissioners or collector, on pain of forfeiting 50% for every neglect or refusal of delivering such declaration, verified as aforesaid. The real owner of any estate, goods, or effects put up to sale by way of auction, and bought in either by himself or by his steward or known agent employed in the management of the sale, or by any other person appointed in writing by the owner to bid for him, shall be allowed the duties, pro- vided notice in writing be given to the auctioneer before such bidding, both by the owner and person Intended to be the bidder, of such person being appointed by the owner; and provided such notice be verified by the oath of the auctioneer, as also the fairness of the transaction to the best of his know- ledge and belief.- Geo. 3. c. 56.; 28 Gee. 3. c. 37.) An auctioneer employed in a case of this sort, and neglecting to take the proper steps to prevent the duties from attaching, may be obliged to pay them himself. (19 Geo. 3. c. 56.) If the sale of an estate be void through defect of title, the commissioners of excise, or jus- tices of the peace in the county, may, on oath being made, grant relief for the duties paid. Claim must be made within twelve months after the sale, if rendered void within that time or if not rendered void within that time, within three months after the discovery. The auctioneer is by law liable to pay the auction duties, but he may recover the same from the vendor. The conditions of sale usually oblige the buyer to pay the whole, or a part of the duties; and upon his refusing or neglecting to pay them, the bidding is void. An auctioneer who declines to disclose the name of his principal at the time of sale, makes himeelf responsible. But if he disclose the name of his principal, he ceases to be responsible, either for the soundness of or title to the thing sold, unless he have expressly warranted it on his own responsibility. If an auctioneer pay over the produce of a sale to his employer, after receiving notice that the goods were not the property of such employer, the real owner of the goods may recover the amount from the auctioneer. It has long been a common practice at certain auctions (called for that reason mock auc- tions) to employ puffers, or mock bidders, to raise the value of the articles sold by their apparent competition, and many questions have grown out of it. It was long ago decided, that if the owner of an estate put up to sale by auction employ puffers to bid for him, it is a fraud on the real bidder, and the highest bidder cannot be compelled to complete his contract. -(6. T. Rep. p. 642.) But it would seem as if the mere employment of puffers under any circumstances were now held to be illegal. The inclination of the courts at the present time is, that a sale by auction should be conducted in the most open and public manner possible; that there should be no reserve on the part of the seller, and no collusion on the part of the buyers. Puffing is illegal, according to a late case, even though there be only one puffer; and it was then decided that the recognised practice at auctions of employing such persons to bid upon the sale of horses could not be on Com- mercial Law, p. 26%.) A party bidding at an auction may retract his offer at any time before the hammer is down. Another clearly established principle is, that verbal declarations by an auctioneer are not to be suffered to control the printed conditions of sale; and these, when pasted up under the box of the auctioneer, are held to be sufficiently notified to purchasers. Auctioneers, like all other agents, should carefully observe their instructions. Should those who employ them sustain any damage through their carelessness or inattention, they will be responsible. They must also answer for the consequences, if they sell the property Digitized by Google AVERAGE. 55 intrusted to their care for less than the price set upon it by the owners, or in a way contrary to order. An auctioneer who has duly paid the licence duty is not hable, in the city of London, to the penalties for acting as a broker without being admitted agreeably to the 6 Anne, c. 16. The establishment of mock auctions is said to be a common practice among swindlers in London. Persons are frequently placed at the doors of such auctions, denominated barkers, to invite strangers to come in ; and puffers are in wait to bid up the article much beyond its value. A stranger making an offer at such an auction is almost sure to have the article knocked down to him. Plated goods are often disposed of at these auctions; but it is almost needless to add, that they are of very inferior quality. Attempts have sometimes been made to suppress mock auctions, but hitherto without much success. We subjoin An account of the Number of Auction Licenses granted from the 5th of January, 1819, with the Amount of Duty received on Sales by Auction; distinguishing each Year, and specifying those who have taken out such Licenses for Town, Country, and Town and Country, down to 1831.- (Parl. Paper, No. 138. Sess. 1831.) Number of Licenses taken out. Years ended Number of Amount of Duty received on Sales 9th of January. Auction Licenses. by Auction. For Town and For Town For Country. Country. £ 8. d. 1890 2,557 256,534 16 9 327 2,124 106 1821 2,770 225,630 5 9 338 2,323 109 1822 2,939 202,317 18 2j 369 2,523 107 1823 2,897 206,322 8 1 343 2,433 121 1894 2,939 223,835 4 9 334 2,493 112 1825 2,941 279,264 1 91 338 2,496 107 1826 2,910 308,591 12 74 857 2,437 116 1837 2,981 225,061 9 11 607 2,325 49 1828 3,119 250,239 10 3 - 2,577 542 1829 2,972 235,447 18 10f - 2,422 550 1830 3,043 225,258 11 41 - 2,519 524 1831 2,467 203,090 17 0 - 2,478 489 Account of the Produce of the Auction Duties, in each of the Three Years, ending the 5th of Janu- ary 1833, listinguishing the Amount paid under separate Heads. Amount of Auction Duties on the Sale of Household Furni- Estates,Houses, ture, Horses, Foreign Annuities, Carriages, and all Sheep's Wool. Produce (First Total Produce. Ships,Plate, other Goods Sale thereof.) Jewels, &c. and Chattels, £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 9. d. England - - - - 72,348 19 6 128,184 13 1 11 14 9 2,865 13 4 203,411 0 8 Scotland - - - - 7,150 6 7 12,387 11 3 0 19 9 85 10 11 19,624 8 6 Ireland - - - - 1,952 13 5 9,004 18 8 0 6 9 10,957 18 10 Year ended 5th of January, 1831. 81,451 19 6 149,577 3 0 13 1 3 2,951 4 3 233,993 8 0 England - - - - 76,164 3 0 122,088 8 11 25 10 11 2,857 3 8 201,135 6 6 Scotland - - - - 4,863 9 7 12,014 11 3 0 16 9 69 7 2 16,948 4 9 Ireland - - - - 1,616 8 5 8,847 2 7 0 7 3 1 7 5 10,465 5 8 Year ended 5th of January, 1832. 82,644 1 0 142,950 2 9 26 14 11 2,927 18 3 228,548 16 11 England - - - - 79,218 9 8 126,126 15 2 15 10 6 2,694 13" 8 208,055 9 0 Scotland - - - - 5,436 13 8 12,294 3 7 1 2 2 136 0 2 17,867 19 7 Ireland - - - - 2,213 5 5 8,180 5 4 0 13 2 10,394 3 11 Year ended 5th of January, 1833. 86,868 8 9 146,601 4 1 16 12 8 2,831 7 0 236,317 12 6 Excise Office, London, 5th of August, 1833. [Sales at public auction, in the United States, are restricted in various ways. In some of the states, a limited number only of auctioneers is appointed by the government; while in others, every person who undertakes to act as an auctioneer is obliged to pay a certain sum into the public treasury for a license to entitle him to do so.-Am. Ed.] AVERAGE, a term used in commerce and navigation to signify a contribution made by the individuals, when they happen to be more than one, to whom a ship, or the goods on board it, belong, or by whom it or they are insured; in order that no particular individual or individuals amongst them, who may have been forced to make a sacrifice for the preserv- ation of the ship or cargo, or both, should lose more than others. "Thus," says Mr. Ser- jeant Marshall, " where the goods of a particular merchant are thrown overboard in a storm to save the ship from sinking or where the masts, cables, anchors, or other furniture of the ship, are cut away or destroyed for the preservation of the whole; or money or goods are Digitized by Google 56 AVERAGE. given as a composition to pirates to save the rest; or an expense is incurred in reclaiming the ship, or defending a suit in a foreign court of admiralty, and obtaining her discharge from an unjust capture or detention; in these and the like cases, where any sacrifice is de- liberately and voluntarily made, or any expense fairly and bonà fide incurred, to prevent a total loss, such secrifice or expense is the proper subject of a general contribution, and ouglit to be rateably borne by the owners of the ship, freight, and cargo, 80 that the loss may fall equally on all, according to the equitable maxim of the civil law-no one ought to be en- riched by another's loss Nemo debet locupletari aliena jacturâ." Upon this fair principle is founded the doctrine of average contributions regulations with respect to which having been embodied in the Rhodian law, were thence adopted into the Roman law; and form a prominent part of all modern systems of maritime jurisprudence. The rule of the Rhodian law is, that if, for the sake of lightening a ship in danger at sea, goods be thrown overboard, the loss incurred for the sake of all, shall be made good by a general contribution."-(Dig. lib. 14. tit. 2. s 1.; Schomberg on the Maritime Laws of Rhodes, p. 60.) Formerly it was a common practice to ransom British ships when captured by an enemy, the ransom being made good by general average. But this practice having been deemed disadvantageous, it was abolished by statute 22 Geo. 3. c. 25., which declares, That all contracts and agreements which shall be entered into, and all bills, notes, and other securi- ties, which shall be given by any person or persons, for ransom of any ship or vessel, mer- chandise, or goods, captured by the subjects of any state at war with his Majesty, or by any person committing hostilities against his Majesty's subjects, shall be absolutely void in law, and of no effect whatever and a penalty of 5001. is given to the informer, for every offence against this act. Average is either general or particular, that is, it either affects all who have any interest in the ship and cargo, or only some of them. The contributions levied in the cases men- tioned above, come under the first class. But when losses occur from ordinary wear and tear, or from the perils naturally incident to a voyage, without being voluntarily encoun- tered, such as the accidental springing of masts, the loss of anchors, &c., or when any pecu- liar sacrifice is made for the sake of the ship only, or of the cargo only, these losses, or this sacrifice, must be borne by the parties not immediately interested, and are consequently de- frayed by a particular average. There are also some small charges called petty or accustomed averages it is usual to charge one third of them to the ship and two thirds to the cargo. No general average ever takes place, except it can be shown that the danger was immi- nent, and that the sacrifice made was indispensable, or supposed to be indispensable, by the captain and officers, for the safety of the ship and cargo. The captain, on coming on shore, should immediately make his protests and he, with some of the crew, should make oath that the goods were thrown overboard, masts or anchors cut away, money paid, or other loss sustained, for the preservation of the ship and goods, and of the lives of those on board, and for no other purpose. The average, if not settled before, should then be adjusted, and it should be paid before the cargo is landed; for the owners of the ship have a lien on the goods on board, not only for the freight, but also to answer all averages and contributions that may be due. But though the captain should neglect his duty in this respect, the suf- ferer would not be without a remedy, but might bring an action either against him or the owners. The laws of different states, and the opinions of the ablest jurists, vary as to whether the loss incurred in defending a ship against an enemy or pirate, and in the treatment of the wounded officers and men, should be made good by general or particular average. The Ordinance of the Hanse Towns (art. 35.), the Ordinance of 1681 (liv. iii. tit. 7. s 6.), and the Code de Commerce (art. 400. § 6.), explicitly declare that the charges on account of medicine, and for attendance upon the officers and seamen wounded in defending the ship, shall be general average. A regulation of this sort seems to be founded on reason. But other codes are silent on the subject; and though the contrary opinion had been advanced by Mr. Serjeant Marshall, and by Mr. Justice Park in the earlier editions of this work, the Court of Common Pleas has unanimously decided, that in England neither the damage done to a ship, nor the ammunition expended, nor the expense of healing sailors wounded in an action with an enemy or pirate, is a subject of general average.-(Abbot on the Law of Shipping, part iii. cap. 8.) Much doubt has been entertained, whether expenses incurred by a ship in an intermediate port in which she has taken refuge, should be general average, or fall only on the ship. But on principle, at least, it is clear, that if the retreat of the ship to port be made in order to obviate the danger of foundering, or some other great and imminent calamity, the ex- penses incurred in entering it, and during the time she is forced by stress of weather, or adverse winds, to continue in it, ought to belong to general average. But if the retreat of the ship to port be made in order to repair an injury occasioned by the unskilfulness of the master, or in consequence of any defect in her outfit, such, for example, as deficiencies of Digitized by Google AVERAGE. 57 water, provisions, sails, &c., with which she ought to have been sufficiently supplied before setting out, the expenses should fall wholly on the owners. When a ship (supposed to be seaworthy) is forced to take refuge in an intermediate port, because of a loss occasioned by a peril of the sea, as the springing of a mast, &c., then, as the accident is not ascribable to any fault of the master or owners, and the retreat to port is indispensable for the safety of the ship and cargo, it would seem that any extraordinary ex- pense incurred in entering it should be made good by general average. Supposing, however, that it could be shown, that the ship was not, at her outset, sea- worthy, or in a condition to withstand the perils of the sea; that the mast, for example, which has sprung, had been previously damaged; or supposing that the mischief had been occasioned by the incapacity of the master; the whole blame would, in such a case, be ascribable to the owners, who besides defraying every expense, should be liable in damages to the freighters for the delay that would necessarily take place in completing the voyage, and for whatever damage might be done to the cargo. These, however, are merely the conclusions to which, as it appears to us, those must come who look only to principles. The law with respect to the points referred to, differs in different countries, and has differed in this country at different periods. " A doubt," says Lord Tenterden, " was formerly entertained as to the expenses of a ship in a port in which she had taken refuge to repair the damage occasioned by a tempest; but this has been re- moved by late decisions. And it has been held, that the wages and provisions of the crew during such a period must fall upon the ship alone. But if a ship should necessarily go into an intermediate port for the purpose only of repairing such a damage as is in itself a proper object of general contribution, possibly the wages, &c. during the period of such detention, may also be held to be general average, on the ground that the accessory should follow the nature of its principal."-(Law of Shipping, part iii. cap. 8.) Perhaps the reader who reflects on the vagueness of this passage will be disposed to con- cur with Lord Tenterden's remark in another part of the same chapter, That the determi- nations of the English courts of justice furnish less of authority on this subject (average) than on any other branch of maritime law." The question, whether the repairs which a ship undergoes that is forced to put into an intermediate port ought to be general or particular average, has occasioned a great diversity of opinion but the principles that ought to regulate our decision with respect to it seem pretty obvious. Injuries voluntarily done to the ship, as cutting away masts, yards, &c. to avert some impending danger, are universally admitted to be general average. It seems, however, hardly less clear, and is, indeed, expressly laid down by all the great authorities, that injuries done to the ship by the violence of the winds or the waves should be particular average, or should fall wholly on the owners. The ship, to use the admirable illustration of this principle given in the civil law, is like the tool or instrument of a workman in his trade. If in doing his work he break his hammer, his anvil, or any other instrument, he can claim no satisfaction for this from his employer.-(Dig. lib. xiv. tit. 2. 2.) The owners are bound, both by the usual conditions in all charterparties, and at common law, to carry the cargo to its destination; and they must consequently be bound, in the event of the ship sus- taining any accidental or natural damage during the voyage, either to repair that damage at their own expense, or to provide another vessel to forward the goods. In point of fact, too, such subsidiary ships have often been provided; but it has never been pretended that their hire was a subject of general average, though it is plain it has quite as good a right to be so considered as the cost of repairing the damage done to the ship by a peril of the sea. Hence, when a ship puts into an intermediate port for the common safety, the charges incurred in entering the port, and down to the earliest time that the wind and weather become favoura- ble for leaving it, ought to be general average; but the repair of any damage she may have sustained by wear and tear, or by the mere violence of the storm, or an accidental peril, and the wages of the crew, and other expences incurred after the weather has moderated, should fall wholly on the owners. It has been, however, within these few years, decided, in the case of a British ship that had been obliged to put into port in consequence of an injury resulting from her accidentally coming into collision with another, that so much of the repair she then underwent as was absolutely necessary to enable her to perform her voyage should be general average. The Judges, however, spoke rather doubtfully on the subject; and it is exceedingly difficult to discover any good grounds for the judgment.-(Plummer and Another v. Wildman, 3 M. & S. 482.)-It seems directly opposed to all principle, as well as to the authority of the laws of Rhodes (Dig. 14. tit. 2.), of Oleron (art. 9.), of Wisby (art. 12.), and to the common law with respect to freight. Lord Tenterden has expressed himself as if he were hostile to the judgment. It is, indeed, at variance with all the doctrines he lays down and the terms in which he alludes to it, " yet in one case," appear to hold it forth as an exception (which it certainly is) to the course of decisions on the subject. It is now usual in this country, when a vessel puts into port on account of a damage belonging to particular average, which requires to be repaired before she can safely proceed 8 Digitized by Google 58 AVERAGE. on her voyage, to allow in general average the expense of entering the port and unloading, to charge the owners of the goods, or their underwriters with the warehouse rent and expenses attending the cargo, and to throw the expense of reloading and departure on the freight. According to the law of England, when a ship is injured by coming into collision with or running foul of another, if the misfortune has been accidental, and no blame can be ascribed to either party, the owners of the damaged ship have to bear the loss; but where blame can be fairly imputed to one of the parties, it, of course, falls upon him to make good the damage done to the other. The regulations in the Code de Commerce (art. 407.) harmonise, in this respect, with our own. According, however, to the laws of Oleron and Wisby, and the famous French ordinance of 1681, the damage occasioned by an accidental collision is to be defrayed equally by both parties. The ship and freight, and every thing on board, even jewels, plate, and money, except wearing apparel, contribute to general average. But the wages of seamen do not contribute because, had they been laid under this obligation, they might have been tempted to oppose a sacrifice necessary for the general safety. Different states have adopted different modes of valuing the articles which are to contri- bute to an average. In this respect the law of England has varied considerably at different periods. At present, however, the ship is valued at the price she is worth on her arrival at the port of delivery. The value of the freight is held to be the clear sum which the ship has earned after seamen's wages, pilotage, and all such other charges as come under the name of petty averages, are deducted. It is now the settled practice to value the goods lost, as well as those saved, at the price they would have fetched in ready money, at the port of delivery, on the ship's arrival there, freight, duties, and other charges, being deducted. Each person's share of the loss will bear the same proportion to the value of his property, that the whole loss bears to the aggregate value of the ship, freight, and cargo. The necessity of taking the goods lost into this account is obvious; for otherwise their owner would be the only person who would not be a loser. When the loss of masts, cables, and other furniture of the ship, is compensated by general average, it is usual, as the new articles will in all ordinary cases be of greater value than those that have been lost, to deduct one third from the value of the former, leaving two thirds only to be contributed. But the mode of adjusting an average will be better understood by the following example, extracted from Chief Justice Tenterden's valuable work on the Law of Shipping, part iii. cap. 8. " The reader will suppose that it became necessary, in the Downs, to cut the cable of a ship destined for Hull; that the ship afterwards struck upon the Goodwin, which compelled the master to cut away his mast, and cast overboard part of the cargo, in which operation another part was injured and that the ship, being cleared from the sands, was forced to take refuge in Ramsgate harbour, to avoid the further effects of the storm. AMOUNT OF LOSSES. VALUE OF ARTICLES TO CONTRIBUTE. £ £ Goods of A. cast overboard - 500 Goods of A. cast overboard 500 Damage of the goods of B. by the jettison 200 Sound value of the goods of B., deduct- Freight of the goods cast overboard 100 ing freight and charges - - 1,000 Price of a new cable, anchor, and) Goods of C. - - - 500 mast £300 200 of D. - - - - - - 2,000 Deduct one third 100 of E. - - - - 5,000 Expense of bringing the ship off the sands 50 Value of the ship - - 2,000 Pilotage and port duties going into the Clear freight, deducting wages, victuals, harbourand out, and commission to the &c. 800 agent who made the disbursements - 100 Expenses there - 25 Adjusting this average - - 4 Postage - 1 Total of losses - £1,190 Total of contributory values - £11,800 Then, 11,800L. : 1,1801. 100/. : 101. 44 That is, each person will lose 10 per cent. upon the value of his interest in the cargo, ship, or freight. Therefore, A. loses 50l., B. 100l., C. 501., D. 2001., E. 5001., the owners 2861. in all, 1,180%. Upon this calculation, the owners are to lose 2801. but they are to receive from the contribution 3802., to make good their disbursements, and 1001. more for the freight of the goods thrown overboard ; or 4801., minus 2801. They, therefore, are actually to receive £200 A. is to contribute 501., but has lost 5001. ; therefore A. is to receive - - - 450 B. is to contribute 100l., but has lost 2001.; therefore B. is to receive - - - 100 Total to be actually received - £750 C. £ 50 On the other hand, c., D., and E. have lost nothing, and are to pay as before viz. D. 200 E. 500 Total to be actually paid - £750 which is exactly equal to the total to be actually received, and must be paid by and to each person in rateable proportion. Digitized by Google AVERAGE. 59 In the above estimate of losses, I have included the freight of the goods thrown overboard, which appears to be proper, as the freight of the goods is to be paid, and their supposed value is taken clear of freight, as well as other charges. In this country, where the practice of insurance is very general, it is usual for the broker, who has procured the policy of insu- rance, to draw up an adjustment of the average which is commonly paid in the first instance by the insurers without dispute. In case of dispute, the contribution may be recovered either by a suit in equity, or by an action at law, instituted by each individual entitled to receive, against each party that ought to pay, for the amount of his share. And in the case of a general ship, where there are many consignees, it is usual for the master, before he delivers the goods, to take a bond from the different merchants for payment of their portions of the average when the same shall be adjusted." The subject of average does not necessarily make a part of the law of insurance though as insurers, from the terms of most policies, are liable to indemnify the insured against those contributions which are properly denominated general average, its consideration very fre- quently occurs in questions as to partial losses. But in order to confine assurances to that which should be their only object, namely, an indemnity against real and important losses arising from a peril of the sea, as well as to obviate disputes respecting losses arising from the perishable quality of the goods insured, and all trivial subjects of difference and litiga- tion, it seems to be the general law of all maritime states, and is expressly, indeed, provided by the famous Ordinance of 1681 (see liv. iii. tit. 6. § 47., and the elaborate commentary of M. Valin), that the insurer shall not be liable to any demand on account of average, unless it exceed one per cent. An article (No. 408.) to the same effect is inserted in the Code de Commerce, and, by stipulation, this limitation is frequently extended in French policies to three or four per cent. A similar practice was adopted in this country in 1749. It is now constantly stipulated in all policies, that upon certain enumerated articles of a quality pecu- liarly perishable, the insurer shall not be liable for any partial loss whatever that upon cer- tain others liable to partial injuries, but less difficult to be preserved at sea, he shall only be liable for partial losses above five per cent. and that as to all other goods, and also the ship and freight, he shall only be liable for partial losses above three per cent. This stipulation is made by a memorandum inserted at the bottom of all policies done at Lloyd's of the fol- lowing tenour :- N. B. Corn, fish, salt, fruit, flour, and seeds, are warranted free from average, unless general, or the ship be stranded sugar, tobacco, hemp, flax, hides, and skins, are warranted free from average under 5% per cent. ; and all other goods free from average under 3/. per cent., unless general, or the ship be stranded." The form of this memorandum was universally used, as well by the Royal Exchange and London Assurance Companies as by private underwriters, till 1754, when it was decided that a ship having run aground, was a stranded ship within the meaning of the memoran- dum; and that although she got off again, the underwriters were liable to the average or partial loss upon damaged corn. This decision induced the two Companies to strike the words " or the ship be stranded," out of the memorandum so that now they consider them- selves liable to no losses which can happen to such commodities, except general averages and total losses. The old form is still retained by the private underwriters.-See STRANDING.) The reader is referred, for the further discussion of this important subject, to the article MARINE INSURANCE; and to Mr. Stevens's Essay on Average; Abbott on the Law of Shipping, part iii. cap. 8.; Marshall on Insurance, book i. cap. 12. S. 7.; Park on Insur- ance, cap. 7.; and Mr. Beneke's elaborate and able work on the Principles of Indemnity in Marine Insurance. [On this very perplexed subject of average, see also Kent's Commentary on American Law, Lecture 47.-Am. Ed.] AVOIRDUPOIS, a weight used in determining the gravity of bulky commodities.See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. B. BACON (Ger. Speck; Du. Spek; Fr. Lard; It. Span. and Port. Lardo; Rus. Solo Lat. Lardum) is made from the sides and belly of the pig, which are first thoroughly impregnated with salt; then suffered to remain for a certain period in brine and, lastly, dried and smoked. The counties of England most celebrated for bacon are York, Hants, Berks, and Wilts. Ireland produces great quantities of bacon ; but it is neither so clean fed, nor so well cured as the English, and is much lower priced. Of the Scotch counties, Dumfries, Wigton, and Kirkcudbright are celebrated for the excellence of their bacon and hame, of which they now export large quantities, principally to the Liverpool and London markets. The imports of bacon and hams from Ireland have increased rapidly of late years. The Digitized by Google 60 BAGGAGE, bahia. average quantity imported during the three years ending the 25th of March, 1800, only amounted to 41,958 cwt; whereas during the three years ending with 1820, the average imports amounted to 204,380 cwt; and during the three years ending with 1825, they had increased to 338,218 cwt. In 1825, the trade between Ireland and Great Britain was placed on the footing of a coasting trade; and bacon and hams are imported and exported without any specific entry at the Custom-house. We believe, however, that the imports of these articles into Great Britain from Ireland amount, at present, to little less than 500,000 cwt. a year. The quantity of bacon and hams exported from Ireland to foreign countries is inconsiderable; not exceeding 1,500 or 2,000 cwt. a year. The duty on bacon, being 28s. the cwt. is in effect prohibitory. The duty on hams is the same as on bacon. By the 7 Geo. 4 C. 48. bacon is not to be entered to be warehoused except for exportation only; and if it be so warehoused, it cannot be taken out for home use. BAGGAGE, in commercial navigation, the wearing apparel and other articles destined for the sole use or accommodation of the crews and passengers of ships. The following are the Custom-house regulations with respect to baggage :- Baggage and apparel accompanied by the proprietor, worn and in use (not made up for the purpose of being introduced into this country), exempted from all duty on importation. Articles in baggage subject to duty or prohibited may be left in custody of the officers of customs for a period of six months, to give the party an opportunity of paying the duty or taking them back. Customs Order, August 6. 1822.) If unaccompanied by proprietor, proof must be made by the party that it is as aforesaid, and not imported as merchandise, otherwise it is subject to a duty of 20 per cent. If not cleared at the expiration of six months from the date of landing, it is liable to be sold for duty and charges, the residue (if any) to be paid to the right owner on proof being adduced to the satisfaction of the honourable Board. One fowling-piece and one pair of pistols accompanying the party, bond fule in use, free per Cus- toms Order, July 5. 1825. Spirits, being the remains of passengers' stores may be admitted to entry.-(6 Geo. 4. c. 107. e 107.) One pint of drinkable spirits of whatever strength, or halfa pint of cordial or Cologne water, in baggage for private use-free.-(Treasury Order, October 20. 1820.) Carriages of British manufacture, in use-free.-(Treasury Order, September 26. 1817.) Glass, in dressing or medicine cases, of British manufacture, free upon proof that no drawback has been received.-(Treasury Order, December 5. 1821.)-(Nyren's Tables.) English Books reprinted abroad.Not more than a single copy of each work is allowed to be im- ported in a passenger's baggage, and for the private use of the party (Customs Order, 20th of June, 1830.)-Such works are absolutely prohibited to be imported as merchandise.-(See Books.) Passengers denying having Foreign Goods in their Possession.-The following clause in the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 53. has reference to this subject If any passenger or other person, on board any ves- sel or boat, shall, upon being questioned by any customs officer, whether he or she has any foreign goods upon his or her person, or in his or her possession, deny the same, and any such goods shall, after such denial, be discovered upon his or her person, or in his or her possession, such goods shall be forfeited, and such person shall forfeit treble the value of such goods. 37. BAHIA, OR ST. SALVADOR, a large city (formerly the capital) of Brazil, contiguous to Cape St. Antonio, which forms the right or eastern side of the entrance of the noble bay of Todos os Santos, or All-Saints. According to the observations of M. Roussin, the light- house on the Cape is in lat. 13° o 30" S., long. 38° 30' W. The opposite side of the en- trance to the bay is formed by the island of Taporica, distant from Cape St. Antonio about 21 leagues. But a bank along the shore of the island narrows the passage for large ships to about two thirds this distance. Another bank runs S.S. W. from Cape St. Antonio about 11 league. Within, the bay expands into a capacious basin, having several islands and har- bours, the depth of water varying from 8 and 10 to 40 fathoms, affording ample accommo- dation and secure anchorage for the largest fleets. There is another entrance to the bay, partly exhibited in the following plan, on the west side of the island of Taporica; but it is narrow, intricate, and at its mouth has not more than 6 feet water. Several rivers have their embouchure in the bay, which generally occasions a current to set from the north end of the island by Cape St. Antonio; when the rivers are flooded, this current is sometimes very strong. The light-house at the extremity of the cape has no great elevation, and cannot be seen at a distance of more than 3 or 31 leagues. The usual place of anchorage is abreast of the city, north and south of Fort do Mar. The city is partly built on the beach, but principally on pretty high ground immediately contiguous. The public buildings, particularly the churches, are numerous, and some of them magnificent; but the streets are narrow, ill paved, and filthy. Population, 125,000. The city is defended by several ports, but none of them are of very great strength. The trade of Bahia is very considerable; and will no doubt continue to increase. The average exports amount, at present, to about 45,000 chests (13 cwt. each) of sugar; 35,000 bags (170 lbs. each) of cotton ; 4,000 tons of coffee, with hides, tobacco, rice, dye and fancy woods, bullion, &c. The imports are similar to those of Rio de Janeiro, to which the reader is referred for some account of the commerce of Brazil, with particulars as to duties, charges, &c. There are several private building yards at Tapagippe, in which ships of all dimensions are built; they are handsome, well modelled, and the timber very suitable for the purpose. Digitized by Google BALACHONG-BALANCE. 61 Monies, Weights, and Measures of Brazil same as those of Portugal; for which, see LISBON. The alquiere, or measure of corn, rice, &c. differs in different provinces, being in some 1.25 bushel Winch. meas., and in others 1 only. At Bahia it is estimated at 1, Wine and olive oil pay duty on being imported by the pipe, hogshead, or barrel they are retailed by the frasco or case bottle = 4.5 pints English wine measure. In 1828, 122 British ships, carrying 25,166 tons, entered Bahia.-(Annuaire du Commerce Maritime for 1833, p. 583.; and private information.) Plan.-The subjoined wood-cut conveys a clearer and better idea of this celebrated bay than could be acquired from any description. It is copied, without any reduction, from a revised edition of a Portuguese chart, published by Mr. Laurie ; and exhibits the banks, soundings, anchorage, &c. 9 4 38°30' W. 5 12 6 6 8 9 9 3 10 29 20 456 4 3 4 4 7 4 6 I 5 F 7 E 4 30 17 4 10 5 5 4 8 10 $ 9 20 € 10 7 24 7 21 16 10 % 2 9 16 8 4 6 8 9 5 G 3 15 14 16 6 13 20 5 12 7 5 17 7 6 4 6 24 5 13 24 4 15 5 3 4 5 8 12 .D 5 6 17 F 10 24 11 12 14 10 24 20 AB 7 BAHIA 9 25 12 10 & 16 7 18 10 11 9 2 16 10 20 4 4 17 3 10 20 8 9 6 10 5 13° 30" 12 18 5 15 B A 20 17 3t 5 5 4 14 20 4 9 31 7 5 18 7 8 10 12 8 E. 1 2 3 N.N. 25 14 Scale of Nautic Leagues. References to the Plan.-A, Cape, light-house, and fort of St. Antonio; B, Fort do Mar C, Fort St. Philip; D, Tapagippe; E, Isla do Mar; F, Isla dos Frados; G, Fort Beaumont. The figures in the plan are the soundings in fathoms. BALACHONG, an article consisting of pounded or bruised fish. Small fish, with prawns and shrimps, are principally employed in making it. Though fœtid and offensive to strangers, this substance, used as a condiment to rice, is largely consumed in all the countries to the east of Bengal, including the southern provinces of China, and the islands of the Eastern Archipelago. Its distribution gives rise to an extensive internal traffic. BALANCE, in accounts, is the term used to express the difference between the debtor and creditor sides of an account. BALANCE, in commerce, is the term commonly used to express the difference between the value of the exports from and imports into a country. The balance is said to be favoura- ble when the value of the exports exceeds that of the imports, and unfavourable when the value of the imports exceeds that of the exports. According to the Custom-house returns, the official value of the exports from Great Britain, exclusive of foreign and commercial mer- chandise, during the year ending 5th of January, 1833, amounted to 64,582,037/; and the Digitized by Google 62 BALANCE. official value of the imports during the same year amounted to 43,237,416/; leaving a favour- able balance of 21,344,6214 The attainment of a favourable balance was formerly regarded as an object of the greatest importance. The precious metals early acquired, in consequence of their being used as money, an artificial importance, and were long considered as the only real wealth either in- dividuals or nations could possess. And as countries without mines could not obtain supplies of these metals except in exchange for exported products, it was concluded, that if the value of the commodities exported exceeded that of those imported, the balance would have to be paid by the importation of an equivalent amount of the precious metals; and conversely. A very large proportion of the restraints imposed on the freedom of commerce, during the last two centuries, grew out of this notion. The importance of having a favourable balance be- ing universally admitted, every effort was made to attain it and nothing seemed so effectual for this purpose as the devising of schemes to facilitate exportation, and hinder the importa- tion of almost all products, except gold and silver, that were not intended for future exporta- tion. But the gradual though slow growth of sounder opinions with respect to the nature and functions of money, showed the futility of a system of policy having such objects in view. It is now conceded on all hands that gold and silver are nothing but commodities and that it is in no respect necessary to interfere either to encourage their importation, or to pre- vent their exportation. In Great Britain they may be freely exported and imported, whether in the shape of coin or bullion.-(See Coin.) The truth is, however, that the theory of the balance of trade is not erroneous merely from the false notions which its advocates entertained with respect to money ; it proceeds on radi- cally mistaken views as to the nature of commerce. The mode in which the balance is usu- ally estimated is, indeed, completely fallacious. Supposing, however, that it could be cor- rectly ascertained, it would be found in opposition to the common opinion, that the imports into every commercial country generally exceed the exports; and that when a balance is form- ed, it is only in certain cases, and those of rare occurrence, that it is cancelled by a bullion payment. I. The proper business of the wholesale merchant consists in carrying the various products of the different countries of the world, from the places where their value is least to those where it is greatest; or, which is the same thing, in distributing them according to the effect- ive demand. It is clear, however, that there could be no motive to export any species of pro- duce, unless that which it was intended to import in its stead were of greater value. When an English merchant commissions a quantity of Polish wheat, he calculates on its selling for so much more than its price in Poland, as will be sufficient to pay the expense of freight, in- surance, &c., and to yield, besides, the common and ordinary rate of profit on the capital em- ployed. If the wheat did not sell for this much, its importation would obviously be a loss to the importer. It is plain, then, that no merchant ever did or ever will export, but in the view of importing something more valuable in return. And so far from an excess of exports over imports being any criterion of an advantageous commerce, it is directly the reverse and the truth is, notwithstanding all that has been said and written to the contrary, that unless the value of the imports exceeded that of the exports, foreign trade could not be carried on. Were this not the case-that is, were the value of the exports always greater than the value of the imports-merchants would lose on every transaction with foreigners, and the trade with them would be speedily abandoned. In England, the rates at which all articles of export and import are officially valued were fixed so far back as 1696. But the very great alteration that has since taken place, not only in the value of money, but also in the cost of most part of the commodities produced in this and other countries, has rendered this official valuation, though valuable as a means of de- termining their quantity, of no use whatever as a criterion of the true value of the exports and imports. In order to remedy this defect, an account of the real or declared value of the exports is annually prepared, from the declarations of the merchants, and laid before parlia- ment; there is, however, no such account of imports; and, owing to the difficulties which high duties throw in the way, it is, perhaps, impossible to frame one with any thing like ac- curacy. It has also been alleged, and apparently with some probability, that merchants have not unfrequently been in the habit of exaggerating the value of articles entitled to drawbacks on exportation; but the recent extension and improvement of the warehousing system, and the diminution of the number of drawbacks, must materially lessen whatever fraud or inaccuracy may have arisen from this source. Indeed, as most articles are charged with an ad valorem duty of 10s. per cent. on exportation, we should consider that, if any thing, their value would be rather under than over-rated. We believe, however, that their declared value comes very near the truth; at least, sufficiently so for all practical purposes. Now the declared value of the exports in 1832 was only 36,046,027L., being little more than half their official value, and upwards of 7,000,000L under the official value of the im- ports. What the excess of the latter might be, had we the means of comparing their real value with that of the exports, it is impossible to say : but there can be no manner of doubt, that, generally speaking, it would be very considerable. The value of an exported commodity is Digitized by Google BALANCE. 63 estimated at the moment of its being sent abroad, and before its value is increased by the ex- pense incurred in transporting it to the place of its destination whereas the value of the commodity imported in its stead is estimated after it has arrived at its destination, and, con- sequently, after its value has been enhanced by the cost of freight, insurance, importer's profits, &c. In the United States, the value of the imports, as ascertained by the Custom-house returns, always exceeds the value of the exports. And although our practical politicians have been in the habit of considering the excess of the former as a certain proof of a disadvantageous commerce, "it is nevertheless true," says Mr. Pitkin, " that the real gain of the United States has been nearly in proportion as their imports have exceeded their exports." Commerce of the United States, 2d ed. p. 280.) The great excess of American imports has in part been occasioned by the Americans generally exporting their own surplus produce, and con- sequently, receiving from foreigners not only an equivalent for their exports, but also for the cost of conveying them to the foreign market. In 1811," says the author just quoted, " flour sold in America for nine dollars and a half per barrel, and in Spain for fifteen dol- lars. The value of the cargo of a vessel carrying 5,000 barrels of flour would, therefore, be estimated at the period of its exportation at 47,500 dollars; but as this flour would sell, when carried to Spain, for 75,000 dollars, the American merchant would be entitled to draw on his agent in Spain for 27,500 dollars more than the flour cost in America or than the sum for which he could have drawn, had the flour been exported in a vessel belonging to a Spanish merchant. But the transaction would not end here. The 75,000 dollars would be vested in some species of Spanish or other European goods fit for the American market; and the freight, insurance, &c., on account of the return cargo, would probably increase its value to 100,000 dollars; so that, in all, the American merchant might have imported goods worth 52,500 dollars more than the flour originally sent to Spain." It is as impossible to deny that such a transaction as this is advantageous, as it is to deny that its advantage consists en- tirely in the excess of the value of the goods imported over the value of those exported. And it is equally clear that America might have had the real balance of payments in her favour, though such transactions as the above had been multiplied to any conceivable extent. II. In the second place, when a balance is due by one country to another, it is but seldom that it is paid by remitting bullion from the debtor to the creditor country. If the sum due by the British merchants to those of Holland be greater than the sum due by the latter to them, the balance of payments will be against Britain; but this balance will not, and indeed cannot, be discharged by an exportation of bullion, unless bullion be, at the time, the cheapest exportable commodity; or, which is the same thing, unless it may be more advantageously exported than any thing else. To illustrate this principle, let us suppose that the balance of debt, or excess of the value of the bills drawn by the merchants of Amsterdam on London over those drawn by the merchants of London on Amsterdam, amounts to 100,000Z. it is the business of the London merchants to find out the means of discharging this debt with the least expense and it is plain, that if they find that any less sum, as 96,000/. 97,000/., or 99,000/., will purchase and send to Holland as much cloth, cotton, hardware, colonial pro- duce, or any other commodity, as would sell in Amsterdam for 100,000/., no gold or silver would be exported. The laws which regulate the trade in bullion are not in any degree different from those which regulate the trade in other commodities. It is exported only when its exportation is advantageous, or when it is more valuable abroad than at home. It would, in fact, be quite as reasonable to expect that water should flow from a low to a high level, as it is to expect that bullion should leave a country where its value is great to go to one where it is low It is never sent abroad to destroy, but always to find its level. The balance of payments might be ten or a hundred millions against a particular country, with- out causing the exportation of a single ounce of bullion. Common sense tells us that no merchant will remit 100l. worth of bullion to discharge a debt in a foreign country, if it be possible to invest any smaller sum in any species of merchandise which would sell abroad for 100Z. exclusive of expenses. The merchant who deals in the precious metals is as much under the influence of self-interest, as he who deals in coffee or indigo; but what merchant would attempt to extinguish a debt, by exporting coffee which cost 100/., if he could effect his object by sending abroad indigo which cost only 99/.? The argument about the balance of payment is one of those that contradict and confute themselves. Had the apparent excess of exports over imports, as indicated by the British Custom-house books for the last hundred years, been always paid in bullion, as the supporters of the old theory contend is the case, there ought at this moment to be about 450,000,000 or 500,000,000 of bullion in the country, instead-of 50,000,000 or 60,000,000, which it is supposed to amount to! Nor is this all. If the theory of the balance be good for any thing-if it be not a mere idle delusion-it follows, as every country in the world, with the single exception of the United States, has its favourable balance, that they must be paid by an annual importation of bullion from the mines corresponding to their aggregate amount. But it is certain, that the entire produce of the mines, though it were increased in a tenfold proportion, would be insufficient for this purpose This reductio ad absurdum is decisive Digitized by Google 64 BALE. of the degree of credit that ought to be attached to the conclusions respecting the flourishing state of the commerce of any country drawn from the excess of the exports over the imports Not only, therefore, is the common theory with respect to the balance of trade erroneous, but the very reverse of that theory is true. In the first place, the value of the commodities im- ported by every country which carries on an advantageous commerce (and no other will be prosecuted for any considerable period), invariably exceeds the value of those which she ex- ports. Unless such were the case, there would plainly be no fund whence the merchants and others engaged in foreign trade could derive either a profit on their capital, or a return for their outlay and trouble; and in the second place, whether the balance of debts be for or against a country, that balance will neither be paid nor received in bullion, unless it be at the time the commodity by the exportation or importation of which the account may be most profitably settled. Whatever the partisans of the doctrine as to the balance may say about money being a preferable product, a marchandise par excellence, it is certain it will never ap- pear in the list of exports and imports, while there is any thing else with which to carry on trade, or cancel debts, that will yield a larger profit, or occasion a less expense to the debtors. It is difficult to estimate the mischief which the absurd notions relative to the balance of trade have occasioned in almost every commercial country ;-here they have been particular- ly injurious. It is principally to the prevalence of prejudices to which they have given rise, that the restrictions on the trade between this country and France are to be ascribed. The great, or rather the only, argument insisted upon by those who prevailed on the legislature, in the reign of William and Mary, to declare the trade with France a nuisance, was founded on the statement that the value of the imports from that kingdom considerably exceeded the value of the commodities we exported to it. The balance was regarded as a tribute paid by England to France; and it was sagaciously asked, what had we done, that we should be obliged to pay so much money to our natural enemy It never occurred to those who so loudly abused the French trade, that no merchant would import any commodity from France, unless it brought a higher price in this country than the commodity exported to pay it; and that the profit of the merchant, or the national gain, would be in exact proportion to this excess of price. The very reason assigned by these persons for prohibiting the trade affords the best attainable proof of its having been a lucrative one; nor can there be any doubt that an unrestricted freedom of intercourse between the two countries would still be of the greatest service to both. [There are some circumstances which have had an influence in determining the relation of exports to imports in the United States, and which are in a great measure peculiar to this country. These it may not be uninteresting briefly to notice here. Our readers will bear in mind that we use the terms exports and imports in their ordinary and mercantile accepta- tion, as including all sorts of commodities, specie only being excepted. 1. While the exports have been valued at the exporting port, the imports, until the 3d day of March, 1833, were valued by adding 20 per cent. to the actual cost thereof, if im- ported from the Cape of Good Hope, or from any place beyond the same and 10 per cent. on the actual cost thereof, if imported from any other place or country, including all charges; commissions, outside packages, and insurance, only excepted." 2. The profits of capital being higher in the United States than in most other countries of the commercial world, it follows that capital must be continually flowing into them from abroad; thus swelling the imports beyond the amount they would otherwise be at. 3. The owner of the capital, imported into the country, in many cases does not come with his property, but continues to reside where he did. A certain amount of profits, or interest, on the foreign capital employed in the United States, is consequently remitted every year to other countries. It must hence be obvious that our exports will, on this account, be rendered more considerable in comparison to our imports. 4. The rapid advances of the country in population and wealth, since its separation from Great Britain, and the adoption of the present constitution, has required a supply of the pre- cious metals, for the most part from abroad, much greater than was sufficient to replace the consumption of those metals, either as coin, or in the arts. Money was, therefore, to a cer- tain extent, on this account, imported into the United States, in exchange for our exports, instead of those other commodities which are ordinarily designated by the term imports. 5. The substitution, in a degree continually greater and greater, of paper money for a gold and silver currency, which has been taking place during the same period, must of course have diminished the effect just stated. If we now put these different circumstances together, two of them operating in one direc- tion, and the other three in the opposite, and if we compare them also with those which are not peculiar to the United States, but belong equally to every country, there will be no cause for surprise why the general law of the excess of imports over exports should almost always have held good among ourselves.-Am. Ed.] BALE, a pack, or certain quantity of goods or merchandise; as a bale of silk, cloth, &c. Bales are always marked and numbered, that the merchants to whom they belong may know them; and the marks and numbers correspond to those in the bills of lading, &c. Selling Digitized by Google BALKS, BALLAST. 65 under the bale, or under the cords, IS a term used in France and other countries for selling goods wholesale, without sample or pattern, and unopened. BALKS, large pieces of timber. BALLAST (Du. Ballast; Fr. Lest; Ger. Ballast; It. Savorra Sp. Lastre; Sw. Ballast), a quantity of iron, stones, sand, gravel, or any other heavy material, laid in a ship's hold in order to sink her deeper in the water, and to render her capable of carrying sail without be- ing overset. All ships clearing outwards, having no goods on board other than the personal baggage of the passengers, are said to be in ballast. The quantity of ballast required to fit ships of equal burden for a voyage, is often materially dif- ferent: the proportion being always less or more, according to the sharpness or flatness of the ship's bottom, called by seamen, the floor. The proper ballasting of a ship deserves peculiar attention, for, although it be known that ships in general will not carry sufficient sail, till they are laden so that the surface of the water nearly glances on the extreme breadth midships, more than this general knowledge is required. If the ship have a great weight of heavy ballast, as lead, iron, &c. in the bottom, the centre of gravity will be too low in the hold this no doubt will enable her to carry a press of sail, but it will, at the same time, make her sail heavily, and roll 80 violently, as to run the risk of being dismasted. The object in ballasting a ship is, therefore, so to dispose of the ballast or cargo, that she may be duly poised, and maintain a proper equilibrium on the water, 80 as neither to be too stiff, nor too crunk, qualities equally pernicious. If too stiff, she may carry much sail, but her velocity will not be proportionably increased; whilst her masts are endangered by sudden jerks and excessive labouring. If too crank, she will be unfit to carry sail without the risk of oversetting. Stiffness in ballasting is occasioned by disposing a too great quantity of heavy ballast, as lead, iron, &c. in the bottom, which throws the centre of gravity very near the keel; and this being the centre about which the vibrations are made, the lower it is placed, the more violent is the rolling. Crankness, on the other hand, is occasioned by having too little ballast, or by disposing the ship's lading so as to raise the centre of gravity too high: this also endangers the masts when it blows hard; for when the masts cease to be perpendicular, they strain on the shrouds in the nature of a lever, which increases as the sine of their obliquity; and it is superfluous to add, that a ship that loses her masts is in great danger of being lost. Hence the art of ballasting consists in placing the centre of gravity to correspond with the trim and shape of the vessel, so as to be neither too high nor too low ; neither too far forward, nor too far aft; and to lade the ship so deep, that the surface of the water may nearly rise to the extreme breadth midships: she will then carry a good quantity of sail, incline but little, and ply well to windward.- (See Falconer's Marine Dictionary.) The mischievous consequences of not attending to the circumstances now mentioned are often ex- perienced by ships loading barilla, brimstone, and such heavy articles, on the coasts of Sicily and Spain. The habit there is to cut large quantities of brushwood and faggots, and to spread them in the hold, to hinder the cargo from sinking the centre of gravity too low, and causing the ship to labour violently but it very frequently happens that the pressure of the cargo on this sort of dunnage is so great as to squeeze it into a much smaller space than could at first have been supposed ; so that ships after getting to sea are sometimes obliged to return to port, to unload a part of their cargo, to prevent their foundering. In such cases, firm dunnage, such as oak staves, should, if possible, be always employed.-(See Jackson's Commerce of Mediterranean, pp. 125-128.) Ships that have cargoes of light goods on board require a quantity of ballast increasing, of course, according to the greater lightness of the goods. The following table shows the average quantity of ballast allowed to ships of war: Ballast allowed to the following Ships. Guns. Tonnage. Iron, Tons. Shingles, Tons. Guns. Tonnage. Iron, Tons. Shingles, Tons. 110 2,290 180 370 36 870 65 160 100 2,090 180 370 32 700 65 140 98 2,110 160 350 28 600 60 100 90 1,870 160 350 24 500 50 80 80 1,620 140 300 22 450 50 70 74 1,700 80 270 20 400 50 60 64 1,370 70 260 Sloop - 300 50 40 50 1,100 65 170 Brig - 160 30 15 44 900 65 160 Cutter - I 20 38 930 70 170 Sloop - seldom any. - 15 The iron ballast is first stored fore and aft, from bulk-head to bulk-head; then the shingle ballast is spread and levelled over the iron. The soil of the River Thames from London Bridge to the sea is vested in the Trinity House corpo- ration, and a sum of 10L, is to be paid for every ton of ballast taken from the channel of the river without due authority from the said corporation. Ships may receive on board land ballast from the quarries, pits, &c. east of Woolwich, provided the quantity taken in a year do not exceed the num- ber of tons notified to the Trinity corporation. Land ballast must be entered, and Id. paid per ton on entering. No ballast is to be put on board before entry at the ballast office, under the penalty of 51. a ton. The Trinity Corporation is authorised by the 3 Geo. 4.c. 111. to charge the following rates for all ballast demanded and entered at the ballast office, viz. :- For every ton (20 cwt.) of ballast, not being washed ballast, carried to any ship or vessel employed in the coal trade, the sum of is. For every such ton carried to any other British ship or vessel, the sum of 1s. 3d. For every such ton carried to any foreign ship or vessel, the sum of is. 7d. For every ton of washed ballast carried to any ship or vessel employed in the coal trade, the sum of 2s. For every ton of washed ditto carried to any other British ship or vessel, the sum of 20. 6d. For every ton of washed ditto carried to any foreign ship or vessel, the sum of 3s. 2d. And for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the Inward West India Dock, the further sum of 10d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the Outward West India Dock, the further sum of 4d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the London Docks, the further sum of 4d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the Inward East India Dock, the further sum of 10d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the Outward East India Dock, the further sum of 4d ; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or un- I 8 9 Digitized by Google 66 BALSAM. laden from the Commercial Dock, the further sum of 4d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the East Country Dock, the further sum of 4d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the City Canal, the further sum of 4d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the Surrey Canal, the further sum of 4d.; and for every ton of ballast delivered in or unladen from the Regent's Canal, the further sum of 4d. Which further rates or prices shall be payable and paid over and above the respective rates first mentioned. In 1832, the gross receipt of the sums paid on account of ballast to the ballast office, on the Thames, amounted to 25,2201. 19s. 4d. The expenses amounted, during the same year, to about 23,000l. The ballast of all ships or vessels coming into the Thames is to be unladen into a lighter, at the charge of 6d. a ton. If any ballast be thrown or unladen from any ship or vessel into the Thames, the captain, master, &c. shall for every such offence forfeit 201. No ballast is to be received on board otherwise than from a lighter. By the stat. 54 Geo. 3. c. 149. it is enacted, that no person shall, under a penalty of 101. over and above all expenses, discharge any ballast, rubbish, &c. in any of the ports, harbours, roadsteads, navigable rivers, &c. of the United Kingdom; nor take ballast from any place prohibited by the Lords of the Admiralty. The masters of all ships clearing out in ballast, are required to answer any questions that may be put to them by the collectors or comptrollers, touching the departure and destination of such ships.- (3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. e 80.) If a foreign ship clear out in ballast, the master may take with him British manufactured goods of the value of 201., the mate of the value of 101. and 51. worth for each of the crew.- e 87. BALSAM (Ger. Balsam Du. Balsem; Fr. Baume; It. and Sp. Balsamo; Lat. Balsamum). Balsams are vegetable, juices, either liquid, or which spontaneously become concrete, consist- ing of a substance of a resinous nature, combined with benzoic acid, or which are capable of affording benzoic acid by being heated alone, or with water. The liquid balsams are copaiva, opobalsam, balsam of Peru, storax, and Tolu; the concrete are benzoin, dragon's blood, and red or concrete storax.-(Dr. Ure.) 1. Copaiva (Fr. Baume de Copahu; Ger. Kopaiva Balsam; Sp. Copayva), obtained from a tree (Copaifera) growing in South America and the West India islands. The largest quantity is furnished by the province of Para in Brazil. It is imported in small casks contain- ing from ] to 14 cwt. Genuine good copaiva or copaiba balsam has a peculiar but agreeable odour, and a bitterish, hot, nauseous taste. It is clear and transparent its consistence is that of oil but when exposed to the action of the air it becomes solid, dry, and brittle, like resin.-- (Thomson's Dispensatory.) 2. Opobalsam (Fr. Balsamier de la Mecque; It. Opobalsamo; Pat. Balsamum verum album, Egyptiacum, Egypt. Balessan), the most precious of all the balsams, commonly called Balm of Gilead. It is the produce of a tree (Amyris Gileadensis) indigenous to Arabia and Abyssinia, and transplanted at an early period to Judea. It is obtained by cut- ting the bark with an axe at the time that the juice is in the strongest circulation. The true balsam is of a pale yellowish colour, clear and transparent, about the consistence of Venice turpentine, of a strong, penetrating, agreeable, aromatic smell, and a slightly bitterish pungent taste. By age it becomes yellower, browner, and thicker, losing by degrees, like volatile oils, some of its finer and more subtile parts. It is rarely if ever brought genuine into this country dried Canada balsam being generally substituted for it. It was in high repute among the ancients; but it is now principally used as a cosmetic by the Turkish ladies.- (Drs. Ure and Thomson.) The Canada balsam, now referred to, is merely fine turpentine. It is the produce of the Pinus Balsamea, and is imported in casks, each containing about 1 cwt. It has a strong, but not a disagreeable odour, and a bitterish taste; is transparent, whitish, and has the con- sistence of copaiva balsam.-(See TURPENTINE.) " Szafra and Beder are the only places in the Hedjaz where the balsam of Mecha, or Balessan, can be procured in a pure state. The tree from which it is collected grows in the neighbouring moun- tains, but principally upon Djebel Sobh, and is called, by the Arabe, Beshem. I was informed that it is from 10 to 15 feet high, with a smooth trunk, and thin bark. In the middle of summer small inci- sions are made in the bark; and the juice, which immediately issues, is taken off with the thumb nail, and put into a vessel the gum appears to be of two kinds, one of a white, and the other of a yellowish white colour the first is the most esteemed. I saw here some of the latter sort in a small sheep-skin, which the Bedouins use in bringing it to market it had a strong turpentine smell, and its taste was bitter. The people of Szafra usually adulterate it with sesamum oil and tar. When they try its purity, they dip their finger into it and then set it on fire; if it burn without hurting or leaving a mark on the finger, they judge it to be of good quality, but if it burn the finger as soon as it is set on fire, they consider it to be adulterated. I remember to have read, in Bruce's Travels, an account of the mode of trying it. by letting a drop fall into a cup filled with water the good balsam falling coagulated to the bottom, and the bad dissolving and swimming on the surface. I tried this expert- ment, which was unknown to the people here, and found the drop swim upon the water I tried also their test by fire upon the finger of a Bedouin, who had to regret his temerity I, therefore, regarded the balsam sold here as adulterated it was of less density than honey. I wished to purchase some ; but neither my own baggage, nor any of the shops of Szafra could furnish any thing like a bottle to hold it: the whole skin was too dear. The Bedouins, who bring it here, usually demand two or three dollars per pound for it when quite pure; and the Szafra Arabs resell it to the hadjeys of the great caravan at between 8and 12 dollars per pound in an adulterated state. It is bought up principally by Persians."-(Burckherdt's Travels in Arabia, vol. ii. p. 123.) 3. Baleam of Peru (Fr. Baume de Peru Ger. Peruvianischer Balsam ; Sp. Balsamo de Quinquina, Lat. Balsamum Peruvianum), the produce of a tree (Myroxylon Perui- forum) growing in the warmest parts of South America. The balsam procured by inci- sions made in the tree is called white liquid balsam; that which is found in the shops is obtained by boiling the twigs in water; it is imported in jars, each containing from 20 to Digitized by Google BALSAM. 67 40 lbs. weight. It has a fragrant aromatic odour, much resembling that of benzoin, with 2 warm bitterish taste. It is viscid, of a deep reddish brown colour, and of the consistence of honey.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) 4. Storax Storax; Ger. Stryaxbroom; It. Storace; Sp. Azumbar; Lat. Styrax, Arab. Usteruk), the produce of a tree (Styrax officinale) growing in the south of Europe and the Levant. Only two kinds are found in the shops: storax in tears, which is pure, and storax in the lump, or red storax, which is mixed with sawdust and other impurities. Both kinds are brought from the Levant in chests and boxes. Storax has a fragrant odour; and a pleasant, sub-acidulous, slightly pungent, and aromatic taste; it is of a reddish brown colour, and brittle.(Thomson's Dispensatory.) 5. Tolu, Balsam of (Fr. Baume de Tolu; Ger. Tolutanischer Balsam Sp. Balsamo de Tolu). The tree which yields this balsam is the same as that which yields the balsam of Peru; it being merely the white balsam of Peru, hardened by exposure to the air. 6. Benzoin, or Benjamin (Fr. Benzoin ; Ger. Benzoe; Sp. Bengui; It. Belzuino; Lat. Benzoinum; Arab. Liban ; Hind. Luban; Jav. Menian; Malay, Caminyan), is an article of much greater commercial importance than any of those balsams previously men- tioned. It is obtained from a tree (Styrax Benzoin) cultivated in Sumatra and Borneo, but particularly the former. The plants produce in the seventh year. The balsam is ob- tained by making incisions in the bark, when it exudes, and is scraped off. During the first three years, the balsam is of a clear white colour, after which it becomes brown. Having borne 10 or 12 years, the tree is cut down, a very inferior article being obtained by scraping the wood. The balsams procured in these different stages are distinguished in commerce, and differ widely in value. Benzoin has a very agreeable, fragrant odour, but hardly any taste. It is imported in large masses, packed in chests and casks. It should be chosen full of clear, light-coloured, and white spots, having the appearance of white marble when broken it is rarely, however, to be met with in 80 pure a state, but the nearer the approach to it the better. The worst sort is blackish, and full of impurities.-(Milburn's Orient. Com., and private information.) Mr. Crawfurd has given the following interesting and authentic details with respect to this article:-Benzoin, or frankincense, called in commercial language Benjamin, is a more general article of commerce than camphor, though its production be confined to the same islands. Benzoin is divided in commerce, like camphor, into three sorts (head, belly, foot), according to quality, the comparative value of which may be expressed by the figures 105, 45, 18. Benzoin is valued in proportion to its whiteness, semi-transparency, and freedom from adventitious matters. According to its purity, the first sort may be bought at the emporia to which it is brought, at from 50 to 100 dollars per picul (133) lbs.); the second from 25 to 45 dollars; and the worst from 8 to 20 dollars. According to Linschoten, benzoin, in his time, cost, in the market of Sunda Calapa or Jacatra, from 19100 to 25100 Spanish dollars the picul. By Niebuhr's account, the worst benzoin of the Indian islands is more esteemed by the Arabs than their own best olibanum, or frankincense. In the Lon- don market, the best benzoin is fourteen times more valuable than olibanum, and even the worst 21 times more valuable. Benzoin usually sells in England at 10s. per pound. The quantity generally imported into England, in the time of the monopoly, was 312 cwts. The principal use of this commodity is as incense, and it is equally in request in the religious ceremonies of Catholics, Mohammedans, Hindus, and Chinese. It is also used as a luxury by the great in fumigations in their houses and the Japanese chiefs are fond of smoking it with tobacco. Its general use among nations in such various states of civilisation, and the steady demand for it in all ages, declare that it is one of those commodities, the taste for which is inherent in our nature, and not the result of a particular caprice with any individual people, as in the case of Malay camphor with the Chinese.-(Indian Archipelago, vol. iii. p. 418.) The imports of benzoin, at an average of the three years ending with 1830, were 36,397 lbs. a year. An inferior description of benzoin, the produce of a different tree from the Styrax benzoin, is produced in Siam. It is comparatively cheap and abundant. 7. Dragon's Blood (Fr,Sang-Dragon; Lat. Sanguis Draconis; Arab. Damulákhwain Hind. Heraduky), the produce of a large species of rattan (Calamus Draco) growing on the north and north-east coast of Sumatra, and in some parts of Borneo. It is largely exported to China, and also to India and Europe. It is either in oval drops, wrapped up in flag-leaves, or in large and generally more impure masses, composed of smaller tears. It is externally and internally of a deep dusky red colour, and when powdered it should become of a bright crimson if it be black, it is worth little. When broken and held up against a strong light, it is somewhat transparent: it has little or no smell or taste what it has of the latter is resinous and astringent. Dragon's blood in drops is much preferable to that in cakes; the latter being more friable, and less compact, resinous, and pure than the former. Being a very costly article, it is very apt to be adulterated. Most of its alloys dissolve like gums in water, or crackle in the fire without proving inflammable; whereas the genuine dragon's blood readily melts and catches flame, and is scarcely acted on by watery liquors. Digitized by Google 68 BALTIMORE-BANDANAS. It sells in the market of Singapore at from 15 to 35 dollars per picul, according to quality: but the Chinese have the art of purifying and refining it, when it sells at from 80 to 100 dollars per picul. The price of the best dragon's blood in the London market, varies from 21L to 251. per cwt.-(Milburn's Orient. Com.; Crawfurd's East. Archip. and private information.) The nett duty on balsams imported into Great Britain in 1832 amounted to 2,440l. 8s. 10d. BALTIMORE, a large and opulent city of the United States, in Maryland, situated on the north side of the Patapeco river, about 14 miles above its entrance into Chesapeake bay, in lat. 30° 17' N. long. 76° 30' W. Population in 1830, 81,000. The harbour is spa- cious, convenient, and the water deep. The exports principally consist of tobacco, wheat and wheat-flour, hemp and flax, flax-seed, Indian corn, and other agricultural products, timber, iron, &c. The imports principally consist of cottons and woollens, sugar, coffee, tea, wine, brandy, silk goods, spices, rum, &c. There were in 1830 ten banks in this city, with an aggregate capital of 6,888,691 dollars; the total dividends for the same year amounted to 362,118 dollars, being at the rate of 54 per cent. There were also four marine insurance companies, with a capital of 1,200,000 dollars, producing a dividend of nearly 15 per cent. on the capital paid up; and two fire insurance companies, one of which is on the principle of mutual guarantee.-(Statement by J. H. Goddard, New York Daily Advertiser, 29th of January, 1831.) The registered, enrolled, and licensed tonnage belonging to Baltimore, in December, 1831, amounted to 43,263 tons, of which 17,575 tons were employed in the coasting trade. The total value of the articles imported into Maryland, in the year ending the 30th of September, 1832, was 4,629,303 dollars; the total value of the exports during the same year being 4,499,918 do. (Papers laid before Congress, 15th of February, 1833.) In Maryland the dollar is worth 7a. 6d. currency, 1L sterling being-- 13s. 4d. currency. For an account of the currency of the different states of the Union, with a table of the value of the dollar in each, see NEW YORK; and to it also the reader is referred for an account of the foreign trade of the United States. Weights and measures same as those of England. Exports of Flour.-Baltimore is one of the principal ports of the United States for the export of flour. None is allowed to be shipped from any port of the Union till it has been inspected by public officers appointed for the purpose, and its quality branded on the barrel. (See NEW York.) It ap- pears from the reports of these officers that the flour inspected at Baltimore during the five years ending with 1830, was as follows Wheat Flour. Rye Flour. Indian Corn Meal. Years. Barrels. Half barrels. Barrels. Half barrels. Hbds. Barrels. Half barrels. 1826 583,671 25,355 1,098 4 30 2,699 20 1827 561,259 22,921 1,874 63 5,214 2 1828 537,010 18,882 4,409 415 8,798 11 1829 466,144 15,149 12,777 48 1,609 6,483 1 1830 587,875 19,865 4,436 559 5,458 In 1832 there were inspected 518,674 barrels, and 17,544 half barrets of wheat flour. The inspec- tions of tobacco during the same year amounted to 24,156 hhds. [The banking capital of Baltimore had increased in the early part of 1837, to $8,611,359. The registered, enrolled, and licensed tonnage belonging to it, on the last day of September, 1837, was 67,107 tons; of which 31,621 tons were employed in the coasting trade, and 6799 tons in steam navigation. The total value of the articles imported into Maryland during the year, ending on the day just mentioned, was $7,857,033 ; and the total value of the exports for the same period was $3,789,917.-Am. Ed.] BAMBOO (Fr. Bambou, Bambochés; Ger. Indianischer Rohr; It. Bambu; Hind. Rans; Malay, Bûlûh; Jav. Preng), a species of cane, the Bambos arundinacea of botanists. It grows every where within the tropics, and is of the greatest utility : strictly speaking, it is a gigantic grass with a ligneous stem. It often rises to the height of 40 or 50 feet, and sometimes to even double those heights. Like most plants long and extensively cultivated, it diverges into many varieties. Some of these are dwarfish, while others, instead of being hollow canes, are solid. The bamboo is of rapid growth, and in four or five years is fit for many uses, but does not bear fruit or grain till it be 25 years old, after which it perishes. The grain makes tolerable bread. The young, but gigantic shoots, as they spring from the earth, make a tender and good esculent vegetable. The mature bamboo is employ- ed in an immense variety of ways, in the construction of houses, bridges, boats, agricultural implements, &c. Some varieties grow to such a size as to be, in the largest part, near two feet in circumference, and single knees of these are used as pails or buckets. The Chinese are believed to fabricate their cheap and useful paper of macerated bamboo. The canes used in Europe as walking sticks are not bamboos, but rattans-a totally distinct class of plants. Bamboos are never used for that purpose-(Private information.) BANDANAS, silk handkerchiefs, generally red spotted with white. They were formerly manufactured only in the East Indies; but they are now manufactured of a very good quality at Glasgow and other places. Digitized by Google BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). 99 BANK-BANKING. Banks are establishments intended to serve for the safe custody of money to facilitate its payment by one individual to another; and, sometimes, for the accommodation of the public with loans. I. BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES of). П. BANK OF ENGLAND (Account or). III. BANKS (ENCLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). IV. BANKS (Scorcn). V. BANKS (IRISH). VI. BANKS (FOREISN). VII. BANKS (SAVINGS). I. BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). Banks are commonly divided into two great classes; banks of deposit, and banks of circulation. This division is not, however, a very distinct one; for there is no bank of deposit that is not, at the same time, a bank of circulation, and few or no banks of circulation that are not also banks of deposit. But the term banks of deposit is meant to designate those which keep the money of individuals and circulate it only; while the term banks of circula- tion is applied to those which do not thus confine their circulation, but issue notes of their own payable on demand. The Bank of England is the principal bank of circulation in the empire but it, as well as the private banks of England and Scotland that issue notes, is also a bank of deposit. The private banking establishments in London do not issue notes, and there are many similar establishments in Lancashire, and other parts of the country. (1.) Utility of Banks. Private Banking Companies of London.-The establishment of banks has contributed, in no ordinary degree, to give security and facility to all sorts of com- mercial transactions. They afford safe and convenient places of deposit for the money that would otherwise have to be kept, at a considerable risk, in private houses. They also pre- vent, in a great measure, the necessity of carrying money from place to place to make pay- ments, and enable them to be made in the most convenient and least expensive manner. A merchant or tradesman in London, for example, who employs a banker, keeps but very little money in his own hands, making all his considerable payments by drafts or checks on his banker and he also sends the various checks, bills, or drafts payable to himself in Lon- don, to his bankers before they become due. By this means he saves the trouble and incon- venience of counting sums of money, and avoids the losses he would otherwise be liable to, and would no doubt occasionally incur, from receiving coins or notes not genuine. Perhaps, however, the great advantage derived by the merchant or tradesman from the employment of a banker, consists in its relieving him from all trouble with respect to the presentation for payment of due bills and drafts. The moment these are transferred to the banker, they are at his risk. And if he either neglect to present them when due, or to have them properly noted in the event of their not being paid, he has to answer for the consequences. This circumstance alone must cause an immense saving of expense to a mercantile house in the course of a year. Let us suppose that a merchant has only two bills due each day. These bills may be payable in distant parts of the town, so that it may take a clerk half a day to present them; and in large mercantile establishments it would take up the whole time of one or two clerks to present the due bills and the drafts. The salary of these clerks is, therefore, saved by keeping an account at a banker's: besides the saving of expense, it is also reasonable to suppose that losses upon bills would sometimes occur from mistakes, or oversights, from miscalculation as to the time the bill would become due-from errors in marking it up-from forgetfulness to present it, or from presenting it at the wrong place. In these cases the indorsers and drawees are exonerated and if the acceptor do not pay the bill, the amount is lost. In a banking house such mistakes occur sometimes, though more rarely but when they do occur, the loss falls upon the banker, and not upon his customer." -(Gilbart's Practical Observations on Banking.) It is on other grounds particularly desirable for a merchant or tradesman to have an account with a banking house. He can refer to his bankers as vouchers for his respects- bility and in the event of his wishing to acquire any information with respect to the cir- cumstances, or credit, of any one with whom he is not acquainted, his bankers will render him all the assistance in their power. In this respect they have great facilities, it being the common practice amongst the bankers in London, and most other trading towns, to com- municate information to each other as to the credit and solvency of their customers. To provide for the public security, the statute 7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 29. 1 49. for the punishment of em- bexxiement committed by agents intrusted with property," enacts, That if any money, or security for the payment of money, shall be intrusted to any banker, merchant, broker, attorney, or other agent, with any direction in writing to apply such money, or any part thereof, or the proceeds, or any part of the proceeds of such security, for any purpose specified in such direction, and he shall, in vie- Digitized by Google 70 BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). lation of good faith, and contrary to the purpose so specified, in any wise convert to his own use or benefit such money, security, or proceeds, or any part thereof respectively, every such offender shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the discretion of the court, to be transported beyond seas, for any term not exceeding fourteen years, nor less than seven years, or to suffer such punishment by fine or imprisonment, or by both, as the court shall award; and if any chattel or valuable security, or any power of attorney for the sale or transfer of any share or In- terest in any public stock or fund, whether of this kingdom, or of Great Britain, or of Ireland, or of any foreign state, or in any fund of any body corporate, company or society, shall be intrusted to any banker, merchant, broker, attorney, or other agent, for safe custody, or for any special purpose, with- out any authority to sell, negotiate, transfer, or pledge, and he shall, in violation of good faith, and contrary to the object or purpose which such chattel or security, or power of attorney, shall have been intrusted to him, sell, negotiate, transfer, pledge, or in any manner convert to his own use or benefit such chattel or security, or the proceeds of the same, or any part thereof, or the share or in- terest in stock or fund to which such power of attorney shall relate, or any part thereof, every such offender shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the dis- cretion of the court, to any of the punishments which the court may award as hereinbefore last mentioned." This act is not to affect trustees and mortgagees, nor bankers receiving money due upon securities, nor securities upon which they have a lien, claim, or demand, entitling them by law to sell, transfer, or otherwise dispose of them, unless such sale, transfer, or other disposal shall extend to a greater number or part of such securities or effects than shall be requisite for satisfying such lien, claim, &c.- 50. Nothing in this act is to prevent, impeach, or lessen any remedy at law or in equity, which any party aggrieved by any such offence might or would have had, had it not been passed. No banker, merchant, &c. shall be convicted as an offender against this act, in respect of any act done by bim, if he shall at any time previously to his being indicted for such offence have disclosed such act on oath, in consequence of any compulsory process of any court of law or equity, in any action bona fide insti- tuted by any party aggrieved, or if he shall have disclosed the same in any examination or deposition before any commissioner of bankrupt.-& 52. The Bank of England, and the private banking companies of London as well as some of the English provincial banks, charge no commission on the payments made and received on account of those who deal with them. But they allow no interest on the sums deposited in their hands; and it is either stipulated or distinctly understood that a person employing a banker should, besides furnishing him with sufficient funds to pay his drafts, keep an average balance in the banker's hands, varying, of course, according to the amount of business done on his account; that is, according to the number of his checks or drafts to be paid, and the number of drafts and bills to be received for him. The bankers then calculate, as well as they can, the probable amount of cash that it will be necessary for them to keep in their coffers to meet the ordinary demands of their customers, and employ the balance in discount- ing mercantile bills, in the purchase of government securities, or in some other sort of pro- fitable adventure; so that their profits result, in the case of their not issuing notes, from the difference between the various expenses attendant on the management of their establish- ments, and the profits derived from such part of the sums lodged in their hands as they can venture to employ in an advantageous way. The directors of the Bank of England do not allow any individual to overdraw his account. They answer drafts to the full extent of the funds deposited in their hands; but they will not pay a draft if it exceed their amount. Private bankers are not generally so scrupulous; most of them allow respectable individuals, in whom they have confidence, to overdraw their accounts; those who do so paying interest at the rate of 5 per cent. or whatever sums they overdraw. The possession of this power of overdrawing is often a great convenience to merchants, while it is rarely productive of loss to the banker. The money which is over- drawn is usually replaced within a short period; sometimes, indeed, in the course of a day or two. The directors of the Bank of England decline granting this facility from a disin- clination on their part to come into competition in a matter of this sort with private bankers, who transact this kind of business better, probably, than it could be done by a great esta- blishment like the Bank. The facility which banks afford to the public in the negotiation of bills of exchange, or in the making of payment at distant places, is very great. Many of the banking companies established in different districts have a direct intercourse with each other, and they have all correspondents in London. Hence an individual residing in any part of the country, who may wish to make a payment in any other part, however distant, may effect his object by applying to the bank nearest to him. Thus, suppose A. of Penzance has a payment to make to B. of Inverness: to send the money by post would be hazardous and if there were fractional parts of a pound in the sum, it would hardly be practicable to make use of the post: how then will A. manage He will pay the sum to a banker in Penzance, and his debtor in Inverness will receive it from a banker there. The transaction is extremely simple the Penzance banker orders his correspondent in London to pay to the correspond- ent of the Inverness banker the sum in question on account of B.; and the Inverness banker, being advised in course of post of what has been done, pays B. A small commission charged by the Penzance banker, and the postage, constitute the whole expense. There is no risk whatever, and the whole affair is transacted in the most commodious and cheapest manner. By far the largest proportion both of the inland bills in circulation in the country, and also of the foreign bills drawn upon Great Britain, are made payable in London, the grand focus Digitized by Google BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). 71 to which all the pecuniary transactions of the empire are ultimately brought to be adjusted. And in order still further to economise the use of money, the principal bankers of the me- tropolis are in the habit of sending a clerk each day to the clearing house in Lombard-street, who carries with him the various bills in the possession of his house that are drawn upon other bankers; and having exchanged them for the bills in possession of those others that are drawn upon his constituents, the balance on the one side or the other is paid in cash or Bank of England notes. By this contrivance the bankers of London are enabled to settle transactions to the extent of several millions a day, by the employment of not more, at an average, than from 200,000L to 300,000Z. of cash or Bank notes.-(See CLEARING HOUSE.) In consequence of these and other facilities afforded by the intervention of bankers for the settlement of pecuniary transactions, the money required to conduct the business of an extensive country is reduced to a trifle only, compared with what it would otherwise be. It is not, indeed, possible to form any very accurate estimate of the total saving that is thus effected but, supposing that 50 or 60 millions of gold and silver and bank notes are at present required, notwithstanding all the devices that have been resorted to for economising money, for the circulation of Great Britain, it may, one should think, be fairly concluded, that 200 millions would, at the very least, have been required to transact an equal extent of business but for those devices. If this statement be nearly accurate, and there are good grounds for thinking that it is rather under than over rated, it strikingly exhibits the vast importance of banking in a public point of view. By its means 50 or 60 millions are ren- dered capable of performing the same functions, and in an infinitely more commodious man- ner, that would otherwise have required four times that sum; and supposing that 20 or 30 millions are employed by the bankers as a capital in their establishments, no less than 120 or 130 millions will be altogether disengaged, or cease to be employed as an instrument of circulation, and made available for employment in agriculture, manufactures, and com- merce. (2.) Substitution of Bank Notes for Coins. Means by which the value of Bank Notes may be sustained.-Not only, however, does the formation of banking establishments enable the business of a country to be conducted with a far less amount of money, but it also enables a large portion of that less amount to be fabricated of the least valuable materials, or of paper instead of gold. It would, however, alike exceed the limits and be inconsistent with the objects of this article, to enter into lengthened details with respect to the mode in which this substitution originally took place. It is sufficient to observe, that it naturally grew out of the progress of society. When governments became sufficiently powerful and intelligent to enforce the observance of contracts, individuals possessed of written promises from others that they would pay certain sums at specified periods, began to assign them to those to whom they were indebted; and when those by whom such obligations are subscribed are persons of whose solvency no doubt can be entertained, they are readily accepted in payment of the debts due by one individual to another. But when the circulation of obligations or bills in this way has continued for a while, individuals begin to perceive that they may derive a profit by issuing them in such a form as to fit them for being readily used as a substitute for money in the ordinary transactions of life. Hence the origin of bank notes. An individual in whose wealth and discretion the public have confidence being applied to for a loan, say of 5,000/., grants the applicant his bill or note payable on demand for that sum. Now, as this note passes, in consequence of the confidence placed in the issuer, currently from hand to hand as cash, it is quite as useful to the borrower as if he had obtained an equivalent amount of gold; and supposing that the rate of interest is 5 per cent., it will yield, so long as it continues to circulate, a revenue of 250L a year to the issuer. A banker who issues notes, coins as it were his credit. He derives the same revenue from the loan of his written promise to pay a certain sum, that he would derive from the loan of the sum itself; and while he thus increases his own income, he at the same time contributes to increase the wealth of the society. Besides being incomparably cheaper, bank notes are also incompar- ably more commodious than a metal currency. A bank note for 1,000L. or 100,000/. may be carried about with as much facility as a single sovereign. It is of importance, too, to observe, that its loss or destruction, whether by fire, shipwreck, or otherwise, would be of no greater importance in a public point of view, than the loss or destruction of as much paper. No doubt it might be a serious calamity to the holder; but whatever the extent it injured him, it would proportionally benefit the issuer, whereas the loss of coin is an injury to the holder without being of service to any one else; it is, in fact, so much abstracted from the wealth of the community. Promissory notes issued by private individuals or associations circulate only because those who accept them have full confidence in the credit and solvency of the issuers, or because they feel assured that they will be paid when they become due. If any circumstances trans- pired to excite suspicions as to their credit, it would be impossible for them to circulate any additional notes, and those that they had issued would be immediately returned for payment. Such, however, is not the case with paper money properly so called, or with notes that are declared legal tender. It is not necessary, in order to sustain the value of such notes, that Digitized by Google 72 BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). they should be payable at all the only thing that is required for that purpose is, that they should be issued in limited quantities. Every country has a certain number of exchanges to make; and whether these are effected by the employment of a given number of coins of a particular denomination, or by the employment of the same number of notes of the same denomination, is, in this respect, of no importance whatever. Notes which have been made legal tender, and are not payable on demand, do not circulate because of any confidence placed in the capacity of the issuers to retire them; neither do they circulate because they are of the same real value as the commodities for which they are exchanged but they circu- late because, having been selected to perform the functions of money, they are, as such, readily received by all individuals in payment of their debts. Notes of this description may be regarded as a sort of tickets or counters to be used in computing the value of property, and in transferring it from one individual to another. And as they are no wise affected by fluctuations of credit, their value, it is obvious, must depend entirely on the quantity of them in circulation as compared with the payments to be made through their instrumentality, or the business they have to perform. By reducing the supply of notes below the supply of coins that would circulate in their place were they withdrawn, their value is raised above the value of gold while, by increasing them to a greater extent, it is proportionally lowered. Hence, supposing it were possible to ebtain any security other than immediate converti- bility into the precious metals, that notes declared to be legal tender would not be issued in excess, but that their number afloat would be so adjusted as to preserve their value as com- pared with gold nearly uniform, the obligation to pay them on demand might be done away. But it is needless to say that no such security can be obtained. Wherever the power to issue paper, not immediately convertible, has been conceded to any set of persons, it has been abused, or, which is the same thing, such paper has uniformly been over-issued, or its value depreciated from excess. It is now admitted on all hands to be indispensable, in order to prevent injurious fluctuations in the value of money, that all notes be made payable, at the pleasure of the holder, in an unvarying quantity of gold and silver. This renders it impos- sible for the issuers of paper to depreciate its value below that of the precious metals. They may, indeed, by over-issuing paper, depress the value of the whole currency, gold as well as paper, in the country in which the over-issue is made; but the moment that they do this, gold begins to be sent abroad; and paper being returned upon the issuers for payment, they are, in order to prevent the exhaustion of their coffers, compelled to lessen their issues; and thus, by raising the value of the currency, stop the drain for bullion. It does, however, appear to us, that it is not only necessary, in order to prevent the over- issue of paper, to enact that all notes should be payable on demand, but that it is further necessary, in order to insure compliance with this enactment, to prohibit any one from issu- ing notes until he has satisfied the government of his ability to pay them. The circum- stances that excite public confidence in the issuers of paper are often of the most deceitful description and innumerable instances have occurred, of the population of extensive dis- tricts having suffered severely from the insolvency of bankers in whom they placed the utmost confidence. In 1793, in 1814, 1815, and 1816, and again in 1825, a very large proportion of the country banks were destroyed, and produced by their fall an extent of ruin that has hardly been equalled in any other country. And when such disasters have already happened, it is surely the bounden duty of government to hinder, by every means in its power, their recurrence. It is no exaggeration to affirm, that we have sustained ten times more injury from the circulation of worthless paper, or paper issued by persons without the means of retiring it, than from the issue of spurious coin. It is said, indeed, by those who are hostile to interference, that coins are legal tenders, whereas, notes being destitute of that privilege, those who suspect them are at liberty to refuse them; but, whatever notes may be in law, they are, in very many districts, practically and in fact, legal tenders, and could not be rejected without exposing the parties to much inconvenience. It should also be observed, that labourers, women, minors, and every sort of persons, however incapable of judging of the stability of banking establishments, are dealers in money, and consequently liable to be imposed upon. This, then, is clearly a case in which it is absolutely imperative upon government to interfere, to protect the interests of those who cannot protect themselves, either by compelling all individuals applying for stamps for notes, to give security for their payment, or by making sure, in some other way, that they have the means of, paying them, and that the circulation of the notes will be a benefit and not an injury to the public. A security of this sort has been exacted in the case of the Bank of England; and the whole 14,686,000L lent by the Bank to government, must be sacrificed before the holders of her notes can sustain the smallest loss. Her stability has, therefore, been truly said, by Dr. Smith, to be equal to that of the British government. The system of taking securities having been found to answer so well in the case of the Bank of England, is a powerful argument in favour of its extension. Were securities taken from the country banks, their ultimate failure, in the capacity of banks of issue, would be rendered impossible; and a degree of solidity would be given to our money system, which it is idle to expect it can ever attain, so long as it continues on its present footing. Digitized by Google BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). 73 It is exceedingly difficult to prevent the issue of forged notes. Various schemes have been suggested for this purpose; and though it is hardly possible to suppose that an inimitable note will ever be produced, it is contended, that by judiciously combining different sorts of engraving, forgery may be rendered so difficult, as to be but rarely attempted. But however this may be, during the period from 1797 to 1819, when the Bank of England issued 1/. notes, their forgery was carried on to a great extent. And the desire to check this practice, and to lessen the frequency of capital punishments, appears to have been amongst the most prominent circumstances which led to the return to specie payments in 1821, and the sup- pression of 1/. notes—(See Table I.) (3.) Bank of England Notes legal tender.-According to the law as it stood previously to the present year (1834), all descriptions of notes were payable at the pleasure of the holder, in coin of the standard weight and purity. But the policy of such a regulation was very questionable and we regard the enactment of the late stat. 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 98., which makes Bank of England notes legal tender, every where except at the Bank and its branches, for all sums above 5/., as a very great improvement. So long as the notes of the Bank are themselves convertible, at the pleasure of the holder, into coin, an arrangement of this sort will, it is obvious, effectually prevent any over-issue of country paper, at the same time that it is free from many very serious disadvantages that attached to the former plan. The unjust liabilities imposed upon the Bank of England by the old system, placed her in a situation of great difficulty and hazard. They obliged her to provide a supply of coin and bullion, not for her own exigencies only, but for those of all the country banks; and, what is harder still, they exposed her to be deeply injured by any misconduct on the part of the latter, as well as by the distress in which they might accidentally be involved. In conse- quence her free action has been at all times in some degree impeded; and her power to render assistance to the banking and mercantile interests in periods of discredit materially diminished. The country banks kept but a small supply of coin in their coffers. They were all, however, holders, to a greater or less extent, of government securities; and whenever any circumstance occurred, to occasion a demand upon them for coin, they immediately sold or pledged the whole or a portion of their stock, carried the notes to the Bank to be exchanged, and then carried the specie to the country. Hence, when any suspicions were entertained of the credit of the country banks, or when a panic originated amongst the hold- ers of their notes, as was the case in 1793 and 1825, the whole of them retreated upon the Bank of England, and 700 or 800 conduits were opened, to draw off the specie of that establishment, which was thus, it is evident, exposed to the risk of stoppage without having done any thing wrong. It was not the drain for gold from abroad, but the drain for gold from the country, that nearly exhausted the Bank's coffers in 1825, and forced her to issue about a million of 1/. and 2/. notes. The currency could not possibly be in a sound healthy state, while the Bank of England, and, through her, public credit, were placed in so perilous a situation. But the making of Bank of England notes legal tender at all places except the Bank, will tend materially to protect her from the injurious consequences of panics or runs among the holders of country bank paper; and while it does this, it will not, as it appears to us, in any wise impair the securities against over-issue or depreciation. It was, no doubt, contended during the discussions on the late act, that the measure now referred to would lead to the depreciation of provincial paper; inasmuch as the expense of sending notes from a distance to London, to be exchanged for gold, would prevent any one from demanding Bank of England notes from country banks in good credit, till the value of the notes issued by them was so much depreciated below the value of gold, that the difference would more than pay the expense of sending men to London, and bringing gold back. But this notion proceeds on a radical misconception of the nature of the old as well as of the new system of currency. There cannot, in point of fact, be the least difference, as repects value, in the provinces, between Bank of England paper, now that it is legal tender, and gold. London being the place where the exchanges are adjusted, the value of money in every part of the empire must depend on its value in it; and this, it is plain, cannot be in any degree affected by the late measure. Formerly the provincial currency, gold as well as paper, might be, and, indeed, frequently was, depreciated. This was brought about either by an over-issue on the part of the country banks, generally in the first instance, the effect, but always, in the end, the cause of a rise of prices; or by the issues of the Bank of England, being, in consequence of an adverse exchange, narrowed sooner or more rapidly than those of the country banks. In either case the provincial currency being redundant as compared with that of the metropolis, there was a demand on its issuers for bills on London but it is material to observe, that, unless their credit was suspected, there was not in such cases, any demand upon them for gold. It is, indeed, obvious that a redundancy of the currency is a defect that cannot be obviated by getting gold from the country banks, unless (as hoarding is out of the question) it be intended to send it abroad; and that may always be done better and cheaper by getting from them Bank of England notes, or bills on London. A local redundancy of the currency may take place in future as it has done formerly, and its occur- rence cannot be prevented, even though paper were wholly banished from cireulation. so G 10 Digitized by Google 74 BANKING (GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF). long as the whole currency is not supplied from one source, and as London is the focus where the exchanges with foreign countries are adjusted. But the statements now made show that it is a radical mistake to suppose that it can take place more readily, or to a greater extent, under the new system than formerly. In this respect no change has been made. But while our ancient security against over-issue is maintained unimpaired, the recent arrangements increase the stability of the Bank of England, and consequently improve our whole pecuniary system. If any doubt could possibly remain as to the operation of the new system, it would be removed by referring to Scotland. Gold has been practically banished from that country for a long series of years; and yet no one pretends to say that prices are higher in Scotland than in England, or that her currency is depreciated. The Scotch currency is kept at its proper level, not by the check of gold payments, but by the demand for bills on London and it is as effectually limited in this way as it could be were the banks universally in the habit of exchanging their notes for gold. On what grounds, then, is it to be apprehended that the obligation to give Bank of England notes or bills on London, will be less effectual in restrain- ing over-issue in Yorkshire or Durham than in Scotland ? A banker who issues notes must keep beside him such a stock of cash and bullion, as may be sufficient to answer the demands of the public for their payment. If the value of the cash and bullion in his coffers were equal to the value of his notes in circulation, he would not, it is plain, make any profit; but if he be in good credit, a third, a fourth, or even a fifth part of this sum will probably be sufficient; and his profit consists of the excess of the interest derived from his notes in circulation, over the interest of the sum he is obliged to keep dormant in his strong box, and the expenses of managing his establishment. The Bank of England, as will be afterwards seen, keeps an average stock of coin and bullion equal to a third of her liabilities. (4.) Legal Description of Bank Notes.-Bank notes are merely a species of promissory notes. They are subscribed either by the parties on whose account they are issued, or by some one in their employment, whose signature is binding upon them. A Bank of England note for 5L is as follows:- Bank of England. N° I promise to pay to Mr. Thomas Rippon, or Bearer, N°. on Demand, the Sum of Five Pounds. 1833. September 9, London, 9 September, 1833. For the Gov and Comp" of the Fibe. BANK of ENGLAND. A.B. No particular form of words is necessary in a bank note. The essential requisites are, that it should be for a definite sum (in England and Wales not less than 5L, and in Scot- land and Ireland not less than 12), that it should be payable to bearer on demand, and that it should be properly stamped. Promissory notes, though issued by bankers, if not payable to bearer on demand, do not come under the denomination of bank notes: they are not, like the latter, taken as cash in all ordinary transactions; nor are they, like them, assignable by mere delivery. The circulation of notes for less than 51. was restrained by law (stat. 15 Geo. 3. c. 51.) from 1766 to 1797. In 1808, it was enacted by stat. 48 Geo. 3. c. 88., that all bank notes, promissory notes, or other negotiable instruments for less than 20s. should be absolutely void a penalty of from 20s. to 51., at the discretion of the justices, being imposed on their issuers. It was enacted by the 7 Geo. 4. c. 6., that the issue of all bank notes or pro- missory notes for less than 51. by the Bank of England, or by any licensed English bankers, and stamped on the 5th of February, 1826, or previously (after which period such notes were not stamped), should terminate on the 5th of April, 1829. The stamp duties on bank notes or promissory notes payable on demand, are- £ s. d. £ s.d. £ 8. d. Not exceeding 110 - - - - - - 0 0 5 Exceeding 1 1 0 and not exceeding 220- - . - 0 0 10 - 220 - 550 - - - - 0 1 3 - 5 5 0 - 10 0 0 - - - - 0 1 9 - 10 0 0 - 20 0 0 - - - - 0 2 0 - 20 0 0 - 30 0 0 - - - - 0 3 0 - 30 0 0 - 50 0 0 - - - - 0 5 0 - 50 0 0 - 100 0 0 - - - - 0 8 6 Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 75 Which notes may be reissued after payment, as often as shall be thought fit, provided they be issued by a banker or person who has taken out a licence, renewable annually, and cost- ing 30/., to issue notes payable to bearer on demand. Any banker or other person issuing such re-issuable notes, without being duly licensed, shall forfeit 100l. for every offence.-(55 Geo. 3. c. 184. s 27.) These conditions do not apply to the Bank of England, the stamp duties on the notes of that establishment being compounded for at the rate of 3,500L per million of its notes in circulation. Notes or bills not payable to bearer on demand, are not re-issuable, under a penalty of 50L (For the stamp duties affecting them, see EXCHANGE.) By the 9 Geo. 4. c. 23., English bankers not in the City of London, or within three miles thereof, are authorised to issue promissory notes, and to draw and issue bills of exchange, on unstamped paper, for any sum of 5L or upwards, expressed to be payable to the bearer on demand, or to order at any period not exceeding 7 days after sight (bills may also be drawn at any period not exceeding 21 days after date), upon obtaining licences, costing 30L, to that effect, provided such bills of exchange be drawn upon bankers in London, Westminster, or Southwark: or provided such bills be drawn by any banker or bankers at the place where he or they shall be licensed to issue unstamped notes and bills, upon himself or themselves, or his or their copartner or copartners, payable at any other place where such banker or bankers shall be licensed to issue such notes and bills. Bankers having such licences, are to give security by bond, that they will keep a true account of all promissory notes and bills so issued, and account for the duties on them at the rate of 3s. 6d. for every 100/., and also for the fractional parts of 100L of the average value of such notes and bills in circulation. Per- sons post-dating unstamped notes or bills shall, for every such offence, forfeit 100L (5.) Legal Effect of the Payment of Bank Notes.Notes of the Bank of England were not, previously to the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 98., like bills of exchange, mere securities, or documents of debt, but were treated as money or cash in the ordinary course or trans- actions of business; the receipts given upon their payment being always given as for money. Now, however, they are legal tender, every where except at the Bank, for all sums above 5L All notes payable to bearer are assignable by delivery. The holder of a bank note is prima facie entitled to prompt payment of it, and cannot be affected by the previous fraud of any former holder in obtaining it, unless evidence be given to show that he was privy to such fraud. Such privity may, however, be inferred from the circumstances of the case. To use the words of Lord Tenterden, If a person take a bill, note, or any other kind of secu- rity, under circumstances which ought to excite suspicion in the mind of any reasonable man acquainted with the ordinary affairs of life, and which ought to put him on his guard to make the necessary inquiries, and he do not, then he loses the right of maintaining possession of the instrument against the lawful Guildhall, 25th October, 1826.) Country bank notes are usually received as cash. But though taken as such, if they be presented in due time and not paid, they do not amount to a payment, and the deliverer of the notes is still liable to the holder. It is not easy to determine what is a due or reasonable time, inasmuch as it must depend in a great measure on the circumstances of each particular case. On the whole, the safest rule seems to be to present all notes or drafts payable on de- mand, if received in the place where they are payable, on the day on which they are received, or as soon after as possible. When they have to be transmitted by post for payment, no un- necessary delay should be allowed to intervene.-Chifty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. p. 590., and the art. " Check" in this Dictionary.) II. BANK OF ENGLAND (Account OF). (1.) Historical Sketch of the Bank.-This great establishment, which has long been the principal bank of deposit and circulation, not in thiscountry only, but in Europe, was founded in 1694. Its principal projector was Mr. William Paterson, an enterprising and intelligent Scotch gentleman, who was afterwards engaged in the ill-fated colony at Darien. Govern- ment being at the time much distressed for want of money, partly from the defects and abuses in the system of taxation, and partly from the difficulty of borrowing, because of the supposed instability of the revolutionary establishment, the Bank grew out of a loan of 1,200,000L for the public service. The subscribers, besides receiving eight per cent. on the sum advanced as interest, and 4,000L a year as the expense of management, in all 100,000L a year, were incorporated into a society denominated the Governor and Company of the Bank of England. The charter is dated the 27th of July, 1694. It declares, amongst other things, that they shall be capable in law, to purchase, enjoy, and retain to them and their suc- cessors, any manors, lands, rents, tenements, and possessions whatsoever; and to purchase and acquire all sorts of goods and chattels whatsoever, wherein they are not restrained by act of parliament; and also to grant, demise, and dispose of the same. That the management and government of the corporation be committed to the go- vernor, deputy governor, and twenty-four directors, who shall be elected between the 25th Digitized by Google 76 BANK OF ENGLAND. day of March and 25th day of April, each year, from among the members of the Company duly qualified. That no dividend shall at any time be made by the said Governor and Company, save only out of the interest, profit, or produce arising by or out of the said capital stock or fund, or by such dealing as is allowed by act of parliament. They must be natural born subjects of England, or naturalised subjects; they shall have in their own name and for their own use, severally, viz-the governor, at least 4,000L, the deputy governor 3,000l., and each director 2,000l. of the capital stock of the said corpo- ration. That thirteen or more of the said governors and directors (of which the governor or de- puty governor must be always one) shall constitute a court of directors, for the management of the affairs of the Company, and for the appointment of all agents and servants, which may be necessary, paying them such salaries as they may consider reasonable. " Every elector must have, in his own name and for his own use, 5001. or more capital stock, and can only give one vote. He must, if required by any member present, take the oath of stock; or the declaration of stock, in case he be one of the people called Quakers. " Four general courts to be held in every year; in the months of September, December, April, and July. A general court may be summoned at any time, upon the requisition of nine proprietors, duly qualified as electors. " The majority of electors in general courts have the power to make and constitute by-laws and ordinances for the government of the corporation, provided that such by-laws and ordi- nances be not repugnant to the laws of the kingdom, and be confirmed and approved, accord- ing to the statutes in such case made and provided." The corporation is prohibited from engaging in any sort of commercial undertaking other than dealing in bills of exchange, and in gold and silver. It is authorised to advance money upon the security of goods or merchandise pledged to it ; and to sell, by public auction, such goods as are not redeemed within a specified time. It was also enacted, in the same year in which the Bank was established, by statute 6 William and Mary, c. 20., that the Bank " shall not deal in any goods, wares, or merchan- dise (except bullion), or purchase any lands or revenues belonging to the crown, or advance or lend to their Majesties, their heirs or successors, any sum or sums of money by way of loan or anticipation, or any part or parts, branch or branches, fund or funds of the revenue, now granted or belonging, or hereafter to be granted to their Majesties, their heirs and suc- cessors, other than such fund or funds, part or parts, branch or branches of the said revenue only, on which a credit of loan is or shall be granted by parliament." And in 1697 it was enacted, that the common capital and principal stock, and also the real fund of the Gover- nor and Company, or any profit or produce to be made thereof, or arising thereby, shall be exempted from any rates, taxes, assessments, or impositions whatsoever, during the conti- nuance of the Bank; and that all the profit, benefit, and advantage, from time to time arising out of the management of the said corporation, shall be applied to the uses of all the mem- bers of the said corporation of the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, rate- ably, and in proportion to each member's part, share, and interest in the common capital and principal stock of the said Governor and Company hereby established." It was further enacted, in 1697, that the forgery of the Company's seal, or of any sealed bill or Bank note, should be felony without benefit of clergy, and that the making of any alteration or erasure in any bill or note should also be felony. In 1696, during the great recoinage, the Bank was involved in considerable difficulties, and was even compelled to suspend payment of her notes, which were at a heavy discount. Owing, however, to the judicious conduct of the directors, and the assistance of government, the Bank got over the crisis. But it was at the same time judged expedient, in order to place her in a situation the better to withstand any adverse circumstances that might after- wards occur, to increase her capital from 1,200,000/. to 2,201,1714 In 1708, the directors undertook to pay off and cancel one million and a half of Exchequer bills they had circu- lated two years before, at 4d per cent., with the interest on them, amounting in all to 1,775,028L which increased the permanent debt due by the public to the Bank, including 400,000L then advanced in consideration of the renewal of the charter, to 3,375,028L, for which they were allowed 6 per cent. The Bank capital, was then also doubled or increased to 4,402,3431. But the year 1708 is chiefly memorable, in the history of the Bank, for the act that was then passed, which declared, that during the continuance of the corporation of the Bank of England, " it should not be lawful for any body politic, erected or to be erected, other than the said Governor and Company of the Bank of England, or for any other per- sons whatsoever, united or to be united in covenants or partnership, exceeding the number of 6 persons, in that part of Great Britain called England, to borrow, owe, or take up any sum or sums of money on their bills or notes payable on demand, or in any less time than 6 months from the borrowing thereof."-This proviso, which has had so powerful an operation on banking in England, is said to have been elicited by the Mine-adventure Company hav- ing commenced banking business, and begun to issue notes. Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND 77 It has been pretty generally imagined, from the private banking companies in the metro- polis not issuing notes, that they were legally incapacitated from doing so. But the clause in the act of 1708, which has been the only restriction on the issue of notes, applied gene- rally to all England, and had no peculiar reference to London. The fact that banks with 6 or fewer partners have not issued notes in the metropolis, as well as in the provinces, is, therefore, ascribable either to their being aware that their notes would obtain no considerable circulation concurrently with those of a great association like the bank of England, or from their believing that their issue would not be profitable. The charter of the Bank of England, when first granted, was to continue for eleven years certain, or till a year's notice after the 1st of August, 1705. The charter was further pro- longed in 1697. In 1708, the Bank having advanced 400,000/. for the public service, without interest, the exclusive privileges of the corporation were prolonged till 1733. And in consequence of various advances made at different times, the exclusive privileges of the Bank have been continued by successive renewals, till a year's notice, after the first of Au- gust, 1855. under the proviso that they may be cancelled on a year's notice to that effect being given on the 1st of August, 1845. We subjoin An account of the successive Renewals of the Charter, of the Conditions under which these Re- newals were made, and of the Variations in the Amount and Interest of the Permanent Debt due by Government to the Bank, exclusive of the Dead Weight. Date of Conditions under which Renewals were made, and Permanent Debt contracted. Permanent Debt. Renewal. 1694. Charter granted under the act 5 & 6 Will. 3. c. 20., redeemable upon £ S. d. the expiration of 12 months' notice after the 1st of August, 1705, upon payment by the public to the Bank of the demands therein spe- cified. Under this act the Bank advanced to the public 1,200,000L., in consideration of their receiving an annuity of 100,000L. a year, viz: 8 per cent. interest, and 4,000L. for management 1,200,000 0 0 1697. Charter continued by the 8 & 9 Will. 3. c. 20. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1710, on payment, &c. Under this act the Bank took up and added to their stock 1,001, 1711. Exchequer bills and tallies. 1708. Charter continued by 7 Anne, c. 7. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1732, on payment, &c. Under this act the Bank advanced 400,000Z. to government without interest; and delivered up to be cancelled 1,775,0271. 17s. 10d. Exchequer bills, in consideration of their receiving an annuity of 106,501L. 13s., being at the rate of 6 per cent. 2,175,027 17 10 1713. Charter continued by 12 Anne, stat. 1. C. 11. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1742, on payment, &c. In 1716, by the 3 Geo. 1. c. 8., Bank advanced to government, at 5 per cent. - - 2,000,000 0 0 And by the same act, the interest on the Exchequer bills can- 1 celled in 1708 was reduced from 6 to 5 per cent. In 1721, by 8 Geo. 1. C. 21., the South Sea Company were au- thorised to sell 200,000Z. government annuities, and corporations purchasing the same at 26 years' purchase were authorised to add the amount to their capital stock. The Bank purchased the whole of these annuities at 20 years' purchase - 4,000,000 0 0 5 per cent. interest was payable on this sum to Midsummer, 1727, and thereafter, 4 per cent. - 9,375,027 17 10 At different times between 1727 and 1738, both inclusive, the Bank received from the public, on account of permanent debt, 3,275,0271. 17s. 10d., and advanced to it on account of ditto, 3,000,000L. Difference - - - - - 275,027 17 10 Debt due by the public in 1738 - - - - 9,100,000 0 0 1742. Charter continued by 15 Geo. 2. c. 13. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1764, on payment, &c. Under this act the Bank advanced 1,600,000Z. without interest, which being added to the original advance of 1,200,000L. and the 400,000Z. advanced in 1710, bearing interest at 6 per cent., reduced the interest on the whole to 3 per cent. - 1,600,000 0 0 In 1745, under authority of 19 Geo. 2. C. 6., the Bank delivered up to be cancelled 956,000Z. of Exchequer bills, in consideration of an annuity of 39,4721., being at the rate of 3 per cent. - 986,000 0 0 In 1749, the 23 Geo. 2. C. 6. reduced the interest on the 4 per cent. annuities held by the Bank, to 31 per cent. for 7 years from the 5th of December, 1750, and thereafter to 3 per cent. 1764. Charter continued by 4 Geo, 3. c. 25. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1786, on payment, &c. Under this act the Bank paid into the Exchequer 110,000L. free of all charge. 1781. Charter continued by 21 Geo. 3. c. 60. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1812, on payment, &c. Under this act the Bank advanced 3,000,000Z. for the public ser- vice for 3 years at 3 percent. 1800. Charter continued by 40 Geo. 3. c. 28. till 12 months notice after 1st of August, 1833, on payment, &c. Carried forward, 11,686,000 0 0 2 Digitized by Google 78 BANK OF ENGLAND. An Account of the successive Renewals of the Charter, &ce.-continued. Date of Renewal. Conditions under which Renewals were made, and Permanent Debt contracted. Permanent Debt. Brought forward 11,086,000 0 o Under this act the Bank advanced to government 3,000,000L. for 6 years without interest ; but in pursuance of the recommenda- tion of the committee of 1807, the advance was continued with- out interest till 6 months after the signature of a definitive treaty of peace. In 1816, the Bank, under authority of the act 56 Geo. 3. c. 96. advanced at 3 per cent., to be repaid on or before 1st of August 1833. - 3,000,000 0 0 1883. Charter continued by 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 98. till 12 months' notice after 1st of August, 1855, with a proviso that it may be dissolved on 12 14,686,800 0 0 months' notice after 1st of August, 1845, on payment, &c. This act directs that in future the Bank shall deduct 120,000L. a year from their charge on account of the management of the public debt ; and that a fourth part of the debt due by the public to the Bank, or 3,638,2501., be paid off - 3,638,250 0 0 Permanent advance by the Bank to the public, bearing interest at 3 per cent., independent of the advances on account of dead weight - - - - - - 11,048,550 0 0 For further details as to this subject, see the Appendix No. 1. of the Report of 1832 on the Renewal of the Bank Charter, and the acts of parliament referred to in it; see also Jumes Postlethwayt's History of the Revenue, pp. 301-310.; and Fairman on the Funds, 7th ed. pp. 85-88. &c. The capital of the Bank on which dividends are paid, has never exactly coincided with, though it has seldom differed very materially from, the permanent advance by the Bank to the public. We have already seen that it amounted, in 1708, to 4,402,343L Between that year and 1727 it was increased to near 9,000,000L In 1746, it amounted to 10,780,000£ From this period it underwent no change till 1782, when it was increased 8 per cent., or to 11,642,400L It continued stationary at this sum down to 1816, when it was raised to 14,553,000L by an addition of 25 per cent. from the profits of the Bank, under the provi- sions of the act 56 Geo. 3. c. 96. The late act for the renewal of the charter, & 4 Will. 4. c. 98., directs that the sum of 3,638,250L the portion of the debt due to the Bank to be repaid by the public, shall be deducted from the Bank's capital which will, therefore, be in future 10,914,750L-(Report on Bank Charter, Appen. No. 33.) The Bank of England has been frequently affected by panics amongst the holders of its notes. In 1745, the alarm occasioned by the advance of the Highlanders under the Pre- tender as far as Derby, led to a run upon the Bank; and in order to gain time to concert measures for averting the run, the directors adopted the device of paying in shillings and sixpences! But they derived a more effectual relief from the retreat of the Highlanders, and from a resolution agreed to at a meeting of the principal merchants and traders of the city, and very numerously signed, declaring the willingness of the subscribers to receive Bank notes in payment of any sum that might be due to them, and pledging themselves to use their utmost endeavours to make all their payments in the same medium. During the tremendous riots in June, 1780, the Bank incurred considerable danger. Had the mob attacked the establishment at the commencement of the riots, the consequences might have proved fatal. Luckily, however, they delayed their attack till time had been afforded for providing a force sufficient to insure its safety. Since that period a considerable military force is nightly placed in the interior of the Bank, as a protection in any emergency that may occur. In the latter part of 1792 and beginning of 1793, there was, in consequence of a pre- vious over-issue on their part, a general run on most of the private banks; and about one third of these establishments were. forced to stop payment. This led to a considerable demand for coin from the Bank. The year 1797 is, however, the most important epoch in the recent history of the Bank. Owing partly to events connected with the war in which we were then engaged-to loans to the Emperor of Germany-to bills drawn on the treasury at home by the British agents abroad-and partly, and chiefly, perhaps, to the advances most unwillingly made by the Bank to government, which prevented the directors from having a sufficient control over their issues,-the exchanges became unfavourable in 1795, and in that and the following year large sums in specie were drawn from the Bank.* In the latter end of 1796 and So early as December, 1794, the court of directors represented to government their uneasiness on account of the magnitude of the debt due by the government to the Bank, and anxiously requested a repayment of at least a considerable part of what had been advanced. In January, 1795, they re- solved to limit their advances upon treasury bills to 500,0001. and at the same time they informed Mr. Pitt that it was their wish that be would adjust his measures for the year in such a manner as not to depend on any further assistance from them. On the 11th of February, 1796, they resolved, That it, is the opinion of this court, founded upon the experience of the late Imperial loan, that if any further loan or advance of money to the emperor, or to any of the foreign states, should in the present state of affairs take place, it will, in all probability, prove fatal to the Bank of England. The court of directors do, therefore, most earnestly deprecate the adoption of any such measure, and they solemnly protest against.any responsibility for the calamitous consequences that may follow thereupon." But Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 79 beginning of 1797, considerable apprehensions were entertained of invasion, and rumours were propagated of descents having been actually made on the coast. In consequence of the fears that were thus excited, runs were made on the provincial banks in different parts of the country and some of them having failed, the panic became general, and extended itself to London. Demands for cash poured in upon the Bank from all quarters; and on Saturday, the 25th of February, 1797, she had only 1,272,000L of cash and bullion in her coffers, with every prospect of a violent run taking place on the following Monday. In this emergency an order in council was issued on Sunday, the 26th, prohibiting the directors from paying their notes in cash until the sense of parliament had been taken on the subject. And after parliament met, and the measure had been much discussed, it was agreed to conti- nue the restriction till six months after the signature of a definitive treaty of peace. As soon as the order in council prohibiting payments in cash appeared, a meeting of the principal bankers, merchants, traders, &c. of the metropolis, was held at the Mansion-house, when a resolution was agreed to, and very numerously signed, pledging, as had been done in 1745, those present to accept, and to use every means in their power to cause Bank notes to be accepted as cash in all transactions. This resolution tended to allay the apprehensions that the restriction had excited. Parliament being sitting at the time, a committee was immediately appointed to examine into the affairs of the Bank; and their report put to rest whatever doubts might have been entertained with respect to the solvency of the establishment, by showing that at the moment when the order in council appeared, the Bank was possessed of property to the amount of 15,513,690Z., after all claims upon it had been deducted. Much difference of opinion has existed with respect to the policy of the restriction in 1797; but, considering the peculiar circumstances under which it took place, its expediency seems abundantly obvious. The run did not originate in any over-issue of Bank paper but grew entirely out of political causes. So long as the alarms of invasion continued, it was clear that no Bank paper immediately convertible into gold would remain in circula- tion. And as the Bank, though possessed of ample funds, was without the means of in- stantly retiring her notes, she might, but for the interference of government, have been obliged to stop payment; an event which, had it occurred, must have produced consequences in the last degree fatal to the public interests. It had been generally supposed, previously to the passing of the Restriction Act, that Bank notes would not circulate unless they were immediately convertible into cash: but the event showed, conformably to principles that have since been fully explained, that this was not really the case. Though the notes of the Bank of England were not, at the passing of the Restriction Act, publicly declared to be legal tender, they were rendered so in prac- tice, by being received as cash in all transactions on account of government, and of the vast majority of individuals. For the first three years of the restriction, their issues were so moderate, that they not only kept on a par with gold, but actually bore a small premium. In the latter part of 1800, however, their quantity was so much increased that they fell to a discount of about 8 per cent. as compared with gold, but they soon after rose nearly to par and it was not until 1808 that the decline of their value excited any considerable attention. Early in 1810, they were at a discount of about 131 per cent.; and this extraordinary fall having attracted the attention of the legislature, the House of Commons appointed a com- mittee to inquire into the circumstances by which it had been occasioned. The committee examined several witnesses; and in their report, which was drawn up with considerable ability, they justly ascribed the fall to the over-issue of Bank paper, and recommended that the Bank should be obliged to resume cash payments within two years. This recommenda- tion was not, however, acted upon; and the value of Bank paper continued to decline, as compared with gold, till 1814. At the period when the restriction on cash payments took place in 1797, it is supposed that there were about 280 country banks in existence but so rapidly were these establish- ments multiplied, that they amounted to above 900 in 1813. The price of corn, influenced partly by the depreciation of the currency, and the facility with which discounts were ob- tained, but far more by deficient harvests, and the unprecedented difficulties which the war threw in the way of importation, had risen to an extraordinary height during the five years ending with 1813. But the harvest of that year being unusually productive, and the inter- course with the Continent being then also renewed, prices, influenced by both circumstances, sustained a very heavy fall in the latter part of 1813, and the beginning of 1814. And this notwithstanding these, and many other similar remonstrances, fresh advances of money were made to our foreign allies, and fresh demands upon the Bank; the directors reluctantly abandoning their own better judgment to what they truly termed the pressing solicitations" of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and their desire to avert the probable distress which a refusal (on their part) might occasion, in the then alarming situation of public affairs." But notwithstanding the difficulties of the Bank were greatly aggravated by that conduct on the part of government against which the di- rectors had so strongly protested, she could hardly, in any state of her affairs, have got safely over the crisis of 1797. The run upon the Bank that then took place, was occasioned by alarms of inva- sion and it is clear, as remarked in the text, that while they. continued, no paper immediately con- vertible into gold could remain in circulation. Digitized by Google 80 BANK OF ENGLAND. fall having proved ruinous to a considerable number of farmers, and produced a general want of confidence, such a destruction of provincial paper took place as has rarely been paralleled. In 1814, 1815, and 1816, no fewer than 240 country banks stopped payment and eighty-nine commissions of bankruptcy were issued against these establishments, being at the rate of one commission against every ten and a half of the total number of banks existing in 1813. The great reduction that had been thus suddenly and violently brought about in the quantity of country bank paper, by extending the field for the circulation of Bank of England paper, raised its value in 1817 nearly to a par with gold. The return to cash pay- ments being thus facilitated, it was fixed, in 1819, by the act 59 Geo. 3. c. 78. commonly called Mr. Peel's act, that they should take place in 1823. But to prevent any future over- issue, and at the same time to render the measure as little burdensome as possible, it was enacted, in pursuance of a plan suggested by the late Mr. Ricardo, that the Bank should be obliged, during the interval from the passing of the act till the return to specie payments, to pay her notes, if required, in bars of standard bullion of not less than sixty ounces' weight. This plan was not, however, acted upon during the period allowed by law; for, a large amount of gold having been accumulated at the Bank, the directors preferred recommencing specie payments on the 1st of May, 1821.-(See Table IV. for an account of the price of bullion, the depreciation of paper, &c. from 1800 to 1821.) A great diversity of opinion has been entertained with respect to the policy of the return to the old standard, in 1819. By one party it has been represented as a wise and politic measure: they contend that Mr. Peel's Act not only put an end to those fluctuations in the value of money, which had previously been productive of great mischief, and gave effect to the solemn engagements into which the public had entered with the national creditor, but that it did this without adding any thing material to the national burdens. But another, and, perhaps, a more numerous party, take a totally different view of this measure they contend that the public was not really bound to return to cash payments at the old standard at the termination of the war; that the return has very greatly enhanced the value of the currency and that this enhancement, by adding proportionally to the fixed burdens laid on the industrious classes, has been most injurious to their interests. It will, however, be found in this, as in most cases of the sort, that the statements of both parties are exagger- ated; and that if, on the one hand, the measure has not been 80 advantageous as its apo- logists represent, neither, on the other, has it been nearly so injurious as its enemies would have us believe. In discussing this question, it is material to observe that the value of paper, which had been in 1815 and 1816 about 16} per cent. below that of gold, rose in 1817 and 1818, from the causes already mentioned, without any interference whatever on the part of govern- ment, to within little more than 21 per cent. of the value of gold; and that in 1819 the depreciation only amounted to 41 per cent-(See Table IV.) It is, therefore, quite ludi- crous to ascribe to the act of 1819, as is often done, the whole rise that has taken place in the value of the currency since the peace, seeing that the currency had been for three years previously to its enactment from 12h to 14} per cent. above its value in 1815, and from 21 to 23 per cent. above its value in 1814! The main object which the promoters of the act of 1819 had in view, was to sustain the value of the currency at the point to which it had recovered itself, without legislative interference. This, however, could not be done without recurring to specie payments; and the difference of 41 per cent. that obtained in 1819 between the value of gold and paper, was not deemed sufficiently considerable to warrant a departure from the old standard, and from the acts engaging to restore it. But it is alleged, that those who suppose that the act of 1819 added only 41, per cent. to the value of the currency, mistake altogether the effect of the measure. It is admitted, in- deed, that paper was then only 41 per cent. less valuable than gold; but by reverting to specie payments, we made an unexpected purchase of thirty millions of gold and it is affirmed, that this novel and large demand, concurring simultaneously with the contraction of paper in several of the continental states, and with a falling off in the supply of bullion from the mines, had the effect of adding very greatly to the value of gold itself, and conse- quently to that of the currency. It is very difficult, or rather, perhaps, impossible, to deter- mine the precise degree of credit that ought to be attached to this statement but while we incline to think that it is well founded to a certain extent, we see no grounds for believing that it is so to any thing like the extent that has been stated. The gold imported into Great Britain, to enable the Bank to resume specie payments, was not taken from any par- ticular country or district, but was drawn from the market of the world and considering the vast extent of the supply whence it was derived, it is against all reason to suppose that its value could be materially influenced by our purchases. We doubt, too, whether the con- traction of the paper currency of some of the continental states, and the substitution of specie in its stead, was not more than balanced by the cessation of the demand for specie for the military chests of the different armies, by the stoppage of the practice of hoarding, and the greater security consequent to the return of peace. And with respect to the falling off Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 81 in the supplies from the mines, it is not a circumstance, supposing it to have had a consider- able influence, that parliament could take into account. It could neither determine the extent to which bullion had been raised, nor at what point the rise would stop, nor how soon it might again begin to decline. The diminution in the supply of bullion had then conti- nued for too short a period, and its influence on the value of gold was much too uncertain, to make it a ground for interfering in any degree with the standard. The decline in the price of most articles that has taken place since the peace, has been often referred to, as a conclusive proof of the great enhancement in the value of bullion. But the inference is by no means so certain as has been represented. The prices of com- modities are as much affected by changes in the cost of their production, as by changes in the quantity of money afloat. Now, there is hardly one of the great articles of commerce, the cost of which has not been considerably reduced, or which has not been supplied from new sources, within the last few years. The growth of corn, for example, has been vastly extended in France, Prussia, and generally throughout the Continent, by the splitting of large estates, and the complete subversion of the feudal system; and the reduction of its price in this country is, at least, as much owing to the extraordinary increase of imports from Ireland, as to any other cause. The fall in the price of wool is most satisfactorily ac- counted for by the introduction and rapid multiplication of Merino sheep in Germany, where they seem to succeed even better than in Spain; and by the growing imports from New Holland and elsewhere. And a very large portion, if not the whole, of the fall in the price of colonial products, is admitted, on all hands, to be owing to the destruction of the monopoly system, and the vast extension of cultivation in Cuba, Brazil, Louisiana, Deme- rara, &c. Although, therefore, we do not deny that the falling off in the supply of bullion from the mines must have had some influence on prices, we hold it to be the greatest imagi- nable error to ascribe to it the entire fall that has taken place since the peace. Were its effect rated at 10 per cent. we believe it would be very considerably overstated.—(See art. PRECIOUS METALS.) On the whole, therefore, we are disposed to approve of the conduct of those who framed the act of 1819. That it added to the burdens of the industrious classes, and has been in so far hostile to the public interests, it seems impossible to doubt; but it has not done this in any thing like the degree which its enemies represent. The period, too, when it was passed, is now so distant, that the existing engagements amongst individuals have almost all been formed with reference to the altered value of the currency so that whatever injury it may have occasioned in the first instance, must be nearly gone by. To modify or change the standard at this late period, would not be to repair injustice, but to commit it afresh. At the end of the war, the circumstances were considerably different. The standard had been really abandoned for the previous 18 years and, perhaps, we may now say, that it would have been better, all things considered, had the mint price of bullion been raised, in 1815, to the market price. But having surmounted all the difficulties attendant upon the restora- tion of the old standard, and maintained it since 1821, it would be in the last degree impoli- tic to subject it to new alterations. Should the country become, at any future period, unable to make good its engagements, it will better consult its honour and its interest, by fairly compounding with its creditors, than by endeavouring to slip from its engagements by resort- ing to the dishonest expedient of enfeebling the standard. The price of corn, which had been very much depressed in 1821 and 1822, rallied in 1823; and this circumstance contributed, along with others peculiar to that period, to pro- mote an extraordinary rage for speculation. The issues of the country banks being in con- sequence far too much extended, the currency became redundant in the autumn of 1824 and the exchanges having been depressed, a drain for gold began to operate upon the Bank of England. But the directors of the Bank having entered, in the early part of that year, into an engagement with government to pay off such holders of 4 per cent. stock as might dissent from its conversion into a 34 per cent. stock, they were obliged to advance a con- siderable sum on this account after the depression of the exchange. This tended to coun- teract the effect of the drain on the Bank for gold; and, in consequence, the London cur- rency was not very materially diminished till September, 1825. When, however, the continued demand of the public on the Bank for gold had rendered money scarce in the metropolis, the pressure speedily extended to the country. Such of the provincial banks- and they were a numerous class-as had been originally established without sufficient capi- tal, or had conducted their business upon erroneous principles, began to give way the moment they experienced an increased difficulty of obtaining pecuniary accommodations in London. The alarm, once excited, soon became general; and confidence and credit were, for a while, almost wholly suspended. In the short space of 6 weeks, above 70 banking establishments were destroyed, notwithstanding the very large advances made to them by the Bank of England; and the run upon the Bank, for cash to supply the exigencies of the country banks, was so heavy, that she was wellnigh drained of all the coin in her coffers, and obliged, as already remarked, to issue about a million of 1/. and 21. notes. In order to guard against a recurrence of the wide-spread mischief and ruin, produced by 11 Digitized by Google 82 BANK OF ENGLAND. this and the previous bankruptcies of the country banks, it was resolved, in 1826, with con- sent of the Bank of England, to make a change in the law of 1708, limiting the number of partners in banking establishments to 6 only. And it was accordingly enacted, that thence- forth any number of partners might form themselves into associations, to carry on the busi- ness of banking, including the issue of notes, any where not within sixty-five miles of Lon- don. The directors of the Bank of England came, at the same time, to the resolution of establishing branches in some of the principal towns; and, at this moment, branch banks are established in Gloucester, Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Bristol, Exeter, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Hull, Norwich, &c. The branch bank cannot fail of being highly useful; but we believe that the benefit resulting from the formation of joint stock banks will not be nearly so great as has been anticipated.-(See post, BANKS (ENGLISH PROVINCIAL).) So long as every one is allowed to issue notes without any sort of check or control, a thousand devices may be fallen upon to insure a certain circulation to those that are most worthless. At best, this measure is but a feeble palliative of inveterate disorders. It is quite illusory to expect to make any real improvement upon the system of country banking in England, by the mere introduction of a plan for allowing banking establishments with large capitals to be set on foot. There have always been, and are at this moment, a great number of such establishments in England. What is really wanted, is the adoption of a system that will exclude the possibility of notes being discredited, by preventing all individuals or associations from issuing such as have not been previously guaranteed. Besides attempting to lessen the frequency of bankruptcy among the country banks, by repealing the law limiting the number of partners, it was further resolved in 1826, to pro- hibit the future issue of 14 notes. The policy and effects of this measure have given rise to much dispute. It seems clear, that it has gone far to shut up one of the most convenient channels by which the inferior class of country bankers contrived to get their notes into circulation, and must, in so far, do good. But there are many other channels still open to them and to imagine that this measure will place the provincial currency on that solid basis on which it ought to be placed, is quite visionary. There were no notes under 5L in circulation in 1792; and yet fully one third of the country banks then in existence became bankrupt! The truth is, as already stated, that it is not possible to guard against loss and fraud, from the proceedings of the country bankers, otherwise than by compelling them to give security for their issues; and, as security may as easily be given for 14 notes as for those of 5/., the suppression of the former does not appear to have been at all essential. No doubt can, however, be entertained, that the representations as to the extreme injury occa- sioned by the withdrawal of the 11. notes have been very greatly exaggerated ;-though it is at the same time obvious, that the means of the bankers to make advances, as well as the profit derived from making them, must both have been diminished by the suppression of the small notes; and it would be foolish to deny that this circumstance must have occasioned some loss and inconvenience to many individuals. These remarks are meant to apply only to the case of the country banks. The extraor- dinary extent to which the forgery of the 1/. notes of the Bank of England was carried, affords, perhaps, a sufficient vindication of the policy of their suppression. But the com- paratively limited circulation of the country banks, and, perhaps we may add, the greater attention paid to the manner in which their notes were engraved, hindered their forgery from becoming injuriously prevalent. (2.) Cash kept by the Bank. Regulation of her Issues.-Of late, the Bank directors have endeavoured, as a general rule, to have as much coin and bullion in their coffers as may together amount, when the exchange is at par, to a third part of the Bank's liabilities, including deposits as well as issues; so that, in the event of the notes afloat, and the public and private deposits in the coffers of the Bank, amounting to 27,000,000L. or 30,000,000L, they would not consider the establishment in a perfectly satisfactory state, unless she was, generally speaking, possessed of about 9,000,000/. or 10,000,000L of coin and bullion. Such a supply seems to afford every requisite security and now that the notes of the Bank are made legal tender, and that she must be less exposed than formerly to drains during panics, it may, probably, be found to be unnecessarily large. The issues of the Bank are wholly governed, at least in all ordinary cases, by what Mr. Horsley Palmer expressively calls " the action of the public :"-that is, they are increased during a favourable exchange, or when bullion is sent to the Bank to be exchanged for notes, and diminished during an unfavourable exchange, or when notes are sent to the Bank to be paid. If the exchange were so favourable that the Bank was accumulating consider- ably more bullion than was equivalent to the third part of her liabilities, the directors would seem to be justified in adding to the currency by buying a larger amount of government securities, or by increasing their discounts, &c.; and conversely, if the exchange were so unfavourable as to depress the supply of coin and bullion considerably below the average proportion. But the most intelligent directors seem to think that this would be an undue Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 83 interference; and, in all but extraordinary cases, the rule of the Bank is, to allow the public to regulate the currency for itself through the action of the exchange.* It is frequently said that the value of money, and, consequently, that the price of all sorts of property, depends on the fiat of the Bank, by which it is capriciously elevated at one time and depressed at another. But the account now given of the mode in which the issues of the Bank are regulated completely disproves such statements; and independently of this, every one who knows that the Bank must pay her notes in coin when presented, and that coin may be at all times obtained from the Mint, without any charge, in exchange for bullion, must know that the very supposition of their being true involves a contradiction. (3.) Bank of England in its Connection with Government and the Public.-The Bank of England conducts the whole banking business of the British government. " It acts not only," says Dr. Smith, " as an ordinary bank, but as a great engine of state. It receives and pays the greater part of the annuities, which are due to the creditors of the public; it circu- lates Exchequer bills; and it advances to government the annual amount of the land and malt taxes, which are frequently not paid till some years thereafter." (4.) Advances by the Bank in Discounts, &c.-The greater part of the paper of the Bank has generally been issued in the way of advances or loans to government, upon security of certain branches of the revenue, and in the purchase of Exchequer bills and bullion but her issues through the medium of discounts to individuals have, notwithstanding, been at all times considerable, while, during war and in periods of distress, they have been occasionally very great. Generally speaking, however, the directors do not think it advisable to enter into competition with private bankers in the transacting of ordinary banking business, or in the discounting of mercantile paper. Mr. Horsley Palmer is decidedly of opinion, that all banking business, apart from the issue of notes, is better transacted by private bankers than by public bodies.-(Min. of Evidence, p. 37.) He also thinks, that were the bank to come fairly into competition, at all times, with the private bankers and other individuals in dis- counting, it would be very apt to lead, every now and then, to an excess of the currency, and a fall of the exchange, producing fluctuations that could not fail to be most injurious. At present, therefore, and generally since the peace, the rate of interest charged by the Bank for loans has been somewhat above the market rate. The consequence is, that, in ordinary periods, very few applications are made to her for discounts. But, at the same time, every one who has any reasonable security to offer, knows where they may always be had while the rate of interest charged by the Bank necessarily forms a maximum rate which no other establishment can exceed. When, however, any circumstances occur to occasion a pressure in. the money market, or a difficulty of obtaining recommendations in the usual channels, the market rate of interest immediately rises to the rate fixed by the Bank; and on such occasions, the private bankers, and the public generally, resort to the Bank for aid. She then becomes, as it were, a bank of support; and has, as such, on many trying occasions, par- ticularly in 1793, 1815 and 1816, and 1825-26, rendered the most essential service to public credit, and to the commercial interests of the country. The usual limited amount of the Bank's discounts does not, therefore, proceed, as has been absurdly enough stated, from any indisposition on the part of the directors to render every assistance in their power to the commercial classes, but is, in fact, the effect of such disposition. They consider, and we believe justly, that, except under peculiar circumstances, the business of discounting and banking is best conducted by private parties; and that, by abstaining from coming into competition with them, they are better able to act as a bank of support-that is, to sustain public and private credit by making extraordinary advances in seasons of distress and diffi- culty. This is not to neglect the interests of the mercantile classes, but to promote them in the best and most efficient manner, even though it should be at the expense of the Bank. No. XIV. of the accounts subjoined to this article shows the average annual amount of commercial paper discounted by the Bank in London, from 1795 down to 1831. But the subjoined account will probably be deemed still more interesting, from its exhibiting in detail the variations in the discounts by the Bank during the 17 years ending with 1831. The sudden increase and immense amount of the discounts, in the last quarter of 1825 and the first quarter of 1826, show the vast importance of the assistance then rendered by the Bank to the trading interests. Had this assistance been withheld, or the Bank not been in a situa- tion to render it, it is not easy to estimate the consequences. The annual average loss by bad debts on the discounts of the Bank of England in Lon- don, from 1791 to 1831; both inclusive, has been 31,698/.-(Appen. to Rep. on Bank Charter, No. 60.) Mr. Horsley Palmer's evidence before the late committee of the House of Commons on the Bank charter contains by far the best exposition ever given to the public, of the mode in which the business of the Bank of England is conducted. It is also highly deserving of attention, from its general ability, and the strong and steady light which it throws on the principles of banking and currency. Digitized by Google 84 BANK OF ENGLAND. Account of the Average Amount of Bills and Notes discounted by the Bank of England, in each Quarter of each of the Seventeen Years ending with 1831.-(Appen. to Rep. on Bank Charter, No. 56.) Years. 1st Quarter, ending 2d Quarter, ending 3d Quarter, ending 4th Quarter, ending 31st of March. 30th of June. 30th of September. 31st of December, & £ £ £ 1815 13,611,500 13,846,500 16,613,200 15,717,300 1816 14,315,900 13,380,400 10,569,400 7,399,800 1817 5,823,500 4,148,300 3,329,300 2,541,200 1818 2,976,900 2,847,800 4,610,400 6,865,700 1819 8,363,700 6,632,300 6,021,600 5,042,200 1820 4,810,700 3,605,500 3,987,600 3,130,700 1821 3,238,300 2,715,100 2,294,100 2,459,300 1822 3,137,000 3,216,500 3,388,700 3,724,600 1823 4,107,200 3,252,200 2,801,400 2,334,200 1824 2,226,800 2,553,500 2,449,800 2,248,900 1825 2,466,800 3,973,700 5,486,000 7,839,500 1826 9,586,700 5,037,400 2,950,500 2,164,800 1827 2,198,600 1,226,400 1,107,500 1,239,800 1828 1,298,400 1,165,600 1,170,800 2,157,200 1829 3,952,900 3,283,700 2,611,800 2,152,700 1830 1,860,500 1,414,600 1,275,000 1,930,700 1831 2,549,200 3,240,200 3,422,500 3,771,500 (5.) Advances by the Bank to Government.-These are made on account of the produce of taxes not yet received, and on the security of Exchequer bills, &c. They varied, from 1792 down to 1810, from about 10,000,000/. to about 16,000,000/. During the remainder of the war, and down to 1820, they were a good deal larger; they were, at an average of each of the 7 years ending with that last mentioned, as follows:- £ £ 1814 - - - 30,149,000 1818 - 28,061,000 1815 - - - - 26,494,000 1810 - - - - 24,636,975 1816 - - - - 23,544,000 1820 - - - - 21,915,825 1817 - - - - 27,347,000 But in these are included about 1,000,000Z a year paid to government out of the sums issued on account of the dividends, but not claimed. This can hardly be regarded as an advance by the Bank. In 1819, provision was made for reducing the amount of these advances; and they do not at present, excluding the permanent advance on account of the dead weight, exceed a third of their amount in 1820. They are represented by the Exchequer bills and defi- ciency bills in the hands of the Bank ; and the average amount of these in her possession during the 4 years ending with 1831, was as follows :- £ £ 1828 - 9,367,630 1830 - 8,783,730 1899 - 8,664,020 1831 6,733,960 (Appen. to Rep. on Bank Charter, No. 64.) (6.) Balances of Public Money.-In point of fact, however, a very large part of theso advances has been nominal only, or has been virtually cancelled by the balances of public money in the hands of the Bank. Thus, from 1806 to 1810, both inclusive, the average advances to government amounted to 14,492,970L But the average balance of public money in possession of the Bank during the same period amounted to about 11,000,000.; so that the real advance was equal only to the difference between these two sums, or to about 3,500,000L This statement completely negatives, as Mr. Tooke has justly stated, the sup- position so commonly entertained and reasoned upon as a point beyond doubt, that the Bank was rendered, by the restriction, a mere engine in the hands of government for facilitating its financial operations.-(First Letter to Lord Grenville, p. 64.) The Bank being enabled to employ the greater part of the balances of public money in her hands as capital, they have formed one of the main sources of the profit she has derived from her transactions with the public. This subject was brought very prominently forward in the Second Report of the Committee of the House of Commons on Public Expenditure in 1807. And it was agreed in the same year, that the Bank should, in consideration of the advantages derived from the public balances, continue the loan of 3,000,000/. made to government in 1800 for 6 years, without interest, on the same terms, till 6 months after the signature of a definitive treaty of peace. In 1816, this sum was finally incorporated with the debt due by government to the Bank, at an interest of 3 per cent. In 1818, the public balances had fallen to about 7,000,000/.; and they have been still further reduced, in conse- quence of measures that were then adopted. They amounted, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, to 4,157,570l.-(See Table XII.) A part of the public balances is formed of the dividends payable at the Bank, but un- claimed. The balance arising from this source has sometimes amounted to above 1,000,000Z * These are the averages of the total advances on the 20th of February, and the 26th of August, each year. Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 85 but in 1808 and 1811, arrangements were made by which the balances growing out of this fund have been much reduced. (7.) Management of Public Debt.-Previously to 1786, the Bank received an allowance on this account-that is, for trouble in paying the dividends, superintending the transfer of stock, &c.-of 562/. 10s. a million. In 1786, this allowance was reduced to 450/. a million, the Bank, being, at the same time, entitled to a considerable allowance for her trouble in receiving contributions on loans, lotteries, &c. This, however, though long regarded as a very improvident arrangement on the part of the public, was acquiesced in till 1808, when the allowance on account of management was reduced to 340/. a million on 600,000,000L of the public debt; and to 300l. a million on all that it exceeded that sum, exclusive of some separate allowances for annuities, &c. The impression, however, was still entertained, that the allowances for management should be further reduced and the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 98., for the renewal of the charter, has directed that 120,000/. a year shall be deducted from their amount. During the year ended the 5th of April, 1832, the Bank received 251,461/. for the management of the public debt, and annuities. This item may therefore, be taken for the future at about 130,000Z. a year.*-(Report on Bank Charter, Appen. p. 35.) It should be observed, that the responsibility and expense incurred by the Bank in manag- ing the public debt are very great. The temptation to the commission of fraud in trans- ferring stock from one individual to another, and in the payment of the dividends, is well known; and notwithstanding the skilfully devised system of checks adopted by the Bank for its prevention, she has frequently sustained very great losses by forgery and otherwise. In 1803, the Bank lost, through a fraud committed by one of her principal cashiers, Mr. Astlett, no less than 340,000L and the forgeries of Fauntleroy the banker cost her a still larger sum ! At an average of the 10 years ending with 1831, the Bank lost, through forgeries on the public funds, 40,204/. a year.f-(Report on Bank Charter, Appen. p. 165.) The total sum paid by the public to the Bank on account of the loans raised, Exchequer bills funded, transfer of 31, per cent. stock, &c. from 1793 to 1820, both included, amounted to 426,795/. 1s. 11d.-(Parl. Paper, No. 81. Sess. 1822.) (8.) Dead Weight.-Besides the transactions alluded to, the Bank entered, on the 20th of March, 1823, into an engagement with government with respect to the public pensions and annuities, or, as they have been more commonly termed, the dead weight. At the end of the war, the naval and military pensions, superannuated allowances, &c. amounted to above 5,000,000/. a year. They would, of course, have been gradually lessened and ulti- mately extinguished by the death of the parties. But it was resolved, in 1822, to attempt to spread the burden equally over the whole period of forty-five years, during which it was calculated the annuities would continue to decrease. To effect this purpose, it was supposed that, upon government offering to pay 2,800,000/. a year for 45 years, capitalists would be found who would undertake to pay the entire annuities, according to a graduated scale pre- viously determined upon, making the first year a payment of 4,900,000Z. and gradually decreasing the payments until the forty-fifth and last year, when they were to amount to only 300,000L This supposition was not, however, realised. No capitalists were found willing to enter into such distant engagements. But in 1823 the Bank agreed, on condi- tion of receiving an annuity of 585,740/. for forty-four years, commencing on the 5th of April 1823, to pay, on account of the pensions, &c., at different specified periods, between the years 1823 and 1828, both inclusive, the sum of 13,089,419/.-(4 Geo. 4. c. 22.) See Table VI. for an account of the sums paid by the public to the Bank, for the management of the public debt during the year 1829. t We subjoin an abstract of the principal provisions in the late statute with respect to the forgery of bank notes, powers of attorney, &c. It is enacted, 1 Will. 4. c. 66., that if any person shall forge or alter, or shall offer, utter, dispose of, or put off, knowing the same to be forged or altered, any Exchequer bill or Exchequer debenture, or any endorsement on or assignation of any such bill or debenture, or any East India bond, or indorse- ment upon or assignation of the same, or any note or bill of the Bank of England, or a bank post bill, or any indorsement on or assignment of any bank note, bank bill of exchange, or bank post bill, with intent to defraud any person whatsoever, he shall be guilty of felony, and shall upon conviction suffer death as a felon.-& 3. Persons making false entries in the books of the Bank of England, or other books in which accounts of public stocks or funds are kept, with intent to defraud, shall suffer death as felons.-& 5. By the same act, the forging of any transfer of any share of, or interest in, or dividend upon, any public stock, or of a power of attorney to transfer the same, or to receive dividends thereon, is made capital. If any person, falsely personating the owner of any share, interest, or dividend of any of the public funds, thereby transfer such share, &c., and receive the money due to the lawful owner, he shall upon conviction suffer death as a felon.- 6. And any person endeavouring by such false personation to procure the transfer of any share, in- terest, &c. in the public funds, may, upon conviction, be transported beyond seas for life, or for any term not less than seven years, or be imprisoned for any term not more than four, nor less than two years.-d7. The forgery of the attestation to any power of attorney for the transfer of stock is to be punished by transportation for seven years, or by imprisonment for not more than two and not less than one year.-$8 Clerks or servants of the Bank of England knowingly making out or delivering any dividend war- rant for a greater or less amount than the party in whose behalf such warrant is made out is entitled to, may, upon conviction, be transported beyond seas for the term of seven years, or imprisoned for not more than two nor less than one year.- 9. H Digitized by Google 86 BANK OF ENGLAND. (9.) Rate of Discount.-The Bank discounted private bills at 5 per cent. during nearly the whole period from her establishment till 1824, when the rate was reduced to 4 per cent. In 1825, it was raised to 5 per cent.; but was again reduced to 4 per cent. in 1827, at which it continues. It may well be doubted, however, whether the rate of discount ought not to be more frequently varied, as occasion may require. When the currency happens, from any cause, to become redundant, its contraction, always a matter of some difficulty, is to be effected only by the sale of bullion or public securities by the Bank, or by a diminu- tion of the usual discounts, or all. But were the Bank to throw any considerable amount of public securities upon the market, the circumstance would be apt to excite alarm; and even though it did not, it would be difficult to dispose of them without a heavy loss. Hence, when a reduction is determined upon, it is most commonly effected partly by a contraction of discounts; and it is plain, that such contraction cannot be made except by rejecting altogether some of the bills sent in for discount, or, which is in effect the same thing, by shortening their dates, or by raising the rate of interest, so that fewer may be sent in. Of these methods, the last seems to be in every respect the most expedient. When bills are rejected for no other reason than that the currency may be contracted, the greatest injury is done to individuals, who entertaining no doubt of getting their usual accommoda- tions from the Bank, may have entered into transactions which they are thus deprived of the means of completing. Were the reduction made by raising the rate of interest, it would principally affect those who are best able to bear it ; at the same time that its operation, instead of being, like the rejection of bills, arbitrary and capricious, would be uniform and impartial. It does, therefore, seem that the Bank should never throw out good bills that she may contract her issues; but that when whe has resolved upon such a measure, she should, provided the contraction cannot be made by the sale of bullion and public securities, raise the rate of discount. The Bank could not, however, act in the way now suggested, - until the usury laws were modified; but the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. cap. 98. has exempted all bills not having more than 3 months to run from their operation; and it is to be hoped that this serious inroad on these antiquated, unjust, and impolitic laws may be followed by their total repeal. The dividends on Bank stock, from the establishment of the Company to the present time, have been as follows :- Years. Dividend. Years. Dividend. 1694 8 per cent. Michaelmas - 1732 54 per cent. 1697 9 - Lady-day - - 1747 5 - 1708 1729 } Varied from 9 to Ditto - - - 1753 4} - 51 per cent. Michaelmas - 1764 5 - Lady-day - - 1730 6 - Ditto - - - 1767 51 - Michaelmas - 1730 5f - Ditto - - - 1781 6 - Lady-day - - 1731 6 - Lady-day - - 1788 7 - Michaelmas - 1731 5t - Ditto - - - 1807 10 - Lady-day - - 1732 6 - Ditto 1822 8 - Previously to 1759, the Bank of England issued no notes for less than 20L She began to issue 10L. notes in 1759; 51. notes in 1793 and 1L and 21. notes in March, 1797. The issue of the latter ceased in 1821. (10.) Interest on Deposits.-The Bank of England does not allow, either in London, or at her branches, any interest on deposits; but it would be exceedingly desirable if she could safely make some alteration in this respect. The want of the power readily to invest small sums productively, and, at the same time, with perfect security, tends to weaken the motives to save and accumulate. Nothing has contributed more to diffuse a spirit of economy, and a desire to save, amongst all classes of the population of Scotland, than the readiness with which deposits of small sums are received by banks of undoubted solidity in that part of the country, and the allowance of interest upon them.-(See BANKS (Scorca).) This advan- tage is in some degree, indeed, secured in England by the institution of savings banks. These, however, are but a very inadequate substitute. They are not open to all classes of depositors; and of those to whom they are open, no one can deposit more than 30L in a year, and 150L. in all.-(See BANKS (SAVINGS).) But it is desirable that every facility should be given to safe and profitable investments. " Were the English banks, like the Scotch banks, to receive deposits of 10L and upwards, and allow interest upon them at about 1 per cent. less than the market rate, they would confer an immense advantage upon the community, and open a source of profit to themselves. This is, in fact, a part of the proper business of a bank. A banker is a dealer in capital, an intermediate party between the bor- rower and the lender. He borrows of one party, and lends to another; and the difference between the terms at which he borrows and those at which be lends is the source of his profit. By this means, he draws into active operation those small sums of money which were pre- viously unproductive in the hands of private individuals, and at the same time furnishes accommodation to another class, who have occasion for additional capital to carry on their commercial transactions."-(See Gilbarf's Practical Observations on Banking, p. 52.) Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 87 In further corroboration of what has now been stated, it may be mentioned that it was estimated by a very well-informed witness (Sir J. G. Craig), before the Lords' Committee on Scotch and Irish Banking, in 1826, that the deposits in the Scotch banks, at that period, amounted to about 24,000,000/., of which more than a half consisted of sums from 10% to 200/.! This is a most satisfactory proof of the vast importance of the system. Perhaps it is not going too far to affirm, that but for the receiving of deposits by the banks, and the allowing of interest upon them, not one third of the sums under 2001., and not one half of those above it, would ever have been accumulated.-(See BANKS (Scorch).) We are not, however, able to say whether the Bank of England could offer interest on deposits without having so large a sum forced upon her as might endanger her stability. And it were better that the system should continue as at present, than that any risk of this sort should be incurred. Since 1826, the private deposits in the hands of the Bank have nearly doubled. Their increase is mainly ascribable to the preceding panic, and the loss that was then occasioned by the failure of private banks. The composition paid by the Bank at the rate of 3,500/. per million, as an equivalent for the stamp duty on her notes, amounts, at an average, to about 70,000/. a year. (11.) Method of conducting Business at the Bank.-All accounts kept at the Bank with individuals are termed drawing accounts; those with whom they are opened being entitled / to draw checks upon them, and to send the bills and drafts in their favour to be presented by the Bank, exactly as if they dealt with private bankers. There is no fixed sum with which an individual must open a drawing account; nor is there any fixed sum which the Bank requires him to keep at his credit to indemnify them for their trouble in answering his drafts, &c. Mr. Horsley Palmer gave in his evidence the following statement as to the facilities granted by the Bank in drawing accounts since 1825 1. The Bank receive dividends by power ofattorney forall persons having drawing accounts at theBank. 2. Dividend warrants are received at the Drawing-office, for ditto. 3. Exchequer bills and other securities are received for ditto; the bills exchanged, the interest re- ceived, and the amount carried to their respective accounts. 4. Checks may be drawn for 51. and upwards, instead of 10L. as heretofore. 5. Cash boxes taken in, contents unknown, for such parties as keep accounts at the Bank. 6. Bank notes are paid at the counter, instead of drawing tickets for them on the pay clerks as heretofore. 7. Checks on city bankers paid in by three o'clock may be drawn for between four and five; and those paid in before four will be received and passed to account the same evening. 8. Checks paid in after four are sent out at nine o'clock the following morning, received and passed to account, and may be drawn for as soon as received. 9. Dividend warrants taken in at the Drawing-office until five in the afternoon, instead of three as heretofore. 10. Credits paid into account are received without the Bank book, and are afterwards entered therein without the party claiming them. 11. Bills of exchange accepted payable at the Bank are paid with or without advice; heretofore with advice only. 12. Notes of country bankers payable in London are sent out the same day for payment. 13. Checks are given out in books, and not in sheets as heretofore. A person having a drawing account may have a discount account; but no person can have the latter without, at the same time, having the former. When a discount account is opened, the signatures of the parties are entered in a book kept for the purpose, and powers of attorney are granted, empowering the persons named in them to act for their principals. No bill of exchange drawn in the country is discounted by the Bank in London under 201., nor London note under 100l., nor for a longer date, under existing regulations, than three months. The number of holidays formerly kept at the Bank has recently been reduced about a half, in the view, as stated by the directors, of preventing the interruption of business. There are no holidays in the months of March, June, September, and December, excepting Christ- mas; Easter Monday and Tuesday are no longer kept. We subjoin an account of the days for transferring stock, and when the dividends are due at the Bank, the South Sea House, and the East India House :- Transfer Days at the Bank. Dividends Dividends due. due. Bank Stock.-Tues. Thurs. and Frid. Annuit. for Terms of Years, ending' April 5. 3 per Cent. Red.-Tues. Wed. Thurs. April 5. 10th of Oct. 1859, pursuant to 10 Geo. Oct. 10. and Frid. Oct. 10. 4.-Tues. Thurs. and Sat. 31 per Cent. 1818.-Tues. Thurs and Frid. Annuit. for Terms of Years, ending 5th Jan. 5. 3 per Cent. 1726.-Tues. and Thurs. Jan. 5. of Jan. 1860, pursuant to 10 Geo. 4.- July 5. 3 per Cent. Cons.-Tues. Wed. Thurs. Tues. Thurs. and Sat. and Frid. July 5. Life Annuit., if transferred between Jan. 5. 31 per Cent. Red.-Tues. Wed. Thurs. Jan. 5. and April 4., or between July 5. July 5. and Frid. April 5. and Oct. 9. Long Annuit. to Jan. 1860.-Mond. Oct. 10. Life Annuit., if transferred between April 5. Wed. and Sat. April 5. and July 4., or between Oct. Oct. 10. 4 per Cent. 1826.-Mond. Wed. and April 5. 10. and Jan. 4. Frid. Oct. 10. At the South Sea House. New 3t per Cent. Annuit.-Tues. Wed. Jan. 5. Thurs. and Frid. Jan. 5. 31 per Cents.-Mond. Wed. and Frid. July 5. New 5 per Cent. Annuit.-Tues. Wed. July 5. 3 per Cent. Old Annuit.-Mond. Wed. April 5. and Frid. and Frid. Oct. 10. Digitized by Google 88 BANK OF ENGLAND. Transfer Days at the South Sea House. Dividends At the East India House. Dividends due. des. 3 per Cent. New Annuit.-Tues. Thurs. and Sat. Jan. 5. India Stock.-Tues. Thurs. and Bat. Jan. 3 per Cent. 1751.-Tues. and Thurs. July 5. July. Interest on India Bonds, due Mar. 31. Sept. 30. Tickets for preparing transfer of stock must be given in at each office before one o'clock at the East India house before two o'clock. Private transfers may be made at other times than as above, the books not being shut, by paying, at the Bank and India House, 2s. 6d. extra for each transfer ; at the South Sea House, 3s. 6d. Transfer at the Bank must be made by half-past two o'clock at the India House, by three : at the South Sea House by two on Saturday, by one. Expense of transfer in Bank Stock, for 251. and under, 9s. ; above that sum, 12s. India Stock, for 10%. - 11. 10s. - II. 14s. South Sea Stock, If under 1001. - 9a. 6d. - - 12s. Powers of attorney for the sale or transfer of stock to be left at the Bank, &c. for examination, one day before they can be acted upon if for receiving dividends, present them at the time the first divi- dend is payable. The expense of a power of attorney is 11. Is. 6d. for each stock ; but for Bank, India, and South Sea stock, 11. 11s. 6d. If wanted for the same day, half past twelve o'clock is the latest time for receiving orders. The boxes for receiving powers of attorney for sale close at two. Probates of wills, letters of administration, and other proofs of decease, must be left at the Bank, &c. for registration, from two OF three clear days, exclusive of holidays. Stock cannot be added to any account (whether single or joint) in which the decease of the indi- vidual, or one or more of a joint party, has taken place ; and the decease to be proved as soon as practicable. Powers of attorney, in case of the death of a party or parties granting it, become void. The unaltered possession of 5001. or upwards Bank Stock, for six months clear, gives the proprietor a vote. (12.) Branch Banks of the Bank of England-The Bank of England, as already observed, has within these few years established branch banks at several of the most con- siderable towns throughout the country. The mode and terms of conducting business at these establishments have been described as follows:- :- " The branch bank (of Swansea, and the same is true of those established in other places) is to be a secure place of deposit for persons having occasion to make use of a bank for that purpose; such persons are said to have drawing accounts: to facilitate to the mercantile and trading classes the obtaining discounts of good and unexceptionable bills, founded upon real transactions, two approved names being required upon every bill or note discounted; these are called discount accounts. The application of parties who desire to open discount accounts at the branch are forwarded every Saturday to the parent establishment for ap- proval, and an answer is generally received in about ten days. When approved, good bills may be discounted at the branch without reference to London. Bills payable at Swansea, London, or any other place where a branch is established, are discounted under this regula- tion. The dividends on any of the public funds, which are payable at the Bank of Eng- land, may be received at the branch, by persons who have opened drawing accounts,' after signing powers of attorney for that purpose, which the branch will procure from London. No charge is made in this case, except the expense of the power of attorney and the postages. Purchases and sales of every description of government securities are effected by the branch at a charge of t per cent., which includes brokerage in London, and all expenses of post- age, &c. A charge of t per cent. is also made on paying at the Bank of England, bills accepted by persons having drawing accounts at Swansea, such bills to be advised by the branch; also for granting letters of credit on London, or on the other branches. The branch grants bills on London, payable at 21 days' date, without acceptance, for sums of 101. and upwards. Persons having drawing accounts at Swansea may order money to be paid at the Bank in London to their credit at this place, and vice verså, without expense. The branch may be called upon to change any notes issued and dated at Swansea but they do not change the notes of the Bank in London, nor receive them in payment, unless as a mat- ter of courtesy where the parties are known. Bank post bills, which are accepted and due, are received at the branch from parties having drawing accounts, and taken to account with- out any charge for postage; but unaccepted Bank post bills, which must be sent to London, are subject to the charge of postage, and taken to account when due. No interest is allowed on deposits. No advance is made by the branch upon any description of landed or other property, nor is any account allowed to be overdrawn. The notes are the same as those issued by the parent establishment, except being dated Swansea, and made payable there and in London. No note issued exceeds the sum of 500L and none are for a less amount than 51." (13.) Act for the Renewal of the Charter.-We subjoin a full abstract of the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 98., continuing the charter, and regulating the exclusive privileges of the Bank of England. The first section, after referring to the acts 30 & 40 Geo. 3. c. 28., and the 7 Geo. 4. c. 46., goes on to declare that it is expedient that certain exclusive privileges of banking be continued to the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, for the period, and upon the terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned.-> 1. No Banking Company of more than 6 Persons to issue Notes payable on Demand within London, or 65 Miles thereof.-That during the continuance of the said privilege, no body politic or corporate, and no society or company, or persons united or to be united in covenants or partnerships, exceeding 6 persons, shall make or issue in London, or within 65 miles thereof, any bill of exchange or promissory Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 89 note, or engagement for the payment of money on demand, or upon which any person holding the same may obtain payment on demand provided always, that nothing herein or in the said act of the 7 Geo. 4. c. 46. contained shall be construed to prevent any body politic or corporate, or any society or company, or incorporated company or corporation, or co-partnership, carrying on and transacting bank- ing business at any greater distance than 65 miles from London, and not having any house of busi- ness or establishment as bankers in London, or within 65 miles thereof, (except as hereinafter men- tioned,) to make and issue their bills and notes, payable on demand or otherwise, at the place at which the same shall be issued, being more than 65 miles from London, and also in London, and to have an agent or agents in London, or at any other place at which such bills or notes shall be made payable, for the purpose of payment only, but no such bill or note shall be for any sum less than 51., or be re-issued in London, or within 65 miles thereof.-d 2. Companies or Partnerships may curry on Banking in London, or within 65 Miles thereof.-And whereas the intention of this act is, that the Bank of England should, during the period stated in this act (sub- ject nevertheless to such redemption as is described in this act), continue to hold and enjoy all the exclusive privileges of banking given by the act 39 & 40 Geo. 3. c. 28. as regulated by the act 7 Geo. 4. C. 46. or any prior or subsequent act or acts of parliament, but no other or further exclusive privilege of banking and whereas doubts have arisen as to the construction of the said acts, and as to the ex- tent of such exclusive privilege and it is expedient that all such doubts should be removed, be it therefore declared and enacted, that any body politic or corporate, or society, or company, or partner- ship, although consisting of more than 6 persons, may carry on the trade or business of banking in London, or within 65 miles thereof, provided that such body politic or corporate, or society, or com- pany, or partnership, do not borrow, owe, or take up in England any sum or sums of money on their bills or notes payable on demand, or at any less time than 6 months from the borrowing thereof, during the continuance of the privileges granted by this act to the said Governor and Company of the Bank of England.-> 3. All Bank of England Notes payable on Demand issued out of London puyable at the Place where issued, &c.-From and after the 1st of August, 1834, all promissory notes payable on demand of the Governor and Company of the Bank of England issued at any place in England out of London, where the trade and business of banking shall be carried on for and on behalf of the said Governor and Company, shall be made payable at the place where such promissory notes shall be issued and it shall not be lawful for the said Governor and Company, or any committee, agent, cashier, officer, or servant of the same, to issue at any place out of London, any promissory note payable on demand not made payable at the place where the same shall be issued, any thing in the said act 7 Geo. 4. c. 46. to the contrary notwithstanding.- 4. Exclusive Privileges to end upon One Year's Notice at the end of 10 Years after August, 1834.-Upon one year's notice given within 6 months after the expiration of 10 years from the 1st of August, 1834, and upon repayment by parliament to the said Governor and Company, or their successors, of all prin- cipal money, interest, or annuities which may be due from the public to the said Governor and Com- pany at the time of the expiration of such notice, as is hereinafter stipulated and provided in the event of such notice being deferred until after the 1st of August, 1855, the exclusive privileges of bank- ing granted by this act shall cease and determine at the expiration of such year's notice; and any vote or resolution of the House of Commons, signified by the Speaker of the said house in writing, and delivered at the public office of the said Governor and Company, or their successors, shall be deemed and adjudged to be a sufficient notice.- δ. Bank Notes to be a legal Tender, except at the Bank and Branch Banks.-From and after the 1st of Au- gust, 1834, unless and until parliament shall otherwise direct, a tender of a note or notes of the Go- vernor and Company of the Bank of England, expressed to be payable to bearer on demand, shall be a legal tender, to the amount expressed in such note or notes, and shall be taken to be valid as a ten- der to such amount for all sums above 51. on all occasions on which any tender of money may be legally made, so long as the Bank of England shall continue to pay on demand their said notes in legal coin; provided always, that no such note or notes shall be deemed a legal tender of payment by the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, or any branch bank of the said Governor and Com- pany but the said Governor and Company are not to become liable or be required to pay and satisfy at any branch bank of the said Governor and Company, any note or notes of the said Governor and Company, not made specially payable at such branch bank; but the said Governor and Company shall be liable to pay and satisfy at the Bank of England in London all notes of the said Governor and Company, or of any branch thereof.-d 6. Bills not huving more than 3 Months to run, not subject to Usury Laws.-No bill of exchange or pro- missory note made payable at or within 3 months after the date thereof, or not having more than 3 months to run, shall, by reason of any interest taken thereon or secured thereby, or any agreement to pay or receive or allow interest in discounting, negotiating or transferring the same, be void, nor shall the liability of any party to any bill of exchange or promissory note be affected by reason of any statute or law in force for the prevention of usury; nor shall any person or persons drawing, accept- ing, indorsing, or signing any such bill or note, or lending or advancing any money, or taking more than the present rate of legal interest in Great Britain and Ireland respectively for the loan of money on any such bill or note, be subject to any penalties under any statute or law relating to usury, or any other penalty or forfeiture any thing in any law or statute relating to usury in any part of the United Kingdom to the contrary notwithstanding.- 7. Accounts of Bullion and of Notes in Circulation to be sent weekly to the Chancellor of the Exchequer.- An account of the amount of bullion and securities in the Bank of England belonging to the said Governor and Company, and of notes in circulation, and of deposits in the said bank, shall be trans- mitted weekly to the Chancellor of the Exchequer for the time being, and such accounts shall be con- solidated at the end of every month, and an average state of the Bank accounts of the preceding 3 months, made from such consolidated accounts as aforesaid, shall be published every month in the next succeeding London Gazette.- 8. Public to pay the Bank 1 Part of 14,686,8001.-One fourth part of the debt of 14,686,800L., now due from the public to the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, shall, and may be repaid to the said Governor and Company.-& 9. Capital Stock of the Bank may be reduced.-A general court of proprietors of the said Governor and Company of the Bank of England shall be held some time between the passing of this act and the 5th of October, 1834, to determine upon the propriety of dividing and appropriating the sum of 3,638,2501. out of or by means of the sum to be repaid to the said Governor and Company as before mentioned, or out of or by means of the fund to be provided for that purpose amongst the several persons, bodies politic or corporate, who may be proprietors of the capital stock of the said Governor and Company on the said 5th of October, 1834, and upon the manner and the time for making such division and ap- propriation, not inconsistent with the provisions for that purpose herein contained and in case such general court, or any adjourned general court, shall determine that it will be proper to make such di- vision, then, but not otherwise, the capital stock of the said Governor and Company shall be, and the same is hereby declared to be reduced from the sum of 14,553,000L., of which the same now consists, to the sum of 10,914,750L., making a reduction or difference of 3,638,2501. capital stock, and such re- duction shall take place from and after the 5th of October, 1834; and thereupon, out of or by means H 2 12 Digitized by Google 90 BANK OF ENGLAND. of the sum to be repaid to the said Governor and Company as herein-before mentioned, or out of or by means of the fund to be provided for that purpose, the sum of 3,638,2501. sterling, or such proportion of the said fund as shall represent the same, shall be appropriated and divided amongst the several persons, bodies politic or corporate, who may be proprietors of the said sum of 14,553,000L. Bank stock on the said 5th of October, 1834, at the rate of 251. sterling for every 100L. of Bank stock which such persons, bodies politic and corporate, may then be proprietors of, or shall have standing in their respective names in the books kept by the said Governor and Company for the entry and transfer of such stock, and 80 in proportion for a greater or lesser sum.- 10. Governor, Deputy, or Directors not to be disqualified by Reduction of their Share of the Capital Stock- The reduction of the share of each proprietor in the capital stock of the said Governor and Company of the Bank of England, by the repayment of such 1/8 part thereof, shall not disqualify the present go- vernor, deputy governor, or directors, or any or either of them, or any governor, deputy governor, or director who may be chosen in the room of the present governor, deputy governor, or directors at any time before the general court of the said Governor and Company to be held between the 25th of March and the 25th of April, 1835: provided that at the said general court, and from and after the same, no governor, deputy governor, or director of the said corporation shall be capable of being chosen such governor, deputy governor, or director, or shall continue in his or their respective offices, unless he or they respectively shall at the time of such choice have, and during such his respective office continue to have, in his and their respective name, in his and their own right, and for his and their own use, the respective sums or shares of and in the capital stock of the said corporation in and by the charter of the said Governor and Company prescribed as the qualification of governor, deputy governor, and directors respectively.- 11. Proprietors not to be disqualified.-Provided also, and be it enacted, that no proprietor shall be dis- qualified from attending and voting at any general court of the said Governor and Company to be held between the said 5th of October, 1834, and the 25th of April, 1835, in consequence of the share of such proprietor of the capital stock of the said Governor and Company having been reduced by such repayment as aforesaid below the sum of 500L. of the said capital stock; provided such proprietor had in his own name the full sum of 5001. of the said capital stock on the said 5th of October, 1834; nor shall any proprietor be required, between the said 5th of October, 1834, and the 25th of April, 1835, to take the oath of qualification in the said charter.- 12. Bank to deduct 120,000/. from Sum allowed for Management of National Debt.-From and after the 1st of August, 1834, the said Governor and Company, in consideration of the privileges of exclusive banking given by this act, shall, during the continuance of such privileges, but no longer, deduct from the sums now payable to them, for the charges of management of the public unredeemed debt, the annual sum of 120,000/., any thing in any act or acts of parliament or agreement to the contrary not- withstanding: provided always, that such deduction shall in no respect prejudice or affect the right of the said Governor and Company to be paid for the management of the public debt at the rate and according to the terms provided by the act 48 Geo. 3. c. 4., intituled An act to authorise the advanc- ing for the public Service, upon certain Conditions, a Proportion of the Balance remaining in the Bank of England for Payment of unclaimed Dividends, Annuities, and Lottery Prizes, and for regu- lating the Allowances to be made for the management of the National Debt. 13. Provisions of Act of 39 & 40 Geo. 3. to remain in force, except as altered by this Act.-All the powers, authorities, franchises, privileges, and advantages given or recognised by the said recited act of the 39 & 40 Geo. 3. c. 28. aforesaid, as belonging to or enjoyed by the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, or by any subsequent act or acts of parliament, shall be and the same are hereby declared to be in full force, and continued by this act, except 80 far as the same are altered by this act, subject nevertheless to such redemption upon the terms and conditions following; (that is to say,) that at any time, upon 12 months' notice to be given after the 1st of August, 1855, and upon repayment by par- liament to the said Governor and Company, or their successors, of the sum of 11,015,100Z., being the debt which will remain due from the public to the said Governor and Company after the payment of the 1 of the debt of 14,686,8041. as herein-before provided, without any deduction, discount, or abate- ment whatsoever, and upon payment to the said Governor and Company and their successors of all arrears of the sum of 100,000Z. per annum in the said act of 39 & 40 Geo. 3. aforesaid mentioned, to- gether with the interest of annuities payable upon the said debt or in respect thereof, and also upon repayment of all the principal and interest which shall be owing unto the said Governor and Compa- ny and their successors upon all such tallies, exchequer orders, exchequer bills, or parliamentary funds which the said Governor and Company, or their successors, shall have remaining in their hands or be entitled to at the time of such notice to be given as last aforesaid, then and in such case, and not till then, (unless under the proviso herein-before contained,) the said exclusive privileges of banking granted by this act shall cease and determine at the expiration of such notice of 12 months. - 14. Tables exhibiting a View of the Circulation, Deposits, Profits, Ac. of the Bank of England. No. I.-A return of the Number of Persons convicted of Forgery, or passing forged Notes and Post Bills of the Bank of England, in each Year, from 1791 to 1829, inclusive. Convictions Convictions for having Total Num- Total Num- Years. Capital forged Bank Years. Capital for having ber of Con- ber of con- Convictions. forged Bank Notes in victions each Convictions. victions each Notes in Year. Year. Possession. Possession. 1791-1796 nil. nil. nil. 1813 9 49 58 1797 1 - 1 1814 5 39 44 1798 11 - 11 1815 8 51 59 1799 12 - 12 1816 20 84 104 1800 29 - 29 1817 33 95 128 1801 32 1 33 1818 62 165 227 1802 32 12 44 1819 33 160 193 1803 7 1 8 1820 77 275 352 1804 13 18 21 1821 41 93 134 1805 10 14 24 1822 16 - 16 1806 nil. 9 9 1823 6 - 6 1807 16 24 40 1824 5 - 5 1808 9 23 32 1825 2 - 2 1809 23 29 52 1826 18 4 22 1810 10 16 26 1827 24 - 24 1811 5 19 24 1828 10 - 10 1812 26 26 52 1829 13 1 14 The Bank of England does not possess the means of stating or distinguishing the punishments in- flicted for the said crimes. Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 91 No. П.-А Return of the Number of Persons convicted of Forgery on the Bank of England con- nected with the Public Funds, Bills of Exchange, or otherwise, except Bank Notes, &c., in each Year, from 1791 to 1829, inclusive. Convictions. Convictions. Convictions. Convictions. . 1790 - - 1 1800 - - 1 1810 - - nil. 1820 1791 - - nil. 1801 - - nil. 1811 - - 2 1921 - - nil. 1792 - - 2 1802 - - 1 1812 - - nil. 1822 - - 1 1793 } 1803 - - 1 1813 - - 2 1823 - - mill. 1794 - - nil. 1804 - - 1 1814 - - 1 1824 - - 1 1795 1805 - - 1 1815 - - nil. 1825 1796 - - 2 1806 - - all. 1816 - - 2 1826 1797 - nil. 1807 - - - - 1 1817 - - 3 1827 - nil. 1798 - - 3 1808 - - nil. 1818 1828 1799 - - nil. 1809 - - 1 1819 nil. - - 1829 - - 2 The Bank of England does not possess the means of stating or distinguishing the punishments in- flicted for the said orimes.-(90th of May, 1830.) No. III-Account of the Debts and Assets (exclusive of the Bank Capital) of the Bank of England exhibiting, on the one hand, the Amount of Bank Notes, Post Bills, &c. in Circulation, and of the public and private Deposits in the Hands of the Bank; and, on the other, the Amount of the various public and private Securities, and of the Bullion held by the Bank, on the 31st of August, in each Year, from 1778 to 1831 inclusive.-(From the Appendix, No. of Report on Bank Charter.) 31 August, 1778. & 31 August, 1778. £ Circulation - 6,758,070 Securities s Public 6,540,433 - - 1 Private - 3,087,537 s 9,627,970 Deposits - - 4,715,580 Bullion - - - - - 3,128,420 11,473,650 - - - Rest, 1,282,7401. 12,756,390 31 August, 1779. 31 August, 1779. 7,276,540 Securities s Public - 7,493,649 Circulation - - - 9,849,840 Private - 2,356,191 Deposits - - 5,201,040 Bullion - - - - 3,983,300 12,477,580 - - - Rest, 1,355,560L. 13,833,140 31 August, 1780. 31 August, 1780. Circulation - - 6,341,600 Securities s Public 6,740,514 - 1 Private - 3,605,026 10,345,540 Deposits - - 6,655,800 Bullion - - - - - 4,179,370 12,997,400 - - - Rest, 1,527,5101. 14,524,910 31 August, 1781. . 31 August, 1781. s Public 6,609,457 Circulation - - 6,309,430 Securities - Private 4,501,053 11,110,510 - Deposits - 5,921,630 Bullion - - - - - - 2,862,590 12,231,060 - - - Rest, 1,742,040L. 13,973,100 31 August, 1782. 31 August, 1782. s Public - Securities 8,967,573 Circulation - - 6,759,310 - Private 4,496,217 13,483,790 - Deposits 6,759,450 Bullion - - - - - - - 1,956,550 13,518,760 - - - Rest, 1,921,5801. 15,440,340 30 August, 1783. 30 August, 1783. Public - 9,566,037 Circulation - - 6,307,270 Securities - 1 Private - 4,275,763 13,841,800 Deposits - 6,105,650 Bullion - - - - - 590,080 12,412,920 - - Rest, 2,018,960L. 14,431,880 31 August, 1784. 31 August, 1784. Public 8,435,777 Circulation - 5,592,510 Securities - Private - 4,088,603 12,524,380 Deposits - - 6,267,130 Bullion - - 1,539,830 11,859,640 - - Rest, 2,204,5701. 14,064,210 31 August, 1785. 31 August, 1785. 5 Public - 6,725,891 Circulation - - 6,570,650 Securities - 3,218,679 9,944,570 Private - Deposits - - 6,252,030 Bullion - 5,487,040 12,822,680 - - - Rest, 2,608,9301. 15,431,610 31 August, 1786. 31 August, 1786. S Public - 7,988,241 ? Circulation - - 8,184,330 Securities - 2,390,539 10,378,780 Private - Deposits - 5,867,210 Bullion - - 6,311,050 14,051,570 - - - Rest, 2,638,2601. 16,689,830 Digitized by Google 92 BANK OF ENGLAND. Amount of Notes in Circulation, and Deposits, and Securities held by the Bank-continued. 31 August, 1787. & 31 August, 1787. £ & 9,685,720 Public - Circulation - - Securities Private - 3,787,357 } 8,066,303 - 11,853,660 Deposits - - 5,631,540 Bullion - - - - - 6,293,000 15,317,260 - - - Rest, 2,829,4001. 18,146,660 30 August, 1788. 30 August, 1788. S Public - Circulation - - 10,002,880 Securities 8,840,068 - Private 2,730,252 } 11,570,320 - Deposits - - 5,528,640 Bullion - - - - - 6,899,160 15,531,520 - - - Rest, 2,937,9601. 18,469,480 31 August, 1789. 31 August, 1789. Public - Circulation - - 11,121,800 Securities 9,661,859 - Private - 2,035,901 11,697,760 Deposits - - 6,402,450 Bullion - - - - - 8,645,860 17,524,250 - - - Rest, 2,819,3701. 20,343,620 31 August, 1790. 31 August, 1790. Circulation - - Public - 11,433,340 Securities 10,047,257 - Private 1,956,263 12,003,520 - Deposits - - 6,199,200 Bullion - - - - - & 8,386,330 17,632,540 - - - Rest, 2,757,3101. 20,389,850 31 August, 1791. 31 August, 1791. Circulation - - 11,672,320 Securities s Public - 10,921,300 - 1 Private 12,819,940 - 1,898,640 s Deposits - - 6,437,730 Bullion - - - - - 8,055,510 18,110,050 - - - Rest, 2,765,400Z. 20,875,450 31 August, 1792. 31 August, 1792. Circulation - - 11,006,300 Securities s Public - 10,715,041 - 13,905,910 Private - 3,190,869 Deposits - - 5,526,480 Bullion - - - - 5,357,380 16,532,780 - - - Rest, 2,730,510L. 19,263,290 31 August, 1793. 31 August, 1793. Circulation - - 10,865,050 Securities s Public - 10,381,838 - 1 Private - 4,427,842 } 14,809,680 Deposits - - 6,442,810 Bullion - - - - - 5,322,010 17,307,860 - -1 - Rest, 2,823,8301. 20,131,690 30 August, 1794. 30 August, 1794. Circulation - - 10,286,780 Securities S Public - 8,863,048 - Private - 3,583,412 } 12,446,460 Deposits - - 5,935,710 Bullion - - - - - 6,770,110 16,222,490 - - - Rest, 2,994,080L. 19,216,570 31 August, 1795. 31 August, 1795. Circulation - - 10,862,200 s Public - Securities - 1 Private - 13,250,904 } 3,739,016 16,989,920 Deposits - - 8,154,980 Bullion - - - - 5,136,350 19,017,180 - - - Rest, 3,109,090L. 22,126,270 31 August, 1796. 31 August, 1796. Circulation - - Securities Public - 9,246,790 10,875,347 - Private - 6,150,123 } 17,025,470 Deposits - - 6,656,320 Bullion - - - - - 2,122,950 15,903,110 --- Rest, 3,245,310L. 19,148,420 31 August, 1797. 31 August, 1797. Circulation - - 11,114,120 Securities S Public - 8,765,224 - ~ Private - 9,495,946 } 18,261,170 Deposits - - 7,765,350 Bullion - - - - - 4,089,620 18,879,470 - - - Rest, 3,471,320L. 22,350,790 31 August, 1798. 31 August, 1798. Circulation - - Securities { Private Public - 12,180,610 10,930,038 - 6,419,602 } 17,349,640 - Deposits - - 8,300,720 Bullion - - 6,546,100 20,481,330 - - - Rest, 3,414,410L. 23,895,740 31 August, 1799. 31 August, 1799. Circulation - - 13,389,490 Securities { Private Public 9,452,955 - - 7,477,485 } 16,930,440 Deposits - - 7,642,240 Bullion - - - 7,000,780 21,031,730 - - - Rest, 2,899,4901. 23,931,220 Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 93 Amount of Notes in Circulation, and Deposits, and Securities held by the Bank-continued. 30 August, 1800. £ 30 August, 1800. £ & 15,047,180 Public - Circulation - - Securities 13,586,590 - - Private - 8,551,830 } 22,138,420 Deposits - - 8,335,060 Bullion - - - - - 5,150,450 23,382,240 - - - Rest, 3,906,6301. 27,288,870 31 August, 1801. 31 August, 1801. s Public - Circulation - - 14,556,110 Securities 11,926,873 - Private 10,282,697 } 22,209,570 - Deposits - - 8,133,830 Bullion - - - - - 4,335,260 22,689,940 - - - Rest, 3,854,890% 26,544,830 31 August, 1802. 31 August, 1802. Circulation - - Securities S Public - 17,097,630 13,528,599 - 2 Private - 13,584,761 s 27,113,360 Deposits - - 9,739,140 Bullion - - - - - 3,891,780 26,836,770 - - - Rest, 4,168,370L. 31,005,140 31 August, 1803. 31 August, 1803. Circulation - 5 Public - - 15,983,330 Securities 13,336,179 - Private 13,582,661 26,918,840 - Deposits - - 9,817,240 Bullion - - - - - 3,592,500 25,800,570 - - - Rest, 4,710,770L. 30,511,340 31 August, 1804. 31 August, 1804. Circulation - Securities s Public - 17,153,890 14,993,395 - - 25,826,680 Private - 10,833,285 1 Deposits - - 9,715,530 Bullion - - - - - 5,879,190 26,869,420 - - - Rest, 4,836,4501. 31,705,870 I 31 August, 1805. 31 August, 1805. Circulation - - 16,388,400 Securities s Public - 11,413,266 - 27,772,850 Private - 16,359,584 s Deposits - - 14,048,080 Bullion - - - - - 7,624,500 30,436,480 - - - Rest, 4,960,8701. 35,397,350 31 August, 1806. 31 August, 1806. Circulation - - 21,027,470 Securities s Public - 14,167,772 - Private - 15,305,328 29,473,100 Deposits - - 9,636,330 Bullion - - = - - 6,215,020 30,663,800 - - - Rest, 5,024,3201. 35,688,120 31 August, 1807. 31 August, 1807. Circulation - - 19,678,360 Securities S Public - 13,410,055 - ( Private - 16,526,895 } 29,936,950 Deposits - - 11,789,200 Bullion - - - - - 6,484,350 31,467,560 - - - Rest, 4,953,740L. 36,421,300 31 August, 1808. 31 August, 1808. Circulation - - s Public - Securities 14,956,394 17,111,290 - 1 Private 14,287,696 s 29,244,090 - Deposits - - 13,012,510 Bullion - - - - - 6,015,940 30,123,800 - - - Rest, 5,136,2301. 35,260,030 31 August, 1809. 31 August, 1809. Circulation - - Securities S Public - 19,574,180 - l Private - 15,307,673 } 18,127,597 33,435,270 Deposits - - 12,257,180 Bullion - - . - 3,652,480 31,831,360 - - - Rest, 5,256,390L. 37,087,750 31 August, 1810. 31 August, 1810. Circulation - - Securities 5 Public - 17,198,677 24,793,990 - c Private I 23,775,093 } 40,973,770 Deposits - - 13,617,520 Bullion - - - # - 3,191,850 38,411,510 - - - Rest, 5,754,110L 44,165,620 31 August, 1811. 31 August, 1811. Public - Circulation - - Securities 21,884,248 23,286,850 - ( Private 15,199,032 37,083,280 - Deposits - - 11,075,660 Bullion - - - - - 3,243,300 34,362,510 - - - Rest, 5,964,070L. 40,326,580 31 August, 1812. 31 August, 1812. 23,026,880 Securities s Public - Circulation - - 21,165,190 - - 17,010,930 38,176,120 l Private Deposits - - 11,848,910 Bullion - - - - - 3,099,270 34,875,790 - - - Rest, 6,399,600L. 41,275,390 Digitized by Google 94 BANK OF ENGLAND. Amount of Notes in Circulation, and Deposits, and Securities held by the Bank-continued. 31 August, 1813. £ 31 August, 1813. £ £ 24,828,120 Securities - Public - Circulation - - - Private - 25,591,336 } 14,514,744 40,106,080 Deposits - - 11,159,730 Bullion - - - - - 2,712,270 35,987,850 - - - Rest, 6,830,500L. 42,818,350 31 August, 1814. 31 August, 1814. Circulation - - Securities Public - 28,368,290 : 34,982,485 - Private 48,345,960 - 13,363,475 Deposits - - 14,849,940 Bullion - - - - - 2,097,660 43,218,230 - - - Rest, 7,225,4101. 50,443,640 31 August, 1815. 31 August, 1815. Securities Public - Circulation - - 27,248,670 24,194,086 - Private 20,660,094 44,854,180 - Deposits - - 12,696,000 Bullion - - - - - 3,409,040 39,944,670 - - - Rest, 8,318,550L. 48,263,220 31 August, 1816. 31 August, 1816. Securities Public - Circulation - - 26,758,720 26,097,431 - 2 Private - 11,182,109 37,279,540 Deposits - - 11,856,380 Bullion - - - - - 7,562,780 38,615,100 - - - Rest, 6,227,2201. 44,842,320 so August, 1817. 30 August, 1817. Circulation - - 29,543,780 Securities s Public - 27,098,238 - Private - 5,507,392 32,605,630 Deposits - - 9,084,590 Bullion - - - - - 11,668,260 38,628,370 - - - Rest, 5,645,5301. 44,273,890 ( 31 August, 1818. 31 August, 1818. Circulation - - 26,202,150 Securities s Public - 27,257,012 - Private - 5,113,748 32,370,760 Deposits - - 7,927,730 Bullion - - - - - 6,363,160 34,129,880 - - - Rest, 4,604,040L. 38,733,920 31 August, 1819. 31 August, 1819. Circulation - - 25,252,690 Securities s Public - 25,419,148 - Private - 6,321,402 31,740,550 Deposits - - 6,304,160 Bullion - - - - - 3,595,360 31,556,850 - - - Rest, 3,779,060L. 35,335,910 31 August, 1820. 31 August, 1820. Circulation - - Securities Public 24,299,340 - 19,173,997 - Private - 4,672,123 23,846,190 Deposits - - 4,420,910 Bullion - - - - - 8,211,080 28,720,250 - - - Rest, 3,336,9501. 32,057,200 31 August, 1821. 31 August, 1821. Circulation - - s Public - 2,728,587 } - 20,295,300 Securities 15,752,953 - Private 18,475,540 Deposits - - 5,818,450 Bullion - - - - - 11,283,500 26,113,750 - - - Rest, 3,595,2801. 29,709,130 31 August, 1822. 31 August, 1822. . Circulation - - Securities s Public - 17,464,790 13,668,359 - Private - 3,622,151 } 17,290,510 Deposits - - 6,399,440 Bullion - - - - - 10,097,960 23,864,230 - - - Rest, 3,524,2401. 27,388,470 30 August, 1823. 30 August, 1823. Circulation - - 19,231,240 Securities s Public - 11,842,677 - Private , 5,624,693 17,467,370 Deposits - - 7,827,350 Bullion - - - . - 12,658,240 27,058,590 - - - Rest, 3,007,0201. 30,125,610 31 August, 1824. 31 August, 1824. Circulation - - 20,132,120 Securities Public - 14,649,187 - Private - 6,255,843 20,004,530 Deposits - . 9,679,810 Bullion - - - - - 11,787,430 29,811,930 - - - Rest, 2,880,0301. 32,091,960 31 August, 1825. 31 August, 1825. . . Circulation - - 19,398,840 Securities S Public - 17,414,566 - Private . 7,691,464 25,106,039 Deposits - - 6,410,560 Bullion - - - - - 3,624,390 25,809,400 - - - Rest, 2,930,9561. 28,740,350 Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 95 Amount of Notes in Circulation, and Deposits, and Securities held by the Bank-continued. 31 August, 1826. £ 31 August, 1826. £ £ 21,563,560 Public - Circulation - - Securities 17,713,881 - Private - 7,369,749 25,083,630 Deposits - - 7,199,860 Bullion - - - - - 6,754,230 28,763,420 - - - Rest, 3,074,4402. 31,837,860 31 August, 1927. 31 August, 1827. S Public - Circulation - - 22,747,600 Securities 19,809,595 - Private - 3,389,725 23,199,320 Deposits - - 8,052,090 Bullion - - -, - - 10,463,770 30,799,690 - - - Rest, 2,863,4001. 33,663,090 30 August, 1828. 30 August, 1828. Public - Circulation - - Securities 20,682,776 21,357,510 - Private - 3,229,754 23,905,530 Deposits - - 10,201,280 Bullion - - - - - 10,496,880 31,558,790 - - - Rest, 2,845,0201. 34,404,410 31 August, 1829. 31 August, 1829. Public - Circulation - - 19,547,380 Securities 20,072,440 - 2 Private 4,589,370 24,661,810 - Deposits - - 9,035,070 Bullion - - - - - 6,795,530 28,582,450 - - - Rest, 2,874,8901. 31,457,340 30 August, 1830. 30 August, 1830. s Public - Circulation - - Securities 20,911,616 21,464,700 - Private - 3,654,074 24,565,690 Deposits - - 11,620,840 Bullion - - - - - 11,150,480 33,085,540 - - - Rest, 2,630,630. 35,716,170 31 August, 1831. 31 August, 1831. Circulation - - S Public - Securities 18,056,552 18,538,630 - 23,905,030 Private - 5,848,478 Deposits - - 9,069,310 Bullion - - - - - 6,439,760 27,607,940 - - - Rest, 2,736,8501. 30,344,799 (Account of the Issues, Securities, and Bullion, of the Bank of England, as published in the Gazette, from the Commencement of the Publication to the Present Time; distinguishing Gold from Silver. Bullion. Average in the Quarters ending Circulation. Deposits. Securities. Gold. Silver. £ £ £ £ £ 29 July, 1834 - 19,110,000 15,675,000 28,502,000 8,147,000 451,000 26 August, - - 19,147,000 15,384,000 28,679,000 7,930,000 342,000 23 September - - 19,126,000 14,754,000 28,691,000 7,460,000 235,000 21 October, - - 18,914,000 13,514,000 27,840,000 6,951,000 172,000 18 November, - - 18,694,000 12,669,000 27,138,000 6,589,000 192,000 16 December, - - 18,304,000 12,256,000 26,362,000 6,499,000 221,000 13 January, 1835 - 18,012,000 12,585,000 26,390,000 6,489,000 252,000 10 February, - - 18,099,000 12,535,000 26,482,000 6,431,000 262,000 10 March, - - 18,311,000 12,281,000 26,657,000 6,274,000 262,000 7 April, - - 18,591,000 11,289,000 26,228,000 6,064,000 265,000 5 May, - - 18,542,000 10,726,000 25,764,000 5,928,000 269,000 2 June, - - 18,460,000 10,568,000 25,562,000 5,875,000 275,000 30 June, - - 18,315,000 10,954,000 25,678,000 5,935,000 284,000 28 July, - - 18,322,000 11,561,000 26,244,000 5,995,000 288,000 25 August, - - 18,340,000 12,308,000 26,964,000 6,039,000 287,000 22 September, - - 18,240,000 13,230,000 27,888,000 5,987,000 274,000 20 October, - - 17,930,000 14,227,000 28,661,000 5,918,000 268,000 17 November, - - 17,549,000 16,180,000 30,069,000 5,998,000 307,000 15 December, 17,729,000 31,048,000 6,257,000 369,000 - - 17,321,000 12 January, 1836 - 17,262,000 19,169,000 31,954,000 6,625,000 451,000 9 February, - - 17,427,000 18,366,000 31,022,000 6,957,000 514,000 8 March, - - 17,739,000 16,966,000 29,806,000 7,153,000 548,000 5 April, - - 18,063,000 14,751,000 27,927,000 7,239,000 562,000 3 May, - - 18,154,000 13,747,000 27,042,000 7,214,000 568,000 31 May, - - 18,051,000 13,273,000 26,534,000 7,088,000 575,000 28 June, 17,899,000 13,810,000 27,153,000 6,784,000 578,000 I - 26 July, - - 17,940,000 14,495,000 28,315,000 6,351,000 575,000 23 August, - - 18,061,000 14,796,000 29,345,000 5,766,000 559,000 20 September, - - 18,147,000 14,118,000 29,406,000 5,211,000 508,000 18 October, - - 17,936,000 13,324,000 28,845,000 4,810,000 447,000 15 November, - - 17,543,000 12,682,000 28,134,000 4,558,000 375,000 13 December, - - 17,361,000 13,330,000 28,971,000 4,545,000 Sup.) Digitized by Google 96 BANK OF ENGLAND. No. IV.-An account of the Average Market Price of Bullion in each Year, from 1800 to 1821 (taken from official Documents), of the Average Value per Cent. of the Currency, estimated by the Mar- ket Price of Gold for the same Period, and of the Average Depreciation per Cent. Years. Average Price of Average per Cent of the Value of Average Depre- Years. Average Price of Average per Cent. Gold per oz. the Currency. ciation per Cent. Gold per oz. of the Value of Average Depre- the Currency. ciation per Cent. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ 8. d. £ S. d. 1800 3 17 101 100 0 0 Nil. 1811 4 4 6 92 3 2 7 16 10 1801 4 5 0 91 12 4 8 7 8 1812 4 15 6 79 5 3 20 14 9 1802 4 4 0 92 14 2 7 5 10 1813 5 1 0 77 2 0 22 18 0 1803 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1814 5 4 0 74 17 6 25 2 6 1804 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1815 4 13 6 83 5 9 16 14 3 1805 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1816 4 13 6 83 5 9 16 14 3 1806 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1817 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1807 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1818 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1808 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1819 4 1 6 95 11 0 4 9 0 1809 4 0 0 97 6 10 2 13 2 1820 3 19 11 97 8 0 2 12 0 1810 4 10 0 86 10 6 13 9 6 1821 3 17 10} 100 0 0 Nil. No. V.-An Account of the total Amount of Outstanding Demands on the Bank of England, and likewise the Funds for discharging the same; 30th January, 1819. DR. - - The Bank, - 30th January, 1819. - CR. £ By advances on government se- £ To Bank Notes out - - - 26,094,430 curities; viz. To other debts; viz. On Exchequer bills, on malt, Drawing accounts - - &c. 1818 - - - Audit roll - - - - 7,800,150 Bank loan, 1808 - - Exchequer bills deposited - Supply, 1816, at 41. per cent. - And various other debts - Growing produce of the conso- 8,438,660 lidated fund to 5th of April, 33,894,580 1819, and interest due, and loans to government on un- Balance of surplus in favour of claimed dividends - the Bank of England, exclu- By all other credits, viz. sive of the debt from govern- Cash and bullion - ment, at 31. per cent. Exchequer bills purchased, and £11,686,800 interest - And the advance to govern- Bills and notes discounted - ment, per 56 Geo. 3. cap. 96. at 5,202,320 Treasury bills for the service 30,658,240 31. per cent. of Ireland - - £3,000, Money lent, and various other articles - - - £39,096,900 £39,096,900 By the permanent debt due from government, for the capital of the Bank, at 31. per cent. per annum 11,686,800 By the advance to government, per act 56 Geo. 3. cap. 96. at 31. per cent. per annum - - £3,000,000 Bank of England, 22d of February, 1819. WILLIAM DAWES, Accountant General. No. VI.-An Account of Money paid or payable at the Bank of England, for the Management of the Public Debt, in the Year 1829, together with an Account of all the Allowances made by the Public to the Bank, or charged by the Bank against the Public, for transacting any Public Service in the Year 1829; describing the Nature of the Service, and the Amount charged thereon in the said Year, and including any Sum under the Denomination of House-money, or House Expenses : and also, any Sum under the Denomination of Charges of Management on South Sea Stock, and stating the aggregate Amount of the whole. Denomination of Payments. Amount. £ s d. Charge for management of the unredeemed public debt for one year, ending the 5th of April, 1830, being the annual period at which the accounts are made up, as directed by the act 48 Geo. 3. c. 4. 248,417 17 21 Ditto, ditto, for one year ending ditto, on sundry annuities, transferred to the Com- missioners for the Reduction of the National Debt, for the purchase of life an- nuities per act 48 Geo. 3. and subsequent acts 2,922 11 9 Charges of management, being part of an entire yearly fund of 100,000Z. enjoyed by the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, originally by the act of the 5th and 6th of William and Mary, C. 20., confirmed to the said Governor and Company by several subsequent acts, and lastly by the Act of the 39th and 40th Geo. 3. c. 28., as per Return made to the Honourable House of Commons, on the 21st of June, 1816 4,000 0 0 Ditto, ditto, on 4,000,000L. South Sea stock, purchased by the Governor and Com- pany of the Bank of England of the South Sea Company, and transferred by them to the said Governor and Company, in pursuance of the act of the 8th Geo. 1. c. 21., and which charges of management were assigned by the said South Sea Company to the said Governor and Company, out of a sum of 8,3971. 9s. 6d. per annum then paid by the public to the said South Sea Company for charges of management on their funds, as per Return made to the Honourable House of Commons, on the 21st of June, 1816 1,898 3 5 £257,238 12 41 Bank of England, 11th of March, 1830. T. RIPPON, Chief Cashier. Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 97 No. VII.-The following is an Account of All Distributions made by the Bank of England amongst the Proprietors of Bank Stock, whether by Money Payments, Transfer of 5 per Cent. Annuities, or otherwise, under the Heads of Bonus, Increase of Dividend, and Increase of Capital, betwixt the 25th of February, 1797, and 31st of March, 1832, in addition to the ordinary Annual Dividend of 7 per Cent. on the Capital Stock of that Corporation, existing in 1797, including therein the whole Dividend paid since June, 1816, on their increased Capital; stating the Period when such Distribu- tions were made, and the aggregate Amount of the whole.-(Appen. No. 29.) Denomination and Periods of Distribution. Amount. £ In June, 1799 10% per cent. bonus in 5 per cents. 1797, on 11,642,400L. is - 1,164,240 May, 1801: 51. per cent ditto, in Navy 5 per cents. ditto - - - - 582,120 November 1802: 21. 10s. per cent. ditto, ditto, ditto - - - - 291,060 October, 1804: 51. per cent. ditto, cash, ditto - - - - - 582,120 October, 1805 51. per cent. ditto, ditto, ditto - - - - - 582,120 October, 1806: 51. per cent. ditto, ditto, ditto - - - - - 582,120 From April, 1807, to Oct. Increase of dividends at the rate of 31. per cent. per 1822, both inclusive Sannum on 11,642,400L., is, 16 years 5,588,352 From April, 1823, to Oct. 1 Increase of dividend at the rate of 11. per cent. per 1829, both inclusive Sannum on 11,642,400L., is, 7 years 814,968 In June, 1816 Increase of capital at 25 per cent., is - 2,910,600 From Oct. 1816, to Oct. Dividend at the rate of 10/. per cent. per annum on 1822, both inclusive $2,910,600L. increased capital, is, 61 years - 1,891,890 From April, 1823, to Oct. Dividend at the rate of 81. per cent. per annum on 1831, both inclusive $2,910,600L. increased capital, is, 9 years - 2,095,632 Aggregate amount of the whole - - £17,318,070 Annual dividend payable on Bank Stock in 1797, on a capital of 11,642,400Z. at the rate of 71. per cent. per annum £814,968 Annual dividend payable since June, 1816, on a capital of 14,553,000L, to October, 1822, inclusive, at the rate of 10Z. per cent. per annum - - - £1,455,300 Annual dividend payable from April, 1823, to the 31st of March, 1832, both inclu- sive, on a capital of 14,553,000L., at the rate of 81. per cent. per annum - £1,164,240 Bank of England, WILLIAM SMEE, 27th of June, 1832. Dep. Acct. No. VIII.-An Account of the Profits of the Bank of England, in the Year ending 29th of February, 1832; stating the Description of the Securities held by the Bank, and the sources from which the said Profits have accrued.-(No. 15. Appen. to Report.) £ Interest on commercial bills - - - - - - - 130,695 Interest on Exchequer bills - - - - - - - 204,109 Annuity for 45 years (the dead weight account) - - - - - 451,415 Interest on capital received from government - - - - - 446,502 Allowance received for management of the public debt - - - - 251,896 Interest on loans on mortgages - - - - - - 60,684 Interest on stock in the public funds - - - - - - 15,075 Interest on private loans , - - 56,941 Profit on bullion, commission, rent, receipts on discounted bills unpaid, manage- ment of the business of the Banks of Ireland, of Scotland, and Royal Bank of Scotland, and sundry items - - 71,859 £1,689,176 No. IX-Expenses of the Bank of England, for the Year ending 29th of February, 1832. DR. £ CR. £ National debt department - - 164,143 Salaries and pensions - - - 218,003 Bank notes - - 106,092 House expenses - - - 39,187 Banking department - - - 69,165 Directors' allowance - - - 8,000 Rent - 40,000 Expenses at eleven branches, arising from the banking department - 5,702 Expenses attending the circulation of 2,500,000. of branch Bank of Eng- land notes, at eleven branches - 28,508 £339,400 £339,400 No. X.-An estimated Account of Profit derived by the Bank from Circulation of Promissory Notes, and from Government Business.-(Appen. No. 23.) £ Circulation - - 20,000,000 Government deposits - 4,000,000 24,000,000, of which two thirds are estimated to be invested in securities, and one third in bullion. I 13 Digitized by Google 98 BANK OF ENGLAND. Table X.-continued. Securities of 16,000,000Γ. ; viz. £ £ £ 9,000,000 Exchequer bills - - - - at 2t per cent. 202,500 800,000 stock - - - - 3 24,000 1,000,000 advances for circulation on discount - 3 - 30,000 500,000 country discount - 3t - 17,500 4,700,000 - - - 193,875 467,875 16,000,000 Deduct, Expense of Circulation - - - - - - - 106,000 Expense of government deposits - - - - - 10,000 Stamp duty on circulation - - - - 70,000 1 per cent. on capital (held by government at 3 per cent.) - - 147,000 333,000 134,875 The Public Debt. Amount received from government for management of the public debt, for the year ending 5th of April, 1832, including life annuities - 251,000 Management of life annuities, supposed to be transferred - - 3,000 Deduct, 248,000 Expenses for management of the national debt - - - 164,000 Average of forgeries per annum, during the last ten years - - 40,000 204,000 44,000 Estimated profit - - £178,875 No. XI.-State of the Affairs of the Bank of England, 20th of February, 1832. DR. £ & CR. £ £ To Bank notes outstand- By advances on govern- ing - 18,051,710 ment securities; by Ex- To public deposits, viz. chequer bills on the Drawing accounts - 2,034,790 growing produce of the Balance of audit roll 550,550 consolidated fund in the Life annuities unpaid 85,030 Annuities for terms of 3,198,730 quarter ending 5th of April, 1832 - 3,428,340 years unpaid 38,360 Ditto, 5th of July, 1832 697,000 Exchequer bills deposited 490,000 Exchequer bills on sup- 4,134,940 To private deposits, viz. plies, 1825 7,600 Drawing accounts - 5,683,870 } 5,738,430 Do. for 10,500,000L. for 1825 2,000 Various other debts - 54,560 By the advances to the trus- To the Bank of England tees appointed by the act for the capital - 14,553,000 3 Geo.4.c. 51. towards the To balance of surplus in purchase of an annuity favour of the Bank of of 585,740L for 44 years England - - - 2,637,760 from 5th of April, 1823 - - 10,897,880 By other credits; viz. Exchequer bills purchased 2,700,000 Stock purchased - 764,600 City bonds - 500,000 Bills & notes discounted 2,951,970 Loans on mortgages 1,452,100 9,166,860 London Dock Company 227,500 Advances on security, and various articles 570,690 By cash and bullion - - 5,293,150 By the permanent debt due from government - - - 14,686,800 £44,179,630 £44,179,630 Rest or surplus brought down 2,637,760 Bank capital due to proprietors 14,553,000 £17,190,760 No. XII.-An Account of the Average aggregate Amounts of Public Deposits in the Hands of the Bank, from the Year 1800; distinguishing each Year.-(Appen. No. 24.) Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. £ £ is £ 1807 12,647,551 1814 12,158,297 1820 3,713,442 1826 4,214,271 1808* 11,761,448 1815 11,737,436 1821 3,920,157 1827 4,223,867 1809 11,093,648 1816 10,807,660 1822 4,107,853 1828 3,821,697 1810 11,950,047 1817 8,699,123 1823 5,526,635 1829 3,862,656 1811 10,191,854 1818 7,066,887 1824 7,292,187 1830 4,761,952 1812 10,390,130 1819 4,538,373 1825 5,347,314 1831 3,948,102 1813 10,393,404 N. B.-The Bank is unable to furnish correctly the aggregate amount of public deposits previous * The Bank advanced, in March, 1808, 3,000,000L., without interest, for the public service, which so centinued till April, 1818, on account of public balances. Digitized by Google BANK OF ENGLAND. 99 to the year 1807; the public accounts prior to that period not being required generally to be kept at the Bank; and many of the public accounts at that time were in the names of individuals, without reference to that part of the public service to which the accounts applied. No. XIII.-An Account of the Average aggregate Amounts of Private Deposits in the Hands of the Bank, from the Year 1807 ; distinguishing each Year.-(Appen. No. 32.) Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. £ £ £ £ 1807 1,582,720 1814 2,374,910 1820 1,325,060 1826* 3,322,070 1808 1,940,630 1815 1,690,490 1821 1,326,020 1827 3,931,370 1809 1,492,190 1816 1,333,190 1822 1,373,370 1828 5,701,280 1810 1,428,720 1817 1,672,800 1823 2,321,920 1829 5,217,210 1811 1,567,920 1818 1,640,210 1824 2,369,910 1830 5,562,250 1812 1,573,950 1819 1,790,860 1825 2,607,900 1831 5,201,370 1813 1,771,310 N. B.-The Bank is unable to return the average aggregate amounts of private deposits for the years prior to 1807, as the public and private drawing accounts were not kept separately till that period, when distinct offices were established. No. XIV.-An Account of the annual Average Amount of Commercial Paper under Discount at the Bank, in London, in each Year, from the Year 1795.-(Appen. No. 59.) Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. £ £ £ £ 1795 2,946,500 1805 11,366,500 1814 13,985,800 1823 3,123,800 1796 3,505,000 1806 12,380,100 1815 14,947,100 1894 2,369,800 1797 5,350,000 1807 13,484,600 1816 11,416,400 1825 4,941,500 1798 4,490,600 1808 12,950,100 1817 3,960,600 1826 4,908,300 1799 5,403,900 1809 15,475,700 1818 4,325,200 1827 1,940,400 1800 6,401,900 1810 20,070,600 1819 6,515,000 1828 1,167,400 1801 7,905,100 1811 14,355,400 1820 3,883,600 1829 2,250,700 1802 7,523,300 1812 14,291,600 1821 2,676,700 1830 919,900 1803 10,747,600 1813 12,330,200 1828 3,366,700 1831 1,533,600 1804 9,982,400 No. XV.-An Account of the Notes, Post-Bills, &c. of the Bank of England in Circulation, on the 28th of February and 31st of August in each Year, from 1698 to 1792 both included, as near as the same can be made up. Year. 28th Feb. 31st Aug. Year. 28th Feb. 31st Aug. Year. 28th Feb. Sist Ang. Year. 28th Feb. Sist Aug. £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ 1698 1,221,290 1,240,400 1722 2,365,640 3,006,430 1746 3,383,720 3,842,500 1770 5,237,210 5,736,780 1699 743,850 519,150 1723 3,516,110 3,482,210 1747 4,107,490 3,652,310 1771 6,822,780 6,014,110 1700 938,240 781,430 1724 3,232,830 3,857,710 1748 3,894,650 3,789,720 1772 5,902,160 5,987,570 1701 208,960 763,860 1725 3,734,480 3,343,400 1749 3,737,110 4,183,390 1773 6,037,060 6,302,220 1702 920,730 1,030,900 1726 3,076,850 3,152,340 1750 3,964,970 4,318,490 1774 7,550,780 9,886,220 1703 933,760 1,214.040 1727 3,888,180 4,677,640 1751 4,022,160 5,195,310 1775 9,135,930 8,396,310 1704 961,990 946,010 1728 4,574,920 4,513,790 1752 4,444,960 4,750,350 1776 8,699,720 8,551,090 1705 556,610 1,943,150 1729 4,152,590 4,199,910 1753 4,401,580 4,490,290 1777 8,712,230 7,753,590 1706 996,840 805,410 1730 3,998,980 4,416,870 1754 4,062,870 4,081,280 1778 7,440,330 6,758,070 1707 959,820 824,860 1731 4,451,720 5,249,880 1755 3,950,650 4,115,280 1779 9,012,610 7,276,540 1708 648,680 598,940 1732 4,251,660 4,592,400 1756 4,106,790 4,516,360 1780 8,410,790 6,341,600 1709 707,470 691,350 1733 4,385,060 4,543,000 1757 5,319,130 5,149,940 1781 7,092,450 6,309,430 1710 601,580 480,920 1734 4,203,070 4,671,930 1758 5,320,590 4,864,110 1782 8,028,880 6,759,310 1711 477,510 573,230 1735 4,627,990 4,738,550 1759 4,586,840 4,809,790 1783 7,675,090 6,307,270 1712 738,920 2,025,200 1736 4,907,750 5,077,570 1760 4,969,250 4,936,280 1784 6,202,760 5,592,510 1713 1,221,860 800,810 1737 5,215,010 4,414,690 1761 5 632,350 5,246,680 1785 5,923,090 6,570,650 1714 623,640 1,651,780 1738 4,766,280 4,609,420 1762 5,741,090 5,886,980 1786 7,581,960 8,184,330 1715 972,160 978,840 1739 4,347,270 4,152,420 1763 5,999,910 5,314,600 1787 8,329,840 9,685,720 1716 1,460,660 1,579,730 1740 4,550,980 4,444,000 1764 5,501,800 6,210,680 1788 9,561,120 10,002,880 1717 2,053,150 2,188,030 1741 4,841,840 4,084,450 1765 6,316,670 5,356,490 1789 9,807,210 11,121,800 1718 2,782,420 1,806,640 1742 4,471,510 4,911,390 1766 5,617,570 5,246,410 1790 10,040,540 11,433,340 1719 1,807,010 1,989,550 1743 4,654,890 4,250,180 1767 5,510,990 4,883,440 1791 11,439,200 11,672,320 1720 2,466,880 3,032,460 1744 4,253,610 4,270,590 1768 5,778,990 5,415,530 1792 11,307,380 11,006,300 1721 2,244,280 2,206,260 1745 4,279,610 3,465,350 1709 5,707,190 5,411,450 N. B.-No previously published table of the circulation of the Bank of England extends further back than 1777; we are indebted to the Court of Directors for being able to supply this striking de- fect, and to exhibit, for the first time, the circulation of the Bank, from within four years of its establishment down to the present day. * The increased amount of deposits in this and the following years, arose from the increase of accounts. Digitized by Google 100 BANK OF ENGLAND. No. XVI.-An Account of the Amount of Bank Notes in Circulation on the undermentioned Days; distinguishing the Bank Post Bills, and the Amount of Notes under Five Pounds, with the Aggre- gate of the whole. Notes of 51. Bank Post Bank Notes Total. and upwards. Bills. under 51. 1792 February 25 £10,394,106 £ 755,703 - 1£ - £11,149,809 August 25 10,281,071 725,898 - - 11,006,969 1793 February 26 10,780,643 647,738 - - 11,428,381 August 26 10,163,839 674,375 - - 10,838,214 1794 February 26 10,079,165 618,759 - - 10,697,924 August 26 10,060,248 567,972 - - 10,628,220 1795 February 26 12,968,707 570,456 - - 13,539,163 August 26 10,939,880 518,502 - - 11,458,382 1796 February 26 10,266,561 643,133 - - 10,909,694 August 26 8,981,645 549,690 - - 9,531,335 1797 February 25 8,167,949 474,615 - - 8,601,964 August 26 9,109,614 524,587 934,015 10,568,216 1798 February 26 10,856,188 551,549 1,442,348 12,850,085 August 25 9,997,958 553,236 1,639,831 12,191,025 1799 February 26 10,576,510 607,907 1,451,728 12,636,145 August 26 11,260,675 653,766 1,345,432 13,259,873 1800 February 25 13,106,368 723,600 1,406,708 15,236,676 August 26 12,221,451 823,366 1,690,561 14,735,378 1801 February 26 12,975,006 954,982 2,647,526 16,577,514 August 26 11,715,665 759,270 2,495,386 14,970,321 1802 February 26 12,038,970 803,499 2,616,407 15,458,876 August 26 12,801,746 772,577 3,312,790 16,887,113 1803 February 26 11,796,424 820,039 2,960,469 15,576,932 August 26 12,413,924 776,030 3,846,005 17,035,959 1804 February 25 12,054,943 848,894 4,673,515 17,577,352 August 25 11,766,628 743,841 4,813,525 17,323,994 1805 February 26 11,403,290 1,029,580 4,801,596 17,234,466 August 26 11,182,188 718,510 4,395,480 16,296,178 1806 February 25 11,994,350 725,736 4,428,360 17,148,446 August 26 14,141,510 702,425 4,228,958 19,072,893 1807 February 26 12,274,629 724,485 4,206,230 17,205,344 August 26 15,077,013 725,262 4,231,837 20,034,112 1808 February 26 13,746,598 742,671 4,103,785 18,593,054 August 26 12,440,930 795,102 4,129,234 17,365,266 1809 February 25 12,730,999 944,727 4,338,951 18,014,677 August 26 13,255,599 880,104 5,221,538 19,357,241 1810 February 26 13,650,592 907,620 5,871,069 20,429,281 August 25 16,078,390 1,145,832 7,221,953 24,446,175 1811 February 26 15,110,688 1,133,419 7,140,726 23,384,833 August 26 15,203,611 1,016,303 7,573,201 23,793,115 1812 February 26 14,523,049 1,059,854 7,415,294 22,998,197 August 26 14,873,705 987,880 7,621,325 23,482,910 1813 February 26 14,567,267 1,034,882 7,705,322 23,307,471 August 26 14,975,479 1,015,616 8,033,774 24,024,869 1814 February 26 15,632,250 1,091,242 8,371,923 25,095,415 August 26 18,066,180 1,246,479 9,667,217 28,979,876 1815 February 25 16,394,359 1,184,459 9,094,552 26,673,370 August 26 16,332,275 1,115,079 9,576,695 27,024,049 1816 February 26 15,307,228 1,336,467 9,036,374 25,680,069 August 26 16,686,087 1,286,429 9,103,338 27,075,854 1817 February 26 17,538,656 1,376,416 8,143,506 27,058,578 August 26 20,388,502 1,712,807 7,998,599 30,099,908 1818 February 26 19,077,951 1,838,600 7,362,492 28,279,043 August 26 17,465,628 1,627,427 7,509,782 26,602,837 1819 February 26 16,307,000 1,622,330 7,317,360 25,246,690 August 26 16,972,140 1,468,920 7,216,530 25,657,590 1820 February 26 15,402,830 1,421,160 6,745,160 23,569,150 August 26 16,047,390 1,633,730 6,772,260 24,453,380 1821 February 26 14,372,840 1,615,600 6,483,010 22,471,450 August 26 16,095,020 1,634,260 2,598,460 20,327,740 1822 February 26 15,178,490 1,609,620 1,384,360 18,172,470 August 26 15,295,090 1,610,600 862,650 17,768,340 1823 February 26 15,751,120 1,742,190 683,160 18,176,479 August 26 17,392,260 1,763,650 550,010 19,705,920 1824 February 26 17,244,940 2,198,260 486,600 19,929,800 August 26 18,409,230 2,122,760 443,970 20,975,960 1825 February 26 18,308,990 2,334,260 416,880 21,060,130 August 26 17,091,120 2,061,010 396,670 19,548,800 1826 February 26 21,100,400 2,487,080 1,367,560 24,955,040 August 26 18,172,160 2,040,400 1,175,450 21,388,010 1827 February 26 18,787,330 2,052,310 668,910 21,508,550 August 26 19,253,890 2,270,110 483,060 22,007,060 1828 February 26 19,428,010 2,329,880 416,890 22,174,780 August 26 19,016,980 2,417,440 382,860 21,817,280 1829 February 26 17,402,470 2,444,660 357,170 20,204,300 August 26 17,164,940 2,030,280 334,190 19,529,410 1830 February 26 17,862,990 2,284,520 320,550 20,468,060 August 26 19,403,610 2,217,870 313,460 21,934,940 1831 February 26 17,566,140 1,777,790 306,900 19,650,830 August 26 16,774,890 1,621,350 302,480 18,698,720 1832 February 25 16,201,890 1,641,990 299,190 18,143,070 August 25 16,068,370 1,533,970 294,940 17,897,280 1833 February 26 17,507,320 1,603,710 292,450 19,403,480 August 26 17,827,150 1,604,590 289,720 19,721,460 Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL.) 101 No. XVII.-An Account of the aggregate Circulation of the Branch Banks of the Bank of England, from their first Establishment, on the 28th of February and 31st of August in each Year. £ £ £ 1827 February 322,150 1830 February 1,482,160 1832 February 2,748,280 August 559,870 August 2,019,770 August 2,800,650 1826 February 585,820 1831 February 2,272,360 1833 February 3,088,670 August 649,740 August 2,433,860 August 3,313,850 1829 February 807,450 August 1,165,390 III. BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). Besides charging the usual rate of interest on bills discounted, the provincial bankers are mostly in the habit of charging 5s. or 6s. per cent. as commission. They also charge a com- mission on all payments; and derive a profit from charges for the transmission of money, &c. They usually allow from 2 to 3 per cent. on money deposited but the numerous failures that have taken place amongst them have, by generating a feeling of insecurity in the minds of the depositors, confined this branch of their business within comparatively narrow limits. When their customers overdraw their accounts, they are charged with interest at the rate of 5 per cent. Country banks established by individuals possessed of adequate funds, and managed with due discretion, are productive of the greatest service. They form commodious reservoirs, where the floating and unemployed capital of the surrounding districts is collected, and from which it is again distributed, by way of loan, to those who will employ it to the best advan- tage, It is, therefore, of the utmost importance, in a public point of view, that these esta- blishments should be based upon solid foundations. But in England, unfortunately, this has been but little attended to ; and the destruction of country banks has, upon three differ- ent occasions,-in 1792, in 1814, 1815, and 1816, and in 1825 and 1826,-produced an extent of bankruptcy and misery that has never, perhaps, been equalled, except by the breaking up of the Mississippi scheme in France. Government is bound to interfere to hinder the recurrence of such disastrous results. The repeal of the act of 1708, preventing the association of more than six persons for carrying on the trade of banking, has already led to the formation of joint stock banking companies in a few of the large towns but it remains to be seen in how far this should be regarded as an improvement. It is, indeed, quite vision- ary to suppose that the power to establish such banks is all that is required to establish the provincial currency on a secure foundation. What is really wanted, is not a regulation to allow banks with large capitals to be set on foot, (for there have, at all times, been many such banks in England,) but a regulation to prevent any bank, be its partners few or many, from issuing notes without previously giving security for their payment. This would render the bankruptcy of such banks impossible, and would give a degree of security to the money system of the country that it can never otherwise attain.-(The reader is referred, for a full discussion of this important question, to the Note on Money, in my edition of the Wealth of Nations, vol. iv. pp. 280-292.) The following is an account of the number of commissions of bankruptcy issued against country bankers in England, from 1809 to 1830, both inclusive :- Years. Commissions. Years. Commissions. Years. Commissions. Years. Commissions. 1809 4 1815 1 25 1821 10 1826 43 1810 20 1816 37 1822 9 1827 8 1811 4 1817 3 1823 9 1828 3 1812 17 1818 3 1824 10 1829 3 1813 8 1819 13 1825 37 1830 14 1814 27 1820 4 (Append. to Report on Bank Charter, p. 116.) Exclusive of the above, many banks stopped payments, to the great injury of their credit- ors and the public, that afterwards resumed them; at the same time that the affairs of some bankrupt concerns were arranged without a commission. During the whole of this period, not a single Scotch bank gave way. The stamp duties on country bank notes have been already specified (p. 69.). Besides the stamp duties payable on Notes, each individual or company issuing them must take out a licence, renewable annually, which costs 30L This licence specifies the names and places of abode of the body corporate, person, or persons, in the firm to whom it is granted, the name of such firm, the place where the business is carried on, &c.; and a separate licence is to be taken out for every town or place where any notes shall be issued by or on account of any banker, &c. Unless the licence granted to persons in partnership set forth the names and places of abode of all persons concerned in the partnership, whether their names appear on the notes issued by them or not, such licence shall be absolutely void.-(55 Geo. 3. c. 184. S. 24.) For the regulations as to the issue of unstamped notes see antè, p. 69. I 2 Digitized by Google 102 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). The issue of notes for less than 5/. was prohibited in England, as previously shown, from 1777 to 1797 but they continued to be issued from the latter period down to the 5th of April 1829, when their further issue ceased in consequence of an act passed in 1826. This act did not extend to Scotland or Ireland, and was intended to give greater stability to the system of country banking in England, by shutting up one of the principal channels through which the inferior class of bankers had been in the habit of getting their notes into circula- tion. But notwithstanding it will certainly have this effect, the policy of the measure seems very doubtful. It is idle, indeed, to imagine that it can give that stability to the banking system which is so desirable; and in proof of this, it is sufficient to state, that though none of the country banks existing in 1793 had any notes for less than 5% in circulation, upwards of one third of their entire number stopped payment during the revulsion that then took place. The truth is, that nothing but the exacting of security for payment of notes can ever place the country issue of notes on that solid foundation on which it ought to stand and as security may be taken for 11. notes as easily as for those of 5l., there would, were such a sys- tem adopted, be no ground for suppressing the former. Metropolitan Joint Stock Banks.-It was for a lengthened period generally understood, that the act of 1708, and the other acts conveying exclusive privileges to the Bank of Eng- land, not only prevented any company with more than 6 partners from issuing notes payable on demand but that they also prevented such companies from undertaking ordinary bank- ing business,-that is, from receiving the money of individuals and paying their drafts, &c. Recently, however, strong doubts began to be entertained whether companies with nume- rous bodies of partners, established for the mere business of banking, and without issuing notes, were really prohibited by the acts in question. During the discussions on the late renewal of the charter of the Bank of England, the point was submitted for the consideration of the Attorney and Solicitor Generals, who gave it as their decided opinion, that such banks might be legally established within the limits to which the exclusive privileges of the Bank of England were restricted by the act 7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 46. But as the opinion of other eminent lawyers differed from theirs, a clause has been inserted in the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 98., which removes all doubts on the subject, by expressly authorising the establishment of banks not issuing notes, with any number of partners, any where within the district to which the exclusive privileges of the Bank of England, as a bank of issue, are now restricted.-(See antè, p. 84.) Down to this period (September, 1833), no advantage has been taken of this declaratory enactment, by the formation of a joint stock bank in the metropolis; but several projects of the kind have been made public, and it seems most likely that some of them will be matured. It is not easy to form beforehand any certain conclusions as to the probable working of such establishments. Provided, however, that they possess large paid up capitals, and numerous bodies of partners, individually liable, as at present, for the debts of the company, it may, one should think, be fairly concluded, that they will afford comparatively safe places for the deposit of money; and in so far their institution will be advantageous. But it is not easy to discover in what other respects they will have any superiority over the present banks. There is great weight in the following statement made by Mr. Jones Loyd before the Com- mittee on the Bank of England charter:-"I think that joint stock banks are deficient in every thing requisite for the conduct of banking business, except extended responsibility the banking business requires peculiarly persons attentive to all its details, constantly, daily, and hourly watchful of every transaction, much more than mercantile or trading businesses. It also requires immediate, prompt decisions upon circumstances when they arise,-in many cases a decision that does not admit of delay for consultation it also requires a discretion to be exercised with reference to the special circumstances of each case. Joint stock banks being, of course, obliged to act through agents, and not by a principal, and, therefore, under the restraint of general rules, cannot be guided by so nice a reference to degrees of difference in the character or responsibility of parties; nor can they undertake to regulate the assist- ance to be granted to concerns under temporary embarrassment by so accurate a reference to the circumstances, favourable or unfavourable, of each case."-(Min. of Evid. p. 236.) We confess, too, that we have great doubts whether the competition of such banks with each other, and with the private banks, may not be productive of much inconvenience. It will be very apt, at times, to occasion an artificial reduction of the rate of interest, and a redundancy of the currency, which must, of course, be followed by a fall of the exchange, and a period of more or less difficulty. It is stated, that the metropolitan joint stock banks are to give interest on deposits; and if they can do so without endangering their stability, it will be an important advantage. But we have yet to learn how it is possible that a joint stock bank should be able to do what would seem to exceed the power of the wealthiest and best managed private establishments. As already remarked, the only circumstance in which joint stock banks seem to have any decided superiority over private companies, consists in their greater responsibility. But this is not a necessary attribute of all joint stock companies. Associations of this sort may, and indeed do, exist, that are in all respects inferior to respectable private companies. And it Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). 103 seems indispensable, in order to the prevention of fraud, that such regulations should be adopted as may make the public fully aware of the real nature of all joint stock associations, and of their claims to credit and confidence. Proposed Measures as to Joint Stock Banks.-The future intentions of government as to the regulation of private banking companies in England were supposed to be partially deve- loped by the Chancellor of the Exchequer in his speech introducing the bill for the renewal of the charter of the Bank of England. According to the statement then made it appears to have been intended that half the subscribed capital of all banks for the issue of notes should be paid up and vested in such securities as parliament should direct that the responsibility of the partners in such banks should be unlimited and that their accounts should be periodically published. In the case of banks not issuing notes, only a fourth part of their subscribed capital was to be paid up, and the responsibility of their shareholders was to be limited. But with the exception of that part of the above plan which relates to the publication of the accounts of banks of issue, the consideration of the remainder was deferred to a more convenient opportunity and notwithstanding our respect for the quarter whence it pro- ceeded, we hope it may never be revived. The adoption of the proposed regulations would not have amended any one of the principal defects in the present system of English country banking, while there are not a few which it would have materially aggravated. There is not so much as the shadow of a ground for interfering with the concerns of such banks as do not issue notes, further than to let the public know with whom they are dealing, and the real amount of their paid up capital and the proposed interference in the case of banks that do issue notes, could have been productive of nothing but mischief. On this point we shall take leave to quote a conclusive paragraph from a memorial drawn up by the directors of the Manchester and Liverpool District Banking Company :- We contend, first, that, except in so far as the issue of notes is concerned, banking is essentially a private business, with which the state has no more title to interfere than it has to interfere with any other description of mercantile agency. If A. choose to deposit money in the hands of B., who lends it to others, why is the interference of government more necessary than if A. had deposited it in the hands of C., who employs it in manufactures or agriculture ? It is the duty of parliament to take care that coins, and the paper notes issued as substitutes for them, be always of their professed value but assuredly it is no part of its duty to inquire into the solvency of those into whose hands coins or paper may come. We contend, secondly, that, admitting it to be right to exact security from banks of issue, that should not be done by the compulsory investment of a portion of their capital. The issues of one bank may be more than twice or three times the amount of its capital; while those of another, placed in a dif- ferent situation, or conducted in a different way, may be under a third or a fourth part of its capital. What, then, could be more unequal as respects the banks, and more illusory as respects the public, than to oblige both these establishments to give security for their issues by vesting half their capital in government stock ? Were the first bank to stop payment, the security in the hands of government would not afford the holders of its notes more than from 3s. 4d. to 5s. in the pound while, were the latter in the same predicament, the holders of its notes would be paid in full out of the government securities, and there would be a large surplus over. It is clear, therefore, that the security to be given by a bank of issue ought to be proportioned to its issues, and not to its capital. The former mode will effec- tually protect the public from loss; the latter gives little, or rather no protection whatever." It is, in fact, quite ludicrous to tamper with a subject of this sort. Nothing short of the obligation to give security for their issues can ever give the public that effectual guarantee for the integrity of the currency that is so essential nor is there any other plan at once fair and equal as respects different banks. Distinction between subscribed and paid up Capital. Expediency of suppressing all Reference to the former. An immediate stop ought, we think, to be put to the practice now so prevalent among joint stock banking companies, of representing their capitals as consisting, not of what has been actually paid up by the shareholders, but of what they have subscribed for. Not a few institutions have recently been set on foot in England, pro- fessing to have capitals of 1,000,000L, 2,000,000/. or more, when, in point of fact, their capital does not really consist of a tenth part of that sum. The practice is to organise a company with some 5,000 or 10,000 shares of 100l. each but it is perfectly understood that not more than 5 or at most 10 per cent. of each share is to be called up ; and if more were demanded, it is most probable it could not be paid, at least without much difficulty. This practice is pregnant with mischief. In the first place, it tends to deceive the public, who imagine there can be no risk in dealing with a bank professing to possess 1,000,000/. of capital, who yet might hesitate about having any thing to do with it, were they aware that the capital paid into its coffers, and on which it carries on business, does not really exceed 50,000/. or 100,000L In the second place, this system tends to deceive the mass of the partners. These are tempted to embark in such hazardous concerns, imagining that they are to be large shareholders with but little outlay, and that they will derive a consider- Digitized by Google 104 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). able dividend upon the nominal amount of their shares! We mistake if a good many such persons be not in the end grievously disappointed. Banking, in an ordinary state of things, is not a business in which large profits can be expected. It is true that many banking houses made immense sums during the war, but they did this more as dealers in the funds, and par- ticularly by their rise on the return of peace, than as bankers. But it is needless to say that no prudently conducted banking establishment will now count much upon this source of emolument. At present, the dividend on the stock of the best established Scotch banks varies, we believe, from about 5 to 6 per cent.; and as they might invest their capital at 34 or 4 per cent., it appears that the real profits of banking, even in the best managed concerns, can hardly be estimated at more than from 1} to 21 per cent. It is, besides, a radical mistake to suppose that any banking concern can ever be esta- blished on a solid foundation, that is not possessed of a pretty large amount of paid up and available capital. We believe, however, that several of the joint stock companies recently established in England take a different view of this matter; and that they trust more to deposits and credit, than to their command of capital of their own. There can be no objection to these, or, indeed, to any associations whatever, being allowed to issue notes, provided they give full security for their payment; but government and parliament will be alike neglectful of their duty to the public if they do not take immediate steps to compel this being done; and to secure the currency of the country from being disturbed by the fraud, mismanagement, or insufficient capital of its issuers. The system of advertising subscribed instead of paid up capitals ought also to be put an end to; nor ought any association to be allowed to say that its capital exceeds what has actually been paid into its coffers. Responsibility ought not, in any Case, to be limited.-We protest against the proposal for allowing the partners in banks not issuing notes to limit their responsibility. Such a measure would be good for nothing, except to serve as a premium on every species of fraud. What check would there be, under such a system, to hinder the partners of a bank going on for a series of years dividing large profits, when, perhaps, they were really incurring a loss, until every farthing of its capital and deposits was absorbed To talk of subjecting such persons to punishment as fraudulent bankrupts, on evidence derived from their books, is absurd ; for, supposing that it was the intention of the parties to defraud, they might easily keep their books so that they could afford no information that was not false or misleading. The annexed list of joint stock banking companies shows that there is no disinclination on the part of individuals to engage in such concerns even with the present unlimited responsi- bility. And the way in which some of them are conducted, proves sufficiently, if any such proof were wanted, that the serious liabilities incurred by the partners are not more than enough for the protection of the public. To lessen them would be an act of gratuitous folly. If we are to interfere, let them be increased, not diminished. But in the case of banks not issuing notes, enough is done if measures be taken to prevent deception, by let- ting the public know the partners in them, and making sure that they shall have no means of evading the responsibility attaching to their engagements. The first object may be secured by compelling all banking associations whatever to publish annually a list of the names and addresses of their partners, with the amount of their paid up capital; and to accomplish the latter object, we have merely to abstain from interference, and to let the law take its natural course. Accounts of Issues.-The act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 83. directs that all persons or associations carrying on banking business, and issuing promissory notes payable on demand, shall keep weekly accounts of their issues; and shall, within a month of each of the quarters ending with the 1st of April, 1st of July, 1st of October, and 1st of January, make up, from the weekly accounts, an average account, verified on oath, of their issues during the preceding quarter, which shall be transmitted to the Stamp-office in London. Penalty for neglecting or refusing to make and transmit such account, 500L. on the corporation, company, per- sons, &c. issuing the notes, and 100L. on the secretary so offending. The wilful sending a false return to be punished as perjury. Drawing on London.-The act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 83. repeals the regulation in the 7 Geo. 4. c. 46., prohibiting banks with more than 6 partners from drawing on London on demand, or otherwise, for sums of less than 50%-$ 2. No. I.-An Account of the Number of Licenses taken out by Country Bankers in England and Wales, in each Year since 1809. Years. Licenses. Years. Licenses. Years. Licenses. Years. Licenses. 1809 702 1815 916 1821 781 1827 668 1810 782 1816 831 1822 776 1828 672 1811 779 1817 752 1823 779 1829 677 1812 825 1818 765 1824 788 1830 671 1813 922 1819 787 1825 797 1831 641 1814 940 1820 769 1826 809 1832 636 N. B.-The years in this account end on the 10th of October. The account for 1832 only comes down to the 26th of June. Stamp Office, 26th of June, 1832. Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). 105 No. II.-An Account of all Places where United or Joint Stock Banks have been established under the Act 7 Geo. 4. c. 46., together with the Number of Partners therein; also, the Nominal Capital* of each such Bank, and the Amount of Capital paid up.-(Parl. Puper, No. 504. Sess. 1833.) Places. Banks. Number of Partners. Birmingham - - - - The Bank of Birmingham - - 203 Liverpool - - - - - The Bank of Liverpool - - - 427 Manchester and Bolton in Lancashire, and Stockport in Cheshire The Bank of Manchester - - 578 - - Kendal - - - - - The Bank of Westmoreland - - 129 Barneley - - - - - The Barnsley Banking Company - 119 Birmingham - - - - The Birmingham Banking Company - 295 Bradford, Yorkshire - - - The Bradford Banking Company - 173 Bradford, Yorkshire - - - } The Bradford Commercial Joint Stock Banking Company 131 Bristol - - - - - The Bristol Old Bank - - - 8 Workington, Cockermouth, Maryport, The Cumberland Union Banking Com- Wigton, Carlisle and Penrith pany - - - - - 158 Darlington, Stockton and Barnard Castle, in Durham; Northallerton and Stokes- The Darlington District Joint Stock Bank- ing Company - ley in Yorkshire - - - 274 Gloucester - - - - The Gloucestershire Banking Company 130 Halifax - - - The Halifax Joint Stock Banking Com- - - pany - - - - - 172 Huddersfield - - The Huddersfield Banking Company 285 Knaresborough, Wetherby, Ripon, Easing- wold, Helmsley, Thirsk, Boroughbridge, The Knaresborough and Clare Banking Masham, Pately Bridge, Otley and Har- Company - - - - 160 rogate Lancaster, Ulverston and Preston - The Lancaster Banking Company - 81 Leeds - - The Leeds Banking Company - 496 Leicester and Hinckley - - The Leicestershire Banking Company 53 Carlisle - - - - The Leith Banking Company - - 14 Liverpool The Liverpool Commercial Banking Com- - - - - - pany - - - - - 104 Manchester, Liverpool, Oldham, Ashton, Warrington, Bury, Preston, Blackburn, and Wigan, in Lancashire; Stockport and Nantwich in Cheshire; Hanley, The Manchester and Liverpool District Stafford, Cheadle, Lane End and Ruge- Banking Company - - - 857 ley, in Staffordshire Market Drayton in Shropshire, and Glossop in Derbyshire. Mirfield, Huddersfield, Wakefield, Dews- The Mirfield and Huddersfield District bury and Dobcross Banking Company - - - 213 Norwich, Swaffham, Foulsham, East Derebam, Fakenham, Lynn, Harleston The Norfolk and Norwich Joint Stock and Watton, in Norfolk; and Bungay in Banking Company - - - 131 Suffolk Newcastle-upon-Tyne in Northumberland, North of England Joint Stock Banking and Sunderland in Durham. Company - 505 Plymouth, Devonport and Kingsbridge Plymouth and Devonport Banking Com- pany - 132 Saddleworth, Ashton and Oldham - The Saddleworth Banking Company 113 Sheffield The Sheffield Banking Company - 154 Stamford, Spalding, Market Deeping, Bos- ton, Bourn and Grantham, in Lincoln- shire; Oundle, Kettering, Thrapstone and Peterborough, in Northamptonshire; Oakham and Uppingham, in Rutland- The Stamford and Spalding Joint Stock shire Melton Mowbray and Market Banking Company - - - 74 Harborough, in Leicestershire Hunt- ingdon in Hunts, and Wisbeach in Cam- bridgeshire Bristol, Bridgewater, Taunton, Chard, Crewkerne, Ilminster, Langport, Wells, Stuckey's Banking Company - - 12 Bruton and Shepton Mallet. Wakefield - - The Wakefield Banking Company 217 Whitehaven and Penrith The Whitehaven Joint Stock Banking - - Company - 225 Wolverhampton The Wolverhampton and Staffordshire - - Banking Company - - - 239 York, Malton, Selby, Howden, Scarbo- The York City and County Banking Com- rough and Goole pany - 266 York, Bridlington and Great Driffield The York Union Banking Company 200 Stamps and Taxes, Somerset Place, 4th of July, 1833. It is not possible to obtain any accurate account of the number of country notes in circu- lation at different periods. But the following table, drawn up by the late Mr. Mushet, of the Mint, founded partly on official returns, and partly on the estimates of Mr. Sedgwick, late chairman of the Board of Stamps, is, 80 far as it goes, the most complete and compre- hensive hitherto published. * This department is not in possession of any information which enables a statement to be made as to the nominal capital of each such Bank, and the amount of capital paid up. 14 Digitized by Google 106 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). No. III.-An Account of the Number of Country Bank Notes, of all Denominations, stamped in each Year, ending Oct. 10., from 1804 to 1825 inclusive, with the Percentage of Increase and Decrease, comparing each Year with the Year preceding; together with an Estimate of the Total Amount in Circulation, according to Mr. Sedgwick's Tables, in each Year, from 1804 to 1825 inclusive; with the Percentage of Increase and Decrease, comparing each Year with the Year preceding. The Amount of Coun- The Amount of Coun- The Percent- The Percent- try Bank Notes in Circu- The Percent- The Percent- try Bank Notes of all age of Increase, age of Decrease, lation, according to Mr. age of Increase, age of Decrease, Years. Denominations stamped comparing each comparing each Sedgwick's Tables, in comparing each comparing each in each year, ending Oct, year with the year with the each year, ending Oct. year with the year with the 10., from 1804 to 1825. year preceding. year preceding. 10., from 1804 to 1825 in- year preceding. year preceding. clusive. 1805 11,342,413 1806 11,480,547 12 1807 6,587,398 - - 42-6 18,021,900 1808 8,653,077 23.8 - - 16,871,524 - - 6.3 1809 15,737,986* 81.8 - - 23,702,493 40.5 1810 10,517,519 - - 33:1 23,893,868 8. 1811 8,792,433 - - 16.4 21,453,000 - - 1-6 1812 10,577,134 20:3 - - 19,944,000 - - 7. 1813 12,615,509 19.2 - - 22,597,000 13.3 1814 10,773,375 - - 14.6 22,709,000 .5 1815 7,624,949 - - 29'2 19,011,000 - - a 16-3 1816 6,423,466 - - 15.7 15,096,000 - - 20.6 1817 9,075,958 41.1 - - 15,898,000 5.3 1818 12,316,868 35.7 - - 20,507,000 29 1819 6,130,313 - - 50-2 17,366,875 - - 15.3 1820 3,574,894 - - 41.7 11,767,391 - - 32.2 1821 3,987,582 11.5 - - 8,414,281 - - 28.5 1822 4,217,241 5.7 - - 8,067,260 - - 41 1823 4,657,589 10.4 - - 8,798,277 9. 1824 6,093,367 30.8 - - 10,604,172 20-5 1825 8,532,438 40. - - 14,147,211 23.4 No. IV.-An Account of the Value of Country Bank Notes, of all Denominations, stamped in each Year from 1826 to 1832, both inclusive. Years. Value. Years. Value. £ £ 1826 1,239,755 1830 1,955,430 1827 1,970,595 1831 2,217,915 1828 2,842,130 1832 1,751,685 1829 2,403,700 (Parl. Paper, No. 456. Sess. 1833.) N. B.-No 11. and 21. notes were stamped after the 3d of February, 1826. (Since the publication of the 2d edition of the Dictionary, in 1834, an extraordinary in- crease has taken place in the number of joint stock banks, both in Great Britain and in Ireland. It appears from the official return, dated the 4th of July, 1833 (Dict., p. 99.), that there were then 34 joint stock banks established in England and Wales; but it appears from the subjoined account, dated the 26th of November, 1836, that the number of joint stock banks had, in the interval, been very nearly trebled, or had increased to 101; and it is deserving of notice, that a very large proportion of this rapid increase had taken place during the previous part of the year 1836. The progress of the system has been as follows:- In 1826, there were In 1830, there were In 1834, there were registered - - 3 registered - - 1 registered - - 10 1827 - - 4 1831 - - 9 1835 - - 9 1828 - - 0 1832 - - 7 To 26 Nov. 1836 - 42 1829 - - 7 1833 - - 9 Total - - 101 We should, however, form a very inadequate idea of the extension of the joint stock banking system, if we measured it merely by the increase in the number of banks, as stated above. Many of the older banks, and even of those established within the present year (1836), have from 30 to 40 or more branches, or subordinate establishments; and, as these carry on all sorts of banking business, and are frequently very far removed from the head office, and from each other, they should really be regarded as 80 many separate banks, so that the num- ber of the latter is incomparably greater than, at first sight, it may appear to be. Proceedings of Joint Stock Banks.-We regret, however, to have to state that the so- lidity of the system seems by no means to correspond with its power of extension. Though the joint stock banks universally almost profess to have immense nominal capitals, their actually paid up and really available capitals are, in many instances, very limited indeed; and it is by no means clear, did any thing occur to render it necessary that they should call for any considerable additional proportion of their nominal capital, that the call could be responded to by the proprietary of some of them without great difficulty, if at all. They seem, also, speaking generally, to have been infinitely more anxious to increase their busi- * In 1809, the duty on 11. notes was increased from 3d. to 4d., and may account for the great in- crease in this year, the notes bearing a 3d. stamp being no longer issuable. Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). 107 ness, than to provide for that security which ought to be the paramount consideration. Hence, the inordinate multiplication of their branches, and hence, also, the extent to which many of them have carried the abusive and dangerous practice of rediscounting. Nearly four fifths of the joint stock banks issue notes; and the subjoined account shows that their issues, which amounted to 1,783,689/. on the 27th of September, 1834, amounted to 3,969,121/. on the 24th of September, 1836. This, no doubt, is an extraordinary increase, more especially when contrasted with the issues of the Bank of England, which were re- duced more than a million during the same interval; and must have had a powerful effect in producing that redundancy of the currency, and drain upon the Bank for gold, that has re- cently taken place. We should, however, fall into the greatest imaginable error, if we mea- sured the influence of the joint stock banks upon the currency by the mere amount of their notes in circulation. These really constitute but a very small portion of their obligations. Most of them have been in the habit of trading, not on their own capital, or on the deposits made with them; but on credit obtained in the metropolis and elsewhere. Instead of retain- ing the bills, and other securities they have discounted, in their coffers till they are paid, many banks have been in the habit of immediately forwarding them to London to be redis- counted at a lower rate of interest. This practice has been carried to an extent that would not readily be imagined by any one not pretty well acquainted with the circumstances. But, though recourse may properly enough be had to assistance of this sort on extraordinary occasions, no bank can be justly said to be established on sound, or to be conducted on safe, principles, that trusts habitually to such accommodation. It is always at the mercy of cir- cumstances over which it has no control, and is not really more secure than a house of cards. While pecuniary accommodation may be had readily in the metropolis, the system goes on smoothly but should prices begin to give way, or credit sustain any sort of shock, distrust takes the place of confidence, and the usual supplies are no longer to be had. The provincial banks being in consequence disabled from making their ordinary advances to their customers, the latter are necessarily involved in difficulties that are frequently as injurious to the banks as to themselves. Such has hitherto been the invariable result of the abuse of banking, or of the granting of undue facilities for the obtaining of credit; and, instead of being lessened by the formation of joint stock banks, they seem to have materially increased the chances of such disasters in future. The circumstances connected with the difficulties in which the Northern and Central Bank of England, and some of the other joint stock banks, have recently been involved, sufficiently illustrate what has now been stated but they are too well known to our readers to require to be recapitulated here. But there are other and, if possible, still more suspicious circumstances connected with the existing joint stock banking system. The shares in the greater number of the recently formed and projected banks are very small, few being above 50L, while others are only 25%, and some not more than 10Z., and even 5/.! Generally, too, it is understood, or rather it is distinctly set forth in the prospectus, that not more than 5, 10, or 20 per cent. of these shares is to be called for; so that an individual who has 10s. or 20s. to spare, may become a share- holder in a bank. And, owing to a practice, or rather a flagrant abuse, introduced into the management of various banks, by which they make large advances or discounts on the credit of the stock held by the shareholders, not a few individuals in doubtful, or even desperate, circumstances take shares in them in the view of obtaining loans and bolstering up their credit ! The great danger arising from such banks is obvious; and where one of them to stop payment, it is plain, even though the claims on it should be ultimately made good, that they could be so only at the cost, and, perhaps, ruin of such of its proprietors as had ab- stained from the abusive practices resorted to by others. It may well, indeed, excite asto- nishment, that any one who can really afford to make a bonâ fide purchase of shares in a bank should be foolhardy enough to embark in such concerns. Report of Committee of 1836.-A knowledge of the circumstances now stated, and of the sort of agency by which certain joint stock banks had been established*, having been pretty generally diffused, a secret committee was appointed by the House of Commons, in 1836, to inquire into the operation of the act 7 Geo. 4. cap. 46., permitting the establishment of joint stock banks; and whether it was expedient to make any alteration in its provisions. The report of this committee, and portions of the evidence taken before it, have since been published, and confirm all the conclusions of those who had contended that the existing sys- tem required material amendment. The committee state that,- Subject to the local restrictions imposed for the protection of the privilege of the Bank of England, it is open to any number of persons to form a company for joint stock banking, whether for the purpose of deposit, or of issue, or of both. 1. The law imposes on the joint stock banks no preliminary obligation beyond the payment of a licence duty, and the registration of the names of shareholders at the Stamp Office. 2. The law does not require that the deed of settlement shall be considered or revised by any competent authority whatever; and no precaution is taken to enforce the insertion in such deeds of clauses the most obvious and necessary. For instances of this, see Edinburgh Review, No. 128. art. 6., and the account of the Norwich Bank in the evidence taken by the Secret Committee. Digitized by Google 108 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). " 3. The law does not impose any restrictions upon the amount of nominal capital. This will be found to vary from 5,000,000L. to 100,000L. ; and in one instance an unlimited power is reserved of issuing shares to any extent. 4. The law does not impose any obligation that the whole or any certain amount of shares shall be subscribed for before banking operations commence. In many instances banks commence their business before one half of the shares are subscribed for, and 10,000, 20,000, and 30,000 shares are reserved to be issued at the discretion of the directors. " 5. Thelaw does not enforce any rule with respect to the nominal amount of shares. These will be found to vary from 1,000L. to 51. The effects of this variation are strongly stated in the evidence. " 6. The law does not enforce any rule with respect to the amount of capital paid up before the commencement of business. This will be found to vary from 1051. to 51. 7. The law does not provide for any publication of the liabilities and assets of these banks, nor does it enforce the communication of any balance-sheet to the proprietors at large. " 8. The law does not impose any restrictions by which care shall be taken that dividends are paid out of banking profits only, and that bad or doubtful debts are first written off. " 9. The law does not prohibit purchases, sales, and speculative traffic on the part of these compa- nies in their own stock, nor advances to be made on the credit of their own shares. " 10. The law does not provide that the guarantee fund shall be kept apart and invested in govern- ment or other securities. " 11. The law does not limit the number of branches or the distance of such branches from the central bank. " 12. The law is not sufficiently stringent to insure to the public that the names registered at the Stamp Office are the names of persons bona fide proprietors, who have signed the deed of settlement, and who are responsible to the public. " 13. The provisions of the law appear inadequate, or, at least, are disregarded, so far as they im- pose upon banks the obligation of making their notes payable at the places of issue. " All these separate questions appear to your committee deserving of the most serious considera- tion, with a view to the future stability of the banks throughout the United Kingdom, the mainte- nance of commercial credit, and the preservation of the currency in a sound state." Remedial Measures that should be adopted.-We do not, however, think that it would be at all necessary, in providing for a secure system of joint stock banking, to make any regulations with respect to many of the points noticed by the committee as to which the law is silent. At present, every partner in a joint stock bank is liable to the public for the whole debts of the firm; and this may be truly said to be the cardinal principle of the system, and without which, it would be an unmixed evil. No individual should, however, by merely withdrawing from a joint stock concern, get rid of his liabilities in connection with it. To prevent fraud, and to insure due caution, these ought to continue for a period of three years at least after he has publicly withdrawn his name. The public, too, are clearly entitled to know the partners in joint stock associations, that is, to be informed who the individuals are with whom they are dealing, and who are responsible to them. But, unluckily, no effective means are taken for supplying the public with this necessary information, or, consequently, of properly discriminating between one establishment and another. The act of 1833 (3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 83.) directed that an account of the places where they carry on business, and of the names and residences of the partners, should be quarterly transmitted to the Stamp Office. But doubts have been entertained as to the correctness of these returns, and com- paratively little use has been, or, indeed, can be, made of them. The accounts of the names and residences of the proprietors are not published; but are carefully secluded from the public eye in the repositories of Somerset House It is true that these lists may be seen by those who choose to apply at the office, for a small fee, and that certified copies may be procured at no great expense. But few know that such returns exist; and fewer still have the op- portunity, or think of availing themselves of them as sources of information. To render them of any real utility, they should be brought under the public eye, by being hung up in the offices of the banks to which they refer, and periodically published in the newspapers of the places where they carry on business. By this means the public would know exactly to whom they had to look, and would act accordingly. They would not be deceived, as they are liable to be at present, by supposing that, because a bank has a number of part- ners, some of them must be opulent and trustworthy. They would know the precise state of the fact; and if it were seen, from the quarterly returns, that opulent and intelligent indi- viduals were withdrawing from any bank, every one would be put on his guard, and would naturally conclude that the parties had very sufficient reasons for quitting the concern. Thus far publicity may be made effectual, and would be of the very greatest importance. Neither is it possible to allege a single plausible objection to this proposal. It interferes in no degree, nor in any way, with the proceedings of the parties all that it does is to declare who and what they are; and to this degree of publicity no honest man will ever object. But we have great doubts whether it be possible to carry publicity farther than this. The committee state that " the law does not provide for any publication of the liabilities and assets of these banks, nor does it enforce the publication of any balance-sheet to the proprietors at large;" and it has been proposed to compel the periodical publication of a statement of this sort but it is very questionable whether any such publication would not be a great deal worse than useless. It is not proposed that commissioners should be appointed to inspect the accounts of the different banks, and to see that the returns are accurate this would be too inquisitorial, too cumbrous, and too costly a plan to be thought of for a moment. There would be nothing for it, in fact, but to trust entirely to the honour of the parties ! Hence, in all cases in which a disclosure would be really useful, the publication of an account of Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). 109 assets and liabilities would afford the means of deceiving the public, and of representing a bankrupt concern as being in a prosperous condition. Supposing, however, that the parties were, in all instances, perfectly honest, still the publication of a balance-sheet would be good for nothing. Every one knows how sanguine people are in relation to their own affairs; and that debts and obligations that other parties would hardly reckon worth any thing, are estimated by them as if they were so much bullion. But, independently of this, the futility of the thing is obvious. A bank with a capital of 100,000Z. discounts bills and other obligations to the extent, perhaps, of 300,000L or 400,000Z the fact that it has discounted them shows that it believes these bills and obligations to be good; and they will, conse- quently, be reckoned among its assets. But should a revulsion take place, or any circum- stance occur to shake credit, these bills may not be worth 100,000Z ; and those who have dealt with the bank, on the hypothesis of its having capital and assets more than enough to meet all its obligations, will find, to their cost, that it is not possessed of a single shilling, but is, on the contrary, some 200,000/. or 300,000L worse than nothing The committee seem to think that some regulation should be enacted, providing that a certain portion of its capital should be paid up before a bank begins business. But we incline to think that the better way would be to prohibit all advertising of nominal capitals; and to enact that the capital actually paid up, whatever its amount, shall always be represented as, and held to be, the capital of the bank. But though such a regulation were made, there would be no security that the capital said to have been paid up had really been paid into the coffers of the bank, or that, if received, it had not again been lent out, in one way or another, to the partners. Perhaps it might be good policy to enact that no shares should be issued under a certain sum, as 50/.; and that no loans should be made to the partners on the credit of their stock. But we should not be inclined to lay much stress on the first regula- tion, and the latter might, and no doubt would, be defeated in a thousand ways. We are decidedly hostile to a proposition we have heard mooted, and which seems to be countenanced by the committee, for obliging all banks to establish a guarantee fund that is, for obliging them to accumulate a portion of their profits as a reserve stock. But where is the security that such reserve would be always deducted from profits The truth is, that bankrupt and fraudulent concerns, and none else, would gain by such a regulation; inasmuch as it would enable them, by appearing to be prosperous, the better to deceive the public, and to blind them as to the real state of their affairs. It is, plainly, worse than absurd to depend on guarantees that cannot be enforced, and which, consequently, must be good for nothing. The knowledge of who the partners are in a bank, and their unlimited responsi- bility, are the only securities that, speaking generally, are good for any thing. If these can- not protect the public from fraud and loss, nothing else will; and the question will come to be, not whether the system should be reformed, but whether it ought to be entirely abo- lished. We have already noticed the extraordinary multiplication of branch banks all over the country and it is not very difficult to discover why banks of issue, at least, are so very anxious about the establishment of these outworks. They are bound, it seems, by the pre- sent law to pay their notes only at the parent establishment; SO that, by issuing them at a branch bank, perhaps a hundred miles distant from the head bank, the chances are ten to one that they will continue for a much longer period in circulation, and that they will con- sequently be able to carry on business with a much less amount of capital, than if they were, as they ought to be, obliged to pay their notes at the branches as well as at the principal office. It is obvious, indeed, that the convertibility of the paper, even of first class banks, into either cash or Bank of England notes, is at present exceedingly imperfect and that very great facilities are afforded for getting the worst class of notes into circulation, and for keeping them afloat, even after their quality may be suspected. This defect in the law ought, undoubtedly, to be amended, by obliging all banks that issue notes to pay them in- differently at any of their offices. But we incline to think that parliament might go further than this: and that it should enact that no branch be established, whether for the issue of notes, or otherwise, beyond a certain distance (say fifty miles) from the head office. Several of the points recapitulated by the committee, as to which the law is silent, respect the rights and interests of the partners in joint stock banks, in relation to each other, and not as between them and the public. But it is always a very difficult matter to interfere to dic- tate the footing on which parties in any undertaking should stand among themselves. Much should, in such cases, be left to the judgment of the parties; and public regulations, if enforced at all, should only go to prevent obvious and acknowledged abuse the parties may, in most cases, be safely left to take care of themselves. The protection of the public interest is the paramount consideration; and we do not well know what can be done to effect this, in the case, at least, of such banks as do not issue notes, other than the making known who their partners are. Suppression of the Notes of Country Banks.-The Committee have, we are sorry to say, omitted all reference to what is by far the most prominent evil in our banking system-we Digitized by Google 110 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). mean the power conceded to all private and joint stock banks and companies, whether with or without property or character, to issue paper money or notes payable on demand, with- out let or hindrance of any sort. We have elsewhere endeavoured to show (Dictionary, p. 72.) that parties issuing notes ought, in all cases, to be obliged to give security for their issues; but further experience and reflection have satisfied us that this, though a vast improvement on the existing system, would not be enough, and that nothing will suffice short of the abo- lition of all private notes. Till this be done, or till the sole power of issuing paper money be committed to the Bank of England, or to some one body, the country will necessarily be exposed to those perpetually recurring fluctuations in the quantity and value of money that are productive of the most pernicious consequences, and which go far, indeed, to impart to all industrious undertakings a sort of gambling character. At present, the currency is sup- plied by hundreds of individuals and bodies, all actuated by different and frequently con- flicting views and interests. The issues of the Bank of England are wholly governed, as those of the empire ought to be, by the state of the exchange, or rather by the influx and ef- flux of bullion-increasing when it flows into, and decreasing when it flows out of the country. But the issues of the provincial banks are not regulated by any such standard, but exclusively by the state of credit and prices in the district in which they happen to be situated. If their managers suppose that these are good or improving, they rarely hesitate about making additional issues. Hence, when the state of the exchange, and the demand on the Bank of England for bullion, shows that the currency is redundant, and ought to be contracted, the efforts of the Bank to effect its diminution are often impeded, and met by a contrary action on the part of the country banks. This, in fact, has been very remarkably the case during the last few months. The excessive multiplication of joint stock banks, the great additions they made to the amount of notes afloat, and the still greater addition they made to the number of bills, checks, and other substitutes for money, occasioned a redun- dancy of the currency, a fall of the exchange, and a drain upon the Bank for gold. But while the Bank of England was narrowing her issues by supplying the exporters of bullion with gold in exchange for notes, the country banks went on increasing their issues What the former did, by contracting, on the one hand, the latter more than undid, by letting out on the other. The vacuum created by the withdrawal of Bank of England paper was im- mediately filled up, and made to overflow, by the issue of a more than equal amount of provincial paper; so that had it not been for the rise in the rate of interest, and the other re- pressive measures adopted by the Bank, the probability is, that she might have gone on pay- ing away bullion for notes, till she was drained of her last sixpence, without, in any degree, affecting the exchange! But this is not all. Not only do the country banks almost uni- versally increase their issues when they ought to be diminished, but the moment they are compelled to set about their reduction they run headlong into the opposite extreme. The cry of sauve qui peut then becomes all but universal and, provided they succeed in secur- ing themselves, little attention is usually paid to the interests of those they have taught to look to them for help. Were the Bank of England the sole issuer of notes, she would be able to regulate the currency without the least difficulty, and without pressing more upon London than upon any other part of the country. If from any circumstances the currency became redundant, and there were a drain upon the Bank for gold, then, as there would be no other description of paper to come into the place of that brought to the Bank to be exchanged for gold, the cur- rency would be in so far contracted, and the drain checked, without the reduction being carried beyond the required limit. But at present the efforts of the Bank, or rather of the public, who carry notes to her for payment, to effect a contraction of the currency, are, in the first instance, invariably counteracted by the country banks; and when the latter, in con- sequence of the increasing difficulty of obtaining pecuniary accommodation in London are, in the end, obliged to pull up, the chances are ten to one that the contraction is carried to an improper extent. A revulsion of this sort seldom occurs without destroying some of the provincial banks; and the alarm, or, it may be, panic, that is in consequence apt to be pro- duced, may be very injurious to the best established and best managed banks, and even to the Bank of England herself. In fact, we have no idea that it will be possible for the latter and the country banks to go on together on their present footing. As matters now stand, the Bank of England may be brought at any time into the greatest jeopardy by the proceed- ings of parties over whom she has no sort of control. The over issue of the provincial banks, by depressing the exchange, drains the Bank of gold and then their discredit, and, perhaps, failure, may, by exciting a panic, bring her to a stand still ! Provided banks of deposit be established on sound principles, there cannot be too many of them. But it is quite other- wise with banks of issue. The more they are multiplied the greater is the chance of fluctua- tion in their issues, and consequently in prices, credit, and so forth. Had the Bank of Eng- land been the sole issuer of paper, the crash of 1825-26, and the difficulties of the past year, never would have been heard of. They grew entirely out of the competition and proceed- ings of the provincial banks, and are in no degree whatever ascribable to any thing else, domestic or fureign. Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). 111 Private Banks.-It may be thought, perhaps, that the unprecedented increase in the num- ber of joint stock banks will have been productive of a corresponding decline in the number of private banks, or of those having six partners or under; but such has not been the case. The latter, no doubt, have decreased, some having been abandoned, while others have been converted into joint stock banks, but not to the extent that might have been anticipated. In 1833, 598 licences were granted to private banks; in 1834, 580; in 1835, 579; and in the present year (1836), down to the 18th of June, 559 licences had been granted. The issues of the private banks are seen in the table below. I. Official Return of all Places where United or Joint Stock Banks have been established under the Act 7 Geo. 4. c. 46.; with the Dates when such Banks respectively were established, and the Num- ber of Partners therein, down to the 26th of November, 1836. Subjoined is the paid up Capital of certain Banks, according to the Returns rendered to the Secret Committee of 1836. Date when esta- Number Places. Name of the Bank. blished. of Paid up Capital. Partners. & 8. d. Ashton-under-Lyne - Ashton, Staleybridge, Hyde, 18 June, 1836 328 and Glossop Bank. Barnsley - - - Barnsley Banking Company 25 Jan. 1832 118 25,150 0 0 Birmingham - - - Bank of Birmingham - 2 Aug. 1832 227 73,785 0 0 Liverpool - - - Bank of Liverpool - 23 April, 1831 441 258,100 0 0 Manchester, Stockport, Bolton, *Bank of Manchester - 19 Mar. 1829 552 500,000 0 0 and Newton Caermarthen - - Bank of South Wales - 26 Feb. 1835 7 Stockport - - Bank of Stockport - 3 May, 1836 390 31,850 0 0 Walsall and Cannock - Bank of Walsall and South 10 Aug. 1835 112 25,000 0 0 Staffordshire. Kendal and Ulverston - Bank of Westmoreland 8 June, 1833 154 20,950 0 0 Bilston - - - Bilston District Banking 31 Aug. 1836 146 Company. Birmingham - - - Birmingham and Midland 18 Aug. 1836 222 Bank. Birmingham - - - Birmingham Town and Dis- 4 July, 1836 314 trict Banking Company. Birmingham - ⑉ - Birmingham Banking Com- 30 Sept. 1829 311 50,000 0 0 pany. Bolton - - - Bolton Joint Stock Banking 30 May, 1836 166 Company. Bradford - - - Bradford Banking Company 7 July, 1827 173 77,300 0 0 Ditto - - - Bradford Commercial Joint 27 Feb. 1833 160 44,100 0 0 Stock Banking Company. Bristol - - - Bristol Old Bank - - 16 June, 1826 8 Bury - - - - Bury Banking Company 14 June, 1836 104 Bury and Heywood - - Bury and Heywood Banking 17 Sept. 1836 48 Company. Carlisle and Wigton - - Carlisle and Cumberland 8 Oct. 1836 222 Banking Company. Cheltenham - - - Cheltenham and Gloucester- 19 May, 1836 99 15,000 0 0 shire Bank. Chesterfield - - - Chesterfield and North Der- 21 Dec. 1831 98 23,200 0 0 byshire Banking Company. Manchester, Preston, Burnley, Commercial Bank of England 1 July, 1834 444 260,005 0 0 Skipton, Birmingham, Ches- ter, Leek, Burslem, Liverpool, Blackburn, Ashbourn, Roch- dale, Shrewsbury, Ellesmere, Uttoxeter, Whitchurch, Han- ley, Newport, and Ludlow Gloucester, Cheltenham, Bur- County of Gloucester Bank 1 Aug. 1836 273 ford, Cirencester, Faringdon, Tetbury, and Dursley Coventry - - - Coventry and Warwickshire 13 Dec. 1835 261 35,000 0 0 Banking Company. Ditto - - - - Coventry Union Banking 12 May, 1836 158 28,050 0 0 Company. Workington, Cockermouth, Ma- *Cumberland Union Banking 13 Mar. 1829 152 ryport, Wigton, Carlisle, and Company. Penrith Darlington, Stockton, Stokes- *Darlington District Joint 22 Dec. 1831 247 55,425 0 0 ley, Barnard Castle, Northal- Stock Banking Company. lerton, Bedale, Egglestone, Durham, Masham, Yarm, Thirsk, Hartlepool, Gisbo- rough, Bishop's Auckland, Brough and Stagshaw Derby, Ashbourn, and Belper *Derby and Derbyshire 28 Dec. 1833 204 20,000 0 0 Banking Company. Plymouth, Devonport, Kings- *Devon and Cornwall Bank- 31 Dec. 1831 146 40,380 0 0 bridge, Totness, Bodmin, Ash- ing Company. burton, St. Austell, Liskeard, Dartmouth, Newton Abbot, Exeter, and Collumpton * The banks to which an asterisk (*) is prefixed, issue notes payable to bearer on demand. t Where blanks are left no returns have been made. Digitized by Google 112 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). Table I.-continued. Date when esta- Number Places. Name of the Bank. blished. of Paid up Capital. Partners. £ a. d. Dudley and Westbromwich *Dudley and Westbromwich 30 Dec. 1833 190 39,085 0 0 Banking Company. Norwich, Great Yarmouth, Ips- *East of England Bank 27 Feb. 1836 534 75,752 10 0 wich, Swaffham, Lynn, East Dereham, Foulsham, Faken- ham, Harleston, Eye, Sax- mundham, Bungay, Watton, Lowestoff, Beccles, Dies, Bu- ry St. Edmund's, North Walsham, and Framlingham Swansea and Neath Glamorganshire Banking 8 Sept. 1836 83 Company. Gloucester - - - Gloucester County and City 31 Dec. 1834 23 19,720 0 0 Bank. Gloucester, Stroud, Newnham, *Gloucestershire Banking 28 June, 1831 265 100,000 0 0 Evesham, Tewkesbury, Chel- Company. tenham, Newent, Cambden, Alcester, Pershore, Redditch, Blockley, Moreton, Cirences- ter, and Winchcomb Halifax and Huddersfield - Halifax and Huddersfield 29 June, 1836 404 Halifax Union Banking Company - - - Halifax Commercial Banking 21 June, 1836 172 Ditto - Company. - - - *Halifax Joint Stock Bank- 11 Nov. 1829 178 39,225 0 0 ing Company. Southampton, Fareham, Rum- *Hampshire Banking Com- 29 April, 1834 141 24,170 0 o sey, and Stockbridge pany. Helston - *Helston Banking Company 4 Aug. 1836 9 Hereford, Ross, Leominster, *Herefordshire Banking 5 Aug. 1836 200 Ledbury, Kington, Hay, Mon- Company. mouth, Coleford, Bromyard, and Abergavenny Holywell and Mold - - *Holywell Bank, North 11 Nov. 1834 7 Wales. Huddersfield, Holmfirth, and *Huddersfield Banking Com- 7 June, 1827 335 65,000 0 0 Brighouse pany. Hull, Barton, Beverly, Brigg, *Hull Banking Company 30 Nov. 1833 247 42,200 0 0 Gainsborough, Goole, Grims- by, Lincoln, Louth, South Cave, Caistor, Market Raisin, Retford, Howden, Snaith, and Market Weighton Knaresborough, Ripon, We- *Knaresborough and Clare 14 Sept. 1831 100 therby, Easingwold, Hemsley, Banking Company. Thirsk, Boroughbridge, Ma- sham, Pateley Bridge, Otley, and Harrogate Lancaster, Ulverstone, and *Lancaster Banking Com- 9 Oct. 1826 127 48,600 0 0 Preston pany. Leamington Priors - - *Leamington Bank - 8 May, 1835 157 25,710 0 0 Leamington Priors, Southam, *Leamington Priors and 27 Aug. 1836 135 22,020 0 0 Warwick, Kenilworth, and Warwickshire Banking Banbury Company. Leeds - - - *Leeds Banking Company 22 Nov. 1832 451 116,109 0 0 Ditto - - - - Leeds Commercial Banking 21 June, 1836 290 Company. Leeds, Harrogate, Pudsey, *Leeds and West Riding 28 Nov. 1835 161 45,000 o 0 Heckmondwicke, and Brad- Banking Company. ford Leicester, Ashby-de-In-Zouch, *Leicestershire Banking 28 Aug. 1829 101 7,865 0 0 Hinckley, Market Harbo- Company. rough, and Melton Mowbray Carlisle *Leith Banking Company 28 Nov. 1827 Litchfield, Rugeley, and Tam- Litchfield, Rugeley, and 21 Nov. 1885 98 26,000 0 0 worth Tamworth Banking Com- pany. Lincoln, Gainsborough, Louth, *Lincoln and Lindsay Bank- 10 Aug. 1833 230 20,000 0 0 Horncastle, Brigg, Market Company. Raisin, Caistor, Bleaford, Al- ford, Spilsby, Epworth, Grimsby, Partney, and Ret- ford Liverpool - - - Liverpool Berough Bank 28 June, 1836 309 Ditto - - - - Liverpool Commercial Bank- 29 Dec. 1832 263 244,400 0 0 ing Company. Ditto - - - - Liverpool Tradesmen's 28 Mar. 1836 542 46,050 0 o : Bank. Ditto - - - - Liverpool United Trades' 12 May, 1836 319 Bank. Manchester, Liverpool,Oldham, *Manchester and Liverpool 26 Nov. 1829 1,054 749,600 o 0 Warrington, Ashton-under- District Bank. Lyne, Bury, Blackburn, Wi- gan, Preston, Staleybridge, Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL). 113 Table I.-continued. Date when esta- Number Places. Name of the Bank. blished. of Paid up Capital. Partners. £ 8. d. Rochdale, Hyde, Stockport, Nantwich, Hanley, Stafford, Burslem, Leek, Lane-End, Cheadle, Rugeley, Market Drayton, and Glossop Manchester - - - Manchester and Salford 15 June, 1836 255 Bank. Huddersfield, Dewsbury, Wake- Mirfield and Huddersfield 29 Dec. 1832 263 field, and Bradford Banking Company. Newport, Ponty-Pool, Usk, Monmouthshire and Glamor- 28 July, 1836 260 Chepstow, and Cardiff ganshire Banking Compa- ny. Nottingham - - - Moore and Robinson's Not- 12 July, 1836 28 tinghamshire Banking Company. Aberystwith, Birmingham, Bre- National Provincial Bank 27 Dec. 1833 487 250,000 0 0 con, Llandovery, Hay, Bath, of England. Shepton Mallet, Boston, Cas- tle Cary, Somerton, Bideford, Southmolten, Torrington, Bury St. Edmund's, Chelten- ham, Cardiff, Bridge-End, Dursley, Gloucester, Here- ford, Honiton, Stowmarket, Ipswich, Woodbridge, Lich- field, Rugby, Tiverton, Wal- sall, Wisbeach, Whittlesea, Chatteris, Long Sutton, Wor- cester, Ledbury, Wotton-un- der-Edge, Yarmouth, Bristol, Norwich, Leicester, and Dol- gelly Newcastle-upon-Tyne - *Newcastle Commercial 16 July, 1836 318 Banking Company. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, North *Newcastle, Shields, and 11 July, 1836 436 and South Shields, Sunder- Sunderland Union Joint land, and Durham Stock Banking Company. Newcastle-upon-Tyne Newcastle-upon-Tyne Joint 27 June, 1836 136 - Stock Banking Company. Norwich, Swaffham, Foulsham, *Norfolk and Norwich Joint 31 Mar. 1827 125 East Dereham, Fakenham, Stock Banking Company. Lynn, Harleston, Bungay, and Watton Liverpool, Dolgelly, Bangor, North and South Wales 30 April, 1836 526 25,000 0 0 Machynlleth, Aberystwith, Bank. Holywell, Wrexham, Pwilhe- li, Bala, Denbigh, Oswestry, Llanidloes, Ruthin, Llanroost, Fastining, Mold, Newtown, St. Asaph, Chester, Caernar- von, Llangefni, Conway, Welehpool, and Amlwch Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Sun- North of England Joint Stock 28 Nov. 1832 571 240,000 0 0 derland, North Shields, Ber- Banking Company. wick-upon-Tweed, Morpeth, Hexham, South Shields, Dur- ham, and Bishop's Auckland Manchester, Bolton, Colne, Cli- *Northern and Central Bank 12 Mar. 1834 1,204 711,860 0 0 theroe, Liverpool, Ormskirk, of England. St. Helen's, Preston, Bangor, Caernarvon, Bakewell, Ches- ter, Birmingham, Bristol, Con- gleton, Knutsford, Maccles- field, Northwich, Nantwich, Halifax, Cleckheaton, Keight- ley, Leeds, Sheffield, Wake- field, Denbigh, Wrexham, Evesham, Worcester, Holy- well, Mold, Leominster, Not- tingham, Oswestry, Wem, Shrewsbury, Whitehurch, Wellington, Tamworth, and Grantham Northampton, Daventry, Wel- Northamptonshire Banking 23 May, 1836 296 lingborough, Kettering, Company. Thrapstone, Peterborough, Oundle, Hyham Ferrars, Stamford, Spalding, and Mar- ket Harborough Northampton, Daventry, and Northamptonshire Union 13 May, 1836 464 Wellingborough Bank Newcastle-upon-Tyne - Northumberland and Dur- 23 May, 1836 464 ham District Banking Com. X % 15 Digitized by Google 114 BANKS (ENGLISH PRIVATE AND PROVINCIAL) Table I.-continued. Date when esta- Number Places. Name of the Bank. blished. of Paid up Capital. Partners. £ 8. d. Melksham, Devizes, Bradford, *North Wilts Banking Com- 6 Nov. 1835 152 36,925 0 0 Trowbridge, Calne, Westbury, pany. Chippenham, Warminster, and Corsham Nottingham, Newark, Mans- *Nottingham and Notting- 12 April, 1834 272 62,610 0 0 field, and Loughborough hamshire Banking Com. Leicester, Hinckley, Loughbo- *Pares's Leicestershire 15 Mar. 1836 15 15,825 0 0 rough, and Melton Mowbray Banking Company, or the Leicestershire Union Banking Company Liverpool - - Royal Bank of Liverpool 30 April, 1836 215 91,980 0 0 Saddleworth, Ashton, and Old- *Saddleworth Banking Com. 29 June, 1833 114 29,650 0 0 ham Sheffield and Rotherham - *Sheffield Banking Com. 24 June, 1831 225 75,955 0 0 Sheffield - - Sheffield and Hallamshire 20 May, 1836 738 Banking Company. Sheffield and Rotherham - Sheffield and Rotherham 25 June, 1836 234 Joint Stock Banking Com- pany. Shiffnal, Wellington, Newport, Shropshire Banking Com- 27 May, 1836 277 and Coalbrook Dale pany. Manchester - South Lancashire Bank 25 May, 1836 778 Stamford, Spalding, Boston, *Stamford and Spalding Joint 28 Dec. 1831 85 44,000 0 0 Oundle, Bourn, Market Deep- Stock Banking Company. ing, Spilsby Burgh, Wainfleet, Swineshead, Peterborough, Holbeach, Oakham, and Up- pingham Stourbridge, Kidderminster, *Stourbridge and Kiddermin- 9 April, 1834 223 45,000 0 0 Stratford-upon-Avon, Hen- ster Banking Company. ley-in-Arden, Bromsgrove, Redditch, Shipston-on-Stour, Chipping Norton, Alcester, and Moreton-in-Marsh Bristol, Axbridge, Bridgewater, *Stuckey's Banking Com. 9 Oct. 1826 35 60,000 0 0 Taunton, Wellington, Crew- kerne, Chard, Ilminster, Langport, Wells, Glaston- bury, Shepton Mallet, Bruton, Wineanton, Selwood, Frome, Castle Cary, Yeovil, Bam- well, Weston-super-Mare, Williton, Martock, Somerton, South Petherton, and Ilches- ter Sunderland - - - Sunderland Joint Stock 4 Aug. 1836 266 Banking Company for De- von and Cornwall. Liverpool - - - Union Bank of Liverpool 2 May, 1835 323 Manchester - - Union Bank of Manchester 6 May, 1836 598 Wakefield - - *Wakefield Banking Com. 25 Oct. 1832 192 44,840 0 0 Warwick, Leamington, Strat- *Warwick and Leamington 10 Sept. 1834 122 31,310 0 0 ford-on-Avon, Southam, Banking Company. Henley-in-Arden, and Ship- ston-on-Stour Bristol, Bath, Barnstaple, Ex- *West of England and South 22 Dec. 1834 469 209,882 10 0 eter, Swansea, Taunton, Wales District Bank. Bridgewater, Cardiff, New port, Wells, Glastonbury, Bideford, Merthyr Tydvil, Stowey, Dulverton, Williton, Axbridge, Somerton, Llanelly, and Sidmouth Salisbury, Warminster, De- *Wilts and Dorset Banking 11 Jan. 1836 485 42,672 10 0 vizes, Bradford, Westbu- Company. ry, Trowbridge, Melksham, Calne, Chippenham, Maribo- rough, Swindon, Malmesbury, Wootton Bassett, Cricklade, Frome, Yeovil, Wincanton, Chard, Crewkerne, Taunton, Glastonbury, Wells, Shepton Mallet, Bruton, Bridgewater, Dorchester, Blandford, Wim- borne, Wareham, Poole, Bridport, Lyme Regis, Shaftesbury, Sherborne, Weyhill, Highworth, Ludger- shall, Mere, Weymouth, Stur- minster, Beaminster, Mel- borne Port, Fordingbridge, Christchurch, Lymington, and Ringwood Digitized by Google BANKS (ENGLISH, PRIVATE, AND PROVINCIAL). 115 Table I.-continued. Number Date when esta- Places. Name of the Bank. of blished. Paid up Capital. Partners. £ 8. d. Devonport, Plymouth, Totnes, *Western District Banking 1 Sept. 1836 278 Kingsbridge,Crediton, Exeter, Company for Devon and Teignmouth, Torrington, Cornwall. Holsworthy, Falmouth, Pen- zance, Truro, Helston, Red- ruth, St. Ives, and Callington Whitehaven and Penrith *Whitehaven Joint Stock 25 May, 1829 236 26,050 0 0 Banking Company. Wolverhampton *Welverhampton and Staf- 28 Dec. 1831 238 50,000 0 0 fordshire Banking Com- pany. York, Malton, Selby, Howden, *York City and County 2 Mar. 1830 207 75,000 0 0 Scarborough, Boroughbridge, Banking Company. and Goole York, Driffield, Bury, Thirsk, *York Union Banking Com- 23 April, 1833 277 57,450 0 0 Malton, Heimsley, Kirby pany. Moorsidge, Pickering, Pock- lington, Market Weighton, and Tadcaster York, Whitby, Wetherby, Tad- Yorkshire Agricultural and 27 July, 1836 694 caster, Sherburn, Howden, Commercial Banking Com- Pickering, Malton, Bcarbo- pany. rough, Burlington, Driffield, Pockington, Goole, Kirby- moorside, Bedale, Ripon, Bo- roughbridge, Knaresborough, Hull, Wakefield, Doncaster, Easingwold, Thirsk, Northal- lerton, Hawes, Skipton, and Beverley Leeds, York, Hull, Sheffield, *Yorkshire District Bank 20July, 1834 680 311,110 0 0 Halifax, Doncaster, Selby, Thirsk, Malton, Pocklington, Bradford, Pontefract, Ripon, Knaresborough. Huddersfield, Beveriey, Darlington, Rich- mond, and Dewsbury N.B. "The Mirfield and Huddersfield Banking Company" is now called "The West Riding Union Banking Company the name of the bank having been changed. II. A Return of Joint Stock Banks in Ireland with the Dates of their Establishment, the Names of the several Towns and Places where such Banks and their Branches have been established, and the Number of Partners in each. Number Towns and Places where the Banks or their Joint Stock Banks. When established. of Branches have been established. Partners. 1.-The Hibernian Joint By special Act, 5 Geo. - - Dublin - - 225 Stock Company.* 4. c. 159. 2-The Northern Banking 31st of December, 1834 Belfast. Ballymena. 208 Company. Lisburne. Coleraine. N.T. Limavady. Magherafelt. Lurgan. Armagh. Downpatrick. Londonderry. 3.-The Provincial Bank of 31st of August, 1825 - Armagh. Athlone 644 Ireland. Ballina. Ballymena Ballyshannon. Banbridge. Bandon. Belfast. Cavan. Clonmel. Coleraine. Cork Downpatrick. Dungannon. Dungarvan. Ennis. Enniskillen. Galway, Kilkenny Limerick. Londonderry. Lurgan. Mallow Monaghan. Moneymore. Omagh. Parsonstown. Sligo. Strabane. Tralee. Waterford. Wexford Youghall. 4.-The Belfast Banking 1826 Belfast. Coleraine 292 Company. Ballymoney Londonderry. Ballymena. Lurgan. Dungannon. Cookstown Armagh. Banbridge * This bank does not issue notes, and is not, therefore, required to make a registry at this office: it did, however, register its firm and partners in 1825, and the number of the partners above given is taken from the registry then made. Stamps, Ireland, April 19, 1836. J. S. COOPER, Compt. and Acct. Genl. Digitized by Google 116 BANKS (SCOTCH). Table II.-continued. Number Towns and Places where the Banks or their of Joint Stock Banks. When established. Branches have been established. Partners. 5.-The Agricultural and 28th of October, 1834. Nenagh. Ennis. 2,170 Commercial Bank of Bandon. Castlebar. Ireland.* New Ross. Enniscorthy. Limerick. Tuam. Roscrea. Skibbereen. Killarney. Strabane. Mallow. Kilkenny. Cork. Longford. Ballins. Galway. Strokestown. Kilrush. Ballinasloe. Tipperary. Fermoy. Sligo. Boyle. Parsonstown. Londonderry. 6.-The National Bank of 24th of January, 1835. Carrick-on-Suir. Clonmel. 250 Ireland. Thurles. Cashel. Cork. Enniscorthy. Kilkenny. Longford. Tipperary. Fermoy. Mitchelstown. Roscrea. Traice. Cahirciveen. Dingle. Killarney. Listowell. Waterford. Dungannon. New Ross. 7.-The Limerick National 17th of August, 1835. Limerick. Kilrush. 523 Bank of Ireland. Charleville. 8.-The Uister Banking 15th of April, 1836. - - - Belfast - - 117 Company. Account of the aggregate amount of Notes circulated in England and Wales by Private Banks, and by Joint Stock Banks and their Branches; distinguishing Private from Joint Stock Banks.-(From Returns directed by 3 & 4 Will. 4.) Private Banks Juint Stock Banks. Total. Quarters ending £ £ £ 28 Dec. 1833 - - - - 8,836,803 1,315,301 10,152,104 29 March, 1834 - - - - 8,733,400 1,458,427 10,191,827 28 June, - - - - 8,875,795 1,642,887 10,518,682 27 Sept. - - - - 8,370,423 1,783,689 10,154,112 28 Dec. - - - - 8,537,655 2,122,173 10,659,828 98 March, 1835 - - - - 8,231,206 2,188,954 10,420,160 27 June, - - - - 8,455,114 2,484,687 10,939,801 26 Sept. - - - - 7,912,587 2,508,036 10,420,023 26 Dec. - - - - 8,334,863 2,799,551 11,134,414 26 March, 1836 - - - - 8,353,894 3,094,025 11,447,919 25 June, - - - - 8,614,132 3,588,064 12,202,196 24 Sept. - - - - 7,969,121 3,969,121 11,733,945 Sup.) IV. BANKS (Scorce). The act of 1708, preventing more than 6 individuals from entering into a partnership for carrying on the business of banking, did not extend to Scotland. In consequence of this exemption, several banking companies, with numerous bodies of partners, have always existed in that part of the empire. Bank of Scotland-This institution was projected by Mr. John Holland, merchant of London, and was established by act of the Scotch parliament (Will. 3. Parl. 1. § 5.) in 1695, by the name of the Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland. Its original capital was 1,200,000/. Scotch, or 100,000L sterling, distributed in shares of 1.000l. Scotch, or 83/. 6s. 8d. sterling, each. The act exempted the capital of the bank from all public burdens; and gave it the exclusive privilege of banking in Scotland for 21 years. The objects for which the bank was instituted, and its mode of management, were intended to be, and have been, in most respects, similar to those of the Bank of England. The responsibility of the shareholders is limited to the amount of their shares. The capital of the bank was increased to 200,000L. in 1744; and was enlarged by subsequent acts of parliament, the last of which (44 Geo. 3. c. 23.) was passed in 1804, to 1,500,000/., its present amount. Of this sum, 1,000,000L has been paid up. The last mentioned act directed that all sums relating to the affairs of the bank should henceforth be rated in sterling money, that the former mode of dividing bank stock by shares should be discontinued, and that, for the future, it should be transferred in any sums or parcels. On the union of the two kingdoms in 1707, the Bank of Scotland undertook the recoinage, and effected the exchange of the currency in Scotland : it was also the organ of government, in the issue of the new ailver coinage in 1817. This Bank stopped payment in November, 1836. Digitized by Google BANKS (SCOTCH). 117 The bank of Scotland is the only Scotch bank constituted by act of parliament. It began to establish branches in 1696 and issued notes for 1l. so early as 1704. The bank also began, at a very early period, to receive deposits on interest, and to grant credit on cash accounts; a minute of the directors with respect to the mode of keeping the latter, being dated so far back as 1729. It is, therefore, entitled to the credit of having introduced and established the distinctive principles of the Scotch banking system, which, whatever may be its defects, is probably superior to every other system hitherto established. Generally speaking, the Bank of Scotland has always been conducted on sound and liberal principles; nor can there be a doubt that it has been productive, both directly and as an example to other banking establish- ments, of much public utility and advantage. It may be worth mentioning, that the act of Will. 3., establishing the Bank of Scotland, declared that all foreigners who became partners in the bank, should, by doing so, become, to all intents and purposes, naturalised Scotchmen. After being for a long time forgotten, this clause was taken advantage of in 1818, when several aliens acquired property in the bank in order to secure the benefit of naturalisation. But after being suspended, the privilege was finally cancelled in 1822. We subjoin an official abstract of the constitution and objects of the Bank of Scotland, printed for the use of the proprietors in 1818;-the terms and mode of transacting business are, of course, sometimes altered, according to circumstances. I. The Bank of Scotland is a public national establishment erected and regulated by the legisla- ture alone and expressly as a public Bank in this kingdom; for the benefit of the nation, and for the advancement of agriculture, commerce and manufactures; and for other objects of public policy.- (Will. Parl. 1. è 5.; 14 Geo. 3. c. 32. 24 Geo. 3. c. 8.; 32 Geo. 3. c. 25. ; 34 Geo. 3. c. 19. 44 Geo. 3. c. 23.) II. The statutory capital is at present 1,500,000L. sterling. It is raised by voluntary subscription and has been subscribed for. 1,000,000L. has been called for, and paid in.-(44 Geo. 3. c. 23.) III. Subscribers, if not under obligation to the Bank, may, at pleasure, transfer their right. If under obligation to the Bank, the obligation must be previously liquidated; or, the proceeds of the sale, at a price to the satisfaction of the directors, must be applied towards such liquidation. Trans- fers are made by a short assignment and acceptance thereof, both in a register appointed for that purpose. The expense, beside the government stamp, is (Will. Parl. 1. 5.) IV. Bank of Scotland stock may be acquired, in any portions, by any person, community, or other lawful party whatsoever without selection, exclusion, or limitation of numbers.-(W Parl. 1 e 5.; 44 Geo. 3. c. 23.) V. Bank of Scotland stock may be conveyed by latter will, and, if specially mentioned, without expense of confirmation. It cannot be arrested the holder's right may be adjudged. Dividends may be arrested.-(Will. Parl. 1. 0 5.) VI. The Bank of Scotland is a public corporation by act of parliament. The Bank's transactions are distinct from those of the stockholders; and theirs from those of the Bank.-(Will. Parl. 1. 5.) VII. The establishment is expressly debarred from any other business than that of banking.- (Will. Parl. 1. (5.) VIII. The management is vested, by statute, in a governor, deputy governor, twelve ordinary, and twelve extraordinary directors. They are chosen annually, on the last Tuesday of March, by the stockholders having 250L. of stock or upwards. Those above 2501. have a vote for every 2501. to 5,000% or 20 votes. No person can have more than 20 votes. The governor must hold, at least, 2,000L. of stock the deputy governor 1,500%; and each director 750L. They swear to be equal to all persons and cannot hold any inferior office in the Bank.-(Will. Parl. 1. 1 5.; 14 Geo. 3. c. 32. 44 Geo. 3. c. 23.) IX. The executive part is conducted by a treasurer, secretary, and other public officers, all sworn. Those having the official charge of cash find due security.-(Will. Parl. 1. 1 5.) X. The Board of directors sits for the general administration of the Bank, at the Bank's Public Head Office in Edinburgh. The local business of that district is also conducted at that office. For the local business in the other parts of the kingdom, the Bank has its regular public offices in the principal towns. At each of these offices there is the Bank agent or cashier, who gives due security, and conducts the Bank's business for that district, in the manner after mentioned. There is also the Bank's accountant for that office ; who is appointed by the directors. (Will. Parl. 1. 5.) XI. The Bank takes in money, at all its public offices, on deposit receipts or promissory notes, or on current deposit account.* At the Head Office, draughts on London, or on any of the agencies, are given at each agency, draughts on London, or on the Head Office, are given. All these documents are on the Bank's check (and sealed with the Bank's sealt). They bear, in words, to be For the Bank of Scotland;" or, For the Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland.' These documents are signed, if at Edinburgh, by the treasurer, and countersigned by the principal accountant if at an agency, they must be signed by the Bank's agent, as agent, and countersigned by the Bank's account- ant for that agency otherwise they infer no obligation on the Bank.-(Resolution of Court, 28th Feb. 1793.) XII. Bills on London, Edinburgh, or any town where the Bank has its official correspondents, are discounted and purchased at all the Bank's public offices. The Bank's agents judge, in ordinary cases, of the bills presented so that parties meet with no delay. The Bank does not sell, at any of its offices, the bills which it has discounted and purchased. Its agents cannot indorse its bills, unless officially to the treasurer.-(Resolution of Court, 23d Feb. 1789.) XIII. Government stock and other public funds, transferable in London, may be purchased or sold, and dividends thereon may be received, through the Bank. XIV. The Bank gives credit on cash accounts at any of its offices, on bond, with security. The security may be personal co-obligants, conjunctly and severally or Bank of Scotland stock or both or such other security as may be specially agreed on. Applications for cash accounts are given in to the office where the cash account is wanted, and must specify the credit desired, and the security pro- posed; and the individual partners, where copartneries are proposed. Cash accounts are granted by The Bank has always allowed interest on deposits. The rate allowed varies, of course, with the variations in the market rate. During the greater part of the late war it was as high as 4 per cent. ; out at present it is only 2 per cent. t The seal is now dispensed with, except on the Bank's notes. Digitized by Google 118 BANKS (SCOTCH). the directors only ; and not recalled unless by their special authority. It is understood that these credits are not used as dead loans, to produce interest only. In the fair course of business, the ad- vantage of the Bank is consulted by an active circulation of its notes, and by frequent repayments to it in a way least affecting that circulation.-(Resolution of Court, 6th Nov. 1729, and 23d Feb. 1789.) XV. The Bank's dividend of profits has for some time been of per cent. per annum (at present, 1833, it is 6 per cent.) on that part of its capital stock, or 1,000,000L. sterling, paid in. The dividends are paid regularly twice a year, without expense. They may be drawn either at the Bank's Head Office, or at any of its other offices, as most agreeable to the stockholder. By order of the Court of Directors. 6th Nov. 1818. Most of the other Scotch banks are conducted on the same principles and in the same way as the Bank of Scotland, so that the details as to its management will nearly apply to them all. The Royal Bank of Scotland was established in 1727. Its original capital was 151,000L At present it amounts to 2,000,000L The British Linen Company was incorporated in 1746, for the purpose, as its name implies, of undertaking the manufacture of linen. But the views in which it originated were speedily abandoned and it became a banking company only. Its capital amounts to 500,000L None of the other banking companies established in Scotland are chartered associations, with limited responsibility the partners being jointly and individually liable, to the whole extent of their fortunes, for the debts of the firms. Some of them, such as the National Bank, the Commercial Banking Company, the Dundee Commercial Bank, the Perth Bank- ing Company, &c., have very numerous bodies of partners. Their affairs are uniformly conducted by a Board of directors, annually chosen by the shareholders. The Bank of Scotland began, as already stated, to issue 1L notes 80 early as 1704 and their issue has since been continued without interruption. In Scotland," to use the state- ment given in the Report of the Committee of the House of Commons of 1826, on the Pro- missory Notes of Scotland and Ireland, " the issue of promissory notes payable to the bearer on demand, for a sum not less than 20s. has been at all times permitted by law nor has any act been passed, limiting the period for which such issue shall continue legal in that country. In England, the issue of promissory notes for a less sum than 5% was prohibited by law from the year 1777 to the period of the Bank Restriction in 1797. It has been permitted since 1797; and the permission will cease, as the law at present stands, in April, 1829." There have been comparatively few bankruptcies among the Scotch banks. In 1793 and 1825, when 80 many of the English provincial banks were swept off, there was not a single establishment in Scotland that gave way. This superior stability seems to be ascribable partly to the formation of so many banks with numerous bodies of partners, which tends to prevent any company with only a few partners, unless they are known to possess consi- derable fortunes, from getting paper into circulation partly to the less risk attending the business of banking in Scotland and partly to the facility afforded by the law of Scotland of attaching a debtor's property, whether it consists of land or moveables, and making it available to the payment of his debts. In the Report already quoted, the last-mentioned topic is touched upon as follows :-"The general provisions of the law of Scotland bearing upon this subject are calculated to promote the solidity of banking establishments, by affording to the creditor great facilities of ascertain- ing the pecuniary circumstances of individual partners, and by making the private fortunes of those partners available for the discharge of the obligations of the bank with which they are connected. There is no limitation upon the number of partners of which a banking company in Scotland may consist; and, excepting in case of the Bank of Scotland and the two chartered banks, which have very considerable capitals, the partners of all banking com- panies are bound jointly and severally, so that each partner is liable, to the whole extent of his fortune, for the whole debts of the company. A creditor in Scotland is empowered to attach the real and heritable, as well as the personal estate of his debtor, for payment of per- sonal debts, among which may be classed debts due by bills and promissory notes; and recourse may be had, for the purpose of procuring payment, to each description of property at the same time. Execution is not confined to the real property of a debtor merely during his life, but proceeds with equal effect upon that property after his decease. " The law relating to the establishment of records gives ready means of procuring informa- tion with respect to the real and heritable estate of which any person in Scotland may be possessed. No purchase of an estate in that country is secure until the seisine (that is, the instrument certifying that actual delivery has been given) is put on record, nor is any mortgage effectual until the deed is in like manner recorded. " In the case of conflicting pecuniary claims upon real property, the preference is not re- gulated by the date of the transaction, but by the date of its record. These records are accessible to all persons; and thus the public can with ease ascertain the effective means which a banking company possesses of discharging its obligations; and the partners in that company are enabled to determine, with tolerable accuracy, the degree of risk and responsibility to which the private property of each is exposed." Digitized by Google BANKS (SCOTCH). 119 Deposits.-As was previously observed, all the Scotch banks receive deposits of so low a value as 10L, and sometimes lower, and allow interest upon them. The interest," say the committee, allowed by the Bank upon deposits varies from time to time according to the current rate of interest which money generally bears. At present (1826) the interest allowed upon deposits is 4 per cent." (At this moment (1833) the in- terest allowed on deposits is only 2 or 2f per cent.) It has been calculated that the aggregate amount of the sums deposited with the Scotch banks amounts to about 20,000,000Z. or 21,000,000/." (It is believed to be now, (1833,) little if any thing under 24,000,000/.) 66 The precise accuracy of such an estimate cannot of course be relied on. The witness by whom it was made thought that the amount of deposits could not be less than 16,000,0004, nor exceed 25,000,000L, and took an intermediate sum as the probable amount. Another witness, who had been connected for many years with different banks in Scotland, and has had experience of their concerns at Stirling, Edinburgh, Perth, Aberdeen, and Glasgow, stated that more than one half of the deposits in the banks with which he had been connected were in sums from ten pounds to two hundred pounds. Being asked what class of the community it is that makes the small deposits, he gave the following answer, from which it appears that the mode of conducting this branch of the banking business in Scotland has long given to that country many of the benefits derivable from the establishment of savings banks. " Question. What class of the community is it that makes the smallest deposits ?-Answer. They are generally the labouring classes, in towns like Glasgow in country places, like Perth and Aberdeen, it is from servants and fishermen, and that class of the community, who save small sums from their earnings, till they come to be a bank deposit. There is now a facility for their placing money in the Provident Banks, which receive money till the de- posit amounts to 10L. When it comes to 10L, it is equal to the minimum of a bank deposit. The system of banking in Scotland is an extension of the Provident Bank system. Half- yearly or yearly those depositors come to the bank, and add the savings of their labour, with the interest that has accrued upon the deposits from the previous half year or year, to the principal; and in this way it goes on without being at all reduced, accumulating (at com- pound interest) till the depositor is able either to buy or build a house, when it comes to be 100/, or 2001, or 300L, or till he is able to commence business as a master in the line in which be has hitherto been a servant. A great part of the depositors of the bank are of that description, and a great part of the most thriving of our farmers and manufacturers have arisen from such beginnings." Cash Accounts or Credits.-The loans or advances made by the Scotch banks are either in the shape of discounts, or upon cash credits, or, as they are more commonly termed, cash accounts. This species of account does not differ in principle from an over-drawing account at a private banker's in England. A cash credit is a eredit given to an individual by a banking company for a limited sum, seldom under 100L or 200L, upon his own security, and that of two or three individuals approved by the bank, who become sureties for its payment. The Individual who has obtained such a credit is enabled to draw the whole sum, or any part of it, when he pleases; replacing it, or portions of it, according as he finds it convenient interest being charged upon such part only as he draws out. " If a man borrows 5,000/. from a pri- vate hand, besides that it is not always to be found when required, he pays interest for it whether he be using it or not. His bank credit costs him nothing, except during the mo- ment it is of service to him; and this circumstance is of equal advantage as if he had bor- rowed money at a much lower rate of interest."-(Hume's Essay on the Balance of Trade.) This, then, is plainly one of the most commodious forms in which advances can be made. Cash credits are not, however, intended to be a dead loan; the main object of the banks in granting them is to get their notes circulated, and they do not grant them except to persons in business, or to those who are frequently drawing out and paying in money. The system of cash credits has been very well described in the Report of the Lords' Com- mittee of 1826, on Scotch and Irish Banking. There is also," say their lordships, " one part of their system, which is stated by all the witnesses (and, in the opinion of the com- mittee, very justly stated) to have had the best effects upon the people of Scotland, and par- ticularly upon the middling and poorer classes of society, in producing and encouraging habits of frugality and industry. The practice referred to is that of cash credits. Any per- son who applies to a bank for a cash credit, is called upon to produce two or more competent sureties, who are jointly bound and after a full inquiry into the character of the applicant, the nature of his business, and the sufficiency of his securities, he is allowed to open a credit, and to draw upon the bank for the whole of its amount, or for such part as his daily transac- tions may require. To the credit of the account be pays in such sums as he may not have occasion to use, and interest is charged or credited upon the daily balance, as the case may be. From the facility which these cash credits give to all the small transactions of the country, and from the opportunities which they afford to persons, who begin business with little or no capital but their character, to employ profitably the minutest products of their Digitized by Google 120 BANKS (SCOTCH). industry, it cannot be doubted that the most important advantages are derived to the whole community. The advantage to the banks who give these cash credits arises from the call which they continually produce for the issue of their paper, and from the opportunity which they afford for the profitable employment of part of their deposits. The banks are indeed so sensible, that in order to make this part of their business advantageous and secure, it is ne- cessary that their cash credits should (as they express it) be frequently operated upon, that they refuse to continue them unless this implied condition be fulfilled. The total amount of their cash credits is stated by one witness to be 5,000,000L of which the average amount advanced by the banks may be one third." The expense of a bond for a cash credit of 500L is 4L stamp duty, and a charge of from 5s. to 10s. 6d. per cent. for filling it up. Circulation, &c.-According to a demi-official return given in the Commons' Report already referred to, the total number of notes in circulation in Scotland, in the early part of 1826, amounted to 3,309,082; of which 2,079,344 were under 5L., and 1,229,838, 5/. and upwards. The Scotch banks draw on London at 20 days' date. This is denominated the par of exchange between London and Edinburgh. Most of the great Scotch banks, such as the Bank of Scotland, the Royal Bank, &c., have established branches in other towns besides that where the head office is kept. By the act 9 Geo. 4. c. 65., to restrain the negotiation in England of Scotch or Irish promissory notes and bills under 5/., it is enacted, that if any body politic or corporate, or person, shall, after the 5th of April, 1829, publish, utter, negotiate, or transfer, in any part of England, any promissory or other note, draft, engagement, or undertaking, payable on demand to the bearer, for any sum less than 5l., purporting to have been made or issued in Scotland or Ireland, every such body politic or corporate, or person, shall forfeit for every such offence not more than 20/. nor less than 5/. Nothing contained in this act applies to any draft or order drawn by any person on his or her banker, or on any person acting as such banker, for the payment of money held by such banker or person for the use of the person by whom such draft or order shall be drawn. No. I.-The following Table contains an Account of the Number of Banks in Scotland; the Names of the Firms or Banks; Dates of their Establishment; Places of the Head Offices; Number of Branches; Number of Partners; and the Names of their London Agents.-(Extracted principally from the Appendix, p. 19. to the Commons' Report of 1826, on Scotch and Irish Banking.) Names of Firms or Banks. Date. Head Office. No of No. of Branches. Partners. London Agents. 1 Bank of Scotland - 1695 Edinburgh 16 Act of P. Coutts and Co. 2 Royal Bank of Scotland 1727 Ditto 1 Charter Bank of England, and ditto. 3 British Linen Company 1746 Ditto 27 Ditto Smith, Payne, and Co. 4 Aberdeen Banking Comp. 1767 Aberdeen 6 80 Glyn and Co. 5 Aberdeen Town and Co. Bk. 1825 Ditto 4 446 Jones, Loyd, and Co. 6 Arbroath Banking Comp. 1825 Arbroath 2 112 Glyn and Co. 7 Carrick and Co. or Ship Bk. 1746 Glasgow None 3 Smith, Payne, and Co. 8 Com. Bk. Comp. of Scotland 1810 Edinburgh 31 521 Jones, Loyd, and Co. 9 Commercial Banking Comp. 1778 Aberdeen None 15 Kinloch and Sons. 10 Dundee Banking Company 1777 Dundee None 61 Kinloch and Sons. 11 Dundee New Bank 1802 Ditto 1 6 Ransom and Co. 12 Dundee Commercial Bank 1825 Ditto None 202 Glyn and Co. 13 Dundee Union Bank - 1809 Ditto 4 85 Glyn and Co. 14 Falkirk Banking Company 1787 Falkirk 1 5 Remington and Co. 15 Greenock Banking Comp. 1785 Greenock 3 14 Kay and Co. 16 Glasgow Banking Company 1809 Glasgow 1 19 Ransom and Co., Glyn & Co. 17 Hunters and Co. 1773 Ayr 3 8 Herries and Co. IS Leith Banking Company - 1792 Leith 4 15 Barnet and Co. 19 National Bank of Scotland 1825 Edinburgh 8 1,238 Glyn and Co. 20 Montrose Bank 1814 Montrose 2 97 Barclay and Co. 21 Paisley Banking Company 1783 Paisley 4 6 Smith, Payne, and Co. 22 Paisley Union Bank 1788 Ditto 3 4 Glyn and Co. 23 Perth Banking Company 1766 Perth 5 147 Barelay and Co. 24 Perth Union Bank - Ditto - 69 Remington and Co. 25 Ramsay's, Bonar's, and Co. 1738 Edinburgh None 8 Coutts and Co. 26 Renfrewshire Banking Co. 1802 Greenock 5 6 Kay and Co. 27 Shetland Bank - Lerwick - 4 Barclay and Co. 28 Sir Wm. Forbes and Co. - - Edinburgh - 7 Barelay and Co., Coutts & Co. 29 Stirling Banking Company 1777 Stirling 2 7 Kinloch and Sons. 30 Thistle Bank 1761 Glasgow None 6 Smith, Payne, and Co. Private Banking Companies in Edinburgh who do not issue Notes. No. of No. of Names of Firms or Banks. Date. Head Office. Branches. Partners. London Agents. 1 Kinnear, Smith and Co. 1830 Edinburgh None Smith, Payne, and Co. 2 Robert Allan and son. 1776 Ditto None Bosanquet and Co. 3 James Inglis and Co. Ditto None Bosanquet and Co. Digitized by Google BANKS (IRISH). 121 No. II.-An Account of the Number of Licences taken out by Country Bankers in Scotland for the Years ending the 10th of October, 1824, 1825, 1826, and 1827 ; specifying such as have been given to Firms carrying on Business in more Places than one. 1824. 1825. 1826. 1827. Number of licences issued to bankers who issue notes at one place only 10 13 9 9 Ditto to bankers who issue notes at two different places - - 10 12 12 6 Ditto to bankers who issue notes at three different places - - 6 6 12 6 Ditto to bankers who issue notes at four or more places - - 52 52 56 60 78 83 89 81 Certified, THOMAS PENDER, Compt. Stamp Office, Edinburgh, 4th of March, 1828. No. III.-Statement of the Number of Persons convicted of Forgery of all Instruments connected with the Chartered and other Banks of Scotland; whether of Bank Notes, of Post Bills, Bills of Exchange, or otherwise, from 1791 to 1829, both inclusive; particularizing the Capital Convictions upon which Execution took place, and the Cases of mitigated Punishment. Number whose Number where Pains Number on Total Number Sentences were miti- For Forging. For Uttering. Convicted. of Law restricted, whom Capital Number and Sentence short of Sentence pro- gated by His Majesty. Executed. Death pronounced. nounced. Pardoned. Commuted. 49 150 199 172 27 2 11 16 Edinburgh, Certified by JA. ANDERSON, 18th of June, 1830. Depute Clerk of Justiciary. v BANKS (IRISH). " In no country, perhaps," says Sir Henry Parnell, has the issuing of paper money been carried to such an injurious excess as in Ireland. A national bank was established in 1783, with similar privileges to those of the Bank of England, in respect to the restriction of more than 6 partners in a bank; and the injury that Ireland has sustained from the repeated failure of banks may be mainly attributed to this defective regulation. Had the trade of banking been left as free in Ireland as it is in Scotland, the want of paper money that would have arisen with the progress of trade would, in all probability, have been sup- plied by joint stock companies, supported with large capitals, and governed by wise and effectual rules. " In 1797, when the Bank of England suspended its payments, the same privilege was extended to Ireland; and after this period the issues of the Bank of Ireland were rapidly increased. In 1797, the amount of the notes of the Bank of Ireland in circulation was 621,917/.; in 1810, 2,266,4714 and in 1814, 2,986,9991. These increased issues led to corresponding increased issues by the private banks, of which the number was 50 in the year 1804. The consequence of this increase of paper was a great depreciation of it; the price of bullion and guineas rose to 10 per cent. above the mint price; and the exchange with London became as high as 18 per cent., the par being 81. This unfavourable exchange was afterwards corrected; not by any reduction in the issues of the Bank of Ireland, but by the depreciation of the British currency in the year 1810, when the exchange between London and Dublin settled again at about par. The loss that Ireland has sustained by the failure of banks may be described in a few words. It appears by the Report of the Committee on Irish Exchanges in 1804, that there were at that time in Ireland 50 registered banks. Since that year, a great many more have been established; but the whole have failed, one after the other, involving the country from time to time in immense distress, with the following exceptions a few that withdrew from business secondly, four banks in Dublin thirdly, three at Belfast; and lastly, one at Mallow. These eight banks, with the new Provincial Bank, and the Bank of Ireland, are the only banks now existing in Ireland. " In 1821, in consequence of 11 banks having failed nearly at the same time in the pre- ceding year, in the South of Ireland, government succeeded in making an arrangement with the Bank of Ireland, by which joint stock companies were allowed to be established at a distance of 50 miles (Irish) from Dublin, and the bank was permitted to increase its capi- tal 500,000L The act of 1 & 2 Geo. 4. c. 72. was founded on this agreement. " But ministers having omitted to repeal in this act various restrictions on the trade of banking that had been imposed by 33 Geo. 2. c. 14., no new company was formed. In 1824, a party of merchants of Belfast, wishing to establish a joint stock company, petitioned par- liament for the repeal of this act of Geo. 2.; and an act was accordingly passed in that session, repealing some of the most objectionable restrictions of it (the 5 Geo. 4. c. 73.). " In consequence of this act, the Northern Bank of Belfast was converted into a joint stock company, with a capital of 500,000Z, and commenced business on the 1st of January, 1825. But the remaining restrictions of 33 Geo. 2,, and certain provisions contained in the L 16 Digitized by Google 122 BANKS (IRISH). new acts of 1 & 2 Geo. 3. and 5 Geo. 4,, obstructed the progress of this company, and they found it necessary to apply to government to remove them ; and a bill was accordingly in- troduced, which would have repealed all the obnoxious clauses of the 33 Geo. 2., had it not been so altered in the committee as to leave several of them in force. In 1825, the Provin- cial Bank of Ireland commenced business with a capital of 2,000,000L; and the Bank of Ireland has of late established branches in all the principal towns in Ireland. " The losses that have been sustained in Ireland by abusing the power of issuing paper have been so great, that much more is necessary to be done, by way of protecting the public from future loss, than the measure proposed last session (1826) by ministers, of abolishing small notes; and the measure already adopted, of allowing joint stock companies to be established in the interior of the country. As the main source of the evil consists in the interference of the law in creating a national bank with exclusive privileges, the first step that ought to be taken for introducing a good system into Ireland is the getting rid of such a bank, and opening the trade of banking in Dublin. The next measure should be the requir- ing of each bank to give security for the amount of paper that is issued; for after the expe- rience of the ignorance with which the Irish banks have conducted their business, and the derangement of the natural course of the trade by the long existence of the bank of Ireland, it would be unwise to calculate upon a sound system of banking speedily supplanting that which has been established. " Under the circumstances in which Ireland is placed, nothing would so much contribute to her rapid improvement in wealth, as the introducing of the Scotch plan of cash credits, and of paying interest on deposits. By cash credits, the capital which now exists would be rendered more efficient, and the paying of interest on small deposits would lead to habits of economy, and to the more rapid accumulation of new capital. The charter of the Bank of Ireland has still to run till the year 1838."-(Observations on Paper Money, &c. by Sir Henry Parnell, pp. 171-177.) The capital of the Bank of Ireland at its establishment in 1783 amounted to 600,000Z but it has been increased at various periods; and has, since 1821, amounted to 3,000,000L At present, no bank having more than 6 partners can be established any where within 50 Irish miles of Dublin nor is any such bank allowed to draw bills upon Dublin for less than 50L, or at a shorter date than 6 months. This enactment seems to amount to a virtual pro- hibition of the drawing of such bills. The Bank of Ireland draws on London at 20 days' date. She neither grants cash credits, nor allows any interest on deposits. She discounts at the rate of 51. per cent. In 1828, the currency of Ireland was assimilated to that of Great Britain. Previously to that period, the currency of the former was 81 per cent. less valuable than that of the latter. Account of Bank of Ireland Notes in Circulation, including Bank Post Bills, in each Half Year, com- mencing with the Half Year ending lat of January, 1797, to 1st of January, 1819, inclusive. Years. January 1. July 1. Years. January 1. July 1. £ £ £ £ 1797 733,763 785,101 1809 3,002,699 3,144,677 1798 1,081,512 1,245,214 1810 3,170,064 3,171,607 1799 1,363,710 1,557,737 1811 3,331,892 3,472,781 1800 1,928,381 2,317,235 1812 3,616,476 3,763,229 1801 2,350,133 2,393,901 1812 3,957,920 4,199,474 1802 2,431,152 2,587,187 1814 4,165,906 4,281,449 1803 2,662,405 2,617,144 1815 4,528,041 4,434,455 1804 2,796,767 2,859,977 1846 4,179,540 4,193,853 1805 2,817,697 2,778,635 1817 4,277,018 4,304,040 1806 2,560,271 2,517,581 1818 4,387,155 4,413,463 1807 2,693,796 2,789,544 1819 4,477,019 1808 2,746,717 2,798,635 An Account of the Average Amount of Bank of Ireland Notes, including Bank Post Bills, issued dur- ing the Six Years ending with 1825. Years. Notes and Bills. Irish Currency. Years. Notes and Bills. Irish Currency. £ 8. £ 8. £ 8. in s. 1820 of 51. and upwards 2,894,777 5 1823 of5l. and upwards 3,528,025 7 under al. 1,314,806 15 under 51. 1,588,764 7 4,209,584 0 5,117,389 14 1821 of 51. and upwards 8,501,119 11 1824 of5l. and upwards 3,890,337 6 under 51. 1,710,003 3 under 51. 1,732,118 6 5,211,798 14 5,022,455 14 1828 of 51. and upwards 3,618,111 1 1825 of51. and upwards 4,446,995 0 under 54. 1,552,321 2 under 51. 1,964,354 8 5,170,432 2 6,411,349 8 $ (Commons Report of 1826, p. 20.) There is no later account of the circulation of the Bank of Ireland, or of the other Irish banks. The entire sterling. paper circulation of Ireland may now, probably, amount to between 7,000,000. and 8,000,000L. Digitized by Google BANKS (FOREIGN). 123 (Retura of the Amount of the Notes of the Bank of Ireland (including Bank Post Bills) in Circuls- tion at the undermentioned Periods.-(Part. Puper, No. 435. Sess. 1834.) £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 1832. June 7. - 3,975,322 7 5 1834. January 2. 3,990,841 7 6 1833. January 3. 4,245,528 10 11 June 5. 3,791,951 19 4 July 4. - 3,790,653 7 7 Sup.) It appears from the statements given in the Report of the Commons' Committee of 1326, that the average value of the notes and post bills of the Bank of Ireland of 51. and upwards in circulation, during the five years ending with 1825, amounted to 3,646,660/. Irish cur- rency and that the average value of the notes and post bills under 51. in circulation during the same period amounted to 1,643,828/. Irish currency. The average value of the notes of all descriptions issued by the other banking establishments in Ireland, in 1825, amounted to 1,192,886L Provincial Bank of Ireland.-This important establishment was, as already stated, founded in 1825. Its subscribed capital consists of 2,000,000L. divided into 20,000 shares of 100L each, of which 25 per cent., or 500,000L, has been paid up. Its head office is in London; and at present it has subordinate offices in Cork, Limerick, Clonmel, Londonderry, Sligo, Wexford, Waterford, Belfast, Galway, Armagh, Athlone, Coleraine, Kilkenny, Bal- lina, Tralee, Youghall, Enniskillen, Monaghan, Banbridge, and Ballymena. The last 5 have been opened since 1831. The entire management of the establishment is vested in the court of directors in London. The business of the branch banks is conducted, under the control of the head office, by the managers, with the advice and assistance of 2 or more gentlemen of respectability in the district, each holding 10 shares in the bank. The business consists of discounting bills; granting cash credits, after the manner of the Scotch banks; receiving deposits, on which interests, varying according to circumstances, is allowed in drawing and giving letters of credit on other places of Ireland, Great Britain, &c. and of other details incident to banking. It has had several pretty severe runs to sustain. In the course of a single week, in October, 1828, about 1,000,000L in gold was sent from England to Ireland on account of the Provincial Bank This prompt and ample supply effectually maintained the credit of the establishment, and did much to restore confidence. The notes of the Provincial Bank have always been payable at the places where they are issued. The Bank of Ireland began to establish branches in 1825; but the notes issued by her branches were not, at first, payable except at the head office in Dublin. This distinction, which tended to throw the principal pressure of runs in the country on the Provincial Bank, and other private companies, was abolished by the act 9 Geo. 4. c. 81., which made it obli- gatory on all banks to pay their notes at the place of issue. Notes of the Provincial Bank are received by the Treasury in payment of taxes, in the same way as those of the Bank of Ireland; and it is the bank of government for the excise, post-office, and stamp revenues for those parts of the country beyond the exclusive privileges of the Bank of Ireland. The divi- dends have been at the rate of 4, 5, and, since the 25th of December, 1832, of. 6 per cent. per annum. Its stock is now at a high premium, the 25% paid up shares fetching 35L or 36/. Northern Banking Company.-This establishment has its head office in Belfast, and its branches are distributed throughout Ulster. Its capital and operations are on a much less extensive scale than those of the Provincial Bank, but in other respects they are conducted nearly in the same way. There are very few private banking establishments at present existing in Ireland, at least compared with those in this country. VI. BANKS (FOREION). To attempt giving any detailed account of the principal foreign banks would very far exceed our limits; we shall, therefore, only notice a few of the more celebrated. The Bank of Venice seems to have been the first banking establishment in Europe. It was founded so early as 1171, and submisted till the subversion of the republic in 1797. It was essentially a deposit bank; and its bills bore at all times a premium or agio over the current money of the city. The Bank of Amsterdam was established in 1659. It was a deposit bank; and pay- ments were made by writing off sums from the account of one individual to those of another. According to the principles on which the bank was established, it should have had at all times in its coffers bullion equal to the full amount of the claims upon it. But the directors privately lent about 10,500,000 florins to the states of Holland and Friesland. This circum- stance transpired when the French invaded Holland, and caused the ruin of the bank-(See my edition of the Wealth of Nations, vol. ii. p. 833.) The Bank of the Netherlands was established in 1814. It is formed on the model of the Bank of England; and was to enjoy for 25 years the exclusive privilege of issuing notes. The original capital of 5,000,000 florins was doubled in 1819. The king holds one tenth of Digitized by Google 124 BANKS (FOREIGN). the shares. The affairs of the bank are managed by a president, secretary, and 5 directors who are chosen every 6 months, but may be indefinitely re-elected. This bank discounts bills of exchange with three responsible signatures; it takes continuations on stock, and sometimes lends on bullion at such a rate of interest and to such an extent as may be agreed upon. It occasionally, also, makes loans on merchandise, but never at less than 5 per cent. Its notes vary from 1,000 florins to 25 florins, that is, from 8314 to 2111 The dividends have varied from 3 to 7 per cent. The shares are each 1,000 florins, and are at present worth 25 per cent. premium ex-dividend. The responsibility of the shareholders is limited to the amount of their Consul's Answer to Circular Queries.) The Bank of Hamburgh is a deposit bank, and its affairs are managed according to a system that insures the fullest publicity. It receives no deposits in coin, but only in bullion of a certain degree of fineness. It charges itself with the bullion at the rate of 442 schillings the mark, and issues it at a rate of 444 schillings; being a charge of 4ths, or nearly the per cent. for its retention. It advances money on jewels to 4ths of their value. The city is answerable for all pledges deposited with the bank they may be sold by auction, if they remain 1 year and 6 weeks without any interest being paid. If the value be not claimed within 3 years, it is forfeited to the poor. The Bank of Hamburgh is universally admitted to be one of the best managed in Europe. The Bank of France was founded in 1803. The exclusive privilege of issuing notes payable to bearer was granted to it for 40 years. The capital of the bank consisted at first of 45,000,000 fr., but it was subsequently increased to 90,000,000 fr., divided into 90,000 shares or actions of 1,000 fr. each. Of these shares, 67,900 are in the hands of the public 22,100, being purchased up by the bank, form part of her capital. The notes issued by the bank are for 1,000 and 500 fr. The dividend varies from 4 to 5 per cent. and there is, besides, a reserve retained from the profits, which is vested in the 5 per cents. A bonus of 200 fr. a share was paid out of this reserve to the shareholders in 1820. The reserve in possession of the bank in 1828, amounted to 6,623,000 fr. No bills are discounted that have more than 3 months to run. The customary rate of discount is 4 per cent., but it varies according to circumstances. The discounts in 1827 amounted to 621,000,000 fr. The bank is obliged to open a compte courant for every one who requires it; and performs services for those who have such accounts, similar to those rendered by the private banks of London to their customers. She is not allowed to charge any commission upon current accounts, so that her only remuneration arises out of the use of the money placed in her hands by the individuals whose payments she makes. This branch of the business is said not to be profitable. There are about 1,600 accounts current at the bank; and of the entire expenses of the establishment, amounting to about 900,000 fr. a year, two thirds are said to be incurred in this department. The bank advances money on pledges of different kinds, such as foreign coin or bullion, government or other securities, &c. It also undertakes the care of valuable articles, as plate, jewels, bills, title-deeds, &c. The charge is 1 per cent. of the value of each deposit for every period of 6 months or under. The administration of the bank is vested in a council general of 20 members, viz. 17 regents, and 3 censors, who are nominated by 200 of the principal proprietors. The king appoints the governor and deputy governor. The first must be possessed of 150, and the latter of 50 shares. A compte rendu is annually published, and a report by the censors, which together give a very full exposition of the affairs of the bank. The institution is flourishing, and enjoys unlimited credit.-(For further details with respect to the Bank of France, see Storch, Cours d' Economic Politique. Paris, 1823, tom. iv. pp. 168-180,, and the Comptes Rendus of the different years.) Banks have also been established at Berlin, Copenhagen, Vienna, and Petersburgh. Those who wish for detailed information with respect to these establishments, may consult the work of M. Storch, to which we have just referred. In the 4th volume, there is an ad- mirable account of the paper money of the different continental states. The objects we have in view will be accomplished by laying before our readers the following details with respect to the Commercial Bank of Ruesia, established in 1818 :-"This bank receives deposits in gold and silver, foreign as well as Russian coin, and in bars and ingots. It has a department for transferring the sums deposited with it, on the plan of the Hamburgh Bank. It dis- counts bills, and lends money on deposits of merchandise of Russian produce or origin. Its capital consists of 30,000,000 of bank-note rubles. It is administered by a governor and 4 directors appointed by government, and 4 directors elected by the commercial body of Peters- burgh. The property in the bank is protected against all taxation, sequestration, or attach- ment; and it is enacted, that subjects of countries with which Russia may be at war shall be entitled at all times to receive back their deposits without any reservation. It is also de- clared, that at no time shall the bank be called upon for any part of its capital to assist the government. All deposits must be made for 6 months at least, and be repayable at or before that period, and not be less than 500 rubles sums 80 deposited to pay + per cent. The deposits, if in bars, ingots, or foreign specie, are estimated in Russian silver coin, and so regis- tered in the attestation and if not demanded back within 15 days of the expiration of 6 Digitized by Google BANKS (FOREIGN). 125 months, or the necessary premium paid for the prolongation, the owner loses the right of claiming his original deposit, and must take its estimated value in Russian silver coin. No bills are discounted that have less than 8 days or more than 6 months to run. The rate of discount is 6 per cent. No interest is allowed on money deposited in the bank, unless notice be given that it will be allowed to lie for a year, and 3 months' notice be given of the inten- tion to draw it out, when six per cent. interest is allowed."-(Kelky's Cambist, vol. i. p. 303.) This bank has branches at Archangel, Moscow, Odessa, Riga, &c. The Bank of the United States was incorporated in 1816. Its capital is 35,000,000 dol- lars, divided into 350,000 shares, of 100 dollars each. Seven millions were subscribed by the United States, and the remaining 28,000,000 by individuals, companies, corporations, &c. In 1832, 84,000 shares were held by foreigners. The bank issues no note for less than 5 dollars; all its notes are payable in specie on demand. It discounts bills and makes advances on bullion at the rate of 6 per cent. The management is under 25 directors: 5 of whom, being holders of stock, are annually appointed by the President of the United States. Seven directors, including the president, constitute a Board. The principal office of the bank is in Philadelphia; but in January, 1830, it had twenty- seven subordinate offices, or branch banks, established in different parts of the Union. Sub- joined is a statement of some of the items in the affairs of the Bank of the United States, on the 1st of April, 1830, and the 2d of November, 1832. 1830. 1832. Notes discounted - - - - 32,138,270-89 dol. 45,726,934.95 dol. Domestic bills discounted - - - 10,506,888.54 16,304,498.46 Funded debt held by the bank - - - 11,122,530-90 4,747,696.45 Real estate - - - 2,891,890-75 1,888,721-51 Funds in Europe, equal to specie - - 2,789,498.54 2,885,016-96 Specie - - - - - 9,043,748.97 8,096,055.45 Public deposits - - - - 8,905,901.87 6,957,621-54 Private deposits - - - - - 7,704,256-87 7,629,898.84 Circulation - - - - - 16,083,894-00 17,968,733.36 The total liabilities of the bank to the public on the 1st of November, 1832, including its notes in circulation, deposits, and debts to the holders of public funds, were 37,296,950-20 dollars; and its assets, including specie, cash in Europe, debts from individuals, banking companies, &c. were 79,593,870-97 dollars; leaving a surplus of 42,296,920.77 dollars, showing the stability of the bank to be equal to that of any institution of the sort in the world.-(Report to Secretary of Treasury on Affairs of the Bank of the United States, Dec. 4. 1832.) The charter of the bank expires in 1836. A bill for its renewal passed both houses of Congress in 1832, but was rejected by the President. The probability, how- ever, seems to be, that the measure will still pass. Of its expediency no reasonable doubt can be entertained. (We stated in our last Supplement that the President had succeeded in his contest with this establishment, and that the probability was, that it would wind up its affairs in the course of the present year. But since then it has been rechartered, in so far at least as respects Pennsylvania, by the legislature of that state; and it seems to be expected that it will be re- chartered by the legislature of some of the other states. Although, therefore, the United States Bank no longer exists, as a great national establishment, it maintains its place as the greatest banking company of the New World; and is, in this respect, second, indeed, to none anywhere to be met with, except the Bank of England.-Sup.) The establishment of the Bank of the United States has been of material service, by afford- ing a currency of undoubted solidity, readily accepted in all parts of the Union. At the period when it was organized, nothing could be in a leas satisfactory condition than the paper currency of the United States; in fact, with the exception perhaps of England and Ireland, they have suffered more than any other country from the abuse of banking. In 1814, all the banks south and west of New England stopped payment; and it appears, from the official returns, that in all, no fewer than 165 banks were in this predicament between the 1st of January, 1811, and the 1st of January, 1880! It is of importance to observe, that most of these banks were joint stock companies. At present, indeed, there are no strictly private banking companies in the United States. They are all incorporated by law, with a fixed capital, the shareholders being only liable in most cases, though not uniformly, to the extent of their shares. They all issue notes of 5 dollars: but the issue of notes of a lower value has been forbidden in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia. A good deal has been said in this country of the flourishing state of the New England banks, particularly those of Massachusetts, and they have been held up as a medel for our imitation. But, bad as our sys- tem of country banking undoubtedly is, we should be exceeding sorry to see any attempt made to improve it, by the adoption of even the best parts of the American system. Among other L 2 Digitized by Google 126 BANKS (FOREIGN). regulations, an act of the legislature of Massachusetts provides that no bank for the issue of notes can go into operation in any way, until at least half its capital stock shall be paid in gold and silver into the bank, and be actually existing in its coffers; and the cashier of every bank is bound to make specific returns once a year of its debts and assets, on being required to do so by the secretary of state. But such regulations are found, in practice, to be nearly if not wholly worthless. Instances have occurred of banks having borrowed an amount of dollars equal to half their capital, for a single day; and of such dollars having been examined by the commissioners appointed for that purpose, and reported by them, and sworn by a majority of the directors to be the first instalment paid by the stockholders of the bank, and intended to remain in !-(Gouge's Paper Money and Banking in the United States, part ii. p. 157.) We do not, of course, imagine that such disgraceful in- stances can be of common occurrence but a system which permits of frauds of this sort being perpetrated under cover of authority, must be altogether vicious. The publicity, too, to which the banks are subject, is injurious rather than otherwise. They know when they are to be called upon to make their returns; and in order to render them as favourable as possibler they are in the habit, for a month or two previously, of narrowing their discounts, to the great inconvenience of those with whom they deal and endeavour by every means in their power, through temporary loans, and all manner of devices, to swell the amount of bullion in their coffers on the day of examination. If the banks were obliged to make regular weekly or even monthly returns of their situation, they might afford some little useful in- formation but it is abundantly obvious, that that which is derived from the present returns must be, even when not so intended, misleading and deserving of very little attention. The truth cannot be too often repeated, that it is quite impossible ever to organize secure banks of issue,-and it is with such only that the legislature has any right to interfere,-except by obliging them to give security for their notes. Every other scheme, how carefully soever it may be devised, is sure in the end to prove nugatory and to be defeated. That part of the American system which limits the responsibility of the partners in a lank to the amount of their shares, seems to us to be in the last degree objectionable. It affords a strong tempta- tion to the commission of fraud, and we have yet to learn that it possesses a single counter- vailing advantage. We have been assured by those well acquainted with the facts, that it has been productive of the most mischievous consequences. Six of the Massachusetts banks, having, or professing to have, a capital of 800,000 dollars, failed between the 1st of January, 1811, and the 1st of July, 1830. We subjoin an official abstract of the state of the 84 banks existing in Massachusetts, on the first Saturday of August, 1832. Abstract Account of the Massachusetts Banks. Dollars. Dollars. Capital stock paid in - - 24,520,200.00 Bills of Banks in this State - 1,027,362-03 Bills in circulation - - 7,122,856.00 Bills of banks elsewhere - 174,568.02 Nett profits on hand - - 1,031,900.16 Bulances due from other banks 2,307,784-26 Balances due to other banks - 1,993,904.15 Due to the banks, excepting ba- Cash deposited, &c., not bearing lances - - 38,889,727-24 interest 2,938,970.33 Total resources of the banks - 44,042,006.54 Cash deposited, bearing interest 6,268,584.61 Amount of last dividend - 689,275.00 Due from the banks - - 43,996,900.00 - reserved profits - 436,708-74 Gold, silver, &c. in banks - 902,205-78 Debts secured by pledge of stock 944,761-73 Real estate - - - 738,612.64 - due, and considered doubtful 211,914-78 Rate of dividend on amount of capital of the banks, as existing when dividend was made, 3.125 per cent. Mr. Gallatin has given the following account of the number and capital of the banking es- tablishments existing in the United States on the 1st of January, 1830:- Number States. of Banks. Capital. States. Number of Banks. Capital. Dollars. Dollars. Massachusetts - 66 20,420,000 North Carolina - 3 3,195,000 Maine - - - 18 2,050,000 South Carolina - 5 4,631,000 New Hampshire - 18 1,791,670 Georgia - - 9 4,203,029 Vermont - - 10 432,625 Louisiana - - 4 5,665,980 Rhode Island - - 47 6,118,397 Alabama - - 2 643,503 Connecticut - 13 4,485,177 Mississippi - - 1 950,600 New York - - 37 20,083,253 Tennessee - - 1 737,817 New Jersey - - 18 2,017,009 Ohio - - - 11 1,454,386 Pennsylvania - - 33 14,609,963 Michigan - - 1 10,000 Delaware :- - 4 820,000 Florida - - 1 75,000 Maryland - F - n 6,250,495 Delaware - . 2 District of Columbia - 9 3,875,794 Virginia - - 4 5,571,100 Total - - 330 110,101,808 Digitized by Google BANKS (FOREIGN). 127 For further information with respect to the banks of the United States, see the Report, 12th of February, 1820, of the Secretary of the Treasury (W. H. Crawford, Esq.) to Con- gress; the pamphlet of Albert Gallatin, Esq. on the Currency and Banking System of the United States, Philadelphia, 1831; Gouge's Account of Paper Money and Banking in the United States, &c. And for further details as to foreign banks, see BORDEAUX, CALCUTTA, CHRISTIANIA, COPENHAGEN, NAPLES, &c. (Private Banks of the United States.-The following table shows the extraordinary pro- gress that the banking system has made in the United States. It has recently, however, sustained a considerable check by the suppression in New York and most other states of all bank notes for less than 5 dollars, and by the regulation enforced by government, that the price of all public lands shall be paid in specie. It appears, from the official accounts pub- lished by order of the legislature of the state of New York, that the notes for less than 5 dol- lars in circulation in that state on the 1st of December, 1834, amounted to 3,730,902 dollars and these have since been either wholly, or almost wholly, suppressed. We do not know that any official account has been published of the issue of such notes in the other states but there can be no doubt that, in the aggregate, it must have been many times greater than their issue in New York only. And as these notes are everywhere, we believe, in the course of being withdrawn from circulation, it is clear that a large additional amount of specie will be required to fill up the vacuum occasioned by their withdrawal. This cir- cumstance seems sufficiently to account for the fact, that notwithstanding the alteration in the proportion of gold and silver in the American mint (See article Coins in this Supple- ment), very little silver has been exported from America to Europe. The alteration in question has made it profitable to use gold in preference to silver in all large payments where metallic money is employed but the suppression of small notes has, at the same time, opened a new field for the employment of silver as a subsidiary currency, or as a means of effecting small payments; and it seems to be generally supposed, that the most part of the silver that would otherwise have found its way to foreign countries, in consequence of the new mint regulations, will be retained in this subordinate capacity. Account of the Progress of Banking in the United States, from January, 1815, to January, 1835 specifying the Number of Banks in the different States, at different Epochs, with the Amount of their Capital. (Official Letter by the Secretary to the American Treasury, 5th January, 1836. p. 91.) January 1st, January 1st, January 1st, 1815. 1820. 1830. June, 1834. January, 1835. States. No. of Banks. Capital. No. of Banks. Capital. No. of Banks. Capital. No. of Banks. Capital. No. of Banks. No. of Branches. Capital. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Maine 8 1,380,000 15 1,654,900 18 2,050,000 29 2,777,000 36 3,549,850 New Hampshire 10 941,152 10 1,005,276 18 1,791,670 22 2,271,300 26 2,655,008 Vermont I 44,955 10 432,625 17 912,000 18 1,021,815 Missachusetts 21 11,050,000 28 10,485,700 66 20,420,000 102 28,236,250 105 30,409,450 Rhode Island 14 2,027,000 30 2,982,026 47 6,118,397 51 7,488,748 60 8,097,482 Connecticut 10 3,655,750 8 3,689,337 13 4,485,177 21 5,708,015 31 3 7,350,766 New York 26 18,946,318 33 18,988,774 37 20,083,353 78 27,755,264 87 2 31,881,460 New Jersey 11 2,121,932 14 2,130,949 18 2,017,009 26 2,500,000 24 2,707,135 Pennsylvania 42 15,068,818 36 14,681,780 33 14,610,333 41 17,061,044 44 17,958,444 Delaware 6 966,990 6 974,900 5 830,000 7 2,000,000 4 4 830,000 Maryland 17 7,832,002 14 6,708,131 13 6,250,495 20 9,270,091 15 4 7,662,639 District of Columbia 10 4,078,295 13 5,525,319 9 3,875,794 8 3,337,305 7 2,613,985 Virginia 4 4,121,097 4 5,212,192 4 5,571,100 4 5,694,500 5 17 5,840,000 North Carolina 3 1,576,600 3 2,964,887 3 3,195,000 3 1,824,725 4 7 2,464,925 South Carolina 5 3,730,900 5 4,475,000 5 4,631,000 7 3,156,318 8 2 7,556,318 Georgia 2 623,580 4 3,401,510 9 4,203,029 13 6,534,691 13 10 6,783,308 Florida I 75,000 6 1,000,000 3 114,320 Alabama 3 469,112 20 643,503 5 4,308,207 2 4 6,107,623 Louisiana 3 1,432,300 4 2,597,420 4 5,665,980 10 23,664,755 11 31 27,172,145 Mississippi 1 100,000 1 900,000 I 950,600 3 3,666,805 5 10 5,890,162 Tennessee 2 212,962 8 2,119,782 1 737,817 3 2,243,827 3 4 2,890,381 Kentucky 2 959,175 42 8,807,431 3 1,875,418 6 11 4,898,685 Missouri 1 250,000 1 Illinois 2 140,910 1 200,000 I I 278,739 Indiana 2 202,857 I 150,000 1 9 800,000 Ohio 12 1,434,719 20 1,797,463 11 1,454,386 20 5,986,625 31 6,390,741 Michigan 1 100,000 5 500,000 7 1 658,980 203 82,259,590 307 102,210,611 329 110,192,268 506 170,123,788 557 121 194,584,361 United States' bank 1 35,000,000 1 35,000,000 I 35,000,000 1 25 35,000,000 208 82,259,590 308 137,240,611 330 145,192,268 507 205,123,788 558 146 229,584,361 Estimated capital of seven banks from which no returns 1,665,976 Totals 208 82,259,590 308 137,210,611 330 145,192,268 507 205,123,788 558 146 231,250,337 Digitized by Google 128 BANKS FOR SAVINGS. Account of the Average Dividends paid by the Banks of the State of New York, on their paid up Capitals, in 1831, 1832, 1833, and 1834.-(Report of Bank Commissioners to the Legisluture of New York, 22nd Jan. 1835.) Capital. Amount of Dividends. Rate per cent. 1831. Dollars. Dollars. 9 Country banks, capitals of 100,000 dollars, and under - - 880,000 80,500 9:14 9 do. capitals over 100,000 dollars, and not over 200,000 dollars - - - 1,395,000 117,180 8:40 10 do., capitals over 200,000 dollars - - 3,750,000 330,000 8-80 Total - 6,025,000 527,680 8:75 1832. 17 Country banks, 1st class, as above - 1,680,000 158,500 9.43 11 do. do. 2d class - - - 1,745,000 163,030 9:34 11 do. do. 3d class - - - 4,160,600 362,568 8:69 13 New York city banks - - - 11,311,200 695,165 6:14 Total - 18,905,800 1,379,263 7.29 1833. 19 Country banks, 1st class - - - 1,880,000 197,500 10-50 14 do. do. 2d class - - - 2,215,000 206,080 9:30 11 do. do. 3d class - - - 4,169,600 444,126 10-65 14 New York city banks - - - 12,111,200 760,787 6-28 Total - 20,375,800 1,608,493 7.89 1834. 20 Country banks, 1st class - - - 1,980,000 206,000 10:43 21 do. do. 2d class - - - 3,420,000 290,818 850 13 do. do. 3d class - - - 4,719,600 409,492 8.67 15 New York city banks - - - 13,611,200 1,028,462 7.55 Total - 23,730,800 1,934,772 8:15 Sup.) VII. BANKS FOR SAVINGS, Are banks established for the receipt of small sums deposited by the poorer class of persons, and for the accumulation of such sums at compound interest. They are managed by in- dividuals, who derive no benefit whatever from the deposits. All monies paid into any Savings Bank established according to the provisions of the act 9 Geo. 4. c. 92. are ordered to be paid into the Banks of England and Ireland, and vested in Bank annuities or Exchequer bills. The interest payable to depositors is not to exceed 2łd. per cent. per diem, or 3/. 8s. 51d. per cent. per annum. No depositor can contribute more than 30L, exclusive of com- pound interest, to a Savings Bank in any one year; and the total deposits to be received from any one individual are not to exceed 150/.; and whenever the deposits, and compound interest accruing upon them, standing in the name of any one individual, shall amount to 200L, no interest shall be payable upon such deposit so long as it shall amount to 200L Since the establishment of this system in 1817, down to January, 1831, the sums received from depositors, and the interest accruing upon them, amounted to 20,760,228!., of which the depositors had received, in principal and interest, 5,648,838L leaving at the period in question, a balance due to the depositors of 15,111,890L The commissioners for the re- duction of the national debt have the disposal of the sums vested in the public funds on ac- count of Savings Banks. The principle and object of these institutions cannot be too highly commended. In the metropolis, and many other parts of England, public banks do not receive small deposits, and upon none do they pay any interest. And even in Scotland, where the public banks allow interest upon deposits, they do not generally receive less than 10/. But few poor per- sons are able to save 80 large a sum, except by a lengthened course of economy. The truth, therefore, is, that until Savings Banks were established, the poor were every where without the means of securely and profitably investing those small sums they are not unfrequently in a condition to save and were consequently led, from the difficulty of disposing of them, to neglect opportunities for making savings, or if they did make them, were tempted, by the offer of high interest, to lend them to persons of doubtful characters and desperate fortunes, by whom they were, for the most part, squandered. Under such circumstances, it is plain that nothing could be more important, in the view of diffusing habits of forethought and economy amongst the labouring classes, than the establishment of Savings Banks, where the smallest sums are placed in perfect safety, are accumulated at compound interest, and are paid, with their accumulations, the moment they are demanded by the depositors. The system is yet only in its infancy but the magnitude of the deposits already received, sets its powerful and salutary operation in a very striking point of view. We subjoin a copy of the rules of the St. Pancras Savings Bank, which may be taken as a model for similar institutions, inasmuch as they have been drawn up with great care, and closely correspond with the provisions in the act 9 Geo. 4. c. 92. Digitized by Google BANKS FOR SAVINGS. 129 1. Management.-This Bank is under the management of a president, vice-presidents, trustees, and not less than fifty managers, none of whom are permitted to derive any benefit whatsoever, directly or indirectly, from the deposits received, or the produce thereof. One or more of the managers attend when the Bank is open for business. 2. Superintending Committee.-A committee of not less than ten managers, three of whom form a quorum, is empowered to superintend, manage, and conduct the general business of this Bank ; to add to their number from among the managers to fill up vacancies in their own body, and to appoint a treasurer or treasurers, agent or agents, auditors, an actuary and clerks, and other officers and ser- vants, and to withdraw any such appointments, and to appoint others, should it be considered neces- sary so to do. The proceedings of this committee are regularly laid before the general meetings of the Bank. 3. Elections.-The superintending committee is empowered to add to the number of managers, until they amount to one hundred and twenty, exclusively of the president, vice-presidents, and trustees. And any vacancies of president, vice-presidents, and trustees, are to be filled up at a general meeting. 4. General Meetings.-A general meeting of the president, vice-presidents, trustees, and managers of this Bank shall be held once a year, in the month of February. The superintending committee shall lay before every such meeting a report of the transactions of the Bank, and state of the accounts. The superintending committee for the succeeding year shall be elected at such general meeting and failing such election, the former committee shall be considered as reappointed. 5. Special Meetings.-The superintending committee are authorised to call special general meetings, when they think proper and also, on the requisition of any ten managers, delivered in writing to the actuary, or to the manager in attendance at the Bank; and of such meeting seven days' notice shall be given. 6. Liability of Trustees, Managers, Officers, &c.-No trustee or manager shall be personally liable except for his own acts and deeds, nor for any thing done by him in virtue of his office, except where he shall be guilty of wilful neglect or default; but the treasurer or treasurers, the actuary, and every officer intrusted with the receipt or custody of any sum of money deposited for the purposes of this Institution, and every officer, or other person, receiving salary or allowance for their services from the funds thereof, shall give good and sufficient security, by bond or bonds, to the clerk of the peace of the county of Middlesex, for the just and faithful execution of such office of trust. 7. Investment and Limitation of Deposits.-Deposits of not less than one shilling, and not exceeding thirty pounds in the whole, exclusive of compound interest, from any one depositor, or trustee of a depositor, during each and every year ending on the 20th of November, will be received and invested, pursuant to 9 Geo. 4. c. 92. S. 11., until the same shall amount to one hundred and fifty pounds in the whole; and when the principal and interest together shall amount to two hundred pounds, then no interest will be payable on such deposit, so long as it shall continue to amount to that sum. But depo- sitors whose accounts amounted to, or exceeded, two hundred pounds, at the passing of the said act, on the 28th of July, 1828, will continue to be entitled to interest and compound interest thereon. 8. Interest to be allowed to Depositors.-In conformity with the 24th clause of the 9 Geo. 4. c. 92., an interest at the rate of 21d. per cent. per day, being 31. 8s. 54d. per cent. per annum (the full amount authorised by the said act), will be allowed to depositors, and placed to their accounts as a cash deposit, in the month of November in each year. Depositors demanding payment of the whole amount of their deposits in this Bank, will be allowed the interest due on such deposits up to the day on which notice of withdrawing shall be given, but no interest will be allowed, in any case, on the fractional parts of a pound sterling. 9. Description and Declaration.-Every person desirous of making any deposit in this Bank, shall, at the time of making their first deposit, and at such other times as they shall be required so to do, declare their residence, occupation, profession, or calling, and sign (either by themselves, or, in case of infants under the age of seven years, by some person or persons to be approved of by the trustees or managers, or their officer) a declaration that they are not directly or indirectly entitled to any deposit in, or bene- fit from, the funds of any other Savings Bank in England or Ireland, nor to any sum or sums standing in the name or names of any other person or persons in the books of this Bank. And in case any such declaration shall not be true, every such person (or the person on whose behalf such declaration may have been signed) shall forfeit and lose all right and title to such deposits, and the trustees and managers shall cause the sum or sums so forfeited to be paid to the commissioners for the reduction of the national debt; but no depositor shall be subject or liable to any such forfeiture, on account of being a trustee on behalf of others, or of being interested in the funds of any Friendly Society legally established. 10. Trustees on behalf of others.-Persons may act as trustees for depositors, whether such persons are themselves depositors in any Savings Bank or not, provided that such trustee or trustees shall make such declaration on behalf of such depositor or depositors, and be subject to the like conditions in every respect, as are required in the case of persons making deposits on their own account, and the receipt and receipts of such trustee or trustees, or the survivor of them, or the executors or adminis- trators of any sole trustee, or surviving trustee, with or without (as may be required by the managers) the receipt of the person on whose account such sum may have been deposited, shall be a good and valid discharge to the trustees and managers of the Institution. 11. Minors.-Deposits are received from, or for the benefit of, minors, and are subject to the same regulations as the deposits of persons of 21 years of age and upwards. 12. Friendly and Charitable Societies.-Friendly Societies, legally established previous to the 28th of July, 1828, may deposit their funds through their treasurer, steward, or other officer or officers, with- out any limitation as to the amount. But Friendly Societies formed and enrolled after that date, are not permitted to make deposits exceeding the sum of 300L, principal and interest included and no interest will be payable thereon, whenever the same shall amount to, or continue at, the said sum of 3001. or upwards. Deposits are received from the trustees or treasurers of Charitable Societies, not exceeding 100Z. per annum, provided the amount shall not at any time exceed the sum of 300L, exclusive of interest. 13. Deposits of Persons unable to attend.-Forms are given at the office, enabling persons to become depositors who are unable to attend personally; and those who have previously made a deposit, may send additional sums, together with their book, by any other person. 14. Depositors' deposits are entered in the books of the Bank at the time they are made, and the depositor receives a book with a corresponding entry therein; which book must be brought to the office every time that any further sum is deposited, also when notice is given for withdrawing money, and at the time the repayment is to be made, so that the transactions may be duly entered therein. 15. Withdrawing Deposits.-Depositors may receive the whole or any part of their deposits on any day appointed by the managers, not exceeding fourteen days after notice has been given for that pur- pose but such deposits can only be repaid to the depositor personally, or to the bearer of an order under the hand of the depositor, signed in the presence of either the minister or a churchwarden of the parish in which the depositor resides, of a justice of the peace, or of a manager of this Bank. 17 Digitized by Google 130 BANKS (UNITED STATES). 15 The Depositor's Book must always be produced when notice of withdrawing is given. 16, Money withdrawn may be re-deposited.-Depositors may withdraw any sum or sums of money, and re-deposit the same at any time or times within any one year, reckoning from the 20th day of Novem- ber, provided such sum or sums of money re-deposited, and any previous deposit or deposits which may have been made by such depositor in the course of the year, taken together, shall not exceed, at any time in such year, the sum of 30L., additional principal money bearing interest. 17. Return or Refusal of Deposits.-This Bank is at liberty to return the amount of the deposits to all or any of the depositors, and may refuse to receive deposits in any case, where it shall be deemed expedient so to do. 18. Deposits of a deceased Depositor exceeding Fifty Pounds.-In case of the death of any depositor in this Bank, whose deposits, and the interest thereon, shall exceed in the whole the sum of fifty pounds, the same shall only be paid to the executor or executors, administrator or administrators, on the production of the probate of the will, or letters of administration. 19. Deposits of a deceased Depositor not exceeding Fifty Pounds.-In case a depositor in this Bank shall die, whose deposits, including interest thereon, shall not exceed the sum of fifty pounds, and that the trustees or managers shall be satisfied that no will was made and left, and that no letters of administration will be taken out, they shall be at liberty to pay the same to the relatives or friends of the deceased, or any or either of them, or according to the statute of distribution, or require the production of letters of administration, at their discretion. And the Bank shall be indemnified by any such payments from all and every claim in respect thereof by any person whatsoever. 20. Certificate.-In all cases wherein certificates shall be required of the amount of deposits in this Bank belonging to depositors therein, for the purpose of obtaining, free of stamp duties, a probate of will, or letters of administration, such certificate shall be signed by a manager, and countersigned by the actuary for the time being, as a true extract from the Ledger of the Institution. 21. Arbitration of Differences.In case any dispute shall arise between the trustees or managers of this Bank, or any person or persons acting under them, and any individual depositor therein, or any trustee of a depositor, or any person claiming to be such executor, administrator, or next of kin, then, and in every such case, the matter so in dispute shall be referred to the barrister at law appointed by the commissioners for the reduction of the national debt, under the authority of the 9 Geo. 4. c. 92. S. 45. and whatever award, order, or determination shall be made by the said barrister, shall be bind- ing and conclusive upon all parties, and shall be final, to all intents and purposes, without any appeal. Purchase of Government Annuities by depositors in Savings Banks.-The act 2 & 3 Will. 4. c. 14. enables depositors in Savings Banks and others to purchase government an- nuities for life or for years, and either immediate or deferred. At present these annuities are limited to 20/. a year. The money advanced is returnable in case the contracting party does not live to the age at which the annuity is to become payable, or is unable to continue the monthly or annual instalments. That this measure was benevolently intended, and that it may be productive of advantage to many individuals, cannot be doubted; but we look upon all attempts, and particularly those made by government, to get individuals to ex- change capital for annuities, as radically objectionable; and as being subversive of principles which ought to be strengthened rather than weakened.-(See FUNDS.) Summary of Savings Banks, &c. in England, Wales, and Ireland, November, 1832. In England there were, on the 10th of November, In Wales there were on the 10th of November, 1832, 384 Savings Banks of these, 7 have made 1832, 22 Savings Banks: 1 has made no return; no return, the remaining Banks contain, the remaining Banks contain, Depositors. Amount. Depositors. Amount. £ No. £ No. £ Under 20 - - - 195,035 1,410,792 Depositors - - - 10,374 322,573 - 50 - - - 102,536 3,146,753 Friendly Societies - - 167 23,385 - 100 - - - 47,903 3,235,083 Charitable ditto, - - 53 3,836 - 150 - - - 17,031 2,042,425 - 200 - - - 7,908 1,338,233 Accounts - - - 10,594 349,794 Above 200 - - - 3,756 930,953 Average amount of each deposit in Wales, 311. 374,169 12,161,607* In Ireland there were, on the 10th of November, Friendly Societies - - 4,162 623,273 1832, 77 Savings Banks: 7 have made no return; Charitable ditto - - 1,996 131,148 the remaining Banks contain, Accounts - - - 380,327 12,916,028 Depositors. Amount. Average amount of each deposit in England, 32/. No. £ Depositors - - - 37,898 1,004,189 Friendly Societies - - 234 This is the amount given in the table whence 10,609 Charitable ditto - - 347 this abstract has been taken, but it does not quite 31,027 agree with the items. Accounts - 38,479 1,045,825 Average amount of each deposit in Ireland, 261, Grand Total in England, Wales, and Ireland, on the 10th of November, 1832. Savings Banks. Accounts. Amount. Average Amount of each Deposit. £ is 483 429,400 14,311,647 30 (From the Statistical Table compiled by John Tidd Pratt, E.g.) BANKS (UNITED STATES). [Historical Account of Banking in the United States.-Although various plans had been formed, as well before as during the war of the Revolution, for the establishment of a public bank of deposit, discount, and circulation, the first which was actually carried into execu- Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 131 tion, within the territory of the United States, was that of Mr. Robert Morris, the Superin- tendent of Finance under the Old Congress. The Bank of North America was incorporated by that body on the last day of the year 1781, and by the Legislature of Pennsylvania on the first day of the following month of April. Besides the powers incidental to every cor- poration, it was authorized to hold property, real and personal, to the amount of ten mil- lions of Spanish silver milled dollars, and no more." Its capital, therefore, might be just what the stockholders thought proper to make it within this limit; and no restrictions what- ever were imposed by law on the extent of its issues. The bank, however, went into operation in January, 1782, with a capital of only $400,000. Of this sum $254,000 were subscribed by Mr. Morris, in behalf of the general government; thus making it the principal stockholder, and, in fact, giving it the entire con- trol over the institution. Why the sum subscribed by individual stockholders was so small, as appears from this statement, was owing chiefly to the distrust, which pervaded the com- munity, of the ability and willingness of the bank to maintain the notes they might issue at their par or specie value. Experience had hitherto led the people to look with suspicion on every thing in the shape of paper money. Paper promises to pay had been, for a long period, put forth by the different States of the Confederacy and the value of such promises had uniformly, after a time, become depreciated, and frequently exceedingly depreciated. The public had also, very lately, witnessed the fall to utter worthlessness of the continental money" of Congress. In such circumstances, it is not singular that capitalists in general should have thought it improbable that the business of a bank of circulation could be carried on with a sufficient degree of success to enable them to receive, after the payment of all the necessary expenses, the ordinary rate of profits in other employments. Even the comparatively small amount of capital, with which the Bank of North America has been stated to have commenced its operations, was to a considerable extent merely no- minal. The government took out of the bank with one hand what it put in with the other. Nay, the money borrowed by it from the bank left to the latter only the inconsiderable sum of about $70,000 to constitute its proper banking capital. To what amount its notes were in fact put into circulation, we have no means of determining. But it must be obvious that, in the then existing state of public opinion in relation to paper money, this amount could not have been very large; notwithstanding every contrivance or artifice was resorted to which honest men could make use of, in order to produce a general impression favourable to the credit of the bank. And we may here add, that to us it appears altogether incredible that a banking institution on so contracted a scale, operating too under circumstances so unpro- pitious, should have had, as has often been very confidently asserted, an extraordinary effect in restoring public and private credit, and in aiding the fiscal operations of the government. By a proper degree of caution at the outset in the issue of its notes, and in consequence of their being received by the States, indifferently with specie, in payment for duties and taxes, such an amount was before long successfully put into circulation, as to enable the bank to make dividends at the rate of from 12 to 16 per cent. per annum. In this condition of things, capitalists, of course, no longer had any doubts of the expediency of engaging in the business of banking; and the project of a new bank was formed, to be styled the Bank of Pennsylvania. To prevent its being carried into execution, the books of the Bank of North America were reluctantly opened for additional subscriptions. These were now pro- cured without difficulty; and bank notes were thereupon issued to so great an amount as to yield, as before, extraordinary profits to the stockholders, and on this account, as also on account of the successive expansions and contractions of the currency which were exten- sively laid to the charge of the bank, to excite against it a strong popular feeling. In con- sequence, the Legislature of Pennsylvania took away, in 1785, the charter which they had granted to it in 1782. Yet the bank still carried on its business, claiming the right to do so under the act of Congress above mentioned. It, however, obtained a new charter from the State of Pennsylvania in 1787 and its existence has been continued, by successive acts of incorporation, without interruption, down to the present time. When the general government went into operation under the present constitution, only two other banks had been incorporated in the whole extent of the country. These were the Bank of New York, in the city of New York, and the Bank of Massachusetts, in Boston. It was, then, with a very limited experience only on the part of the community, of the effects of banking, that the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Alexander Hamilton, in December, 1790, presented to Congress his celebrated report, recommending the establishment of a bank of the United States. The advocates of the measure, besides maintaining the expediency of it, as a means of stimulating the industry of the people and augmenting the national wealth, held it to be a most useful, and therefore so desirable an instrument, for exercising the fiscal functions of the government, as to entitle it to be regarded, in the language of the constitu- tion, as necessary and proper for carrying into execution" the powers vested in the government by the constitution. Its opponents denied both its expediency and constitu- tionality. Most of them preferred a metallic currency to one composed of bank notes; whilst the measure was by many regarded as unconstitutional, because, however convenient the Digitized by Google 132 BANKS (UNITED STATES). proposed bank might be to the government, in their opinion it could not, in the true mean- ing of the constitution, be pronounced to be necessary and proper for carrying into execution other powers, of a primary nature, expressly conferred by that document. The act, incor- porating the Bank of the United States, passed the Senate on the 20th of January, 1791, a few members only of this body having resisted its passage, and the House of Representatives, by a vote of 39 to 20, on the 8th day of February following. After great deliberation, and after having requested and received elaborate opinions for and against the adoption of the measure from the several members of his cabinet, who were equally divided on the subject, the bill was signed by the President and became a law on the 14th of the same month. As the act incorporating this first Bank of the United States, is one of great importance in the civil and financial history of the country, and may be regarded as a model on which, in, many respects, future bank charters were framed; it is judged better to insert it verbatim than to give any abstract or abridgment of it. It is as follows :- An Act to incorporate the Subscribers to the Bank of the United States. Whereas it is conceived that the establishment of a bank for the United States, upon a foundation sufficiently extensive to answer the purposes intended thereby, and at the same time, upon the prin- ciples which afford adequate security for an upright and prudent administration thereof, will be very conducive to the successful conducting of the national finances; will tend to give facility to the obtaining of loans, for the use of the government, in sudden emergencies; and will be productive of considerable advantages to trade and industry in general: Therefore, $ 1. Be it enacted, &c. That a bank of the United States shall be established; the capital stock whereof shall not exceed ten millions of dollars, divided into twenty-five thousand shares, each share being four hundred dollars; and that subscriptions, towards constituting the said stock, shall, on the first Monday of April next, be opened at the city of Philadelphia, under the superintendence of such persons, not less than three, as shall be appointed for that purpose, by the President of the United States, (who is hereby empowered to appoint the said persons accordingly), which subscriptions shall continue open until the whole of the said stock shall have been subscribed. . 2. That it shall be lawful for any person, copartnership, or body politic, to subscribe for such or so many shares as he, she, or they shall think fit, not exceeding one thousand, except as shall be here- after directed relatively to the United States; and that the sums respectively subscribed, except on behalf of the United States, shall be payable, one fourth in gold and silver, and three fourths in that part of the public debt which, according to the loan proposed in the fourth and fifteenth sections of the act, entitled An act making provision for the debt of the United States," shall bear an accruing interest, at the time of payment, of six per centum per annum, and shall also be payable in four equal parts, in the aforesaid ratio of specie to debt, at the distance of six calendar months from each other ; the first whereof shall be paid at the time of subscription. 2 3. That all those who shall become subscribers to the said bank, their successors and assigns, shall be, and are hereby, created and made a corporation and body politic, by the name and style of The president, directors, and company of the bank of the United States and shall so continue until the fourth day of March, one thousand eight hundred and eleven: And by that name shall be, and are hereby, made able and capable, in law, to have, purchase, receive, possess, enjoy, and retain, to them and their successors, lands, rents, tenements, hereditaments, goods, chattels, and effects, of what kind, nature, or quality, soever, to an amount not exceeding, in the whole, fifteen millions of dollars, including the amount of the capital stock aforesaid and the same to sell, grant, demise, alien, or dis- pose of to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, answer and be answered, defend and be defended, in courts of record, or any other place whatsoever: And also to make, have, and use a common seal, and the same to break, alter, and renew at their pleasure; and also to ordain, establish, and put in execution such by-laws, ordinances and regulations, as shall seem necessary and convenient for the government of the said corporation, not being contrary to law, or to the constitution thereof (for which purpose general meetings of the stockholders shall, and may, be called by the directors, and in the manner hereinafter specified), and generally to do and execute all and singular acts, matters, and things, which to them it shall or may appertain to do; subject, nevertheless, to the rules, regulations, restrictions. limitations, and provisions hereinafter prescribed and declared. 2 4. That for the well ordering of the affairs of the said corporation, there shall be twenty-five directors ; of whom there shall be an election on the first Monday of January in each year, by the stockholders or proprietors of the capital stock of the said corporation, and by plurality of the votes actually given; and those who shall be duly chosen at any election shall be capable of serving as directors, by virtue of such choice, until the end or expiration of the Monday of January next ensu- ing the time of such election, and no longer. And the said directors, at their first meeting after each election, shall choose one of their number as president. è 5. That as soon as the sum of four hundred thousand dollars, in gold and silver, shall have been actually received on account of the subscriptions to the said stock, notice thereof shall be given, by the persons under whose superintendence the same shall have been made, in at least two public gazettes printed in the city of Philadelphia; and the said persons shall, at the same time, in like man- ner, notify a time and place, within the said city, at the distance of ninety days from the time of such notification, for proceeding to the election of directors; and it shall be lawful for such election to be then and there made; and the persons who shall then and there be chosen shall be the first directors, and shall be capable of serving, by virtue of such choice, until the end or expiration of the Monday in January next ensuing the time of making the same, and shall forthwith thereafter commence the ope- rations of the said bank, at the said city of Philadelphia. And provided further, That in case it should at any time happen, that an election of directors should not be made upon any day, when, pursuant to this act, it ought to have been made, the said corporation shall not, for that cause, be deemed to be dissolved; but it shall be lawful, on any other day, to hold and make an election of directors, in such manner as shall have been regulated by the laws and ordinances of the said corporation. And pro- rided lastly, That in case of the death, resignation, absence from the United States, or removal of a director by the stockholders, his place may be filled up, by a new choice, for the remainder of the year. - 6. That the directors for the time being shall have power to appoint such officers, clerks, and ser- vants under them, as shall be necessary for executing the business of the said corporation, and to allow them such compensation for their services, respectively, as shall be reasonable and shall be capable of exercising such other powers and authorities, for the well governing and ordering of the affairs of the said corporation, as shall be described, fixed, and determined, by the laws, regulations, and ordinances of the same. 1 7. That the following rules, restrictions, limitations, and provisions sball form and be funda- mental articles of the constitution of the said corporation, viz. Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 133 1. The number of votes to which each stockholder shall be entitled shall be according to the num- ber of shares he shall hold, in the proportions following, that is to say: For one share, and not more than two shares, one vote For every two shares above two, and not exceeding ten, one vote: For every four shares above ten, and not exceeding thirty, one vote: For every six shares above thirty, and not exceeding sixty, one vote: For every eight shares above sixty, and not exceeding one hundred, one vote And for every ten shares above one hundred, one vote: But no person, copartnership, or body politic, shall be entitled to a greater number than thirty votes. And after the first election, no share, or shares, shall confer a right of suffrage, which shall not have been holden three calendar months previous to the day of election. Stockholders actually resident within the United States, and none other, may vote in elections by proxy. 2. Not more than three fourths of the directors in office, exclusive of the president, shall be eligible for the next succeeding year: But the director, who shall be president at the time of an election, may always be re-elected. 3. None but a stockholder, being a citizen of the United States, shall be eligible as a director. 4. No director shall be entitled to any emolument, unless the same shall have been allowed by the stockholders, at a general meeting. The stockholders shall make such compensation to the president for his extraordinary attendance at the bank, as shall appear to them reasonable. 5. Not less than seven directors shall constitute a board for the transaction of business, of whom the president shall always be one, except in case of sickness, or necessary absence in which case his place may be supplied by any other director, whom he, by writing under his hand, shall nominate for the purpose. 6. Any number of stockholders, not less than sixty, who, together, shall be proprietors of two hun- dred shares or upwards, shall have power, at any time, to call a general meeting of the stockholders, for purposes relative to the institution, giving, at least, ten weeks' notice, in two public gazettes of the place where the bank is kept, and specifying, in such notice, the object, or objects, of such meeting. 7. Every cashier or treasurer, before he enters upon the duties of his office, shall be required to give bond, with two or more sureties, to the satisfaction of the directors, in a sum not less than fifty thousand dollars, with condition for his good behaviour. 8. The lands, tenements, and hereditaments, which it shall be lawful for the said corporation to hold, shall be only such as shall be requisite for its immediate accommodation, in relation to the con- venient transacting of its business, and such as shall have been bona fide mortgaged to it by way of security, or conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts, previously contracted in the course of its dealings, or purchased at sales upon judgments which shall have been obtained for such debts. 9. The total amount of the debts which the said corporation shall, at any time, owe, whether by bond, bill, note, or other contract, shall not exceed the sum of ten millions of dollars, over and above the moneys then actually deposited in the bank for safe keeping, unless the contracting of any greater debt shall have been previously authorised by a law of the United States. In case of excess, the directors, under whose administration it shall happen, shall be liable for the same in their natural and private capacities; and an action of debt may, in such case, be brought against them, or any of them, their, or any of their, heirs, executors, or administrators, in any court of record of the United States, or either of them, by any creditor or creditors, of the said corporation, and may be prosecuted to judgment and execution; any condition, covenant, or agreement, to the contrary notwithstanding. But this shall not be construed to exempt the said corporation, or the lands, tenements, goods, or chat- tels of the same, from being also liable for, and chargeable with the said excess. Such of the said directors who may have been absent when the said excess was contracted, or created, or who may have dissented from the resolution, or act, whereby the same was so contracted or created, may, respectively, exonerate themselves from being so liable, by forthwith giving notice of the fact, and of their absence or dissent, to the president of the United States, and to the stockholders, at a general meeting which they shall have power to call for that purpose. 10. The said corporation may sell any part of the public debt whereof its stock shall be composed, but shall not be at liberty to purchase any public debt whatsoever; nor shall, directly or indirectly, deal or trade in any thing, except bills of exchange, gold or silver bullion, or in the sale of goods, really and truly pledged for money lent, and not redeemed in due time ; or of goods which shall be the produce of its lands. Neither shall the said corporation take more than at the rate of six per centum per annum, for, or upon, its loans or discounts. 11. No loan shall be made by the said corporation for the use, or on account, of the government of the United States, to an amount exceeding one hundred thousand dollars, or of any particular state, to an amount exceeding fifty thousand dollars, or of any foreign prince or state, unless previously authorised by a law of the United States. 12. The stock of the said corporation shall be assignable and transferable, according to such rules as shall be instituted in that behalf, by the laws and ordinances of the same. 13. The bills obligatory, and of credit, under the seal of the said corporation, which shall be made to any person, or persons, shall be assignable, by endorsement thereupon, under the hand, or hands, of such person, or persons, and of his, her, or their assignee, or assignees, and so as absolutely to transfer, and vest the property thereof in each, and every, assignee, or assignees, successively, and to enable such assignee, or assignees, to bring and maintain an action thereupon, in his, her, or their, own name, or names. And bills or notes, which may be issued by order of the said corporation, signed by the president, and countersigned by the principal cashier, or treasurer, thereof, promising the payment of money to any person, or persons, his, her, or their order, or to bearer, though not under the seal of the said corporation, shall be binding and obligatory upon the same, in the like man- ner, and with the like force and effect, as upon any private person, or persons, if issued by him, or them, in his, her, or their, private or natural capacity, or capacities and shall be assignable and nego- tiable, in like manner as if they were so issued by such private person or persons that is to say, those which shall be payable to any person, or persons, his, her, or their order, shall be assignable by endorsement, in like manner, and with the like effect, as foreign bills of exchange now are ; and those which are payable to bearer shall be negotiable, and assignable, by delivery only. 14. Half yearly dividends shall be made of so much of the profits of the bank as shall appear to the directors adviseable; and once in every three years, the directors shall lay before the stockholders, at a general meeting, for their information, an exact and particular statement of the debts which shall have remained unpaid after the expiration of the original credit, for a period of treble the term of that credit; and of the surplus of profit, if any, after deducting losses and dividends. If there shall be a failure in the payment of any part of any sum subscribed by any person, copartnership, or body politic, the party failing shall lose the benefit of any dividend which may have accrued prior to the time for making such payment, and during the delay of the same. 15. It shall be lawful for the directors aforesaid, to establish offices wheresoever they shall think fit, within the United States, for the purposes of discount and deposit only, and upon the same terms, and in the same manner, as shall be practised at the bank ; and to commit the management of the said offices, and the making of the said discounts, to such persons, under such agreements, and subject to such regulations, as they shall deem proper not being contrary to law, or to the constitution of the bank. M Digitized by Google 134 BANKS (UNITED STATES). 16. The officer at the head of the treasury department of the United States shall be furnished, from time to time, as often as he may require, not exceeding once a week, with statements of the amount of the capital stock of the said corporation, and of the debts due to the same; of the moneys depo- sited therein ; of the notes in circulation, and of the cash in hand and shall have a right to inspect such general accounts in the books of the bank as shall relate to the said statements: Provided, That this shall not be construed to imply a right of inspecting the account of any private individual, or in- dividuals, with the bank. 2 8. That if the said corporation, or any person or persons for or to the use of the same, shall deal or trade, in buying or selling any goods, wares, merchandise, or commodities whatsoever, contrary to the provisions of this act, all and every person and persons, by whom any order, or direction, for so dealing or trading, shall have been given, and all and every person and persons, who shall have been concerned as parties or agents therein, shall forfeit and lose treble the value of the goods, wares, merchandises, and commodities, in which such dealing and trade shall have been; one half thereof to the use of the informer, and the other half thereof to the use of the United States, to be recovered with costs of suit. 2 9. That if the said corporation shall advance or lend any sum, for the use or on account of the government of the United States, to an amount exceeding one hundred thousand dollars; or of any particular State, to an amount exceeding fifty thousand dollars; or of any foreign prince or state (unless previously authorised thereto by a law of the United States), all and every person and per- sons, by and with whose order, agreement, consent, approbation, or connivance, such unlawful advance or loan shall have been made, upon conviction thereof, shall forfeit and pay, for every such offence, treble the value or amount of the sum or sums which shall have been so unlawfully ad- vanced or lent; one fifth thereof to the use of the informer, and the residue thereof to the use of the United States to be disposed of by law, and not otherwise. 2 10. That the bills or notes of the said corporation, originally made payable, or which shall have become payable, on demand, in gold and silver coin, shall be receivable in all payments to the United States. è 11. That it shall be lawful for the president of the United States, at any time or times, within eighteen months after the first day of April next, to cause a subscription to be made to the stock of the said corporation, as part of the aforesaid capital stock of ten millions of dollars, on behalf of the United States, to an amount not exceeding two millions of dollars; to be paid out of the moneys which shall be borrowed by virtue of either of the acts, the one entitled " An act making provision for the debt of the United States;" and the other, entitled " An act making provision for the redue- tion of the public debt;" borrowing of the bank an equal sum, to be applied to the purposes for which the said moneys shall have been procured reimburseable in ten years, by equal annual in- stalments; or at any time sooner, or in any greater proportions, that the government may think fit. 1 12. That no other bank shall be established, by any future law of the United States, during the continuance of the corporation hereby created; for which the faith of the United States is hereby pledged. The high dividends of the Bank of North America, previous to the date of the incorpora- tion of that of the United States, have been already noticed. They, however, gradually de- clined as other banks sprang into existence; but were still as high as 10 per cent. in 1801, and so late as 1810, at the rate of 9 per cent. per annum. During the existence too of the Bank of the United States, from 1791 to 1811, its dividends amounted to from nearly 8 to 10 per cent. And at the last mentioned date, " none of the banks divided less than 8 per cent., and some of them much more." Hence it is not to be wondered at, that, as the period of the expiration of the charter of the United States Bank approached, the stockholders should have been exceedingly desirous of obtaining a renewal of it. Application was, accordingly, made by them for this purpose to Congress, so early as the spring of the year 1808. Their memorial on the subject was re- ferred by the Senate to the then Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Gallatin, " to consider and report thereon, at the next session of Congress." In pursuance of the reference thus made to him, that officer, on the last day of the next session, presented a report favourable to the views of the memorialists, and in which he made the following suggestions:- :- That the bank should pay interest to the United States on the public deposits, whenever they shall exceed a certain sum, which may perhaps be fixed at about three millions of dollars. II. That the bank should be bound, whenever required, to lend to the United States a sum not ex- ceeding three fifths of its capital, at a rate of interest not exceeding six per cent.; the amount of such loan or loans to be paid by the bank in instalments, not exceeding a certain sum, monthly, and to be reimbursed at the pleasure of government. III. That the capital stock of the bank should be increased to thirty millions of dollars, in the fol- lowing manner, viz. 1. Five millions of dollars to be subscribed by citizens of the United States, under such regulations as would make an equitable apportionment amongst the several States and Territories. 2. Fifteen millions to be subscribed by such States as may desire it, and under such equitable appor- tionments among the several States as may be provided by law; and a branch to be established in each subscribing State, if applied for by the State. 3. The payments, either by individuals or States, to be either in specie or in public stock of the United States, at such rates as may be provided by law. 4. The subscribing States to pay their subscription in ten annual instalments, or sooner if it suits their convenience, but to receive dividends in proportion only to the amount of subscription actually paid; and their shares of bank stock not to be transferable. IV. That some share should be given in the direction to the general and state governments, the general government appointing a few directors in the general direction, and the government of each subscribing State appointing a few directors in the direction of the branch established in such State." Mr. Gallatin concluded his report by remarking that the result of his plan would be, " first, that the United States, receiving an interest on the public deposits, might, without inconvenience, accumulate, during years of peace and prosperity, a treasure sufficient to meet periods of war and calamity, and thereby avoid the necessity of adding, by increased taxes, to the distreases of such periods. Secondly, that they might rely on a loan of eighteen mil- Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 135 lions of dollars, on any sudden emergency. Thirdly, that the payment of the greater part of the proposed increase of capital, being paid in ten annual instalments, that increase would be gradual, and not more rapid than may be required by the progressive state of the country. Fourthly, that the bank itself would form an additional bond of common interest and union among the several States." Presented, as this report was, on the very last day of the session of Congress, that body, of course, rose without any action having been had in relation to it. During the session of 1809-1810, the subject of the recharter of the bank did not come up in the Senate: but in the House, the memorial, previously presented by the stockholders, was referred to a select committee, who reported a resolution declaring that it is proper to make provision for continuing the establishment of the Bank of the United States, with of- fices of discount and deposit, under the regulations necessary for the beneficial administra- tion of the national finances, during such time and on such conditions, as may be defined by law." Another resolution was offered by a member, " that it is expedient to inquire into the propriety of establishing a national bank." These resolutions were referred to different committees. And two bills were, in consequence, reported to the House; one of which was entitled " A bill to establish a National Bank," the other, An act to incorporate the sub- scribers to the Bank of the United States." By the former bill, a bank was to be established in the city of Washington, with branches in the Territories of the United States, and in the States respectively, on application of their legislatures; the capital of which bank was not to exceed 15,000,000 dollars. This bill met with very little favour, as it was generally con- ceded that the proper place for a bank, with a large capital, was a large city, having exten- sive mercantile transactions, which was very far from being the case with Washington city. Indeed, the only object which the advocates of the bill had in view, when they argued in behalf of placing the national bank in the District of Columbia, where the entire legisla- tive power was vested in Congress, was, if possible, to overcome the constitutional scruples of a portion of the members as to their authority to incorporate an institution of the kind in any of the states. The bill for renewing the charter of the existing bank seemed at first to be much more in accordance with the views of a majority of the House. After having been debated, it was, however, laid on the table, and not again taken up during the remainder of the session. Provision had been made in it for the payment by the bank into the treasury of the United States of a bonus of 1,250,000 dollars; the bank, on the other hand, to be the better enabled to pay this bonus, was authorised to add a milllion of dollars to the former amount of its capital. It was, also, made obligatory upon it to lend to the government, at any time the latter might require a loan, any sum not exceeding five millions of dollars, at a rate of interest not exceeding six per cent. per annum. The bank was further bound to pay to the United States, in conformity with the suggestion made by Mr. Gallatin, an interest at the rate of three per cent. per annum, on all sums of money above the sum of three mil- lions of dollars, which should accumulate in the bank to the credit of the Treasurer of the United States, or in any of its branches, and which should remain there for one whole year. And the government was to be at liberty to subscribe to a certain number of additional shares, annually for a term of years. A new petition was presented to Congress, in the beginning of the next session (December, 1810), by the stockholders of the Bank of the United States, for the renewal of their charter; which petition was, in both the Senate and House of Representatives, referred to a com- mittee, that of the House being composed of one member from each state of the Union. This committee, early in January, 1811, reported a bill, for a renewal of the charter, not un- like the one above mentioned as having been laid on the table during the preceding session. After much debate, the bill reported was, on the 24th of that month, indefinitely postponed by a vote of 65 to 64. No report had as yet been made by the committee of the Senate. On the 5th of February, only four weeks before the close of the session and the expiration of the charter of the bank, they reported a bill for its renewal, the first section of which was, on the 20th day of the month, struck out by the casting vote of the Vice Presi- dent, George Clinton. The fate of the bank was thus decided; and nothing remained for it but to close its business. To enable it to do so with more convenience to itself, and to prevent as much as possible the distress among the community which its friends confidently asserted would inevitably ensue from its affairs being wound up in a short period of time, application was made to both Houses of Congress, in a few days afterwards, for a temporary continuation of its powers, for this purpose only. The request so preferred was, nevertheless, refused. A com- mittee of the House of Representatives, to which it had been referred, stated, that they " are of opinion that a law of Congress, granting the powers prayed for, would facilitate the final adjustment of the affairs of the bank, although they do not think such a law indispensable to that object. But believing, as your committee do, that, in granting the original charter to the stockholders, Congress transcended the legitimate powers of the constitution, the same objection now presents itself to the extension of any of their corporate capacities." Trustees were appointed, who proceeded so expeditiously in settling the accounts of the Digitized by Google 136 BANKS (UNITED STATES). bank, that, in about a year and a half after the expiration of the charter, they had already paid to the stockholders 88 per cent. of the capital stock. It is proper to mention that all this was accomplished without any extraordinary derangement of the currency, and without any of the disastrous effects which had been anticipated and dreaded by many among the most intelligent men of the country. And it may not be uninteresting to note the fact, that the whole amount of the sums, which were received by the stockholders, from first to last, amounted to 108} dollars, on every 100 dollars of stock. That no extraordinary derangement of the currency followed immediately upon the refusal of Congress to recharter the Bank of the United States, and the rapid winding up of its con- cerns, was owing chiefly to the extent in which the notes of the other banks of the country were issued; an extent much greater, indeed, than would have sufficed to take the place of the United States Bank notes in the circulation. At this period, these institutions had become very numerous, especially in the eastern and middle states. The aggregate capitals of the banks " most deserving of notice" amounted, in the beginning of the year 1811, according to a statement in the American edition of the Edinburgh Encyclopedia, article Banks, to nearly five times that of the Bank of the United States. In the course of a single year, this amount was augmented fifty per cent. A sort of mania for the creation of new banks seemed every where to prevail, and often nearly as much in districts almost exclusively agricultural as in those where a great extent of commerce was carried on. Such was the anxiety displayed in Pennsylvania for the incorporation of local banks, that it probably con- tributed in no slight degree to the rejection there by the Legislature, of an application on the part of the Bank of the United States for a charter, with a capital of five millions of dollars, although a bonus was offered the state of half a million of dollars, together with a loan of another half million. " During the session of 1812-13" (we quote the words of an able report made to the Senate of Pennsylvania, January 29th, 1820, by a committee, of which Condy Raguet, Esq. was chairman), "a bill to incorporate twenty-five institutions, the capitals of which amounted to nine millions five hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars, was passed by both Houses of the Legislature, by a bare majority of one vote in each. The bill was return- ed by the governor, with his objections, which were sensible and cogent, and on a recon- sideration the votes were 38 to 40. At the following session the subject was renewed with increased ardour, and a bill authorising the incorporation of forty-one banking institutions with capitals amounting to seventeen millions of dollars, was passed by a large majority. This bill was also returned by the governor, with additional objections, but two thirds of each house (many members of which were pledged to their constituents to that effect) agree- ing on its passage, it became a law, on the 21st of March, 1814, and thus infficted upon the commonwealth, an evil of a more disastrous nature than has ever been experienced by its citizens. Under this law thirty-seven banks, four of which were established in Philadelphia, actually went into operation. " The immediate commencement of a number of these banks, with scarcely a bona fide capital equal to the first instalment, for the convenient mode of discounting stock notes, to meet the subsequent payments, was soon discovered, increased the mass of paper credits already too redundant, and depreciated the whole circulating medium so far below specie value, as to excite a want of confidence in its convertibility. In the absence of a foreign de- mand for specie, a domestic one arose. The laws of the New England States had been so rigorous upon the subject of banks, which were liable to a penalty of 12 per cent. per an- num, for the non-payment of their notes, that no depreciation of their currency took place. The consequence thereof was, that the difference between the New England prices of com- modities, stocks and foreign bills of exchange, and those of Pennsylvania, was equal to the extent of the depreciation of the latter; and as our bank notes were redeemable on demand, the most profitable remittance which could be made to New England, in exchange for her commodities, was specie; and this demand created a run upon the banks which they were not able to withstand. The situation of the southern and western banks was precisely simi- lar to that of our own. All had over-issued, and a general depreciation had ensued. The same causes produced the same effects, and a general stoppage of all the banks in the United States, except those of New England, took place in August and September, 1814. The New England demand, it is true, was increased by two causes, viz. first, by facilities in foreign trade through neutral vessels, which were afforded them by an exemption from the blockade of the enemy, and, secondly, by a well grounded apprehension that the southern banks, from their extensive emissions, would necessarily become embarrassed. Certain it is, however, that all these causes combined could not have produced a general suspension of payment, had our banks observed the same caution in their issues as that which characterized the banks of the eastern states." The following table, from Mr. Gallatin's valuable little work, entitled " Considerations on the Currency and Banking System of the United States," presents the results of that gen- tleman's researches respecting the progress of the banking system in the United States, in the period from 1810 to 1816. Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 137 Capital. Notes is circulation. Specia. 1st Jan. 1811.-Bank of the United States - $10,000,000 5,400,000 5,800,000 88 State banks - - 42,610,001 22,700,000 9,600,000 Total - - - 52,610,601 28,100,000 15,400,000 1815.-208 State banks - - 82,259,590 45,500,000 17,000,000 1816.-246 do. do. - - 89,822,422 68,000,000 19,000,000 Mr. Crawford, in his report to the House of Representatives, of January 12th, 1820, esti- mated the bank notes in circulation in 1816, as high as 99 millions of dollars. And Mr. Pitkin is of opinion that the truth lay between the amounts stated by Mr. Gallatin and Mr. Crawford. The unequal distribution of the specie of the banks, on the 1st of January, 1815, was, according to the first of these two gentlemen, as follows:- " At that time the banks of the four States of Capital. Circulation. Specia. Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New inin $15,690,000 5,390,000 8,200,000 Hampshire, had The States of Pennsylvania and Maryland, with the District of Columbia, had 26,000,000 13,750,000 3,000,000 And all the other States - 40,930,000 25,630,000 5,800,000" Not only did the banks which had suspended specie payments enlarge their issues, with a view to augment their profits, so as to cause their paper to become depreciated below its no- minal value; but this depreciation was very different in different parts of the country. For example, soon after the suspension of specie payments, in September, 1814, while the notes of the New York city banks were 10 per cent. below their par or specie value, those of Baltimore were at a discount of no less than 20 per cent. This inequality, too, continued to a greater or less extent until the return of the banks to specie payments. Mr. M'Duffie, in his report of the 13th of April, 1830, to the House of Representatives, in relation to the re- charter of the Bank of the United States, remarks concerning the state of the currency on the 1st day of July, 1816, that among the principal eastern cities, Washington and Balti- more were the points at which the depreciation was the greatest. The paper of the banks in these places was from 20 to 22 per cent. below par. At Philadelphia the depreciation was considerably less, though, even there, it was from 17 to 18 per cent. But in the inte- rior of the country, where banks were established, the depreciation was even greater than at Washington and Baltimore. In the western part of Pennsylvania, and particularly at Pitts- burgh, it was 25 per cent." It may be added, that during the period of which we speak, specie had so entirely disappeared from the circulation, that the smallest payments, for marketing and other ordinary purchases of daily occurrence, were everywhere made in paper money issued by the banks, by corporations of various descriptions, or even by indi- viduals. Searcely had the suspension by the banks of specie payments taken place, and the con- sequences above mentioned begun to be exhibited, when the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Alexander J. Dallas, on the 17th of October, 1814, recommended to Congress the establish- ment of a national bank, as the proper remedy to be applied. He proposed that such a bank should be incorporated for a term of twenty years, to be established at Philadelphia, with a power to erect offices of discount and deposit elsewhere; that the capital of the bank should be fifty millions of dollars, three fifths of it to be sub- scribed by corporations, companies, or individuals and two fifths of it by the United States that the former subscriptions should be paid, one fifth part in gold or silver coin, and four fifth parts in gold or silver coin, or in six per cent. stock, issued since the declaration of war, and in treasury notes, in the proportion of one fifth in treasury notes, and three fifths in six per cent. stock; and that the subscription of the United States should be paid in this kind of stock. The United States were to be at liberty, also, to substitute six per cent. stock for the amount of the treasury notes subscribed by corporations, companies, and individuals, as the notes respectively became due and payable. No part of the public stock, constituting a por- tion of the capital of the bank, was to be sold during the war; nor at any subsequent time for less than par, nor at any time to an amount exceeding one moiety, without the consent of Congress; and the bank was to be bound to loan to the United States $30,000,000. A bill was reported to the House of Representatives, Nov. 7th, by the Committee of Ways and Means, in conformity with the views of the Secretary, which were also understood to be those of the President; which bill contained a clause authorising the bank to suspend specie payments, whenever such a measure should, in the opinion of the President, be advisable. On the proposition, however, of Mr. Calhoun, this clause, with that rendering it obligatory on the bank to make loans to the government, were stricken out of the bill,-no portion of the capital was to be subscribed by the United States, and none of the directors to be appointed by them,-and the capital, the six millions in specie only excepted, was to be in treasury notes to be thereafter issued. The capital was subsequently reduced to thirty millions of dollars. While the bill in its present form was still pending, the Chairman of the Committee VoL. L X 2 18 Digitized by Google 138 BANKS (UNITED STATES.) of Ways and Means addressed a letter to the Secretary of the Treasury, requesting him to communicate his opinion in relation to the effect which a considerable issue of treasury notes (to which should be attached the quality of being receivable in subscriptions to the bank) might have upon the credit of the government, and particularly on the prospects of a loan for 1815." An answer unfavourable to the bill was promptly returned by the Se- cretary ; and it was thereupon, on the 28th of November, rejected by a vote of 101 to 49, many of its friends being unwilling to insist upon its adoption, after having been assured of its being unsatisfactory to the executive branch of the government. A bill was now introduced into the Senate, and passed by a vote of 17 to 14, in substan- conformity with the views of the Secretary, before stated. The thirteenth section of this was as follows :- "That if, during the continuance of the present war between the United States and Great Britain, and a period of one year after the termination of the said war, demands shall, at any time or times, be made upon the said corporation, for gold and silver coin, to an amount, and under circumstances, which induce a reasonable and probable belief, that the said gold and silver coin is intended to be exported from, and out of, the United States, 80 as greatly to diminish or endanger the specie capital of the government and country, as well as of the said corporation; or that the said gold and silver coin is intended to be wilfully withdrawn from the circulation, so as greatly to embarrass, obstruct, and discredit the pecuniary transac- tions of the people and the government, as well as of the said corporation; or that the said gold and silver coin is demanded, in consequence of a wilful and sinister accumulation of the bills and notes of the said corporation, with the intention to impair or destroy the credit of the said corporation then, and in every such case, and as often as such cases shall occur, it shall be lawful for the directors of the said corporation to suspend its payments in specie, and their duty forthwith, to represent the same to the President of the United States. And it shall be thereupon lawful for the President of the United States to direct the said corpora- tion to resume, or to continue to suspend, its payments in specie, for such time as he shall deem it expedient; and the said corporation shall resume, or continue to suspend, its pay- ments in specie, according to such directions. And the President of the United States shall cause a statement of the proceedings, in all such cases, to be laid before Congress, if in ses- sion, immediately if not in session, then within ten days after the next meeting of Congress; and such suspension may continue until removed by Congress, or by the President." With such a section as the one now recited, not only did it pass the Senate by the vote of 17 to 14 above stated, but it was defeated in the House of Representatives merely by the casting vote of the speaker, Mr. Cheves. This took place on the 2d of January, 1815. The bill was, however, reconsidered on the following day, and, on the 7th of January, passed the House by a vote of 120 to 37, having been amended by reducing the capital of the bank from fifty to thirty millions of dollars, as well as by striking out from the bill those parts of it which authorised the suspension of the specie payments, and which obliged the bank to make loans to the government. On the bill being returned to the Senate, as amended, it was again amended, by the increase of the capital of the bank from thirty to thirty-five mil- lions of dollars, and by the reinstatement in the bill of the section authorising a. suspension, in certain cases, of payments in specie. These amendments not being agreed to by the House, the Senate, January 20th, receded from its amendments, and passed the bill without them. It was destined to receive the veto of the President, Mr. Madison. "Waiving the question of the constitutional authority of the Legislature to establish an incorporated bank, as being precluded," in his judgment, " by repeated recognitions, under varied circum- stances, of the validity of such an institution, in acts of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the government, accompanied by indications, in different modes, of a concur- rence of the general will of the nation he objects to the bill because " the proposed bank does not appear to be calculated to answer the purposes of reviving the public credit, of pro- viding a national medium of circulation, and of aiding the treasury by facilitating the india- pensable anticipations of the revenue, and by affording to the public more durable loans." And the President was not alone in being ready to waive the scruples which he had for- merly entertained as to the constitutionality of a national bank, in consequence of a growing conviction of the necessity of such an institution for the fiscal operations of the general govern- ment. The Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Dallas, had already expressed himself in reference to this question of constitutionality in language very similar to that of Mr. Madison and the minority of only 37 in the House of Representatives on the final passage of the bill is itself sufficient evidence of the opposition to a national bank having, at the period of which we speak, very much declined, as well on the ground of inconsistency with the powers bestowed upon Congress by the constitution, as on the ground of its inexpediency. Indeed, compara- tively few persons were then disposed to take the former ground. Almost the only question at issue between the contending parties seemed to be what was the most desirable mode of organising a bank. The friends of an institution organised in accordance with the views of the President and Secretary, did not yet despair of accomplishing their object before the rising of Congress. Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 139 They succeeded in getting the Senate to pass such a bill as they desired, on the 11th of Febru- ary ; which bill was, however, indefinitely postponed in the House of Representatives, on the 17th of the same month, by a vote of 74 to 73. It is more than probable that, but for the news of peace with Great Britain, which had just arrived, the bill would have become a law, and the country would have had irremediably imposed upon it an institution authorised by law to issue millions and tens of millions of promises to pay specie to its creditors, and au- thorised at the same time to refuse the fulfilment of those promises. During the session of Congress of 1815-16, the subject of the incorporation of a national bank was resumed and a bill was passed in the House of Representatives, on the 14th of March, 1816, by a vote of 80 to 71, and in the Senate, with amendments, by a vote of 22 to 12, on the 3d of April. These amendments having been concurred in by the House, the bill was approved by the president, on the 10th of April, and constituted the charter of the late Bank the United States. We give this bill entire, as follows. An act to incorporate the subscribers of the Bank of the United States. 2 1. Be it enacted &c. That a bank of the United States of America shall be established, with a capital of thirty-five millions of dollars, divided into three hundred and fifty thousand shares, of one hundred dollars each share. Seventy thousand shares, amounting to the sum of seven millions of dollars, part of the capital of the said bank, shall be subscribed and paid for by the United States, in the manner hereinafter specified and two hundred and eighty thousand shares, amounting to the sum of twenty-eight millions of dollars, shall be subscribed and paid for by individuals, companies, or corporations, in the manner hereinafter specified. 22. That subscriptions for the sum of twenty-eight millions of dollars, towards constituting the capital of the said bank, shall be opened on the first Monday in July next, at the following places that is to say: at Portland, in the District of Maine at Portsmouth, in the state of New-Hampshire; at Boston, in the state of Massachusetts; at Providence, in the state of Rhode Island at Middle- town, in the state of Connecticut; at Burlington, in the state of Vermont at New York, in the state of New York: at New Brunswick, in the state of New Jersey; at Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania; at Wilmington, in the state of Delaware at Baltimore, in the state of Maryland; at Richmond, in the state of Virginia ; at Lexington, in the state of Kentucky at Cincinnati, in the state of Ohio; at Raleigh, in the state of North Carolina; at Nashville, in the state of Tennessee at Charleston, in the state of South Carolina at Augusta, in the state of Georgia; at New Orleans, in the state of Louisiana; and at Washington, in the District of Columbia. And the said subscrip- tions shall be opened under the superintendence of five commissioners at Philadelphia, and of three commissioners at each of the other places aforesaid, to be appointed by the president of the United States, who is hereby authorized to make such appointments, and shall continue open every day, from the time of opening the same, between the hours of ten o'clock in the forenoon and four o' clock in the afternoon, for the term of twenty days, exclusive of Sundays, when the same shall be closed, and immediately thereafter the commissioners, or any two of them, at the respective places aforesaid, shall cause two transcripts or copies of such subscriptions to be made, one of which they shall send to the secretary of the treasury, one they shall retain, and the original they shall transmit, within seven days from the closing of the subscriptions as aforesaid, to the commissioners at Philadelphia aforesaid. And, on the receipt of the said original subscriptions, or of either of the said copies thereof, if the original be lost, mislaid, or detained, the commissioners at Philadelphia aforesaid, or a majority of them, shall immediately thereafter convene, and proceed to take an account of the said subscriptions. And if more than the amount of twenty-eight millions of dollars shall have been sub- scribed, then the said last mentioned commissioners shall deduct the amount of such excess from the largest subscriptions, in such manner as that no subscription shall be reduced in amount while any one remains larger: Provided, That if the subscriptions taken at either of the places aforesaid shall not exceed three thousand shares, there shall be no reduction of such subscriptions, nor shall, in any case, the subscriptions taken at either of the places aforesaid be reduced below that amount. And, in case the aggregate amount of the said subscriptions shall exceed twenty-eight millions of dollars, the said last mentioned commissioners, after having apportioned the same as aforessid, shall cause lists of the said apportioned subscriptions to be made out, including in each list the apportioned sub- scription for the place where the original subscription was made, one of which lists they shall trans- mit to the commissioners, or one of them, under whose superintendence such subscriptions were originally made, that the subscribers may thereby ascertain the number of shares to them respect- frely apportioned as aforesaid. And, in case the aggregate amount of the said subscriptions made during the period aforesaid, at all the places aforesaid, shall not amount to twenty-eight millions of dollars, the subscriptions to complete the said sum shall be and remain open at Philadelphia aforesaid, under the superintendence of the commissioners appointed for that place and the subscriptions may be then made by any individual, company, or corporation, for any number of shares, not exceeding, in the whole, the amount required to complete the said sum of twenty-eight millions of dollars. & 3. That it shall be lawful for any individual, company, corporation, or state, when the subscrip- tions shall be opened as hereinbefore directed, to subscribe for any number of shares of the capital of the said bank, not exceeding three thousand shares, and the sums so subscribed shall be payable, and paid, in the manner following; that is to say: seven millions of dollars thereof in gold or silver coin of the United States, or in gold coin of Spain of the dominions of Spain, at the rate of one hun- dred cents for every twenty-eight grains and sixty hundredths of a grain of the actual weight thereof, or in other foreign gold or silver coin at the several rates prescribed by the first section of an act regu- lating the currency of foreign coins in the United States, passed tenth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and six, and twenty-one millions of dollars thereof in like gold or silver coin, or in the funded debt of the United States, contracted at the time of the subscriptions respectively. And the payments made in the funded debt of the United States, shall be paid and received at the following rates that is to say: the funded debt bearing an interest of six per centum per annum, at the nomi- nal or par value thereof; the funded debt bearing an interest of three per centum per annum, at the rate of sixty-five dollars for every sum of one hundred dollars of the nominal amount thereof; and the funded debt bearing an interest of seven per centum per annum, at the rate of one hundred and six dollars and fifty-one cents for every sum of one hundred dollars of the nominal amount thereof; together with the amount of the interest accrued on the said several denominations of funded debt, to be computed and allowed to the time of subscribing the same to the capital of the said bank as afore- said. And the payments of the said subscriptions shall be made and completed by the subscribers, respectively, at the times and in the manner following; that is to say: at the time of subscribing there shall be paid five dollars on each share, in gold or silver coin as aforesaid, and twenty-five dollars more in coin as aforesa!d, or in funded debt as aforesaid; at the expiration of six calendar months Digitized by Google 140 BANKS (UNITED STATES). after the time of subscribing, there shall be paid the further sum of ten dollars on each share, in gold or silver coin as aforesaid, and twenty-five dollars more in coin as aforesaid, or in funded debt as aforesaid; at the expiration of twelve calendar months from the time of subscribing, there shall be paid the further sum of ten dollars on each share, in gold or silver coin as aforesaid, and twenty-five dollars more, in coin as aforesaid, or in funded debt as aforesaid. 8 4. That, at the time of subscribing to the capital of the said bank as aforesaid, each and every subscriber shall deliver to the commissioners, at the place of subscribing, as well the amount of their subscriptions, respectively, in coin as aforesaid, as the certificates of funded debt, for the funded debt proportions of their respective subscriptions, together with a power of attorney, authorising the said commissioners, or a majority of them, to transfer the said stock in due form of law to the president, directors, and company, of the bank of the United States," as soon as the said bank shall be organized Provided always, That if, in consequence of the apportionment of the shares in the capital of the said bank among the subscribers, in the case, and in the manner, hereinbefore provided, any subscriber shall have delivered to the commissioners, at the time of subscribing, a greater amount of gold or silver coin and funded debt than shall be necessary to complete the payments for the share or shares to such subscribers, apportioned as aforesaid, the commissioners shall only retain so much of the said gold or silver coin and funded debt as shall be necessary to complete such payments, and shall, forthwith, return the surplus thereof, on application for the same, to the subscribers lawfully entitled thereto. And the commissioners, respectively, shall deposite the gold and silver coin, and certificates of public debt, by them respectively received as aforesaid from the subscribers to the capital of the said bank, in some place of secure and safe keeping, so that the same may and shall be specifically delivered and transferred, as the same were by them respectively received, to the president, directors, and com- pany, of the bank of the United States, OF to their order, as soon as shall be required after the organiza- tion of the said bank. And the said commissioners appointed to superintend the subscriptions to the capital of the said bank as aforesaid, shall receive a reasonable compensation for their services, respectively, and shall be allowed all reasonable charges and expenses incurred in the execution of their trust, to be paid by the president, directors, and company, of the bank, out of the funds thereof. . 5. That it shall be lawful for the United States to pay and redeem the funded debt subscribed to the capital of the said bank, at the rates aforesaid, in such sums, and at such times, as shall be deemed expedient, any thing in any act or acts of Congress, to the contrary thereof notwithstanding. And it shall also be lawful for the president, directors, and company, of the said bank, to sell and transfer for gold and silver coin, or bullion, the funded debt subscribed to the capital of the said bank as aforesaid: Provided always, That they shall not sell more thereof than the sum of two millions of dollars in any one year; nor sell any part thereof at any time within the United States, without previously giving notice of their intention to the secretary of the treasury, and offering the same to the United States for the period of fifteen days, at least, at the current price, not exceeding the rates aforesaid. $ 6. That, at the opening of subscription to the capital stock of the said bank, the secretary of the treasury shall subscribe, or cause to be subscribed, on behalf of the United States, the said number of seventy thousand shares, amounting to seven millions of dollars as aforesaid, to be paid in gold or silver coin, or in stock of the United States, bearing interest at the rate of five per centum per annum and if payment thereof, or of any part thereof, be made in public stock, bearing interest as aforesaid, the said interest shall be payable quarterly, to commence from the time of making such payment on account of the said subscriptions; and the principal of the said stock shall be redeemable in any sums, and at any periods, which the government shall deem fit. And the secretary of the treasury shall cause the certificates of such public stock to be prepared, and made in the usual form, and shall pay and deliver the same to the president, directors, and company of the said bank, on the first day of January, one thousand eight hundred and seventeen; which said stock it shall be lawful for the said president, directors, and company, to sell and transfer, for gold and silver coin or bullion, at their dis- cretion: Provided, They shall not sell more than two millions of dollars thereof in any one year. 07. That the subscribers to the said bank of the United States of America, their successors and assigns, shall be, and are hereby, created a corporation and body politic, by the name and style of the president, directors, and company, of the bank of the United States," and shall so continue until the third day of March, in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six, and by that name shall be, and are hereby, made able and capable, in law, to have, purchase, receive, possess, enjoy, and retain, to them and their successors, lands, rents, tenements, hereditaments, goods, chattels, and effects, of whatsoever kind, nature, and quality, to an amount not exceeding, in the whole, fifty-five millions of dollars, including the amount of the capital stock aforesaid; and the same to sell, grant, demise, alien, or dispose of; to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, answer and be answered, defend and be defended, in all state courts having competent jurisdiction, and in any circuit court of the United States: and also to make, have, and use, a common seal, and the same to break, alter, and renew, at their pleasure: and also to ordain, establish, and put in execution, such by-laws and ordi- nances, and regulations, as they shall deem necessary and convenient for the government of the said corporation, not being contrary to the constitution thereof, or to the laws of the United States; and generally to do and execute all and singular the acts, matters, and things, which to them it shall or may appertain to do; subject, nevertheless, to the rules, regulations, restrictions, limitations, and provisions, hereinafter prescribed and declared. $8. That, for the management of the affairs of the said corporation, there shall be twenty-five direct- ors, five of whom, being stockholders, shall be annually appointed by the president of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, not more than three of whom shall be resi- dents of any one state; and twenty of whom shall be annually elected at the banking house in the city of Philadelphia, on the first Monday of January in each year, by the qualified stockholders of the capital of the said bank, other than the United States, and by a plurality of votes then and there actually given, according to the scale of voting hereinafter prescribed: Provided always, That no per- son, being a director in the bank of the United States, or any of its branches, shall be a director of any other bank; and should any such director act as a director in any other bank, it shall forthwith vacate his appointment in the direction of the bank of the United States. And the directors, so duly appointed and elected, shall be capable of serving, by virtue of such appointment and choice, from the first Monday in the month of January of each year, until the end and expiration of the first Mon- day in the month of January of the year next ensuing the time of each annual election to be held by the stockholders as aforesaid. And the board of directors, annually, at the first meeting after their election in each and every year, shall proceed to elect one of the directors to be president of the cor- poration, who shall hold the said office during the same period for which the directors are appointed and elected as aforesaid: Provided also, That the first appointment and election of the directors and president of the said bank shall be at the time and for the period hereinafter declared: And provided also, That in case it should at any time happen that an appointment or election of directors, or an election of the president of the said bank, should not be 80 made as to take effect on any day when in pursuance of this act, they ought to take effect, the said corporation shall not, for that cause, be deemed to be dissolved; but it shall be lawful at any other time to make such appointments, and to hold such elections, (as the case may be ;) and the manner of holding the elections shall be regu- lated by the by-laws and ordinances of the said corporation: and until such appointments or elections Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES.) 141 be made, the directors and president of the said bank, for the time being, shall continue in office: And provided also, That in case of the death, resignation, or removal, of the president of the said corpo- ration, the directors shall proceed to elect another president from the directors as aforesaid and in case of the death, resignation, or absence, from the United States, or removal of a director from office, the vacancy shall be supplied by the president of the United States, or by the stockholders, as the case may be. But the president of the United States alone shall have power to remove any of the directors appointed by him as aforesaid. $ 9. That as soon as the sum of eight millions four hundred thousand dollars, in gold and silver coin and in the public debt, shall have been actually received on account of the subscription to the capita of the said bank (exclusively of the subscription aforesaid, on the part of the United States) notice thereof shall be given by the persons under whose superintendence the subscription shall have been made at the city of Philadelphia, in at least two newspapers printed in each of the places (if so many be printed in such places respectively) where subscriptions shall have been made; and the said per- sons shall, at the saine time, and in like manner, notify a time and place, within the said city of Phi- ladelphia, at the distance of at least thirty days from the time of such notification, for proceeding to the election of twenty directors as aforesaid, and it shall be lawful for such election to be then and there made. And the president of the United States is hereby authorised, during the present session of congress, to nominate, and, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, to appoint, five di- rectors of the said bank, though not stockholders, any thing in the provisions of this act to the con- trary notwithstanding; and the persons who shall be elected and appointed as aforesaid, shall be the first directors of the said bank, and shall proceed to elect one of the directors to be president of the said bank; and the directors and president of the said bank, so appointed and elected as aforesaid, shall be capable of serving in their respective office, by virtue thereof, until the end and expiration of the first Monday of the month of January next ensuing the said appointments and elections and they shall then and thenceforth commence, and continue the operations of the said bank, at the city of Philadelphia. $ 10. That the directors for the time being, shall have power to appoint such officers, clerks, and servants, under them, as shall be necessary for executing the business of the said corporation, and to allow them such compensation for their services, respectively, as shall be reasonable and shall be capable of exercising such other powers and authorities for the well governing and ordering of the officers of the said corporation, as shall be prescribed, fixed, and determined, by the laws, regulations, and ordinances, of the same. è 11. That the following rules, restrictions, limitations, and provisions, shall form and be funda- mental articles of the constitution of the said corporation, to wit: 1. The number of votes to which the stockholders shall be entitled, in voting for directors, shall be according to the number of shares he, she, or they, respectively, shall hold, in the proportions following, that is to say ; for one share and not more than two shares, one vote; for every two shares above two, and not exceeding ten, one vote ; for every four shares above ten, and not exceeding thirty, one vote; for every six shares above thirty, and not exceeding sixty, one vote; for every eight shares above sixty, and not exceeding one hundred, one vote; and for every ten shares above one hundred, one vote; but no person, copart- nership, or body politic, shall be entitled to a greater number than thirty votes ; and after the first election, no share or shares shall confer a right of voting, which shall not have been holden three calendar months previous to the day of election. And stockholders actually resident within the United States, and none other, may vote in elections by proxy. Second. Not more than three fourths of the directors elected by the stockholders, and not more than four fifths of the directors appointed by the president of the United States, who shall be in office at the time of an annual election, shall be elected or appointed for the next succeeding year; and no director shall hold his office more than three years out of four in succession: but the director who shall be the president at the time of an election, may always be re-appointed, or re-elected, as the case may be. Third. None but a stock- holder, resident citizen of the United States, shall be a director; nor shall a director be entitled to any emolument; but the directors may make such compensation to the president, for his extraordi- nary attendance at the bank, as shall appear to them reasonable. Fourth. Not less than seven direct- ors shall constitute a board for the transaction of business, of whom the president shall always be one, except in case of sickness or necessary absence; in which case his place may be supplied by any other director whom he, by writing, under his hand, shall depute for that purpose. And the director so deputed may do and transact all the necessary business, belonging to the office of the president of the said corporation during the continuance of the sickness or necessary absence of the president. Fifth. A number of stockholders, not less than sixty, who, together, shall be proprietors of one thou- sand shares or upwards, shall have power, at any time, to call a general meeting of the stockholders, for purposes relative to the institution, giving at least ten weeks' notice in two public newspapers of the place where the bank is seated, and specifying in such notice the object or objects of such meet- ing. Sixth. Each cashier or treasurer, before he enters upon the duties of his office, shall be required to give bond, with two or more sureties, to the satisfaction of the directors, in a sum not less than fifty thousand dollars, with a condition for his good behaviour, and the faithful performance of his duties to the corporation. Seventh. The lands, tenements, and hereditaments, which it shall be law- ful for the said corporation to hold, shall be only such as shall be requisite for its immediate accom- modation in relation to the convenient transacting of its business, and such as shall have been bona fide mortgaged to it by way of security, or conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts previously con- tracted in the course of its dealings, or purchased at sales, upon judgments which shall have been obtained for such debts. Eighth. The total amount of debts which the said corporation shall at any time owe, whether by bond, bill, note, or other contract, over and above the debt or debts due for money deposited in the bank, shall not exceed the sum of thirty-five millions of dollars, unless the contracting of any greater debt shall have been previously authorised by law of the United States. In case of excess, the directors under whose administration it shall happen, shall be liable for the same in their natural and private capacities and an action of debt may, in such case, be brought against them, or any of them, their or any of their heirs, executors, or administrators, in any court of record of the United States, or either of them, by any creditor or creditors of the said corporation, and may be prosecuted to judgment and execution, any condition, covenant, or agreement, to the contrary notwithstanding. But this provision shall not be construed to exempt the said corporation, or the lands, tenements, goods, or chattels, of the same, from being also liable for, and chargeable with, the said excess. Such of the said directors who may have been absent when the said excess was contracted or created, or who may have dissented from the resolution or act whereby the same was so contracted or created, may respectively exonerate themselves from being so liable, by forth- with giving notice of the fact, and of their absence or dissent, to the president of the United States, and to the stockholders, at a general meeting, which they shall have power to call for that purpose. Ninth The said corporation shall not, directly or indirectly, deal or trade in any thing except bills of ex- change, gold or silver bullion, or in the sale of goods really and truly pledged for money lent and not redeemed in due time, or goods which shall be the proceeds of its lands. It shall not be at liberty to purchase any public debt whatsoever, nor shall it take more than at the rate of six per centum per annum for or upon its loans or discounts. Tenth. No loan shall be made by the said corporation, for Digitized by Google 142 BANKS (UNITED STATES). the use or on account of the government of the United States, to an amount exceeding five hundred thousand dollars, or of any particular state, to an amount exceeding fifty thousand dollars, or of any foreign prince or state, unless previously authorized by a law of the United States. Eleventh. The stock of the said corporation shall be assignable and transferable, according to such rules as shall be instituted, in that behalf, by the laws and ordinances of the same. Twelfth. The bills obligatory and of credit, under the seal of the said corporation, which shall be made to any person or persons, shall be assignable by endorsement thereupon, under the hand or hands of such person or persons, and his, her, or their, executors or administrators, and of his or their assignee or assignees, and so as abso- lutely to transfer and vest the property thereof in each and every assignee or assignees successively, and to enable such assignee or assignees, and his, her, or their, executors or administrators, to main- tain an action thereupon in his, her, or their, own name or names: Provided, That said corporation shall not make any bill obligatory, or of credit, or other obligation under its seal, for the payment of a sum less than five thousand dollars. And the bills or notes which may be issued by order of the said corporation, signed by the president and countersigned by the principal cashier or treasurer thereof, promising the payment of money to any person or persons, his, her, or their, order, or to bearer, although not under the seal of the said corporation, shall be binding and obligatory upon the same, in like manner, and with like force and effect, as upon any private person or persons, if issued by him, her, or them, in his, her, or their, private or natural capacity or capacities, and shall be as- signable and negotiable in like manner as if they were SO issued by such private person or persons ; that is to say, those which shall be payable to any person or persons, his, her, or their, order, shall be assignable by endorsement, in like manner and with the like effect as foreign bills of exchange now are; and those which are payable to bearer shall be assignable and negotiable by delivery only: Provided, That all bills or notes, so to be issued by said corporation, shall be made payable on demand, other than bills or notes for the payment of a sum not less than one hundred dollars each, and paya- ble to the order of some person or persons; which bills or notes it shall be lawful for said corpora- tion to make payable at any time not exceeding sixty days from the date thereof. Thirteenth. Half yearly dividends shall be made of so much of the profits of the bank as shall appear to the directors advisable; and once in every three years the directors shall lay before the stockholders, at a general meeting, for their information, an exact and particular statement of the debts which shall have re- mained unpaid after the expiration of the original credit, for a period of treble the term of that cre- dit, and of the surplus of the profits, if any, after deducting losses and dividends. If there shall be a failure in the payment of any part of any sum subscribed to the capital of the said bank, by any person, copartnership, or body politic, the party failing shall lose the benefit of Any dividend which may have accrued prior to the time for making such payment, and during the delay of the same. Fourteenth. The directors of the said corporation shall establish a competent office of discount and deposite in the district of Columbia, whenever any law of the United States shall require such an es- tablishment; also one such office of discount and deposite in any state in which two thousand shares shall have been subscribed or may be held, whenever, upon application of the legislature of such state, congress may, by law, require the same: Provided, The directors aforesaid shall not be bound to establish such office before the whole of the capital of the bank shall have been paid up. And it shall be lawful for the directors of the said corporation to establish offices of discount and deposite wheresoever they shall think fit, within the United States or the territories thereof, and to commit the management of the said offices, and the business thereof, respectively, to such persons, and under such regulations, as they shall deem proper, not being contrary to law or the constitution of the bank. Or instead of establishing such offices, it shall be lawful for the directors of the said corpora- tion, from time to time, to employ any other bank or banks, to be first approved by the secretary of the treasury, at any place or places that they may deem safe and proper, to manage and transact the business proposed as aforesaid, other than for the purposes of discount, to be managed and transacted by such offices, under such agreements, and subject to such regulations, as they shall deem just and proper. Not more than thirteen, nor less than seven, managers or directors, of every office esta- blished as aforesaid, shall be annually appointed by the directors of the bank, to serve one year; they shall choose a president from their own number ; each of them shall be a citizen of the United States, and a resident of the state, territory, or district, wherein such office is established; and not more than three fourths of the said managers or directors, in office at the time of an annual appointment, shall be re-appointed for the next succeeding year; and no director shall hold his office more than three years out of four, in succession but the president may be always re-appointed. Fifteenth. The offi- cer at the head of the treasury department of the United States shall be fornished, from time to time, as often as he may require, not exceeding once a week, with statements of the amount of the capital stock of the said corporation, and of the debts due to the same; of the moneys deposited therein of the notes in circulation, and of the specie in hand; and shall have a right to inspect such general accounts in the books of the bank as shall relate to the said statement: Provided, That this shall not be construed to imply a right of inspecting the account of any private individual or individuals with the Bank. Sixteenth. No stockholder, unless he be a citizen of the United States, shall vote in the choice of directors. Seventeenth. No note shall be issued of less amount than five dollars. & 12. That if the said corporation, or any person or persons, for or to the use of the same, shall deal or trade in buying or selling goods, wares, merchandise, or commodities, whatsoever, contrary to the provisions of this act, all and every person and persons by whom any order or direction for so dealing or trading shall have been given, and all and every person and persons, who shall have been con- cerned as parties or agents therein, shall forfeit and lose treble the value of the goods, wares, mer- chandise, and commodities, in which such dealing and trade shall have been ; one half thereof to the use of the informer, and the other half thereof to the use of the United States; to be recovered in any action of law, with costs of suit. è 13. That if the said corporation shall advance or lend any sum of money for the use or on account of the government of the United States, to an amount exceeding five hundred thousand dollars; or of any particular state, to an amount exceeding fifty thousand dollars; or of any foreign prince or state (unless previously authorized thereto by a law of the United States), all and every person and persons, by and with whose order, agreement, consent, approbation, and connivance, such unlawful advance or loan shall have been made, upon conviction thereof, shall forfeit and pay, for every such offence, treble the value or amount of the sum or sums which have been so unlawfully advanced or lent one fifth thereof to the use of the informer, and the residue thereof to the use of the United States. è 14. That the bills or notes of the said corporation, originally made payable, or which shall have become payable, on demand, shall be receivable in all payments to the United States, unless otherwise directed by act of congress. 1 15. That, during the continuance of this act, and whenever required by the secretary of the trea- sury, the said corporation shall give the necessary facilities for transferring the public funds from place to place, within the United States, or the territories thereof, and for distributing the same in payment of the public creditors, without charging commissions, or claiming allowance, on account of difference of exchange and shall also do and perform the several and respective duties of the com- missioners of loans for the several states, or of any one or more of them, whenever required by law. Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 143 $ 16. That the deposites of the money of the United States, in places in which the said bank and branches thereof may be established, shall be made in said bank or branches thereof, unless the secre- tary of the treasury shall at any time otherwise order and direct; in which case the secretary of the treasury shall immediately lay before congress, if in session, and, if not, immediately after the commencement of the next session, the reasons of such order or direction. è 17. That the said corporation shall not, at any time, suspend and refuse payment in gold and silver, of any of its notes, bills, or obligations; nor of any moneys received upon deposite in said bank, or in any of its offices of discount and deposite. And if the said corporation shall, at any time, refuse or neglect to pay, on demand, any bill, note, or obligation, issued by the corporation, according to the contract, promise, or undertaking, therein expressed; or shall neglect or refuse to pay,on demand, any moneys received in said bank, or in any of its offices aforesaid, on deposite, to the per- son or persons entitled to receive the same, then, and in every such case, the holder of any such note, bill, or obligation, or the person or persons entitled to demand and receive such moneys as aforesaid, shall, respectively, be entitled to receive and recover interest on the said bills, notes, obligations, or moneys, until the same shall be fully paid and satisfied, at the rate of twelve per centum per annum, from the time of such demand as aforesaid Provided, That congress may, at any time hereafter, enact laws enforcing and regulating the recovery of the amount of the notes, bills, obligations, or other debts, of which payment shall have been refused as aforesaid, with the rate of interest above men- tioned, vesting jurisdiction for that purpose in any courts, either of law or equity, of the courts of the United States, or territories thereof, or of the several states, as they may deem expedient. 2 18. That if any person shall falsely make, forge, or counterfeit, or cause or procure to be falsely made, forged, or counterfeited, or willingly aid or assist in falsely making, forging, or counterfeiting, any bill or note in imitation of, or purporting to be, a bill or note issued by order of the president, directors, and company, of the said bank, or any order or check on the said bank or corporation, or any cashier thereof; or shall falsely alter, or cause or procure to be falsely altered, or willingly aid or assist in falsely altering, any bill or note issued by order of the president, directors, and company, of the said bank, or any order or check on the said bank or corporation, or any cashier thereof; or shall pass, utter, or publish, or attempt to pass, utter, or publish, as true, any false, forged, or counterfeited, bill or note, purporting to be a bill or note issued by order of the president, directors, and company, of the said bank, or any false, forged, or counterfeited, order or check upon the said bank or corpora- tion, or any cashier thereof, knowing the same to be falsely forged or counterfeited; or shall pass, utter, or publish, or attempt to pass, utter, or publish, as true, any falsely altered bill or note, issued by order of the president, directors, and company, of the said bank, or any falsely altered order or check on the said bank or corporation, or any cashier thereof, knowing the same to be falsely altered, with intention to defraud the said corporation, or any other body politic or person or shall sell, utter, or deliver, or cause to be sold, uttered, or delivered, any forged or counterfeit note or bill, in imita- tion, or purporting to be, a bill or note issued by order of the president and directors of the said bank, knowing the same to be false, forged, or counterfeited; every such person shall be deemed and adjudged guilty of felony, and being thereof convicted by due course of law, shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept to hard labour, for not less that three years nor more than ten years, or shall be imprisoned not exceeding ten years, and fined not exceeding five thousand dollars: Provided, That nothing herein contained shall be construed to deprive the courts of the individual states of a jurisdic- tion, under the laws of the several states, over any offence declared punishable by this act. è 19. That if any person shall make or engrave, or cause or procure to be made or engraved, or shall have in his custody or possession, any metallic plate, engraved after the similitude of any plate from which any notes or bills, issued by the said corporation, shall have been printed, with intent to use such plate, or to cause or suffer the same to be used, in forging or counterfeiting any of the notes or bills issued by the said corporation or shall have in his custody or possession any blank note or notes, bill or bills, engraved and printed after the similitude of any notes or bills issued by said corpo- ration, with intent to use such blanks, or cause or suffer the same to be used, in forging or counter- feiting any of the notes or bills issued by the said corporation or shall have in his custody or posses- sion any paper adapted to the making of bank notes or bills, and similar to the paper upon which any notes or bills of the said corporation shall have been issued, with intent to use such paper, or cause or suffer the same to be used, in forging or counterfeiting any of the notes or bills issued by the said corporation; every such person, being thereof convicted by due course of law, shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept to hard labor for a term not exceeding five years, or shall be imprisoned for a term not exceeding five years and fined in a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars. è 20. That, in consideration of the exclusive privileges and benefits conferred by this act upon the said bank, the president, directors, and company, thereof, shall pay to the United States, out of the corporate funds thereof, the sum of one million and five hundred thousand dollars, in three equal pay- ments; that is to say: five hundred thousand dollars at the expiration of two years; five hundred thousand dollars at the expiration of three years and five hundred thousand dollars at the expiration of four years after the said bank shall be organized and commence its operations in the manner here- inbefore provided. è 21. That no other bank shall be established by any future law of the United States during the continuance of the corporation hereby created, for which the faith of the United States is hereby pledged: Provided, Congress may renew existing charters for banks in the district of Columbia, not increasing the capital thereof, and may also establish any other bank or banks in said district, with capitals not exceeding, in the whole, six millions of dollars, if they shall deem it expedient. And, not- withstanding the expiration of the term for which the said corporation is created, it shall be lawful to use the corporate name, style, and capacity, for the purpose of suits for the final settlement and liqui- dation of the affairs and accounts of the corporation, and for the sale and disposition of their estate, real, personal, and mixed but not for any other purpose, or in any other manner, whatsoever, nor for a period exceeding two years after the expiration of the said term of incorporation. e 22. That if the subscriptions and payments to said bank shall not be made and completed so as to enable the same to commence its operations, or if the said bank shall not commence its operations on or before the first Monday in April next, then, and in that case, congress may, at any time within twelve months thereafter, declare, by law, this act null and void. 1 23. That it shall, at all times, be lawful for a committee of either house of congress, appointed for that purpose, to inspect the books, and to examine into the proceedings, of the corporation hereby created, and to report whether the provisions of this charter have been, by the same, violated or not; and whenever any committee, as aforesaid, shall find and report, or the president of the United States shall have reason to believe, that the charter has been violated, it may be lawful for congress to direct, or the president to order, a scire facias to be sued out of the circuit court of the district of Pennsyl- vania, in the name of the United States (which shall be executed upon the president of the corpora- tion for the time being, at least fifteen days before the commencement of the term of said court), calling on the said corporation to show cause wherefore the charter hereby granted shall not be declared forfeited; and it shall be lawful for the said court, upon the return of the said scire facias, to examine into the truth of the alleged violation, and if such violation be made appear, then to pro- nounce and adjudge that the said charter is forfeited and annulled. Provided, however, Every issue Digitized by Google 144 BANKS (UNITED STATES). of fact which may be joined between the United States and the corporation aforesaid, shall be tried by jury. And it shall be lawful for the court aforesaid to require the production of such of the books of the corporation as it may deem necessary for the ascertainment of the controverted facts: and the final judgment of the court aforesaid shall be examinable in the supreme court of the United States, by writ of error, and may be there reversed or affirmed, according to the usages of law. The bank commenced operations on the 7th of January, 1817; and soon after entered into a compact with the State banks for a simultaneous resumption of specie payments. It was agreed that this should take place on the 20th of February, on the condition, among others, that the Bank of the United States should not demand payment of any balances which might accumulate against the State institutions, until that bank and its branches should have discounted for individuals, not having duties to pay, at some of the principal Atlantic ports, to the amount of $6,000,000. Immediately on going into operation, every effort was, very naturally, made by the bank to push its paper into circulation, and to make its transactions as extensive as possible. Its discounts were augmented, in the course of little more than a month, from three to twenty millions of dollars and in the end of October, of the same year, they already amounted to 33 millions. With respect to the circulation of its notes, this was soon only limited by the physical inability of the President and Cashier to sign more than a certain number of them in a given time. On the whole, however, there is no doubt that the continued expansion of its paper by the Bank of the United States more than counterbalanced any contraction of that of the other banks, which may have ensued by means of its action upon them. The whole currency of the country remained still in a depreciated condition. Prices were uni- versally high and the spirit of speculation in the different kinds of stocks especially was everywhere rife. Independently of any other consideration, a return to a more natural state of things could not fail before long to ensue, from the exportation of specie, and the conse- quent necessity of the banks to curtail their discounts. This reaction, it is also true, must necessarily give occasion to much pecuniary embarrassment and distress to almost every por- tion of the community. But the distress, when it actually came, was unquestionably very much aggravated by the system of management adopted in the early administration of the new Bank of the United States. In the first place, not only were its discounts and circula- tion augmented altogether too rapidly, but its discounts were, to a considerable extent, made to the stockholders, on pledges of their stock. The object which the directors had, at the outset, in thus favouring the stockholders, above every other class of borrowers, was to enable them to pay the specie portion of the several instalments due by them for their shares, as the time for their payment occurred. As a consequence, the whole amount of the specie paid into the bank by the stockholders, intead of being what was contemplated by Congress, when they incorporated the bank, viz. $7,000,000, was, it is probable, considerably short of third of this sum. But it soon became a practice to lend to the stockholders to the extent *the par value of their shares, on a pledge of these to the bank, without any personal secu- City. Persons of little or no property were, by this means, enabled to hold bank stock, even to a very large amount; since all that they needed to do was to procure from the bank, on a pledge of the stock which they purchased, the very money which they were called upon to pay for it. An increased demand was in this way created for the stock and it is not sur- prising that its price in the market should have been, for some time, almost steadily on the rise, as well as that it should have presented a tempting field for the operations of the specu- lator and the gambler. Again, it was in the natural order of things that, when a contraction on the part of the bank became necessary, the directors, instead of throwing any portion of the pledged stock into the market, which would have a tendency to lower the value of the stock, should curtail their discounts of mercantile paper to an extent far greater than would otherwise have been requisite, and should thus, as we have said, veaggravated the pecuniary embarrassments incidental to every sudden diminution of the circulating medium. We cannot better continue this account of the mode in which the Bank of the United States was managed, in the period under consideration, than by adopting the language of Mr. Cheves, the second president of the bank, in a report made by him to the stockholders in 1822. " The bank, immediately on its commencement, did a very extensive business, imported vast sums of specie, paid its notes and those of the offices, without reference to the places where they were payable, at the bank and all the principal offices north of the Potomac, while they were, under the charter, necessarily received every where in payments of debts to the government of the United States; and drafts were given without limit, on the parent bank and northern offices, by the western offices, at par or at a premium merely nominal. As soon as the notes of the southern and western offices were paid or received by the bank and northern offices, they were returned to them and re-issued in perpetual succession. The re- sult was, that the bank and the great northern offices were drained of their capital, and on the 20th of July, 1818, only eighteen months after the institution began its operations, it was obliged to commence a rapid and heavy curtailment of the business of the bank and its of- fices. During all this time, it had the advantage of immense government deposites. At the moment that curtailments were ordered, the government deposites in the bank and its branches, including the deposites of public officers, amounted to eight millions of dollars, and Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 145 they had been larger at preceding periods. Curtailments were ordered from time to time, at the southern and western offices, to the amount of seven millions of dollars, and at the parent bank to the amount of two millions, though at the latter they were made to the amount of 3,600,000 dollars, and upwards, between the 30th of July, 1818, and the 1st of April, 1819. No curtailments were ordered at the offices of New York and Boston, because there was no room for them, yet necessity obliged them to reduce their business very much. The cur- tailments at all points within the above mentioned dates, being eight months, were 6,530,000 dollars, 49 cents. Yet after these immense and rapid curtailments, the most sensible and vital points (Philadelphia, New York, and Boston) were infinitely in worse condition than when the remedy was devised. " At that moment" (the 1st of April, 1819) " the discount line of the important office at Boston was only 94,584 dollars, 37 cents. And when in this wretched state, the southern and western circulation was pouring in upon these weak points, and the government was at liberty, according to the practice of the time, to draw on every office of the bank, for the gross amount of its deposites, throughout the whole establishment, whether north, south, east, or west. The southern and western offices were not restrained from issuing their notes, which they did most profusely. The curtailments, in many instances, resulted merely in a change of debts bearing interest, for debts due by local banks, or the notes of local banks, on neither of which was interest received. The western offices curtailed their dis- counted paper, but they purchased what were called race horse bills, to a greater amount than their curtailments. The bank itself continued, during the whole period, to purchase and collect drafts on the southern and even western offices, though almost the whole of the active capital already lay in those quarters of the Union, and though the great object of the curtailments was to draw funds from these points. The debt due in Kentucky and Ohio, instead of being reduced, was within this period actually increased upwards of half a million of dollars. Instead of getting relief from the southern and western offices generally, where curtailments had been ordered, the bank was still further exhausted by the intervening ope- rations. " At the commencement of this period, (a period commencing with the order for curtail- ments, and ending March, 1819,) the bank was indebted to Baring, Brothers & Co., Reed, Irving & Co., Adams, Robertson, & Co., and Thomas Wilson & Co., the sum of 1,586,345 dollars, 47 cents, growing principally, if not entirely, out of its specie operations. Of this sum the greater part was paid during this period. It had, however, contracted new debts with Baring, Brothers & Co., and Thomas Wilson & Co., of which there remained due, including any balance which may have been due on the former accounts, the sum of 876,648 dollars; and, within the same period, it had disposed of 2,270,926 dollars, 65 cents of its funded debt, furnishing by these compound operations ways and means, in addition to its curtailments, to the amount of 1,561,229 dollars, 13 cents, and making, with these curtail- ments, a reduction in the productive capital of the bank, within the period of eight months, of eight millions of dollars, and upwards. " At the close of this period, the discounts on personal security at Philadelphia had been so long the subject of curtailment, that a small portion of them admitted of further reduction, and, after great efforts, a rule had been established to reduce the discounts which had been granted on the stock of the bank, at the rate of five per cent. every 60 days. The latter constituted the bulk of the discounted paper, and 80 small a reduction afforded no relief against a great and immediate demand. Even this small reduction was the subject of loud, angry, and constant remonstrance among the borrowers, who claimed the privileges and the favours which they contended were due to stockholders, and sometimes succeeded in com- municating their sympathies to the board. All the funded debt which was valuable had been disposed of, and the proceeds exhausted. The specie in the vaults at the close of the day, on the 1st of April, 1819, was only 126,745 dollars, 28 cents, and the bank owed to the city banks, deducting balances due to it, an aggregate balance of 79,125 dollars 99 cents. " It is true there were in the mint 267,978 dollars, 9 cents, and in transitu from Kentucky end Ohio over land, 250,000 dollars; but the Treasury dividends were payable on that day to the amount of near 500,000 dollars, and there remained at the close of the day more than one half of the sum subject to draft, and the greater part of the sum which had been drawn during the day remained a charge upon the bank, in the shape of temporary deposits, which were almost immediately withdrawn. Accordingly, on the 12th of the same month, the bank had in its vaults but 71,522 dollars, 47 cents, and owed to the city banks a balance of 196,148 dollars, 47 cents; exceeding the specie in its vaults 124,895 dollars, 19 cents. It must again be remarked, that it had yet the sum before mentioned in the mint, as well as the sum in transitu from Ohio and Kentucky this last sum (250,000 dollars) arrived very seasonably on the next day, or a day or two thereafter. The bank in this situation, the office at New York was little better, and the office at Boston a great deal worse. At the same time the bank owed to Baring, Brothers & Co., and Thomas Wilson & Co., nearly 900,000 dollars, which it was bound to pay immediately, and which was equivalent to a charge upon its vaults to that amount. It had, including the notes of the offices, a circula- VoL. L-N 19 Digitized by Google 146 BANKS (UNITED STATES). tion of six millions of dollars to meet, to which were to be added the demands of depositors, public and private, at a time, too, when the scarcity of money called forth every disposable dollar, and therefore created demands upon the bank for an unusual portion of the ordinary deposites and circulation. The sums which were collected daily on account of the revenue, in branch paper, were demandable the next day in Philadelphia, and, at the same time, at every office of the es- tablishment, at the discretion of the officers of government. The revenue was chiefly paid in branch paper, as well at Boston and New York as at Philadelphia, and while the duties were thus paid at one counter, in branch paper, the debentures, which amounted to one million of dollars every three months, were demanded and paid at the other, in specie or its equivalent-money of the place. Many additional details, increasing the difficulties of the moment, might be added. The southern offices were remitting tardily, and the western not at all. All the resources of the bank would not have sustained it in this course and mode of business another month. Such was the prostrate state of the bank of the nation, which had, only twenty-seven months before, commenced business with an untrammelled active capital of twenty-eight millions of dollars." Mr. Cheves then goes on to state the losses incurred by the bank and its offices, especially at Baltimore, in consequence of the improper conduct of certain of the officers connected with it. The losses in that city alone, he says, were estimated at the sum of 1,671,221 dol- lars, 87 cents. " The aggregate of the losses of the institution, growing out of the opera- tions which preceded the 6th of March, 1819, exceeded considerably 3,500,000 dollars. The dividends during the same time amounted to 4,410,000 dollars. Of this sum 1,348,553 dollars, 98 cents, were received as the interest on the public debt held by the bank, which leaves, as the entire profits on all the operations of banking, the sum of 3,061,441 dollars, 2 cents, which is less by at least half a million of dollars, than the losses sustained on the same business. " Thus stood the bank at the organisation of the present administration. I was elected and took my seat as President of the Board on the 6th of March, 1819. But some time, of course, was necessary to look into the state of the bank, before measures of relief could be projected. Its danger, however, was too manifest and too pressing to allow much time for this purpose. The principal errors which produced the danger were fortunately of easy discovery, and to them the proper remedy was immediately applied. The southern and western offices were immediately directed not to issue their notes, and the bank ceased to purchase and collect exchanges on the south and west. " At a meeting of the directors on the 9th of April, which was very full, the state of the bank was submitted to them, and a select committee appointed, to whom the subject of its difficulties was referred, and after very mature deliberation that committee made a report, which was unanimously agreed to. The principal means of relief proposed and agreed to were " 1. To continue the curtailments previously ordered. 2. To forbid the offices, at the south and west, to issue their notes when the exchanges were against them. 3. To collect the balances due by local banks to the offices. 4. To claim of the government the time neces- sary to transfer funds from the offices where money was collected to those where it was to be disbursed, as well as like time (until the difficulties of the banks were removed) to trans- fer funds to meet the notes of offices paid in the bank or other offices than those where they were payable according to their tenor. 5. To pay debentures in the same money in which the duties on which the debentures were secured had been paid. 6. To obtain a loan in Europe for a sum not exceeding 2,500,000 dollars, for a period not exceeding three years. These measures, simple and obvious as they are, and some of them 80 strangely over- looked 80 long, lifted the bank in the short space of seventy days (from the 6th of March to the 17th of May) from the extreme prostration which has been described to a state of safety, and even in some degree of power, enabled it to cease its curtailments, except at points where it had an excess of capital, to defy all attacks upon it, and to sustain other institutions which wanted aid and were ascertained to be solvent; above all to establish the soundness of the currency, which had just before been deemed hopeless; and in a single season of business (the first) to give to every office as much capital as it could advantageously employ." Nothing more need be added to this exposition of Mr. Cheves, in order to enable the reader to understand the injurious action of the bank, at the period of which we are speak- ing, on the currency of the country, than to state the fact that the branches of the United States Bank made a practice of exchanging their drafts on the Atlantic cities for the notes of the local banks, upon which they required interest to be paid. The obvious consequence of this proceeding was to stimulate those institutions to enlarge their business also to a very extravagant extent; thus contributing to render the contraction of the currency in the western states, when it necessarily happened, both more extensive and more sudden than it would otherwise have been. The mismanagement of the affairs of the Bank of the United States could not fail to at- tract the attention of Congress. It was brought before the House of Representatives by 8 Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 147 resolution offered by Mr. Spencer of New York, on the 25th of November, 1818; which resolution was referred to a select committee of which the mover of the resolution was the chairman. This committee, on the 16th of January following, made an elaborate report, concluding with an explicit declaration, that, in their opinion, the charter of the bank had in several instances been violated. However, excepting the passage of a bill to prevent the larger stockholders from having an undue number of votes at elections, they did not recom- mend any specific action, on the part of Congress, to correct the many evils and mischiefs" depicted by them, because, by the provisions of the charter, the Secretary of the Treasury has full power to apply a prompt and adequate remedy, whenever the situation of the bank shall require it." Resolutions were shortly after offered to the House, for taking the proper measures preparatory to declaring the charter of the bank to have been forfeited; but they were voted down by very large majorities. It is unnecessary to go into any details here concerning the history of the Bank of the United States, from the period at which we have now arrived until the meeting of Congress in December, 1829, when the President presented the question of its recharter for the con- sideration of that body. Its expansions and contractions," as well as those of the banks of the country generally, during the whole of this time were merely such as are incidental to the operations of all banks of circulation. The President observed that the charter of the Bank of the United States expires in 1836, and its stockholders will, most probably, apply for a renewal of their privileges. In order to avoid the evils resulting from precipi- tancy, in a measure involving such important principles, and such deep pecuniary interests, I feel that I cannot, in justice to the parties interested, too soon present it to the deliberate consideration of the legislature and the people. Both the constitutionality and the expe- diency, of the law creating this bank, are well questioned by a large portion of our fellow- citizens; and it must be admitted by all, that it has failed in the great end of establishing a uniform and sound currency. .. Under these circumstances, if such an institution is deemed essential to the fiscal opera- tions of the government, I submit to the wisdom of the legislature whether a national one, founded upon the credit of the government, and its revenues, might not be devised, which would avoid all constitutional difficulties, and, at the same time, secure all the advantages to the government and country that were expected to result from the present bank." The Committee of Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, through their chair- man, Mr. McDuffie, made a report on the 13th of April, 1830; in which, after an elaborate examination of the several questions presented by the message of the President, and sub- mitted to them for consideration, they conclude that Congress has the constitutional power to incorporate a bank, such as that of the United States; that it is expedient to establish and maintain such an institution and that it is inexpedient to establish a national bank, founded upon the credit of the government and its revenues." In the Senate, a resolution had been referred, early in the same session, to the committee of finance, directing them to inquire into the expediency of establishing an uniform national currency for the United States; which committee reported on the 29th of March, and, like that of the House of Representatives, expressed opinions, concerning the currency and the Bank of the United States, in direct opposition with those of the President. No further steps were taken by either the Senate or the House of Representatives on the subject, until the session of 1831-32, when the bank made application to Congress for a re- newal of its charter. The President had, in the mean while, a second, and a third time, in successive annual messages, reiterated his views in opposition to such a renewal. This did not prevent a bill from passing through both branches of the national legislature, incorporat- ing anew the Bank of the United States; which bill was, however, vetoed by the President, who stated his reasons for doing so in a message to the Senate, where the bill had originated. It was there promptly reconsidered; but, failing to obtain in its favour the constitutional majority of two-thirds of the members of that body, it was finally rejected on the 13th day of July, 1832. The removal by the President of the government deposites from the Bank of the United States, in the autumn of 1833; the adoption, in consequence, by Congress of what has been styled the deposite bank system, as a means of safely keeping the public money the passage of the act of June 23d, 1836, for the distribution of the surplus revenue among the different states of the Union; the issue by the Secretary of the Treasury of the famous specie circular, of July 11th, 1836 the incorporation of the Bank of the United States by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, early in the same year; the derangement in the currency of the country, which led, in May of the following year, to the general suspension of specie payments by the banks; the resumption of specie payments by the banks, in the summer of 1838 with the adoption by the State of New York, and one or two others, of a system of free bank- ing;" constitute the principal events, in the monetary and financial history of the United States, during the last six years. They are, of course, fresh in the recollection of our readers; and, on this account, as well as with the view of abstaining entirely from any in- terference on our part in the party contentions to which those events have afforded an ample Digitized by Google 148 BANKS (UNITED STATES). field, we shall content ourselves with enumerating them here, and inserting below the act incorporating the Pennsylvania Bank of the United States, as also the act to authorise the business of banking, passed by the Legislature of the State of New York, April 18th, 1838. An Act to repeal the State Tax on Real and Personal Property, and to continue and extend the Improve- ments of the State, by Railroads and Canals, and to charter a state bank, to be called the United States Bank." a 1. Be it enacted, &c., That all and every provision of the Acts of Assembly, passed the twenty-fifth day of March, in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-one, respectively, entitled An act assessing a tax on personal property, to be collected with the county rates and levies, for the use of the commonwealth, and An act to increase the county rates and levies for the use of the common- wealth, be and the same are hereby repealed, except so far as relates to the collection of taxes assessed before the first day of October last: Provided, That the said repeal shall not go into effect, until all the terms and provisions hereinafter set forth shall be fully complied with. 1 2. That the present stockholders of the Bank of the United States, (excepting the United States and the treasurer of the United States,) and such other persons as may become stockholders agree- ably to the by-laws made for that purpose, to an amount not exceeding in the whole the present capi- tal of the said bank, their successors and assigns, be and are hereby created a corporation and body politic, by the name and style of "The President, Directors, and Company of the Bank of the United States," and shall 80 continue until the third day of March, in the year one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six; and by that name shall be and are hereby made capable in law, to have, purchase, and receive, possess, enjoy, and retain, to them and their successors, lands, rents, tenements, heredita- ments, goods, chattels, and effects, of whatsoever kind, nature, and quality, and the same to sell, grant, demise, alien or dispose of, to sue and be sued, to use a common seal, and the same to alter and renew, and to make such by-laws and ordinances as they shall deem necessary, not being contrary to this act, the constitution of the United States, or to the constitution and laws of this commonwealth; and also to prescribe rules for the transfer of the stock of said corporation, and generally to do all the acts which to them it shall or may appertain to do. and to enjoy the same privileges and authority given by law to any bank within this commonwealth, subject to the rules and restrictions hereinafter prescribed. 0 3. For the management of the affairs of the said corporation, there shall be annually elected at the banking-house, in the city of Philadelphia, on the first Monday in January in each year, by a plu- rality of votes, which shall be given by the qualified stockholders of the said bank, in person or by proxy, twenty directors, who shall be capable of serving for one year, and who shall, at the first meeting after their election in each year, proceed to elect one of the directors to be the president of the corporation, who shall hold the said office during the same period for which the directors are elected; but if an election of directors or of the president should not be made on that day, the said corporation shall not for that cause be dissolved, but it shall be lawful at any other time to hold such elections; and until such elections be made, the directors and president for the time being shall con- tinue in office; and in case of the death or resignation of the president, the directors shall elect ano- ther president from their own number and in case of the death or resignation of a director, the va- cancy may be supplied by the remaining directors. 0 4. The following shall be the fundamental articles of the said corporation, to wit 1. None but a stockholder who is a citizen of the United States shall be a director, or vote at an election for directors, either in person or by proxy; and all proxies shall be dated within sixty days before the day of each election. The number of votes to which each stockholder shall be entitled in voting for directors shall be as follows for one share and not more than two shares, one vote ; for every two shares above two and not exceeding ten shares, one vote for every four shares above ten and not exceeding thirty, one vote; for every six shares above thirty, and not exceeding sixty, one vote for every eight shares above sixty, and not exceeding one hundred, one vote but no person, copartnership, or body politic, shall be entitled to a greater number than thirty votes: and after the first election, no share or shares shall confer a right of voting, unless the same shall have been held three calendar months before the day of election. 2. Not more than three fourths of the directors who shall be in office at the time of an annual election, shall be elected for the succeeding year, and no director shall hold his office for more than three years out of four in succession, but the director who shall be the president may always be re- elected and previous to each election of directors, the board of directors shall appoint three stock- holders, not directors, to be judges of the election, who shall conduct and regulate the same, after having severally taken and subscribed an oath or affirmation, before some justice of the peace or alderman, well and faithfully and lawfully to conduct the election, and who, after the conclusion of the ballot, shall decide and openly declare who are chosen directors for the ensuing year. No director of any other bank shall be, at the same time, a director of this bank; nor shall the governor. or any executive or judicial officer of this commonwealth, or member of congress, or of the state legislature, be a director. 3. Not less than seven directors shall constitute a board for the transaction of business, of whom. the president shall always be one, except In case of sickness or necessary absence, in which case his place may be supplied by any other director whom he by writing under his hand shall depute for that purpose; and in case the president shall not 80 depute, the board of directors may elect a director to act during the absence of the president. 4. A general meeting of the stockholders for purposes relative to the institution, may at any time be called, either by the board of directors, or by sixty or more stockholders owning one thousand or more shares of the capital stock, on giving at least six weeks' notice in two public newspapers pub- lished in the city of Philadelphia, and specifying in such notice the object or objects of such meeting. And there shall be a general meeting of the stockholders at the banking house, in the city of Phila- delphia, on the first Monday of January in every year, at which time the directors shall lay before them a general and particular statement of the affairs of the company. 5. The lands, tenements, and hereditaments which it shall be lawful for the said corporation to hold, shall be only such as shall be requisite for its immediate accommodation in transacting its business, and such as shall have been bona fide mortgaged to it by way of security, or conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts previously contracted in the course of its dealings, or purchased at sales upon judgments which shall have been obtained for such debts, or purchased for the purpose of securing such debts. The said corporation shall not directly, or indirectly, deal or trade in any thing except bills of exchange, gold and silver bullion, or in the sale of goods really and truly pledged for money lent, and not redeemed in due time,-or goods which shall be the proceeds of its lands. Neither shall it make any loan to any foreign prince or state unless previously authorised by law. The said cor- poration shall not be at liberty to purchase any stock whatever, except their own stock, treasury notes, or public stocks created by the government of the United States, or of this State, or stock of or loans to any of the incorporated companies of this State, for the construction and improvement of Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 149 roads, bridges, canal or inland navigation, or other stocks which may be bona fide pledged as security for debts to the bank, and not duly redeemed. 6. The rate of discount at which loans may be made by said Bank within this commonwealth, shall not exceed one half of one per centum for thirty days. And the notes and bills which shall be issued by order of said corporation, or under its authority, shall be binding upon it, and those made payable to order, shall be assignable by endorsement, but none shall be issued of a denomination less than ten dollars; and if the bank shall neglect or refuse to pay its notes or bills or moneys deposited when due, on demand made at the bank during banking hours, the person or persons entitled to the same shall receive interest thereon at the rate of twelve per centum a year until payment be made. And the notes of the corporation in circulation shall never exceed the capital actually paid in. The total amount of debts which the said corporation may at any time owe, whether by bond, note, or other contract, excepting the amount of money due to depositors, shall not at any time exceed double the amount of capital stock actually paid in and in case of excess, the directors under whose administration it shall happen, shall be liable in their individual capacities, and an action of debt may in such case be brought against them, or any of them, or any of their heirs, executors or administrators, in any court having competent jurisdiction, by any creditor or creditors of such corporation, and may be prosecuted to judgment and execution, any condition, covenant or agreement to the contrary notwithstanding but this shall not be construed to exempt the said corporation, or the lands, tenements, goods and chattels of the same, from being also liable for, and chargeable with the said excess. Such of the said directors as may have been absent when the said excess was contracted or created, shall not be con- sidered as consenting thereto, or liable therefor, and those who may have dissented from the resolu- tion or act whereby the same was so contracted or created, and who shall enter their dissent upon the minutes of the board, may exonerate themselves from being so liable, by forthwith giving notice of the fact to the stockholders at a general meeting, which they shall have power to call for that purpose. 7. If the said bank should at any time refuse to pay any of its notes, bills, obligations, or deposited moneys, in gold or silver, then at or after the expiration of three months from the time of the first refusal of said bank to pay as aforesaid, it shall and may be lawful for the holder or proprietor of the same, to make application in writing to any judge of any court in the proper county, to allow him or her to make proof of said refusal on oath or affirmation, by one or more disinterested witness or wit- nesses, before said judge, whose duty it shall be to give at least ten days' notice to the president or cashier of said bank, of the time and place of making such proof, in order that an opportunity may be afforded for rebutting the same by testimony, and if the facts be substantiated, it shall be the duty of the said judge to reduce the same to writing, and to transmit the same to the Governor. And it shall be the duty of the Governor, immediately on the receipt of the written proof above specified, to issue his proclamation, declaring the charter of the said bank to be forfeited. And from and after the tenth day after the date of the said proclamation, the charter of the said bank shall be absolutely null and void, and of no effect whatsoever-except that the said bank shall be liable, in its corporate ca- pacity, for the fulfilment of all contracts previously made and entered into by it; and the stock- holders thereof shall have power to elect directors as usual, and be capable of compelling the fulfil- ment of any contract entered into with said bank, previously to the date of the said forfeiture. 8. Dividends of so much of the profits as the directors may deem advisable, shall be declared twice a year, on the first Mondays of January and July in each year, and paid to the stockholders on de- mand at any time after the expiration of ten days therefrom. But such dividends shall in no case exceed the amount of the nett profits, actually acquired by the bank, so that the capital stock of the said bank shall never thereby be impaired. If the directors of the bank shall make any dividends which shall impair the capital stock of said bank, the directors consenting thereto, shall be liable in their individual capacities, to such corporation for the amount of the stock so divided and each director present when such dividend shall be made, shall be adjudged to be consenting thereto, unless he forthwith enter his protest on the minutes of the board, and give public notice to the stockholders of the declaring of such dividend. 9. The salary of the President shall be established and allowed by the stockholders at a general meeting, and no compensation shall be allowed to any person for his services as a director. The board of directors shall appoint a cashier, and such other officers, clerks, and persons as shall be ne- cessary for transacting the business of the bank, and shall take from each such security as the by- laws shall prescribe, and shall make to each a just compensation for his services. 10. The said bank shall make to the auditor general monthly returns of its condition, showing the details of its operations, according to the form of the returns the Bank of the United States now makes to the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, or according to such form as may be esta- blished by law. è5. It shall at all times be lawful for a committee of the legislature, appointed for that purpose, to inspect the books and examine into the proceedings of the corporation hereby created, and to report whether the provisions of this charter have been by the same abused or violated, or not; and if the officers of said corporation should refuse to be sworn or affirmed, or give evidence, or to produce all such of their books or papers as may be demanded before any such committee, then the legislature may by law declare the said charter void, and repeal the same; and whenever any committee as aforesaid shall find and report, or the Governor shall have reason to believe, that the charter has been violated, it may be lawful for the legislature to direct, or the Governor to order, a scire facias to be issued out of the supreme court of Pennsylvania, in the name of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl- vania (which shall be executed on the president of the corporation for the time being, at least ten days before the commencement of the term of said court), calling on said corporation to show cause wherefore the charter hereby granted, shall not be declared forfeited; and it shall be lawful for said court upon the return of said scire facias, to examine into the truth of the alleged violation, and if such violation be made to appear, then to pronounce or adjudge that such charter is forfeited and an- nulled: Provided, however, every issue of fact which may be joined between the commonwealth or the corporation, such issue shall be tried by jury, and on the trial thereof, the commonwealth shall have the right to change the venue from the county of Philadelphia to any adjoining county. And it shall be lawful for the court aforesaid, to require the production of such of the books or papers of the corporation, as it may deem necessary for the ascertainment of the controverted facts, and the final judgment of said court shall be subject to all the usages of law in other cases. $6. In consideration of the privileges granted by this act, and in lieu of all taxes on dividends, the said corporation shall pay into the Treasury of the Commonwealth the sum of two millions of dollars, at such time and in such instalments as the Governor may require: Provided, That at least thirty days' notice shall be given by the Governor, of the time when each instalment will be required And provided also, that for all sums the Governor shall not so require to be paid within three months after the acceptance of this charter by the stockholders, interest at the rate of five per cent. a year shall be paid by the corporation, commencing at the expiration of the said three months, and termi- nating thirty days before the time fixed for the payment of each sum ; and the said corporation shall also, whenever required by law, advance on permanent loan any sum or sums, not exceeding in the whole six millions of dollars, and for each sum of money so loaned, shall receive from the common- N 2 Digitized by Google 150 BANKS (UNITED STATES.) wealth a negotiable certificate of stock, reimbursable on the third day of March, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight, transferable at the Bank of Pennsylvania, or such other place as the legisla- ture may hereafter designate, bearing an interest of either four or five per cent. per annum, payable half yearly at the Bank of Pennsylvania, or such other place as the legislature may hereafter desig- nate, as the law requiring such loan may determine, and in case the interest shall be five per cent. shall pay to the commonwealth one hundred and ten dollars in money for each hundred dollars in stock; or if the interest be four per cent. shall pay one hundred dollars in money for each hundred dollars in stock and the said corporation shall be bound, whenever required by law, to advance to the commonwealth as a temporary loan, any sum of money not exceeding one million of dollars in any one year, at an interest of four per cent. a year, reimbursable at the pleasure of the common- wealth, within twelve months from the date of the loan and the said corporation shall further pay to the Treasurer for the use of the commonwealth, the sum of five hundred thousand dollars on the third day of March, Anno Domini, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven, and shall pay the further sum of one hundred thousand dollars on the first Monday of June next, and the like sums of one hundred thousand dollars on each succeeding first Monday of June, for nineteen years thereafter, to be added to and paid over with the annualappropriation provided by the common- wealth for common school purposes, and be distributed according to the several laws of this common- wealth regulating the distribution of such appropriation and the said corporation shall further be bound to subscribe the following sums to the capital stock of the following named companies, if re- quested so to do by the directors of the said companies, or either of them, within one year from the passage of this act, namely, To the capital stock of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, the sum of two hundred thousand dollars ; To that of the Williamsport and Elmira Railroad Company, the sum of two hundred thousand dollars; To the Monongahela Navigation Company, fifty thousand dollars, if the same be incorporated, at the opening of the books of subscription for the capital stock thereof, and the further sum of fifty thousand dollars as soon as one hundred thousand dollars sub- scribed by other persons or bodies corporate shall have been bona fide expended in the construction of the said work To the Cumberland Valley Railroad Company, one hundred thousand dollars; To the Warren and Pinegrove Railroad Company, twenty thousand dollars; To the Warren and Frank- lin Turnpike-road Company, fifteen thousand dollars, if the said company be incorporated this ses- sion of the legislature To the Warren and Ridgeway Turnpike-road Company, five thousand dol- lars; To the Johnstown and Ligonier Turnpike-road Company, ten thousand dollars; To the Snow Shoe and Packerville Turnpike Company, twenty thousand dollars; To the Roseburg and Mercer Turnpike Company, five thousand dollars. All of which subscriptions shall place the said bank on the same footing as to the rights and liabilities with the original subscribers to said companies respect- ively: Provided, That such subscription shall not be made to the stock of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company until a law of Maryland shall be passed, and assented to by said company, ena- bling the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and any company or companies duly authorised by the said commonwealth, to intersect by Railroad and unite with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, at any point In the state of Maryland; and that the whole amount 80 to be subscribed by the said bank, shall be appropriated exclusively to the construction of the Railroad from Cumberland to Pittsburg and that no payment shall be called for by the directors of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company on ac- count of said subscription, until at least twenty miles of the Railroad within the state of Pennsylvania shall have been bona fide placed under contract, and the construction thereof actually begun. 1 14. The said bank may establish two offices of discount and deposite in this state, one of which shall be at such place in the county of Beaver as the directors may select for the purpose. è 15. Nothing in this act contained shall take effect until the several sections and provisions relat- ing to the bank of the United States shall have been accepted by the stockholders thereof, at a general meeting, which acceptance shall be made known to the Governor on or before the third day of March next; whereupon every preceding section of this act shall be in full force. And within thirty days after the acceptance by the stockholders of the existing Bank of the United States, notice shall be given by the directors thereof, that on a day named, not exceeding thirty days thereafter, an election shall be held for directors under the charter 80 accepted, which election shall be held in like manner as elections are now held in said bank and the directors so elected shall elect a President, and shall serve until the first annual election: Provided, That from the said third day of March to the holding of the election authorised by this section, the President and directors in office at the time of such ac- ceptance may continue to act. In April, 1836, the United States Bank was authorised to establish, in addition to the two offices specified in the 14th section of the act Just recited, an office of discount and deposite in the town of Erie; but this office is not to be continued there longer than the first day of January, 1850. The Bank was also authorised to purchase and hold any real estate belonging to the late Bank of the United States, and to purchase and hold any bank stock. All proxies, moreover, dated at least sixty days before the date of any election, shall be lawful. An Act to authorise the business of Banking, passed April 18, 1838. The people of the State of New York, represented in senate and assembly, do onact as follows: 0 1. The comptroller is hereby authorised and required to cause to be engraved and printed in the best manner, to guard against counterfeiting, such quantity of circulating notes, in the similitude of bank notes in blank, of the different denominations authorised to be issued by the incorporated banks of this state, as he may from time to time deem necessary, to carry into effect the provisions of this act, and of such form as he may prescribe. Such blank circulating notes shall be countersigned, numbered. and registered, in proper books to be provided and kept for that purpose in the office of said comptroller, under his direction, by such person or persons as the said comptroller shall appoint for that purpose, so that each denomination of such circulating notes shall all be of the same simili- tude, and bear the uniform signature of such register, or one of such registers. è 2. Whenever any person or association of persons, formed for the purpose of banking under the provisions of this act, shall legally transfer to the comptroller any portion of the public debt now created or hereafter to be created by the United States or by this state, or such other states of the United States as shall be approved by the comptroller, such person or association of persons shall be entitled to receive from the comptroller an equal amount of such circulating notes. of different deno- minations, registered and countersigned as aforesaid; but such public debt shall in all cases be, or be made to be, equal to a stock of this state, producing five per cent. per annum, and it shall not be law- ful for the comptroller to take any stock at a rate above its par value. . 3. Such person or association of persons are hereby authorised, after having executed and signed such circulating notes in the manner required by law, to make them obligatory promissory notes pay- able on demand, at the place of business within this state, of such person or association, to loan and circulate the same as money, according to the ordinary course of banking business as regulated by the laws and usages of this state. 0 4. In case the maker or makers of any of such circulating notes, countersigned and registered as aforesaid, shall at any time hereafter on lawful demand during the usual hours of business between Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 151 the hours of ten and three o'clock, at the place where such note is payable, fail or refuse to redeem such note in the lawful money of the United States, the holder of such note making such demand may cause the same to be protested for non-payment by a notary public, under his seal of office in the usual manner and the comptroller, on receiving and filing in his office such protest, shall forthwith give notice in writing to the maker or makers of such note to pay the same and if he or they shall omit to do so for ten days after such notice, the comptroller shall immediately thereupon (unless he shall be satisfied that there is a good and legal defence against the payment of such note or notes), give notice in the state paper that all the circulating notes issued by such person or association will be redeemed out of the trust funds in his hands for that purpose and it shall be lawful for the comp- troller to apply the said trust funds belonging to the maker or makers of such protested notes to the payment and redemption of such notes, with costs of protest, and to adopt such measures for the pay- ment of all such circulating notes put in circulation by the maker or makers of such protested notes, pursuant to the provisions of this act, as will in his opinion most effectually prevent loss to the holders thereof. è5. The comptroller may give to any person or association of persons, so transferring stock in pur- suance of the provisions of this act, powers of attorney to receive interest or dividends thereon, which such person or association may receive and apply to their own use; but such powers may be revoked upon such person or association failing to redeem the circulating notes so issued, or when- ever, in the opinion of the comptroller, the principal of such stock shall become an insufficient secu- rity ; and the said comptroller, upon the application of the owner or owners of such transferred stock in trust, may, in his discretion, change or transfer the same for other stocks of the kind before specified in this act, or may re-transfer the said stocks, or any part thereof, or the mortgages, or any of them hereinafter mentioned and provided for, upon receiving and cancelling an equal amount of such cir- culating notes delivered by him to such person or association, in such manner that the circulating notes shall always be secured in full either by stocks or by stocks and mortgages, as in this act provided. 0 6. The bills or notes so to be countersigned, and the payment of which shall be so secured by the transfer of public stocks, shall be stamped on their face, Secured by the pledge of public stocks." è7. Instead of transferring public stocks as aforesaid to secure the whole amount of such bills or notes, it shall be lawful for such person or association of persons, in case they shall so elect before receiving any of the said bills or notes, to secure the payment of one half of the whole amount so to be issued, by transferring to the comptroller bonds and mortgages upon real estate, bearing at least six per cent. interest of this state, payable annually or semi-annually; in which case all such bills or notes issued by the said person or association of persons, shall be stamped on their face, " Secured by pledge of public stocks and real estate." (8. Such mortgages shall be only upon improved, productive, unincumbered lands within this state, worth, independently of any buildings thereon, at least double the amount for which they shall be so mortgaged; and the comptroller shall prescribe such regulations for ascertaining the title and the value of such lands as he may deem necessary; and such mortgages shall be payable within such time as the comptroller may direct. $ 9. The comptroller may, in his discretion, resign the said bonds and mortgages, or any of them, to the person or association who transferred the same, on receiving other approved bonds and mort- gages of equal amount and when any sum of the principal of the bonds and mortgages transferred to the comptroller shall be paid to him, he shall notify the person or association that transferred the bonds and mortgages of such payment, and may pay the same to such person or association on receiving other approved bonds and mortgages of equal amount. è 10. The person or association of persons assigning such bonds and mortgages to the comptroller, may receive the annual interest to accrue thereon, unless default shall be made in paying the bills or notes to be countersigned as aforesaid, or unless in the opinion of the comptroller the bonds and mort- gages or stocks so pledged shall become an insufficient security for the payment of such bills or notes. 8 11. In case such person or association of persons shall fail or refuse to pay such bills or notes on demand in the manner specified in the 4th section of this act, the comptroller, after the ten days' notice therein mentioned, may proceed to sell at public auction the public stocks so pledged or the bonds and mortgages so assigned, or any or either of them, and out of the proceeds of such sale shall pay and cancel the said bills or notes, default in paying which shall have been made as aforesaid but nothing in this act contained shall be considered as implying any pledge on the part of the state for the pay- ment of said bills or notes, beyond the proper application of the securities pledged to the comptroller for their redemption. è 12. The public debt, and bonds, and mortgages, to be deposited with the comptroller by any such person or association, shall be held by him exclusively for the redemption of the bills or notes of such person or association put in circulation as money, until the same are paid. 1 13. The plates, dies, and materials to be procured by the comptroller for the printing and making of the circulating notes provided for hereby, shall remain in his custody and under his direction and the expenses necessarily incurred in executing the provisions of this act, shall be audited and settled by the comptroller, and paid out of any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated and for the purpose of reimbursing the same, the said comptroller is hereby authorised and required to charge against and receive from such person or association applying for such circulating notes, such rate per cent. thereon as may be sufficient for that purpose, and as may be just and reasonable. $ 14. It shall not be lawful for the comptroller, or other officer, to countersign bills or notes for any person or association of persons, to an amount in the aggregate exceeding the public debt, or public debt and bonds and mortgages at their value, as provided in the 2d section of this act, deposited with the comptroller by such person or association; and any comptroller or other officer who shall violate the provisions of this section shall, upon conviction, be adjudged guilty of a misdemeanour, and shall be punished by a fine not less than five thousand dollars, or be imprisoned not less than five years, or by both such fine and imprisonment. 1 15. Any number of persons may associate to establish offices of discount, deposite, and circula- tion, upon the terms and conditions, and subject to the liabilities prescribed in this act but the aggre- gate amount of the capital stock of any such association shall not be less than one hundred thousand dollars. 1 16. Such persons, under their hands and seals, shall make a certificate which shall specify :- 1. The name assumed to distinguish such association, and to be used in its dealings. 2. The place where the operations of discount and deposite of such association are to be carried on, designating the particular city, town, or village. 3. The amount of the capital stock of such association, and the number of shares into which the same shall be divided. 4. The names and places of residence of the shareholders, and the number of shares held by each of them respectively. 5. The period at which such association shall commence and terminate which certificate shall be proved or acknowledged and recorded in the office of the clerk of the county where any office of such association shall be established, and a copy thereof filed in the office of the secretary of state. Digitized by Google 152 BANKS (UNITED STATES). 1 17. The certificate required by the last preceding section to be recorded and filed in the offices of the clerk of the county and secretary of state as aforesaid, or copies thereof, duly certified by either of those officers, may be used as evidence in all courts and places for and against any such association. 2 18. Such association shall have power to carry on the business of banking, by discounting bills, notes, and other evidences of debt ; by receiving deposites by buying and selling gold and silver bul- lion, foreign coins and bills of exchange in the manner specified in their articles of association for the purpose authorised by this act by loaning money on real and personal security; and by exercising such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on such business; to choose one of their num- ber as president of such association, and to appoint a cashier, and such other officers and agents as their business may require, and to remove such president, cashier, officers and agents at pleasure, and appoint others in their place. . 19. The shares of said association shall be deemed personal property, and shall be transferable on the books of the association in such manner as may be agreed on in the articles of association, and every person becoming a shareholder by such transfer, shall, in proportion to his shares, succeed to all the rights and liabilities of prior shareholders; and no change shall be made in the articles of asso- ciation by which the rights, remedies, or security of its existing creditors shall be weakened or im- paired. Such association shall not be dissolved by the death or insanity of any of the shareholders therein. è 20. It shall be lawful for any association of persons organised under this act by their articles of association, to provide for an increase of their capital and of the number of the associates, from time to time, as they may think proper. 1 21. Contracts made by any such association, and all notes and bills by them issued and put in cir- culation as money, shall be signed by the president or vice-president and cashier thereof; and all suits, actions, and proceedings brought or prosecuted by or on behalf of such association, may be brought or prosecuted in the name of the president thereof; and no such suit, action, or proceeding, shall abate by reason of the death, resignation, or removal from office of such president, but may be continued and prosecuted according to such rules as the courts of law or equity may direct, in the name of his successor in office, who shall exercise the powers, enjoy the rights, and discharge the duties of his predecessor. 0 22. All persons having demands against any such association, may maintain actions against the president thereof; which suits or actions shall not abate by reason of the death, resignation, or removal from office of such president, but may be continued and prosecuted to judgment against his successor; and all judgments and decrees obtained or rendered against such president for any debt or liability of such association, shall be enforced only against the joint property of the association, and which property shall be liable to be taken and sold by execution under any such judgment or decree. . 23. No shareholder of any such association shall be liable in his individual capacity for any con- tract, debt, or engagement of such association, unless the articles of association by him signed shall have declared that the shareholder shall be so liable. 0 24. It shall be lawful for such association to purchase, hold, and convey real estate for the follow- ing purposes :- 1. Such as shall be necessary for its immediate accommodation in the convenient transaction of its business or 2. Such as shall be mortgaged to it in good faith, by way of security for loans made by, or moneys due to, such association ; or 3. Such as shall be conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts previously contracted in the course of its dealings; or 4. Such as it shall purchase at sales under judgments, decrees or mortgages held by such asso- ciation. 5. The said association shall not purchase, hold or convey real estate in any other case, or for any other purpose and all conveyances of such real estate shall be made to the president, or such other officer as shall be indicated for that purpose in the articles of association and which president or officer, and his successors, from time to time, may sell, assign and convey the same, free from any claim thereon, against any of the shareholders. or any person claiming under them. 2 25. Upon the application of creditors or shareholders of any such association, whose debts or shares shall amount to one thousand dollars, and stating facts, verified by affidavit, the chancellor may, in his discretion, order a strict examination to be made by one of the masters of his court of all the affairs of such association, for the purpose of ascertaining the safety of its investments, and the prudence of its management; and the result of every such examination, together with the opinion of the master and of the chancellor thereon, shall be published in such manner as the chancellor shall direct, who shall make such order in respect to the expenses of such examination and publication as he may deem proper. . 26. Such associations shall, on the first Mondays of January and July in every year after having commenced the business of banking as prescribed by this act, make out and transmit to the comp- troller, in the form to be provided by him, a full statement of the affairs of the association, verified by the oath of the president or cashier, which statement shall contain 1. The amount of the capital stock paid in according to the provisions of this act or secured to be paid. 2. The value of the real estate of the association, specifying what portion is occupied by the asso- clation as necessary to the transaction of its business. 3. The shares of stock held by such association; whether absolutely or as collateral security spe- cifying each kind and description of stock, and the number and value of the shares of each. 4. The amount of debts due to the association, specifying such as are due from monied or other cor- porations or associations and also specifying the amount secured by bond and mortgage or judgment and the amount which ought to be included in the computation of losses. 5. The amount of debts due by such association specifying such as are payable on demand, and such as are due to monied or other corporations or associations. 6. The amount of claims against the association not acknowledged by its debts. 7. The amount of notes, bills, or other evidences of debt, issued by such association. 8. The amount of the losses of the association; specifying whether charged on its capital or profits, since its last preceding statement, and of its dividends declared and made during the same period. 9. The average amount in each month during the preceding six months of the debts due to and from the association; the average amount of specie possessed by the same during each month, and the amount of bills and notes issued by such association and put in circulation as money, and outstand- ing against the association, on the first day of each of the preceding six months. 10. The average amount in each month during the preceding six months due to the association, from all the shareholders in the association also the greatest amount due to the association in each of the.said preceding six months, from all the sharebolders in such association. 11. The amount which the capital of the said association has been increased during the preceding six months, if there shall have been any increase of the said capital; and the names of any persons Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 153 who may become parties to the said articles of association, or may have withdrawn therefrom since their last report. It shall be the duty of the comptroller to cause the statement required to be made by this section, to be published in a newspaper printed in the county where the place of business of such association is situated, and in the state paper; the expense of which shall be paid by such association. è 27. If such association shall neglect to make out and transmit the statement required in the last preceding section, for one month beyond the period when the same is required to be made, or shall violate any of the provisions of this act, such association may be proceeded against and dissolved by the court of chancery, in the same manner as any monied corporation may be proceeded against and dissolved. 2 28. If any portion of the original capital of any such association shall be withdrawn for any pur- pose whatever whilst any debts of the association remain unsatisfied, no dividends or profits on the shares of the capital stock of the association shall thereafter be made, until the deficit of capital shall have been made good. either by subscription of the shareholders, or out of the subsequently accruing profits of the association; and if it shall appear that any such dividends have been made, it shall be the duty of the chancellor to make the necessary orders and decrees for closing the affairs of the asso- ciation, and distributing its property and effects among its creditors and shareholders. 1 29. Such association shall be liable to pay the holder of every bill or note put in circulation as money, the payment of which shall have been demanded and refused, damages for non-payment thereof, in lieu of interest, at and after the rate of fourteen per cent. per annum, from the time of such refusal until the payment of such evidence of debt. and the damages thereon. . 30. The president and cashier of every association formed pursuant to the provisions of this act, shall at all times keep a true and correct list of the names of the shareholders of such association, and sha II file a copy of such list in the office of the clerk of the county where any office of such associa- tion may be located, and also in the office of the comptroller, on the first Mondays of January and July in every year. 2 31. It shall not be lawful for any association formed under the provisions of this act, to make any of its bills or notes of a denomination less than one thousand dollars, to be put in circulation as money, payable at any other place than at the office where the business of the association is carried on and conducted. a 32. The legislature may at any time alter or repeal this act. 2 33. No association of persons authorised to carry on the business of banking under this act, shall at any time, for the space of twenty days. have on hand at their place of business, less than twelve and a half per cent. in specie on the amount of the bills or notes in circulation as money. It has been already mentioned, on the authority of Mr. Gallatin, that the State banks, on the 1st January, 1816, a short time only before the incorporation by Congress of the Bank of the United States, amounted in number to 246, with a capital of about $90,000,000, and that, in 1830, their number amounted to as many as 330. From this date, however, down to the present moment, their number has been continually increasing until it has at length reached, including branch banks, to between 800 and 900. A very general conviction has ensued of the expediency of some modification or change in a system presenting so many different sources of a paper currency, all of them in a considerable degree independent of each other, and liable, in consequence, to frequent and extensive expansions and contractions of their issues. To guard against the evils of the banking system, the banks, in many of the States, are obliged to make an annual statement to the legislature of their condition, specifying the amount of their capitals paid in, of their bills in circulation, of their deposites, and of the specie in their vaults. In New York, commissioners are appointed by the legislature to examine into the affairs of the banks, and to make report accordingly. But the measure, in relation to the banking system, which is peculiar to that State, is the establishment of a " safety fund," as a security to the public against losses resulting from the failure of banks. One half per cent. on the capital of these institutions is exacted from them annu- ally. When the fund, thus obtained, shall amount to half a million of dollars, no farther payment on their part is to be made; and this amount is put out at interest and accuinu- lates, until the failure occurs of some bank, whose notes it is then appropriated to redeem. As soon as the fund shall again fall below a half million of dollars, the half per cent. above mentioned is again exacted, and 80 on. Another measure, which has been adopted as a security against over issues by the banks, is the compelling of them to pay a very high in- terest, commonly 12 per cent. or even as much as 24 per cent., upon every sum which they refuse to pay in specie, whether of their notes in circulation, or of the deposites made with them. And in some of the States the banks have been prohibited from issuing any notes below the denomination of five dollars. Notwithstanding, however, all the contrivances hitherto invented for remedying the acknowledged evils of our existing banking system, the opinion of the public seems to be at present divided, between first, a preference for a currency purely metallic; secondly, for one to consist in part of metallic money, and in part of a paper money to be issued exclu- sively by the general government, or by some institution created, or commissioners appointed by it, subjected to certain checks and responsibilities, to prevent over issues thirdly, for the incorporation once more of a bank of the United States, with a capital sufficiently large to give it a control over the other banks of the country, numerous as they now are; and, lastly, the introduction of the free system of banking, of which the State of New York has fur- nished an example. Perhaps, indeed, we ought rather to have said that public opinion was divided between the two last mentioned schemes, since those who are advocates of the former two, constitute as yet, without doubt, only a small minority of the people. We here abstain altogether from expressing our own preferences contenting ourselves 20 Digitized by Google 154 BANKS (UNITED STATES). with the remark, in reference to the proposed free system of banking, that in our view it is singular that the principal evils which pertain to the existing system, and which pertain to it especially on account of the great multiplication of the sources whence paper money is issued, should look for a remedy to the enactment of a law, granting liberty to the invest- ment of capital without limit in the business of banking, and therefore also to the issuing of paper money without limit. It is comparatively easy to devise means to secure the public against losses which may arise from the ultimate failure of banks to comply with their en- gagements; and it is against losses of this nature that the advocates among us of a free trade in banking seem to have been particularly solicitous to provide. These losses, indeed, have been sufficiently extensive, and injurious to the community. Mr. Gallatin enumerates as many as 165 banks which either failed, or discontinued their business, from the 1st of January, 1811, to the 1st of July, 1830. Still there can be little doubt that the distresses and losses which have arisen from fluctuations in the quantity and value of the circulating medium have been of far greater amount. Against these evils, little or no provision seems to have been deemed requisite. No. I.-Comparative View of the Condition of all the Banks in the United States at four different periods. According to returns nearest Jan. 1, 1834. Jan. 1, 1835. Jan. 1, 1836. Jan. 1, 1837. Number of banks from which returns have been received, 406 515 559 632 Number of branches from which returns have been received, - 141 146 154 Number of banks, the affairs of which have been estimated, for want of returns, 100 43 8 2 Number of branches, the affairs of which have been estimated, for want of returns, - - 5 Whole number of banks in operation, - 506 558 567 634 Whole number of branches in operation, - - 146 146 154 Whole number of banks and branches in operation, - - - - - 506 704 713 788 Capital paid in, - - - - $200,005,944 $231,250,337 $251,875,292 $290,772,091 Loans and discounts, - - - - 324,119,499 365,163,834 457,506,080 525,115,702 Stocks, - - - - - 6,113,195 9,210,579 11,709,319 12,407,112 Real estate, - - - - - 10,850,090 11,140,167 14,194,375 19,064,451 Other investments, - - - - 1,723,547 4,642,224 9,975,226 10,423,630 Due from other banks, - - - 27,329,645 40,084,038 51,876,955 59,663,910 Notes of other banks on hand, - - 22,154,919 21,086,301 32,115,138 36,533,527 Specie funds, - - - - - 26,641,753 3,061,819 4,800,076 5,366,500 Specie, - - ⑉ - - - 43,937,625 40,019,594 37,915,340 Circulation, - - - - - 94,839,570 103,692,495 140,301,038 149,185,890 Deposites, - - - - - 75,666,986 83,081,365 115,104,440 127,397,185 Due other banks, - - - - 26,602,293 38,972,578 50,402,369 62,421,118 Other liabilities, - - - - - 19,320,475 25,999,234 36,560,289 Aggregate of bank accounts, - - 816,047,441 974,643,887 1,205,879,136 1,372,826,745 Aggregate of investments supposed to yield income, 342,806,331 390,156,804 493,385,000 567,010,895 Excess of such investments above amount of capital paid in, - - 142,800,387 158,906,467 241,409,708 276,238,804 Aggregate of deposites and circulation, - 170,506,556 186,773,860 255,405,478 276,583,075 Aggregate of deposites, circulation, and sums due to other banks, - - 197,108,849 225,746,438 305,807,847 339,004,193 Aggregate of specie, specie funds, notes of other banks, and sums due by other banks, 76,126,317 108,169,783 128,811,763 139,479,277 Excess of immediate liabilities beyond imme- diate means, - - 120,982,532 117,576,655 176,996,084 199,524,916 Total of means of all kinds, - - 418,932,648 498,326,587 622,196,763 706,490,172 Total of liabilities, exclusive of those to stock- holders, 197,108,849 245,066,913 331,807,081 375,564,482 Total of liabilities of the banks to one another, 76,086,857 100,142,917 134,394,462 158,618,555 Total of liabilities to all, except other banks and stockholders, - - - 121,121,992 144,923,996 281,404,712 313,143,364 Net circulation, - - - - 72,684,651 82,606,194 108,185,900 112,652,363 No. II.-Condensed Statement of the Condition. at different intervals, of all the Banks in the United States. Number of Number of banks from banks the Total Date. which re- affairs of number of Loans and dis- Specie. Circulation. counts. Deposites. Capital. turns are which are banks. received. estimated. Jan. 1. 1811, 51 38 89 - $15,400,000 28,100,000 :- 52,601.601 1815, 120 88 208 - - 17,000,000 45,500,000 - 82,259,590 - 1816, 134 112 246 - 19,000,000 68,000,000 - 89,822,422 - 1820, 213 95 308 - 19,820,210 44,863,344 35,950,470 137,110,611 - 1830, 282 48 330 $200,451,214 22,114,917 61,323,898 55,559,928 145,192,268 - 1834, 406 100 506 324,119,499 - 94,839,570 75,666,986 200,005,944 - 1835, 515 43 558 365,163,834 43,937,625 103,692,495 83,081,365 231,250,337 - 1836, 559 8 567 457,506.080 40,019,594 140,301,038 115,104,440 251,875,292 - 1837, 632 2 634 525,115,702 37,915,340 149.185,890 127,397,185 290,772,091 Digitized by Google 155 No. III.-Summary Statement of the Condition of all the Banks in the United States, at the dates annexed, 1835-36. No. of Banks. Branches. Date. Loans and Stocks. Real Estate. Other Due by other Notes of other banks. Specie. Circulation. Due to other Other discounts. Investments. banks on hand. Specie funds. Deposits. banks. liabilities. Capital. Digitized by Google s 8 8 $ 8 $ s $ 8 8 $ $ $ Maine, 36 June 4, 1836, 6,579,761 - - 109,970 - - 318,673 185,166 176,939 1,788,040 834,929 290,261 409,195 3,935,000 New Hampshire 26 May 2, 1836, 4,501,701 - - 87,621 - - 84,948 535,960 1,526,512 816,569 2,663,308 Vermont, 19 January 1, 1836, 2,594,675 - - 40,502 - - 46,609 126,048 801,913 76,802 2,086,860 348,875 23,874 1,125,624 Massachusetts, 105 May, 1835, 48,342,019 - - 922,543 - - 3,797,926 2,097,797 - - 1,136,444 9,430,357 6,422,266 3,490,097 5,499,434 30,410,000 Rhode Island, 61 October, 1835, 11,085,543 149,752 171,680 18,078 290,290 379,618 - - 566,416 1,644,289 1,699,389 189,486 8,750,581 Connecticut, 31 3 March 7, 1836, 11,736,163 383,700 191,056 139,454 582,703 63,094 1,770,118 3,874,212 1,465,977 488,793 153,124 8,519,368 New York, 86 2 January 1, 1836. 72,826,111 803,159 1,811,925 442,696 15,991,168 10,237,574 1,277,886 6,224,646 21,127,927 29,532,616 19,783,482 4,068,891 31,281,461 Pennsylvania, 44 November, 1835. 35,987,776 1,621,018 1,699,570 43,477 2,834,073 3,971,270 - - 3,876,868 10,932,023 13,347,977 4,097,333 434,844 18,858,482 New Jersey, 25 Oct. 1835 to Dec. 1836, 6,700,072 70,845 150,513 8,028 669,211 344,560 - - 336,132 1,755,829 1,139,827 388,512 BANKS (UNITED STATES). 532,032 3,970,090 Delaware, 4 4 Feb. to Nov. 1836, 1,470,687 193,126 83,035 2,312 257,284 88,372 - - 161,860 806,665 410,824 69,263 817,775 Maryland, 18 2 Dec. 1835 to Dec.1836, 12,728,478 2,125,646 490,446 24,628 1,803,804 951,536 - - 1,300,868 3,200,163 4,379,945 1,750,211 1,246,482 8,203,575 Dist. Columbia, 7 January 1, 1836, 3,157,782 328,300 318,684 529,148 320,074 - - 643,582 961,798 1,385,523 460,768 13,796 2,339,738 Virginia, 5 18 January 1, 1836, 14,329,680 167,166 629,835 3,482 2,264,746 560,291 - - 1,552,528 8,182,763 3,548,414 457,685 2,423 6,511,300 North Carolina, 3 4 November, 1835, 3,441,241 107,704 3,981 674,213 141,164 111,238 314,896 2,050,518 655,311 193,181 41,630 1,769,231 South Carolina, 8 2 Jan. to Oct. 1836, 16,316,319 948,198 148,470 237,769 2,014,435 902,255 - - 2,500,427 7,488,727 4,021,210 1,863,376 1,125,497 7,936,318 Georgia, 14 11 April, 1836, 15,138,142 1,236,749 309,091 191,978 1,303,029 1,016,322 - - 2,602,595 7,971,587 3,295,930 1,074,247 349,000 8,209,967 Florida, 5 Jan. to July, 1836, 2,340,850 15,717 90,350 213,900 19,168 261,394 39,037 714,589 449,451 221,165 47,506 1,484,386 Alabama, 2 4 Oct. 1835 to Oct. 1836, 15,020,505 600,000 140,862 205,002 1,441,198 429,436 - - 1,562,494 6,172,107 3,152,047 1,123,864 1,556,837 6,558,969 Louisiana, 14 31 April to Oct. 1836. 51,234,158 807,568 3,611,876 6,279,650 3,460,917 1,680,565 - - 2,607,587 7,130,546 11,744,712 7,161,452 4,091,574 34,065,284 Mississippi, 5 8 Dec.1835 to Nov. 1836, 19,124,977 196,711 1,465,011 599,343 543,085 - - 659,470 4,490,521 6,401,518 1,027,020 2,106,688 8,764,550 Tennessee, 3 4 May to October 1836, 9,862,921 584,092 59,025 1,152,634 206,518 41,567 211,976 4,205,508 1,514,065 392,568 1,087,381 4,546,285 Kentucky, 4 10 Dec.1835 to July 1836, 8,818,406 1,690,000 169,384 113,218 587,611 1,659,168 - - 1,199,354 3,819,480 1,925,101 1,149,969 1,769,017 5,116,400 Missouri, 1 January 30, 1836, 976,185 - - 2,044 109,049 233,671 - - 371,598 1,382,262 297,928 Illinois, 2 5 Jan. to July 1836, 1,203,763 - - 8,296 4,465 55,689 69,983 - - 279,670 653,661 252,734 13,175 200,000 478,220 Indiana, 1 10 January 9, 1836, 2,304,683 - - 17,214 226,404 1,278,223 557,612 - - 869,839 1,981,650 1,673,887 78,823 128,392 1,279,857 Ohio, 31 1 Dec. 1835 to Dec. 1836, 17,079,714 - - 223,375 29,075 3,318,708 2,725,262 - - 2,924,906 9,675,644 6,125,914 1,420,613 921,005 8,369,744 Michigan, 7 3 Oct.1835 to Nov. 1836, 2,099,608 - - 25,707 100,472 1,671,325 200,710 - - 172,071 1,184,498 2,114,943 52,922 25,000 909,779 Total, 566 123 397,001,920 11,709,319 11,740,812 9,631,574 47,265,909 29,795,267 4,800,076 32,369,005 124,856,474 110,042,216 47,370,582 25,999 234 216,875,292 Bank of U. S. 1 23 February 1, 1836, 60,504,160 2,453,563 343,652 4,611,046 2,319,871 7,650,589 15,444,564 5,062,224 3,031,787 35,000,000 Aggregate, 567 146 s 457,506,050 11,709,319 14,194,375 '9,975,226 51,876,955 32,115,138 4,800,076 40,019,594 140,301,038 115,104,440 50,402,369 25,999,234 251,875,292 Increase of ca- pital in 34 December, 1836, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 12,195,000 old banks, Banks lately - - - - - December, 1836, - - 110 - - - - - - - - - - chartered, - - - - - - - 60,170,000 - - - - - - - - - - - - - Aggregate, 677 146 - - - - - - - - - - - 324,240,202 No. IV,-General Statement of the Condition of all the Banks according to returns nearest to January 1, 1837. 156 No. of State or Territory. Date. Banks. Branches. Loans and Stocks. Real Estate. Other Due by other Notes of other Due to other Other discounts. Investments. banks. banks on hand. Specie funds. Specie. Circulation. Deposits. banks. liabilities. Capital. $ 8 $ s s 8 $ $ $ 8 8 $ $ Maine, Jan. 2, 1837, 55 7,821,023 - 129,831 - 650,962 266,606 - 387,169 1,912,418 1,242,540 279,479 422,737 5,226,700 New Hampshire May 1, 1837, 27 4,829,562 - 80,444 - - 154,306 790,175 - 1,662,952 1,147,373 - 2,839,508 Vermont, Jan. 1, 1836, 19 2,594,675 - 40,502 - 46,609 126,048 801,913 76,802 2,086,860 348,875 23,874 - 1,125,624 Massachusetts, Sept. 3, 1836, 117 56,643,171 - 1,140,004 - 5,126,900 3,428,852 - 1,455,230 10,892,249 8,784,516 5,063,886 - 34,478,110 Rhode Island, Mar. 18, 1837, 62 13,401,344 143,462 198,056 23,952 451,978 430,426 - 243,482 1,864,132 2,113,260 603,974 6,477,928 9,837,171 Connecticut, Oct. 1, 1836, 31 3 13,361,928 410,542 179,603 17,664 502,486 339,579 282,064 426,290 4,094,681 1,869,369 457,650 93,145 8,665,607 New York, Jan. 1, 1837, 98 2 79,313,188 1,794,152 2,263,857 1,123,225 18,832,254 12,487,610 3,268,648 6,557,020 24,198,000 30,883,179 20,462,823 7,078,167 37,101,460 Pennsylvania, Jan. 1, 1837, 49 44,601,933 1,551,908 1,740,242 2,178,211 4,697,053 4,147,647 - 3,113,990 13,794,014 12,902,251 7,224,953 1,411,498 23,750,338 New Jersey, Jan. 1837, 25 9,341,797 1,096,367 3,104,998 840,445 993,273 418,632 - 496,917 1,918,017 1,869,254 604,663 7,090,385 4,142,031 Delaware, Jan. 1837, 4 4 1,599,168 195,140 86,839 2,312 183,615 113,618 - 141,956 718,948 563,985 46,197 818,020 Maryland, Jan. 1837, 21 2 14,986,487 1,678,515 530,141 65,543 1,396,558 1,521,432 - 1,139,347 3,310,835 4,840,477 1,443,476 705,139 10,438,655 Dist. Columbia, Jan. 1, 1837, 7 4,204,512 220,152 306,073 75,912 433,233 394,406 - 438,327 1,136,557 1,950,736 597,235 3,059 2,204,445 Virginia, Jan. 1, 1837, 5 18 18,021,429 276,734 632,710 1,218 1,654,205 797,137 - 1,624,899 9,107,347 5,309,554 548,391 294,747 6,731,200 North Carolina, Dec. 1836, 3 7 5,769,094 123,424 - 681,076 181,675 - 883,011 3,319,428 1,387,120 262,070 - 2,525,000 South Carolina, Jan. 1837, 10 2 18,899,838 1,402,226 210,191 442,392 882,473 819,143 - 1,664,786 7,223,616 5,048,477 1,885,173 803,578 8,636,118 Georgia, April, 1837, 16 16 16,692,215 1,253,334 1,230,047 187,016 1,941,452 1,571,377 - 2,860,326 8,058,739 2,943,632 1,546,834 377,967 11,438,828 Alabama, Nov. 1, 1836, 3 4 18,133,788 - - - 2,126,373 - - 1,572,246 7,090,819 3,073,979 1,839,237 - 7,572,176 Louisiana, Jan. 23, 1837, 16 31 59,108,741 100,000 4,761,168 528,876 3,607,412 2,467,229 - 3,108,416 7,909,788 11,487,431 11,817,341 893,422 36,769,455 Mississippi, Jan. 1837, 9 9 24,351,414 52,000 465,430 5,000 1,343,647 638,148 - 1,369,457 5,073,425 5,345,384 2,226,677 1,723,817 12,872,815 Tennessee, Jan. 1, 1837, 3 8 10,960,368 - 70,048 790,379 412,640 - 378,930 4,272,635 2,230,833 236,937 380,495 5,092,665 BANKS (UNITED STATES). Kentucky, Jan. I, 1837, 4 10 11,631,475 2,066,000 147,073 25,000 1,945,015 1,301,518 - 1,456,384 4,105,155 3,428,666 1,635,924 1,733,682 7,145,326 Missouri, Jan. 14, 1837, 1 1,298,811 - 3,241 508,204 449,064 - 222,924 2,262,900 299,749 Illinois, Jan. 1837, 2 6 3,098,751 - 14,179 11,070 620,790 268,653 - 590,794 1,565,373 828,644 37,342 1,681 2,014,760 Indiana, Nov. 26, 1836, 1 10 3,179,271 - 48,901 270,197 1,457,204 489,753 - 1,204,737 1,970,595 2,738,405 66,867 63,777 1,585,481 Ohio, Jan. 1837, 32 1 18,178,699 - 271,558 - 4,597,579 1,710,827 - 3,153,334 8,326,974 7,590,933 1,471,659 - 9,247,296 Digitized by Michigan, Dec. 1836, 9 2 2,946,697 14,250 37,064 28,161 1,496,583 308,305 - 564,275 1,350,325 2,379,380 218,035 - 1,400,000 Florida, Dec. 1836, 5 2,652,614 152,430 14,969 59,881 411,999 82,142 223,700 145,842 774,010 493,623 155,432 78,699 2,113,302 Penn. Bank of U.S. Jan. 2, 1837, 1 18 57,393,709 - 1,237,099 4,534,314 2,284,598 1,206,754 - 2,638,449 11,447,968 2,332,409 1,365,240 6,926,366 35,000,000 Total, 634 154 525,115,702 12,407,112 19,064,451 10,423,630 59,663,910 36,533,527 5,366,500 37,915,340 149,185,890 127,397,185 62,421,118 36,560,289 290,772,091 Google NOTE.-To complete this table, It has been necessary to take the returns of the 19 Vermont banks for January, 1836; the returns of eight banks in New Jersey for the latter part of 1835, or the early part of 1836 of one bank in South Carolina, of three banks in Georgia, and of one bank in Florida, for the early part of 1836; of one bank in Mississippi, and one in Michigan, for the latter part of 1835; and to estimate the affairs of one bank in South Carolina, and one in Louisiana. 1 State or Territory. Date No. of banks. No. of branches. Loans and dis- Other invest- Notes of other Capital. counts. Stocks. Real estate. Specie Due other Other liabili- ments. Due by banks. banks. funds. Specie. Circulation. Deposites. banks. ties. Maine, 1837, Dec. 30, 55 $5,458,750 $7,552,938 - $136,260 - $640,696 $163,145 - $246,720 $1,690,023 $763,741 $351,200 New Hampshire, $315,656 1838, Feb. 1, 27 2,839,500 4,200,245 - 82,250 - 531,638 109,308 - 148,793 1,111,074 466,092 - - Vermont, 1837, Aug. 19 1,274,970 2,405,249 Google $10,000 33,728 $70,682 431,693 53,793 $85,029 97,333 1,457,441 282,283 44,112 1,135 Massachusetts, 1838, Feb. 10, 124 37,080,000 56,398,121 - 1,117,883 - 5,662,780 2,954,804 - 1,474,743 9,964,110 8,231,580 5,498,012 5,318,484 Rhode Island, Jan. 5, 62 9,849,853 13,250,296 74,860 301,945 - 537,350 420,196 - 399,944 2,164,344 799,306 788,680 764,115 New York, Jan. 1, 95 2 36,611,460 60,999,770 2,795,207 2,356,249 38,256 18,297,899 3,616,918 618,277 4,139,732 12,432,478. 15,895,684 15,221,478 6,142,047 Pennsylvania, 1837, Nov. 1, 49 24,941,435 38,237,566 1,407,803 1,833,326 3,658,404 9,254,641 3,148,184 - 3,674,194 11,330,474 10,363,562 8,862,928 2,972,846 New Jersey, Dec. 28 4,997,012 8,029,700 2,438,001 307,738 380,117 645,909 324,396 - 418,992 1,345,241 820,805 495,993 Delaware, 4,140,111 1838, Jan. 1, 4 4 990,658 1,550,221 187,990 88,131 Digitized by - 310,877 163,543 - 126,007 756,148 444,020 49,766 - Maryland, Jan. 1, 22 2 11,971,876 15,813,006 1,505,641 541,677 91,946 3,076,511 1,452,574 - 1,259,908 3,002,085 3,253,683 3,036,772 BANKS (UNITED STATES). Dist. of Columbia, 1,395,714 Jan. 1, 7 2,175,970 3,109,814 272,752 311,636 169,793 342,560 394,925 - 318,354 764,822 1,222,052 553,511 - Virginia, Jan. 1, 5 18 7,005,356 15,900,987 439,781 636,404 123,305 1,477,542 473,895 - 1,366,582 7,178,776 3,028,954 342,568 1,600,386 North Carolina, Feb. 3 7 2,980,640 4,571,328 127,424 34,495 878,308 177,763 - 705,389 2,267,793 756,591 187,774 - South Carolina, 1837, Nov. 10 2 7,947,419 16,657,217 1,162,630 211,759 98,325 923,161 622,571 - 1,436,315 5,011,656 3,383,468 698,675 1,610,411 Georgia, Oct. 20 16 11,790,573 15,937,526 1,215,501 1,830,430 324,715 1,057,866 1,345,808 - 2,475,788 5,077,273 2,121,617 1,954,361 93,409 Florida, 1838, Jan. 6 2 2,387,585 3,270,015 5,000 466,134 105,540 316,527 107,392 16,872 161,310 621,393 417,191 173,404 637,376 Alabama, 1837, Nov. 3 4 10,150,538 26,087,750 600,000 158,499 213,380 1,081,412 117,625 - 796,151 7,535,475 5,220,346 2,395,062 1,293,351 Louisiana, Dec. 23, 16 31 39,943,832 55,593,371 995,076 4,235,476 1,791,030 1,395,737 4,508,761 - 2,729,983 7,558,465 7,426,468 9,131,466 3,748,343 Mississippi, Dec. 11 15 19,231,123 28,999,984 367,633 1,618,676 4,731,925 2,563,783 1,058,274 - 766,360 7,472,334 4,638,669 3,039,201 3,505,364 Arkansas, 1838, Jan. 1, 1 2 413,105 374,791 - - 100,657 3,678 2,450 40,395 96,455 8,100 87,242 - 102,095 Tennessee, Jan. 1, 3 8 5,309,454 11,249,170 59,750 84,021 345,792 581,711 327,817 - 595,667 2,620,185 1,502,271 660,513 2,370,481 Kentucky, 1837, Dec. 4 10 8,499,094 10,346,152 2,256,000 208,562 324,301 1,279,274 673,852 - 1,716,489 3,600,570 2,159,700 872,112 1,245,005 Missouri, Dec. 30, 1 2 607,398 1,034,852 50,101 67,335 45,271 223,930 - 628,167 94,000 748,655 312,760 297,808 Illinois, 1838, Jan. 8, 2 6 4,673,050 4,416,577 2,690,000 27,533 4,944 234,145 70,718 - 684,487 1,990,993 789,652 348,995 188,836 Indiana, Jan. 6, 1 10 1,900,687 3,556,341 - 97,301 298,658 281,393 209,185 - 1,221,181 2,308,130 952,009 136,647 5,720 Ohio, 1837, Dec. 33 1 11,331,618 17,212,694 - 387,427 - 1,340,338 864,597 - 2,674,212 6,221,136 4,071,975 481,344 1,509,459 Michigan, Dec. 18 2 1,918,365 3,773,370 - 123,113 253,681 569,011 233,031 - 435,073 1,724,409 1,313,286 196,366 113,959 Wisconsin, Nov. 2 119,625 152,676 - 3,179 - 45,908 27,432 - 83,494 141,363 43,228 163 9,435 Penn. Bk. of U.S. Dec. 30, 1 19 35,000,000 45,181,854 14,862,108 1,504,772 10,809,774 3,657,251 866,597 - 3,770,842 6,768,067 2,617,253 4,957,291 20,524,568 Total of recent re- turns, 632 163 309,403,946 475,863,581 33,345,733 18,881,634 24,037,055 57,464,870 24,713,484 760,573 34,648,665 114,218,358 83,821,383 60,791,214 59,906,114 Connecticut, 1827, Mar. 25, 31 3 8,744,697 13,246,945 416,016 175,883 56,019 941,314 296,725 - 415,386 3,998,325 1,484,966 639,824 288,130 * Total of returns nearest Jan. 1, 1838. 663 166 318,148,643 489,110,526 33,761,749 19,057,517 24,093,074 58,406,184 25,010,209 760,573 35,064,051 118,216,683 85,306,349 61,431,038 60,194,244 *Note.-R. Island, 1838, April 6, 62 9,852,353 12,772,099 108,226 300,201 - 488,210 415,733 - 460,999 2,191,609 695,798 640,754 716,791 VoL. I.-0 N. York, April 1, 94 2 36,401,460 59,075,768 529,771 2,366,456 3,595,547 14,603,770 5,301,579 794,636 5,117,063 11,057,935 16,503,114 9,389,108 6,501,787 Louisiana, Mar. 21, 16 31 39,523,693 52,058,084 - 7,837,546 3,216,465 1,355,165 4,410,333 - 2,970,723 4,734,739 8,021,137 10,591,600 904,411 158 No. VI.-Abstract of the statements of the Bank of the United States, chartered by Congress, from its commencement in 1817, to March, 1836, when its charter expired, and of the Penn- sylvania Bank of the United States, from March, 1836, to December, 1836. Deposites by Loans and Bank'g houses Date. Funded debt. Due by Euro- Balances due Notes of state discounts. Real estate. & permanent pean bankers. by state banks. banks. Specie. Circulation. Balance due Due to Euro- to state banks. pean bankers. Capital. expenses. United States Public officers. Other depo- Treasurer. sites. 1817, Feb. $3,485,194 $4,829,234 - - - $8,848,315 $587,281 $1,724,109 $1,911,200 $10,112,487 $67,791 $1,052,743 - - $15,879,865 March 9,536,993 11,907,365 - - - 7,647,313 696,309 1,459,158 4,565,398 - - - - - 23,155,010 July 26,235,536 - - - - 2,424,900 1,757,268 2,129,368 4,759,861 24,746,641 - 3,023,167 - - - Oct. 33,764,035 - - - - 2,518,669 1,825,241 2,271,611 5,492,827 7,743,899 - 4,535,280 - - - 1818, March 41,181,750 9,475,932 - $175,201 $1,033,682 1,203,894 1,837,254 2,515,949 8,339,448 - 7,369,911 4,909,296 - $1,357,778 - July 41,458,985 7,430,926 - 423,332 1,188,291 2,463,064 2,398,698 2,357,137 9,045,216 - 7,967,775 4,786,923 - 1,760,668 34,972,568 1819, Jan. 35,786,263 7,391,823 - 433,808 621,667 2,624,797 1,877,909 2,666,696 6,563,750 1,329,525 1,526,867 2,936,477 - 1,434,022 - July 30,949,642 7,139,081 - 742,261 57,094 2,908,160 1,330,490 2,954,266 5,213,040 2,112,147 1,558,234 2,643,808 - 60,465 - 1820, Jan. 31,401,158 7,192,980 - 1,296,626 261,548 2,727,080 1,443,166 3,392,755 3,589,481 2,096,686 1,464,026 3,008,082 - 2,053,650 - July 30,207,579 9,158,984 - 1,345,815 1,066,479 727,553 1,285,055 5,821,495 4,005,382 1,307,794 1,618,008 3,963,820 - 2,093,650 - 1821, Jan. 30,905,199 9,155,855 - 1,886,724 83,548 1,178,897 677,022 7,643,140 4,567,053 1,106,801 1,822,020 4,996,164 - 2,053,074 - July 28,386,916 13,360,780 $429,015 1,880,674 1,337,509 - 1,036,073 5,876,534 5,551,910 1,330,894 1,613,309 4,362,603 $291,810 2,040,000 - 1822, Jan. 28,061,169 13,318,950 563,480 1,855,946 1,107,637 1,717,723 917,629 4,761,299 5,578,782 1,688,577 928,977 5,457,598 - 2,040,000 34,992,139 July 31,795,700 13,112,443 595,746 1,999,441 781,184 1,055,146 760,003 3,350,443 5,620,960 1,971,555 1,416,692 3,839,388 - 2,040,000 - 1823, Jan. 30,736,432 11,018,552 626,674 1,956,764 24,599 1,407,573 766,248 4,424,874 4,361,058 2,746,366 1,528,964 3,347,010 - 1,292,710 - July 34,803,829 10,876,023 736,957 1,893,893 260,052 1,205,250 856,697 4,910,434 4,629,349 6,116,933 1,616,306 3,688,919 - 1,020,000 - 1824, Jan. 33,432,084 10,874,014 1,302,551 1,871,635 1,434,020 1,287,808 705,173 5,813,694 4,647,077 8,281,718 1,900,146 3,520,072 - 1,020,000 - July 32,694,096 15,872,791 1,418,143 1,880,545 527,538 296,864 1,105,466 5,588,000 6,383,647 5,951,933 2,207,815 6,043,562 - - BANKS (UNITED STATES). 1825, Jan. 31,812,617 18,422,027 1,495,150 1,852,935 24,178 2,130,095 1,056,224 6,746,952 6,068,394 4,610,180 2,092 263 5,330,921 - 2,407,282 - July 33,531,692 20,738,600 1,568,125 1,831,464 517,030 241,982 1,541,568 4,048,178 9,540,694 6,460,455 1,532,258 5,966,444 - - 1826, Jan. 33,424,621 18,303,501 1,848,354 1,792,870 421,524 747,375 1,114,831 3,960,158 9,474,987 3,704,527 2,065,268 5,444,845 - 251,494 - July 35,020,490 17,764,359 1,620,927 1,809,530 487,965 1,833,822 1,210,645 6,194,275 10,210,412 4,518,544 5,264,617 5,630,623 - 314,498 - 1827, Jan. 30,937,866 17,764,359 2,039,226 1,678,192 460,686 1,683,510 1,068,483 6,457,161 8,549,409 5,619,075 3,363,167 5,337,944 - 280,056 - July 34,191,166 17,764,359 2,163,767 1,625,189 1,275,093 1,834,502 1,154,082 6,381,225 10,198,760 4,711,456 4,737,531 6,257,738 - 306,037 - Digitized by Google 1828, Jan. 33,682,905 17,624,859 2,295,401 1,634,260 356,470 - 1,447,386 6,170,045 9,855,677 5,553,449 2,801,774 6,142,107 1,697,401 1,467,806 - July 38,506,410 17,352,859 2,354,821 1,600,198 335,303 - 1,418,826 6,621,734 10,890,343 7,544,267 4,010,146 6,402,121 1,737,080 687,383 - 1829, Jan. 39,219,602 16,099,099 2,345,539 1,557,356 482,420 1,723,297 1,293,578 6,098,138 11,901,656 5,941,049 4,755,917 6,364,952 - - - July 43,018,132 14,932,639 2,606,495 1,502,024 1,447,196 1,960,398 1,311,611 6,641,958 13,691,783 4,889,940 6,767,478 7,122,188 - - - 1830, Jan. 40,663,805 11,610,290 2,686,397 1,444,801 1,530,553 1,199,458 1,465,047 7,608,076 12,924,145 5,579,568 4,075,209 6,391,005 - - - July 43,238,168 10,674,724 2,802,004 1,384,171 3,756,813 1,335,058 1,489,358 10,252,325 15,346,407 6,266,742 4,170,327 7,928,550 - - - 1831, Jan. 44,032,057 8,674,681 2,629,125 1,344,761 2,383,331 - 1,494,506 10,808,047 16,251,267 6,940,268 2,191,336 8,165,437 734,900 - - July 56,562,044 3,674,681 2,493,455 1,298,098 144,439 60,538 2,043,287 12,175,476 19,195,817 5,067,653 2,588,150 9,103,864 - - I Table VI.-Continued. Deposites by Loans and Bank'g houses discounts. Real estate. Due by Euro- Due by state Notes of state & permanent Specie. Circulation. Dividends un- Due to state Date. Due to Euro- pean bankers. banks. banks. paid. banks. United States pean bankers. Capital. expenses. Publicofficers. Other depo- Treasurer. sitors. 1832, Jan. $66,293,707 $2,136,525 $1,159,637 $91,668 $3,944,847 $2,171,676 $7,038,823 $21,355,724 $8,258,155 $4,331,207 $8,107,155 $64,917 $1,951,103 $1,447,748 $35,000,000 July 67,416,081 1,829,889 1,174,176 630,144 4,774,187 2,165,555 7,519,083 20,520,068 9,568,123 2,303,982 8,115,367 72,399 2,221,406 - 35,000,000 1833, Jan. 61,695,913 1,855,169 1,181,071 3,106,833 3,688,143 2,292,655 8,951,847 17,518,217 4,180,813 8,571,730 7,518,677 76,529 2,091,891 - 35,000,000 April 64,323,929 1,832,846 1,181,071 3,942,019 2,828,040 2,226,936 9,001,661 18,033,205 4,514,670 3,952,159 10,265,605 130,419 3,029,787 - 35,000,000 July 63,369,897 1,809,289 1,187,238 1,911,044 2,768,324 2,523,857 10,098,816 19,366,555 3,312,012 3,199,490 9,868,728 1,290,589 2,282,729 - 35,000,000 Oct. 60,094,202 1,787,406 1,187,238 2,375,390 3,619,741 2,431,399 10,663,441 19,128,189 6,691,883 3,176,551 8,008,862 101,691 1,331,168 - 35,000,000 1834, Jan. 54,911,461 1,741,407 1,189,125 1,801,669 3,058,870 1,982,640 10,031,237 19,208,379 1,973,452 2,057,056 6,734,866 73,181 1,522,124 - 35,000,000 April 54,806,817 1,704,322 1,221,306 2,255,090 2,606,724 1,608,651 10,180,008 17,251,264 372,599 2,560,266 7,166,028 96,720 2,019,886 - 35,000,000 July 51,024,972 1,741,878 1,222,443 3,827,413 2,565,524 1,564,556 12,823,997 16,641,997 305,226 2,370,206 6,735,869 67,164 2,156,797 - 35,000,000 Oct. 46,006,791 1,821,525 1,215,943 3,127,982 2,127,438 1,568,247 15,561,374 15,637,676 351,654 1,688,699 6,912,591 118,533 2,946,149 - 35,000,000 Nov. 45,754,201 1,808,845 1,215,943 2,727,781 2,036,103 1,341,094 15,910,045 15,968,731 429,465 1,572,173 6,741,752 82,791 2,950,095 - 35,000,000 Dec. 45,570,088 1,752,141 1,215,943 2,761,222 2,194,475 1,635,970 15,680,387 15,603,446 441,988 1,432,783 7,144,716 70,982 3,207,874 - 35,000,000 1835, Jan. 51,808,739 1,760,632 1,218,896 1,922,498 4,609,973 1,506,200 15,708,369 17,339,797 431,248 2,190,193 7,844,798 1,290,666 3,119,172 - 35,000,000 Feb. 55,524,806 1,759,786 1,218,896 2,340,643 2,862,723 1,778,710 16,369,525 19,733,527 744,297 2,014,488 8,755,419 257,052 4,324,491 - 35,000,000 March 57,814,404 1,765,350 1,218,896 2,892,835 2,261,477 2,173,925 16,567,893 19,519,777 690,704 1,892,722 8,934,807 141,963 5,011,634 - 35,000,000 April 60,100,216 1,775,224 1,218,896 2,421,354 2,036,291 2,055,862 16,448,814 20,544,736 710,744 1,752,904 9,372,204 98,930 6,023,344 - 35,000,000 May 61,919,425 1,774,040 1,218,896 2,457,937 2,983,737 2,340,702 14,385,843 20,347,936 545;062 1,439,837 9,383,954 84,815 6,404,048 - 35,000,000 June 63,642,646 1,775,736 1,218,395 2,007,145 4,000,158 3,018,066 13,912,577 22,009,474 510,999 1,299,561 10,549,197 76,057 4,691,857 - 35,000,000 July 65,197,692 1,758,345 1,218,395 2,378,669 3,904,537 2,073,826 13,429,328 25,332,820 475,410 1,210,700 9,558,757 70,824 5,969,593 - 35,000,000 BANKS (UNITED STATES). Aug. 64,314,518 1,736,175 1,212,395 2,258,886 3,739,454 1,710,513 12,883,968 24,329,222 411,097 1,039,150 8,508,041 236,115 5,533,375 - 35,000,000 Sept. 61,787,020 1,678,416 1,212,395 1,885,135 3,080,268 2,289,806 12,840,781 23,645,122 327,552 1,016,016 7,870,462 143,603 4,026,714 - 35,000,000 Oct. 60,163,249 1,679,305 1,200,808 1,810,897 3,456,832 1,707,575 12,545,652 24,403,074 206,487 972,659 6,708,750 119,008 4,108,827 - 35,000,000 Nov. 57,529,053 1,690,329 1,143,628 685,753 3,514,564 2,349,808 10,224,675 23,031,667 3,927 728,107 5,406,962 105,277 2,828,993 - 35,000,000 Dec. 57,144,258 1,691,256 1,076,581 212,272 3,767,355 2,842,389 8,749,920 22,113,902 10,588 634,331 5,058,449 72,433 2,073,819 - 35,000,000 1836, Jan. 59,232,445 1,486,561 967,404 73,171 4,088,005 1,736,491 8,417,988 23,075,422 625 627,192 4,369,220 64,419 2,660,694 - 35,000,000 Feb. 60,191,478 1,486,158 967,404 546,299 4,611,016 2,319,871 7,650,589 21,802,355 19,611 572,497 3,936,770 533,345 3,031,787 - 35,000,000 March 58,345,107 1,452,492 881,504 115,589 4,376,267 2,350,591 6,224,197 20,114,227 19,584 326,909 3,484,143 250,453 3,412,417 271,777 35,000,000 52,511,081 2,570,318 474,657 1,303 4,908,652 2,207,647 5,595,077 21,109,352 17,395 306,855 3,390,418 253,937 2,255,003 371,777 39,015,130 Digitized by Google NOTE.-In addition to the above, the following amounts were due to the United States Bank by European bankers, viz. : August 1, 1836, - - - - $1,872,479 Sept. 1, " - - - - - 100,438 159 No. VIL.-PENNSYLVANIA BANK OF THE UNITED STATES. Bills discounted Bills discounted Date. on personal se- Bills discounted Domestic bills Total of bills dis- Due from the on other securi- Foreign bills Bank U. States counted and bills Mortgages. Banking Other real United States on bank stock. of exchange. chartered by Due from Notes of state curity. ties. of exchange. of exchange. houses. estate. and Daty ag"t., state tanks. banks. Specie, Norfolk. Congress. March 31, 1836, $17,998,368 $2,951,512 $18,914,952 $16,524,419 #114,285 $56,503,539 $56,037 $315,214 $1,196,103 $45,411 $599,288 $2,444,923 $2,284,082 $5,079,460 May 2, 11,371,031 5,920,058 22,967,348 17,029,111 114,285 54,401,836 56,037 208,200 1,196,775 45,411 599,288 2,818,870 2,422,889 5,020,471 May 30, 9,598,024 2,928,547 24,509,323 15,362,543 268,385 52,664,824 56,037 264,417 1,166,687 45,411 599,349 2,522,000 2,087,050 4,528,881 July 4, 12,162,434 2,885,374 29,404,921 13,438,820 109,049 58,000,600 79,861 165,815 1,361,822 45,411 103,782 1,601,261 1,251,029 4,064,455 August 1, 14,236,490 2,889,141 27,879,110 12,532,354 109,477 57,646,573 124,081 534,359 1,119,481 45,411 33,782 1,456,062 1,246,011 4,997,500 Digitized by Google Sept. 1, 14,863,374 2,880,137 27,951,287 11,793,938 73,962 57,562,600 132,589 508,621 993,162 45,411 33,782 1,285,991 1,604,822 4,696,693 Sept. 29, 15,096,892 2,841,379 27,900,009 11,156,549 74,109 57,068,940 132,589 506,208 970,465 45,411 33,782 1,722,339 1,735,694 3,424,763 Oct. 31, 14,817,638 2,826,735 26,817,878 11,012,191 74,335 55,548,779 144,589 506,268 829,844 45,411 33,782 5,274,212 1,812,443 3,410,181 Dec. 1, 14,566,008 2,775,869 25,679,478 11,907,433 - 54,928,790 143,859 506,268 803,028 45,411 33,782 5,009,217 2,370,195 3,275,292 PENNSYLVANIA BANK OF THE UNITED STATES-Continued. BANKS (UNITED STATES). Due officers Loans in Eu- Date. Nett circulation. Deposites. Dividends un- Due to state Due to Euro- of common- rope, and inte- Capital. Due U.S. for Post notes. Notes issued. Notes on hand. Notes at state Notes in tran- claimed. banks. pean bankers. wealth of rest on the capital s'ock. bank agencies. situ. Penn. same. March 31, 1836, $18,155,396 $2,194,231 $241,900 #1,333,372 $1,547,090 $98,721 - $35,000,000 - - $36,620,420 $16,794,713 - $1,670,310 May 3 17,251,165 2,521,410 212,479 1,095,911 956,213 141,542 - 35,000,000 - - 37,177,895 15,094,514 - 4,832,215 May 30, 13,323,659 2,074,662 203,086 1,520,992 792,892 34,804 - 35,000,000 $6,875,200 - 35,635,125 3,101,040 - 19,210,425 July 4, 13,764,305 1,972,401 1,404,745 1,275,671 2,631,950 2,913 - 35,000,000 6,875,200 - 35,217,648 18,237,673 - 3,215,670 August 1, 14,027,524 2,617,819 196,315 1,610,356 - 39,636 $6,788,194 35,000,000 6,875,200 - 35,039,566 18,355,837 - 2,656,205 Sept. 1, 11,805,454 1,944,718 139,775 1,655,994 - 91,220 6,788,194 35,000,000 6,875,200 - 34,541,541 21,023,572 - 1,712,515 Sept. 29, 10,480,828 1,913,137 112,696 1,347,564 603,888 44,917 6,788,194 35,000,000 6,875,200 - 33,989,246 21,912,453 - 1,595,965 Oct. 31, 10,044,097 1,735,588 103,517 965,213 644,016 - 6,788,194 35,000,000 6,875,200 - 33,017,326 17,744,784 - 5,228,445 Dec. 1, 9,733,032 1,695,480 80,400 1,146,351 622,489 - 6,788,194 35,000,000 6,875,200 - 33,232,925 18,468,138 - 5,031,755 PENNSYLVANIA BANK OF THE UNITED STATES-Continued. Common- Bonus and Discount, ex. Date. wealth of Contingent fund, Losses charge- Fund for extin- permanent Deficiencies. Expenses. change, and Profit and loss. able to contin- Contingent Foreign exch. guishing cost Contingent Due from U. S. Due to U. States Penn. interest. Bank and offices. Bank and offices. expenses. interest. gross. gent fund. fund, nett. account. of banking- houses. March 31, 1836, - $640,000 #149,912 $197,792 $732,434 $3,765,520 $5,943,308 $4,248,202 $1,695,105 $1,033,052 $1,104,223 $656,328 $29,108,111 $29,422,189 May 2, $334,138 600,000 147,872 260,093 914,614 3,765,520 5,943,308 4,414,834 1,528,473 981,867 1,104,233 782,052 24,797,763 21,821,200 May 30, 334,138 665,583 115,445 258,879 1,121,061 3,765,520 5,943,308 4,465,369 1,477,938 996,889 1,104,223 742,451 23,439,669 23,499,213 July 4, 352,357 866,828 116,999 50,106 215,986 4,291,210 5,943,308 4,464,365 1,478,942 1,051,529 1,070,600 706,773 30,539,078 30,515,730 August 1, 593,575 895,754 116,587 62,031 399,954 4,291,210 5,943,308 4,452,914 1,490,313 1,213,618 1,070,600 690,740 31,189,571 29,838,302 Sept. 1, 783,753 897,804 86,193 85,987 612,014 4,291,210 5,943,308 4,394,624 1,548,683 1,301,628 1,070,600 689,360 30,017,921 30,190,454 160 Sept. 29, 784,023 901,454 90,171 109,738 779,181 4,291,210 5,943,308 4,406,522 1,536,785 1,366,827 1,070,600 657,673 44,921,912 44,858,085 Oct. 31, 845,852 911,924 122,734 134,201 1,010,741 4,291,210 5,943,308 4,407,736 1,535,571 1,366,943 1,070,600 617,481 44,067,374 44,279,495 Dec. 1, 906,031 916,216 128,022 152,020 1,320,651 4,291,210 5,943,308 4,619,790 1,323,517 1,323,517 1,070,600 586,052 35,553,479 34,749,350 No. VIII.Statement of the Condition of the Bank of the United States in the Year 1837, on the Days mentioned. 161 RESOURCES. January 2. January 31. March 1. April 1. May 11. June 3. July 1. August 1. September 1. October 2. November 1. December 1. Bills discounted on personal security, D. 14,901,191 30 13,550,206 11,218,697 39 9,839,513 88 11,851,928 90 11,615,864 57 12,184,962 59 11,296,474 07 11,511,544 35 10,866,932 49 10,678,606 61 10,734,999 65 " bank stock, 2,807,707 47 2,876,558 37 2,719,021 14 2,376,218 S1 2,283,648 55 2,262,198 55 1,554,157 23 1,504,018 97 1,452,917 46 1,379,340 96 1,372,965 96 1,189,682 38 other securities, 26,256,440 60 26,276,805 16 25,548,888 34 25,390,631 94 29,447,249 83 29,262,114 54 24,973,006 25,310,608 45 24,724,645 27 23,258,548 2 22,546,390 70 21,693,140 72 Bills of exchange, 13,246,878 35 15,884,556 81 17,163,578 53 18,729,696 72 19,970,125 18 17,805,413 79 15,297,515 08 12,751,741 10 9,062,428 70 9,351,569 92 8,723,551 85 8,643,390 26 Real estate, 816,985 22 779,308 781,508 82 778,223 84 755,881 75 755,676 717,188 1,078,622 75 1,117,015 80 1,130,704 28 28 1,137,029 21 1,115,820 16 Due from Bank of United States and offices, 36,423,333 21 34,033,948 70 30,672,825 04 29,875,051 88 34,010,391 05 33,829,174 33,123,579 33,427,613 16 36,146,587 45 34,717,244 92 34,999,071 06 35,015,317 95 Digitized by Google " State banks, 2,284,598 90 1,279,077 73 2,132,520 52 3,276,485 1,420,393 65 2,654,866 3,940,070 6,189,458 67 5,212,231 32 3,590,494 41 3,786,991 71 3,482,573 66 " the United States, 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 5,267 32 Deficiencies, 128,797 84,115 66 92,687 95,661 95,665 03 26,321 26,321 83 15,140 27 28,069 17 29,670 84 30,420 84 86,660 78 Banking houses, 470,244 57 470,244 57 470,244 470,244.57 470,244 57 470,244 57 470,244 57 445,363 94 435,134 92 435,134 92 435,559 39 455,361 13 Expenses, 124,417 65,829 S0 78,536 14 97,657 17 120,083 31 138,413 63 119,668 28 59,525 15 90,129 94 96,426 80 115,448 37 137,648 14 Cash, viz. notes of the Bank of U. S. & offices, 15,467,792 70 17,517,298 90 19,848,778 90 20,650,214 19 18,748,053 21,290,846 71 * see note. " State banks, 1,206,754 84 877,366 78 1,236,849 13 1,625,187 49 2,689,470 21 1,212,585 01 643,316 1,214,530 77 1,495,004 84 1,746,419 935,819 68 997,156 20 Specie, 2,638,449 04 2,161,441 75 2,653,272 51 1,919,094 02 1,490,968 03 1,465,820 1,594,371 54 1,773,266 68 2,636,103 09 3,016,230 55 2,822,697 15 3,349,850 89 Mortgages, 136,081 91 136,066 91 136,081 91 136,081 91 147,751 77 147,711 77 147,711 7 147,652 40 147,652 40 189,207 13 189,207 13 336,860 91 Navy agent, Norfolk, 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 40,144 17 Bank of United States chartered by Congress, 28,062 65 28,062 65 28,062 65 28,086 24 28,086 24 28,086 28,086 24 28,554 19 28,855 33 28,855 33 28,855 33 28,855 33 Bonus and permanent expenses, 2,339,578 2,339,578 2,339,578 31 2,840,078 2,850,678 31 2,850,678 31 2,951,928 31 2,951,928 31 2,951,928 31 2,951,928 31 3,013,300 33 3,018,385 68 BANKS (UNITED STATES). Bills receivable for post notes, - - - - - 2,644,242 2,550,279 2,251,339 24 1,225,210 31 1,025,069 07 850,227 70 713,570 Secretary of the navy, - - - - - 400,000 400,000 600,000 00 500,000 500,000 00 Notes of the late bank and offices, - - - - - - 16,962,752 44 16,271,678 54 16,939,276 64 16,972,581 06 17,229,560 50 17,023,504 10 new bank and offices, - - - - - - 1,950,300 00 2,071,670 00 2,707,785 52 2,783,003 03 2,539,585 77 2,787,498 01 Baring, Brothers & Co., Hope & Co., Hottinger & Co. - - - - - - 133,345 270,972 81 267,263 09 I 185,159 99 Stock accounts, - - - - - - 13,044,853 55 13,968,131 16 14,508,362 95 14,323,823 71 14,337,080 39 14,683,045 85 Foreign exchange, - - - - - - - 420,874 1,101,898 54 1,675,529 48 1,195,050 04 2,315,200 87 Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, - - - - - - - - - 75,359 42 100,000 150,037 00 Cashier of Bank U. S. attorney for foreign banks, - - - - - - - - - 110 88 1% Interest on bonds in Europe, - - - - - - - - I I --- 552 09 119,322,726 27 118,405,859 01 117,166,542 59 118,173,545 12 126,426,031 77 128,908,671 65 132,859,071 91 133,994,574 51 134,335,456 89 130,189,597 21 127,597,991 40 128,004,523 77 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock, 28,124,800 00 28,124,800 00 28,124,800 00 28,124,800 00 28,124,800 28,124,800 00 35,000,000 00 35,000,000 00 35,000,000 00 35,000,000 00 35,000,000 00 35,000,000 00 Notes " issued, of United States, 6,875,200 00 6,875,200 6,875,200 6,875,200 00 6,875,200 6,875,200 00 t 32,155,356 69 33,199,356 33,636,080 59 34,948,080 50 37,252,403 94 37,610,102 75 6,121,504 13 7,045,045 7,645,045 03 6,099,093 42 5,689,563 21 5,689,563 21 Discount, exchange, and interest, 1,164,877 28 377,327 47 566,508 08 864,373 15 1,293,681 1,566,486 1,583,664 252,633 46 418,893 565,310 99 822,730 95 987,132 37 Dividends unclaimed, 72,671 55 190,110 55 133,052 55 107,828 24 75,036 67,933 24 64,182 74 164,255 123,905 74 94,746 49 86,487 49 77,134 91 Profit and loss, 4,291,210 4,755,985 4,755,985 4,755,985 3 4,755,985 4,755,985 32 4,755,985 5,191,718 83 5,191,718 83 5,191,718 5,191,718 83 5,191,718 83 Contingent fund, less losses chargeable to it, 1,276,667 93 1,291,733 35 1,291,733 1,291,733 35 1,320,834 21 1,145,510 79 1,145,861 25 1,204,944 91 1,202,953 63 1,202,383 73 1,202,587 98 1,202,587 98 Due to Bank United States and offices, 31,917,081 01 29,605,223 71 27,317,127 24 26,567,067 01 27,888,725 85 28,715,361 87 26,860,705 77 26,078,894 01 26,230,468 05 24,927,785 25 24,181,390 55 23,988,459 97 " state banks, 1,365,240 1,599,760 1,812,827 23 1,678,615 1,753,993 1,925,435 45 2,741,097 43 3,933,761 71 4,432,576 74 4,627,779 16 5,012,199 85 5,094,317 26 Foreign exchange account, 1,309,623 1,241,174 1,247,867 59 1,242,140 80 1,231,645 51 1,221,401 07 1,190,669 11 1,115,512 87 1,049,175 58 942,368 61 933,090 18 956,723 Baring, Brothers Co., Hope & Co., Hottinger & Co. 138,172 68 300,129 14 572,158 31 680,077 361,418 77 227,483 67 - 252,414 4 507,838 2 2 Fund for extinguishing cost of banking houses,- 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,056,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,056,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 1,055,259 11 0 Contingent interest, 528,632 71 514,602 506,198 478,698 457,381 422,891 74 379,676 88 371,381 88 350,370 91 348,513 68 429,S36 61 387,811 15 Deposites, 2,259,738 2,367,556 2,401,595 2,688,871 2,846,933 2,520,730 2,738,991 82 3,033,679 84 2,545,101 32 2,686,753 93 2,924,150 2,817,542 10 Loan in Europe, 6,788,194 6,788,194 6,788,194 6,788,194 6,788,194 44 6,788,194 6,788,194 44 6,565,972 22 6,145,972 22 4,798,611 11 4,798,611 11 4,798,611 11 Interest on ditto, - 119,444 44 81,944 44 26,388 26,388 88 5,295 13 5,295 13 124,739 57 $7,239 76,097 22 20,541 66 Bonds in Europe, - - - - 4,318,149 5,880,599 6,019,300 76 6,269,300 76 6,269,300 76 6,633,745 6,728,189 65 6,728,189 65 Late bank for issues, - - - - - 28,462,326 00 28,462,326 00 28,462,326 27,561,866 27,561,866 90 27,561,866 90 Bonds to United States, - - - - - - 7,946,356 16 7,946,356 16 7,946,356 96 7,946,356 16 5,959,767 12 5,959,767 12 Interest on ditto, 1 - - - - - - - 178,793.01 178,793 01 178,793.01 119,322,726 27 118,405,859 01 117,166,542 118,173,545 126,426,031 77 128,908,671 65 132,859,071 91 133,994,574 134,335,456 89 130,189,597 21 127,597,991 40 128,004,523 77 I. VoL.I. From this date the notes of the old bank were separated from those of the new bank, as shown lower down in the column. + The stock held by the government was purchased by the bank, and it is presumed makes one of the items in the stock account, which first appears in this month. The amount paid for the stock is represented by the bonds due the government for d. 7,946,356 16. 162 BANKS (UNITED STATES). No. IX.-Statement of the Condition of the Bank of the United States in the Year 1838, on the days mentioned. 1st dis. day of Jan. of May. of June. of November. RESOURCES. Bills and notes discounted, $33,876,208 51 $31,035,913 29 $30,069,002 23 $32,052,091 58 Specie, 3,770,842 52 4,409,330 92 6,457,853 48 5,223,476 79 Notes and checks of other banks, 19,140,575 36 20,075,363 09 20,699,039 62 7,062,455 28 Due by banks, 38,479,200 68 29,379,092 40 27,483,106 35 25,709,373 87 Real estate and other property, 1,504,772 53 1,507,973 83 1,550,793 64 1,515,194 62 Expenses, 133,478 49 119,845 05 137,332 19 90,409 73 Stocks, 14,862,108 93 17,979,078 03 18,156,684 29 17,486,841 73 Bills of exchange, 10,313,129 13 13,765,226 95 14,905,433 06 6,522,596 82 Miscellaneous, 4,123,565 69 4,213,220 43 4,311,335 18 1,606,957 57 Totals, $126,203,881 84 $122,485,043 99 $123,770,690 04 $97,299,397 99 LIABILITIES. Capital stock, $35,000,000 00 $35,000,000 00 $35,000,000 00 $35,000,000 00 Notes in circulation, 6,768,067 62 6,451,605 17 6,077,738 98 4,220,854 11 Due to banks, 28,970,019 12 25,423,330 38 23,397,395 19 16,552,548 95 Deposites, 2,544,316 81 4,319,384 33 3,851,816 12 5,668,124 37 Dividends unpaid, 72,937 99 95,594 49 81,326 49 80,187 55 Contingent fund, 1,106,654 40 1,157,546 57 1,134,123 39 1,109,179 68 Profit and loss, 5,191,718 83 5,255,972 02 5,255,972 02 2,816,687 80 Discount, exchange, and interest, 1,200,846 11 1,495,426 80 1,834,115 89 1,482,913 95 Miscellaneous, 45,349,320 96 43,286,184 23 47,138,201 96 30,368,901 58 Totals, $126,203,881 84 $122,485,043 99 $123,770,690 04 $97,299,397 99 " From documents" (we quote from the Journal of Commerce of January 18, 1839) " appended to the annual Report of the Comptroller, just published, it appears that, under the General Banking Law passed at the last session of the Legislature, certificates have been filed in the office of the Secretary of State from FIFTY-FOUR banking associations, with an aggregate capital subscribed, of $12,319,175, and with a reserved right to increase the same to the aggregate amount of $487,680,000. The articles of association are so framed as to cover this enormous amount, in case it should ever be wanted. The dura- tion of the associations, as contemplated by their articles, varies from 25 years to 4050 years. At the time of making out the Comptroller's statements, 24 of the fifty-six associa- tions had been organized, and had applied to that officer for bills in the aggregate amount of $2,493,090 comprising 296,000 one dollar bills, 173,045 twos, 20,000 threes, 218,600 fives, 33,300 tens, 1250 twenties, 900 fifties, 1150 hundreds, 60 five hundreds, and 50 thousands. Sixteen associations had already made transfers of State stocks, or State stocks and mort- gages, to the Comptroller, in the aggregate amount of $1,170,090 of stocks, and $422,900 of mortgages. The particulars of these various items will be found in the annexed tables. Several associations, for which bills have been ordered, have their securities ready, and will transfer them to the Comptroller as soon as the bills can be prepared. The process of engraving the plates, from which the bills were to be struck, occupied so much time, that it was only a few weeks since any of the associations could be supplied. A further delay is occasioned by the circumstance that all the bills are required to be countersigned by the Registers, who are only two in number, Messrs. John O. Cole and J. M. Woodward, and whose pens cannot move fast enough to supply the demand from so many associations, all desiring to commence operations immediately. The whole amount countersigned prior to the 29th of December was $370,200. The securities lodged with the Comptroller are to be applied exclusively to the redemption of the bills which are countersigned and registered in the Comptroller's office; i. e. in case said bills should fail to be redeemed by the associa- tions at their counters. The interest on the securities is paid to the associations so long as they continue to redeem their bills. In any event, the holders of the bills are safe the securities, held by the Comptroller as a guard against contingencies, being alone sufficient for their redemption. The mortgages lodged with the Comptroller, are required by the law to be only upon improved, productive, unincumbered lands within this State, worth, independ- ently of any buildings thereon, at least double the amount for which they shall be so mort- gaged.' And only one half of the securities lodged with the Comptroller can consist of mortgages at all. The residue must consist of State or national stocks. The arhount of bills, given out by the Comptroller to any association, is never to exceed the amount of secu- rities lodged by said association in his hands. In the case of each association he appoints commissioners to view the premises on which mortgages are offered, and to make a full report to him both in regard to title and value. On the whole, we do not see but every pre- caution has been taken to guard the interests of bill-holders, which the case admits of." Digitized by Google No. X.-New York Banking Associations under the General Banking Law. 163 Name and Style of Company. Where located. Capital May be in- Duration of Amount of secu- Amount of subscribed. Charter. Stockholders. When filed. creased to rities pledged. Bills ordered. $ Years. $ Bank of Western New York New York City 500,000 500,000 100 Elisha B. Strong, Simeon B. Jewitt and others Bank of Western New York July 10, 1838 Rochester 180,000 180,000 100 do. do. do. - 14, 1 00,000 93,000 North American Trust and Banking Company New York City 2,000,000 50,000,000 468 Joseph D. Beers and 19 others - 18, 302,000 400,000 Bank of the United States in New York do. 200,000 50,000,000 62 George Griswold and Richard Alsop Aug. 7, 200,000 900,000 Mechanics' Banking Association do. 128,175 10,000,000 99 Thomas R. Mercein and 76 others - 21, 120,000 115,000 Staten Island Bank Port Richmond 100,000 6,000,000 Digitized by Google 100 Richard D. Littell and 79 others - 24, 50,000 100,000 Erie County Bank Buffalo 100,000 100,000 112 George N. Rinney, H. Griffin and W. C. Sherwood Lockport Bank and Trust Company Sept. 4, 50,000 Lockport 500,000 2,000,000 262 Lot Clark and 46 others - Bank of Central New York 6 129,600 200,000 Utica 100,000 2,000,000 4960 Spencer Kellogg and 9 others - 17, Bank of Syracuse 20,000 40,000 Syracuse 100,000 1,000,000 600 George F. Leitch and 9 others - 22, 70,800 120,000 American Exchange Bank New York City 500,000 50,000,000 100 Nathaniel Weed and 242 others Farmers' Bank of Orleans Oct. 1, Gaines 200,000 600,000 25 Lyman H. Phillips and 92 others - St. Lawrence Bank a 98,300 100,000 Ordensburgh 100,000 2,000,000 100 S. D. Moody and 21 others - 15, 100,000 Merchants' and Farmers' Bank Ithaca 150,000 2,000,000 201 Timothy S. Williams, Manuel R. Williams, and J. B. Williams - 24, 67,200 100,000 Willoughby Bank Brooklyn 100,000 100,000 100 Samuel A. Willoughby and Margaretta Duffield Nov. 6, Stuyvesant Banking Company 100,000 100,000 New York City 300,000 2,000,000 199 Peter Palmer and 9 others - 10, BANKS (UNITED STATES). New York Banking Company do. 1,000,000 20,000,000 100 John Delafield and 7 others - 12, East River Bank of the city of New York do. 100,000 25,000,000 158 Samuel D. Dakin and Ralph Pomeroy - 16, Chelsea Bank do. 1,000,000 10,000,000 150 Isaac H. Mead, Gouverneur Morris and 5 others - 20 Farmers' Bank of Ovid Ovid 100,000 1,000,000 118 Claudius C. Coan and Jonathan Thomas and others - 18 Tenth Ward Bank New York City 100,000 10,000,000 462 Alexander H. Prescott, Charles Marsh and others Dec. 8, Bank of Waterville Waterville 100,000 1,000,000 1080 Amos Osborn, Stanton Park and others - 10, Millers' Bank of New York Clyde 300,000 1,000,000 1000 Benjamin Ford and 4 others I 10, 100,000 300,000 Albany Exchange Bank Albany 100,000 10,000,000 662 John Q. Wilson, G. W. Stanton and others I 12, Exchange Bank of Genesee Alexander 100,000 500,000 162 Samuel Benedict, Jr., Elias J. Pettibone and others - 13, Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank of Genesee Batavia 100,000 1,000,000 162 Philip P. Kissam, Timothy Treadwell and others - 13, 100,000 20,000 Genesee County Bank Le Roy 100,000 1,000,000 161 Israel Rathbun, M. P. Lampson, Samuel Skinner and others - 19, - 30,000 United States Bank at Buffalo Buffalo 100,000 5,000,000 200 Bank of Kinderhook Pierre A. Barker, Wm. Hodge and Wm. Hodge, Jr. I 19, - 100,000 Kinderhook 125,000 300,000 50 J. P. Beckman and others - Merchants' Exchange Bank of Buffalo 19, - 80,000 Buffalo 200,000 5,000,000 100 Sherman Stevens, Wm. More, E. Fitch Smith and others - of - 50,000 Le Roy Bank of Genesee Le Roy 100,000 1,000,000 161 G. W. Blodget, J. Lathrop, Augustus P. Hascall and others - Mechanics' and Farmers' Bank of Ithaca 100,000 1,000,000 362 Wm. Andrus and J. M. McCormick - Genesee Central Bank 24, Attica 100,000 1,000,000 300 Wm. Mitchell, Nathaniel Huggins and others - Wool Growers' Bank of the State of New York 24, New York City 100,000 8,000,000 100 John A. Parker and Melancthon W. Whitman - Bank of Lowville 24, 10,000 10,000 Lowville 100,000 600,000 463 Isaac W. Bostwick, Gerrit Borhart and others - Erie Canal Trust and Banking Company 26, Buffalo 200,000 10,000,000 300 Reuben B. Heacock, Stephen G. Austin and others - Hudson River Bank 29, New York City 100,000 20,000,000 150 Lemuel Arnold, Wm. Finch and others - Powell Bank 3 Newburgh 130,000 1,000,000 100 Thomas Powell, Benjamin Carpenter and others - 29, 100,000 70,000 Patriot Bank of Genesee Batavia 100,000 1,000,000 161 Pardon C. Sherman, W. S. Mallory, Horace W. Soper - 31, Bank of Brockport Brockport 150,000 1,000,000 160 Robert Staples, Levi Preston and others - Ithaca Bank SI, Ithaca 250,000 1,000,000 662 Frederick M. Camp and Robert Halsey - Deposite Bank of Albany 31, Albany 100,000 5,000,000 161 Thaddeus Joy, Lyman Chapin, Aaron Thorp and others I Bank of Waterford 31, Waterford 100,000 500,000 161 Silver Lake Bank of Genesee J. Mandeville, G. W. Kirtland, N. Bailey and others - 31, Perry village 100,000 1,000,000 161 Rufus H. Smith, Calvin P. Bailey and others - Bank of the City of New York 31, New York City 100,000 60,000,000 600 Josh. C. Morrison, Chr. B. Morrison, and John C. Morrison, Jr. Jan. 1839 Fort Plain Bank Fort Plain 100,000 500,000 161 John Webster, Joshua Read, Robert Hall and others - Troy Exchange Bank of Troy 100,000 10,000,000 661 N. Church and C. H. Read - United States Trust and Banking Company 10 New York City 1,000,000 50,000,000 500 Amos Palmer, Courtlandt Palmer and others - Rail Road Bank of Coxsackie jo Coxesckie 100,000 1,000,000 161 Joseph Sherman and Pardon C. Sherman a I - 90,000 James' Bank Jamesville® 100,000 1,000,000 651 John W. James, James O. Bennett and others - North Bank +, New York City 106,000 10,000,000 462 Clark S. Dunning, Thomas Russell and others - Bank of Warsaw 4, Warsaw 100,000 1,000,000 161 John A. McElwain, Joshua H. Darling and others - Bank of North America 5, New York City 100,000 50,000,000 200 William Irving and his assigns - State Stock Security Bank 7, do. - - - 25,090 25,090 . Saratoga Co. 18,319,175 487,680,000 1,599,990 2,493,090 164 BANKS (UNITED STATES). No. XI.-Statement of the Amount and kinds of Securities pledged by the several Banks which have gone into operation under the General Banking Law. Securities. Names of Banks. Date. Rate State Stocks. per cent. Amount. Bonds and Mortgages Total. 1838. 8 $ $ Bank of Western New York, Rochester, July, 14. Indiana, 5 100,000 - 100,000 North American Trust and Banking Com- Nov. 1, 14. Arkansas, 6 pany, New York, 200,000 102,000 302,000 Bank of the United States in New York, Aug. 13. Michigan, 6 200,000 - 200,000 Mechanics' Banking Association, New York Nov. 6. Maine, 5 60,000 60,000 120,600 Staten Island Bank, Port Richmond, Oct. 29. Indiana, 5 - 25,000 25,000 50,000 Lockport Bank and Trust Company, Lock- port, Oct. 31. Alabama, 5 100,000 29,600 129,000 Bank of Syracuse, Syracuse, - Sept. 3. Michigan, 6 50,000 20,800 70,800 Farmers' and Mechanics' Bank, of Gene- Arkansas, 6 Sept.17. Michigan, 6 100,000 - 100,000 see, Batavia, Farmers' Bank of Orleans, Gaines, Oct. 29. Indiana, 5 - 50,000 48,300 98,300 Merchants' and Farmers' Bank, Ithica, - Oct. 24. Michigan, 6 40,000 27,200 67,200 Willoughby Bank, Brooklyn, Nov. 6. Maine, 5 50,000 50,000 100,000 New York State Stock Security Bank, New Nov. 1. New York 5 10,000 Dec. 19. do. 5 - 15,090 25,090 York, Millers' Bank, of New York, Clyde, - Dec. 15. Arkansas, 6 100,000 - 100,000 The Powell Bank, Newburgh, - Dec. 27. Michigan, 6 50,000 50,000 100,000 Dec. 26. Michigan, 6 Bank of Central New York, - Arkansas, 6 10,000 10,000 20,000 The Wool Growers' Bank of the State of New York, - - Dec. 31. Maine, 5 10,000 - 10,000 1,170,090 422,900 1,592,990 In here concluding what we have thought proper to add to the author's article on banking, properly so called, we earnestly recommend to our readers, besides the American works already referred to in the preceding pages, the Financial Register, in two 8vo. volumes, edited by Condy Raguet, Esq. It embraces a great mass of information on currency and banking, of high interest to the merchant as well as to the political economist, and rendered accessible on the cheapest terms. In regard to Savings' Banks, we may mention that their introduction into the United States dates from the month of December, 1816. The " Philadelphia Saving Fund Society" was then instituted by a number of intelligent and philanthropic citizens, with the object in view of promoting habits of foresight and saving among the labouring poor of their vicinity. As was to have been expected from the novelty of the undertaking, and the difficulty with which the habits of a people, and especially of the comparatively uneducated portion of a people, can be in any way changed, the amount of the deposites made with the society was at first quite inconsiderable. During the first 13 months the deposites had, in fact, only reached the sum of $8,945.41. The society was incorporated by the legislature of the State in February 1819; and on the 31st of March of that year, when the funds were trans- ferred to the corporation, they amounted to $45,114.85. That the institution had, in the mean time, been managed with due discretion and skill was testified by the legislature making the articles of association and the by-laws of the society the basis of the act of incorporation. From the date of the passing of this act, however, the deposites began to increase more rapidly than they had hitherto done. In 1821, they exceeded $200,000 the maximum of deposites then allowed being $300,000. The legislature, by a supplementary act passed in March 1824, just as the deposites were approaching the sum just mentioned, extended the maximum allowed to an amount twice as large. And as the deposites con- tinued to augment, the maximum was still farther extended, until at present $1,500,000 is the amount of deposites which is authorised to be received. The interest allowed to depositors, originally 41°o per cent., was, in consequence of a fall in the general rate of interest, reduced in December 1820, to 4 per cent and, since Febru- ary 1828, no deposite greater than 200 dollars could be received from the same person in any one year. The deposites received in 1837, a year of extraordinary pecuniary pressure, amounted to $422,698.92 while the payments to depositors were $712,444.96. In 1838, when that pressure was in a considerable degree alleviated, the deposites received exceeded the pay- ments to the depositors the former amounting to $459,711.38; and the latter to $449,084.94. The whole amount of deposites, since the establishment of the society down to the close of the year 1838, was $6,794,813.03; that of deposites returned, during the same period, $5,720,474.42. The benefits of the institution have been extended to 38,743 depositors. Since the establishment of the " Philadelphia Saving Fund Society," and especially since the experience of its successful operation, other societies have sprung into existence at New York, Boston, Baltimore, and elsewhere in the United States, conducted on similar princi- Digitized by Google BANKS (UNITED STATES). 165 ples. The details given above will serve as a favourable illustration of their nature as well as of the mode in which they have been administered. We subjoin, as a farther illustration of their nature, the original act of incorporation of the Philadelphia Society together with its " rules and regulations respecting deposites and payments." An Act incorporating the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society. WHEREAS, a voluntary association of a number of the citizens of Philadelpbia and its neighbour- hood, under the title of "THE PHILADELPHIA SAVING FUND SOCIETY," has for some time existed, and has been established for the sole purpose of receiving and investing in public stock or substan- tial security on real estate, such small sums as may be saved from the earnings of tradesmen, me- chanics, labourers, servants and others, and of affording to industrious persons the advantages of security and interest. And whereas the members of this society by their memorial to the legislature have prayed to be perpetuated, and brought into legal existence by being incorporated and established by law, with perpetual succession, for the purpose of receiving, holding and improving, in such way as to them may seem proper, all such real and personal estate, as the said institution shall become possessed of, or entitled to, by gift, grant, devise, bequest, purchase, deposit, loan and payment, for the purpose of the said institution. Therefore, e 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That Andrew Bayard, Samuel Archer, Richard Bache, Charles N. Bancker, Clement C. Biddle, Samuel Breck, Turner Ca- mac, Reuben Haines, Thomas Hale, Adam Konigmacher, Ludwig Krumbhaar, John I'Crea, Samuel B. Morris, Isaac W. Norris, Richard Peters, Jun., Condy Raguet, Joseph Rotch, William Schlatter, Samuel Spackman, John C. Stocker, John Strawbridge, Roberts Vaux, John Vaughan, Daniel B. Smith, and Matthew C. Ralston, and their successors, forever, be, and they are hereby erected and made one body politic and corporate, in deed and in law, by the name, style and title, of THE PHI- LADELPHIA SAVING FUND SOCIETY," and by the same name shall have perpetual succession, and are hereby made able and capable in law, to have, purchase, receive, take, hold, possess, enjoy, and re- tain, to them and their successors, lands, rents, tenements, hereditaments, stock, goods, chattels, and effects of what kind, nature, or quality, soever, whether real, personal, or mixed, by gift, grant, de- mise, bargain and sale, devise, bequest, testament, legacy, loan, deposit or advance, or by any other mode of conveyance or transfer whatever, and the same to give, grant, bargain, sell, demise, convey, assure, transfer, alien, pay, release, and dispose of, for the whole or any less estate or property than they have in the same, and also to improve and augment the same, in such manner and form as the said society by their by-laws and regulations shall order and direct, and shall and may apply the same with the rents, issues, profits, income, interest and profits of such estate, and the moneys arising from the sale, alienation, disposal, or employment thereof to the uses, ends and purposes of their in- stitution, according to the rules, regulations and orders of their society now in force, or which, ac- cording to the provisions, hereinafter made, shall from time to time, be declared, touching the same, as effectually and fully, as any natural person or body politic or corporate within this state, by the constitution and laws of this commonwealth, can do and perform. And the said society, by the name, style and title aforesaid, shall and may sue, and be sued, plead, and be impleaded, answer, and be an- swered, defend, and be defended, in all courts of law within the commonwealth, and elsewhere, and also make, have, and use a common seal, and the same break, alter and renew at their pleasure and shall have power also to make, establish, ordain, and put in execution, such by-laws, ordinances and regulations, as shall to them, or a majority of such quorum of them (as has already or shall here- after be directed), seem meet or convenient for the government of such corporation, not being con- trary to the constitution and laws of this commonwealth; and generally to do and execute all and singular such acts, matters and things, which to the said corporation shall or may appertain, and be necessary for the purposes thereof, subject, nevertheless, to the rules, regulations, restrictions, limi- tations, and provisions, berein prescribed and declared. 12. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the following rules, limitations and provisions, shall form and be fundamental articles of the constitution of the corporation. 1. The institution shall be conducted by twenty-five managers, who shall annually, on the first Monday in January, choose one of their number as President, and shall have power to appoint a Secretary, Treasurer, and such other officers, as the business of the corporation may require. The seat of any manager, who shall have neglected to attend for three successive stated meetings, may be vacated by the board and any of the officers of the society may be removed at the pleasure of the board. 2. The managers shall have power to fill up by ballot, after notice of one month, any vacancy which may occur in their own body or officers ; two-thirds of the members present to agree to all re- movals and new appointments; and no appointment or removal to take place when a less number than thirteen managers are present. 3. No emolument whatever shall be received by the president or managers for their services. 4. The money deposited shall bear an interest at the rate of four and eight-tenths per cent. per annum, and shall be repaid when required, upon two weeks' notice, with the interest thereon, to the time of such notice. 5. No sum less than one dollar shall be received as a deposit, and no interest shall be allowed on any payments, until they amount to the sum of five dollars, the interest on which will be twenty-four cents per annum, or two cents per calendar month. Every additional sum of five dollars that may be lodged, will bear interest in the same manner. 6. Interest is to be estimated by calendar months, and in order to avoid the calculation of days upon small sums, no interest will be allowed for the fractional parts of a month. 7. Two or more managers shall attend at the office of the society, at such times as may be ap- pointed by the board of managers, to receive deposits, and to pay such sums as may be withdrawn. No money shall be drawn out under five dollars, unless to close an account. 8. The deposits and payments shall be regularly entered in the books of the office, and every person depositing money, shall be furnished with a duplicate of his or her account, in which every deposit or payment shall be regularly entered as soon as made. 9. A cash book and leger shall be kept at the office, in which the deposit money and payments shall be immediately entered. 10. A book shall be kept at the office in which every depositor shall be at liberty to appoint some person or persons to whom, in the event of his or her death, the money shall be paid, if not otherwise disposed of by will. 11. The managers shall meet at least once in every month, and five shall be a quorum. The books, Treasurer's accounts and other documents shall be produced at such meetings. 12. The managers shall be at liberty any time to refuse deposits, and on giving one month's notice Digitized by Google 166 BANKS (UNITED STATES). to return such as have been made, with interest thereon, to be calculated to that time and no longer 13. A report shall be annually prepared by three auditors, who shall not be managers or officers of the corporation, chosen by the board, and such report shall be published in one or more of the ga- zettes of the City of Philadelphia and the managers shall annually transmit one copy of the said report to the speaker of the Senate, and one copy to the speaker of the House of Representatives. 14. The managers shall not receive deposits from any one person, to a greater amount than five hundred dollars in any one year, and the amount of the deposits received by the corporation, shall at no time exceed three hundred thousand dollars. $3. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That until the election of the officers afore- said, pursuant to this act, the officers now elected and appointed shall be and continue officers of the said society ; and that no misnomer of the said corporation, in any deed, testament or gift, grant, devise, or other instrument, or contract, or conveyance, shall vitiate or defeat the same, if the said corporation, shall be sufficiently described to ascertain the intent of the party or parties, to give, de- vise, bequeath, assure to or contract with the corporation hereby created, by the name aforesaid. Nor shall any of the non-users of the said privileges hereby granted, create any forfeiture of the same, but the same may be exercised by the said corporation; and notwithstanding any failure to meet at any of the times appointed herein or by the by-laws and ordinances of the said society, to hold their annual or other meetings for elections or other subjects for consideration, the officers then in office shall continue to hold and exercise their respective offices, until others shall be duly elected to suc- ceed them, at some future meeting of the said society, which the said corporation is hereby author- ised to hold, for such purpose. (4. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if at any time the said corporation shall misuse or abuse any of the privileges granted by this act, or if it shall appear that the said privileges are injurious to the citizens of this commonwealth, the legislature shall have power to revoke and annul them. at any time they may deem the same expedient. Rules and Regulations respecting Deposits and Payments. 1. Of Deposits. 1. Every person desirous of becoming a depositor with this society, shall, at the time of making the first deposit, sign his or her name in a book provided for the purpose, and shall state his or her business, occupation or calling, and place of residence, which shall be recorded in the same book. 2. No money will be received from any depositor, unless his or her book be brought at the time and the society will not hold itself accountable for any money brought to its office to be deposited, unless an entry thereof be made in the book of the depositor by the proper officer of the society, at the time of making the deposit. 3. No sum less than one dollar can be received as a deposit, and no person can deposit to a greater amount than two hundred dollars in any one year. 4. Whenever the moneys standing to the credit of any depositor shall amount to the sum of one thousand dollars, no further deposit can be received from such depositor; and compound interest shall cease to be computed in favour of such depositor. 5. Every deposit made by one person for the benefit of another person, shall be expressed to be "in trust and no deposit shall be received or be expressed to be received, from one person "by" another person, or by one person "for" another person. 6. No deposit will be received in the name of any unincorporated society or association of persons. In all cases in which any such society or association shall be desirous of making a deposit, the same may be done in the name of some person in trust for" such society or association; and in every such case, the trustee alone will be entitled to receive payments; and his receipt, with the pro- duction of the book, will be considered by this society, and is agreed by the depositors to be, a suffi- cient discharge. In case of the death of such trustee, or in case the society or association in trust for whom the deposit was made, shall be desirous of appointing another in his place, the vacancy must be filled, or the substitution made, according to law. 2. Of the interest payable to Depositors. 1. Interest is allowed by this society at the rate of four per cent. per annum; but no interest is allowed on any deposits until they amount to the sum of five dollars. Every additional sum of five dollars will bear interest in the same manner. 2. Interest is estimated by calendar months, and no interest is allowed for the fractional parts of a month. 3. The interest payable on deposits will, at the conclusion of every year, either be added to the principal, and will from time to time become principal, and bear the same interest, or will be paid to the depositor, according to the rules prescribed for payments. 3. Of payments to Depositors. 1. No depositor can receive any payment without having given two weeks' notice. 2. When notice is given, the book must be sent to the office, and the Treasurer must be informed at the time how much is wanted; and if the whole amount is wanted, the book must be left at the office for settlement. 3. At the expiration of the two weeks, payment will be made of the amount required. 4. In all cases in which the whole amount is withdrawn, the book must be given up to the society. 5. No sum less than five dollars can be withdrawn, unless to close an account, or in payment of in- terest to a depositor. 6. No payment can in any case be made, unless the book is produced at the time of giving notice, and at the expiration of the two weeks. 7. No check or order for the payment of money will be accepted and no transfer or assignment of the book, or of the money belonging to a depositor, can be acknowledged. 8. In case any depositor shall be unable by reason of sickness or other infirmity, or of absence from the city, to attend in person to receive any payment, he or she may receive the same by means of a power of attorney duly executed and proven or acknowledged. Blank powers of attorney for this purpose will be furnished gratis, at the office of the society. 9. In case of the death of a depositor, payment can be made only to his or her executors or admi- nistrators producing the book, unless an appointment shall have been made by such depositor in the book of the society of a person to receive the same, agreeably to the 10th article of the constitution of this society. 10. In all cases in which deposits are made in the names of two or more persons, either in their own right, or in trust for others, they must all appear at the office at the time payment is desired, and sign joint receipt, except in case of death or inability as aforesaid, unless at the time of making the de- posit. it is expressed on the book of the society, and signed by such persons, that the deposit may be withdrawn by "either of them," or "any two of them," or otherwise, as the case may be. Digitized by Google BANGKOK. 167 4. Of Books lost, destroyed, &c. 1. In case any depositor shall lose his or her book, or the same shall be destroyed or fraudulently obtained from such depositor, immediate notice thereof is to be given at the office of the society. 2. After the expiration of the two weeks from the time of notice given that any book has been lost or destroyed, if a satisfactory explanation be given, and a bond of indemnity, with a sufficient surety, be given to the society, the amount to the credit of the depositor in the books of the society, will be paid to him or her. 3. If it shall appear that the book has been fraudulently obtained from the depositor as aforesaid, the society shall not be liable to pay the amount deposited, or any part thereof, and will not furnish another book to the depositor, unless satisfactory evidence be produced that notice of the application to the society for such purpose, was given at least thirty days previously, to the person in whose hands the book was supposed to be, or if the person be not known, that notice of such application was given for the same space of time, in at least one daily newspaper published in this city and a bond of in- demnity shall also be given as aforesaid. 4. If any person shall present a deposit-book at the office of this society, and allege himself or herself untruly, to be the depositor named therein, and shall thereby obtain from the officers of this society the amount deposited, or any part thereof, and the actual depositor shall not have given pre- vious notice at the office, of his book having been lost or taken from him, this society will not be responsible for the loss so sustained by any depositor, neither will this institution be liable to make good the same, provided that such payment has been entered in the book of the depositor at the time when made. 5. Depositors to sign these Rules, &c. Every person making a deposit for the first time is to sign a book containing these Rules and Regu- lations, which he thereby signifies his assent to and his willingness to be bound by and by receiving the book with these Rules and Regulations printed thereon, he is informed of the same and any alter- ation made in these regulations, and any new regulations made by the managers shall be equally binding on all depositors as those by them subscribed, after the same shall have been duly made known.-Am. Ed.] BANGKOK, the capital of the kingdom of Siam, situated about 20 miles from the sea, on both sides of the river Menam, but chiefly on its left or eastern bank, in lat. 13° 40' N., long. 101° 10' E. The Menam opens in the centre nearly of the bottom or the Gulf of Siam. There is a bar at its mouth, consisting, for the most part, of a mud flat 10 miles in depth. The outer edge of this flat, which is little more than 200 yards broad, is sandy and of harder materials than the inner part; which is so soft, that when a ship grounds on it during the ebb, she often sinks 5 feet in the mud and clay, which supports her upright, so that she is but little inconvenienced. The highest water on the bar of the Menam, from February to September, is about 13} feet and in the remaining 4 months, somewhat more than 14 feet-a difference probably produced by the accumulation of water at the head of the bay after the south-west monsoon, and by the heavy floods of the rainy season. On account of the deficiency of water on the bar, vessels sent to Bangkok had better, perhaps, not exceed 200 or 250 tons burden. In all other respects, the river is extremely safe and commodious. Its mouth is no sooner approached, than it deepens gradually and at Pak- nam, two miles up, there are 6 and 7 fathoms water. This depth increases as you ascend, and at Bangkok is not less than 9 fathoms. The only danger is, or rather was, a sand bank off Paknam, bare at low water; but on this a fort or battery has been erected within the last few years, affording at all times a distinct beacon. The channel of the river is so equal, that a ship may range from one side to another, approaching the banks so closely that her yards may literally overhang them. The navigation is said to be equally safe all the way up to the old capital of Yuthia, 80 miles from the mouth of the river. The city of Bangkok extends along the banks of the Menam to the distance of about 21 miles; but is of no great breadth, probably not exceeding 11 mile. On the left bank there is a long street or row of floating houses; each house or shop, for they are in general both, consisting of a distinct vessel, which may be moored any where along the banks. Besides the principal river, which at the city is about a quarter of a mile broad, the country is inter- sected by a great number of tributary streams and canals, so that almost all intercourse at Bangkok is by water. The population has been computed at 50,000 or 60,000, half of whom are Chinese settlers. The total area of the kingdom of Siam has been estimated at 190,000 square miles, and the population at only 2,790,500, principally resident in the rich valley of the Menam. Of the entire population, it is supposed that not less than 440,000 are Chinese. The common necessaries of life at Bangkok are exceedingly cheap. A cwt. of rice may always be had for 2s. and very often for 1s. Other necessaries, such as salt, palm-sugar, spices, vegetables, fish, and even flesh, are proportionably cheap. The price of good pork, for example, is 23d. per lb. A duck may be had for 7d. and a fowl for 3d. The neighbourhood of Bangkok is one of the most productive places in the world for fine fruits; for here are assembled, and to be had in the greatest perfection and abundance, the orange and the lichi of China, the mangoe of Hindostan, and the mangostein, durian, and shaddock of the Malay countries. Monies, Weights, and Measures.-Gold and copper are not used as money in Siam, and the currency consists only of cowrie shells and silver. The denominations are as follow :-200 bia or cowries make 1 'hai-nung 2 p'hai-nungs, 1 sing-p'l ; 2 sing-p'hais, 1 fuang; 2 fuangs, 1 salung 4 salungs, 1 bat or tical; 80 ticals, 1 cattie; 100 catties, 1 picul. The standard coin is the bat, which Europeans have called a tical; but there are also coins, though less frequently, of the lower denominations. These are of a rude and peculiar form. They are, in Digitized by Google 168 BANGKOK. fact, nothing more than small bits of a silver bar bent, and the ends beaten together. They are im- pressed with two or three small stamps, not covering the whole surface of the coin. The cattie and picul are, of course, only used in speaking of large sums of money. Gold and silver are weighed by small weights, which have the same denominations as the coins. The p'hai-nung, the lowest of these, is in this case subdivided into 32 sagas, or red beans, the Abrus precatorius of bothnists. The bat, or tical, was assayed at the mint of Calcutta; it was found to weigh 236 grains; its stand- ard, however, was uncertain, and the value of different specimens varied from 1 rupee 3 anas and 3 pice, to 1 rupee 3 anas and 7 pice. The value, therefore, in sterling money, is about 2s. 6d., and it is so considered. In respect to ordinary measures, the Siamese cattle is double the weight of the Chinese cattie, which as is well known, is equal to If lb. avoirdupois. The picul, however, is of the same weight, consist- ing in the one case of 50 catties only, and in the other of 100. In weighing rice and salt, a large mea- sure is used, consisting, in respect to the first of 22 piculs, and of the last of 25 piculs. Rice is also measured by the basket, of which 100 go to the large measure above-mentioned. The long measures are as follow :-12 finger breadths make 1 span 2 spans, 1 cubit 4 cubits, 1 fa- thom; 20 fathoms, 1 sen ; and 100 sen, 1 yuta, or, as it is more commonly pronounced by the Siamese, yut. The fathom is the measure of most frequent use, and the Siamese have a pole of this length divided into its fractional parts. This, as nearly as can be ascertained, is equal to about 6 feet 6 inches. The sen appears to be also used in the admeasurement of land, and to be the name of a square measure of 20 fathoms to the side. Port Regulations and Duties.-As soon as a European ship reaches the bar of Siam, she must, ac- cording to the regulations of the country, communicate with the chief of the village of Paknam, at the mouth of the Menam, and from him obtain a pilot. At Paknam, the rule is to land ammunition, cannon, and small arms; but this regulation is not very rigidly Insisted on. The duties and other imposts levied on external trade are somewhat complex, and differ in some degree according to the class of vessels subjected to them, and which consist of junks carrying on trade with China Proper, junks of the island of Hai-nan, junks trading to the Malay Islands, and European shipping. The imposts consist of a duty on the measurement or dimensions of the vessel an ad valorem duty upon imports and a rated tariff in most cases, with an ad valorem duty in a few, on exports. The first named class of vessels, viz. the large junks trading with the principal ports of China, pay no mea- surement or import duties, because these are vessels belonging to the king, or to the princes, or cour- tiers, licensed to engage freely in this branch of trade. The Hai-nan junks pay 40 ticals per Siamese fathom, on the extreme breadth of the vessel. The junks trading to the Malay countries, in lieu of measurement duty, pay 130 ticals each, without regard to size. Neither of these vessels pay import duties. The measurement duties on European vessels are estimated at 118 ticals per fathom, besides an inconsiderable impost in the form of an anchorage fee. The cargoes of these alone pay an import duty, which is reckoned at 8 per cent. ad valorem, levied in kind. The tariff on exports consists of specific duties, of which the following are specimens :- Ivory - - - - - per picul - - 21 ticals. Stick lac - - - - - - - - - Sugar, if exported under a European flag - - - - If Ditto - an Indian flag - - - - 1 Cotton wool - - - - - - - - Trade.-The foreign trade of Siam is conducted with China, Cochin China, Cambogia, and Tonquin, Java, Singapore, and the other British ports within the Straits or Malacca, with an occasional intercourse with Bombay and Surat, England and America. The most important branch of the foreign trade is that with China. This is wholly carried on in vessels of Chinese form, navigated by Chinese, but the greater portion of them are built in Siam. The whole of the Chinese trade centres in Bangkok, with the exception of a few junks, which trade to Sungora and Ligor. The ports of China which carry on trade with Siam, are, Canton, Kiang-mui, and Changlim, in the province of Quantong; Amoi, or Emwi, in Fokien; Limpo, or Nimpo, in Chekiang with Siang-hai and Saochen, in Kiang-nan; besides several ports of the great island Hai-nan. These junks are expected in Siam in the following ;-those of the island of Hai-nan usually arrive in January and those from the provinces of Canton, Fokien, and Chekiang, in the latter end of February, and down to the beginning of April. They all sail from the Menam in the months of June and July, when the south-west monsoon is at its height, and, of course, there is but one voyage per- formed yearly. The imports from China are very numerous, consisting of what are called in commercial language assorted cargoes." The following is a list of the principal com- modities:-Coarse earthenware and porcelain, spelter, quicksilver, tea, lacksoy (vermicelli), dried fruits, raw silk, crapes, satins, and other silk fabrics, nankeens, shoes, fans, umbrellas, writing paper, sacrificial paper, incense rods, and many other minor articles. Not the least valuable part of the importations are immigrants. The exports from Siam are also very various, but the following list comprehends the most considerable :-Black pepper, sugar, tin, cardamoms, eagle-wood, sapan-wood, red mangrove bark, rose-wood for furniture and cabinet work, cotton, ivory, stick lac, rice, areca nuts, salt fish; the hides and skins of oxen, buffaloes, elephants, rhinoceroses, deer, tigers, leopards, otters, civet cats, and pangolins; of snakes, and rays, with the belly-shell of a species of land tortoise; the horns of the buffalo, ox, deer, and rhinoceros: the bones of the ox, buffalo, elephant, rhinoceros, and tiger; dried deer's sinews the feathers of the pelican, of several species of storks, of the peacock and kingfisher, &c.; and, finally, esculent swallows' nests. The tonnage carrying on the China trade amounts in all to probably about 130 junks in number, a few of which are of 1,000 tons burden, and the whole shipping is not short of 35,000 tons. The trade with the different countries of the Malay Archipelago forms the next most im- portant branch of the Siamese commerce, and the only one respecting which it can be neces- sary to give any particulars in this place. It is conducted with the following ports:-Patain, Digitized by Google BANKRUPT AND BANKRUPTCY. 169 Kalantan, Tringano, Pahang, Rhio, Singapore, Malacca, Penang, Batavia, Samarang, Cheribon, Palembang, and Pontianak. In this intercourse, the staple exports of Siam are sugar, salt, oil, and rice; to which may be added the minor articles of stick lac, iron pans, coarse earthenware, hogs' lard, &c. The returns are British and Indian piece goods, opium, with a little glass ware, and some British woollens from the European settlements, with commodities suited for the Chinese market, such as pepper, tin, dragon's blood, rattans, biche-de-mer, esculent swallows' nests, and Malay camphor from the native ports. The following are believed to be the quantities of the two greatest staple articles of Siamese export; viz. clayed sugar, 10,000 tons; black pepper, 3,525 tons. (We are indebted for this, as we have been for many other excellent communications, to our esteemed friend, John Crawfurd, Esq., who ascertained the particulars on the spot.) BANKRUPT AND BANKRUPTCY. In the general sense of the term, bankrupt is equivalent to insolvent, and is applied to designate any individual unable to pay his debts. But in the law of England bankrupts form that particular class of insolvents who are en- gaged in trade, or who seek their living by buying and selling," and who are declared, upon the oath of one or more of their creditors, to have committed what the law has defined to be an act of bankruptcy. At present, however, we shall merely lay before the reader a few observations with respect to the principles and leading provisions embodied in the law as to bankruptcy and insolvency; referring the reader to the article INSOLVENCY AND BANK- RUPTCY, for a detailed statement of these and the other provisions in that law. " All classes of individuals, even those who have least to do with industrious undertakings, are exposed to vicissitudes and misfortunes, the occurrence of which may render them inca- pable of making good the engagements into which they have entered, and render them bankrupt or insolvent. But though bankruptcy is most frequently, perhaps, produced by un- controllable causes, it is frequently also produced by the thoughtlessness of individuals, or by their repugnance to make those retrenchments which the state of their affairs demands; and sometimes also by fraud or bad faith. Hence it is, that the laws with respect to bank- ruptcy occupy a prominent place in the judicial system of every state in which commerce has made any progress, and credit been introduced. They differ exceedingly in different countries and stages of society; and it must be acknowledged that they present very many difficulties, and that it is not possible, perhaps, to suggest any system against which pretty plausible objections may not be made. " The execrable atrocity of the early Roman laws with respect to bankruptcy is well known. According to the usual interpretation of the law of the twelve tables, which Cicero has so much eulogised", the creditors of an insolvent debtor might, after some preliminary formalities, cut his body to pieces, each of them taking a share proportioned to the amount of his debt; and those who did not choose to resort to this horrible extremity, were authorised to subject the debtor to chains, stripes, and hard labour; or to sell him, his wife, and children, to perpetual foreign slavery trans Tyberim! This law, and the law giving fathers the power of inflicting capital punishment on their children, strikingly illustrate the ferecious and sanguinary character of the early Romans. " There is reason to think, from the silence of historians on the subject, that no unfortu- nate debtor ever actually felt the utmost severity of this barbarous sentence but the history of the republic is full of accounts of popular commotions, some of which led to very impor- tant changes, that were occasioned by the exercise of the power given to the creditors of enslaving their debtors, and subjecting them to corporal punishments. The law, however, continued in this state till the year of Rome 427, 120 years after the promulgation of the twelve tables, when it was repealed. It was then enacted, that the persons of debtors should cease to be at the disposal of their creditors, and that the latter should merely be authorised to seize upon the debtor's goods, and sell them by auction in satisfaction of their claims. In the subsequent stages of Roman jurisprudence, further changes were made, which seem generally to have leaned to the side of the debtor and it was ultimately ruled, that an indi- vidual who had become insolvent without having committed any fraud, should upon making a cessio bonorum, or a surrender of his entire property to his creditors, be entitled to an exemption from all personal penalties-(Terasson, Histoire de la Jurisprudence Romaine, 117.) The law of England distinguishes between the insolvency of persons engaged in trade, and that of others. The former can alone be made bankrupts, and are dealt with in a com- paratively lenient manner. 'The law,' says Blackstone, 'is cautious of encouraging prodi- gality and extravagance by indulgence to debtors; and therefore it allows the benefit of the laws of bankruptcy to none but actual traders, since that set of men are, generally speaking, the only persons liable to accidental losses, and to an inability of paying their debts without any fault of their own. If persons in other situations of life run in debt without the power of payment, they must take the consequences of their own indiscretion, even though they Fremant omnes, licet dicam quod sentio; bibliothecas, mehercule, omnium philosophorum unus mihi videtur duodecim tabularum libellus; siquis legum fontes et capita viderit et authoritatis pon- dere et utilitatis ubertate superare.-De Oratore, lib. i. VoL. I-P 22 Digitized by Google 170 BANKRUPT AND BANKRUPTCY. meet with sudden accidents that may reduce their fortunes; for the law holds it to be an unjustifiable practice for any person but a trader to encumber himself with debts of any con- siderable value. If a gentleman, or one in a liberal profession, at the time of contracting his debts has a sufficient fund to pay them, the delay of payment is a species of dishonesty, and a temporary injustice to his creditors and if at such time he has no sufficient fund, the die- honesty and injustice are the greater he cannot, therefore, murmur if he suffer the punish- ment he has voluntarily drawn upon himself. But in mercantile transactions the case is far otherwise trade cannot be carried on without mutual credit on both sides the contracting of debts is here not only justifiable, but necessary and if, by accidental calamities, as by the loss of a ship in a tempest, the failure of brother traders, or by the nonpayment of persons out of trade, a merchant or trader becomes incapable of discharging his own debts, it is his mis- fortune and not his fault. To the misfortunes, therefore, of debtors, the law has given a compassionate remedy, but denied it to their faults; since at the same time that it provides for the security of commerce, by enacting that every considerable trader may be declared a bankrupt, for the benefit of his creditors as well as himself, it has also, to discourage extrava- gance, declared that no one shall be capable of being made a bankrupt but only a trader, nor capable of receiving the full benefit of the statutes but only an industrious trader.'-( (Com- mentaries, book ii. cap. 31.) " After the various proceedings with respect to bankruptcy have been gone through, if nothing be discovered to impeach the honesty of the debtor, he is allowed a certificate or discharge, provided three out of five of his creditors both in number and value agree to sign it. The bankrupt is then entitled to a reasonable allowance out of his effects; which is however, made to depend partly on the magnitude of his dividend. Thus, if his effects will not pay half his debts, or 10s. in the pound, he is left to the discretion of the commissioners and assignees, to have a competent sum allowed him, not exceeding 3 per cent. upon his estate, or 300l. in all but if his estate pay 10s. in the pound, he is to be allowed 5 per cent., provided such allowance do not exceed 400l. 12s. 6d. then 71 per cent. under a limitation as before of its not exceeding 500L and if 15s. in the pound, then the bankrupt shall be allowed 10 per cent. upon his estate, provided it do not exceed 600L. " According to our present law, when a person not a trader becomes insolvent, he may, after being actually imprisoned at the suit of some of his creditors for fourteen days, present a petition to the court to be relieved and upon surrendering his entire property, he is, un- less something fraudulent be established against him, entitled to a discharge. While, how- ever, the certificate given to the bankrupt relieves him from all future claims on account of debts contracted previously to his bankruptcy, the discharge given to an insolvent only relieves him from imprisonment; in the event of his afterwards accumulating any property, it may be seized in payment of the debts contracted anterior to his insolvency. This princi- ple was recognised in the cessio bonorum of the Romans, of which the insolvent act is nearly a copy. " It may be questioned, however, notwithstanding what Blackstone has stated, whether there be any good ground for making a distinction between the insolvency of traders and other individuals. There are very few trades so hazardous as that of a farmer, and yet should he become insolvent, he is not entitled to the same privileges he would have enjoyed had he been the keeper of an inn, or a commission agent! The injustice of this distinction is obvious; but, without dwelling upon it, it seems pretty clear that certificates should be granted indiscriminately to all honest debtors. Being relieved from all concern as to his previous incumbrances, an insolvent who has obtained a certificate is prompted to exert himself vigorously in future, at the same time that his friends are not deterred from coming forward to his assistance. But when an insolvent continues liable to his previous debts, no one, however favourably disposed, can venture to aid him with a loan and he is discouraged, even if he had means, from attempting to earn any thing more than a bare livelihood; so that, while creditors do not, in one case out of a hundred, gain the smallest sum by this constant liability of the insolvent, his energies and usefulness are forever paralysed. The policy of imprisoning for debt seems also exceedingly questionable. Notwithstand- ing the deference due to the great authorities who have vindicated this practice, I confess I am unable to discover any thing very cogent in the reasonings advanced in its favour. Pro- vided a person in insolvent circumstances intimate his situation to his creditors, and offer to make a voluntary surrender of his property to them, he has, as it appears to me, done all that should be required of him, and ought not to undergo any imprisonment. If he had de- ceived his creditors by false representations, or if he conceal or fraudulently convey away any part of his property, he should of course be subjected to the pains and penalties attached to swindling; but when such practices are not alleged, or cannot be proved, sound policy, I apprehend, would dictate that creditors ought to have no power over the persons of their debtors, and that they should be entitled only to their effects. The maxim carcer non solvit, is not more trite than true. It is said, that the fear of imprisonment operates as a check to prevent persons from getting into debt; and 80 no doubt it does. But then it must, on the other hand, be borne in mind, that the power to imprison tempts individuals to trust to its Digitized by Google BANKRUPT AND BANKRUPTCY. 171 influence to enforce payment of their claims, and makes them less cautious in their inquiries as to the condition and circumstances of those to whom they give credit. The carelessness of tradesmen and their extreme earnestness to obtain custom, are, more than any thing else, the great causes of insolvency; and the power of imprisoning merely tends to foster and en- courage these habits. If a tradesman trust an individual with a loan of money or goods, which he is unable to pay, he has made a bad speculation. But why ought he, because he has done so, to be allowed to arrest the debtor's person ? If he wished to have perfect secu- rity, he either should not have dealt with him at all, or dealt with him only for ready money such transactions are, on the part of tradesmen perfectly voluntary and if they place undue confidence in a debtor who has not misled them by erroneous representations of his affairs, they have themselves only to blame. It would really, therefore, as it appears to us, be for the advantage of creditors, were all penal proceedings against the persons of honest debtors abolished. The dependence placed on their efficacy is deceitful. A tradesman ought rather to trust to his own prudence and sagacity to keep out of scrapes, than to the law for redress; he may deal upon credit with those whom he knows; but he should deal for ready money only with those of whose circumstances and characters he is either ignorant or suspicious. By bringing penal statutes to his aid, he is rendered remiss and negligent. He has the only effectual means of security in his own hands and it seems highly inexpedient that he should be taught to neglect them, and put his trust in prisons. It is pretty evident, too, that the efficacy of imprisonment in deterring individuals from running into debt has been greatly overrated. Insolvents who are honest, must have suf- fered from misfortune, or been disappointed in the hopes they entertained of being able, in one way or other, to discharge their debts. The fear of imprisonment does not greatly in- fluence such persons; for when they contract debts, they have no doubt of their ability to pay them. And though the imprisonment of bona fide insolvents were abolished, it would give no encouragement to the practices of those who endeavour to raise money by false re- presentations; for these are to be regarded as swindlers, and ought as such to be subjected to adequate punishment. (See CREDIT.) " But the regulations with respect to bankruptcy and insolvency differ radically in other important respects. An individual cannot be subjected to the insolvent law, except by his own act, that is, his petitioning for relief from actual imprisonment for debt; and, on the other hand, an individual cannot be made a bankrupt and subjected to the bankrupt law, ex- cept by the act of another, that is, of a petitioning creditor*, as he is called, swearing that the individual in question is indebted to him, and that he believes he has committed what is termed an act of bankruptcy. These differences, coupled with the refinements introduced into other branches of the law, give rise to very extraordinary results. " While the law of England gives the creditor an unnecessary degree of power over the debtor's person, it does not give him sufficient power over his property. In this respect, in- deed, it is so very defective, that one is almost tempted to think it had been intended to pro- mote the practices of fraudulent debtors. The property of persons subjected to the bankrupt laws, as well as those who choose to subject themselves to the insolvent laws, is placed at the disposal of assignees or trustees for the benefit of their creditors; but when a person possessed of property, but not subject to the bankrupt laws, contracts debts, if he go abroad, or live within the rules of the King's Bench or the Fleet, or remain in prison without petitioning for relief (in neither of which cases can he be subjected to the insolvent laws), he may most probably continue to enjoy the income arising from that property with- out molestation. " It is true, the law says that the creditors shall be authorised to seize the debtors' lands and goods,-a description which an unlearned person would be apt to conclude was abun- dantly comprehensive; but the law is so interpreted, that neither funded property, money, nor securities for money, are considered goods. If the debtor have a copyhold estate, it can- not be touched in any way whatever; if his estate be freehold, the creditor may, after a tedious process, receive the rents and profits, but no morè, during the lifetime of his debtor. Should the debtor die before judgment against him in a court has been obtained, then, unless the debt be on bond, the creditor has no recourse upon the land left by the debtor, whatever may be its tenure nay, though his money borrowed on note or bill has been laid out in buying land, the debtor's heir takes that land, wholly discharged of the debt "-(Lord Brougham's Speech on the State of the Law, p. 100.) In consequence of this preposterously absurd system, an individual known to have a large income, and enjoying a proportionally extensive credit, may, if he go to Paris or Brus- sels, or confine himself within the rules of the King's Bench or Fleet, defraud his creditors of every farthing he owes them, without their being entitled to touch any part of his fortune. All owners of funded, monied, and copyhold property, have a licence given them to cheat One creditor, whose debt is to the amount of upwards of 100% ; or two, whose debts amount to 1501.; or three, whose debts amount to 2001. Digitized by Google 172 BARCALAO, BARCELONA. with impunity and the only wonder is, not that some do, but that a vast number more do not avail themselves of this singular privilege. In point of fact, therefore, the power of imprisonment is operative only on the really necessitous-on those from whom it can extract little or nothing. The rich debtor is seldom subjected to its operation; he re- sorts, before a writ can be executed against him, either to the Continent or the rules, and then laughs at the impotent wrath of those he has defrauded, and perhaps ruined. That such a system of law should be suffered to exist in a commercial country, and so little outcry be raised against it, is truly astonishing, and strikingly exemplifies the power of habit in reconciling us to the most pernicious absurdities. Can any one won- der at the frequency of fraudulent bankruptcy, when it is thus fostered and encouraged "A reform of the bankrupt law on the principles already mentioned, seems, therefore, to be imperiously called for. Its evils were forcibly stated by Mr. Brougham (now Lord Brougham) in his Speech on the State of the Law.' He has also pointed out the remedia! measures necessary to be adopted to render this important department of commercial juris- prudence consistent with the obvious principles of justice and common sense. Let the whole,' says he, of every man's property, real and personal-his real, of what kind soever, copyhold, leasehold, freehold; his personal, of whatever nature, debts, money, stock, chattels -be taken for the payment of all his debts equally, and, in cases of insolvency, let all be dis- tributed rateably ; let all he possesses be sifted, bolted from him unsparingly, until all his creditors are satisfied by payment or composition; but let his person only be taken when he conceals his goods, or has merited punishment by fraudulent conduct.'-(pp. 106-110.) Were these measures adopted, and a certificate given to every man who has been divested of his property for behoof of his creditors, and against whom no charge of fraud has been es- tablished, there would be little room for improvement in the principles of the law of bank- ruptcy."-(See my Principles of Political Economy, 2d ed. pp. 264-274.) [For Bankrupt laws in the United States, see article INSOLVENCY.-Am. Ed.] BARCALAO, OR BACALAO, the Spanish name for cod. BARCELONA, the capital of Catalonia, and the principal town of Spain, on the Medi- terranean, in lat. 41° 22' N., and long. 2° 10' E. It is a strongly fortified, well-built city. The population is supposed to amount to about 150,000. Barcelona is eminently dis- tinguished in the history of the middle ages, for the zeal, skill, and success with which her citizens prosecuted commercial adventures at a very early period. She would seem also to be entitled to the honour of having compiled and promulgated the famous code of maritime law known by the name of the Consolato del Mare; and the earliest authentic notices of the practice or marine insurance and of the negotiation of bills of exchange are to be found in her annals.* Catalonia has continued, amidst all the vicissitudes it has undergone, to be the most industrious of the Spanish provinces; and several valuable and extensive manu- factures have been established at Barcelona. Latterly, however, her commerce, owing to a variety of causes, but principally to oppressive restrictions on the importation of foreign goods, and the emancipation of South America, has very much declined. The Harbour, which is naturally bad, is formed by a mole or jetty, which has recently been a good deal enlarged, running out to a considerable distance in a southerly direction, and having a light- house and some batteries near its extremity. The depth of water within the mole is from 18 to 20 feet; but there is a bar between the mole and Monjui, which has frequently not more than 10 feet water ; and which would, it is believed, entirely shut up the harbour, were it not occasionally low- ered by means of dredging machines. Vessels in the harbour moor at a short distance from the mole; where, though exposed to the southerly gales, they are so well protected that no accident of any con- sequence has taken place since the dreadful storm of 1821. Large ships must anchor outside the mole, and in winter are much incommoded by winds. Vessels entering the harbour are under no obligation to take a pilot on board but they are always in attendance, and it is generally deemed safest to have their assistance in passing the bar. Turiff.-Of prohibited articles, the most important are tobacco, cotton goods, salt, gunpowder, brandy, carpets, leather, baizes, soap, wearing apparel, hemp, fire-arms, copper, beds, mattrasses, furniture, manufactured tin, flour, and all sorts of grain and pulse, manufactured cast iron, earthen- ware, blankets, paper, oil-cloths, sealing-wax, &c. The following were the duties on the principal articles allowed to be imported into Barcelona in 1833:- Spanish National Foreign Eng. Nat. For. Span. National Wts. Wts. Articles. Foreign Eng. National For. Articles. Flag. Flag. Flag. Flag. Wts. Flag. Flag. Wts. Flag. Flag. Sterl. Sterl. Sterling Sterl 8. d. 8. d. a. d. 1. d. Cotton lb. 16 marave. 25 marars. lb. 0 1.1 0 1-8 Dyewoods quintal 61 maravs. 6 reals - 04 1 2 Sugar arroba 4 reals 8 reals - 0 0-4 0 0-8 Fish do. 36 reals 48 reals - 7 X 97 Hides do. 84 marava. 1 real - 0 0-6 0 2.2 hoops do. 26 reals 35 reals - 52 7 0 Cocoa lb. 10 marava. 20 marava. - 0 0-7 0 1-4 Staves 1,000 20 reals 40 reals 1,000 40 80 Coffee quintal 8 reals 20 reals cwt. 17 40 Cheese quintal 121 reals 17g reals cwt. 26 3 6 Beeswax lb. 36 marava. 59 maravs. 0 2f 04 Tar arroba 3 maravs. I real lb. 0 001 0 24 Horns quintal 5 reals 20 reals cwt. 10 40 Butter lb. If reals 2f reals - 0 3f 06 * For proofs of this, see the articles MARITIME LAW, INSURANCE, &c. in this Dictionary. The Me- morias Historicas sobre la Marina, Comercio, &c. de Barcelona, by Capmany, in 4 vols. 4to, is one of the most valuable and authentic works that has ever been published on the commerce, arts, and commer- cial and maritime legislation of the middle ages. The first volume is the most interesting, at least to the general reader; the others consisting principally of extracts from the archives of the city. There is a brief but pretty good account of the early trade of Barcelona, drawn principally from Capmany, in the work of Depping, Histoire du Commerce entre le Levant et l' Europe depuis les Croisades, &c. tom. i. c. 5. Digitized by Google BARCELONA. 173 All articles whatever, the produce of the soll, or the manufacture of the country, may at present be exported; and, in most instances, without paying any duty. In this respect there is nothing in the legislation of Spain to which to object; but the government seems, like many others, to have for- gotten that reciprocity is the beginning, the middle, and the end of commerce,-that there can be no exportation without an equivalent importation; and that, to prohibit or restrict the latter is, in fact, to prohibit or restrict the former. Custom-house and Warehousing Regulations, same M at All- cant which see. nett weights must be rigorously manifested. A surplus of 3 per cent. Port Charges-The following are the various charges of a public is, however, allowed, to cover any inexactness in the proportion be- nature that would be paid by a Spanish and a British ship, each of tween foreign and Spanish weights, but if the weight of any parcel should turn out to be 3 per cent. greater than is marked in the mani- 300 toms burden, unloading and loading mixed cargoes in Barce- losa - fest, the surplus is seized, at the same time that the importer loses the benefit of the 3 per cent. allowed by law, and becomes liable to the penalties of smuggling. 1 he tares usually allowed by merchants are, on Havannah sugar 13 per cent. ; on coffee? per cent., exclusive Spanish Versel. Reals. British Vessel. Reals. of the barrel, bag, &c. in which it is contained on COCOR and pepper 2 per cent. ; Pernambuco cotton lbs. per bale; other cotton 1 lb. Anchorage 75 Anchorage 75 per cwt. New do. 15 Double do. 75 Sea-stores of all sorts are dear at Barcelona, but they may always Cleaning of port 10 New do. 15 be obtained. Beef costs about 7d. per lb., and biscuit about 8 dollars Lantern 6 Cleaning of port 10 per cwt. Captain of the port 8 Lantern 6 Money.-Accounts are kept in hibras of 20 sucidos, 240 dineros, or Light-house of Tarrifa 106 Captain of the port 8 480 mallas. The libra is likewise divided into reals de plata Cater Loading (1 real per ton) 300 Light-house of Tarrifa 211 lan, of 3 rueldos each ; and into reales ardites, of 2 sucidos each. Extraordinary contribu- New mole (8 reals per Hence, 67 of the former, or 10 of the latter, = I libra Catalan. tion 40 ton) 2,400 The libra Catalan is - 2a. 4d. sterling nearly. New mole 16 Loading (1 real per ton) 300 The pean duro, or hard dollar, is valued at 87 1-2 sueldos Catalan, Extraordinary contribu- eight such dollars making 15 libras. Total 575 tion 40 Weights and Measures.-There are endless discrepancies amonget the weights and measures in the different Spenish provinces, and 3,140 there is a very great discrepancy in the accounts of the authors who Consular fees usually have written upon them. The following statements are taken from required 160 Nelkenbrecher :- I The quintal is divided into 4 arrobas, or 104 lbs. of 12 OZ. to the Total 3,300 pound. The pound = 6-174 English grains = 4 kilog. = 8326-6 as of Holland. 100 lbs. of Barcelona = 88-215 lbs. avoirdupois. Taking the real at 4d., this would be 9L 11s. 2d. on the Spanish The yard named cana, is divided into 8 palmoe, of 4 quartos, and ship, and 651. on the British do. is = 21 inches very nearly. Hence, 100 canas = 53-499 metres - Commission is at the rate of 2 1-2 per cent. on goods shipped, and 77.5 yards of Amsterdam = 58-514 English yards. 2 per cent. on those received on consignment. Goods are sometimes The quartera, or measure for grain, is divided into 12 cortanes sold for ready money, and sometimes on credit for 3 or 4 months; and 49 picoline. 100 quarteras = 23-536, or 23 1-2 Winchester accreantile discount is 1-8 per cent. per month. There are no bank- quarters. ing establishments in Barcelona. The carsa, or measure for liquids, is divided into 12 cortanes or Insurance on ships is effected by individuals, but insurances on arrobas, 24 cortarinas, and 72 mitadellas. It is = 32.7 English houses, lives, &c. are unknown here. wine gallons. 4 cargas = 1 pipe The pipe of Majorea contains Tares-At the Custom-house, real tares only are allowed; and the 107 cortanes. Imports.-Account of the Quantity and Value of the principal Foreign Articles imported into Bar- celona during the Three Years ending with 1831. Value in Value in Value in Articles. In 1829. Sterling In 1830. Sterling In 1891. Sterling Money. Money. Money. £ £ £ Cotton - 18,600 bales 100,000 22,900 bales 137,000 43,400 bales 260,000 Sugar - 14,100 boxes 112,000 23,600 boxes 188,000 20,300 boxes 160,000 Hides - 67,500 54,000 82,400 62,000 75,000 56,000 Cocoa - 4,100 bags 25,000 8,300 bags 50,000 7,300 bags 44,000 Coffee - 1,400 cwt. 2,800 2,030 cwt. 4,500 620 cwt. 1,200 Bees'-wax - 1,200 cwt. 4,200 700 cwt. 1,100 460 cwt. 2,400 Horns - 111,000 2,200 133,600 2,600 95,000 2,000 Specie - 51,400 dollars 10,300 39,286 dollars 7,900 380,700 dollars 76,200 Dye woods - 15,000 cwt. 9,000 5,000 cwt. 3,000 16,000 cwt. 9,600 Fish - 70,000 cwt. 84,000 42,000 cwt. 50,000 64,300 cwt. 77,000 Iron hoops - 22,000 bundles 17,000 6,000 bundles 5,000 4,000 bundles 3,200 Staves - 400,000 6,400 820,600 14,850 762,000 16,000 Cheese - 2,000 cwt. 6,000 1,000 cwt. 3,000 2,000 cwt. 6,000 Tar - 700 barrels 800 180 barrels 200 - - Butter - 50 cwt. 200 - - - - Indigo - 200 cwt. 8,000 750 cwt. 30,000 900 cwt. 36,000 Pepper - 600 cwt. 1,200 800 cwt. 1,600 700 cwt. 1,400 Cinnamon - 250 cwt. 10,000 800 cwt. 32,000 1,000 cwt. 40,000 Grain is usually represented as forming an important article in the imports into Barcelona ; but its importation from abroad is prohibited; and the wants of the city are supplied either by land carriage from the interior, or by coasting vessels from the Spanish ports more to the north. Of the imports specified above, the greater portion are furnished by Cuba and Porto Rico. The im- ports from France are also considerable. Those from England, which were once very large, have dwindled to almost nothing. The only goods now openly imported from Great Britain, are iron hoops, hardware, and woollen stuffs, and these in too small quantities to deserve notice. Fish is principally supplied by Sweden and Denmark. Smuggling, particularly in tobacco and printed cottons, is carried on to a considerable extent. Exports.-The principal exports are wrought silks, soap, fire-arms, paper, hats, laces, ribands, steel, &c. But no vessels, except a few that take on board manufactured goods for the Spanish West In- dies, are loaded here and even this trade is much fallen off. Upwards of 2,000 hands used formerly to be employed in the city in the manufacture of shoes for the colonies; but their export has now nearly ceased. The cotton manufacture has made some progress in the town and its vicinity, and is Increasing. The principal articles of native produce that Catalonia has to export are most conve- niently shipped at Villanova, Tarragona, and Salon. They consist of wine, brandy, nuts, almonds, cork bark, wool, fruits, &c. Of these, Cuba takes annually about 12,000 pipes of wine, worth at an average 4l. per pipe, and about 3,000 pipes of brandy, worth 81. per do.; South America, 16,000 pipes of wine, and 6,000 do. brandy the north of Europe, 2,000 pipes of wine, and 2,000 do. brandy. A good deal of brandy is sent to Cadiz and Cette: most part of the former finds its way into the wine vaults of Xeres; and the latter, being conveyed by the canal of Languedoc to the Garonne, is used in the preparation of the wines of Bordeaux. From 25,000 to 30,000 bags of nuts are annually sent from Tarragona to England. Tarragona also exports about 12,000 bags of almonds. In 1831, only 128 foreign ships, of the burden of 15,130 tons entered Barcelona. Of these, 31 were P 2 Digitized by Google 174 barilla, BARK. Tuscan, 24 Sardinian, 19 Swedish, 18 English, 14 French, 8 American, &c. The ships belonging to the port carry on no foreign trade except to the Spanish West Indies they are few in number, and are daily decreasing. Those engaged in the coasting trade are usually of very small burden. The customs duty in the same year did not exceed 100,000Γ. (We have derived these details from various sources; but principally from the Consul's Answer to Circular Queries, and from Inglis's Spain in 1830, vol. ii. pp. 384-387. and 362.) BARILLA (Du. Soda; Fr. Soude, Barille; Ger. Soda, Barilla; It. Barriglia; Port. Solda, Barrilha; Rus. Socianka; Sp. Barrilla; Arab. Kali), carbonate of soda-(see ALKALIES), is found native in Hungary, Egypt, and many other countries. It is largely used by bleachers, manufacturers of hard soaps, glass-makers, &c. The barilla of commerce consists of the ashes of several marine and other plants growing on the sea-shore. The best, or Alicant barilla, is prepared from the Salsola soda, which is very extensively cultivated for this purpose in the huerta of Murcia, and other places on the eastern shores of Spain.- (Townsend's Travels in Spain, vol. iii. p. 195.) The plants are gathered in September, dried and burned in furnaces heated 80 as to bring the ashes into a state of imperfect fusion, when they concrete into hard, dry, cellular masses of a greyish blue colour. Sicily and Teneriffe produce good barilla, but inferior to that of Alicant and Carthagena. Kelp, which is a less pure alkali, is formed by the incineration of the common sea-wrack.-(See KELP.) The Saracens established in Spain seem to have been the first who introduced the manufacture of barilla into Europe. They called the plants employed in its preparation kali; and this, with the Arabic article at prefixed, has given rise to the modern chemical term alkali. Of 184,649 cwt. of barilla imported into Great Britain in 1831, 61,921 cwt. came from Spain, 95,995 from Teneriffe, and 23,867 from Sicily. The values of these species are, for the most part, in the proportion of about 12, 9, and 10; that is, if Spanish barilla fetch 12/. a ton, Teneriffe barilla will fetch 91., and Sicilian 10% Prime quality in barilla is to be distinguished by its strong smell when wetted, and by its whitish colour. Par- ticular attention should be paid to have as little smell or dust as possible. The duties on barilla have recently been very considerably reduced.-(See TARIFF.) At an average of the three years ending with 1831, the barilla entered for home consumption amounted to 255,289 cwt. a year. In 1832, it produced 15,3291. 8s. 2d. nett revenue. (The duties on barilla used in the bleaching of linen are to be repaid to the persons using it, under such regulations as the commissioners of customs may issue.-(4 & 5 Will 4. c. 89. § 14.)-Sup.) [Barilla is imported into the United States, free of duty, chiefly from the Canary islands. The value of it annually imported, on.an average of four years ending with 1837, amount- ed to little more than 100,000 dollars; scarcely any of which wassubsequently exported.- Am. Ed.] BARK, the outer rind of plants. There is an immense variety of barks known in com- merce, as cinnamon, Peruvian bark, oak bark, quercitron, &c. The term " bark" is, how- ever, generally employed to express either Peruvian bark, or oak bark and it is these only that we shall describe in this place. 1. Peruvian or Jesuits' Bark (Fr. Quinquina; Ger. Kron-china; Du. China-bast; Sp. Quina, Quinquina Lat. Quinquina, Cortex Peruvianus). There are three principal species of this bark known in commerce, which have been elaborately described by Dr. A. T. Thomson, from whose account the following particulars are selected. The first species is the pale bark of the shops. It is the produce of the Cinchona lancifolia, and is the original cinchona of Peru. It is now very scarce. It is imported in chests covered with skins, each containing about 200 lbs., well packed, but generally mixed with a quantity of dust and other heterogeneous matter. It consists of pieces 8 or 10 inches long, some of them being scarcely one-tenth of an inch thick, singly and doubly quilled, or rolled inwards; the quills, generally, being in size from a swan's quill to an inch and a half. It is internally of a pallid fawn or cinnamon hue but approximates, on being moistened, to the colour of a pale orange. When in substance it has scarcely any odour: but during decoction the odour is sensible, and agreeably aromatic. The taste is bitter, but not unpleasant, acidulous, and austere. The second species, or red bark, is obtained from the Cinchona oblongifolia, growing on the Andes. It is imported in chests containing from 100 to 150 lbs. each. It consists of variously sized pieces, most of them flat, but some partially quilled or rolled. The internal part is woody, and of a rust red colour; it has a weak peculiar odour; and its taste is much less bitter, but more austere and nauseous, than that of the other barks. The third species, or yellow bark of the shops, is obtained from the Cinchona cordifolia, growing in Quito and Santa Fé. It is imported in chests containing from 90 to 100 lbs. each, consisting of pieces 8 or 10 inches long, some quilled, but the greater part flat. The interior is of a yellow colour, passing to orange. It has nearly the same odour in decoction as the pale; the taste is more bitter and less austere, and it excites no astringent feeling when chewed. The goodness decreases when the colour varies from orange yellow to pale yellow; when of a dark colour, between red and yellow, it should be rejected. Digitized by Google BARLEY. 175 It is needless to add, that bark is one of the most valuable medical remedies. The In- dians were unacquainted with its uses, which seem to have been first discovered by the Jesuits. It was introduced into Europe in 1632, but was not extensively used till the latter part of the seventeenth century. According to M. Humboldt, the Jesuits' bark annually exported from America amounts to from 12,000 to 14,000 quintals. Of these, 2,000 are furnished by Santa Fé, and 110 by Loxa; Peru furnishing the remainder, which is shipped at Callao, Guayaquil, &c. 2. Oak Bark (Fr. Ecorce de la Chêne; Ger. Eichenrinde; It. Corteccia della Quercia; Lat. Quercûs cortex). The bark of the common oak is a powerful astringent, and is pre- ferred to all other substances for tanning leather. The bark of the larch is now, however, used for the same purpose. The import of oak bark is very considerable; but owing to the cork tree being a species of oak (Quercus Suber), bark for tanning and cork bark are usually mixed together in the parliamentary returns. The latter, however, does not amount to a tenth part of the whole quantity imported. The imports of both sorts amounted, in 1831, to 931,075 cwt., which is about the average importation. Of this quantity, no less than 608,304 cwt. were brought from the Netherlands (Holland and Belgium), 62,437 cwt. from Germany, &c. Cork bark is almost entirely imported from Italy, Spain, and Portugal; the imports from them being, in the above-mentioned year, Italy 95,163 cwt., Spain 78,067 cwt., and Portugal only 187 cwt. The quality of bark varies according to the size and age of the tree, the season when it is barked, &c., so much, that the price varies, at this moment, from about 5l. to about 10L per ton. The duty, which is 13s. 4d. a ton, produced in 1832, in Great Britain, 22,251/. 0s. 5d. nett. Quercitron is the bark of a species of oak tree (Quercus tinctoria). It is not used, at least in this country, for tanning, but for imparting a yellow dye to silk and wool. It is principally imported from North America. The price varies, at present, according to the quality, from about 12s. 6d. to 15s. a cwt., duty (1s.) included. At an average of the three years ending with 1831, the entries for home consumption were 25,015 cwt. a year. We are indebted for the discovery and application of the useful properties of quercitron to Dr. Bancroft. The doctor obtained a patent for his invention in 1775; but the American war breaking out soon after, deprived him of its advantages. In consideration of this eir- cumstance, parliament passed, in 1785, an act (25 Geo. 3. c. 38.) securing to him the privileges conveyed by his patent for 14 years. At the expiration of the latter period, the House of Commons agreed to extend the doctor's privilege for an additional 7 years but the House of Lords rejected the bill. Like too many discoverers, Dr. Bancroft profited but little by his invention, though it has been of great use to the arts and manufactures of the country.-(See Bancroft on Permanent Colours, vol. ii. p. 112., and the Report of the Committee of the House of Commons on Patents, Appendix, p. 175.) Oak bark, the produce of Europe, is not to be imported into the United Kingdom for home consump- tion, except in British ships, or in ships of the country of which it is the produce, or in ships of the country from which it is imported, on pain of forfeiting the goods, and 1001. by the master of the ves- sel.-(7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 58.) BARLEY (Fr. Orge; Ger. Gerstengraupen; Du. Ryg; It. Orzo; Sp. Cebada; Rus. Fatschmea; Lat. Hordeum; Arab. Dhourra; Hind. Jow), a species of bread-corn (Hordeum Lin.), of which there are several varieties. It is extensively cultivated in most European countries, and in most of the temperate districts of Asia and Africa. It may also be raised between the tropics; but not at a lower elevation than from 3,000 to 4,000 feet, and then it is not worth cultivating. Large quantities of barley have been, for a lengthened period, raised in Great Britain. Recently, however, its cultivation has been supposed, though probably on no good grounds, to be declining. In 1765, Mr. Charles Smith estimated the number of barley consumers in England and Wales at 739,000 and as a large proportion of the population of Wales, Westmoreland, and Cumberland continue to subsist chiefly on barley bread, we are inclined to think that this estimate may not, at present, be very wide of the mark. But the principal demand for barley in Great Britain is for conversion into malt, to be used in the manufacture of ale, porter, and British spirits; and though its con- sumption in this way has not certainly increased proportionally to the increase of wealth and population, still there does not seem to be any grounds for supposing that it has diminished. Barley is also extensively used in fattening black cattle, hogs, and poultry. It now gene- rally follows turnips, and is a very important crop in the rotation best adapted to light soils. The principal barley counties of England are Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridge, Bedford, Herts, Leicester, Nottingham, the upper parts of Hereford, Warwick, and Salop. The produce varies, according to soil, preparation, season, &c., from about 20 to 60 or 70 bushels an acre. The most usual crop is from 28 to 36 or 38 bushels. The Winchester bushel of good English barley generally weighs about 50 lbs., but the best Norfolk barley sometimes weighs 53 or 54 lbs. Its produce in flour is about 12 lbs., to 14 lbs. grain. Barley is a tender plant, and easily hurt in any stage of its growth. It is more hazardous than wheat, and is, generally speaking, raised at a greater expense; so that its cultivation should not be attempted except when the soil and climate are favourable for its growth.-(For details as to Digitized by Google 176 BARLEY-SUGAR-BARRATRY. the prices of barley, the quantities imported and exported, &c., see CORN LAWS AND Corn TRADE. And for further details as to its consumption and culture, see Smith's Tracts on the Corn Trade, 2d ed. p. 182. Brown on Rural Affairs, vol. ii. p. 42.; Loudon's Encyc. of Agriculture, &c.) [Barley has long been cultivated in various parts of America, especially in Canada, and in the States as far south as Virginia. There are two species. One of these is called winter barley, from the seed being sown in autumn, and remaining in the earth during the winter. It ripens about July. The grain is longer, and the hull thicker, than in the other species. In weight, it seldom exceeds 47 lbs. to the bushel. Under favourable circumstances, 50 bushels have been raised from an acre of ground; though the produce generally does not exceed 25 or 30. The other species, called spring barley, is sown in the spring, and also ripens about July. This species has two varieties, distinguished from each other by the number of rows of grain on the head, as two-rowed and four-rowed barley. The crop is generally from 25 to 30 bushels per acre, and frequently weighs from 48 to 52 lbs. per bushel. By common consent, however, among the dealers in this article, the weight of a bushel is fixed at 48 lbs. at which rate it is now altogether bought and sold. Barley, in the United States, is generally raised for malting, and is seldom made into flour, barley bread being almost unknown. Small quantities are hulled, and used in soup and for medicinal purposes. It is also used as food for cattle; but only occasionally, as the price of it is ordinarily much greater in proportion than that of Indian corn or oats. New soils are best fitted for the cultivation of barley and it is a very uncertain crop on lands on which it has been often sown. Hence its culture has been abandoned in many sections of the country, where large quantities were formerly raised.-Am. Ed.] BARLEY-SUGAR (Fr. Sucre d'orge; Ger. Gerstenzucker; It. Pennito; Sp. Alfenique; Lat. Alphenix), a preparation of sugar, candied with orange or lemon peel. BARRATRY, in navigation, is, in its most extensive sense, any fraudulent or unlawful act committed by the master or mariners of a ship, contrary to their duty to their owners, and to the prejudice of the latter. It appears to be derived from the Italian word barratrare, to cheat. It may be committed by running away with a ship, wilfully carrying her out of the course prescribed by the owners, delaying or defeating the voyage, deserting convoy without leave, sinking or deserting the ship, embezzling the cargo, smuggling, or any other offence whereby the ship or cargo may be subjected to arrest, detention, loss, or forfeiture. It is the practice, in most countries, to insure against barratry. Most foreign jurists hold, that it comprehends every fault which the master and crew can commit, whether it arise from fraud, negligence, unskilfulness, or mere imprudence. But in this country it is ruled, that no act of the master or crew shall be deemed barratry, unless it proceed from a criminal or fraudulent motive. " Barratry can only be committed by the master and mariners by some act contrary to their duty, in the relation in which they stand to the owners of the ship. It is, therefore, an of- fence against them, and consequently an owner himself cannot commit barratry. He may, by his fraudulent conduct, make himself liable to the owner of the goods on board, but not for barratry. Neither can barratry be committed against the owner, with his consent; for though he may be liable for any loss or damage occasioned by the misconduct of the master to which he consents, yet this is not barratry. Nothing is more clear than that a man can never set up as a crime, an act done by his own direction or consent."-(Marshall on Insur- ance, book i. c. 12. s 6.) When, therefore, the owner of a ship is also the master, no act of barratry can be com- mitted; for no man can commit a fraud against himself. It is a maxim in law, that fraud shall not be presumed, but must be clearly proved and it is a rule in questions of insurance, that he who charges barratry must substantiate it by conclusive evidence. It is not necessary, to render an act barratrous, that it should be committed with a crimi- nal intent as respects the owners, in order to injure them, or to benefit the captain or crew. It may even be committed with a view to promote the owner's interest; for an illegal act done without the authority or privity of the owners, and which proves detrimental to them, is barratry, whatever be the motives in which it originated. Lord Ellenborough, in an able judgment, has laid it down as clear law, that a breach of duty by the master in respect of his owners, with a fraudulent or criminal intent, or ex maleficio, is barratry that it makes no difference whether this act of the master be induced by motives of advantage to himself, malice to the owner, or a disregard of those laws which it was his duty to obey ; and that it is not for him to judge or suppose, in cases not intrusted to his discretion, that he is not breaking the trust reposed in him, when he endeavours to advance the interests of his owners by means which the law forbids, and which his owners also must be taken to have forbidden." The circumstance of the owners of ships being permitted to insure against the barratry of the master and mariners can hardly fail, it may be not uncharitably presumed, of rendering Digitized by Google BARREL-BATAVIA. 177 them less scrupulous in their inquiries with respect to their character than they would other- wise be. Perhaps, therefore, it might be expedient to prohibit such insurances, or to lay some restrictions upon them. They were, indeed, expressly forbidden by the Ordinance of Rotterdam; and Lord Mansfield, whose authority on all points connected with the law of insurance is so deservedly high, seems to have thought that it would be well to exclude bar- ratry entirely from policies, and to cease "making the underwriter become the insurer of the conduct of the captain whom he does not appoint, and cannot dismiss, to the owners who can do either." But though it were expedient to prevent the owners from making an in- surance of this sort, nothing can be more reasonable than that third parties, who freight a ship, or put goods on board, should be allowed to insure against such a copious source of loss-(For a further discussion of this subject, see the article MARINE INSURANCE; and Marshall on Insurance, book i. c. 12. § 6., and Park on Insurance, c. 5.) Owners, masters, or seamen, who wilfully cast away, burn, or destroy ships, to the preju- dice of freighters or insurers, incur the penalty of death.-(See SEAMEN.) BARREL, a cask or vessel for holding liquids, particularly ale and beer. Formerly the barrel of beer in London contained only 32 ale gallons - 321 Imperial gallons: but it was enacted by 43 Geo. 3. c. 69., that 36 gallons of beer should be taken to be a barrel; and by the 6 Geo. 4. c. 58. it is enacted, that whenever any gallon measure is mentioned in any excise law, it shall always be deemed and taken to be a standard Imperial gallon. At pre- sent, therefore, the barrel contains 36 Imperial gallons. It may be worth while observing that the barrel or cask is exclusively the produce of European ingenuity; and that no such article is known to any nation of Asia, Africa, or America, who have not derived it from Europeans. [In the United States the barrel in use is uniformly one of 31} gallons.-Am. Ed.] BARWOOD, a red dye wood brought from Africa, particularly from Angola, and the river Gaboon. The dark red which is commonly seen upon British Bandana handkerchiefs is for the most part produced by the colouring matter of barwood, saddened by sulphate of iron-(Bancroft on Colours.) The imports of barwood, in 1829, amounted to 246 tons 15 cwt. It fetches at present (October, 1833) from 9/. to 11/ a ton (duty 5s. included) in the London market. BASKETS (Fr. Corbeilles; Ger. Körbe; It. Paniere; Sp. Canastas, Canastos; Rus. Korsinü) are made, as every one knows, principally of the interwoven twigs of willow, osier, birch, &c., but frequently also of rushes, splinters of wood, straw, and an immense number of other articles. They are used to hold all sorts of dry goods, and are constructed of every variety of quality and shape. Besides the vast quantities produced at home, some of the finer kinds are imported under an ad valorem duty of 20 per cent. In 1832, this duty produced 1,044L 7s. 9d., showing that the value of the foreign baskets entered for home consumption in the same year had been 5,2214 18s. 9d. BAST, for straw hats or bonnets. See HATS. BATAVIA, a city of the island of Java, the capital of the Dutch possessions in the East Indies, and the principal trading port of the Oriental islands, in lat. 6° 12' S., long. 106° 54' E., situated in the north-west part of the island, on an extensive bay. The harbour, or rather road, lies between the main land and several small uninhabited islands, which, during the boisterous or north-western monsoon, afford sufficient shelter and good anchorage. Ships of from 300 to 500 tons anchor at about a mile and a half from shore. A small river runs through the town, navigable for vessels of from 20 to 40 tons, from the sea, a couple of miles inland; a number of canals branch off from it into different parts of the town, afford- ing great conveniences for trade. Batavia was formerly so notorious for its insalubrity, that General Daendels was anxious to transfer the seat of government to Sourabaya; but being thwarted in this, he set about building a new town, a little further inland, on the heights of Weltevreden, whither the government offices were immediately removed. Most of the principal merchants have now their residences in the new town, repairing only to the old city, when business requires it, during a portion of the day. In consequence, the old town is at present principally occupied by Chinese, and the descendants of the ancient colonists, several of its streets having been deserted and demolished. Recently, however, the Baron Capellen, whose enlightened administration will long be gratefully remembered in Java, sensible of the superior advantages of the old town as a place of trade, exerted himself to prevent its further decay, by removing the causes of its unhealthiness; to accomplish which, he widened several of the streets, filled up some of the canals, and cleaned others, demolished useless fortifications, &c.; and the effect of these judicious measures has been, that Batavia is now as healthy as any other town in the island. The population, according to an accurate census taken in 1824, consisted of 3,025 Europeans and their descendants, 23,108 natives, 14,708 Chinese, 601 Arabe, and 12,419 slaves; in all, 53,861 persons, exclusive of the garrison. As the population has increased since, it may at present be estimated at about 60,000, independently of the military, of which there are always a considerable number. Among the principal merchants are Dutch, English, Americans, French, and Germans. The island of Java forms the most important portion of the Dutch possessions in the East, and is, VoL. I. 23 Digitized by Google 178 BATAVIA. in fact, one of the finest colonies in the world. It contains an area of 50,000 square miles, with a population of 6,000,000 individuals, or 120 to the square mile. The annual revenue of the Dutch government, which possesses about two thirds of the island, amounts to about 3,000,000/. sterling ; and the military force amounts to about 15,000; of which not less than 8,000 are European troops, being about one third of the whole European force in British India, which has a population of 90,000,000, and an area of between 1,200,000 and 1,300,000 square miles of territory. The staple products of the island are rice (of which 25,500 tons were exported in 1828), a variety of pulses, vegetable oils, tobacco, sugar, and coffee. The production of sugar is rapidly increasing. In 1832 the exports were estimated at 200,000 piculs (12,000 tons) but it was supposed that the exports in 1833 would not fall short of 18,000 tons; and as the Dutch authorities have made extensive contracts with the owners of large tracts of land to take sugar at very remunerating prices for some years to come, it has been calculated that the exports of 1834 would amount to 400,000 piculs, or about 24,000 tons. The produc- tion of indigo, cocoa, tea, and raw silk, is making considerable progress. The tin exported from Batavia is brought from Banca, the copper from Japan, the finer spices from the Moluccas, and the pepper from Sumatra. In 1828, the exports from and imports into Batavia were, in quantity and value, as follows :- Exports. Imports. Piculs of Articles. Florins. Piculs of 136 lbs. each. Articles. 136 lbs. each. Florins. Coffee 416,171 8,024,039 Cotton manufactures, Netherlands - 2,940,635 Mace 600 96,078 English - 1,819,435 Cloves 1,832 229,107 French - 18,679 Nutmegs 1,647 221,121 Woollen ditto Netherlands - 246,545 Rice 419,499 1,194,486 English and French - 16,861 Tin 19,554 866,521 Provisions from England only - 522,342 Sugar 25,869 456,084 Brandy and geneva - 322,606 Birds' nests - 521,392 Wines - 1,154,868 Piece goods - 499,470 Opium, Levant 559 717,529 Java tobacco - 401,002 Bengal 110 314,300 Pepper 8,226 151,537 Lead 2,891 76,612 Rattans 31,301 141,506 Copper, Europe 354 45,110 Salt 24,930 119,890 Japan 11,631 988,635 Japan and sandal wood 7,240 96,474 Steel from the Netherlands 726 22,963 Indigo 188 04,342 England 404 12,625 Arrack Leg.533 86,362 Sweden 186 5,812 Hides 52,140 Iron from Sweden 3,200 23,276 Turmeric 5,412 42,038 England 4,593 45,050 Horses 384 (to the Isle of France) - 35,975 Netherlands 9,033 138,003 Tortoiseshell 37 57,941 Cotton piece goods, Bengal and Madras - 787,917 Japan camphor 489 43,200 Cotton yarn from the Netherlands 99 1,146 Articles not specified - 2,859,336 ditto English 243 41,430 Treasure - 1,209,294 Gambir (terra Japonica) - 477,854 Rattans - 223,667 Total - 17,499,341 Tripang (Holothurion) - 380,964 Silk and cotton piece goods, Chinese ma- nufacture - 366,701 Marine stores - 264,226 Articles not specified - 3,383,596 Treasure - 2,616,707 Total - 17,976,094 The following Table shows the different Countries with which Batavia carries on Trade, and the Value of the Export and Import Trade with each, in 1828. Imports. Exports. From Merchandise. Treasure. Total. To Merchandise. Treasure. Total Florins. Florins. Florins. Florins. Florins. Florins. Netherlands - 6,459,852 1,001,913 7,461,765 Netherlands - 9,188,929 279,601 9,398,530 England - 2,166,515 - 2,166,515 England - 200,962 165,750 366,712 France - - 139,302 I 139,302 France - - 102,628 7,650 110,278 Hamburgh - 59,932 16,830 76,762 Hamburgh - 85,174 - 85,174 Gibraltar - 18,275 89,250 107,525 Sweden - 23,652 - 23,652 Sweden - - 30,384 - 30,384 U.S. of America 120,880 - 120,880 U.S. of America 305,161 697,210 1,002,371 Cape Good Hope 1,970 - 1,970 Cape Good Hope 1,624 - 1,624 Isle of France 88,547 62,523 151,070 Isle of France 21,051 - 21,051 Mocha - - 28,481 - 28,481 Persian Gulf - 1,510 - 1,510 Persian Gulf - 112,957 - 112,957 Bengal - - 737,424 10,200 747,621 Bombay - - 3,055 - 3,055 Siam - - 131,004 I 131,001 Bengal - - 77,497 2,040 79,537 Cochin China - 4,909 - 4,909 Siam - 77,451 22,785 100,236 China - - 585,566 5,408 590,974 Cochin China - 21,883 - 21,883 Macao - - 65,628 - 65,625 China - - 1,474,486 87,167 1,561,653 Manilla - - 29,989 - 29,989 Macao - - 78,361 15,536 93,897 Japan - - 1,067,231 - 1,067,231 Manilla - - 35,240 37,500 72,740 New Holland - 7,613 2,550 10,163 Japan - - 291,263 22,050 313,313 Eastern Ar- chipelago s 3,526,415 793,346 4,319,761 New Holland - 75,083 1,377 76,460 Eastern Ar- chipelago 271,544 505,314 4,776,858 Total - 15,359,387 2,616,707 17,976,094 ' Total - 16,290,046 1,209,294 17,499,341 * The quantity of sugar exported in 1829 had risen to 80,000 piculs, and the indigo to 1,200 lbs. Digitized by Google BATAVIA. 179 The Exports and Imports under different Flags were as follow :- Imports. Exports. Florina. Cent. Florina. Cent. Netherlands - - - 12,843,901 88 Netherlands - - - 11,986,049 26 English - - - - 1,928,743 English - - - - 2,312,449 24 American (U. States) - - 1,715,306 27 French - - - - 166,025 50 Chinese - - - - 472,093 50 American (U. States) - 1,324,570 34 Siamese - - - - 314,802 941 Siamese - - - - 314,802 94 Native - - - - 473,083 73 Chinese - - - - 951,133 97 Various other flags - - 228,163 22/ Portuguese - - - 103,822 85 Various other foreign - 334,487 17,976,094 55 17,499,341 12 In 1828, the Number of Ships and Amount of Tonnage entering inwards and clearing outwards under different Flags were as follow: Outwards. Inwards. Number of Tonnage in Number of Flag. Vessels. Flag. Tonnage in Lasts. Vessels. Lasts. Netherlands - - 843 45,689 Netherlands - - 801 45,684 English - - - 68 14,7781 English - - - 54 10,7991 French - - - 9 8611 French - - - 8 6921 Hamburgh - - 1 137 Hamburgh - - 1 137 Danish - - - 1 85 Danish - - - 1 85 Swedish - - - 1 66 Swedish - - - 1 66 Russian - - - 1 153 Russian - - ⑉ 1 153 Spanish - - - 2 420 Spanish - - - 3 505 Portuguese - - 4 9621 Portuguese - - 4 9621 American - - 19 3,116 American - - - 14 2,087 Chinese - - - 8 805 Chinese - - - 8 805 Siamese - - 7 308 Siamese - - - 9 4971 Other Asiatic - - 26 813 Other Asiatic - - 55 804 1,026 68,1941 960 63,278 Note.-Taking the last at 2 tons, the quantity of tonnage which cleared outwards will be 136,389, and inwards 126,556 tons. Pert Regulations.-The following is the substance of the port regulations of Batavia :-1st. The commander of a ship arriving in the roads, is not to land himself, or permit any of his crew or passen- gers to land, until his vessel be visited by a boat from the guard-ship.-2d. The master, on landing is first to wait on the master attendant, and afterwards report himself at the police office.-3d. A mani- fest of the whole cargo must be delivered at the Custom-house within 24 hours of the ship's arriving in the roads.-4th. The master of the vessel must lodge the ship's papers with the master attendant when he first lands, which are duly delivered up to him when he receives his port clearance from the same authority.-5th. No goods can be shipped or landed after sunset, under a penalty of 500 florins. -6th. No goods can be shipped on Sunday without a special permission from the water fiscal, which, however, is never refused on application.-7th. No muskets or ammunition can be imported; but the prohibition does not extend to fowling pieces exceeding 100 florins value. Tariff.With respect to the tariff. all foreign woollens and cottons. being the manufacture of coun- tries to the westward of the Cape of Good Hope, imported under a foreign flag, pay an ad valorem duty of 26+ per cent., and under the Netherlands flag, of 121 per cent., that is, a duty upon the wholesale price at Batavia, not in bond. With the exception of wines, spirits, and opium, which pay a rated duty, all other articles, if imported under a foreign flag, pay an ad valorem duty, rated on the invoice value, of 16:38 per cent., and if under the Netherlands flag, of 8.19 per cent. Cottons and woollens, the manufacture of the Netherlands, if accompanied by a certificate of origin, are duty free but since the separation of Belgium and Holland, there have been no importations of cotton manufactures claiming this privilege. The export duty on coffee, if exported on a foreign bottom to a foreign coun- try, is 5 florins per picul; if on a foreign bottom to a port in the Netherlands, 4 florins; and if on a Netherlands bottom to a Netherlands port, 2 florins. Sugar, if exported on a foreign bottom to what- ever country, pays 1 florin per picul; but if exported on a Netherlands bottom to a Netherlands port, is duty free. Rice, on whatever bottom exported, and to whatever country, pays a duty of 3 florins per coyang of 27 piculs. Tin, exported on a foreign ship to whatever port, 4 florins per picul and by a Netherlands ship, 2 florins per picul. The trade in spices is now monopolised by the Netherlands Trading Company. Goods are received in entrepôt not only at Batavia, but at the ports of Samarang, Sourabaya, and Anjie in Java, and Rhio in the Straits of Malacca, on payment of a duty of 1 per cent. levied on the invoice value. Money.-Accounts are kept at Batavia, in the florin or guilder, divided into centimes, or 100 parts, represented by a proper coinage or doits. The florin is a new coin made expressly for India, but of the same value as the florin current in the Netherlands. It is usually estimated at the rate of 12 to the pound sterling, but the correct par is 11 florins 58 centimes per pound. Doubloons, and the coins of Continental India, are receivable at the Custom-house at a fixed tariff; the Spanish dollar, for exam- ple, at the rate of 100 for 260 florins. Weights.-The Chinese weights are invariably used in commercial transactions at Batavia, and throughout Java and the other Dutch possessions in India. These are the picul. and the cattie, which is its hundredth part. The picul is commonly estimated at 125 Dutch, or 1334 lbs. avoirdupois, but at Batavia it has been long ascertained and considered to be equal to 136 lbs. avoirdupois.- Hogendorp, Coup d' CEil sur l'Ile de Java, cap. 8. &c.; Evidence of Gillian Maclaine, Esq. before the Select Commit- tee of the House of Commons on the Affairs of the East India Company, 1831, and pricute communications from the same.) Digitized by Google 180 BATTEN-BEECH. (Statements with respect to the Imports and Exports of Java during the Years 1830-1834.) Exports. Imports of Cotton Total Im- Indiga. Tin, Exports. Years. Goods from Europa. ports, Value Coffee. Sugar. Rice. Pounds, old Banca. Value in Pepper. Value in Florian. in Florins. Piculs. Piculs. Coyange. Ameterdam Piculs. Florina. Piculs. weight, 1830. Nethds. 2,873,309 15,681,978 288,742 108,640 14,521 22,063 21,425 14,501,779 6,061 Foreign 1,510,786 1831. Nethds. 1,399,905 14,178,401 299,096 120,298 18,637 42,841 30,255 14,702,148 7,836 Foreign 1,546,791 1832. Nethds. 67,240 12,190,067 314,173 245,872 23,072 108,211 47,801 21,031,099 7,075 Foreign 1,891,611 1833. Foreign 3,984,066 17,864,577 360,166 210,947 30,344 217,480 Return 23,343,327 Return wanting. wanting. 1834. Nethda. 313,549 455,008 367,131 25,379 250,433 39,165 29,021,217 7,704 Foreign 4,111,282 Among the articles imported into Java, in 1834, were copper, iron, steel, &c. value 875,166 florins glass and earthenware, 299,321 do.; wines and spirits, 951,345 do.; provisions, 496,158, &c. The total value of the exports, in 1834, was, 29.021,217 florins, which, at 20d. to the florin, is equal to 2,418,435. We have not learned the exact amount of the imports during the same year, but taking them at 2,000,000L. the whole trade of the island would amount to about 4,400,000L. or 4,500,000. Remarks on the above Statements.-These statements show, that the trade of Java has increased very materially since 1830. In fact, there wants nothing but an enlightened, liberal administration, that by dealing fairly by, and giving confidence to the natives, should develope the resources of this noble island, to render Java by far the most valuable of all the eastern colonial possessions of any European power. It is due to the Dutch to state, that their colonial government is now materially improved, as compared with what it formerly was; but it is still susceptible of much amendment; and it is to be hoped, seeing the wonderful influence that a more liberal system has had in Cuba, and other foreign colonies, and even in Java itself, that the administration of the latter will be still farther improved. It is stated in the Dictionary (p. .) that the export of coffee from Java might be estimated at about 18,000 tons but it appears from the above table, that it has increased so rapidly that it amounted, in 1834-5, taking the picul at 136 lbs., to 61,881,088 lbs., or to above 27,000 tons! The export of sugar during the same year exceeded 22,300 tons.-Sup.) BATTEN, a name in common use for a scantling of wood 21 inches thick and 7 wide. If above 8 inches wide, it is called deal. BAZAAR, a term used in the East to designate a market, or building in which various articles of merchandise are exposed for sale. Bazaars are now met with in most large cities of Europe. There are several in London, of which the one in Soho-square is the most considerable. BDELLIUM (Arab. Aflatoon), a gum-resin, semi-pellucid, and of a yellowish brown or dark brown colour according to its age, unctuous to the touch, but brittle; soon, however, softening between the fingers; in appearance it is not unlike myrrh, of a bitterish taste, and moderately strong smell. Two kinds have been distinguished: the opoculpasum of the ancients, which is thick like wax; and the common dark sort. It is found in Persia and Arabia, but principally in the latter; all that is met with in India is of Arabic origin. The tree which produces it has not been clearly ascertained.-(Ainslie's Materia Indica.) BEACONS, in commerce and navigation, public marks or signals to give warning of rocks, shoals, &c. No man is entitled to erect a light-house, beacon, &c., without being empowered by law. The Trinity House corporation are authorised to set up beacons in whatever places they shall think fit; and any person who shall wilfully remove or run down any buoy, beacon, &c. belonging to the Trinity House, or to any other corporation, indivi- dual or individuals, having authority to establish it, shall, besides being liable to the expense of replacing the same, forfeit a sum not less than 10/. nor more than 50L for every such of- fence.-(6 Geo. 4. c. 125. 91.)-(See Buors.) BEADS (Fr. Rosaires; Ger. Rosenkränze; Du. Paternosters; It. Corone; Sp. Coronas), small globules or balls used as necklaces, and made of different materials; as pearl, steel, amber, garnet, coral, diamonds, crystal, glass, &c. Roman Catholics use beads in rehears- ing their Ave Marias and Paternosters. Glass beads or bugles are imported in large quan- tities into India and Africa, and also into Borneo and Sumatra. They are brought partly from Europe, and partly from China and the Persian Gulf. The glass beads sent from England are all imported, principally, we believe, from Venice. The non-manufacture in this country is said to be a consequence of the excise regulations on the manufacture of glass. BEANS (Fr. Fêves; Ger. Bohnen; It. Fave; Rus. Boobü; Sp. Habas; Lat. Fabæ), a well-known vegetable of the pulse species, largely cultivated both in gardens and fields. Its cultivation is of much importance in rural economy, inasmuch as it has gone far to super- sede fallows on strong loams and clays. BEAVER. See SKINS. BEECH (Fagus sylvatica), a forest tree to be met with every where in England. -There is only one species, the difference in the wood proceeding from the difference of soil and situation. A considerable quantity of beech is grown in the southern parts of Bucks. It is not much used in building, as it soon rots in damp places; but it is used as piles in places where it is constantly wet. It is manufactured into a great variety of tools, for which Digitized by Google BEEF-BERRIES. 181 its great hardness and uniform texture render it superior to all other sorts of wood; it is also extensively used in making furniture. BEEF, as every one knows, is the flesh of the ox. It is used either fresh or salted. Formerly it was usual for most families, at least in the country, to supply themselves with a stock of salt beef in October or November, which served for their consumption until the ensuing summer; but in consequence of the universal establishment of markets where fresh beef may be at all times obtained, the practice is now nearly relinquished, and the quantity of salted beef made use of as compared with fresh beef is quite inconsiderable. Large supplies of salted beef are, however, prepared at Cork and other places for exportation to the East and West Indies. During the war, large supplies were also required for victualling the navy. The vessels engaged in the coasting trade, and in short voyages, use only fresh provisions. The English have at all times been great consumers of beef; and at this moment more beef is used in London, as compared with the population, than any where else.-(For further details with respect to the consumption of beef, &c., see CATTLE.) BEER. See ALE AND BEER. BELL-METAL (Fr. Metal de Fonte ou de Cloches; Ger. Glockengut; Du. Klokspys, Sp. Campanil; Rus. Koloklnaja mjed), a composition of tin and copper, usually consisting of 3 parts of copper and 1 of tin. Its colour is greyish white; it is very hard, sonorous, and elastic. Less tin is used for church bells than for clock bells; and in very small bells, a little zinc is added to the alloy-(Thomson's Chemistry.) BENZOIN. See BALSAM. BERGEN, the first commercial city of Norway. situated at the bottom of a deep bay, in lat. 60° 24' N., long. 5° 20' E. Population 21,000. The bay is inclosed on all sides by rugged rocks and islands the water is deep.; but, owing to the number and intricacy of the passages, the access to the town is attended at all times with a good deal of difficulty, and should never be attempted without a pilot. Codfish, salted or dried, is one of the principal articles of export; when dried, it is called stock-fish, and goes chiefly to Italy and Holland. The cod fishery employs several thousand persons during the months of February and March; and the exports amounted, in 1829, to 184,064 barrels. The herring fishery, which used to be very successfully carried on upon the coasts of Norway, has, for a good many years, been comparatively unproductive. Whale oil, skins, bones, tar, with immense num- bers of lobsters, &c., are exported. The exports of timber from Bergen are inconsiderable, and none has latterly gone to England. Norway timber is not so large as that brought from Prussian ports, nor so free from knots; but, being of slower growth, it is more compact, and less liable to rot. The planks are either red or white fir or pine: the red wood is pro- duced from the Scotch fir; the white wood, which is inferior in price and estimation, is the produce of the spruce fir: each tree yields three pieces of timber of 11 or 12 feet in length; and is 70 or 80 years of age before it arrives at perfection. The planks or deals of Bergen are, however, a good deal inferior to those of Christiania. The imports into Bergen prin- cipally consist of grain from the Baltic; and salt, hardware, coffee, sugar, &c. from England. For Monies, Weights, and Measures, see CHRISTIANIA where there are further details as to the trade and navigation of Norway. We subjoin an account of the principal exports from Bergen in 1829. Bones - - - 50 tons. Oil, whale - - 2,402 tuns. Fish, Lobsters - - - 250,000 number. Skins, goat, buck, and deer - 440 cwt. Cod, smoked and dry - 15,373 tons. sheep and lamb - 75 do. - salt - - 184,064 barrels. fox, martin, otter, &c. 97 skins. - roe, ditto - - 13,927 do. Tar - 451 barrels Pickled sprate - - 1,912 kegs. Wood, timber and deals - 380 tons. Horns, ox and cow - - 178 cwt. staves - 800 number. Moss, rock - - - 131 tons. (Private information.) BERRIES (Baccæ), the fruits or seeds of many different species of plants. The berries quoted in London Price Currents are bay, juniper, Turkey, and Persian. 1. Bay Berries (Fr. Baies de Laurier; Ger. Lorbeeren; It. Bacchi di Lauro: Sp. Bayas), the fruit of the Laurus nobilis. This tree is a native of the south of Europe, but it is cultivated in this country, and is not uncommon in our gardens. The berry is of an oval shape, fleshy, and of a dark purple colour, almost black; it has a sweet fragrant odour, and an aromatic astringent taste. Bay berries, and the oil obtained by boiling them in water, are imported from Italy and Spain.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) 2. Juniper Berries (Fr. Genévrier; Du. Sevenboom; It. Ginepro; Sp. Embro), the fruit of the common juniper (Juniperus communis). They are round, of a black purple colour, and require two years to ripen. They have a' moderately strong, not disagreeable, but peculiar smell, and a warm, pungent, sweetish taste, which, if they be long chewed, or previously well bruised, is followed by a considerable bitterness. They are found in this country but most of those made use of here are imported from Holland, Germany, and Italy. They should be chosen fresh, not much shrivelled, and free from mouldiness, which they are apt to contract in keeping. On distillation with water, they yield a volatile essential oil, very subtile and pungent, and in smell greatly resembling the berries. The peculiar VOL. I.-Q Digitized by Google 182 BERYL, BETEL-NUT. flavour and diuretic qualities of Geneva depend principally on the presence of this oil. Eng- lish gin is said to be, for the most part, flavoured with oil of turpentine.-(Lewis's Mat. Med.; Thomson's Dispensatory.) The duty on juniper berries, previously to 1832, was 11s. 1d. a cwt., being more than 100 per cent. on their price in bond. The oppressiveness of this duty seems to have been the principal reason why turpentine, which in point of flavour and all other respects is so in- ferior, has been largely used in preference to juniper berries in the preparation of gin. This oppressive duty was reduced, in 1832, to 2s., and we entertain little doubt that this wise and liberal measure will at no distant period occasion the receipt of a greater amount of revenue, at the same time that it cannot fail materially to improve the beverage of a large proportion of the people. Italian juniper berries fetch at present (Sept. 1833), in the London market, from 9s. 6d. to 10s. 6d. a cwt., duty included; and German and Dutch ditto, from 8s. to 9s. 3. Turkey Yellow Berries, the unripe fruit of the Rhamnus infectorius of Linnæus. They are used as a dye drug, in preparing a lively but very fugitive yellow, for topical ap- plication in calico-printing. Considerable quantities of them are exported from Salonica, to which they are brought from Thessaly and Albania. An inferior sort is produced in France. -(Bancroft on Colours.) The duty on Turkey berries is 2s.; and their price, duty in- cluded, in the London market, is (Sept. 1833) 34s. to 36s. a cwt. 4. Persian Yellow Berries are said by the merchants to be of the same species as the Turkey yellow berries. The colours which they yield are more lively and lasting. They are high priced, fetching (duty 2s. included) from 110s. to 130s. a cwt. Hitherto the imports have been very inconsiderable; the yellow berries (Turkey as well as Persian) entered for home consumption during the 3 years ending with 1831, being only 1,939 cwt. a year. The nett revenue derived from all sorts of berries imported in 1832, was 3,062/. 12s. 4d. BERYL, called by the jewellers Aquamarine. This stone was suspected by Pliny to be a variety of the emerald a conjecture which modern mineralogists have completely confirm- ed. The term emerald is applied to that particular variety which presents its own peculiar colour, or emerald green while that of beryl is given indiscriminately to all the other varie- ties; as the sea green, pale blue, golden yellow, and colourless. Pliny says that the beryl is found in India, and rarely elsewhere; but besides India, it is found in Peru and Brazil; at Nantes and Limoges, in France; in the Wicklow mountains, in Ireland in the district of Cairngorm, in Scotland; and in various other places.-(Plin. Hist. Nat. lib. xxxvii. cap. 5.; Ency. Brit. new edit.) Those only which are of good colour and sufficient depth are manufactured they have a.pretty, lively effect, if in good proportion and well polished. Large stones, from one to three and four ounces, are not uncommon, but from their bulk are only in request as specimens for the cabinet smaller stones suitable for necklaces may be bought at low prices, within the reach of every description of purchasers; ring stones may be had at a few shillings each; and larger, for brooches or seals, from 11. to 51. and often lower. (Mawe on Diamonds. FC. 2d Edit.) BETEL-NUT, OR ARECA (Sans. and Hind. Supari; Malay, Pinang, Javan. Jambi), the fruit of the Areca catechu, a slender and graceful palm, rising to the height of about 30 or 40 feet it produces fruit at the age of five or six years, and continues bearing till its 25th or 30th year. The fruit, which is the only part of the palm that is made use of, is eaten both in its unripe and in its mature state. When ripe, it is of the size of a small egg, and of an orange colour; the exterior part consists of a soft, spongy, fibrous matter, inclosing a nucleus resembling a nutmeg in shape, internal structure, and colour, but usually larger, and always harder. A single tree produces, according to its situation, age, culture, &c., from 200 to 800 nuts. They are objects of great importance in the East, forming the principal ingredient of a compound in universal use as a masticatory in all Central and Tropical Asia. The other ingredients are the leaf of the Betel pepper-(which see), in which the areca nut is wrap- ped; a little CHUNAM-(which see) and generally, but not always, a little catechu or terra japonica-(see CATECHU). The whole compound is called betel, and is used to an extent of which it is difficult for a European to form a just idea. All individuals, without exception of age or sex, begin at an early period to accustom themselves to betel. They are unceasing- ly masticating it, and derive a gratification from its use that strangers can neither under- stand nor explain. It reddens the saliva, gives a bright hue to the lips, and, in course of time, renders the teeth quite black. It is said to dispel nausea, excite appetite, and strengthen the stomach. Besides being used as an article of luxury, it is a kind of ceremonial which regulates the intercourse of the more polished classes of the East. When any person of consideration visits another, after the first salutations, betel is presented; to omit it on the one part would be considered neglect, and its rejection would be judged an affront on the other. No one of inferior rank addresses a dignified individual without the previous precau- tion of chewing betel; two people seldom meet without exchanging it; and it is always offered on the ceremonious interviews of public missionaries. The areca nut is, in conse- quence, an article of very extensive trade. The countries which yield it most largely for exportation are Malabar, Ceylon, and Sumatra. Of the extent of this trade, some notion may be formed from the fact, that the imports of areca into Bengal in 1829-30, were 695 Digitized by Google BETEL-LEAF-BILBAO. 183 tons, and into Canton, 2,894 tons, though Bengal and Southern China are countries in which areca is largely produced.-(See the article Betel in the new edition of the Ency. Britannica; Bell's Review of the External Commerce of Bengal; Crawford's Indian Archipelago, vol. i. p. 102., vol. iii. p.414.; Chinese Kalendar and Register for 1832, &c.) BETEL-LEAF (Hind. Pan; Malay, Sireh; Javan. Suro), the leaf alluded to in the foregoing article. It is the produce of a species of pepper vine (Piper betel), and some- what resembles the ivy leaf. In their fresh state, betel leaves form an important article of Eastern traffic, being every where used in the preparation of betel. The Piper betel is a scandent plant, and poles are placed in the ground, round which it twines itself. In conse- quence of the great consumption of its leaves, it is extensively cultivated throughout Tropical Asia. It grows in the greatest perfection in rich soils close to the equator; and is raised with more difficulty the further we recede from it.-(Ency. Britannica, new edition, article Betel; Crawford's Indian Archipelago, vol. i. p. 403.) BEZOAR (Arab. Faduj; Hind. Zeher-morah; Pers. Padzehr Kanie), a concretion found in the stomach of an animal of the goat kind it has a smooth glossy surface, and is of a dark green or olive colour; the word bezoar, however, has lately been extended to all the concretions found in animals ;-such as the hog bezoar, found in the stomach of the wild boar in India; the bovine bezoar, found in the gall-bladder of the ox, common in Nepaul and the camel bezoar, found in the gall-bladder of the camel; this last is much prized as a yellow paint by the Hindoos. The finest bezoar is brought to India from Borneo and the sea-ports of the Persian Gulf; the Persian article is particularly sought after, and is said to be procured from animals of the goat kind, Capra Gazella. Many extraordinary virtues were formerly ascribed to this substance, but without any sufficient reason.-(Ainslie's Ma- teria Indica.) BILBAO, OR (as it is commonly, though incorrectly, written in this country) BILBOA, a sea-port town of Spain, in the province of Biscay, on the river Ybai Cabal, about 9 miles from Portugalete. Population 14,500. Port.-The bay of Bilbao lies between Punto Galea on its east, and Punto Luzuero on its western side, distant about 3 miles. It stretches S. E. to within 4 of a mile of Portugalete, in lat. 43° 20' 10" N., long. 2° 541' W., near the mouth of the river on which Bilbao is built. The water in the bay va- ries from 5 to 10 and 14 fathoms. There is a bar at the mouth of the river, between Santurce and Portugalete, on which there is not above four feet water at ebb tide. High water at full and change at 3 h. P. M. Spring tides rise about 13 feet; and large ships taking advantage of them sometimes ascend the river as far as Bilbao; but they usually load and unload by lighters, either at Portugalete, or at Olaviaga, 4 miles below the town. Pilots are to be had at Santurce, without the bar. In win- ter, a heavy sea sometimes sets into the bay but if the pilot cannot go off, he places himself on one of the batteries to the N. W. of Santurce, and makes signals with a red flag, so as to direct the ship to the best anchorage ground.-(See Laurie's excellent Chart of the Bay of Biscay, with the Sailing Directions that accompany it.) Trade.-Bilbao is favourably situated for commerce. The Biscayans are distinguished for the zeal and courage with which they have defended their peculiar privileges, and for their industry and activity. Bilbao and Santander are the principal ports through which the extensive province of Old Castile, and large portions of Leon and Navarre, most easily communicate with foreign countries. They have in consequence, particularly the former, a pretty considerable foreign trade. Wool is one of the principal articles of export; but since the introduction of Merino sheep into Germany, and their extraordinary increase in that country, this branch of Spanish commerce, though still of a good deal of importance, has materially declined. Since the abolition, in 1820, of all restrictions on the exportation of corn, flour, &c., the shipments of wheat from Bilbao have been, in some years, very con- siderable. The supplies are principally brought from the provinces of Palencia, Valladolid, and Zamora, which yield immense quantities of wheat. The distance is from 130 to 140 English miles; and owing to the badness of the roads, and the deficient means of transport, the rate of carriage advances enormously when there is any extraordinary foreign demand. If the Canal of Castile, intended to unite the Douro with Reynosa, Bilbao, and Santander, were completed, it would make a considerable revolution in this trade. The campos, or plains, on the south side of the Douro, are amongst the finest wheat countries in the world the crops being frequently so abundant, that the peasants decline reaping the fields at a distance from the villages! In 1831, 146,234 quarters of Spanish wheat, principally from Bilbao, were imported into Great Britain. The iron manufactures of Biscay are in a state of considerable activity, and some part of the produce is exported. The principal ar- ticles of importation are wove fabrics, cod-fish, cutlery, and jewellery; sugar, coffee, cacao, and other colonial products, spices, indigo, &c. In 1831, 210 foreign ships, of the burden of 18,822 tons, entered the port of Bilbao. The countries to which these ships belonged are not mentioned but in 1828, 49 British ships, of the burden of 6,051 tons, entered the port-(We have derived these details from the Foreign Quarterly Review, No. 9. art. Spain; the Annuaire du Commerce Maritime for 1833, p. 265. the Parl. Paper, No. 550. Sess. 1833 ; and private information.) Monies, Weights, and Measures, same as those of CADIZ; which see. We may mention, however, that the fanega, or measure for grain, is equivalent to 1:65 Winchester quarters. Digitized by Google 184 BILL OF EXCHANGE-BILL OF LADING. BILL OF EXCHANGE. See EXCHANGE. BILL OF HEALTH, a certificate or instrument signed by consuls or other proper au- thorities, delivered to the masters of ships at the time of their clearing out from all ports or places suspected of being particularly subject to infectious disorders, certifying the state of health at the time that such ships sailed. A clean bill imports, that at the time that the ship sailed no infectious disorder was known to exist. A suspected bill, commonly called a touched patent or bill, imports that there were rumours of an infectious disorder, but that it had not actually appeared. A foul bill, or the absence of clean bills, imports that the place was infected when the vessel sailed.-(See QUARANTINE.) BILL OF LADING, is a formal receipt subscribed by the master of a ship in his ca- pacity of carrier, acknowledging that he has received the goods specified in it on board his ship, and binding himseif (under certain exceptions) to deliver them, in the like good order as received, at the place, and to the individual named in the bill, or his assigns, on his or their paying him the stipulated freight, &c. When goods are sent by a ship hired by a charter-party, the bills of lading are delivered by the master to the merchant by whom the ship is chartered; but when they are sent by a general ship,-that is, by a ship not hired by charter-party, but employed as a general carrier,-each individual who sends goods on board, receives a bill of lading for the same. In all cases, therefore, the bill of lading is the evidence of and title to the goods shipped. The liability of a carrier, at common law, to deliver the goods intrusted to his care, is can- celled only by " the act of God and the king's enemies." But to limit this responsibility, the following exception is now, invariably almost, introduced into the clause in bills of lading, bind- ing the master to the delivery of the goods act of God, the king's enemies, fire, and all and every other dangers and accidents of the seas, rivers, and navigation, of whatever nature and kind soever, excepted." Bills of lading are not, in general, immediately given by the master on receiving the goods. The usual practice is for the master or his deputy to give a common receipt for the goods, which is delivered up on receiving the bill of lading. The latter should always be required within 24 hours after the goods are received on board. Three sets of all bills of lading are made out on stamped paper one of these should be re- mitted by the first post to the person to whom the goods are consigned, a second being sent to him by the ship; the third is retained by the shipper of the goods. The master ought al- ways to retain copies of the bills of lading for his government. A stamp duty of 3s. is charged on all bills of lading, whether for goods exported or carried coastwise. The usual form of a bill of lading is as follows :- W.B. N. B.-SHIPPED, in good order and well conditioned, by A. B. merchant, in and upon No. 1. a. 10. the good ship called whereof C. D. is master, now in the river Thames. and bound for , the goods following, viz. [here describe the goods,] marked and numbered as per margin, to be delivered, in the like good order and condition, at aforesaid, (the act of God, the king's enemies, fire, and all and every other dangers and accidents of the seas, rirers, and narigation, of whatever nature and kind so- over, excepted,) unto the said A. B. or his assigns, he or they paying for the said goods at the rate of per piece freight, with primage and average accustomed. In witness whereof, 1 the said master of the said ship, have affirmed to three bills of lading. of this tenour and date ; any one of which bills being accomplished, the other two are to be void. London, this day of , 1834. C. D., Master. But in the case of ships homeward bound from the West Indies, which send their boats to fetch the cargo from the shore, the exception in the bill of lading is usually expressed as fol- lows:-"The act of God, the king's enemies, fire, and all and every other dangers and acci- dents of the seas, rivers, and navigation, of whatever nature and kind soever, save risks of boats, 80 far as ships are liable thereto, excepted." Other exceptions may be and are some- times introduced but the above is the general form. Transfer of Bills of Lading.-Bills of lading are transferable either by blank or special indorsement, like bills of exchange. And whatever may be the character of the person to whom the goods are consigned, whether he be a buyer, or merely the factor, agent, or broker of the consignor, the bona fide holder of the bill of lading indorsed by the consignee, is en- titled to the goods, and may claim them from the master, if he can prove that he has pur- chased the bill for a good consideration, but unless he can do this, he is not entitled to the goods.-(Holt, Law of Shipping, 2d ed. p. 363.) Formerly, a factor, though he might sell, could not pledge the goods of his principal. But the hardship and inconvenience arising from this rule were such, that it was set aside by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 94. The second section of this act declares, that any person in possession of a bill of lading shall be deemed the true owner of the goods specified in it, so as to make a sale or pledge by him of such goods or bill of lading valid, unless the person to whom the goods are sold or pledged has notice that the seller or pledger is not the actual and bona fide owner of the goods.-(See FACTOR.) Delivery under Bill of Lading.-It being usual to sign and deliver three bills of lading, it is possible that there may be conflicting demands upon the captain by the different holders. Nothing, however, is, in such a case, required of him, except that he act with good faith, and Digitized by Google BILL OF SALE-BILL OF STORE. 185 to the best of his judgment; and that he make delivery of the goods to the person who first demands them of him, upon presentment of the bill of lading, provided the circumstances be not such as to justify a suspicion of his having unfairly got possession of it. If he act dif- ferently, he is answerable, according to the peculiarities of the case, to the person injured by his negligence; the bill of lading being not only the instructions of the merchant to him, as his carrier or servant, but his own especial agreement to deliver according to its con- ditions. Where several bills of lading of a different import have been signed, no regard is to be paid to the time when they were first signed by the master; but the person who firsts gets legal possession of one of them from the owner or shipper, has a right to the consignment and where such bills of lading, though different upon the face of them, are constructively the same, and the master has acted bona fide, a delivery according to such legal title will dis- charge him from all.-(Holt, p. 375. and 377.) BILL OF SALE, a contract under seal, by which an individual conveys or passes away the right and interest he has in the goods or chattels named in the bill. The property of ships is transferred by bill of sale.-(See REGISTRY.) BILL OF SIGHT. When a merchant is ignorant of the real quantities or qualities of any goods assigned to him, 80 that he is unable to make a perfect entry of them, he must ao- quaint the collector or comptroller of the circumstance; and they are authorised, upon the importer or his agent making oath that he cannot, for want of full information, make a per- fect entry, to receive an entry by bill of sight, for the packages, by the best description which can be given, and to grant warrant that the same may be landed and examined by the im- porter in presence of the officers; and within 3 days after any goods shall have been so land- ed, the importer shall make a perfect entry, and shall either pay down the duties, or shall duly warehouse the same.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. C. 52. § 24.) In default of perfect entry within 3 days, such goods are to be taken to the king's ware- house; and if the importer shall not, within 1 month, make perfect entry, and pay the duties thereon, or on such parts as can be entered for home use, together with charges of moving and warehouse rent, such goods shall be sold for payment of the duties.-$ 25. The East India Company are authorised without the proof before-mentioned, to enter goods by bill of sight, and to make perfect entry, and pay the duties within 3 months.- $ 26. BILL OF STORE, is a license granted by the Custom-house, to merchants, to carry such stores and provisions as are necessary for a voyage, free of duty. By the act 3 and 4 Will. 4. c. 52., returned goods may be entered by bill of store, as follows:- From 5th January, 1826, it shall be lawful to re-import into the United Kingdom, from any place, in a ship of any country, any goods (except as herein-after excepted) which shall have been legally ex- ported from the United Kingdom, and to enter the same by bill of store, referring to the entry out- wards, and exportation thereof; provided the property in such goods continue in the person by whom or on whose account the same have been exported; and if the goods so returned be foreign goods which had before been legally imported into the United Kingdom, the same duties shall be payable thereon as would, at the time of such re-importation, be payable on the like goods, under the same circumstances of importation as those under which such goods had been originally imported; or such goods may be warehoused upon a first importation thereof; provided always, that the several sorts of goods enu- merated or described in the list following shall not be re-imported into the United Kingdom for home use, upon the ground that the same had been legally exported from thence, but that the same shall be deemed to be foreign goods, whether originally such or not, and shall also be deemed to be imported for the first time into the United Kingdom; viz. Goods exported, which may not be re-imported for Home Use. Corn, grain, meal, flour, and malt; hops, tobacco, tea. Goods for which any bounty or any drawback of excise had been received on exportation, unless by special permission of the commissioners of customs, and on repayment of such bounty or such drawback. All goods for which bill of store cannot be issued in manner herein-after directed, except small rem- nants of British goods, by special permission of the commissioners of customs, upon proof to their satisfaction that the same are British, and had not been sold.- 33. The person in whose name any goods 80 re-imported were entered for exportation, shall deliver to the searcher, at the port of exportation, an exact account signed by him of the particulars of such goods, referring to the entry and clearance outwards, and to the return inwards of the same, with the marks and numbers of the packages both inwards and outwards; and thereupon the searcher, finding that such goods had been legally exported, shall grant a bill of store for the same; and if the person in whose name the goods were entered for exportation was not the proprietor thereof, but his agent, he shall declare upon oath on such bill of store the name of the person by whom he was em- ployed as such agent; and if the person to whom such returns are consigned shall not be such pro- prietor and exporter, he shall declare upon oath on such bill of store the name of the person for whose use such goods have been consigned to him; and the real proprietor. ascertained to be such, shall make oath upon such bill of store to the identity of the goods 80 exported and so returned, and that he was at the time of exportation and of re-importation the proprietor of such goods, and that the same had not during such time been sold or disposed of to any other person and such affidavits shall be made before the collectors or comptrollers at the ports of exportation and of importation respectively, and thereupon the collector and comptroller shall admit such goods to entry by bill of store, and grant their warrant accordingly.-d 34. (The 6 & 7 Will. 4. c. 60. enacts, that goods legally, exported, and which are after- wards re-imported, may, if the proprietor thereof be resident abroad, be entered by bill of store, on the proprietor subscribing a declaration as to the identity of the goods, and that VoL. L-Q 2 24 Digitized by Google 186 BILLINGSGATE-BIRDS' NESTS. they did and do belong to him, and have not been sold or disposed of to any other person such declaration to be subscribed before the British Consul, &c.-(§ 2.)-Sup.) BILLINGSGATE, a market for fish, contiguous to the Custom-house in London. It is held every lawful day, and was established in 1699 by stat. 10 & 11 Will. 3. c. 24. Every person buying fish in Billingsgate market, may sell the same in any other market-place or places within the city of London or elsewhere, by retail, with this condition, that none but fishmongers be permitted to sell in fixed shops or houses. No person or persons shall pur- chase at Billingsgate any quantity of fish, to be divided by lots or in shares amongst any fishmongers or other persons, in order to be afterwards put to sale by retail or otherwise nor shall any fishmonger engross, or buy in the said market, any quantity of fish, but what shall be for his own sale or use, under the penalty of 20/. No person is to have in his possession, or expose to sale, any spawn of fish, or fish unsizeable, or out of season.-(36 Geo. 3. c. 118.) The minimum size of the lobsters to be sold at Billingsgate is fixed by statute.-(See LOBSTER.) No fish of foreign taking or curing, or in foreign vessels, is to be imported into the United Kingdom, under penalty of forfeiture, except turbots and lobsters, stock-fish, live eels, ancho- vies, sturgeon, botargo, and caviare. Fresh fish of British taking, and imported in British ships, and turbot, however taken or imported, may be landed without report, entry or war- rant.-(6 Geo. 4. c. 107.) For some further remarks with respect to this subject, see FISH. BIRCH (Fr. Bouleau; Du. Berke; Ger. Birke; It. Betulla; Lat. Betula; Pol. Brzoza; Rus. Bereza; Sp. Abedul, Betulla), a forest tree met with every where in the north of Europe. It is applied to various purposes. In Lapland, Norway, and Sweden, the long twigs of the birch are woven into mats and twisted into ropes; the outer bark forms an almost incorruptible covering for houses; and the inner bark is used in periods of scarcity, as a substitute for bread. Russia leather is prepared by means of the empyreu- matic oil of the birch. It is an excellent wood for the turner, being light, compact, and easily worked. Its durability is not very great. It is sometimes used in the manufacture of herring barrels. BIRDLIME (Ger. Vogelleim; Fr. Glu; It. Pania; Sp. Liga; Rus. Ptitschei Klei) crudes spontaneously from certain plants, and is obtained artificially from the middle bark of the holly. Its colour is greenish, its flavour sour, and it is gluey, shining, and tenacious The natural is more adhesive than the artificial birdlime.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) BIRDS' NESTS (Ger. Indianische Vogelnester ; Du. Indiaansche Vogelnestjes; Fr. Nids de Tunkin; It. Nidi di Tunchino; Sp. Nidos de la China; Java. Susu; Malay, Sarungburung), the nests of a species of swallow peculiar to the Indian islands (Hirundo esculenta), very much esteemed in China. In shape this nest resembles that of other swal- lows; it is formed of a viscid substance; and in external appearance, as well as consistence, is not unlike fibrous, ill-concocted isinglass. Esculent nests are principally found in Java, in caverns that are most frequently, though not always, situated on the sea-coast. Many conflicting statements have been made as to the substance of nests some contending that they are formed of sea-foam or other marine products, and others that they are elaborated from the food of the bird, &c. But these are points as to which nothing satisfactory is known. We borrow from Mr. Crawfurd's valuable work on the Eastern Archipelago (vol. iii. pp. 433-437.). the following authentic and curious details as to the tratiic in this singular production :- The best nests are those obtained in deep dainp caves, and such as are taken before the birds have laid their eggs. The coarsest are those obtained after the young are fledged. The finest nests are the whitest, that is, those taken before the nest has been rendered impure by the food and faces of the young birds. They are taken twice a-year, and, if regularly collected, and no unusual injury be offered to the ca- verns, will produce very equally, the quantity being very little, if at all, improved by the caves being left altogether unmolested for a year or two. Some of the caverns are extremely difficult of access, and the nests can only be collected by persons accustomed from their youth to the office. The most remarkable and productive caves in Java, of which I superintended a moiety of the collection for several years, are those of Karang-bolang, in the province of Baglen, on the south coast of the island. Here the caves are only to be approached by a perpendicular descent of many hundred feet, by ladders of bamboo and rattan, over a sea rolling violently against the rocks. When the mouth of the cavern 14 attained, the perilous office of taking the nests must often be performed by torch-light, by pene- trating into recesses of the rock where the slightest trip would be instantly fatal to the adventurers, who see nothing below them but the turbulent surf making its way into the chasms of the rock. The only preparation which the birds' nests undergo IS that of simple drying, without direct ex- posure to the sun, after which they are packed in small boxes, usually of half a picul. They are as- sorted for the Chinese market into three kinds, according to their qualities, distinguished into first or hert. second, and third qualities. Caverns that are regularly managed, will afford, in 100 parts, 53.3 parts of those of the first quality, 35 parts of those of the second, 11.7 parts of those of the third. The common prices for birds nests at Canton are, for the first sort, no less than 3,500 Spanish dollars the picul, or 51. 18s. 13d. per 1b.; for the second. 2.500 Spanish dollars per picul; and for the third, 1,600 Spanish dollars. From these prices it is sufficiently evident, that the birds' nests are no more than an article of expensive luxury. They are consumed only by the great; and, indeed, the best part is sent to the capital for the consumption of the court. The sensual Chinese use them, under the imagination that they are powerfully stimulating and tonic; but it is probable that their most valuable quality is their being perfectly harmless. The people of Japan, who so much resemble the Chinese in many of their habits, have no taste for the edible nests; and how the latter acquired a taste for this foreign commodity is no less singular than their persevering in it. Among the western Digitized by Google BISMUTH, BITUMEN. 187 nations there is nothing parallel to it, unless we except the whimsical estimation in which the Romans held some articles of luxury, remarkable for their scarcity rather than for any qualities ascribed to them." Mr. Crawfurd estimates the whole quantity of birds' nests exported from the Archipelago at 242,400 lbs. worth 284,2901. "The value," he observes, "of this immense property to the country which produces it, rests upon the capricious wants of a single people. It is claimed as the exclusive pro- perty of the sovereign, and every where forms a valuable branch of his income, or of the revenue of the state. This value, however, is of course not equal, and depends upon the situation and the cir- cumstances connected with the caverns in which the nests are found. Being often in remote and se- questered situations, in a country 80 lawless, a property so valuable and exposed is subject to the per- petual depredation of freebooters, and it not unfrequently happens that an attack upon it is the prin- cipal object of the warfare committed by one petty state against another. In such situations, the expense of affording them protection is so heavy, that they are necessarily of little value. In situa- tions where the caverns are difficult of access to strangers, and where there reigns enough of order and tranquillity to secure them from internal dépredation, and to admit of the nests being obtained without other expense than the simple labour of collecting them, the value of the property is very great. The caverns of Karang-bolang, in Java, are of this description. These annually afford 6,810 lbs. of nests, which are worth, at the Batavia prices of 3,200, 2,500, and 1,200 Spanish dollars the picul, for the respective kinds, nearly 139,000 Spanish dollars; and the whole expense of collecting, curing, and packing, amounts to no more than 11 per cent. on this amount. The price of birds' nests is of course a monopoly price, the quantity produced being by nature limited, and incapable of augmenta- tion. The value of the labour expended in bringing birds' nests to market is but a trifling portion of their price, which consists of the highest sum that the luxurious Chinese will afford to pay for them, and which is a tax paid by that nation to the inhabitants of the Indian islands. There is, perhaps, no production upon which human industry is exerted, of which the cost of production bears so small a proportion to the market price."-(See also the valuable work of Count Hogendorp, Coup d' CEil sur rile de Juva, p. 201.) BISMUTH (Ger. Wismuth; Du. Bismuth, Bergsteen, Fr. Bismuth; It. Bismutte; Sp. Bismuth, Piedra inga; Rus. Wismut; Lat. Bismuthum), a metal of a reddish white colour, and almost destitute of taste and smell. It is softer than copper; its specific gravity is 9-822. When hammered cautiously, its density is considerably increased it breaks, however, when struck smartly by a hammer, and, consequently, is not malleable, nei- ther can it be drawn out into wire; it melts at the temperature of 476°.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) Bismuth is used in the composition of pewter, In the fabrication of printers' types, and in various other metallic mixtures. With an equal weight of lead, it forms a brilliant white alloy, much harder than lead, and more malleable than bismuth, though not ductile and if the proportion of lead be in- creased, it is rendered still more malleable. Eight parts of bismuth, 5 of lead, and 3 of tin, consti- tute the fusible metal, sometimescall Newton's, from its discoverer, which melts at the heat of boil- Ing water, and may be fused over a candle in a piece of stiff paper without burning the paper. Pew- terers' solder is formed of one part of bismuth, with 5 of lead, and 3 of tin. It forms the basis of a sympathetic ink."-(Ure.) BITUMEN (Ger. Judenpech; Du. Jodenlym ; It. Asfalto; Sp. Asfalto; Port. As- phalto ; Rus. Asfalt; Lat. Asphaltum, Bitumen Judaicum). This term includes a con- siderable range of inflammable mineral substances, burning with flame in the open air. They differ in consistency, from a thin fluid to a solid but the solids are for the most part lique- fiable at a moderate heat. They are,-1. Naphtha; a fine, white, thin, fragrant, colourless oil, which issues out of white, yellow, or black clays in Persia and Media. This is highly inflammable. Near the village of Amiano, in the state of Parma, there exists a spring which yields this substance in sufficient quantity to illuminate the city of Genoa, for which purpose it is employed. With certain vegetable oils, naphtha is said to form argood varnish.-2. Petroleum is much thicker than naphtha, resembling in consistence common tar. It has a strong disagreeable odour, and a blackish or reddish brown colour. During combustion, it emits a thick black smoke, and leaves a little residue in the form of black coal. It is more abundant than the first mentioned variety, from which it does not seem to differ, except in being more inspissated. It occurs, oozing out of rocks, in the vicinity of beds of coal, or float- ing upon the surface of springs. In the Birman empire, near Rainanghong, is a hill con- taining coal, into which 520 pits have been sunk for the collection of petroleum, the annual produce of the hill being about 400,000 hogsheads. It is used by the inhabitants of that country as a lamp oil, and, when mingled with earth or ashes, as fuel. In the United States it is found abundantly in Kentucky, Ohio, and New York, where it is known by the name of Seneca or Genesee oil. It is also obtained from wells in the island of Zante. Herodotus tells us, that he has seen these wells-(lib. iv. c. 195.); and the description he has given of them, and of the mode of obtaining the petroleum, corresponds, in all respects, with the accounts of the best modern travellers. The average annual produce of the Zante springs is about 100 barrels.-Chandler's Travels in Greece, 4to ed. p. 301.; Holland's Travels in Greece, 4to ed. p. 18.) Petroleum is particularly abundant in Persia. " When taken from the pit, it is a thick liquid resembling pitch. The bottoms of most vessels which navi- gate the Euphrates and Tigris are covered with it, and it is also used in lamps, instead of oil, by the natives. The most productive fountains are those of Kerkook, Mendali, and Badku. The wells in the neighbourhood of the latter seem to be quite inexhaustible, being no sooner emptied than they again begin to fill. Some of them have been found to yield from 1,000 to 1,500 lbs. a day !"-Kinneir's Persian Empire, p. 39. and 359.)-3. Maltha, or Sea-wax, is a solid whitish substance, not unlike tallow. It melts when heated, and in Digitized by Google 188 BLACKING-BOATS. cooling assumes the consistence of white cerate. This is, most probably, the bitumen can- didum of Pliny (Hist. Nat. lib. XXXV. c. 15.). It is not used as pitch but it affords a better light than petroleum, and emits a less disagreeable smell. It is found on the surface of the Baikal Lake in Siberia, at the foot of the mountains of Bucktiari in Persia, and in some other places.-4. Elastic Bitumen yields easily to pressure; is flexible and elastic. It emits a strong bituminous odour, and is about the weight of water. On exposure to the air it hardens, and loses its elasticity. It takes up the traces of crayons in the same manner as caoutchouc, or Indian rubber, whence it has obtained the name of mineral caoutchouc. It has hitherto been found only in the lead mines of Derbyshire.-5. Compact Bitumen, or Asphaltum, is of a shining black colour, solid, and brittle, with a conchoidal fracture. Its specific gravity varies from 1 to 16. Like the former varieties, it burns freely, and leaves but little residuum. It is found in India, on the shores of the Dead Sea, in France, in Switzerland, and in large deposits in sandstone in Albania but nowhere so largely as in the island of Trinidad, where it forms a lake three miles in circumference, and of a thick- ness unknown. A gentle heat renders it ductile, and when mixed with grease or common pitch, it is used for paying the bottoms of ships, and is said to protect them from the teredo of the West Indian seas. The ancients employed bitumen in the construction of their buildings. The bricks of which the walls of Babylon were built were, it is said (Herodotus, lib. i. § 179.), cemented with hot bitumen, which gave them unusual solidity. BLACKING (Ger. Schuhschwürze, Wichse, Fr. Noir (de cordonniera) ; It. Nero da ugner le scarpe Sp. Negro de zapatos). A factitious article, prepared in various ways, used in the blacking of shoes. It is in very extensive demand. BLACK-LEAD, OR PLUMBAGO (Du. Potloot; Fr. Mine de plomb noir, Plomb de mine, Potelot Ger. Pottloth, Reissbley; It. Miniera di piombo, Piombaggine, Corezolo; Lat. Plumbago; Sp. Piedra mineral de plomo), a mineral of a dark steel grey colour, and a metallic lustre; it is soft and has a greasy feel; it leaves a dark coloured line when drawn along paper. It is principally employed in the making of pencils; it is also employed in the making of crucibles, in rubbing bright the surface of cast-iron utensils, and in diminishing friction, when interposed between rubbing surfaces. The finest specimens of this mineral are found in the celebrated mine of Borrowdale, in Cumberland, worked since the days of Queen Elizabeth.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) Recently, plumbago, of a very good quality, has been imported from Ceylon. BLACK-LEAD PENCILS (Du. Potlootpennen; Fr. Crayons noirs ; Ger. Bleystifte; It. Lapis nero Port. Lapis negro; Rus. Karanaschü; Sp. Lapiz negro), are formed of black-lead encircled with cedar. BLOOD-STONE (Ger. Blutstein, Fr. Pierre sanguine à crayon It. Sanguigna; Sp. Piedra sanguinaria; Lat. Hæmatites), or the Lapis hæmatites, a species of calcedony, is a mineral of a reddish colour, hard, ponderous, with long pointed needles. It is found among iron ore in great abundance. These stones are to be chosen of the highest colour, with fine strise or needles, and as much like cinnabar as possible. Goldsmiths and gilders use it to polish their work. It is also used for trinkets. BLUBBER (Ger. Thran, Fischtran; Du. Thraan It. Olio di pesce, Sp. Grassa, Aceite de pescado; Rus. Salo worwannoe, Worwan; Lat. Oleum piscinum), the fat of whales and other large sea-animals, of which train oil is made. The blubber is the adeps of the animal: it lies under the skin, and over the muscular flesh it is about 6 inches in thickness, but about the under lip it is 2 or 3 feet thick. The whole quantity yielded by one of these animals ordinarily amounts to 40 or 50, but sometimes to 80 or more cwt. Formerly train oil was manufactured from the blubber in the seas round Spitzbergen, and other places where whales were caught; but the practice is now to bring the blubber home in casks, and to prepare the oil afterwards. It is enacted by the 6 Geo. 4. c. 107 1 44., that before any blubber, train oil, spermaceti oil, head mat- ter, or whale fins, shall be entered as being entirely the produce of sea-animals caught by the crews of ships fitted out in the United Kingdom, or the islands of Jersey, Guernsey, Sark, and Man, the master of the ship importing such goods shall make oath, and the importer also shall make oath, to the best of his knowledge and belief, that the same are the produce of fish or creatures living in the sea, taken and caught wholly by the crew of such ship, or by the crew of some other ship (naming it) fitted out in the United Kingdom, or in one of the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Sark, or Man (naming which). Before blubber, train oil, &c. can be entered as from a British possession, a certificate must be obtained from the Custom-house officer at such British possession, or in default of such officer being there, from two principal inhabitants, notifying that oath had been made before him or them that such blubber, &c. was the produce of fish or creatures living in the sea, and had been taken by British sub- jects usually residing in some part of his Majesty's dominions; and the importer is to make oath, to the best of his knowledge and belief, to the same effect. The gauging of casks of oil and blubber is dispensed with since 1825. They are to be passed at the rate of 126 gallons the pipe, and 63 gallons the hogshead. BOATS are open vessels, commonly wrought by oars, and of an endless variety of shapes, according to the purposes to which they are to be applied. It is ordered by stat. 0 Geo. 4. c. 108., that every boat belonging to or attached to any other vessel, shall have painted on the outside of the stern of such boat, the name of the vessel and place to which Digitized by Google BOLE. 189 she belongs, and the master's name within side of the transom, in white or yellow Roman letters, 2 Inches long, on a black ground, under pain of forfeiture. Boats not belonging to vessels, are to be painted with the name of the owner and place to which they belong, under penalty of forfeiture. All boats having double sides or bottoms, or secret places for the purpose of concealing goods, or having any hole, pipe, or other device for the purpose of running goods, are to be forfeited. Regulations of Watermen on the Thames.-From Chelsea Bridge towards Windsor, 3d. per half mile for scullers. Over the water directly between Windsor and Crawley's wharf, Greenwich (excepting the Sunday ferries), for one person, 3d.; two persons, 11d. each ; exceeding two persons, 1d. each. To or from ships westward of Greenwich. for one person, 2d.; exceeding one person, 1d. each and, where the distance to the ship does not exceed the distance across the river, the fare across the river shall be taken. To or from ships eastward of Greenwich. at the rate of 6d. per half mile. To or from vessels for passengers, for one person 4d.; exceeding one person, 3d. each, with not exceeding 56 lbs. of luggage for each. After this at the rate of 1s. per cwt. Watermen detained by passengers to be paid for time or distance, at the option of the watermen. s.d. d. By Time for a Pair of Oars.-First hour - 20 Each succeeding hour - - - 10 Second hour - - - - - 16 For the day - - - - - 12 0 To last from 7 A. M. to 5 P. M. between Michaelmas and Lady Day; and from 6 A. M. to 6 P. M. from Lady Day to Michaelmas. SCULLER'S FARES. The Bridges &c..stand in the following order. London Bridge Nine Elms Shadwell Dock Stairs Southwark Bridge Red House, Battersea Kidney ditto Blackfriars Bridge Swan Stairs, Chelsea Limehouse Hole ditto Waterloo Bridge Chelsea Bridge Ditto, Torrington Arms Westminster Bridge Iron Gate Deptford, George Stairs Lambeth Stairs Union Stairs Ditto, Low-Water Gate Vauxhall Bridge King Edward ditto Greenwich, Crawley's Wharf. The fare from either of the above places to the next is 3d., and so on in proportion. Passage Boats.-Oars' Fare 8 Passengers. Sculler's Fare 6 Passengers. each each each London Bridge to 8. d. London Bridge to S. d. London Bridge to S. d. Chelsea Bridge - - 0 6 Brentford - - - 13 Walton-upon-Thames 19 Wandsworth - - 07 Isleworth - - - 13 Shepperton - - 20 Putney - - - - 0 8 Richmond - - - 1 3 Weybridge - - 20 Fulham - - - 0 8 Twickenham - - 1 6 Laleham - - - 2 0 Barn's Elms - - 0 8 Tide-end Town - - 1 6 Chertsey - - - 2 0 Hammersmith - - .09 Kingston - - - 1 6 Staines - - - 20 Chiswick - - - 09 Hampton Court - - 1 9 Datchet - - - 3 0 Barnes - - - 10 Hampton Town - - 1 9 Windsor - - - 30 Mortlake - - - 10 Sunbury - - - 1 9 Deptford - - - 06 Blackwall - - - 09 Gravesend - - - 16 Greenwich - - - 06 Woolwich - 10 For a full boat load of luggage, same as for 8 passengers. For half a load, same as for 4 passengers. Penalties.-Taking more than fare, not exceeding 21. Waterman to have a list of fares in his boat, and on not permitting the passenger to examine it, the passenger is discharged from paying his fare, and the waterman may be fined not exceeding 51. Refusing to take a passenger, or not answering when called by the number of his boat, not exceed- Ing 51. Unnecessarily delaying a passenger, not exceeding 51. Refusing to permit any person to read the name and number of his boat, or to tell his Christian or surname, or the number of his boat, on being paid his fare, or making use of any abusive language, not exceeding 51. Rules and By-laws made by the Court of Aldermen, 15th of April, 1828.-Letting his boat remain at any stairs, while wilfully absent, or not being ready to take a passenger into his boat, not exceeding 11. Refusing to give his name or number, or that of any other waterman, not exceeding 11. Obstructing any other waterman in taking in or landing a passenger, or obstructing a passenger, not exceeding 11. Towing or being towed by any other boat without the consent of all the passengers, not exceed- ing 3/. Agreeing to take any less sum than the rate allowed, and afterwards demanding more than the sum agreed for, not exceeding 21. Only two boats to be placed aboard any steamboat at the same time in turn. Waterman, previous to taking turn as aforesaid, to lie with his boat upon his oars at least one boat's length distant from any other boat lying alongside, and shall not approach nearer, until after the former boat shall have proceeded two boats' length, not exceeding 51. The offices of Harbour-masters are in Little Thames street, St. Catharine's; and Canal Office, Blackwall. BOLE, a friable earthy substance, a species of the soapstone family. Specific gravity 14 to 2. It is found in the island of Lemnos, whence it is sometimes called Lemnian earth; and in Armenia, Italy, France, Silesia, various parts of South America, &c. Armenian and French boles were at one time not uncommon in this country, being used in the materia medica, but they are now entirely, or almost entirely, discarded. In India, however, Arme- nian bole still continues to be in extensive demand. It is brought to Bombay from the Persian Gulf. It is soft, feels greasy to the touch, adheres strongly to the tongue, and is very frangible; it is generally of a yellowish brown colour; though sometimes it is seen of a fine flesh red, which is the variety held in the highest estimation. Some savage nations, such as the Ottomaques, described by M. Humboldt, are in the habit of allaying the pains of hunger by eating holes. The Javanese, when they wish to become thin, eat cakes, Digitized by Google 190 BOHEA, BOMBAY. called tanaampo, made of bole.-(Lewis, Mat. Medica; Thomson's Chemistry Ainslic's Mat. Indica.) BOHEA, a species of tea. See TEA. BOMBAY, a sea-port on the western coast of British India, being, after Calcutta and Canton, the greatest commercial emporium in the East; lat. 18° 56' N., long. 72° 57' E. It is situated on the south-eastern extremity of a small island of the same name, separated from the main land by an arm of the sea, forming, with the contiguous islands of Colabah, Salsette, Butcher's Island, and Caranjah, one of the best harbours in India. Bombay Island was ceded by the Portuguese to the English in 1661, as the dower of Queen Cathe- rine, wife of Charles II., and was taken possession of in 1664; so that it has been in our occupation about 170 years, being by far the oldest of our possessions in the East. In 1668, it was transferred by the crown to the East India Company, by letters patent, in free and common soccage, on payment of the annual rent of 10/. But, by the present charter, it has reverted to the crown, with the rest of the Company's assets, being held by the Company in trust merely. On its cession to the crown of England, in 1661, its population did not ex- ceed 15,000 souls, the outcasts of the natives of India. It now contains 15,474 houses, valued at 3,606,4241. and a population exceeding 229,000. The following statement of the population of Bombay, at different periods, will show its progress: 1664, when taken possession of - 15,000 16,000 I 1816 - - - - - 161,550 1716, - - - - - 1830 - - - - - 229,000 The census of 1816 exhibits the proportion of the different classes of inhabitants as follows :- British, not military - - - 1,840 Hindoos - - - - - 103,800 Ditto, military and marine - - 2,460 Parsees - - - - 13,550 Native Christians, Armenians, and de- scendants of Portuguese - - 11,500 Total 161,550 Jews - - - - 800 Mohammedans - - - - 28,000 The fort stands on the south-east extremity of the island, on a narrow neck of land, im- mediately over the harbour. The fortifications are extensive, and on the sea side very strong. Bombay Harbour is one of the safest and most commodious in India. It is bounded on the west and north by the island of Colabah, or Old Woman's Island, Bombay Island, and the island of Salsette. The first two are separated only by a narrow creek fordable at low water, and Bombay Island was joined to Salsette by a causeway constructed in 1805. On the east side of the harbour, between it and the main land, is Butcher's Island, distant about 4 miles from Bombay and immediately behind Butcher's Island is the famous island of Elephanta. About 3 miles south from Butcher's Island is the island of Caranjah, on the western side of which, next the harbour, is an extensive shoal. S. W. from Caranjah, distant about 5 miles, is Tull point; between which and Colabah, or Old Woman's Island, is the entrance to the harbour. There is a light-house on the southern extremity of Colabah Island, elevated about 150 feet above the level of the sea, which in clear weather may be seen at the distance of 7 leagues. The point on which the light-house stands is surrounded on all sides by an extensive reef of rocks divided into prongs: of these, the most dangerous is the prong stretching S. W. about 3 miles from the light-house, and forming the northern boundary of the entrance into the harbour. The reef stretching W.N. W. from Tull point about 34 miles, forms the southern boundary of the entrance : the breadth of the channel between them being about 3 miles, with a depth of from 7 to 8 fathoms. In going into the harbour, it is necessary to clear a sunken rock, lying almost due east from the light- house, at about 11 mile distant; and also a bank, called the middle ground, lying nearly opposite to and about 11 mile from the southern extremity of the (See Nicholson and Watson's Plan of Bombay Harbour.) Docks.-Bombay is the only port of consequence in British India in which the rise and fall of the tide are so considerable as to admit of the formation of extensive wet docks. At ordinary spring tides, the rise is about 14 feet, but occasionally as high as 17. The capa- cious docks constructed by the East India Company are their property, and are for the most part under the direction of Parsees, who, excepting the Chinese, are the most industrious and intelligent people of the East. The expense of repairing ships in them is enormous. Merchant vessels of great size, or from 1,000 to 1,200 tons burden, for the cotton trade to China, have been built in these docks. Frigates and line-of-battle ships have also been occa- sionally constructed in them, sometimes under the exclusive direction of Parsee artificers. Ships built at Bombay, on account of the timber being brought from a great distance, are very costly; but being, contrary to the practice in other parts of India, entirely constructed of teak, they are the most durable vessels in the world, requiring little repair, and often run- ning 50 or 60 years. Being for the most part built by natives, without any very strict ap- plication of the rules of art, they are commonly, though not always, heavy sailers. Monies.-Accounts are here kept in rupees each rupee being divided into 4 quarters, and each quarter into 100 reas. The rupee is also divided into 16 annas, or 50 pice. An urdee is 2 reas a doreea, 6 reas; a dooganey, or single pice, 4 reas; a fuddea, or double pice, 8 reas a paunchea is 5 rupees and a gold mohur, 15 rupees. Of these, the annas and reas only are imaginary monies. The coins of Bombay are the mohur, or gold rupee, the silver rupee, and their divisions; also the double and single pice, the urdee, and doreea, which are copper coins with a mixture of tin or lead. The follow- ing is the assay and sterling value of the present gold and silver coinage of Bombay:- Digitized by Google BOMBAY. 191 Gross Weight. Pure Metal. Sterling Value. É grs. 8. Gold mohur - - - - 179.0 - 164.68 - 29:18 Silver rupee - - - - 179.0 - 164:68 - 2.48 In the East India's Company's financial accounts rendered to parliament, the Bombay rupee is reckoned at 2s. 3d. The charge for coinage in the Bombay Mint is 21 per cent. for gold, and 3 per cent. for silver, including the charges for refining. The machinery for this mint was sent out from England a few years ago, and is complete, but very costly. At Bombay there are no banks, as at Madras and Calcutta, and paper money is unknown in mercantile transactions. Weights and Measures.-The weights and measures used at Bombay are as follow :- Gold and Silver Weight. lbs. or. dr. E: 7 Pailies = 1 Parah = 19 9 96 1 Wall = 4.475 8 Parabs = 1 Candy = 156 12 12.8 40 Walls = 1 Tola - 179 Pearl Weight. Salt Measure. cubic inches gr. 1 Tucka - 0.208 10} Adowlies - 1 Parah = 1607-61 134 Tuckas = 1 Ruttee - 3 100 Parahs = 1 Anna = 160761 24 Ruttees - 1 Tank - 72 16 Annas = 1 Rash = 2572176 Commercial Weight. The anna weighs 21 tons, and the rash 40 tons. Avoirdupois. lbs. oz. dr. Liquor Measure. 1 Tank - 0 0 2.488 72 Tanks = 1 Seer = 0 11 32 (Spirits and Country Arrack.) 40 Seers = 1 Maund = 28 00 The seer weighs 60 Bombay Rupees, and equals 11b. 8oz. 81 dr. and 50 seers make the maund. These weights are used for all heavy goods, ex- cepting salt. Long Measure. Grain Measure. English inches. lbs. oz. dr. 16 Tussoos = 1 Hath = 18 2 Tipprees = 1 Seer = 0 11 3.2 24 Tussoos = 1 Guz = 27 4 Seers - 1 Paily= 2 12 12.8 An the foregoing standards are likewise divided into halves, quarters, &c. The preceding weights and measures are generally used in Bombay but it sometimes occurs in mercantile transactions, that calculations are made in pounds and maunds, which last weight is reckoned at 40, 401, 41, 431, and 44 seers; and sometimes in Surat candies of 20, 21, and 22 maunds. Shipping, Commerce, &c.-At Bombay there is an insurance society with a capital of 20 lacs of rupees, or about 200,000/. sterling; and there are also private underwriters who insure separately on ships. In 1820, and we believe the number continues about the same, there were 45 registered ships belonging to this port engaged in the trade to China and Europe, the aggregate burden of which amounted to about 20,000 tons, giving at an average 450 tons to each ship. These are for the most part navigated by Indian seamen or Las- cars, those of Bombay being accounted by far the best in India; the master and superior officers only being Englishmen. Besides these large vessels, there is a numerous class of native craft, under various forms and names. In 1820, they were computed to amount in all to near 47,000 tons, of from 2 to 175 tons each. These vessels, besides furnishing the town with firewood, hay, straw, &c. from the neighbouring continent, navigate coastways from Cape Comorin to the Gulf of Cutch, and sometimes cross the sea to Muscat and the Arabian Gulf. During the eight fair months, that is, from October to May, the largest sized vessels perform five or six trips to Damaun, Surat, Cambay, Broach, Jumbosier, and Cutch, bringing from these ports, where they sometimes winter, and where many of their owners reside, cotton, ghee, oil, pulse, wheat, cotton cloths, timber, firewood, putchok, mawah, &c. and return to the northern ports laden with the produce of Europe, Bengal, and China. The capital employed in this trade, in the minor articles of commerce, exclusive of cotton, has been estimated to amount to 1,500,000/. sterling. The island of Bombay, a small and sterile spot, containing only about 184 square miles, affords no produce for exportation indeed, hardly yields a week's consumption of corn for its inhabitants. Neither is the neighbouring territory fruitful; nor does the whole presidency of Bombay, although estimated to contain about 70,000 square miles, and from 10,000,000 to 11,000,000 inhabitants, yield, with the exception of cotton and rice, any of the great colo- nial staples, such as coffee, sugar, and indigo; a circumstance that seems mainly ascribable to the impolitic restraints upon the employment of British settlers and capital that have been hitherto imposed by law, and acted upon with peculiar rigour in this and the sister presi- dency of Madras, in contradistinction to the greater latitude afforded in Bengal. Bombay is, notwithstanding, a great emporium for the exports and imports of foreign countries. Its principal trade is carried on with the countries on the Gulfs of Cambay, Persia, and Arabia with Calcutta, China, Great Britain, and other European countries, and the United States of America. From the countries on the Gulf of Cambay it receives cotton wool and grain ; and from the Persian and Arabian Gulfs, raw silk of Persia, copper from the same country, and also pearls, galls, coffee, gum arabic, bdellium, copal, myrrh, olibanum, and asafoctida, with dates, and other dried fruits, horses, and bullion. Its exports to Arabia and Persia consist of grain, raw sugar from China and Bengal, British cotton manufactures, woollens, and metals, pepper and other spices. From Calcutta, Bombay receives raw silk, sugar, indigo, and grain; and exports to it oak timber, coir, or the fibre of the coco nut husk, with coco nuts and sandal-wood. The trade between Bombay and Calcutta has declined since Digitized by Google 192 BOMBAY. the abolition of the restrictive system in 1815 gave to Bombay a wider intercourse with foreign countries. Previously to the opening of the trade, Calcutta was the entrepôt from which many of the productions of the neighbourhood of Bombay used to find a market in distant countries. In 1813 and 1814, according to the Custom-house returns of Calcutta, the value of the imports into it from Bombay amounted to 400,000Z. sterling in 1819 and 1820, to 360,000/.; and in 1827 and 1828, to 200,000/. The exports from Calcutta to Bombay in the first-named year amounted to 280,000/.; and in 1827, to only half that amount. The greatest branch of the trade of Bombay used to be that with China; but it has considerably declined of late years. The principal article of export is cotton wool, to which opium has been added since we obtained possession of the province of Malwa. The minor articles are pepper, sandal-wood, Arabian gums, salt-fish, fish maws, and sharks' fins. The imports consist of alum, camphor, cassia, nankeens, rhubarb, tea, raw sugar, vermilion, and other paints, with a considerable quantity of bullion. In 1828 and 1829, the number of ships which cleared out from Bombay for Canton was 36, of the burden of 25,731 tons but the number which entered from thence was only 30, of the burden of 17,534 tons; many of the ships which cleared out having made intermediate voyages after discharging their cargoes at Canton. The principal export from Bombay to Great Britain is cotton wool, after which follow pepper, cardamoms, Arabian gums and drugs, and Persian raw silk. The chief imports are cotton fabrics and cotton twist, for both of which Bombay is, after Calcutta, the greatest mart in India; woollens, iron, copper, spelter, glass-ware, &c. &c. Bombay trades with France and Hamburgh, but not to any considerable amount. Neither is her trade with the United States of America of much importance. The following statements, drawn up from papers laid before parliament in 1830 and 1831, show the whole amount of the trade car- ried on by Bombay, including Surat, with Great Britain, foreign Europe, and America, in the years 1813 and 1814, and 1828 and 1829 :- Imports into Bombay and Surat. 1813 and 1814. 1828 and 1829. Merchandise. Bullion. Total. Merchandise. Bullion. Total £ £ £ £ £ £ From Great Britain 275,716 110 275,826 781,248 - 781,249 - France - - - - 63,291 - 63,291 - Hamburgh - - - - 7,329 - 7,329 - America - - - - 1,461 - 1,461 Total - 275,716 110 275,826 853,394 - 853,394 Exports from Bombay and Surat. 1813 and 1814. 1828 and 1829. Merchandise. Bullion. Total. Merchandise. Bullion. Total £ £ £ £ £ £ To Great Britain 135,342 169,811 305,154 694,654 139,113 833,767 - France - - - 5,995 - 5,995 - Hamburgh I - - - - - - America - - - - - - Total 135,342 169,811 305,154 700,649 139,113 839,762 In some of the intermediate years between 1814 and 1829 there was some trade between Bombay, Portugal, and Brazil, but not very considerable. It will appear from these state- ments that the present imports into Bombay from Great Britain amount to above 780,000L, and the exports to near 840,000/.; the first having increased since the opening of the free trade by 500,000Z. sterling, or above 180 per cent., and the latter by somewhat more than that amount. Dock Regulations.-At daylight the wickets of the gates are opened, and at 7 clock the sentry gate. Half an hour after sunset the gates are shut, the wicket of the centre gate being left open till the evening gun be fired. No boats, saving those belonging to the Company's marine department. or his Majesty's navy, are permitted to come to the dock-yard stairs; but must use the piers expressly con- structed for their accommodation. No meat, stores, or baggage for the merchant shipping, of any description, are to be passed through the dock-yards. After the firing of the evening gun, nobody belonging to the ships in the harbour, below the rank of a commissioned officer, is to be allowed to land or enter the dock-yard, without the express permission of the master attendant, or other consti- tuted authorities. Boats' crews are not to be permitted to quit their boat at the stairs, after the hour of shutting the gates. Small craft are not to deliver firewood or any other lading within the limits of the yard, without the superintendent's sanction. The ships and vessels in dock are not to land any lumber whatever on the pier. No cargo of any description is to be landed in or passed through the yard, from or to any ship in dock, without the superintendent's permission in writing. No fire or light is allowed Digitized by Google BOMBAZINE, BONES. 193 on board any ship or vessel in dock, without the authority of the superintendent, to whom the pur- poses for which either may be required, must be stated in writing. Export of Cotton from Bombay to China, England, &c., with prices, freights, &c. from 1824 to 1831. To China. Price of Surat Cotton per Price of Rates of To London. To Liverpool. To the Clyde. To other Places than the foregoing. Candy of Dhollera. 784 lbs. Rates of Freight Grand Company's Investments. to England perTon Total. Freight to of 41 Bales, or Years. Private Trade. Total to China. Lov Lowest. est. Highest. Average. China per Can- Lowest. Highest. Average. about 1,530 lbs. dy of 784 lbs. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Rupees. Rupees. L. 1. L. s. Rupees. 7 0 to 9 07 1824 12,106 63,407 76,786 39,331 5,834 None. 640 122,591 140 170 153 135 140 138 11 0 10> 30,40,50 (90-77) 60,70,35 1825 12,130 70,885 83,015 35,454 14,129 1,559 300 134,457 146 192 166 134 175 151 6 02 10 8 45, 40, 48 1826 14,686 103,537 118,228 21,262 7,404 4,838 2,097 153,824 125 155 137 110 128 120 9 9 7 6 45, 40, 44 1827 19,093 105,596 124,689 43,870 10,118 8,523 4,261 191,461 110 130 122 95 116 109 5 6102 7 0 - 6105 40, 35, 25, 35 1828 15,883 102,020 117,903 62,103 19,694 10,871 3,952 214,523 104 135 120 100 118 105 2 0.15 0 15 25, 25, 28 1829 14,495 86,063 100,558 23,608 11,542 11,058 3,442 150,208 115 140 125 105 128 117 - 2 15- - 1 20, 18, 191 1830 22,303 117,969 140,272 17,339 14,458 7,542 2,960 182,571 114 120 116 80 110 89% 15 3 10 4 4 30,32,40 1831 to2d 17,578 115,274 132,852 17,965 22,238 9,470 3,413 185,938 100 110 104} 70 81 751 5 6 Oct. 6 10 25,35,45 From 1,500 to 2,000 bales may be added to the exports to China for each year, as, after the Com- pany's vessels are nominally loaded, the captains take from 300 to 500 bales, which are never placed upon the Custom-house records. (See Milburn's Oriental Commerce; Hamilton's East India Gazetteer, 1828; Bombay Calendar and Register; Kelly's Cambist; Wilson's Review of the External Commerce of Bengal, under head "Coast of Malabar Parl. Papers relating to the Finances of India, and Trade of India and China, 1830 and 1831 Second Appendix to Report of the Select Committee on Public Departments, 1832, p. 274; Circular of Beckwith & Co., &c.) BOMBAZINE, a kind of silk stuff, originally manufactured at Milan, and thence sent into France and other countries. Now, however, it is nowhere manufactured better, or in larger quantities, than in this kingdom. BONES of cattle and other animals are extensively used in the arts, in forming handles for knives, and various other purposes. So long as bones are preserved fresh, a highly nutritious jelly may be obtained from them. Bones have latterly been employed, particularly in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire, as a manure for dry soils, with the very best effect. They are commonly ground and drilled in, in the form of powder, with turnip seed. Their effect is considerably increased when they have undergone the process of fermentation. The quantities employed are usually about 25 bushels of dust, or 40 bushels of large, to the acre. Besides the immense supplies collected at home, they have begun, within these few years, to be largely imported from the Continent, principally from the Netherlands and Germany. They occupy about 40,000 tons of small vessels belonging to these countries. Mr. Huskisson estimated the real value of those annu- ally imported for the purpose of being used as manure at 100,000Z.; and he contended, that it was not too much to suppose, that an advance of between 100,000/. and 200,000L expended on this article occasioned 500,000 additional quarters of corn to be brought to market.-(Loudon's Encyclopædia of Agriculture; Mr. Huskisson's Speech, May 7, 1827.) Account of the Declared Value of the Bones imported into Great Britain during each of the Twelve Years ending with the fifth of January, 1833; and of the Amount of Duty charged on the same.- (Parl. Paper, No. 708. Sess. 1833.) Imports into Years. Duty. England. Scotland. Great Britain. Declared Value. Declared Value. Declared Value. £ s. d. £ 3. d. in 8. d. £ 8. d. 1821 15,898 12 11 69 17 0 15,968 9 11 159 14 4 1822 9,438 0 5 52 12 0 9,490 12 5 94 16 4 1823 14,395 15 8 82 0 0 14,477 15 8 144 16 1 1824 43,940 17 11 82 14 0 44,023 11 11 440 6 3 1825 86,571 5 8 139 4 6 86,710 10 2 867 4 10 1826 94,747 16 1 245 18 3 94,993 14 4 995 15 6 1827 77,956 6 8 1,798 4 6 79,754 11 2 835 1 9 1828 59,782 9 11 2,874 5 7 62,656 15 6 654 14 0 1829 59,741 11 10 12,398 4 9 72,063 16 7 748 7 11 1830 58,233 16 5 8,529 13 8 66,763 10 1 688 1 6 1831 65,623 10 0 7,073 16 0 72,697 6 0 '749 9 3 1832 77,847 4 4 13,908 1 1 91,755 5 5 940 5 9 VoL. I.-R 25 Digitized by Google 194 BOOK, BOOKS. There are no means of distinguishing between the bones imported for manure and for other purposes. BOOK, BOOKS (Ger. Bücher ; Du. Boeken; Da. Böger Sw. Böcker ; Fr. Livres; It. Libri; Sp. Libros; Port. Livros; Rus. Knigi; Pol. Ksiaski, Ksiegi; Lat. Libri), a written or printed treatise or treatises on any branch of science, art, or literature, composed in the view of instructing, amusing, or persuading the reader. Copyright is the right which the authors of books or treatises claim to the exclusive pri- vilege of printing, publishing, and selling them. Books are sometimes blank, as account books; but these enjoy no peculiar privileges, and do not come within the scope of our inquiries. Books are divided into the following classes, according to the mode in which the sheets of the paper on which they are printed or written are folded viz. folio, when the sheet is folded into two leaves; quarto, when folded into four; octavo, when folded into eight duo- decimo, when the sheet is folded into twelve, &c. In making these classifications, no attention is paid to the size of the sheet. I. Progress and present State of the Law as to the Copyright of Books.-It has been doubted whether in antiquity, an author had any exclusive right to a work, or whether, having once published it, he could restrain others from copying it, and selling copies. We incline to think that he could. The public sale of copies of works is often referred to in the classics; and in such a way as warrants the inference that they were productive to the author, which could not have been the case had every one been permitted to copy them at pleasure. Terence, in one of his plays (Prol. in Eunuch. 1. 20), says, Fabulam, quam nunc acturi sumus, postquam rediles emerunt; but why should the magistrates have bought it, had it been free to every one to copy it ? Martial, in one of his epigrams, says- Sunt quidam, qui me dicunt non esse poëtam: Sed qui me vendit, bibliopola, putat. Mart. lib. xiv. Ep. 194. This evidently conveys the idea that he had assigned the right to sell his book to a single person, who profited by it. Passages to the same effect may be found in Horace (De Arte Poeticâ, line 345.), Juvenal (Sat. 7. line 83.), &c. It would have been singular, indeed, had it been otherwise. Of all the species of pro- perty a man can possess, the fruits of his mental labours seem to be most peculiarly his own. And though it may, we think, be shown, that many serious inconveniencies would result from giving the same absolute and interminable property over ideas that is given over material objects, these inconveniencies could hardly have been perceived in antiquity. It will also be observed, that in antiquity a copyright was of much less value than in modern times. Books could then not only be multiplied by copying them with the pen and if any one chose privately to copy a work, or to buy it of another, it must have been very difficult to hinder him but when printing had been introduced, the greater cheapness of books not only extended the demand for them in far greater proportion, and consequently rendered copyrights more valuable, but it also afforded the means of preventing their piracy. Print- ing is not a device by which a few copies of a book can be obtained at a cheap rate. It is productive of cheapness only when it is employed upon a large scale, or when a considerable impression is to be thrown off. And hence, after its invention, piracy could hardly be com- mitted in secret the pirated book had to be brought to market the fraud was thus sure to be detected, and the offending party might be prosecuted and punished. For a considerable time after the invention of printing, no questions seem to have occurred with respect to copyrights. This was occasioned by the early adoption of the licensing system. Governments soon perceived the vast importance of the powerful engine that had been brought into the field; and they endeavoured to avail themselves of its energies by interdicting the publication of all works not previously licensed by authority. During the continuation of this system, piracy was effectually prevented. The licensing act (13 & 14 Chas. 2. c. 2.) and the previous acts and proclamations to the same effect, prohibited the printing of any book without consent of the owner, as well as without a licence. In 1694, the licensing act finally expired, and the press then became really free. Instead, however, of the summary methods for obtaining redress for any invasion of their property enjoyed by them under the licensing acts, authors were now left to defend their rights at common law and as no author or bookseller could procure any redress for a piracy at common law, except in so far as he could prove damage, property in books was virtually annihilated; it being in most cases impossible to prove the sale of one printed copy out of a hundred. Under these circumstances, applications were made to parliament for an act to protect literary property, by granting some speedy and effectual method of preventing the sale of spurious copies. In consequence, the statute 8 Anne, c. 19. was passed, securing to authors and their assignees the exclusive right of printing their books for 14 years certain, from the day of publication, with a contingent 14 years, provided the author were alive at the expiration of the first term. Persons printing books protected by this act, without the consent of the authors or their assignees, were to forfeit the pirated copies, and 1d. for every sheet of the same. Such books as were not entered at Stationers' Hall were excluded from the benefit of this act. Digitized by Google BOOK, BOOKS. 195 It had been customary, for some time previous to this period, for the libraries of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, &c. to get a copy of most books entered at Station- ers' Hall ; and the act of Anne made it imperative that one copy of all works entitled to its protection should be delivered to the following libraries viz. the Royal Library, now transferred to the British Museum ; the Libraries of Oxford and Cambridge the Libraries of the four Scotch Universities the Library of Sion College, London and that of the Faculty of Advocates in Edinburgh ;-in all, nine copies. The act of Anne did not put to rest the questions as to copyrights. The authors con- tended that it did not affect their natural ownership, and that they or their assignees were entitled to proceed at common law against those who pirated their works after the period mentioned in the statute had expired. The publishers of spurious editions resisted these pretensions, and contended that there was either no right of property at common law in the productions of the mind or that, supposing such a right to have existed, it was superseded by the statute of Anne. There was some difference of opinion in the courts as to these points; but Lord Mansfield, Mr. Justice Blackstone, and the most eminent Judges, were favourable to the claims of the authors. However, it was finally decided, upon an appeal to the House of Lords in 1774, that an action could not be maintained for pirating a copy- right after the term specified in the on the Law of Patents and Copy- rights, p. 205.) The act of Queen Anne referred only to Great Britain but in 1801, its provisions were extended to Ireland the penalty, exclusive of forfeiture, on printing or importing books with- out consent of the proprietor, was also increased from 1d. to 3d. a sheet. In return for this concession, two additional copies of all works entered at Stationers' Hall were to be delivered; one to Trinity College, Dublin, and one to the King's Inns, Dublin. Every one must be satisfied that 14 years' exclusive possession is far too short a period to indemnify the author of a work, the composition of which has required any considerable amount of labour and research; though 28 years is, perhaps, all things considered, as pro- per a period as could be fixed upon. Now, the grand defect of the statute of Anne con- sisted in its making the right to the exclusive possession for 28 years contingent on the fact of a person having lived a day more or less than 14 years after the publication of his work. This was making the enjoyment of an important right dependent on a mere accidental cir- cumstance over which man has no control. Could any thing be more oppressive and unjust than to hinder an author from bequeathing that property to his widow and children, that would have belonged to himself had he been alive Nothing, indeed, as it appears to us, can be more obvious than the justice of extending all copyrights to the same period, whether the authors be dead or not. But though the extreme hardship, not to say injustice, of the act of Queen Anne had been repeatedly pointed out, its provisions were continued down to 1814, when the existing copy- right act, 54 Geo. 3. c. 156., was passed. This act extended the duration of all copy- rights, whether the authors were dead or alive, to 28 years certain with the further provision, that if the author should be alive at the end of that period, he should enjoy the copyright during the residue of his life. We subjoin the principal clauses of this statute. Having recited the acts 8 Anne, c. 19. and 41 Geo. 3. c. 107., it enacts that so much of the said seve- ral recited acts as requires that any copies of any books which shall be printed or published, or re- printed and published with additions, shall be delivered by the printers thereof to the warehouse- keeper of the said Company of Stationers, for the use of any of the libraries in the said act mentioned, and as requires the delivery of the said copies by the warehouse-keeper for the use of the said libra- ries, and as imposes any penalty on such printer or warehouse-keeper for not delivering the said copies, shall be repealed. And that 11 printed copies of the whole of every book, and of every volume thereof, upon the paper upon which the largest number or impression of such book shall be printed for sale, together with all maps and prints belonging thereto, which from and after the passing of this act shall be printed and published, on demand thereof being made in writing to or left at the place of abode of the publisher or publishers thereof, at any time within twelve months next after the publication thereof, under the band of the warehouse-keeper of the Company of Stationers, or the librarian or other person thereto authorised by the persons or body politic and corporate, proprietors or managers of the libraries following videlicet, the British Museum, Sion College, the Bodleian Library at Oxford, the Public Library at Cambridge, the Library of the Faculty of Advocates at Edinburgh, the Libraries of the Four Universities of Scotland, Trinity College Library and the King's Inns Library at Dublin, or so many of such 11 copies as shall be respectively demanded, shall be delivered by the publishers thereof respectively, within 1 month after demand made thereof in writing as aforesaid, to the warehouse- keeper of the said Company of Stationers; which copies the said warehouse-keeper shall receive for the use of the library for which such demand shall be 80 made and he is hereby required, within 1 month after any such book or volume shall be 80 delivered to him, to deliver the same for the use of such library. And if any such publisher or warehouse-keeper shall not observe the directions of this act, he and they so making default shall forfeit, besides the value of the said printed copies, the sum of 51. for each copy not 80 delivered or received, together with the full costs of suit; to be recovered by action in any court of record in the United Kingdom.-> 2. Provided always, that no such copy shall be so demanded or delivered, &c. of the second, or of any subsequent edition of any such book, unless the same shall contain additions or alterations; and in case any edition after the first shall contain any addition or alteration, no printed copy thereof, shall be demanded or delivered, if a printed copy of such additions or alterations only, printed in an uni- Digitized by Google 196 BOOK, BOOKS. form manner with the former edition of such book, be delivered to each of the libraries aforesaid: provided also, that the copy of every book that shall be demanded by the British Museum shall be delivered of the best paper on which such work shall be printed.- 3. And whereas by the said recited acts it is enacted, that the author of any book, and the assigns of such author, should have the sole liberty of printing and reprinting such book for the term of 14 years &c.; and it was provided, that after the expiration of the said term of 14 years, the right of printing or disposing of copies should return to the authors thereof, if they were then living, for another term of 14 years: and whereas it will afford further encouragement to literature, if the duration of such copyright were extended be it enacted, that the author of any book or books composed, and not printed and published, or which shall hereafter be composed, and be printed and published, and his assigns, shall have the sole liberty of printing and reprinting such book or books, for the full term of twenty-eight years, to commence from the day of first publishing the same; and also, if the author shall be living at the end of that period, for the residue of his natural life; and if any bookseller or printer, or other person whatsoever, in any part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in the Isles of Man, Jersey, or Guernsey, or in any other part of the British dominions, shall, from and after the passing of this act, within the times granted and limited by this act, print, reprint, or import, or shall cause to be printed, &c. any such book, without the consent of the author, or other proprietor of the copyright, first had in writing or knowing the same to be so printed, &c. without such consent, shall sell, publish, or expose to sale, or cause to be sold, &c., or shall have in his pos- session for sale, any such book, without such consent first had and obtained; such offender shall be liable to a special action at the suit of the author or other proprietor of such copyright; and every such author or other proprietor may, in such special action, recover damages, with double costs ; and every such offender shall also forfeit such book, and every sheet of such book, and shall deliver the same to the author or other proprietor, to be made waste paper of, and shall also forfeit the sum of 3d. for every sheet thereof either printed or printing, or published or exposed to sale; the one moiety thereof to any person who shall sue for the same.- 4. And in order to ascertain what books shall be from time to time published, the publishers of every book demandable under this act shall, within 1 calendar month after the day on which any such book shall be first sold, published, advertised, or offered for sale, within the bills of mortality, or within 3 calendar months in any other part of the United Kingdom, enter the title to the copy of every such book, and the names and place of abode of the publisher, in the register book of the Company of Stationers in London (for every of which several entries the sum of 2s. shall be paid, and no more), under a penalty of the sum of 51., together with eleven times the price at which such books shall be sold or advertised; to be recovered, together with full costs of suit, by persons authorised to sue, and who shall first sue for the same provided, that in the case of magazines, reviews, or other periodical publications, it shall be sufficient to make such entry in the register book of the said Company within 1 month next after the publication of the first number or volume provided, that no failure in making any such entry shall in any manner affect any copyright, but shall only subject the person making default to the penalty aforesaid under this act.-d 5. Provided always, that if any publisher shall be desirous of delivering the copy of such book or volume, on behalf of any of the said libraries, at such library, it shall and may be lawful for him to deliver the same at such library ; and such delivery shall be held as equivalent to a delivery to the said warehouse-keeper. And if the author of any book, which shall not have been published 14 years at the time of passing this act, shall be living at the said time, and if such author shall afterwards die before the expiration of the said 14 years, then the personal representative of the said author, and the assigns of such per- sonal representative, shall have the sole right of printing and publishing the said book for the further term of "14 years after the expiration of the first 14. And if the author of any book which has been already published shall be living at the end of 28 years after the first publication, he or she shall, for the remainder of his or her life, have the sole right of printing and publishing the same. Actions and suits shall be commenced within 12 months next after such offence committed, or be void and of no effect.- 1 7, 8, 9, 10. Musical compositions, engravings, maps, sculptures, models, &c. enjoy a similar pro- tection. The great practical difficulty in interpreting the copyright acts, is in distinguishing be- tween an original work and a copy made, animo furandi, from one already in existence. The following is a summary of Mr. Godson's remarks on this subject:- 'The identity of a literary work consists entirely in the sentiments and language. The same con- ceptions, clothed in the same words, must necessarily be the same composition; and whatever method is taken of exhibiting that composition to the ear or the eye, by recital, or by writing, or by printing, in any number of copies, or at any period of time, the property of another person has been violated; for the new book is still the identical work of the real author. Thus, therefore, a transcript of nearly all the sentiments and language of a book is a glaring pi- racy. To copy part of a book, either by taking a few pages verbatim, when the sentiments are not new, or by imitation of the principal ideas, although the treatises in other respects are different, is also considered to be illegal. Although it was held by Ellenborough C. J. that a variance in form and manner is a variance in substance, and that any material alteration which is a melioration cannot be considered as a piracy yet a piracy is committed, whether the author attempt an original work, or call his book an abridg- ment, if the principal parts of a book are servilely copied or unfairly varied. But if the main design be not copied, the circumstance that part of the composition of one author is found in another is not of itself piracy sufficient to support an action. A man may fairly adopt part of the work of another; he may so make use of another's labours for the promotion of science, and the benefit of the public, but having done so, the question will be, Was the matter so taken used fairly with that view, and without what may be termed the animus furandi In judging of a quotation, whether it is fair and candid, or whether the person who quotes has been swayed by the animus furandi, the quantity taken and the manner in which it is adopted, of course, must be considered. If the work complained of be in substance a copy, then it is not necessary to show the intention to pirate for the greater part of the matter of the book having been purloined, the intention is apparent, and other proof is superfluous. A piracy has undoubtedly been committed. 46 But if only a small portion of the work is quoted, then it becomes necessary to show that it was done animo furandi, with the intention of depriving the author of his just reward, by giving his work to the public in a cheaper form. And then the mode of doing it becomes a subject of inquiry; for it is Digitized by Google BOOK, BOOKS. 197 not sufficient to constitute a piracy, that part of one author's book is found in that of another, unless ft be nearly the whole, or so much as will show (being a question of fact for the jury) that it was done with a bad intent, and that the matter which accompanies it has been colourably introduced."- (pp. 215-817.) If a work be of such a libellous or mischievous nature as to affect the public morals, and that the author cannot maintain an action at law upon it, a court of equity will not interpose with an injune- tion to protect that which cannot be called property. Even if there be a doubt as to its evil tendency, the Lord Chancellor will not interfere.' (Godson, p. 212.) II. Expediency of limiting Copyrights to Twenty-eight Years.-It is argued by many that copyrights should be made perpetual that were this done, men of talent and learning would devote themselves much more readily than at present to the composition of works re- quiring great labour inasmuch as the copyright of such works, were it perpetual, would be an adequate provision for a family. But we doubt much whether these anticipations would be realised. Most books or manuscripts are purchased by the booksellers, or published upon the presumption that there will immediately be a considerable demand for them and we ap- prehend that when copyrights are secured for 28 years certain, very little more would be given for them were they made perpetual. When an annuity, or the rent or profit arising out of any fixed and tangible property, with respect to which there can be no risk, is sold, if the number of years for which it is to continue be considerable, the price which it is worth, and which it fetches, does not differ materially from what it would bring were it perpetual. But the copyright of an unpublished work is, of all descriptions of property in which to spe- culate, the most hazardous and the chances of reaping contingent advantages from it, at the distance of 28 years, would be worth very little indeed. Those who write books, and those who publish them, calculate on their obtaining a ready and extensive sale, and on their being indemnified in a few years. Very few authors, and still fewer booksellers, are disposed to look forward to so distant a period as 28 years for re- muneration. They are mostly all sanguine enough to suppose that a much shorter term will enable them to reap a full harvest of fame and profit from the publication; and we doubt much whether there be one case in a hundred, in which an author would obtain a larger sum for a perpetual copyright, than for one that is to continue for the period stipulated in the late act. But while the making of copyrights perpetual would not, as it appears to us, be of any material advantage to the authors, there are good grounds for thinking that it would be dis- advantageous to the public. Suppose an individual calculates a table of logarithms to five or seven places; if his computations be correct, no improvement can be made upon them, to the extent at least to which they go; but is he or his assignees to be entitled, in all time to come, to prevent other individuals from publishing similar tables, on the ground of invasion of privato property ? Such a pretension could not be admitted without leading to the most mischievous consequences; and yet there is no real ground (though the courts have at- tempted to make one) on which the claim in question and others of the same description could be resisted, were copyrights made perpetual, and placed in all respects on the same footing as other property. We therefore, are clearly of opinion that good policy sug- gests the limitation of the exclusive right of printing and publishing literary works to such a reasonable period as may secure to authors the greater part of the profit to be de- rived from their works; and that this period being expired, they should become public property. Perhaps the period of 28 years might be advantageously extended to 35 or 40; but we are satisfied that more injury than benefit would result to literature, by extending it beyond that term. In France, copyrights continue for 20 years after the death of the author. In most of the German states they are perpetual this, however, until very recently, hardly in- demnified the authors for the ease with which spurious copies might be obtained from other states. But by a late resolution of the Diet, a copyright secured in one state is good in all. III. Taxes on Literature-These taxes have been carried to such an extent in England as to be in the highest degree injurious. They are at once impolitic, oppressive, and unjust impolitic, because they tend to obstruct the growth and diffusion of knowledge oppressive, because they very frequently swallow up the entire reward of the labours of the most deserv- ing persons; and unjust, because they are not proportioned to the value of the article on which they are laid, and are, indeed, much oftener paid out of capital than out of profit. These taxes consist of the duty on paper—(See PAPER), the duty on advertisements- (See ADVERTISEMENTS), and the 11 copies given to the public libraries. The follow- ing statements, drawn up by a very competent authority (Mr. Rees, of the firm of Longman, Rees, and Co.), show the mode in which they operate. They refer to an octavo volume of 500 pages, the paper such as this, with the ordinary quantity of matter on the page, and sold by retail for 12s. a copy. Estimate of the cost of such a volume, when 500, 750, and 1,000 copies are printed, showing what part of this cost consists of taxes. R 2 Digitized by Google 198 BOOK, BOOKS. Cost. Duty. Five Hundred Copies. £ S. d. £ 8. d. Printing and corrections - - - - - 88 18 0 0 0 0 - - - Paper - - - - - - - 38 10 0 8 12 10 - Boarding - - - - , - 10 0 0 3 3 8 - - - Advertising - - - - - - 30 0 0 9 0 0 - 167 8 0 20 16 6 11 copies to public libraries. 14 copies (say) to author. £ 3. d. 475 copies for sale at 8s. 5d. - - - - 199 17 11 Deduct cost - - - - - - 167 8 0 Profit to author and publisher, commission, and inte- 32 9 11 rest on capital, when all are sold - - - s Seven Hundred and Fifty Copies. Printing and corrections , - - - - - - - 95 6 0 0 0 0 Paper - - - - - - - - - 57 15 0 12 19 4 Boarding - - - - - - - - - 15 0 0 4 15 7 Advertising - - - - - - 1 - - 37 o 0 11 5 0 11 copies to public libraries. 205 1 0 28 19 11 14 copies to authors. £ 8. d. 725 copies for sale at 8s. 5d. - - - - 305 2 5 Deduct cost - - - - - - 205 1 0 Profit to author and publisher, commission, and inte- 100 1 5 rest on capital, when all are sold - - - s One Thousand Copies. . Printing and corrections - - - - - - - 102 14 0 0 0 0 Paper - - - - - - - - - 77 0 0 17 5 9 Boarding - - - - - - - - - 20 0 0 6 7 5 Advertising - - - - - - - - 45 0 0 13 10 0 244 14 0 37 3 2 11 copies to public libraries. 14 copies to author. £ S. d. 975 copies for sale at 8s. 5d. - - - - 410 6 3 Deduct cost - - - - - - 244 14 0 Profit to author and publisher, commission, and inte- 165 12 3 rest on capital, when all are sold - - - The following statement shows the operation of the duties on a pamphlet of 5 sheets or 80 pages, of which 500 copies are printed: Cost. Duty. Pamphlet, Five Hundred Number. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ S. d. Printing - - - - - - - 14 14 19 19 0 0 0 0 Extras - - - - - - - 5 5 0 Paper - - - - - - - - - 6 0 0 1 0 0 Stitching I - - - - - - - - - 0 12 6 0 0 0 Advertising (say) - - - - - - - - 7 2 0 2 3 6 33 13 6 3 3 6 25 copies for author and public libraries. 475 copies for sale, 25 for 21. 14s. - - - 51 6 0 Profit to author and publisher, interest, &c. after all are sold - - - - - - - £17 12 6 These statements set the oppressive operation of the taxes on literature in a very striking point of view. Where the edition is an average one of 750 copies, the duties amount to about a seventh, or 143 per cent. of the cost of the edition. If the edition consist of 500 or 750 copies, the duties amount to more than the entire remuneration of the author; and if it consist of 1,000 copies, they amount to about as much ! It is essential, however, to bear in mind that the previous statements show only how the duties affect books when the entire impression is sold off at the full publication price; but this seldom happens. Excluding pamphlets, it may be truly affirmed, that, at an average, the original impression of half the books printed is hardly ever sold off, except at a ruinous reduction of price. Now, if we suppose, in the previous example of an edition of 750 copies, that only 625 instead of 725 were sold, the result would be that only 57% 19s. would remain as profit to the author and publisher, and as a compensation for interest, the risk of bad debts, &c. Were only 500 copies sold, the cost would not be more than balanced; and there would be nothing whatever to remunerate the author for his labour, or the bookseller for the use of his capital. Were only 400 copies sold, government would have received 28/. 0 Digitized by Google BOOK, BOOKS. 199 19s. 11d. of duty from a speculation by which the author had lost all his labour, and the bookseller 36/. 15s. of his capital The mere possibility of such a supposition being realised, would be a sufficient ground for a revision of the duties; but, in point of fact, such cases, instead of being merely possible or rare, are of every day occurrence! There is a radical difference between the demand for books, or of food for the mind, and food for the body. The latter is always sure, under any circumstances, to command a sale. The demand for it is comparatively constant it cannot be dispensed with. If a tax be laid on malt, hats, or shoes, it will, perhaps, somewhat lessen the demand for these articles; but the quantities of them brought to market, in future, will sell for such an advanced price as will leave the customary rate of profit to their producers. But with books the case is altogether different. The taste for them is proverbially capricious; so much so, that the most saga- cious individuals are every day deceived in their anticipations as to the success of new works, and even as to the sale of new editions. But if a book do not take, it is so very ruinous an affair, that a publisher is glad to dispose of the greater part of an impression at a fourth or fifth part of its regular price; and is often, indeed, obliged to sell it as waste paper to the trunk-maker or the tobacconist. On a late investigation into the affairs of an extensive publishing concern, it was found, that of 130 works published by it in a given time, fifty had not paid their expenses. Of the 80 that did pay, 13 only had arrived at a second edition but, in most instances, these second editions had not been profitable. In general it may be estimated, that of the books published, a fourth do not pay their expenses; and that only one in eight or ten can be re- printed with advantage. As respects pamphlets, we know we are within the mark, when we affirm that not one in fifty pays the expenses of its publication Now, when such is the fact, can any thing be more glaringly unjust than to impose the same duty on all works before they are published ? In a very few cases, such duty may fall principally on the buyers, and be only a reasonable deduction from the profits of the au- thor and publisher but in a vast number more it swallows them up entirely and in very many cases there are no profits for the duty to absorb, so that it falls wholly on the capital of the unfortunate author or publisher. Were the judges of the courts of law to decide cases by a throw of the dice, there would be quite as much of reason and justice in their decisions, as there has been in the proceedings of our finance ministers as to taxes on literature. If books must be taxed, let publishers be put under the surveillance of the excise; let them be obliged to keep an account of the books they sell, and let them be taxed accordingly but do not let the loss arising from an unsuccessful literary speculation-and more than half such speculations are unsuccessful-be aggravated to a ruinous degree by the pressure of a sys- tem of taxation, than which there is nothing, even in Algiers, more unequal or oppressive. The reduction of the advertisement duty has done something to lessen this injustice. But the above statements, which apply to the reduced duty, show that the relief is most in- adequate. It acknowledges, without correcting, the evil. Instead of being reduced, this duty ought to have been entirely repealed. Before the reduction it only amounted to about 170,000L a year and there cannot be a doubt that the loss of revenue occasioned by its re- peal, and by the repeal of half the paper duty, would, at no distant period, be made up by the greater productiveness of the remaining duty on paper, resulting from its greater consump- tion. The advertisement duty presses very severely on all sorts of works, but particularly on pamphlets it may, indeed, be said to have utterly destroyed the latter class of publications, in so far at least as they are a source of profit. But we object altogether to the imposition of taxes on books previously to their being published. It is not possible, for the reasons already stated, that such taxes can be other- wise than unjust. This objection to them might, indeed, be removed by imposing the du- ties according to the number and value of the copies actually sold. Still such duties must, however imposed, by raising the price of books, and preventing the diffusion of knowledge among the poorer and least instructed classes, be in the utmost degree injurious at the same time that they can never be rendered considerably productive. They seem, in fact, to have every quality that taxes ought not to have, and hardly one that they should have. The delivery of eleven copies to public libraries is exceedingly burdensome upon the more expensive class of works, of which small impressions only can be printed eleven copies of such works would in many instances be a very fair profit for the author and the obligation to make such a sacrifice has frequently, indeed, caused their publication to be abandoned. A tax of this sort would not be tolerable, even were it imposed for a public purpose ; but such is not the object of its imposition. Though called public, the libraries which receive the eleven copies are, with the exception of the British Museum, private establishments, belonging to particular corporations or institutions, and accessible only to their members. Why, when an author produces a book, should he be compelled to bestow copies of it on the lawyers of Edinburgh and Dublin, and on the Universities On what principle can these bodies pretend to demand from him a portion of his property Perhaps it might be expedient, in order to insure the preservation of every work, that copies of it should be Digitized by Google 200 BOOK, BOOKS. deposited, one in London, one in Edinburgh, and one in Dublin. Even this would be call- ing upon authors to make a considerable sacrifice for the public advantage. But to call upon them to sacrifice ten copies, exclusive of that given to the British Museum, for the benefit of 80 many private institutions, is a proceeding utterly at variance with every principle of justice. The law of other countries is, in this respect, far preferable to ours. In America, Prussia, Saxony and Bavaria, only one copy of any work is required from the author; in France and Austria, two copies are required and in the Netherlands three. The governments of the most despotical states treat authors better than they have hitherto been treated by the legisla- ture of England. IV. Book Trade of Great Britain.-London is the great centre of the British book trade; the number of new publications that issue from its presses being far greater than all that appear in the rest of the empire. Within the course of the last forty years, however, many very important works, have been published at Edinburgh; but the latter, as well as those that appear at Oxford, Cambridge, Glasgow, &c., are principally disposed of by the London trade. The booksellers of Edinburgh, and of all the provincial towns, have agents in Lon- don to whom they consign a certain number of copies of every work they publish; and to whom, also, they address their orders for copies of such new or old works as they have occa- sion for. The London booksellers, who act as agents for those in the country, are in the habit of regularly despatching parcels to their correspondents on the last day of each month, with the magazines and other monthly publications; but if any new work of interest appears in the interim, or orders be received from the country that cannot be conveniently deferred to the end of the month, a parcel is immediately forwarded by coach. The book- sellers of Edinburgh and Dublin act as agents for those of London, and supply the Scotch and Irish country trade with the metropolitan publications. The price of new works is fixed by the publishers, who grant a deduction to the retail dealers of from 20 to 25 per cent. on the price of quartos, and from 25 to 30 per cent. on that of octavos, and those of smaller size. The credit given by the publishers to the retailers varies from seven to twelve months; a discount being allowed for prompt payment at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum. From inquiries we have made, we believe it may be laid down that about 1,500 volumes of new publications (exclusive of reprints, pamphlets, and periodical publications not in volumes) are annually produced in Great Britain and, estimating the average im- pression of each volume at 750 copies, we have a grand total of 1,125,000 volumes; the value of which, if sold at an average publication price of 9s. a volume, would be 506,250L The number of reprinted volumes, particularly of school-books, is very great; and if to these we add the reviews, magazines, pamphlets, and all other publications, exclusive of newspa- pers, the total publication value of the new works of all sorts, and new copies of old works, that are annually produced, may be estimated at about 750,000/. At an average of the three years ending with 1831, 1,176 new works were annually entered in Stationers' Hall but, as no account is kept of the size or price of these works, this return furnishes no clue by which to judge of the number of volumes, their magnitude or value. This deficiency might easily be supplied either by the Stationers' Hall or the British Museum keeping an account of the size and price of all the new books coming into their hands, and making an annual abstract of the same. The old book trade carried on in Great Britain is very extensive, and employs many dealers. The price of old books depends very much on their condition but, independently of this circumstance, it is very fluctuating and capricious; equally good copies of the same works being frequently to be had in some shops for a half or a third of what they can be bought for in others. V. Regulations as to Importation of Works.-For the duties, see TARIFF. To prevent foreign books and maps, the property of individuals, from being charged with duty more than once, the proprietor shall, on each importation subsequent to the original one, make oath, that the duties were paid when they were first imported, or that he purchased them in this country in a fair way of trade; that they are the identical books or maps he exported from this kingdom, and that they are now brought back for his private use, and not for sale. -(Treasury Order, 3d, and Customs Order, 8th of October, 1818.) No books, first composed, written or printed in the United Kingdom, imported for sale, except books not reprinted in the United Kingdom within 20 years, or being parts of collec- tions, the greater part of which had been composed or written abroad. shall be imported into the United Kingdom, under forfeiture thereof.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. § 58.) Books first composed or written, or printed and published, in the United Kingdom, and reprinted in any other country or place, may not be entered to be wareboused.-§ 59. The permission to import English works reprinted abroad for private use, is limited to a single copy of each work, brought as a part of a passenger's baggage, for the private use of the parties themselvea-(Treasury Order, 29th of June 1830.) Digitized by Google BOOK, BOOKS. 201 Account of the Amount of Duty paid upon the Foreign Books imported into the United Kingdom during each of the Ten Years ending with 1830.-(Parl. Paper, No. 146. Sess. 1832.) Year. Amount. Year. Amount. Year. Amount. £ 8. d. £ S. d. £ 8. d. 1821 12,987 8 9 1825 17,095 18 6 1828 11,026 18 1 1822 13,035 7 11 1826 10,785 3 8 1829 11,400 8 2 1823 15,339 1 5 1827 11,133 2 5 1830 11,865 4 4 1824 17,237 17 3 VI. Book Trade of France.-The activity of the French press has been very greatly increased since the downfall of Napoleon. The Count Daru, in a very instructive work (Notions Statistiques sur la Librairie) published in 1827, estimated the number of printed sheets, exclusive of newspapers, produced by the French press in 1816, at 68,852,883 and in 1825, at 128,011,483! and we believe that the increase from 1825 down to the present period has been little if any thing inferior. The quality of many of the works that have recently issued from the French press is also very superior; and it may be doubted whether such works as the Biographie Universelle, the new and enlarged edition of the Art de verifier les Dates, in 38 vols. octavo, and the two octavo editions of Bayle's Dictionary, could have been published in any other country. The greater number of new French works of merit, or which it is supposed will command a considerable sale, are immediately reprinted in the Netherlands or Switzerland, but principally in the former. To such an extent has this piratical practice been carried, that it is stated in the Requête presented by the French book- sellers to government in 1828, that a single bookseller in Brussels had, in 1825 and 1826, and the first six months of 1827, reprinted 318,615 volumes of French works ! Having nothing to pay for copyright, these counterfeit editions can be afforded at a lower price than those that are genuine. This is a very serious injury to French authors and publishers, not only by preventing the sale of their works in foreign countries, but from the ease with which spurious copies may be introduced into France. All the French booksellers are brevetés, that is, licensed, and sworn to abide by certain pre- scribed rules. This regulation is justly complained of by the publishers, as being vexatious and oppressive; and as tending to lessen the number of retail booksellers in the country, and to prevent that competition which is so advantageous. The discount allowed by the French publishers to the retail dealers is not regulated, as in England, by the size of the volumes, but by the subjects. The discount on the sale of books of history, criticism, and general literature, is usually about 25 per cent.; in the case of mathematical and strictly scientific works, it is seldom more than 10 or 15 per cent. while upon romances, tales, &c. it is often as high as 50 or 60 per cent. VII. German Book Trade.-"Th trade is very much facilitated by the book fairs at Leipsic; the Easter fair being frequented by all the booksellers of Germany, and by those of some of the neighbouring countries, as of France, Switzerland, Denmark, Livonia, &c., in order to settle their mutual accounts, and to form new connections. The German publisher sends his publications to the keeper of assortments à condition, that is, on commission, for a certain time, after which the latter pays for what have been sold, and may return the re- mainder. This is not so favourable for the publisher as the custom in the French and Eng- lish book trades, where the keepers of assortments take the quantity they want at a fixed rate. In the German book trade, it is the custom for almost every house, either in the coun- try or abroad, which publishes or sells German books, to have its agent at Leipsic, who receives and distributes its publications. A., of Riga, who publishes a book calculated for the German trade, has his agent B., in Leipsic, to whom he sends, free of expense, a number of copies of his publication, that he may distribute the new work to all the booksellers with whom he is connected, from Vienna to Hamburgh, and from Strasburgh to Königsberg, each of whom has his agent in Leipsic. Instructions are also given as to the number of copies to be sent to each. B. delivers those copies in Leipsic to the agents, who send them every week. or more or less frequently, by the post or by carriers, at the expense of the receiver. C., of Strasburgh, who finds that he has not received copies enough, writes for an additional number of copies to his agent D., of Leipsic: D. gives the order to B., who delivers the number wanted to D., to be transmitted to C. This arrangement is advantageous to the German book trade, as well as to Leipsic. The dealer receives every thing from Leipsic; and as a great number of packets, with books from all parts of Germany, arrive there for him every week, he can have them packed together and sent at once. The carriage is thus much less than if the packets were sent to him separately from the different places and the whole business is simplified. The booksellers are also enabled to agree with ease on a cer- tain discount per cent. No such intimate connection of the booksellers has yet been formed in any other country. The German booksellers rarely unite, as is the practice in England, in undertaking the publication of extensive works."-German Conversations-Lexicon, American edition.) The literary deluge which commenced in Germany in 1814 still continues to increase. 26 Digitized by Google 202 BOOK, BOOKS. For the 2,000 works which were then about the annual complement, we have now about 6,000. The catalogue of the Leipsic fair for Michaelmas, 1830, contains 3,444 articles, of which 2,764 are actually published; and if these are added to the 3,162 announced in the Easter catalogue, the number of books published in 1830 will amount to 5,926. The num- ber published in 1829 was 5,314 in 1828, 5,654 in 1827, 5,108; previously to which, the number had never exceeded 5,000. Magazines and popular Encyclopædias have increased in the same proportion; and the public has shown as great a desire to read, as the learned have to write. Private libraries are diminishing, while the public ones are daily increasing. (Foreign Quarterly Review, No. XIV. p. 551.) (We are glad to have to announce that, during the course of the present year (1836), the taxes affecting books have been very materially diminished,-1st, by the duties on paper having been reduced a half, or from 3d. per lb. to 14d.; and 2d, by its having been enacted that five only instead of eleven copies of new works are in future to be fur- nished, at the expense of authors and publishers, to public libraries. (6 & 7 Will. 4. cap. 110.) These important reductions will be of the greatest service to the interests of litera- ture, and will contribute, in no slight degree, both to lessen the risk of publication, and to reduce the cost and price of books. It is to be hoped that, at no distant period, the remain- der of the paper duty and the advertisement duty may both be repealed. However reduced, all duties on books are liable to the fundamental objection (see Dict. p. 198.) of being imposed on articles that may not, and, indeed, very frequently do not, sell; and when such is the case, the duties have to be either partially or wholly paid out of the capital of the authors or publishers. The advertisement duty is still very heavy, and it is, at the same time, most unfair. What, in fact, can be more subversive of every principle of justice than to impose the same duty on the announcement of the publication of a sixpenny pamphlet, as on that of the sale of an estate worth 100,000l.? Luckily, this duty may be relinquished without any sensible sacrifice. The total produce of the advertisement duty, in 1835, amounted only to the trifling sum of 96,910/. and, as its repeal would be of as much ser- vice to commerce as to literature, it cannot, surcly, be permitted to exist much longer. Compensation is to be given by the public to the six public libraries that have abandoned their claim to copies of each new work. The Advocates' Library of Edinburgh still retains its privilege of receiving a copy but it is not easy to see why it should be entitled to any such distinction. It is essentially a private institution, from which the public are carefully ex- cluded, and there neither is nor can be any good reason why an author should be obliged to present it with a copy of his works. The following statement may be substituted for that given in the Dict. p. 198. It is derived from the same source, and shows the present cost of printing and publishing an octavo volume of about 500 pages,-the paper such as this, with the ordinary quantity of matter on the page,-when 500, 750, and 1,000 copies are printed It further shows what portion of the cost consists of duty, and the profits of the author and publisher on each edi- tion, supposing the volume to be sold by retail at 12s. a copy, and the entire edition to be sold off. A similar statement is subjoined for a pamphlet of 80 pages. Total Cost. Whereof Duty. Five Hundred Copies. £ S. d. £ 3. d. Printing and corrections - - - - - - - 88 18 0 0 0 0 Paper - - - - - - - - - 32 0 0 4 6 0 Boarding - - - - - - - - - 10 0 0 0 15 6 Advertising - - - - - - - - 40 0 0 10 0 0 170 18 0 15 1 6 5 copies to public libraries. 14 copies to author, &c. £ 8. d. 481 copies for sale at 8s. 5d. - - - 202 8 5 Deduct cost - - - - - - 170 18 0 For profit to author and publisher. commission, and in- terest on capital, when all are sold. 1 - } 31 10 5 , Seven Hundred and Fifty Copies. Printing and corrections - - - - - - - 95 6 0 0 0 0 Paper - - - - - - - - - 48 0 0 6 9 0 Boarding - - - - - - - - - 15 0 0 1 3 3 Advertising - - - - - - - - 50 0 0 12 10 0 208 6 0 20 2 3 5 copies to public libraries. 14 copies to author, &c. £ 8. d. 731 copies for sale at 8s. 5d. - - - - 307 12 7 Deduct cost - - - - - - 208 6 0 For profit to author and publisher, commission, and in- terest on capital, when all sold. 99 6 7 - - - Digitized by Google BOOK, BOOKS. 203 Total Cost. Whereof Duty. One Thousand Copies. £ s. d. £ 3. d. Printing and corrections - - - - - - - 102 14 0 0 0 0 Paper - - - - - - - - - 64 0 0 8 12 0 Boarding - - - - - - - - - 20 0 0 1 11 0 Advertising - - - - - - - 60 0 0 15 0 0 246 14 0 25 3 0 5 copies to public libraries. 14 copies to author, &c. £ 8. d. 981 copies for sale at 8s. 5d. - - - - 412 16 9 Deduct cost - - - - - - 246 14 0 For profit to author and publisher, commission, and in- terest on capital, when all sold 166 2 9 - - - Pamphlet of 5 sheets, 500 printed. Printing - - - - - - - - Extra corrections and alterations 14 14 0 0 0 0 - - - - - Paper 5 5 0 0 0 0 - - - - - - - - - 5 0 0 Stitching - 0 13 5 - - - - - - - - 0 12 6 0 0 0 Advertising (say) - - - - - - - - 10 0 0 2 10 0 25 copies for author and public libraries. 35 11 6 3 3 5 £ 8. d. 475 copies for sale, at 25 for 21. 14s. - - - 51 6 0 Deduct cost - - - - - - 35 11 6 For profit to-author and publisher, interest &c. when all are sold. 15 14 6 - - - - - s Importation of Books.-Under the late law, such books as might be imported were ad- mitted, provided they were of editions printed in or since the year 1801, on payment of a duty of 51. a cwt.; but this duty has been reduced to 21. 10s. a cwt.; with the additional proviso, that the books, besides being printed in or since 1801, are in foreign living lan- guages.-(4 & 5 Will. 4 c. 89 § 15.) This condition was inserted principally to obviate the risk of dictionaries, or the class books used in our schools, being supplied from the Con- tinent; the booksellers contending that the 21. 10s. a cwt. of duty was insufficient to balance the influence of the paper duty, and the peculiar burdens incident to the getting up of books in this country. It has been alleged, indeed, that it will not effect its purpose because, as is contended, both Latin and Greek are living languages; the former being spoken in cer- tain parts of Hungary and Poland, and the latter in Greece! But the intention of the legislature is too obvious to admit of its being defeated by any quibbling of the sort now men- tioned. By a living language is meant a language spoken by a nation or people, and not by a few learned individuals; and the dialect of the modern Greeks is abundantly different from that of their ancestors. The duty of 11. a cwt. on foreign books printed prior to 1801 ought to be repealed it throws obstructions in the way of their importation, while it is quite unproductive of revenue. Smuggling of English Books from abroad.-Very considerable loss is sustained by literary men and booksellers, by the clandestine importation of English works printed abroad, of which the copyright has not expired. There is hardly, in fact, one of our popular authors, copies of whose works, printed in France or America, may not be readily procured in London and as those by whom they are printed have neither copyright nor paper duty to pay, they are able materially to undersell the native article. It is surely unnecessary to say, that every practicable effort should be made to hinder such an inva- sion of private property; and in this view we beg to suggest, that the permission given to persons coming from abroad to bring with them single copies of all prohibited works, ought to be withdrawn. It opens a door for smuggling and fraud; and there is neither sense nor justice in allowing any indi- vidual to invade the rights of another, merely because he has been across the Channel. A specific penalty, recoverable by a summary process, ought also to be imposed on every individual offering such books for sale. This would be much more effectual in preventing such practices than the exist- ing law.See Dict. p. 196.-Sup.) [In addition to the statements of the author concerning copyright in the different Euro- pean countries, we may mention that the government of Denmark, by an ordinance of the 7th of May 1828, not merely sanctioned a perpetual right of literary property in its own subjects, but even went so far as to assert a similar right in the case of foreigners, by pro- hibiting all reprints of foreign books, excepting by an authority to do so derived from their authors or proprietors abroad. Copyright in Russia, by a law enacted in 1828, was conferred upon an author and his heirs, until the expiration of 25 years after his death. A law of the 25th January 1817, common to both Holland and Belgium, and probably still in force, not- withstanding the separation of the two countries, guarantees the right of literary property for a period extending from the publication of a book until 20 years after the death of an author ; any edition of his work, published without his consent, being rendered liable to confiscation. The publisher is also subjected to a penalty, equivalent to the price of 2000 copies, to accrue to the benefit of the party injured, and is obliged to pay a considerable fine to be appropriated to the support of the poor. On again offending in a similar manner, the Digitized by Google 204 BOOK, BOOKS. publisher may be declared incapable of pursuing his occupation. The disturbed condition of Spain and Portugal, for some years past, renders what the law is in those countries con- cerning the press and literary property of comparatively little moment. And in respect to Italy and Switzerland, whatever protection to authors is professedly granted by the govern- ments of the different states into which they are subdivided, these states are so numerous, and so independent of each other in their legislation on the subject of literary property, that very little protection is in reality afforded. A work which appears at Florence may, for example, be immediately reprinted at Modena and the possibility of any pecuniary advantage being derived by the author from his labours may thus be at once entirely frustrated. An author, in the United States, by the act of Congress of May 31st, 1790, " for the encouragement of learning, &c.," had, if a citizen or a resident in the country, an exclusive copyright in his works conferred upon him for a term of 14 years,-a right renewable when this term shall have expired, provided the author be then living, in favour of him and his legal representatives, for the farther term of 14 years. By an act passed February 3d, 1831, the privilege in question is to be enjoyed in the first instance during a term of 28 years; and if, at the expiration of this term, the author, or his widow, or any child of his, be still living, it may be enjoyed for 14 years more. The expense of procuring a copyright is very trifling and only one copy of a work is required from the author, which is to be delivered to the Secretary of State, to be preserved in his office. Latterly, there has been almost every where a tendency to extend the right of literary property; and the justice as well as expediency of assimilating it to the right of property in material things, by making it perpetual, has been argued with much earnestness and force. The desirableness, too, of an international copyright law, placing the rights of authors on the same footing in every portion of the civilised and literary world, has been of-late frequently expressed in quarters entitled to the highest respect. These topics were brought to the con- sideration of the Congress of the United States, in the winter of 1837, by a petition signed by 56 British authors, asking the privilege to secure copyrights for their works in the United States. The committee of the Senate, to whom this petition was referred, made a report favourable to the object of the petitioners, accompanied by the following bill, which was, however, not acted upon. A Bill to amend the act entitled "An Act to amend the several acts respecting copyright." "Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the provisions of the act to amend the several acts respecting copyrights, which was passed on the third day of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-one, shall be extended to, and the benefits thereof may be enjoyed by, any subject or resident of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or of France, in the same manner as if they were citizens or residents of the United States, upon depositing a printed copy of the title of the book or other work for which a copyright is desired, in the clerk's office of the district court of any district in the United States, and complying with the other requirements of the said act Provided, That this act shall not apply to any of the works enumerated in the aforesaid act, which shall have been etched or engraved, or printed and published, prior to the passage of this act: And provided, also, That, unless an edition of the work for which it is intended to secure the copyright, shall be printed and published in the United States simultaneously with its issue in the foreign country, or within one month after depositing as afore- said the title thereof in the clerk's office of the district court, the benefits of copyright hereby allowed shall not be enjoyed as to such work." For a concise and excellent view of what has been done on the subject of copyright generally, both abroad and at home, we may refer the reader to the little work entitled " Remarks on Literary Property" by Philip H. Nicklin, Esq., lately published. He will be well repaid for the time he may spend in its perusal. The progress of publication and of the book trade in the United States has been exceed- ingly rapid. Previous to the year 1803, most of the books published, besides the Bible, were such as were adapted for elementary instruction in the schools. In that year the whole of the Bible was set up by Mathew Carey, Esq., then actively engaged in the business of bookselling and publishing, and kept permanently standing in the 4to form. Long after- wards, however, pocket Bibles and other kinds continued to be imported, chiefly from Scot- land. There cannot, at the present time, be less than 100 sets of stereotype plates, of va- rious sizes, in use for the printing of Bibles. At the date above mentioned, such standard works as Shakspeare and the Pilgrim's Progress were constantly imported. Now there must be half a dozen sets of plates of Shak- speare alone. A fact evincive of the great extent to which the book trade is carried on is the division of labour which exists among our principal booksellers and publishers. One deals exclusively in law books another confines his attention to medicine; another again to theology and a fourth is concerned only with school books. The most extensive and costly works have been printed in the United States such as Rees's and Brewster's Encyclopadias. The first trades' sale took place in 1824. Since that time the amount of books annually disposed of at trades' sales has been constantly increasing until the amount at present has probably reached the sum of half a million of dollars. Digitized by Google BOOK, BOOKS. 205 The sale of five bookselling establishments, it is said, amounted, in 1836, to $1,350,000. And it was stated in a report made to the United States Senate during the late session of Congress, that the number of persons employed in the United States, in the various branches connected with book-making and periodical publication, is estimated at 200,000, and the capital employed in those branches, at from 30 to 40 millions of dollars." The progress of authorship in this country has been perhaps more rapid than in any other. It commenced, of course, with the books used in schools, for which there was a large demand. The authors of such books, it is probable, derive a larger revenue from their works than in any other country. American school books are now constantly reprinted in Eng- land. This is even occasionally true in reference to American editions of the Greek and Latin classics in use for purposes of instruction. Books of science also, which are used in our colleges and higher seminaries, have become almost universally American. Step by step, we have risen, until Irving and Cooper have obtained higher prices for their works than have been received in Europe, except by a very few authors. Of Prescott's " Ferdi- nand and Isabella" 3,000 copies have been printed, and nearly all have been sold in 16 months. Of Bancroft's " United States" 4,000 have been sold. A single publisher is said to have paid, in the five years preceding 1834, $135,000 for copyrights, out of which $30,000 were for two works only. Carey, Lea, and Blanchard subsequently paid $30,000 in a single year to American writers; and Harper and Brothers have paid about the same sum for several years past. The imports of books into this country, in the years 1834, 1835, 1836, and 1837, amount- ed in value to $175,635, $204,953, $293,371, and $248,164, respectively ; and the exports of books, during the same period, to $42,543, $67,354, $61,553, and $41,438. The former were chiefly from England and France ; while the latter were, for the most part, destined for the Mexican and South American market. It may be added too that the exports consisted mostly of books printed in the United States.-Am. Ed.} BOOK-KEEPING, the art of keeping the accounts and books of a merchant. Book- keeping by double entry means that mode or system in which every entry is double, that is, has both a debtor and a creditor. It is called also the Italian method, because it was first practised in Venice, Genoa, and other towns in Italy, where trade was conducted on an ex- tensive scale at a much earlier date than in England, France, or other parts of Europe. This method, however familiar to merchants and book-keepers, seems intricate to almost all who have not practised it; nor is the dryness and difficulty of the task much lessened by the printed works on the subject, which, having been compiled more by teachers than by practi- cal merchants, contain a number of obsolete rules and unnecessary details. The most effect- ual mode of giving clearness and interest to our remarks will be, first to state a few mer- cantile transactions, and then to explain the nature of the accounts and entries which result from them. The Journal of a mercantile house ought to open, at the beginning of each year, with an enumeration of their assets and debts, as follows :- Folio of Ledger. SUNDRIES DRS. to STOCK. £ 8. d. For the following, being the assets of the house. 1 CASH ; amount at the bankers' this day (1st Jan.) - - - 2,550 0 0 1 EXCHEQUER BILLS; amount in hand - - - 5,310 0 0 7 BILLS RECEIVABLE; in hand, as per bill book 7,300 15 0 1 THREE AND A HALF PER CENT. STOCK, 6,000L., valued at 90% P 1001. stock 5,400 0 0 8 DESENTURE ACCOUNT; drawbacks receivable at the Custom-house 513 0 0 6 SHIP AMELIA our three eighths of that vessel 3,000 0 0 7 ADVENTURE IN IRISH LINEN ; amount in hand, computed at cost price - 2,467 0 0 7 JAMES BAILEY & Co., Liverpool due by them 1,350 10 0 7 THOMAS WATSON, & Co., Dublin; do. - - - 3,530 12 0 7 WILLIAM SPENCE & Co., Plymouth; do. - - - - 970 0 10 £ 32,391 17 10 Folio of STOCK DR. to SUNDRIES. Ledger. For the debts of the house, as follows £ s. d. 6 To BILLS PAYABLE: amount of acceptances at this date - - 2,350 10 0 3 To INSURANCE; amount of premiums due to underwriters - - 1,880 15 0 9 To MORRIS PITMAN, Trinidad balance due to him - - - 1,370 5 0 4 To JAMES FORBES, Demarara do. - - 720 5 0 7 To SIMON FRAZER, London do - - - - 960 15 0 2 To JAMES ALLAN & Co., Kingston, Jamaica ; do. - - - 1,150 10 0 8 To GEORGE and WILLIAM Fox, Falmouth; do. - - - - 320 15 0 8,753 15 0 Balance, being the present capital of the house - - 23,638 2 10 £32,391 17 10 VOL L-8 Digitized by Google 206 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. Let the transaction to be first explained be an order for goods from a correspondent abroad. A house in Jamaica sends instructions to the house at home to buy and ship a quantity of manufactured articles, suited to the Jamaica market, as follows:- Order from JAMES ALLAN & Co., of Kingston, Jamaica, to HENRY BARCLAY & Co., of London. J. A. Linen; Lint Strelitz Osnaburgs, 14 bales, about 6d. P yard. & Co. Best tow Strelitz do., 9 bales, 4d. or 4jd. Best white Platillas, 1 case. Linen tick assorted, Iths width, 9d., 1s., Is. 3d.; 10 pieces each, cut up in 22-yard lengths. Woollens 5 bales Penistones, 4ths wide, best indigo blue, 1s. a yard. Cottons; 50 pieces stout calico, 28 yards each, the wide, 4d. a yard. 50 do. do. do. iths, superior, 5d. a yard. 100 do. stout calico shirting, the wide, superior, 6d. a yard Hats; 4 dozen gentlemen's superfine black, 20s. each. 2 do. do drab, 20s. each. 1 do. youth's do. black, 15s. each. 20 do. felt hats, for negroes, 22s. P dozen. Shoes ; 10 dozen prime calf-skin shoes, full size, 65s. P dozen. 10 do. youth's do 52s. P dozen. 5 do. gentlemen's dress do. 72s. P dozen. This order the London merchant divides among six, seven, or more wholesale dealers, according to their respective lines of business. Each dealer, or tradesman, as he is com- monly called, provides his portion of the order in the course of the fortnight, three weeks, or month, allowed him by the merchant; and when the goods are packed and ready to ship, he sends in his account, or bill of parcels, thus :- London, 20th February, 1831. Messrs. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. Bought of SIMON FRAZER. J.A. & Co. £ 8. d. No. 8. 10 pieces best tow Strelitz Osnaburgs, 146 yards each, at 4d. P yard - 24 6 8 Inside wrapper, 16 yards, at 3d. - - - - - - 0 4 0 Cord, bale, and press packing - - - - - 0100 25 0 8 Then follow, stated in like manner, the particulars of 8 bales, No. 9. to 16. both inclusive, amounting to - - - - 212 4 2 £237 4 10 London, 20th February, 1831. Messrs. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. Bought of J. BORRADAILE & Co. J. A. & Co. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 39. Case, 1 dozen and 2 youths' hats and bands, at 15s. each - 10 10 0 Case (small) - - - - - - - 040 10 14 0 40. Case, 9 dozen felt hats for negroes, at 22s. + dozen - - 9 IS 0 Case (large) - - - - - - - 0 16 0 10 14 0 41. Do. the same - - - - - - - - 10 14 0 £32 2 0 The merchant, having received the whole of the bills of parcels, fixed on a vessel, and agreed for the freight, proceeds to make an entry at the Custom-house, and to ship the goods. That done, the next step is to prepare the Invoice, or general account of the ship- ment, as exhibited in the next page. This invoice, being sent out by the vessel to Messrs. Allan & Co. conveys to them a number of particulars in a short space viz. the mark, the numbers, the value, and the con- tents of each package. In former times it was the practice to make an invoice very long, inserting in it a literal copy of each bill of parcels, but it has now become usual to make each tradesman deliver a duplicate of his account, to be sent abroad with the goods; in which case the invoice may be, like the above, little more than a summary of the bills of parcels. This method has two advantages it saves time at the counting-house of the export- er; and it affords to his correspondent an assurance that no more is charged to him than has been actually paid for the articles. An invoice ought to be made out with the utmost care, for it is a document of great importance in several respects: first, between the exporting merchant and his correspond- ent abroad; and next, when in the hands of the latter, it may and generally does form a voucher for calculating the import duty, as well as for the sales effected to retailers or other dealers. The sum insured by the exporting merchant generally exceeds the amount of the invoice by 2 per cent., because the recovery of a loss from insurers involves a charge of fully that amount. It is thus necessary to cover not only the price of the goods, and the charges of Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 207 shipping, insurance, and freight, but, such further sum as may enable the shipper, in case of loss, to carry to the credit of his correspondent the amount of the invoice, clear of any deduction. INVOICE of Goods shipped by HENRY BARCLAY & Co., in the Rawlins, J. Thomson, from London to Kingston in Jamaica, on account and risk of Messrs. JAMES ALLAN & Co. of Kingston. J. A. & Co. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. No. 1. Puncheon strong calf-skin shoes, P J. Johnson's bill of parcels - - - - - - 93 7 0 2. Do. do. do. - - - 94 16 4 3. French calf-skin shoes, do. - - - 23 9 0 4,5,6. 3 trunks do. - do. - - - 67 3 7 278 15 11 7. Case linen tick assorted, per J. Wilson's bill of parcels - - 42 0 0 8. to 16. 9 bales best tow Osnaburgs, 10 pieces each, Simon Frazer's bill of parcels - - - 236 5 0 17. 1 case white Platillas, Molling & Co's. bill of parcels - 41 0 8 18. to 24. 7 cases the same, do. - - 287 4 8 25. to 38. 14 bales lint Osnaburgs, P J. Mackenzie's bill of parcels - 367 10 0 39. 1 case youth's hats and bands, P J. Borradaile & Co's bill of parcels 10 14 0 40, 1. 2 cases felt hats, do P do. - - - 21 8 0 1,284 18 3 £ S. d. Entry; duty on part at t + cent.; bond and debenture 4 8 0 Cartage, wharfage, and shipping charges - - 7 9 6 Freight and primage 381. 7s.; bills of lading 3s. 6d. - 38 10 6 Insurance on 1,500L. at 40s. + 1001. - £30 0 0 Policy duty - - - - 3 18 9 33 18 9 Commission, 5 P cent. on 1,3351. - - - 66 15 0 do cent. on 1,5001. insured - 7 10 0. 158 11 9 Errors excepted. £1,443 10 0 At 6 months credit; due 6th of September. London, 6th of March, 1830. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. JOURNAL ENTRIES resulting from the foregoing Invoice. Folio of JAMES ALLAN & Co. Drs. to SUNDRIES. Ledger. For goods shipped to them in the Rawline, Thomson, for Jamaica. £ 8. d. 1 To JAMES JOHNSON; amount of shoes, P his bills of parcels - 278 15 11 1 To JOHN WILSON; linen tick do. - - 42 0 0 1 To SIMON FRAZER; tow Osnaburgs do. - - 236 5 0 1 To JOHN MACKENZIE; lint Osnaburgs do. - - 367 10 o 2 To JAMES BORBADAILE & Co.; hats do. - - 32 2 0 2 To MOLLING & Co.; for Platillas do. - - 328 5 4 3 To FREIGHT ACCOUNT freight, primage, and bills of lading - 38 10 6 3 To INSURANCE; premium and policy - - 33 18 9 3 To CHARGES; entry outward, duty, and shipping charges - - 11 17 6 3 To PROFIT AND Loss; for commission - - - 74 5 0 £1,443 10 0 The preceding invoice, being for account of a mercantile house, who sell again to dealers, comprises a variety of articles as a further specimen, we subjoin two short invoices, for account of sugar planters, and confined to articles consumed on their estates. INVOICE of Plantation Stores, shipped by HENRY BARCLAY & Co. in the Adventure, J. Williamson, Master, for Kingston, Jamaica, by order of Mr. JAMES THOMSON, Planter, and for his account and risk. J. T. £ 8. d. 1.to 6. 6 bales lint Osnaburgs, P bill of parcels from James An- derson - - - - - £240 0 0 Then follow, in like manner, the mark, number, and contents of va- rious other packages of plantation stores (hats, shoes, nails, &c.), com- posing the shipment amounting in all to - - 2,352 10 0 CHARGES. £ s. d. Custom-house entry, and shipping charges - - 2 12 6 Freight, primage, and bills of lading - - 18 7 6 Commission on 2,3741. at 21 P cent. - - 59 7 0 80 7 0 Insurance on 2,5501. at 21. P cent. - 9 5100 Policy duty - - - - - 6100 Commission, t P cent. - - - - 12 15 0 70 5 0 £ 2,503 2 0 Errors excepted. London, 2d of October, 1830. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. Digitized by Google 208 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. INVOICE of 60 Barrels of Herrings, shipped by HENRY BARCLAY & Co. of London, in the Barclay, James Ferrier, bound to Barbadoes, by order and for account and risk of JOHN HENDERSON, Esq., Planter, and consigned to him at Bridgetown, Barbadoes. London, 18th of Feb. 1824. J.H. 60 barrels prime white herrings, deliverable at Bridgetown, Barbadoes, free of charges, at 21s. P barrel - - - - - £63 0 0 This invoice is very short the agreement having been, that the herrings should be delivered at a fixed price, all charges included. ACCOUNT OF SALES.We come now to a transaction of a different kind; to the sale of goods imported from abroad. A merchant in England receives from a correspondent, whether in India, the West Indies, or North America, notice of a shipment of sugar, coffee, rice, or other produce, about to be made to England, with instructions to effect insurance on the computed value. This is the first step in the transaction; on the arrival of the vessel the goods are entered, landed, and warehoused ; and a broker is instructed to report on the state and prospects of the market. On a sale taking place, an account is made out and for- warded to the correspondent abroad, as follows:- ACCOUNT SALE of 7 Hhds. Sugar, by the Ceres, from Trinidad, for account of MORRIS PITTMAN, Esq. of Trinidad. £ S. d. cwt. qrs. lbs. £ s. d. Insurance on 1751. at 60s. M.P. 7 Hhds. weighing 87 3 21 P 100Z. - - £5 5 0 1. to7. Deduct draft - 0 0 14 Policy - - 0 10 6 5 15 6 87 3 7 Freight of 79cwt. 25 lbs. at 6s. P cwt. 23 15 4 Deduct tare - 9 3 7 Primage, pierage, and trade - 0 9 7 Duty on 79 cwt. 25 lbs. at 27s. P cwt. 106 19 0 Nett 78 0 0 Entry - - - 0 6 0 at 60s. P cwt. } 234 0 0 Dock dues - - - 2 12 0 Landwaiters and entry - - 0 16 0 Warehouse rent, 19 weeks - 15 2 Sampling - - 0 3 6 Insurance from fire - - 0 6 0 Interest on freight and duty - 1 12 3 Brokerage, 1 P cent. - - 2 6 9 Commission, 2 P cent. - - 4 13 4 P cent. on 1751. insured - 0 17 6 152 8 9 Nett proceeds, due 2d of May, 1830. 81 11 3 234 0 0 234 0 0 Errors excepted. London, 2d of April, 1831. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. We have here on one side of the account, the quantity and value of the goods sold ; on the other, the various charges attending the bringing home, the warehousing, and the sale of the articles. The quantity of goods accounted for in an account sale must be the same as in the invoice; if it be less, whether through damage at sea, through waste or any other cause, the extent of the deficiency should be explicitly stated. By the "overtaker" in the following sale is meant the additional barrel or package required for the coffee taken out of such of the tierces as have been opened on account of breakage or other damage. Allowances of Weight.-The tare is the weight of the cask, and differs, of course, in almost every package: but trett (see the following sale) is a fixed allowance of 5 lbs. per tierce in the case of coffee, intended, like draft in the case of sugar, to insure good weight to the buyer, and to enable him to do the same to those who purchase again from him. ACCOUNT SALE of 20 Tierces of Coffee, P Vittoria, from Demerara, for Account of JAMES FORBES, Esq., Demerara. CHARGES. £ s. d. Gross Weight. Tare. £ s. d. Insurance on 20 tierces at 351. a J.F. Clot. qrs. lbs. Cut. qre. lbs. tierce, 7001. at 50s. ; policy No. 5 tierces 30 7 3 2 15 36s. 9d. - - - 1969 1.to20. 5 do. 32 2 5 405 - Freight on 114 cwt. at 4 do. 2424 2 3 16 7s. 6d. P cwt. £42 15 0 Primage, pierage, and 6 87 1 16 10 2 8 trade - 176 Trett 0 2 14 - 44 2 6 Dock dues - - - - - 10 9 1 11 0 Landwaiters, entry, and part of Deduct 11 0 22 bond - - - - 126 Insurance from fire - - - 0 19 6 Nett 76 0 22 at Pcwi.} 462 17 9 Carried forward - - £76 0 4 . Carried forward £462 17 9 Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 209 ACCOUNT SALE-continued. CHARGES. Brought forward £462 17 9 Brought forward £76 0 4 J.F. Gross Weight. Tare. Public sale charges - - - 176 No. Cut. Cut. qre. 11s. Brokerage, 1 P cent. - 6167 Lto20. - - 3 tierces 17 1 1 209 Commission, 2f P cent. on 6761. - 16 18 0 3 do. 19 3 15 2 1 15 Commission, t cent. on 700L. insured - 3100 37 0 16 - 4 1 24 Trett 0 1 1 104 12 5 Nett proceeds, due 3d of May, 1831 571 13 1 4 2 25 Deduct 4 2 25 £676 5 6 Nett 32 1 19 at 120s. 194 9 4 cwt. Gross Weight. Tare. Cut. qrs. lbs. Cut. qrs. lbs. Overtaker 519 039 Trett 0 0 11 0 3 20 Deduct 0320 Nett 4 1 17 at 117s. 25 15 0 P cwt. 683 2 1 Discount, 1 P cent. 6 16 7 Gross proceeds £676 5 6 London, 3d of April, 1831. Errors excepted. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. Freight is charged on the weight of the produce only; not of the produce and packages together. This allowance is of old standing, and is to be traced less to the reason of the case, than to the competition prevailing among shipmasters. JOURNAL ENTRIES resulting from the preceding Accounts of Sale. Folio of Lodger. June, 1831. 4 THOMAS KEMBLE & Co. Drs. to SUNDRIES. £ 8. d. 2 To SUGAR + Ceres. Proceeds of 7 hhds., M. P. 1. to 7., sold by them at one month's credit, from 2d of April - 234 0 0 4 To COFFEE P Vittoria. Proceeds of 20 tierces, J. F. 1. to 20., sold at one month's credit, from 3d of April - - - 676 5 6 910 5 6 2 SUGAR P CERES Dr. to SUNDRIES. 3 To INSURANCE ACCOUNT; for premium and policy - - - 515 6 3 To FREIGHT ACCOUNT; for freight, primage, and pierage - - - 24 4 11. 4 To CUSTOMS INWARD; duty and entry - - - 107 5 0 4 CHARGES; dock dues, 52s. 10d. warehouse rent, 35s. 2d. landwaiters, 16s. ; sampling, 3s. 6d.; and fire insurance, 6s. - - - 5 13 6 4 To THOMAS KEMBLE & Co.; brokerage, 1 P cent. - - - - 2 6 9 3 To PROFIT AND Loss; for commissions - - - - £5 10 10 Interest on freight and duty - - 0 - 1 12 3 7 3 1 4 To MORRIS PTTMAN proceeds due 2d of May, 1831 - - - - 81 11 3 234 0 0 4 COFFEE P VITTORIA Dr. to SUNDRIES. 3 To INSURANCE; for premium and policy - - - - 19 6 9 3 To FREIGHT ACCOUNT; freight, primage, and pierage - - - - 44 2 6 3 Ta CHARGES; dock dues, landwaiters, insurance from fire, and public sale charges - - - - - 13 18 7 4 To THOMAS KEMBLE & Co. brokerage - - - - - - 6 16 7 3 To PROFIT AND Loss; for commissions - - - - - - 20 8 1 4 To JAMES FORBES ; nett proceeds due 3d of June, 1830 - - - - 571 13 1 £676 5 7 We have thus given an example of the transactions which form a great part of the busi- ness of our merchants the export of manufactured goods, and the import and sale of pro- duce received in return. Our next illustration shall be of a merchant's Cashbook the following is an example of the entries for a month:- S 2 27 Digitized by Google 210 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. Dr. CASH. PAID. Cr. 1830. £ S. d. 1830. £ S. d. Mar. 1 To balance at the Banker's 2,550 0 0 Mar. 2 By bills payable, paid No. 3 To ship Amelia, received of 261. to James Harding - 145 10 0 James Jacobs, for freight 175 3 0 4 By George and William Fox, 6 To bills receivable, received paid their balance of ac- payment of No. 251. on J. count - 320 15 0 Henderson - 200 0 0 6 By John Smith & Sons, paid 9 To James Bailey & Co., re- J. Jackson for their ac- ceived payment of their count - 98 0 0 draft at sight on J. Bain- 7 By bills payable, paid No. bridge - 152 10 0 269. to J. Stewart - - 300 0 0 15 To William Spence & Co., 18 By interest paid, discount on received balance of their Harrison & Co., 2 months 6 110 account - - 790 0 10 By J. Johnson, paid his bill - To debenture account, re- of parcels - - 278 15 11 ceived drawback on to- By John Wilson do. - 42 0 0 baeco shipped by the Plo- By Simon Frazer do. - 236 5 0 ver 15 8 0 By John Mackenzie do. - 367 10 0 18 To bills receivable, dis- By James Borradaile counted at the bankers, & Co. do. - 32 2 0 Harrison & Co., due 15- By Molling & Co. do. - 328 5 4 18 March - 730 10 0 31 By charges paid, postage, To profit and loss, received and petty disbursements 5 P cent. discount, on this month, per petty cash paying with ready money, book - - 15 2 6 the accounts per contra, By balance, carried to next not due till six months month - - - 2,686 13 0 hence, from James Johnson £13 19 0 John Wilson - 2 20 Simon Frazer 11 16 0 John Mackenzie 18 7 6 James Borradaile & Co. - - 0 16 0 Molling & Co. - 16 8 3 63 8 9 £4,857 0 7 £4,857 0 7 These transactions, when put into the Journal form, stand thus :- Folio of MARCH, 1830. Ledger. CASH DR. to SUNDRIES. £ 8. d. Received this month. 6 To SHIP AMELIA. 3d. Freight from James Jacobs - - - - 175 3 0 6 To BILLS RECEIVABLE. 6th. Received payment of J. Anderson, due this day £200 0 0 18th. Discounted Harrison and Co., due 9th May - 730 10 0 930 10 0 7 To JAMES BAILEY & Co. 9th. Received their draft on Bainbridge, due - - 152 10 0 7 To WILLIAM SPENCE & Co. 15th. Received balance of their account - - - - 970 0 10 8 To DEBENTURE ACCOUNT. 15th. Drawback on tobacco by the Plover - - - - 15 8 0 3 To PROFIT AND Loss. 18th. Received discount on sundry accounts, per cash book - 63 8 9 £2,307 0 7 Folio of Ledger. SUNDRIES DRS. to CASH. Paid this month as follows: £ S. d. 6 BILLS PAYABLE. 2d. Paid No. 261. - - - - - £ 145 10 0 7th. Do. 269. - - - - - 192 15 0 338 5 0 4 CUSTOMS INWARD. 23d. Paid duty on sugar, P Ceres, 79 cwt. 25 lbs. at 27s. P cwt. - - - - 106 19 0 Entry . - - - - - 0 6 0 107 5 0 8 SIMON FRAZER. 18th. Paid his bill of parcels - - - 236 5 0 1 26th. Paid J. Jackson for his account - - 98 0 0 334 5 0 8 INTEREST ACCOUNT. 18th. Paid discount on Harrison & Co. - - - - 6 10 1 JAMES JOHNSON. 18th. Paid his bill of parcels - - - - - 278 15 11 Carried forward. - 1,064 12 9 Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 211 Folio of SUNDRIES DRS. to CASH-continued. Ledger. £ S. d. Brought forward 1,064 12 9 1 JOHN WILSON. 18th. Paid his bill of parcels - - - - - 42 0 0 1 JOHN MACKENZIE. 18th. Paid his bill of parcels - - - - - 307 10 0 2 JAMES BORRADAILE & Co. 18th. Paid their bill of parcels - - - - - 32 2 0 2 MOLLING & Co. 18th. Paid their balance of account - - - - - 328 5 4 8 GEORGE AND WILLIAM Fox. 24th. Paid their balance of account - - - - - 320 15 0 3 CHARGES. 31st. Paid postage, and petty disbursements this month - - 15 2 6 £2,170 7 7 The above shows, that for all sums received, the account of cash is made debtor, and the parties paying the same are made creditors; while for all sums paid, the cash is credited, and the parties receiving them are made debtors. We are next to state the mode of entering bill transactions. BILLS RECEIVABLE.-We have seen by the Balance sheet that several correspondents are indebted to the house. The debts of correspondents abroad may be reduced by remitting either bills, specie, or merchandise for sale: from correspondents in England, bills are almost the only mode of remitting. When bills come to hand, the rule is to enter each in the bill book, with a minute statement of the date, term, sum, and other particulars thus:- No. Received From whom. Drawn by Date. Term. Drawn on To order of Due. Sum How disp. of. L. 660 8 March Bailey & Co. W. Adams Belfast, 1 Mar. 2 mths. T. Jones, Dublin A. Williams 1-4 May 850 Rainier & Co. 631 10 do. Watson & Co. J. Jacobs Cork, 3 do. 1 do. J. Adams, London G. Wilson 3-6 April 136 Smith & Co. 632 12 do. Spence & Co. T. Johnson Falmo. 5 do. 2 do. T. Allan, Liverpool D. Jones 5-8 May 260 Overend & Co. The JOURNAL ENTRIES for these bills are as follows:- Folio of Ledger. BILLS RECEIVABLE DR. to SUNDRIES. For the following remitted this month £ S. d. 7 To JAMES BAILEY & Co. No. 630. on T. Jones, Dublin, due 4th of May - - - 350 0 0 7 To T. WATSON & Co. No. 631. on J. Adams, London, due 6th of April - - - 135 0 0 7 To WILLIAM SPENCE & Co. No. 632. on T. Allan, Liverpool, due 8th of May - - - 260 0 0 £745 0 0 BILLS PAYABLE.-The entries under this head are, of course, wholly different from the preceding, being for acceptances of the house given on account of sums owing by it to corres- pondents. Each acceptance is entered in the book of bills payable, thus:- Drason by Place and Date To Order of On Account of Term. When accepted. Due. Sum. No. L 8. d. 151 J. Allan & Co. Jamaica, 15 Jan. J. Jones J. Allan & Co. 90 days' sight 12 March 10-13 June 175 10 0 152 G. & W. Fox Falmouth, 7 Mar. J. Thompson G. & W. Fox 15 days' date 14 do. 22-25 March 73 15 0 132 10 0 153 J. Clark Hull, 5 Mar. G. Barclay J. Smith & Sone 1 month's date 16 do. 5-8 ditto The Journal entries for these bills are as follows:- Folio of SUNDRIES DRS. to BILLS PAYABLE. Ledger. £ S. d. For the following bills accepted. JAMES ALLAN & Co. No. 151. their draft, due 13th of June - 175 10 0 2 G. & W. Fox. No. 152. their draft, due 25th of March - 73 15 0 8 1 SIMON FRAZER. J. Clark's draft on his account, due 8th of March - 132 10 0 £ 381 15 0 May, 1830. CASH DR. to THOMAS KEMBLE & Co. 27th. Received from them proceeds of sugar P Ceres - 284 0 0 1 Less their brokerage - - 2 6 9 - 231 13 3 30th. Received coffee P Vittoria - 676 5 6 - - . 4 6 16 7 Less brokerage - - - - 669 8 11 £ 901 22 Digitized by Google 212 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. The preceding entries, few as they are compared to the monthly transactions of a house of business, are sufficient to show the nature of a Journal as well as of the subsidiary books, (for cash, bills, invoices, and account sales,) from which it is composed. The Journal, being a complete record of the business of the house, is very varied and comprehensive in its nature, and may be termed an index to every book of consequence in the counting-house. But while in the cash book every payment or receipt is entered on the day it takes place, and in the bill books every bill is registered on the day it comes to hand, or is accepted, the Journal entries, being completed only at the end of the month, admit of being combined to a considerable extent, so as to exhibit a number of transactions in collective sums. Thus all the acceptances of the house paid in the course of the month appear in the Journal entry of Bills Payable Dr. to Cash; they are arranged in this entry as they fall due, after which the whole are added into one sum, which sum alone needs be carried to the Ledger. In like manner, all bills receivable, whether discounted, or kept by the house till they fall due, are collected under the head of Bills Receivable Dr. to Cash, summed up together, and carried to the Ledger in one line; a point of great importance, as we shall see presently, in facilitat- ing the balance of the Ledger. We proceed to give a specimen of the Ledger: the whole of the Journal entries in the preceding pages, when posted into the Ledger, will stand thus :- Dr. STOCK. CR. Fo. £ 8. d. Fo. £ 8. d. 1831. 1831. Jan. 1 1 To sundries - 8,753 15 0 Jan. 1 1 By sundries - 32,391 17 10 Dr. CASH. CR. Jan. 1 I To Stock - - 2,550 0 0 Mar. 31 By sundries 2,170 7 7 Mar. 1 4 To sundries - 2,307 0 7 May 30 15 ToT. Kemble & Co. 901 2 2 DR. EXCHEQUER BILLS. CR. Jan. 1 1 To stock - - 5,310 0 0 DR. THREE AND A HALF PER CENT. STOCK. CR. Jan. 1 1 To stock - 5,400 0 0 DR. JAMES JOHNSON, London. CR. Mar. 1 4 To cash - - 278 15 11 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 278 15 1 DR. JOHN WILSON, London. CR. Mar. 1 4 To cash - - 420 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 4200 DR. SIMON FRAZER, London. CR. Mar. 26 4 To cash - - 334 5 0 Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 960 15 0 31 5 To bills payable - 132 10 0 Jan. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 236 5 0 DR. JOHN MACKENZIE, London. Ca. Mar. 8 4 To cash - - 367 10 0 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 367 10 0 DES. JAMES BORRADAILE & Co., London. CRS. Mar. 1 4 To cash - - 320 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 32 2 0 Das. IOLLING & Co., London. Cas. I Mar. 1 4 To cash - - 328 5 4 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. is 328 5 4 Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 213 DRS. J. ALLAN & Co., Kingston, Jamaica. Cas. Mar. 6 9 To sundries - 1,443 10 0 Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 1,150 10 0 31 11 To bills payable - 175 10 0 DR. SUGAR BY THE CERES. Ca. April 2 11 To sundries - 234 0 0 April 2 11 By T. Kemble & Co. 234 0 0 DR. FREIGHT ACCOUNT. CR. Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 38 10 6 April 2 11 By sugar P Ceres 24 11 11 May 3 13 By coffee P Vittoria 44 2 6 DR. INSURANCE ACCOUNT. CR. Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 1,880 15 0 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 33 18 9 April 2 11 By sugar P Ceres 5 16 6 May 3 13 By coffee P Vittoria 19 6 9 DR. CHARGES. CR. Mar. 3 4 To cash - - 15 2 6 Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 11 17 6 April 2 11 By sugar P Ceres 5136 May 3 13 By coffee P Vittoria 13 18 7 DR. PROFIT AND Loss. CR. Mar. 6 9 By J. Allan & Co. 74 5 0 Mar. 8 4 By cash - - 63 8 9 April 2 11 By sugar P Ceres 7 3 1 May 3 13 By coffee + Vittoria 20 8 1 DR. CUSTOMS INWARDS. CR. April 2 4 To cash - - 107 5 0 April 2 11 By sugar + Ceres 107 5 0 DR. COFFEE PER VITTORIA. CB. April3 3 To sundries - 676 5 6 April 3 11 By T. Kemble & Co. 676 5 6 DR. MORRIS PITTMAN, Trinidad. CR. Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 1,370 5 0 April 2 11 By sugar P Ceres 81 11 3 DR. JAMES FORBES, Demarara. CR. Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 720 5 0 May 3 13 By coffee P Vittoria 571 13 1 DRS. THOMAS KEMBLE & Co., London. DRS. April 3 11 To sundries - 910 5 6 April 7 11 By sugar P Ceres 2 6 9 30 13 By coffee # Vittoria 6 16 7 May 30 15 By cash - - 901 2 2 910 5 B DR. BILLS RECEIVABLE. CR. Jan. 1 1 To stock - - 7,300 15 0 Mar. 1 4 By cash - - 930 10 0 Mar. 3 5 To sundries - 745 0 0 Digitized by Google 214 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. DR. BILLS PAYABLE. CR. Mar. 7 4 To cash - - 388 5 0 Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 2,359 10 0 Mar. 3 5 By sundries - 381 15 0 DR. SHIP AMELIA. CR. Jan. 1 1 To stock - - 3,000 0 0 Mar. 1 4 By cash - 175 3 0 DR. ADVENTURE IN IRISH LINEN. CR. Jan. 1 1 To stock : - 2,467 0 0 Das. JAMES BAILEY & Co., Liverpool. CRS. Jan. 1 1 To stock - - 1,350 10 0 Mar. 3 4 By cash - - 152 10 0 Mar. 9 5 By bills receivable 350 0 0 DRS. THOMAS WATSON & Co. Dublin. CRS. Jan. 1 1 To stock - - 3,530 12 0 Mar. 3 5 By bills receivable 135 0 0 DRS. WILLIAM SPENCE & Co., Plymouth. CRs. Jan. 1 1 To stock - - 970 0 10 Mar. 3 4 By cash - - 970 0 10 Mar. 5 5 By bills receivable 260 0 0 DRS. GEORGE AND WILLIAM Fox, Falmouth. CRS. Mar. 4 4 To cash - - 320 15 0 Jan. 1 2 By stock - - 320 15 0 Mar. 6 To bills payable - 73 15 0 DR. DEBENTURE ACCOUNT. CR. Jan. 1 1 To stock - 513 0 0 Mar. 5 4 By cash - - 1580 DR. INTEREST ACCOUNT. CR. Mar. 8 4 To cash - - 6 1 10 The Ledger is thus a register of all the entries in the Journal; and a register so arranged as to exhibit on one side all the sums at Debtor; on the other all those at Creditor. It is kept in the most concise form, the insertions in it hardly ever exceeding a line each, or con- taining more than the title of the entry in the Journal. On opening a page in the Ledger, a person unacquainted with book-keeping is apt to consider this brevity unsatisfactory ; and it was formerly the practice to add in each line a few explanatory words. Thus the entries in the account of Simon Frazer, which in our preceding page are briefly £ 8. d. March 26. To cash - - - - - - 334 5 0 31. To bills payable - - - - - 132 10 0 would, at an earlier date in the practice of book-keeping, have been expanded to £ 8. d. March 18. To cash paid for goods per Rawlins - - - 236 5 0 26. To ditto paid J. Jackson for his account - - 9800 31. To bills payable, paid J. Clarks' draft for his account 132 10 0 This method is still followed in some counting-houses, and such explanatory additions are certainly conducive to clearness; but they are practicable only in a house of limited business: wherever the transactions are numerous and varied, they should be left out of the Ledger, for two reasons; they increase greatly the labour of the book-keeper, and they never can be so full or circumstantial as to supersede the account current book. Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 215 The same Ledger may continue in use from one to five years, according to the size of the book, or the extent of the transactions of the house. On opening a new Ledger, it is proper to place in succession accounts of the same class or character: thus-Stock account ought to be followed by that of the Three per cent. consols, exchequer bills or other property be- longing to the house; and if the business be with the West Indies, it is fit that accounts with Jamaica should be placed near those with Demerara, Trinidad, and other sugar colonies. Balancing the Ledger.-This important operation is performed by adding up the Debtor and Creditor side of every account in the Ledger, ascertaining the difference or balance in each, and carrying such balance, as the case may be, to the Debtor or Creditor column in the balance sheet. On closing, for example, a few of the preceding Ledger accounts, we find them to stand thus :- Debtors. Creditors. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. Cash - - - - 3,587 15 2 Simon Frazer - - 780 5 0 James Allan & Co. - - 468 10 0 Freight Account - - 107 4 11 And so on with every account except Stock, which, having no entries in the current year, is put in the balance sheet exactly as it was in the beginning of the year. Including Stock, the total at the Debtor side of the balance sheet ought to agree exactly with the total at the Creditor side and if it do not, it is a rule in all well-regulated counting-houses to follow up the examination perseveringly, until they are made to agree. The apparent difference may not exceed a few shillings or a few pence; still the search is continued, because the smallest discrepancy shows the existence of error, and to an extent perhaps greatly beyond the frac- tion in question. It often happens, indeed, that, as the examination proceeds, the difference undergoes a change from a smaller to a larger amount, and without increasing the difficulty of discovering the error, which is as likely to have occurred in the case of a large as of a small sum. Differences, when in round sums, such as 10/. 100L, or 1,000l., generally lie in the addition; fractional sums frequently in the posting. All this, however, is uncertain for the error or errors may be in any month in the year, and in any one of the thousand entries and upwards which have been made in the course of it. Hence the necessity of examining the whole; and young book-keepers are often obliged to pass week after week in the tedious labour of revising, adding, and subtracting. On the other hand, there are sometimes exam- ples of the balance being found on the first trial; but such cases are rare, and occur only to careful and experienced book-keepers. The only effectual means of lessening the labour and perplexity of balancing the Ledger, is to exercise great care in every stage of the book- keeping process; as well in making the additions in the Journal, as in posting from the Journal into the Ledger, and casting up the Ledger accounts; and, lastly, in adding up the balance sheet, which is generally of formidable length. Accuracy in addition is one of the main requisites in a clerk, and particularly in a book- keeper. Of the extent to which it may be attained by continued practice, those only can judge who have experienced it themselves, or have marked the ease and correctness with which clerks in banking-houses perform such operations. They are in the habit of striking a daily balance which comes within small compass; but a merchant's balance, comprising the transactions of a year, extends commonly over a number of folio pages. It is advisable, therefore, to divide each page into portions of ten lines each, adding such portions separately. This lessens the risk of error, as it is evidently easier to add five or six such portions in suc- cession, than to do at once a whole folio containing fifty or sixty sums. Another important point towards agreeing a balance, is to limit carefully the number of Ledger entries; in other words, to comprise as much as possible in those aggregate sums in the Journal which are posted in the Ledger. Thus, in the case of the monthly entries for bills, whether receivable or payable, while the inner column of the Journal contains the amount of each specific bill-the final column, that which is carried to the Ledger-should, and generally does, comprise a number of bills in one sum. Entries in the cash book, which generally form so large a proportion of the transactions of the month, are carried by some book-keepers directly from the cash book into the Ledger, without an intermediate arrange- ment in the Journal form. In some lines of business this plan may answer; but as a gene- ral rule it is better to take the trouble of journalising the cash, thereby comprising in 30 or 40 Ledger entries the transactions of the month, which, when posted separately, would ex- ceed 100. The time required for re-writing or rather re-casting them, will, in most cases, be amply made good, by exhibiting the cash in a proper form, and by facilitating the ba- lance of the Ledger at the close of the year. We have said the close of the year, because, in nine mercantile houses out of ten, that is the period for striking a balance. In some branches of trade, however, the case is other- wise. Thus, among West India merchants, the 30th of April is the time of balancing, Digitized by Google 216 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. because at that season the sales of the preceding crop are, in general, completed, and those of the current year not yet begun. Arrears in book-keeping ought to be most carefully avoided-calculated as they are to engender mistakes, and to produce loss from delay in adjusting accounts. The practice of balancing the Ledger every six months, and of transmitting as often accounts current to the correspondents and connections of merchants, will, it is to be hoped, become general. It is, however, hardly practicable in cases where, as too often happens in the lesser mercantile establishments, the book-keeper is charged with a share of the active management. Exemp- tion from interruption, and removal from the bustle of current business, are main requisites to accuracy and despatch in accounts. In examining, or, as it is called, collating the books, the book-keeper requires not only a retired apartment, but the assistance of a clerk for the purpose of calling them over. A similar arrangement for another purpose-we mean for composing the Journal, the book-keeper dictating from the subsidiary books to a clerk whose writing forms the draught or rough copy of the Journal, has as yet been seldom adopted; although, when properly applied, it is highly conducive both to accuracy and expedition. A Ledger must, of course, have an index ; but it is very brief, containing merely the titles of the accounts and a reference to the page, as follows :- Folio Folio Allan & Co., James - - - 2 Bailey & Co., James - - - 7 Amelia, ship - - - - 6 Bills payable - - - - 6 The Subsidiary Books.-In former times, when business in this country was conducted by most persons on a very limited scale, the accounts of a number of merchants, or rather of those dealers whom we should now think it a compliment to call merchants, were often kept on a plan somewhat like that at present followed by our shopkeepers. The merchant or his chief clerk kept a daily record of transactions, whether sales, purchases, receipts, or pay- ments, in a diary, which was called a Waste-book, from the rude manner in which the entries or rather notices in it were written, being inserted, one by one, soon after the trans- actions in question took place. From this diary the Journal and Ledger were posted and book-keeping by double entry being in those days understood by few, one person frequently kept the books of several merchants, passing one or two days in the week at the house of each, and reducing these rough materials into the form of regular entries. In process of time, as transactions multiplied and mercantile business took a wider range, separate books were more generally required for particular departments, such as a bill book for all bills of exchange, and a cash book for all ready money transactions. This had long been the case in the large mercantile towns of Italy and Holland; and above a century ago it became a general practice in London and Bristol, which were then the only places of extensive busi- ness in England. But in English, as in foreign counting-houses, the bill book and even the cash book were long considered as little more than memoranda of details not as books of authority, or as fit documents for Journal entries: for that purpose the diary only was used. In time, however, the mode of keeping these subsidiary books improved, and merchants became aware that, when cash or bill transactions were properly entered in them, the Jour- nal might be posted from them as well as from the diary. Similar observations are applicable to the other subsidiary books, viz. an invoice book for goods shipped, and an account of sales book for goods received and sold. When from the gradual improvement in the management of counting-houses these books were kept in a manner to supply all that was wanted for Journal entries, the use of the diary was dispensed with for such entries also. And at last it was found, that in all well-regulated counting- houses the books kept for separate departments of the business were sufficient for the com- position of the Journal, with the exception of a few transactions out of the regular course, which might be easily noticed in a supplementary book called a Petty Journal, or a book for occasional entries. The consequence was, that the diary or waste book, formerly the ground- work of the Journal and Ledger, became excluded from every well-regulated counting-house. This has long been the case, and the name of waste book would have been forgotten, were it not found in the printed treatises on book-keeping which have appeared from time to time, and have been generally composed by teachers in schools or academies, who, unacquainted with the actual practice of merchants, were content to copy and reprint what they found laid down in old systems of book-keeping. The subsidiary books required in a counting-house are, the Cash book; Book of Acceptances of the house, or Bills Payable; Book of Bills Receivable, or bills on other merchants which are or have been in possession of the house. Bought book, or book for bills of parcels; Invoice book, or register of goods sold or exported; Account of Sales book Insurance Policy book, containing copies of all policies of insurance; Petty Journal, or book for such occasional entries as do not belong to any of the preceding. Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 217 Such are the authorities from which it is now customary, in every well-regulated house, to compose the Journal. Their number indicates a repartition or subdivision, to a consider- able extent, of counting-house work, and nowhere is such repartition productive of greater advantage. How much better is it to enter all bills receivable in one book, all bills payable in another, and all cash transactions in a third, than in any way to blend these very distinct entries ! The effect of this subdivision is to simplify the Journal entries in a manner highly conducive to accuracy and despatch and to present such means of checking or examining them, that many transactions may be stated, and an account extended over a number of folios, without a single error. The use of most of the subsidiary books is sufficiently pointed out by their names but it may be well to add a few remarks on the Bought book," or receptacle for the accounts of goods purchased. A bill of parcels is the name given to the account of goods supplied by a manufacturer, tradesman, or dealer, to a merchant. Such accounts soon become numerous, and it is evidently of consequence to adopt the best method of keeping them. In former times it was the practice to fold them up in a uniform size, and after writing on the back the names of the respective furnishers, to put them away in bundles. But wherever the pur- chases of a merchant are extensive, and the bills of parcels numerous, the better mode, after arranging them alphabetically, is to paste them in a large book, generally a folio, made of blue or sugar-loaf paper: this book to have its pages numbered, and to have an alphabetical index. Any single bill of parcels may thus be referred to with the same case as we turn to an account in a ledger; and one of these folios may be made to hold a very great quantity of bills of parcels; as many as would form a number of large bundles when tied up on the plan of former times. Book of Bills Payable.-The notice, or, as it is termed, advice of bills payable after sight, generally comes to hand before the bills themselves. As the time of the arrival of the latter is uncertain, the better plan is not to enter them from the advice among the other bills pay- able, but to appropriate a space of ten or twelve pages at the beginning or end of the book of bills payable, and to insert there the substance of the advice received. There are a few books in every counting-house which do not form part of the vouchers or materials for the Journal; viz., the Account Current book, containing duplicates of the accounts furnished by the house to their different correspondents and connections The Letter-book, containing copies of all letters written to the correspondents or connec- tions of the house; The Petty Cash book, or account of petty disbursements, the sum of which is entered once a month in the cash book. The Order book, containing copies of all orders received The Debenture book, or register of drawbacks payable by the custom-house. It was formerly a practice in some houses for the book-keeper to go over the letter book at the end of each month, that he might take note of any entries not supplied by the subsi- diary books. This, however, is now unnecessary these books, when carefully kept, con- taining, in one shape or other, every transaction of the house. The Principle of Double Entry-From these explanations of the practice of book-keep- ing, we must call the attention of our readers to a topic of more intricacy-the origin of the present system, and the manner in which it was adopted. To record the transactions of a merchant in a Journal or day book was an obvious arrangement, and to keep a Ledger or systematic register of the contents of the Journal was a natural result of his busi- ness, particularly when conducted on credit. Such, in a rude form, are the books of our shopkeepers, who enter their sales and purchases in a day book, and in their Ledger carry the former to the Dr. of their customers, the latter to the Cr. of the wholesale dealers who supply them with goods. By making at the end of the year a list of the sums due to him by his customers, and of those due by him to wholesale dealers, a shopkeeper may, after adding to the former the value of his stock on hand, make out an approximative statement of his debts and assets. Now, that which in this manner is done indirectly and imperfectly, it is the object of double entry to do with method and certainty. The shopkeeper makes out a list of debtors on one side and to creditors on the other, but he cannot make them balance, because his entries have been single; that is, they have had no counterpart. On making a purchase of cottons from Messrs. Peel of Manchester, or of woollens from Messrs. Gott of Leeds, he merely enters the amount of their credit, but he makes no one Dr. to them, because the goods are not sold; and to introduce an imaginary account would be too great a refinement for a plain, practical man. But a person accustomed to double entry would, without any effort of thought, make " Printed Calicoes" Dr. to Messrs. Peel, and Ker- seymeres" Dr. to Messrs. Gott, for the respective amounts after which, as the sales proceeded, he would make the buyers Drs. to these accounts for the amount of their purchases. We thus perceive that the intricacy in the application of double entry was not with the personal so much as with the nominal accounts. Let us refer to the country where book- VoL. L-T 28 Digitized by Google 218 BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. keeping was first studied, and take as an example the case of Doria, a merchant in Genoa, shipping, in a former age, silk, of the value of 2001, bought from Flori, in Piedmont, to Henderson & Co., silk manufacturers, in England, on the terms of charging, not an addi- tional price, but a commission of 5 per cent. with interest until reimbursed his advance. In entering the transaction, Doria's book-keeper would, as a matter of course, make Hendersone debtors to Flori 200L for the cost of the silk ; but he might not so readily find a creditor for the 10L commission, or the 71. interest eventually due on the advance, The custom in this primitive era of book-keeping probably was, to introduce the firm of the house into their books, making Hendersons debtors to Doria, for the 10/. and 71.; but as the practice of book- keeping improved, it was found preferable to avoid inserting, on any occasion, the firm of the house, and to substitute nominal accounts, such as, commission, interest, bills payable, bills receivable. These, attention and practice rendered in time familiar to the book-keeper, who learned to open his Journal at the beginning of a year by making the parties who owed balances to the house debtors, not to the firm by name, but to Stock; and those to whom the house was indebted, creditors by Stock. As the transactions of the year proceeded, he made those to whom money was paid debtors, not to the firm of the house, but to Cash and those for whose account bills were accepted debtors to Bills payable; so that book- keeping by double entry assumed its present form gradually and almost imperceptibly. What are the advantages of this method compared to that of single entry ! First, it sup- plies a test of accuracy, inasmuch as, the entries on the debtor side of the Ledger being equal to those on the creditor side, their respective totals ought, as a matter of course, to balance. After going through this proof, personal accounts of whatever length may be settled with confidence; while in a general account, such as kerseymeres or printed calicoes, the value sold and the value remaining on hand may be ascertained by merely balancing the account in the Ledger, without the repeated references to the sales book that would otherwise be required. Without double entry, a dealer could hardly estimate his property unless he took stock; but with it an extraction of the Ledger balances fulfils that object, and stock-taking, however proper as a test of the honesty of servants, becomes quite unnecessary as a means of calculation. In short, in regard to any person in trade, whether merchant, dealer, or manufacturer, double entry forms the connecting link of his accounts, and affords a ready solution of any inquiry as to the appropriation, increase, or diminution of his capital. This advantage may fortunately be obtained without any great sacrifice of time or labour. Of the books of dealers, manufacturers, and retailers, nine parts in ten may continue to be kept by single entry ; for the addition of a few pages of double entry in the form of a sum- mary, at the end of the month or quarter, will be sufficient to exhibit the result of a great extent of transactions. Nominal Accounts.-Of these our limits permit us to notice only two Profit and Loss, and Merchandise. The former contains on the creditor side all the entries of commissions earned, and gains obtained on particular adventures; while the debtor side exhibits the losses incurred, whether by bad debts or by unsuccessful purchases. Every house keeping regular books must have a profit and loss account, but a merchandise account is altogether optional. Those who have such a head in their Ledger are accustomed to make it Dr. to the dealers or furnishers from whom they make purchases, and to credit it in return by the correspondents or connections to whom they make sales. In many houses, however, there is no such intermediate account; the parties to whom the goods are sent being made Drs. at once to the furnishers of the goods, as in the case of the shipment to Jamaica stated in our preceding pages. A merchant, before estimating his profits, ought to charge interest on each head of investment. His clear profit cannot be ascertained without it; and the practice of charg- ing it, is a lesson to him to hold no property that does not afford, at least, interest on his advances. Mercantile books and accounts must be kept in the money of the country in which the partners reside. A house in Rotterdam composed of English partners necessarily keep their accounts in Dutch money, although their transactions may be chiefly with England. Fur- ther, books, it is obvious, can be kept in only one kind of money and when a merchant in England, receives from a distant country, accounts which cannot at the time be entered in sterling for want of a fixed exchange, these accounts should be noted in a separate book, until, the exchange being ascertained, they can be entered in the Journal in sterling. A book-keeper will do well to avoid all such puzzling distinctions, as " J. Johnson, my account with him and J. Johnson, his account proper;" on the plain ground that every account in the Ledger ought to be the general account of the person whose name it bears. Errors excepted.-This expression is merely a proviso, that if any mistakes be discovered in the account in question, they shall be open to correction. Accounts Current.-An account current generally contains all the transactions of the house with one of its correspondents during a given time, generally six or twelve months. The following is an example:- Digitized by Google BOOK-KEEPING AND ACCOUNTS. 219 Messrs. JAMES ALLAN & Co., Jamaica, in Account Current with HENRY BARCLAY & Co., London. Days Days Drs. to 31 Interest. Crs. to 31 Interest. Dec. Dec. 1831. £ 8. d. 1831. £ S. d. June 30 To balance of last Aug. 10 By proceeds account 867 10 0 184 1,595 of 20 tierces July 2 To your draft to J. coffee P Smith, due Aug. 13. 128 0 0 140 179 Louisa, due July 9 To invoice of goods Sept. 10. 410 0 0 112 459 P Amelia, due By your re- Oct. 9. 752 0 0 83 624 mittance on Oct. 10 To cash paid J. Har- J. Austin, vey on your ac- due Oct. 10. 350 0 0 82 287 count 75 10 0 82 62 Sept. 15 By proceeds To insurance on pro- of 17 hhds. duce shipped by sugar, P you in the Ann, Hercules, Nokes, £1,400, at due Oct. 15. 238 0 0 77 173 2guineas per cent. Sept. 20 By cash re- £29 8 0 ceived from Policy 3 10 0 J. Johnson 32 18 0 on your ac- Dec. 31 Postage and petty count 260 0 0 102 265 charges during this Dec. 31 Balance of in- half year 1 15 0 terest car- To commission, 1 ₱ ried to Dr. - 1,276 cent. on £203 paid, Balanceofac- Do. on £260 re- count car- ceived on your ac- ried to your count 4 6 0 Dr. in new To balance of inte- account 621 8 7 rest this half year, 1,276 divided by 73, is 17 9 7 1,879 8 7 2,460 1,879 8 7 2,460 Errors excepted. London, 31st of December, 1831. HENRY BARCLAY & Co. We have here on the Dr. side all the payments made or responsibilities incurred for the correspondents in question, and on the Cr. side the different receipts on their account. The interest for the half year, the commission on receipts and payments, the postage and petty charges, being then added, the account may be closed and the balance carried to next year. Copies of accounts current ought to be sent off as soon as possible after the day to which they are brought down and with that view they ought to be written out from the Ledger before the close of the year or half year, particularly as the entries for interest and commis- sion can be made only after they are written out. The whole ought then to be copied into the account current book. But in some counting-houses the account current book, instead of being copied from the Ledger and Journal, is posted, like the latter, from the bill book, the cash book, the invoice book, and the account of sales book. It is then considered a check on the Journal and Ledger and from the comparative ease with which it is posted, may be completed and made use of before the latter are fully brought up, This is certainly an advantage in houses where, from pressure on the book-keeper, the Journal and Ledger are in arrear, but such ought never to be the case for any length of time; while as to the former point-that of forming a check on the Journal and Ledger-the fact is, that these books, from the mode in which they are kept, are much more likely to be correct than the account current book. Printed Works on Book-Reping.-To the publications of old date by teachers have suc- ceeded, in the present age, several treatises on book-keeping by accountants. Some of these are of very limited use, being directed more to recommend a favourite practice of the author in some particular branch of book-keeping, than to convey a comprehensive view of the system. The only works on the subject entitled to that character are two one by the late Benjamin Booth, published above thirty years ago the other by Mr. Jones, an accountant in London, printed so lately as the year 1831. Booth was a man of ability, who had expe- rience both as a merchant and a book-keeper, having passed one part of his life in London, the other in New York. The reader of his work finds a great deal of information in short compass, without being perplexed either by superfluous detail or by fanciful theory.* The form of Mr. Booth's Journal and Ledger is similar to what we have given in the preceding pages, and to the practice of our merchants for more than a century : it was by The title of the book is A Complete System of Book-keeping, by Benjamin Booth." London, 1799, thin 4to. Printed for Growvenor and Chater, and for the late J. Johnson, St. Paul's Church- yard. Mr. Jones's book is entitled " The Science of Book-keeping exemplified." 4to. London, 1831. 4l. 4s. Digitized by Google 220 BOOTS-BORDEAUX. much the best work on book-keeping, until Mr. Jones devised several improvements calcu- lated to lessen the risk of error in both Journal and Ledger. One of these improvements is the use of two columns for figures in each page of the Journal, one for the Drs., the other for the Crs. by inserting each sum twice, the book-keeper obtains the means of proving the Journal additions page by page. The posting from the Journal to the Ledger is also simplified and rendered less subject to error by the use of these columns. In regard to the great task of balancing the Ledger, Mr. Jones's plan is to do it quarter by quarter, making use of a separate book, called a balance book, in which are inserted the totals on each side of the Ledger accounts at the end of three months. By these means, the agreement of the general balance is made a matter of certainty after completing the additions. Other parts of Mr. Jones's book, viz. his formulæ for books on the single entry plan, and for the accounts of bankers, contain suggestions of evident utility. His volume consists of two parts: the printed part (120 pp.) containing the treatise, with directions; and the lithographed part (140 pp.) giving copious examples in two sets of books, one kept by single, the other by double entry. If, on a reimpression, the author were to divide the work, and to sell the sin- gle entry part separately from the double entry, the price of each might be moderate, and a great service would be rendered to the mercantile public. BOOTS AND SHOES, the external covering for the legs and feet, too well known to require any description.-(For an account of the value of the boots and shoes annually pro- duced in Great Britain, see LEATHER.) BORAX, OR TINCAL (Arab. Buruk; Pers. Tunkar), one of the salts of soda. This salt is obtained in a crystallised state from the bottom of certain lakes in Thibet. It is found dissolved in many springs in Persia, and may be procured of a superior quality in China. It is also said to be found in Saxony and South America; but it is more abundant in Thibet than any where else. When dug up it is in an impure state, being enveloped in a kind of fatty matter. It is then denominated tincal and it is not till it has been purified in Europe that it takes the name of borax. The process followed in its purification was for a long time known only to the Venetians and Hollanders. Borax is white, transparent, rather greasy in its fracture, its taste is styptic, and it converts syrup of violets to a green. It rea- dily dissolves in hot water, and swells and bubbles in the fire. It is of great use as a flux for metals.-(Thomson's Chemistry, Ure's Dictionary, &c.) The borax entered for home consumption amounted, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, to 151,569 lbs. a year; the total imports during the 3 years ending with 1832 having been 170,392 lbs. a year. Previously to 1832, it was subject, refined, to a duty of 56s., and unrefined, to a duty of 28s. a cwt. In 1832, however, these duties were reduced, the former to 10s., and the latter to 4s. a cwt. Their produce in that year amounted to 8821. 15s. Id. Borax is worth, in bond, unrefined, 31. 15s. to 41.; refined, 41. 10s. to 51. a cwt. BORDEAUX, a large and opulent commercial city of France, situated on the Garonne, about 75 miles from its mouth, in lat. 44° 50¥ N., long. 0° 34' W. Population 110,000. The commerce of Bordeaux is very extensive. The Garonne is a noble river, with depth of water sufficient to enable large ships to come up to the city, laying open, in conjunction with the Dordogne and their tributary streams, a large extent of country. The commerce of Bordeaux is greatly promoted by the famous canal of Languedoc, which communicates with the Mediterranean. By its means Bordeaux is enabled to furnish the south of France with colonial products at : early as cheap a rate as Marseilles. Wines, brandies, and fruits are the staple articles of export ; but the merchants apply themselves more particularly to the wine trade. Most part of their other business is confined to dealing upon commission ; but this they conduct almost invariably on their own account. The reason they assign for this is, that the difficulties attending the purchase, racking, fining, and proper care of wines, so as to render them fit for exportation, are so very great, as to make it almost impossible to conduct the business on any thing like the ordinary terms so as to satisfy their employers. Colonial products, cotton, &c. form the principal articles of importation. Money is the same at Bordeaux as in other parts of France. All accounts are kept in francs, the par of exchange being 25 fr. 20 cent. the pound sterling.-(See EXCHANGE.) Weights and Measures.-With the exception of wines and brandies, the new or decimal system is of general application in Bordeaux, both in wholesale and retail operations.-(See WEIGHTS AND MEA- SURES.) Wine is still sold by the tun of 4 hogsheads. The hogshead contains 30 veltes. Brandy by the 50 veltes. Spirits of wine by the velte. The velte is an old measure of which 50 are equal to 3.8 hectolitres. Oil is sold by weight (per 50 kilog.) 50 811 imperial gallons. Entrance to the River.-This lies between Point de la Coubre on the north, and Point de Grave on the south, bearing from each other nearly S. E. and N. W., distant about 4 leagues. There are lights on both these points, but neither of thein is elevated to any great height above the level of the sea. The middle part of the entrance to the river is encumbered with extensive sand banks and rocks. On one of the latter, in lat. 45° 351' N., long. 1° 10' W., stands the Tour de Cordouan, one of the most celebrated light-houses in Europe. It was erected in 1610; but has been materially improved since. It is 206 feet high. The light, which is revolving, exhibits in succession a brilliant light, a feeble light, and an eclipse, the changes following each other every half minute. It may be distinguished at the distance of 8 or 9 leagues. The point de la Coubre is 21 leagues N. t W., and the Point de Grave If league S. E. by E. $ E., from the Tour de Cordouan. There are two main channels for entering the Digitized by Google BORDEAUX. 221 river,-the Passe du Nord, and the Passe de Grave. The former lies between the north side of the river and the banks in the middle, about It mile south from the Point de la Coubre the water, where shallowest, being about 41 fathoms. The course hence is nearly S. E. t E. The other principal pas- sage lies between the Tour de Cordouan and the Point de Grave, nearly in a N. N. E. and S. S. W. direction. In some places it has not more than 13 feet water and is in all respects very inferior to the other passage, which is always to be preferred, especially with a large ship. The tides, both ebb and flood, set through the channels with great rapidity, so that a good deal of caution is required on making the river; but having once entered, there is no further danger. Spring tides rise from 14 to 15 feet, and neaps from 7 to 8; but they depend a good deal on the direction of the wind. All ves- sels, except French coasters under 80 tons burden, and small craft from the north of Spain, entering the Garonne, are obliged to take a pilot on board as soon as one offers himself. In summer, pilots are not unfrequently met with 30 or 40 miles west of the Tour de Cordouan; but in winter they seldom venture far beyond the banks, and sometimes cannot proceed even thus far.-(See Laurie's Plan of the Bay of Biscay, with the Sailing Directions, &c.) Shipping.In 1831, the arrivals at Bordeaux were- Ships. Tons. French from French colonies - - - 103 24,722 - foreign countries - - - 146 27,226 - fishery - - - - 234 9,165 - coasting trade - - - 2,341 108,370 Foreign ships from foreign countries - - 114 16,453 Total - 2,938 185,936 -(Administration des Douanes, p. 342.) It is stated in the Resumb Annuel, published at Bordeaux, that of the 114 foreign ships entering the port in 1831, 50 were English. In 1832, there were ninety-five arrivals from England and there was also a considerable increase in the arrivals from the north. The entire produce of the customs duties at Bordeaux in 1831, was 10,415,682 francs. Port Charges.-Account of Port Charges, Brokerage, and other public Disbursements, payable in Bordeaux on account of a French or English Vessel of 300 Tons Burden, from a Port of England to Bordeaux, or from Bordeaux to a Port of England, or from or to any other British Possession in Europe. On a Fr. or Brit. Vessel. On a Foreign Vessel. Nature of Charges. In French La Sterling In French In Sterling Money. Money. Money. Money. Fr. c. L. a. d. Fr. c. L s. a Report and pilotage from sea to Bordeaux, for a vessel drawing 14 French net water (15 IL S-9 in- British) 218 93 8 15 2 247 50 918 0 Lamretto dues 61 0 2 18 10 61 0 2 18 10 Moving ressel up and mooring her 10 0 080 10 0 0 8 0 Entering vessel at Custom-bouse, and brokerage inwards 100 0 400 100 0 400 Advertisements for freight and passengers, 6 fr. (4. 10d.) to each newspaper Tonanage money and navigation dues on 300 tons 495 0 19 16 0 1,239 0 49 2 Visit mg officers, clearances, harbour-master, ac. 14 75 0 11 10 14 75 0 10 Man ifest and freight list 15 0 0 12 0 15 0 0120 Ball cast taken in and out, fr. 25 per ton (1s.) Consul's bill. Usual fees (English vemels), 17 fr. 25 c. (15e.) Pilottage from Bordeaux to sea 200 0 8 16 0 245 84 9 16 3 Broizer's commission outwards, care and attendance for expediting the vessel in ballast, 50 c. per tom (5d.), say 120 fr. at most (41. 16a.) Londed per charter or on owner's account, 1 fr. (10d.) per ton } average 300 0 12 0 300 0 12 0 0 Loaded in freight, 1 fr. 50 c. (La. 3d.) per ton - 1,434 68 57 10 2.232 59 89 6 1 N. B.-No regard paid to the nature of the cargo, as all goods are importable either for consump- tion or exportation, which does not expose vessels to pay more or less charges. British vessels are on a perfect equality with French vessels when they come from British ports in Europe, otherwise they pay pilotage and tennage dues like all other foreign vessels, as stated in the foreign column. Imports.-The following is a note of the leading articles imported, by the ships not of Europe, in 1827 and 1828, since which they have not materially varied. They are taken from the ship brokers' reports, no official account being published by the Customs. 1827. 1828. 1827. 1828. Sugar - 16,094 22,748 hogeheads Indigo 1,143 1,568 serons 5,073 4,783 boxes Lac dye - 0 210 chests 312 346 tieroes Campeachy and casks other dye 5,717 383317 } parcels, 1,540 1,608 118 152 quantities sacks woods - unknown Coffee - 2,273 1,949 hogsheads Cochineal - 1,243 2,926 serons 4,800 3,490 casks Annotto - 680 666 casks 736 663 tierces Gums (different } 9,423 do., bales sacks or kinds) 15,151 38,661 27,540 and sacks bales Quercitron - 340 116 casks Cocoa - - 130 51 hogsheads Quino - 4,793 250 serons 1,202 525 casks Bablap - 512 208 bales 34,424 12,229 sacks Jalap - 252 717 serons Pimento - 1,996 342 bales Sarsaparilla - 290 230 do. and bales Pepper - 25,498 21,698 do., sacks, Saltpetre - 9,467 8,713 sncks andpackages Saffron - 0 110 bales Clanamon - 149 0 cases and Tea - - 670 99 chests serons Rice - - 2,520 4,306 casks 2,635 2,374 bundles 3 to White and yel- } 460 680 an do., sacks, 5 lbs. low wax &c. Cloves - 543 323 casks Curcuma - 1,130 2,034 sacks 2,997 227 bales Ivory - 28 70 teeth, &c. Dc. bruised - 614 434 do. Mother of pearl 602 0 canisters Vanilla - 52 45 chests Indigo 4,144 5,693 do. Cotton - 9,429 7 068 bales and - serons Digitized by Google 222 BORDEAUX. 1827. 1828. 1827. 1828. Raw silk - 46 0 cases and Cigars 466 685 boxes bales Rattans - 1,604 10,370 packets Wool, Cashmere 6 0 bales Quicksilver - 2,739 1,990 bottles Do. Peru - 3 616 do. Tin, Peru and Tufia (new rum) 1,031 460 puncheons Banca } 9,759 804 bare Guinea blue 122 490 bales Lead - 0 1,583 saloners cloth - Copper - 4,400 R,240 do. or bars American hides 47,116 15,738 single Platina - 5 10 packages 109 0 bales Gold - - 735 29 ingots Ox horns - 10,000 21,700 8,250 2,517 doubloons Chinchilla - 216 0 dozens Silver - 105 51 chests Raw skins - 55 80 bales I 25 40 ingots Tobacco - 4,594 4,616 hogsheads and bales 23 11 boxes or sacks Cigars - 170,000 80,000 1,559,569 3,784,231 dollars In addition to the articles above specified, there were also received for re-exportation considerable quantities of bar iron, utensils, and tools from England, Spain, and Sweden zinc from Germany and linens from England, Holland, and Germany for consumption, lead, tin plates, coal (as ballast), arsenic, litharge, minium, &c. from England ; lead, steel, olive oil, liquorice, paste, saffron, and saf- frarum from Spain; steel from Germany; olive oil from Italy; fish, glue, and tallow from Russia timber from Baltic ports; cheese, stock-fish, &c. from Holland. Exports.-It is impossible to procure even approximate information regarding the quantities of the several articles of exportation. No reports are published by the Customs, nor do they allow extracts of the entries ontwards to be taken. The following is a list of the species of articles exported from Bordeaux to the different parts of the world :- To Martinique and Guadalowpe.-Provisions, flour, wine, brandy, and a small quantity of manufac- tured goods. To Bourbon.-Wines, provisions, cattle. furniture, coarse and fine hardwares, perfumery, silk, cot- ton and linen stuffs, stationery, fashionable articles, &c. To the United States.-Wines, brandy, almonds, prunes, verdigris, and a trifling quantity of manu- factured goods. To Spanish America, Cuba, &c.-Wines, brandy, silks, cloths, stationery, fashions, jewellery, per- fumery, saddlery, &c. To the South Seas.-Wines, brandy, liqueurs, and all sorts of manufactured articles. To the East Indies and China.-Wines, brandy, furniture, silver, &c. To England.-Wines, brandy, liqueurs, fruits, tartar, cream of tartar, plums, chesnuts, walnuts, loaf-sugar to Guernsey and Jersey, clover seed, annotto, corn, flour, skins raw and dressed, cork wood and corks, vinegar, turpentine, resins, &c. To the North of Europe.-Wines, brandy, spirits of wine, tartar, cream of tartar, colonial produce, loaf-sugar, molasses, &c. Wine.-This forms the great article of export from Bordeaux. The estimated produce of the de- partment of the Gironde in wines of all kinds, and one year with another, is from 220,000 to 250,000 tuns; the disposal of which is, approximately, as follows :- Consumed in the department - about 50,000 tuns. Expedited to the different parts of France - - 125,000 - Converted into brandy - - - 25,000 - Exported to foreign countries - - - 50,000 - 250,000 tuns. The exports to foreign countries are as follow :- To England - 1,500 to 2,000 tuns. Holland - - 12,000 15,000 - The north of Europe - 27,000 34,000 - America and India - 1,000 1,200 - 41,500 to 52,000 tuns. The red wines are divided into three great classes, each of which is subdivided into several sorts. Class 1. embraces the Medoc wines, 2. - Grave, and St. Emilion, 3. - common, or cargo wines. The first class is composed of the " grands crus," the crus bourgeois," and the "crus ordinaires." The grands crus" are further distinguished as firsts, seconds and thirds. The firsts are the wines of Château Margaux, Lafitte, Latour. and Haut-Brion. The latter is pro- perly a Grave wine, but it is always classed amongst the first Medocs. The seconds are the wines of Rauzan, Leoville, Larose, Mouton, Gerse, &c. The thirds, wines which are produced by the vineyards touching those above named, and which differ little in quality from them. The quantity of " grands crus" wine of the above description does not exceed 3,000 tuns, and sells at from 1,600 fr. to 3,500 fr. per tun on the lees. The crus bourgeois" consists of the superior Margaux, St. Julien, Pauillac, St. Estaphe, &c. quantity estimated about 2,000 tuns, and prices on the lees 800 fr. to 1,800 fr. per tun. The " crus ordinaires," sell at 300 fr. to 700 fr. according to the year and the quality. Quantity. 25,000 to 35,000 tuns. The whole produce of Medoe is therefore about 40,000 tuns. The grands crus" and "crus bourgeois" require 4 years' care and preparation, before delivery for use or for exportation; and this augments their price from 30 to 35 per cent. The second class is composed of the red wines of Grave and St. Emilion, which are in greater quan- tity, and amongst them some of a very superior quality, that are generally bought for mixing with Medoc. The first quality of these wines sells from 800 fr. to 1,800 fr. per tun. The second qualities- Queyries, Montferrand, Bassans, &c.300 fr. to 600 fr. The third class consists of the common or cargo wines, the greater part of which is consumed in the country, or converted into brandy. The portion exported is sent off the year of its growth. Prices from 160 fr. to 250 fr. per tun. The white wines of the first "crus," such as-Haut-Barsac, Preignac, Beaumes, Sauterne, &c., are only fit for use at the end of 4 or 6 years, and for exportation at the end of 1 or 2 years more. Prices on the lees vary from 800 fr. to 1,500 fr. per tun. The grand crus," of white Grave St. Bries, Carbonieux, Dulamon, &c., sell, in good years, from 500 fr. to 800 fr. Digitized by Google BORDEAUX. 223 Inferior white wines 130 fr. to 400 fr. per tun. The expenses of all kinds to the wine-grower of Medoc, for the cultivation, gathering, and making his wine, and the cask, are estimated to amount, in the most favourable years, to 50 fr. per hogshead, or 200 fr. per tun. The merchants in general purchase up the finest crus as soon as sufficiently advanced to judge of their character; or more frequently they are bought up for a series of years, whether good or bad. They are transported to their cellars or "chays," in Bordeaux, SO situated and protected by surround- ing houses, as to preserve a tolerable equable temperature throughout the year; and in these they ripen, and undergo all the different processes of fining, racking, mixing, &c. considered necessary to adapt them to the different tastes of the foreign consumers. It is pretty generally the practice to adapt the wines for the English market by a plentiful dose of the strong, full-bodied, and high flavoured wines of the Rhone; such as Hermitage, Côte Rotie, and Croze-especially the first, by which means they are hardly cognisable by the Medoc flavour. Per- haps the principal reason for keeping these wines SO long before they are used, is to give them time to acquire a homogeneous flavour, destroyed by the mixture of several different qualities. The wines shipped under the titles of Château Margaux, Lafitte, and Latour, are also mixed with the wines of the surrounding vineyards, which, from the nature of the soil, and proximity, cannot be greatly dif- ferent. Other good wines are also said to enter largely into the composition of these celebrated crus; and those of a superior year are employed to bring up the quality of one or two bad years, so that it is easy to conceive, that the famous wines of 1811 and of the years 1815, 1819, and 1825, are not speedily exhausted. Some houses pretend to keep their wines pure; but the practice of mixing is, at any rate, very general. The purchase of the wines, whether from the grower or merchant, is always effected through a broker. There are a few of them who have acquired a reputation for accuracy in dissecting the dif- ferent flavours, and in tracing the results of the wines by certain measures of training, or treat- ment. England takes off nearly half the highest priced wines, and very little of any other quality. Except in Bordeaux itself, there is but a very moderate portion of the superior Medoc consumed in France. The capital even demands only second, third, and fourth rate wines. The Dutch, who are large consumers of Bordeaux wine, go more economically to work. They send vessels to the river in the wine season, with skilful supercargoes, who go amongst the growers, and purchase the wines themselves, cheaper even than a broker would do. They live on board the ship, take their own time to select, and wait often for months before their cargo is completed but they attain their object, getting a supply of good sound wine, and at as low a rate, with all charges of shipping included, as the wine merchants can deliver it into their stores in Bordeaux. They never purchase old wine; they take only that newly made, which, being without the support of stronger bodied wines, must be consumed in the course of 2 or 3 years. They follow the same system at Bay- onne, where 2 or 3 ships go annually for the white wines of Jurancon, &c. The cargo wines are so manufactured that it is hardly possible to know of what they are composed. They are put free on board for 21. per hogshead and upwards, according as they are demanded. They are such as will not bear exposure in a glass when shipping: the tasters have a small flat silver cup expressly for them. These wines are principally shipped to America and India, and some at a higher price to the north of Europe. The principal wine merchants have agents in London, whose business is more particularly to intro- duce their wines to family use; and it is to that end they pay them from 300L. to 800/. for travelling expenses and entertainments, besides allowing 3 per cent. or more, on the amount of sales. They generally look out for individuals for their agents of good address, and some connection amongst the upper classes. Brandies and Spirits of Wine.-The quantity distilled in the neighbourhood of Bordeaux is esti- mated at about 18,000 pieces, of 50 veltes each. Ditto, in the Armagnac - 20,000 ditto Ditto, in the Marmauduis - 8,000 ditto 46,000 pieces, ordinary proof. or this quantity, France takes off about 23,000 pieces for consumption; England, 2,500; United States, 10,000; India, 2,500 north of Europe, 5,000; in all, 43,000 pieces. Languedoc produces annually about 40,000 pieces, of 80 veltes each, the greater part of which comes to Bordeaux to be forwarded to the different ports of the north of France, or to foreign countries. France consumes about two thirds of the above quantity the remaining one third goes to the north of Europe. The prices of brandy are from 130 fr. to 150 fr. per 50 veltes, ordinary proof; spirits of wine, from 4 fr. to 5 fr. per velte. It is at the port of Formay, on the Charente, that the greatest shipments of brandy take place to England. Cognac, from which the brandy takes its name, and where there are large distilleries, is a few leagues up the river. The quantity exported is far greater than what is made at Cognac-the two leading distillers there (Martel, and Henessey) buying great quantities from the small cultiva- tors. The greater part of the wines made about Angouleme, and thence down toward the sea, are of Inferior quality, and fit only for making brandy and so little do the prices vary, that the proprietors look upon it nearly in the samelight as gold. When they augment their capital by savings or profits, it is employed in keeping a larger stock of brandy, which has the further advantage of paying the in- terest of their capital by its improved value from age. England is said to receive upwards of 6,000 pieces annually from Charente. At Bordeaux, as at Paris and Marseilles, there is a constant gambling business in time bargains of spirits of wine. It is in the form of spirits of wine that nearly all the brandy consumed in France is expedited; as in this form there is a great saving in carriage.-(For an official account of the exports of wine and brandy from France. see WINE.) The fruits exported consist almost entirely of prunes and almonds. The latter come principally from Languedoc. The policy of the Spanish government toward her American colonies during the last 10 years has been the cause of a great many very wealthy Spaniards settling in Bordeaux; and their number has been still further increased by the Spaniards expelled from Mexico, who do not choose to employ their fortunes in their native country, or find greater facilities for employing them in Bordeaux. These are in possession of the greater part of the Spanish American trade of this port, and are viewed with a very jealous eye by the old merchants. They have also contributed greatly to beautify the city, by employing their wealth in building, which they have done to a considerable extent. They have also reduced the rate of interest, and contributed to the facilities of discounting bills: the Spanish houses generally discount long bills at 11 or 2 per cent. lower than the Bank. Digitized by Google 224 BORDEAUX. Bordeaux possesses some iron founderies, cotton factories, sugar refineries, glass works, &c., but labour and living are too high to admit of its becoming a considerable manufacturing city. Banking Establishments.-There is only one banking company in Bordeaux-the Bordeaux Bank." It. has a capital of 3,000,000 in shares of 1,000 fr. each. It issues notes for 1,000 and 500 fr. (40L. and 201.) payable in specie on demand. Its affairs are managed by a Board of directors, named by the 50 principal shareholders. This Board fixes the rate of discount, and the number of names that ought to guarantee. each bill it being left to the discount committee to judge of the responsibility of the signatures on the bills presented. At present the bank discounts bills on Bordeaux. having 3 months to run, and guaranteed by 3 signatures, at 5 per cent., and those on Paris at 41 per cent. When bills are presented, not having the required number of names, or these deemed suspicious, they take, in guarantee, public stock bonds or other effects-advancing to the extent of 9-10ths of their current value. The bank advances iths of the value of gold and silver in ingots, or in foreign money, deposited with them, at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum. It also accepts in deposit, diamonds, plate, and every kind of valuable property, engaging to redeliver the same in the state received, for t per cent. per quarter, or 1 per cent. per annum. Those who have accounts current with the bank may have all their payments made, and money re- ceived, by the bank, without fee. It allows no Interest on balances, and never makes advances either on personal security or on mortgage. On the 31st of December, 1832, the bank notes in circulation amounted to 12,650,000 fr. (506,000Z.) The affairs of the bank are subject to the inspection of the Prefect, to whom half yearly reports of its situation are made. These are printed entire, and distributed to the 50 principal shareholders an abstract being, at the same time, published in the Bordeaux journals. After the revolution of July, 1830, there was a severe run on the bank; and owing to the difficulty of procuring gold from Paris, the directors were obliged to limit their deliveries in specie to 500 fr. (201.) in a single payment; but notwithstanding this circumstance, no notes were protested and the moment supplies of gold could be obtained from Paris, the operations of the bank resumed their usual course; and her affairs have been, during the last 3 years, uncommonly prosperous. Exclusive of the dividend of 5 per cent., the bank accumulated, in 1831, a surplus profit of 72,000 fr.; and, in 1832, her surplus profits were 250,000 fr., or 10,000/. Brokers.-No one is allowed to act as a mercantile broker in France, who is not 25 years of age, and who has not served 4 years in a commercial house, or with a broker, or a notary public. They are nominated by the king, after their qualifications have been ascertained by the Chamber of Commerce. All brokers must deposit the sum of 8,000 fr. in the treasury, as a guarantee for their conduct, for which they are allowed interest at the rate of 4 per cent. At present there are in Bordeaux 21 ship brokers, 24 merchandise do., 20 wine and spirit do., 7 insurance do., and 20 money and exchange do. the latter form a separate class. All foreigners are obliged to employ ship brokers to transact their business at the Custom-house and although masters and owners of French vessels might sometimes dispense with their services, they never do so, finding it to be, in all cases, most advantageous to use their intervention. All duties outward on vessels and cargoes are paid by the ship brokers, who invariably clear out all ves- sels, French as well as foreign. Rates of Commission.-1. Ship brokers -Vessel in ballast, 50 cents (5d.) per ton; vessel loaded per charter or on owners' account, 1 fr. (10d.) per ton. 2. Merchandise brokers :- per cent. on co- lonial produce, and other goods. 3. Wine and spirit brokers :-2 per cent. on wine, &c. 4. Insu- rance brokers :- per cent. 5. Money brokers :- per cent. on Paris and foreign paper; ! per cent. on Bordeaux do. 6. Merchants :-2 per cent. on all sorts of operations between natives; 21 per cent. on all sorts of operations between strangers 5 per cent. on litigious affairs; 1 per cent. on goods in transitu, when the constituent is present; # per cent. on banking affairs. Insurance of ships, houses, and lives is effected at Bordeaux. The first is carried on partly by indi- viduals, and partly by companies; the last two by companies only. The partners in these associa- tions are generally liable only to the amount of the shares they respectively hold. For statements as to the Warehousing System, Smuggling, &c., the reader is referred to the article HAVRE. Quarantine is performed at Trompeloup, where a spacious lazaretto has been constructed. Bor- deaux is a favourable place for repairing and careening ships, and for obtaining supplies of all sorts of stores. The exchange or money brokers of Bordeaux follow a kind of business pretty similar to the London private bankers. They receive, negotiate, and pay bills and orders, of such houses as have accounts open with them, charging and allowing an interest on balances, which varies from 31 to 41 per cent. according to circumstances. They charge t per cent. for negotiating bills, and t per cent. on all the payments they make. There are, besides, numerous capitalists who employ their spare funds in discounting bills. They prefer bills at long dates, and take from 3 to 6 per cent. discount, according to the confidence they have in the paper presented. There are not wanting individuals who guarantee, with their names, every sort of paper presented, taking from 5 to 60 per cent. for the risk. Customary Mode of Payment, and Length of Credit.-Colonial produce, spices, dye stuffs, and metals are usually sold for cash, with 3 per cent. discount. Corn, flour, brandy, and several other articles, are sold for nett cash, without discount. Wines are generally bought of the cultivators at 12 and 15 months' credit, or 6 per cent. discount. When they change hands amongst the merchants, the practice is to sell for cash, allowing 3 or 5 per cent. discount. The usage is generally established in Bordeaux, to consider all paper having less than 30 days to run as cash; and with such all payments are made, where there is not an express stipulation to be paid in coin. Tares.-The tares allowed in Bordeaux are as follows At Curtom-house. In Commerce. All Custom-house. In Commerce. Cotton in bales, 6 per Large square bales, 6 per cent. Rice, from all countries Tare nett, or 12 per cent. cent. Smaller do., 8 per cent. none. Round do., 4 per cent. Coffee in bags, tare nett, In bags weighing 60 kil. (134 lbs.), I Sugar in hhds, 15 per In hhds., 17 per cent. or 2 per cent. kil. cent. Tret per hhd., 1 kil. (2.21 lbs.) Do. from 60 1-2 to 75 kil. (136 to 168 lbs.), Do. in cases, Havannah, In cases, Havannah, &c, 14 per cent. I 1-2 kil. &c., 15 per cent. Tret per case, I kil. (2.24 15s.) Do. above 75 kil. (163 lbs.), 2 kil. Do. in bales from Bour- In bales from Bourbon, &c., real. Cocoa in bags, tare nett, In bags weighing 60 kil. (134 lbs.), 1 bon, Mauritius, Ma. Mauritius, Manilla, &c., 8 per cent. or 2 per cent. kil. nilla, &c., nett. Do 60 1-2 kil, to 73 kil. (135 to 168 lbs.) Do. clayed, in hhds., Clayed, in hbds. white, 12 per cent. I 1-2 kil. white and brown, 12 Tret per hhd., I kil. Do. above 75kil. (168 Ibs.), 2 kil. per cent. Clayed do., brown, 13 per cent. Pepper in bags, 2 per In bags weighing 60 kil. (134 lbs.), I Trot per hhd., 1 kil. cent. kil. Digitized by Google BORDEAUX. 225 It Custom-house In Commerce. at Custom-house. In Commerce. Pupper in bags, 2 per In bags weighing from 60 1-2 to 75 kil. Peruvian bark, real tare. In chests, tare nett. cent. (135 to 168 lbs.), I 1-2 kil. In serons weighing from 45 to 57 1-8 kil. In bales, 130 to 150 kil. (291 to 336 Iba.), (101 to 129 lbs. ), 8 kiL 2 kil. Do. 60 to 75 kil. (134 to 168 lbs.), 10 kil. In serons, 50 to 60 kil. (112 to 134 lbs.), 2 Ashes, pot and pearl, 12 Pot and pearl, 18 per cent. kil. per cept. Indigo, in chests, real In chests, real tare. Cinnamon in chests, 12 Ceylon, in serons, or single bales, 3 kil. tare. In serons weighing from 45 to 55 kil. (101 per cent. Do. in double bales, 6 kil. to 123 lbs.), 7 kil. Do. in bales, 2 per cept. China, in chests, real tare. Do. 55 1-2 to 65 kil. (102 to 146 lba.), 8 kil. Cloves, real tare. In casks, real tare. Do. 65 1.2 to 75 kil. (103 to 168 lbs.), 9 kil. In bales weighing from 30 1-2 to 50 kil. Do. 1.2 to 95 kil. (160 to 213 lbs.), 10 kil. (68 to 112 lbs.), real tare, or 2 kil. Do. 95 1-2 to 107 kil. (214 to 240 lbs.), 11 In bags, single, 1 kil. kil. Cochineal, real tare. Real tare. Quareitron bark, real In casks of 200 kil. and above (448 1bs.), Gum in casks, do. Real tare. tare. 12 per cent. Mace and nutmegs, do. Real tare. Do. from 150 1-2 to 200 kil. (337 to 448 Annotto, none. In casks, 4 per cent. for leaves, and 6 per 1bs.), 15 per cent. cent. tare. Do. from 120 to 130 kil. (269 to 336 lbs.), Saranparilla, real tarejor In bales, 5 kil. 20 per cent. 2 per cent. The instructive details with respect to the trade of Bordeaux given above, so very superior to what are to be found in any other publication, have been principally derived from a communication of Mr. Buchanan, of the house of James Morrison and Co., acquired his information on the spot ; but some particulars have been learned from the carefully drawn-up answers made by the Consul to the Circular Queries. Operation of the French commercial System on the Trade of Bordeaux, &c-The trade of this great city has suffered severely from the short-sighted, anti-social policy of the French government. This policy was first broadly laid down, and systematically acted upon, by Napoleon ; and we believe it would not be difficult to show that the privations it entailed on the people of the Continent powerfully contributed to accelerate his downfall. But those by whom he has been succeeded, have not hitherto seen the expediency of returning to a sounder system on the contrary, they have carried, in some respects at least, the conti- nental system" to an extent not contemplated by Napoleon. Notwithstanding the vast im- portance to a country like France, of supplies of iron and hardware at a cheap rate, that which is produced by foreigners is excluded, though it might be obtained for half the price of that which is manufactured at home. A similar line of policy has been followed as to cot- ton yarn, earthenware, &c. And in order to force the manufacture of sugar from the beet- root, oppressive duties have been laid, not only on foreign sugar, but even on that imported from the French colonies. The operation of this system on the commerce and industry of the country has been most mischievous. By forcing France to raise, at home, articles for the production of which she has no natural or acquired capabilities, the exportation, and consequently the growth, of those articles in the production of which she is superior to every other country, has been very greatly narrowed. All commerce being bottomed on a fair principle of reciprocity, a country that refuses to import must cease to export. By exclud- ing foreign produce-by refusing to admit the sugar of Brazil, the cottons and hardware of England, the iron of Sweden, the linens of Germany, and the cattle of Switzerland and Wir- temberg-France has done all that was in her power to drive the merchants of those coun- tries from her markets. They are not less anxious than formerly to obtain her wines, bran- dies, and silks inasmuch, however, as commerce is merely an exchange of products, and as France will accept very few of the products belonging to others, they cannot, how anxious soever, maintain that extensive and mutually beneficial intercourse with her they would otherwise carry on they sell little to her, and their purchases are of course, propor- tionally diminished. This, indeed, is in all cases the necessary and inevitable effect of the prohibitive system. It never fails to lessen exportation to the same extent that it lessens importation so that, when least injurious, it merely substitutes one sort of industry for another-the production of the article that had been obtained from the foreigner, in the place of the production of that which had been sent to him as an equivalent-(See COMMERCE.) France is not only extremely well situated for carrying on an extensive intercourse with foreign countries, but she is largely supplied with several productions, which, were she to adopt a liberal commercial system, would meet with a ready and advantageous sale abroad, and enable her to furnish equivalents for the largest amount of imports. The superiority enjoyed by Amboyna in the production of cloves is not more decided than that enjoyed by France in the production of wine. Her claret, burgundy, champagne, and brandy, are un- rivalled and furnish, of themselves, the materials of a vast commerce. Indeed, the produc- tion of wine is, next to the ordinary business of agriculture, by far the most extensive and valuable branch of industry in France. It is estimated by the landholders and merchants of the department of the Gironde, in the admirable Pétition et Mémoire à l'Appui presented by them to the Chamber of Deputies in 1828, that the quantity of wine annually produced in France amounts, at an average, to about 40,000,000 hectolitres, or 1,060,000,000 gallons; that its value is not less than from 800,000,000 to 1,000,000,000 francs, or from 32,000,000/. to 40,000,000L sterling and that upwards of three millions of individuals are employed in its production. In some of the southern departments, it is of paramount importance. The population of the Gironde, exclusive of Bordeaux, amounts to 432,839 individuals, of 29 Digitized by Google 226 BORDEAUX. whom no fewer than 226,000 are supposed to be directly engaged in the cultivation of the vine. Here, then, is a branch of industry in which France has no competitor, which even now affords employment for about a tenth part of her population, and which is susceptible of indefinite extension. The value of the wines, brandies, vinegars, &c. exported from France, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1790, amounted to about 51,000,000 francs, or upwards of two millions sterling. The annual exports of wine from Bordeaux only, exceed- ed 100,000 tuns; and as the supply of wine might be increased to almost any amount, France has, in this single article, the means of carrying on the most extensive and lucrative commerce. " Le gouvernement Francais," says Mr. Chaptal, in his work Sur Industrie Francaise, " doit les plus grands encouragements à la culture des vignes, soit qu'il considére ses produits relativement à la consommation intérieure, soit qu'il les envisage sous le rap- port de notre commerce avec l'étranger, doni il est en effet la base essentielle." But instead of labouring to extend this great branch of industry, government has con- sented to sacrifice it to the interests of the iron-founders, and the planters of Martinique and Guadaloupe ! We do not, indeed, imagine that they were at all aware that such would be the effect of their policy. Theirs is only one instance, among myriads that may be specified, to prove that ignorance in a ministry is quite as pernicious as bad intentions. The conside- ration, apparently, not a very recondite one, that, notwithstanding the bounty of nature, wine was not gratuitously produced in France, and could not, therefore, be exported except for an equivalent, would seem never to have occurred to the ministers of Louis and Charles X. But those whose interests were at stake, did not fail to apprise them of the hollowness of their system of policy. In 1822, when the project for raising the duties on sugar, iron, linens, &c. was under discussion, the merchants of Bordeaux, Nantes, Marseilles, and other great commercial cities, and the wine-growers of the Gironde, and some other departments, presented petitions to the Chambers, in which they truly stated, that it was a contradiction and an absurdity to attempt selling to the foreigner, without, at the same time, buying from him; and expressed their conviction, that the imposition of the duties in question would be fatal to the commerce of France, and would consequently inflict a very serious injury on the winegrowers and silk manufacturers. These representations did not, however, meet with a very courteous reception. They were stigmatised as the work of ignorant and interested persons. The Chambers approved the policy of ministers and in their ardour to extend and perfect it, did not hesitate deeply to injure branches of industry on which several mil- lions of persons are dependent, in order that a few comparatively insignificant businesses, nowise suited to France, and supporting 100,000 persons, might be bolstered up and protected The event has shown that the anticipations of the merchants were but too well founded. There is a discrepancy in the accounts laid before the late Commission d'Enquête by government, and those given in the above-mentioned Pétition et Mémoire a ľAppui from the Gironde. According to the tables printed by the Commission, the export of wine from France is, at this moment, almost exactly the same as in 1789. It is, however, plain that, had there not been some powerful counteracting cause in operation, the export of wine ought to have been very greatly augmented. The United States, Russia, England, Prussia, and all those countries that have at all times been the great importers of French wines, have made prodigious advances in wealth and population since 1789; and, had the commerce with them not been subjected to injurious restrictions, there is every reason to think that their imports of French wine would have been much greater now than at any former period. But the truth is, that the accounts laid before the Commission are entitled to extremely little credit. In so far as respects the export of wine from Bordeaux, which has always been the great market for this species of produce, the statements in the Mémoire à Appui are taken from the Custom-house returns. Their accuracy may, therefore, be depended upon, and they show an extraordinary falling off. Previously to the Revolution, the exports amounted to 100,000 tuns a (Peuchet, Statistique Elémentaire, p. 138.) ; but since 1820, they have only been as follows :- Tuns. Tuns. Tuns. Tuns 1820, 61,110 1822, 39,955 1824, 39,625 1826, 48,46 1821, 63,244 1823, 51,529 1825, 46,314 1827, 54,49 It is also stated (Mémoire, p. 33.), that a large proportion of these exports has been made on speculation and that the markets of Russia, the Netherlands, Hamburgh, &c. are glut- ted with French wines, for which there is no demand. " Dans ce moment," (25th April, 1828,) it is said in the Mémoire, it existe en consignation, à Hambourg, 12,000 à 15,000 barriques de vin pour compte des propriétaires du département de la Gironde, qui seront trop heureux s'ils ne perdent que leur capital." This extraordinary decline in the foreign demand has been accompanied by a correspond- ing glut of the home market, a heavy fall of prices, and the ruin of a great number of mer- chants and agriculturists. It is estimated, that there were, in April, 1828, no fewer than 600,000 tuns of wine in the Gironde, for which no outlet could be found and the glut in Digitized by Google BORDEAUX. 227 the other departments, is said to have been proportionally great. The fall in the price of wine has reacted on the vineyards, most of which have become quite unsaleable ; and a total stop has been put to every sort of improvement. Nor have matters been in the least amend- ed during the current year on the contrary, they seem to be gradually getting worse. Such is the poverty of the proprietors, that wine is now frequently seized, and sold by the revenue officers in payment of arrears of taxes; and it appears, from some late statements in the Mémorial Bordelais (a newspaper published at Bordeaux), that the wine so sold has not recently fetched more, at an average, than about two thirds of the cost of its production ! The following official account of the exports of wine from the Gironde, during the 3 years ending with 1831, sets the extraordinary decline of this important trade in the most striking point of view :- Year. Litres. Imp. Gal. Year. Litres. Imp. Gal. Year. Litres. Imp. 1829 43,832,064 9,643,053 1830 98,551,863 = 6,281,412 1831 24,409,604 = 5,370,110 The exports of brandy have declined in about the same degree and the foreign shipping frequenting the port has been diminished nearly a half. Such are the effects that the restrictive system of policy has had on the wine trade of France,-on a branch of industry which, as we have already seen, employs three millions of people. It is satisfactory, however, to observe, that the landowners and merchants are fully aware of the source of the misery in which they have been involved. They know that they are not suffering from hostile or vindictive measures on the part of foreigners, but from the blind and senseless policy of their own government; that they are victims of an attempt to counteract the most obvious principles-to make France produce articles directly at home, which she might obtain from the foreigner in exchange for wine, brandy, &c. at a third or a fourth part of the expense they now cost. They cannot export, because they are not allowed to import. Hence they do not ask for bounties and prohibitions; on the contrary, they disclaim all such quack nostrums and demand what can alone be useful to them, and beneficial to the country,-a free commercial system. Considéré en lui-même," say the landowners and merchants of the Gironde, "le système prohi- bitif est la plus déplorable des erreurs. La nature, dans sa variété infinie, a départi a chaque contrée ses attributs particuliers; elle a imprimé sur chaque sol sa véritable destination, et c'est par la diver- sité des produits et des besoins, qu'elle a voulu unir les hommes par un lien universel, et opérer entre eux ces rapprochements qui ont produit le commerce et la civilisation. Quelle est la base du système prohibitif1 Une véritable chimère, qui consiste a essayer de vendre à l'étranger sans acheter de lui. "Quelle est donc la conséquence la plus immédiate du système prohibitif, ou, en d'autres termes, du monopole C'est que le pays qui est placé sous son empire ne peut vendre ses produits a l'étran- ger. Le voilà donc refoulé dans lui-meme et a l'inpossibilité de vendre ce qu'il a de trop vient se joindre la nécessité de payer plus cher ce qui lui manque. 44 Notre industrie ne demandoit, pour fructifier, ni la faveur d'un monopole, ni cette foule d'artifices et de secours dont bien d'autres ont imposé le fardeau au pays. Une sage liberté commerciale, une économie politique fondée sur la nature, en rapport avec la civilisation, en harmonie avec tous les intérêts véritables; telle étoit son seul besoin. Livrée a son essor naturel, elle se seroit étendue d'elle-même sur la France de 1814, comme sur celle de 1789; elle auroit formé la plus riche branche de son agriculture; elle auroit fait circuler, et dans son sol natal, et dans tout le sol du royaume, une sève de vie et de richesse; elle auroit encore attiré sur nos plages le commerce du monde; et la France, au lieu de s'ériger avec effort en pays manufacturier, auroit reconquis, par la force des choses, une supériorité incontestable comme pays agricole. Le système contraire a prevalu. La ruine d'un des plus importants départements de la France la détresse des départements cir- convoisins; le dépèrissement général du Midi; une immense population attaquee dans ses moyens d'existence; un capital énorme compromis; la perspective de ne pouvoir prélever l'impôt sur notre sol appauvri et dépouillé; un préjudice immense pour tous les départements dont nous somme tribu- taires; un décroissement rapide dans celles de nos consommations qui profitent au Nord; la stagna- tion générale du commerce, avec tous les désastres qu'elle entraine, toutes les pertes qu'elle produit, et tous les dommages ou matériels, ou politiques ou moraux, qui en sont l'inévitable suite; enfin, l'anéantissement de plus en plus irréparable de tous nos anciens rapports commerciaux; les autres peuples s'enrichissant de nos pertes et développant leur système commercial sur les débris du notre Tels sont les fruits amers du système dont nous avons été les principales victimes." Such is the well authenticated account, laid before the Chamber of Deputies by 12,563 landowners and merchants of the Gironde, of the practical operation and real effect of that very system of policy, which, extraordinary as it may seem, has been held up for imitation to the parliament of England! The effect of this system upon the silk trade of France, the most important branch of her manufacturing industry, and one in which she had long the superiority, is similar, and hardly less destructive. Her prohibitions have forced others to manufacture for themselves, so that the foreign demand for silks is rapidly diminishing. It is stated, in Observations addressées d la Commission Enquête, by the delegate of the Chamber of Commerce of Lyons, that the silk manufacture is in the worst possible state. " Ce qui doit surtout ex- citer," he observes, " la sollicitude du gouvernement, et le décider à entrer dans nos vues, c'est l'état déplorable, alarmant, de la fabrique de Lyon : les quatre années de 1824 à 1827 offrent sur les quatre années précédentes un déficit qui excéde 150 mille kilog. pour les seules expéditions d'Allemagne l'année 1828, et l'année courante, 1829, nous donnent une progression décroissante plus effrayante encore."-(p. 11.) It is further stated, in a Report by the manufacturers of Lyons, that there were 26,000 looms employed in that city in 1824, Digitized by Google 228 BOSTON. while at present there are not more than 15,000. The competition of Switzerland and Eng- land has been chiefly instrumental in producing these effects. At Zurich, where there were only 3,000 looms employed in 1815, there were, in 1830, more than 5,000 and at Eber- feld, where there were none in 1815, there were then above 1,000. Switzerland is said to have, in all, 11,000 looms employed at this moment (1833) in the manufacture of plain broad silks. Besides the injury done to the wine trade of France by her anti-commercial system, it has been much injured by the octrois, and other duties laid on wine when used for home con- sumption. These, however, have been modified since the accession of Louis Philippe; and it is reasonable to suppose, that the experience that has been afforded of the ruinous effects of the prohibitive system, and the more general diffusion of correct ideas with respect to the real sources of wealth, will at no distant period cause the adoption of such changes in the commercial legislation of France, as may render it more conducive to her interest, and more in accordance with the spirit of the age. If we were hostile to France, we should wish her to continue the present system ; but we disclaim being actuated by any such feelings. We are truly anxious for her prosperity, for her sake and our own for, unless she be surround- ed by Bishop Berkeley's wall of brass, whatever contributes to her prosperity must, in some degree, redound to the advantage of her neighbours. " Were such narrow and malignant politics to meet with success," said Mr. Hume, writ- ing in the middle of the last century, and when the prosperity of others was generally regarded with an evil eye, we should reduce all our neighbouring nations to the same state of sloth and ignorance that prevails in Morocco and the coast of Barbary. But what would be the consequence ? They could send us no commodities; they could take none from us: our domestic commerce itself would languish for want of emulation, example, and instruc- tion; and we ourselves should soon fall into the same abject condition to which we had reduced them. I shall, therefore, venture to acknowledge, that not only as a man, but as a British subject, I pray for the flourishing commerce of Germany, Spain, Italy, and even France itself. I am, at least, certain that Great Britain, and all those nations, would flourish more, did their sovereigns and ministers adopt such enlarged and benevolent sentiments towards each other.' on the Jealousy of Trade.) For a more ample exposition of the nature and effects of the French commercial system, the reader is referred to an article in the 99th number of the Edinburgh Review, contri- buted by the author of this work. Most of the foregoing statements are taken from that article. [To one residing in the United States, where the population is so very locomotive that almost every person is occasionally a traveller, it must appear singular that only two dili- gences should daily leave a city as considerable and important as Bordeaux, for Paris, and only a single diligence should leave it in the opposite direction for Spain. Such is, nevertheless, the fact. Steam navigation has been introduced on the Garonne, both above and below Bordeaux. And since the year 1825, three packets regularly sail between that city and the Havanna, and six others between it and Mexico. The chief imports from Bordeaux into the United States are wines, white as well as red, brandies, cordials, olive oil, and fruits of various descriptions. But our commerce with that port has very much declined since Havre has grown into importance.-Am. Ed.] BOSTON, a commercial city of the United States, the capital of Massachusetts, and the largest town of New England, in lat. 42° 23' N., long. 71° 4' W. Population, in 1830, 62,000. The city is situated on a peninsula near the bottom of a large and deep bay, being surrounded on all sides by water, except on the south, where it is joined to the main land by the narrow isthmus called Boston Neck. But it communicates, by means of extensive wooden bridges, with Charleston on the north side of the bay, and with Dorchester on the south. Boston Bay is of great extent, and is studded with many islands. The plan on the opposite side, will give a better idea of it than could be derived from any descrip- tion. Shipping.-According to the official accounts laid before Congress, 15th of February. 1833, the regis- tered, enrolled, and licensed tonnage belonging to Boston in 1831 amounted to 138,174 tons, of which 21,084 tons were employed in the coasting trade, and 17,784 in the fisheries.* In 1831, there arrived from foreign parts 766 ships, of the burden of 126,980 tons. Of these were, American, 671 ships, tonnage, 115,780; and British, 86 ships, tonnage 9,350. With the exception of Sweden, which sent 3, there was not more than I ship from any other country! In 1832, the foreign arrivals were 1,064 ships, tonnage not stated of these, 842 were American, and 211 British. The arrivals coastwise in 1832 were 3,536; of these were 62 ships, 514 brigs, 2,332 schooners, and 628 sloops. Shipping Charges.-For an account of these, see NEW YORK. By comparing this return with that for 1828, given in the former edition of this work, there would appear to have been a considerable falling off in the interim in the amount of shipping; this, how- ever, is not really the case. For an explanation of the discrepancy, see art. NEW YORK. Digitized by Google BOSTON. 229 D B O S T O N 5 3 3 5 3 4 6 6 5 4 4 4 NOTSON 5 3 4 3 2 4 3 4 4 N 3 7 3 3 3 2 3 3 4 2 3 6 3 2 6 2 K 2 7 6 7 2 5 2 2 2 2 H 4 S 7 4 6 7 5 3 5 2 5 5 3 3 8 5 5 6 3 0 5 8 3 7 12 7 7 3 6 5 7 6 5 5 4 3 D 9 3 B 6 4 9 5 7 10 7 4 6 5 7 fir 10 5 5 9 7 10 9 0 1 2 Nautic Miles. References to Plan-A, outer light-house, 65 feet high, having a revolving light, alternately brilliant 40 and obscured 20 seconds. B, buoy on the outward edge of the shoal, off Alderton Point. C, D, E, Great, Middle, and Outward Brewster's Islands. F, George's Island. The passage for ships, lying between this island and the rocks on the opposite side of Lovell's Island (G), being very narrow, it is, in effect, the key of the harbour; and large sunis have recently been expended on its fortification. To the south of George's Island, and Rainsford's Island (H), is Nantasket road, where there is good anchorage. The outer harbour lies to the west of Lovell's (G) and George's (F) Islands, being sepa- rated from the inner harbour by Castle Island (M), and Governor's Island (N.) On the north end of Long Island (I) is R harbour fixed light, 27 feet high. K, Deer Island. L, Spectacle Island. o, Middle Ground, dry at + ebb. P, Upper and Middle Ground. having, at ebh, only 5 feet water. Q, Thomson's Island. R, Dorchester Point. S, East Boston. T, Charlestown. M. N, and S, are all fortified. The course that a ship ought to steer is marked by the dotted line, leading between the light-house and Alderton Point, and between George's Island (F) and Lovell's Island (G). The soundings are laid down in fathoms at low water. VoL. I.-U Digitized by Google 230 BOSTON. How to enter the Port.-In coming from the Atlantic, a ship should bring the light-house to bear W. by N. to W. N. W., and run direct for it. The largest ships may pass it at within less than a cable's length. If there be no pilot on board, or the master be unacquainted with the harbour, or the wind be north-westerly, which is the most unfavourable for entering, she had better steer W. by S. for Nantasket roads, where she may anchor, and get a pilot.' Mooring, &c.-Generally speaking, there is sufficient depth of water to enable the largest ships to come up to town at all times of the tide. They usually moor alongside quays or wharfs, where they lie in perfect safety. There are in all about 60 wharfs; which, for the most part, are built on piles, with a superstructure of stone and earth. The two principal are Long Wharf," 550 yards in length; and Central Wharf," 413 yards long by 50 in breadth, having a range of lofty brick stores and ware- houses along its whole length. Pilotage.-No particular place is specified at which vessels must heave to for a pilot. But all vessels, with the exception of coasters under 200 tons, and American vessels laden with plaster of Paris from British America, if hailed by a pilot within about If mile of the outer light, must take him on board, under a penalty of 50 dollars. If they have got within this distance before being hailed, the obligation to take a pilot on board ceases. This regulation has obviously been dictated by a wish to have the pilots constantly on the alert; it being supposed that masters not well acquainted with the bay will heave to to take one on board, though they have got within the free limits. Table of the Rates of Pilotage on Outward and Inward bound Vessels in the Port of Boston. Outward. Inward. From Nov. 1. to May 1. From May 1. to Nov. 2. From Nov. 1. to May 1. From May 1. to Nov. 1. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. Ships Dol. drwg. per drwg. per drivg. per drwg. per drwg. per drwg. per drwg. per drwg. per Water. Foot. Water. Foot. Water. Foot. Water. Foot. Water. Foot. Water. Foot. Water. Foot. Water. Foot. 7 ft. 0.90 17 ft. 1:10 7 ft. 0.75 17 ft. 1:00 7 ft. 1-45 17 ft. 1.87 7 ft. 1:10 17 ft. 1:35 8 0:90 18 1.20 8 0.75 18 1:00 8 1:45 18 2:50 8 1:10 18 1:88 9 0:90 19 1:30 9 0.75 19 1.25 9 1.45 19 2.75 9 1.10 19 1:88 10 0:95 20 1:50 10 0.80 20 1:50 10 1:56 20 3:00 10 1:20 20 1.88 11 1:00 21 2:00 11 0.85 21 1.75 11 172 21 4:00 111 1.25 21 2.80 12 1·05 22 2.50 12 0.90 22 2:00 12 1.77 22 4:00 12 1:30 22 3:00 13 1:10 23 2.75 13 0.95 23 2.25 13 1.77 23 4-00 13 1:35 23 3:00 14 1·10 24 2.75 14 0.95 24 2.25 14 187 24 4:00 14 1:35 24 3:00 15 1:10 25 2.75 15 0.95 25 2.25 15 187 25 4:00 15 1:35 25 3:00 16 1·10 16 0.95 16 1.87 16 1:35 Careening, Stores, &c.-Boston is a very favourable place for careening and repairing ships. All kinds of supplies may be had of the best quality and at moderate prices. Customs Revenue.-The amount collected at Boston in 1831 was 5,227,592 dollars= 1,176,2081. 4s.- (For an Account of the American warehousing system, see NEW YORK.) Immigration.-The number of immigrants arriving at Boston is not great, seldom exceeding 1,600 in n year. A city ordinance directs that the masters of vessels bringing immigrants shall enter Into a bond with sureties to the amount of 200 dollars for each immigrant, that he shall not become a charge upon the state for 3 years, or pay a commutation of five dollars on account of each Individual. But this regulation does not apply to immigrants having a reasonable amount of property the declaration of the foreign consuls as to this point is commonly acted upon. Trade of Boston, &c.-Boston has a very extensive trade with the southern states and with foreign countries, and is also one of the principal seats of the American fisheries. She is wholly indebted to her southern neighbours, and principally to New York, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, for supplies of flour and wheat, and for large quantities of barley, maize, oatmeal, oats, &c., as well as for cotton, tobacco, staves, rice, &c. Of these, the imports of flour may amount, at an average, to about 400,000 barrels a year all sorts of grain to about 2,000,000 bushels cotton, 160,000 bales; staves, 3,000,000, &c. Her returns are made, partly in native raw produce, as beef, pork, lard, &c. partly and principally in the produce of her manufacturing industry, in which Massachusetts is decidedly superior to every other state in the Union; and partly in the produce of her fisheries and foreign trade. At an average, Boston annually sends to the southern ports of the Union about 45,000 barrels of beef and pork 165,000 barrels of mackerel, herrings, alewives, &c. 20,000 quintals of dried and smoked fish 3,500,000 pairs of boots and shoes 600,000 bundles of paper be- sides a very large amount of cotton and woollen manufactured goods, nails, furniture, cord- age, &c. ; so as to leave a large balance in her favour. Her exports of native produce to foreign countries consist principally of the same articles she sends to the southern states but she also exports a large amount of the foreign produce she had previously imported. The imports from abroad consist principally of cotton and woollen goods; linens, canvas, &c. hardware, silks, sugar, tea, coffee, wines and brandy, spices, hides, indigo, dye woods, &c. The total imports from foreign countries into the state of Massachusetts in the year ending 30th of September, 1832, amounted to 18,118,900 dollars; while the exports of native pro- duce, during the same year, amounted to only 4,656,635 dollars, and of native and foreign produce together, to 11,993,763 dollars; the balance against Massachusetts being paid off by bills upon the southern states, to which she exports much more than she imports. New York alone is, in fact, supposed to be at all times indebted to Boston about 5,000,000 dollars. We subjoin a summary Digitized by Google BOSTON. 231 Account of the Trade of Boston and Massachusetts with Foreign Countries in 1831. Imports from Dollars. Exports to Dollars. Russia - - 1,606,300 Russia - - - - - - 176,400 Sweden and Denmark - 322,800 Sweden and Denmark - - - 285,600 Brazil - - - - 396,500 Brazil - - - - 428,500 England - - - - 6,030,000 England - - - - 200,000 British East Indies - - 685,000 British East Indies - - 426,000 Do. West Indies - 92,000 Do. West Indies - - - 80,500 Do. American provinces - 92,100 Do. American provinces - 531,000 Cuba and Spanish West Indies - 1,991,300 Cuba and Spanish West Indies - 1,077,000 China 762,000 China - - - - - - - - 325,000 12,278,000 3,530,000 From other places to Boston - 1,000,000 To other places from Boston - 2,000,000 Total value of imports to Boston 13,278,000 Total value of exports from Boston 5,530,000 To other ports in Massachusetts from various places } To various places from other 991,056 - ports in Massachusetts - s 2,203,763 Total value of imports into 14,269,056 Total value of exports from } 7,733,763 Massachusetts - Massachusetts - 14,269,056 dollars = 3,210,5271. 12s. sterling. 7,733,763 dollars = 1,740,0961. 13s. 6d. sterling. Banks.-In January, 1833, there were 84 Banks in the state of Massachusetts, of which 24 were in Boston. Of the latter, 4 or 5 were only recently established. We subjoin a detailed statement of the principal circumstances in the condition of the Boston banks in 1830; and for further particulars the reader is referred to the article BANKS (FOREIGN). Banks. Shares. Each. Capital. Time and Rate of Amount of Dividend. Dividend. Dollars. Dollars. U. S. Branch - - - 15,000 100 1,500,000 Jan. 3f-July 3t 105,000 American - - - 7,500 100 750,000 April 1 -Oct. 2 22,500 Massachusetts - - 3,200 250 800,000 April 2 -Oct. 21 36,000 New England - - 10,000 100 1,000,000 April 3 -Oct. 3 60,000 State Bank - - - 30,000 60 1,800,000 April 2f-Oct. 21 90,000 Washington - - - 5,000 100 500,000 April 1f-Oct. 2t 18,750 Commonwealth - - 5,000 100 500,000 April 3 -Oct. 3 30,000 Eagle - - - 5,000 100 500,000 April 3 -Oct. 3 30,000 Globe - - - 10,000 100 1,000,000 April 2f-Oct. 3 55,000 Union - - - 8,000 100 800,000 April 2 -Oct. 21 44,000 Boston - - - 12,000 75 900,000 April 0 -Oct. 3 27,000 City - - - - 10,000 100 1,000,000 April 11-Oct. 3 45,000 Columbian - - - 5,000 100 500,000 April -Oct. 21 22,500 Franklin - - - 1,000 100 100,000 April 3 -Oct. 3f 6,500 Tremont - - - 5,000 100 500,000 April -Oct. 21 12,500 North Bank - - - 5,000 100 500,000 April 3f-Oct. 3t 33,750 Suffolk - - - 7,500 100 750,000 April -Oct. 3 45,000 Atlantic - - - 5,000 100 500,000 April 2f-Oct. If 20,000 Totals - 149,200 13,900,000 703,500 So that there were in 1830, in Boston, 18 banks with a capital of 13,900,000 dollars. The dividends on this sum for the same year amounted to 703,500 dollars, being at the rate of 5:06 per cent. The paper under discount is estimated to have exceeded 70,000,000 dollare.- (Statement by J. H. Goddard, New York Advertiser, 29th of January, 1831.) Insurance Companies.-Insurance, both fire and marine, is carried on to a great extent by joint stock companies, and to some extent also by individuals. The stocks of the different insurance companies amounted in January; 1833, to 6,675,000 dollars. Only one company is established for insurance upon lives. The stocks of the different insurance companies produced, in 1830, an average dividend of 5-113 per cent. Credit.-Foreign goods are frequently sold for ready money, but more usually at a credit of from 3 to 12 months average length of credit, 6 months; but on iron and some other articles, 12 months' credit is given. Discount for ready money at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum. Commission.-The rates of commission are arbitrary, varying from 2 to 5, and sometimes (del cre- dere included) to 71 per cent. On small accounts, and West India goods, 5 per cent. is usually charged. The ordinary rate may be taken at 21 per cent. ; but competition is so great, that commis- sion merchants may be found who will transact business on almost any terms. Sometimes whole cargoes are sold by brokers on an agreement to receive a specific sum in lieu of commission and bro- kerage. Bankruptcy.-The law as to bankruptcy in Massachusetts seems to be in a most disgraceful state. Preferences are very frequently given; and property is in many instances conveyed, for behoof of the bankrupt's family, to persons said to be creditors to a corresponding amount, without their having any real claim to such character. It is true that these conveyances may be cancelled; but the diffi- culties in the way are so great, that they are seldom set aside. The safest course that a foreigner, or one not thoroughly acquainted with the city, can pursue, is to deal only for ready money and to employ none but the most respectable agents. Money.-In Massachusetts, and throughout New England, the dollar passes at 6s.; so that the pound sterling = 11. 6s. 8d. Boston currency.-(For further particulars as to Money, Weights, Measures, &c. see NEW YORK.) We have derived these details partly from the authorities referred to, partly from private informa- tion, and partly from the elaborate Answers of the Consul to the Circular Queries. [According to a census taken in May, 1837, the population of Boston was 80,325. Digitized by Google 232 .BOTARGO-BOTTOMRY. From an abstract of the returns made by the banks of Massachusetts, showing their con- dition on the 10th of February, 1838, and published under the direction of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, it appears that at that date there were no less than 128 banks in the State. No returns were received from five of these. The aggregate of the amounts returned by the remaining 123, together with those returned by them on the preceding 1st day of October, were as follows :- Oct. 1. Feb. 10. Circulation - - - - - $9,964,110 $9,100,776 Balances to other banks - - - - 5,498,012 4,534,813 Deposites not on interest - - - 8,231,580 5,436,530 Do. on interest - - - - 5,318,484 3,650,832 Specie - - - - 1,474,743 1,701,460 Bills of other banks - - - - 2,954,804 2,700,275 Balances from other banks . - - 5,662,780 4,037,618 Loans - - - - 56,398,121 52,799,967 Nett profits on hand - - - - 1,474,487 2,442,578 Amount of last dividend - - - 1,038,850 1,041,350 For a later account of the trade of Boston with foreign countries than is given above, the reader is referred to the article Imports and Exports-Am. Ed.] BOTARGO, called in Provence Bouargues, a sausage made on the shores of the Medi- terranean .and the Black Sea, of the roe of the mullet. The best comes from Tunis and Alexandria. BOTTLES (Fr. Bouteilles; Ger. Bouteillen; It. Bottiglie; Fiaschi; Rus. Bulülki, Sp. Botellas), glass vessels for holding liquids, too well known to require any description. They are exported in considerable quantities. The duty of 8s. a cwt. on bottle glass, like the duties on other descriptions of glass, is both oppressive in amount, and is imposed and col- lected in the most vexatious manner. The manufacture has declined considerably since 1826.-(For further details, see GLASS.) (BOTTLES (STONE).-In 1812, a duty of 2s. 6d. a cwt., increased in 1817 to 5s., was imposed upon stone bottles. The average nett produce of this duty has not recently ex- ceeded 3,500/. a year. But, to collect this insignificant sum, the manufacture had to be placed under the surveillance of the excise, and those engaged in it subjected to various troublesome and vexatious regulations. The duty did not extend to Ireland, so that a draw- back had to be granted on bottles exported to that country, and a countervailing duty charged on those imported from it. This unproductive and troublesome duty was imposed at the instance of the glass bottle manufacturers, who contended, that if stone bottles were exempt- ed from duties, they would be used instead of glass bottles, to the injury of those engaged in manufacturing the latter. But the purposes to which stone bottles and glass bottles are applied are 80 very different, that it would require a much greater reduction of the price of the former than could possibly be occasioned by the abolition of the duty, to make them be substituted, to any extent worth mentioning, in the place of the latter. These views were ably enforced by the Commissioners of Excise Inquiry ; and having been adopted by go- vernment, the duty has been abolished.-(4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 77.; see also Fifth Report by Commissioners of Excise Inquiry.) It is to be hoped that the duty on glass bottles may, also, be speedily put an end to. It produces about 110,000L. a year. We noticed (see art. WINE) the propriety of enacting and enforcing some re- gulations as to the size of bottles. The bottle is, in fact, a very important measure; a great deal of wine and other liquors being sold by the dozen. But there is, at this moment, the greatest discrepan- cy in the size of bottles; and it appears to us that it would be highly expedient, in order to obviate the numerous frauds arising from this source, to enact that all bottles be made to contain not less than a certain specified quantity, and to place them under the acts relating to weights and measures. -Sup.) BOTTOMRY AND RESPONDENTIA.-Bottomry, in commercial navigation, is a mortgage of the ship. The owner or captain of a ship is, under certain circumstances, authorised to borrow money, either to fit her out so as to enable her to proceed on her voy- age, or to purchase a cargo for the voyage, pledging the keel, or bottom of the ship (a part for the whole), in security for payment. In bottomry contracts it is stipulated, that if the ship be lost in the course of the voyage, the lender shall lose his whole money but if the ship arrive in safety at her destination, the lender is then entitled to get back his principal, and the interest agreed upon, however much that interest may exceed the legal rate.—(Black. Com. book ii. c. 30.) The extraordinary hazard run by the lenders of money on bottomry, who, in fact, become adventurers in the voyage, has been held, in all countries, as justifying them in stipulating for the highest rate of interest. When the loan is not on the ship, but on the goods laden on board, which, from their nature, must be sold or exchanged in the course of the voyage, the borrower's personal responsibility is then the principal security for the performance of the contract, which is therefore called respondentia. In this consists the principal difference between bottomry and respondentia. The one is a loan upon the ship. the other upon the goods. The money Digitized by Google BOTTOMRY. 233 is to be repaid to the lender, with the marine interest, upon the safe arrival of the ship, in the one case and of the goods, in the other. In all other respects, these contracts are nearly the same, and are governed by the same principles. In the former, the ship and tackle, being hypothecated, are liable, as well as the person of the borrower; in the latter, the lender has, in general, only the personal security of the borrower. This contract, which must always be in writing, is sometimes made in the form of a deed poll, called a bill of bottomry, executed by the borrower sometimes in the form of a bond or obligation, with a penalty. But whatever may be its form, it must contain the names of the lender and the borrower, those of the ship and the master the sum lent, with the stipulated marine interest; the voyage proposed, with the commencement and duration of the risk which the lender is to run. It must show whether the money is lent upon the ship, or upon goods on board, or on both; and every other stipulation and agreement which the parties may think proper to introduce into the contract.-(See the Forms at the end of this article.) " It is obvious," says Lord Tenterden, that a loan of money upon bottomry, while it relieves the owner from many of the perils of a maritime adventure, deprives him also of a great part of the profits of a successful voyage; and, therefore, in the place of the owners' residence, where they may exercise their own judgment upon the propriety of borrowing money in this manner, the master of the ship is, by the maritime law of all states, precluded from doing it, 80 as to bind the interest of his owners without their consent. With regard to a foreign country, the rule appears to be, that if the master of a vessel has occasion for money to repair or victual his ship, or for any other purpose necessary to enable him to complete the enterprise in which she is engaged whether the occasion arises from any ex- traordinary peril or misfortune, or from the ordinary course of the adventure; he may, if he cannot otherwise obtain it, borrow money on bottomry at marine interest, and pledge the ship, and the freight to be earned in the voyage, for repayment at the termination of the voyage. When this is done, the owners are never personally responsible. The remedy of the lender is against the master of the ship."-(Law of Shipping, part ii. c. 3.) In bottomry and respondentia bonds, the lender receives the whole of his principal and interest, or nothing he is not answerable for general or particular average"; nor will any loss by capture, if subsequently recaptured, affect his claim. In this respect our law differs from that of France (Code de Commerce, art. 330.) and most other countries: the lenders on bottomry bonds being there subject to average, as our underwriters upon policies of insu- rance. No loss can avoid a bottomry contract, unless a total loss, proceeding from a peril of the sea, during the voyage, and within the time specified by the contract. If the loss hap- pen through any default or act of the owners or master, to which the lender was not privy, he may still recover. There is no restriction by the law of England as to the persons to whom money may be lent on bottomry or at respondentia except in the single case of loans on the ships of foreigners trading to the East Indies, which are forbidden by the 7 Geo. 1. stat. 1. c. 21. § 2. It does not, however, appear to be necessary, in order to enable the master of a ship in a foreign port to obtain money for her repair, outfit, &c., that the contract pledging the vessel in security of the debt should be in the nature of a bottomry bond. Provided the person who advances the money do not choose to take upon himself the risk of the ship's return, and do not stipulate for maritime interest, " there seems," says Lord Tenterden, to be no reason why the master should not pledge both the ship and the personal credit of the owner." And in the case of money advanced in this way to refit a ship in distress at Jamaica, which was captured on the voyage home, the lender recovered.-(Law of Ship- ping, part ii. c. 3.) Bottomry contracts were well known to the ancients. At Athens, the rate of interest was not fixed by law; but the customary rate seems to have been about 12 per cent. But when money was lent for a voyage, upon the security of the ship and cargo, the interest on account of the superior risk encountered by the lender, was in most cases much higher. In voyages to the Taurica Chersonesus and Sicily, it was sometimes as high as 30 per cent.-(Ana- charsis's Travels, vol. iv. p. 369. Eng. trans.) By the Rhodian law, the exaction of such ,high interest as in usual bottomry was declared to be illegal, unless the principal was really exposed to the dangers of the sea-(Boeckh's Public Economy of Athens, vol. i. p. 177. Eng. trans.) The principle was adopted by the Romans who gave to bottomry interest the name of nauticum fanus; and has been transferred from the Roman law into all modern codes. Formerly," says Mr. Serjeant Marshall, the practice of borrowing money on bottomry and respondentia was more general in this country than it is at present. The immense capitals now engaged in every branch of commerce render such loans unnecessary and money is now seldom borrowed in this manner, but by the masters of foreign ships who put into our ports in need of pecuniary assistance to refit, to pay their men, to purchase provi- * Mr. Serjeant Marshall doubts this but it was so decided by the Court of King's Bench in Joyce V. Williamson, B. R. Mich. 23 Gep. 3. U 2 30 Digitized by Google 234 BOTTOMRY. sions, &c. Sometimes officers and others belonging to ships engaged in long voyages, who have the liberty of trading to a certain extent, with the prospect of great profit, but without capitals of their own to employ in such trade, take up money on respondentia to make their investments; but even this, as I ain informed, is now not very frequently done in this country." The term bottomry has sometimes been incorrectly applied to designate a contract, by the terms of which the ship is not pledged as a security, but the repayment of money, with a high premium for the risk, is made to depend upon the success of the voyage. This, how- ever, is plainly a loan upon a particular adventure, to be made by a particular ship, and not a loan upon the ship, and of course, the lender has only the personal security of the borrower for the due performance of the contract. And it seems that loans have sometimes been made in this manner, and probably also with a pledge of the ship itself, to an amount exceeding the value of the borrower's interest in the ship; and such a contract is still legal in this country in all cases, except the case of ships belonging to British subjects bound to or from the East Indies, as to which it is enacted (19 Geo. 2. c. 37. s 5.), That all sums of money lent on bottomry or at respondentia upon any ship or ships belonging to his Majesty's subjects, bound to or from the East Indies, shall be lent only on the ship, or on the mer- chandise or effects laden, or to be laden, on board of such ship, and shall be so expressed in the condi- tion of the bond, and the benefit of salvage shall be allowed to the lender, his agents or assigns, who alone shall have a right to make assurance on the money 80 lent; and no borrower of money on bot- tomry or at respondentia as aforesaid, shall recover more on any assurance than the value of his interest on the ship, or in the merchandises and effects laden on board of such ship, exclusive of the money so borrowed ; and in case it shall appear that the value of his share in the ship, or in the mer- chandises and effects laden on board, doth not amount to the full sum or sums he hath borrowed as aforesaid, such borrower shall be responsible to the lender for so much of the money borrowed as he hath not laid out on the ship, or merchandises laden thereon, in the proportion the money not laid out shall bear to the whole money lent, notwithstanding the ship and merchandises be totally lost." Lord Tenterden says that this statute was introduced for the protection of the trade of the East India Company and its rules must be complied with in the case of bottomry by the masters of ships trading to the East Indies. For a further discussion of this subject, see Abbott on the Law of Shipping, part ii. c. 3. Marshall on Insurance, book ii. and Park on Insurance, c. 21. I. Form of a Bottomry Bond. KNOW ALL MEN by these presents, That I, A. B. commander and two-thirds owner of the ship Exeter, for myself and C. D., remaining third owner of the said ship, am held and firmly bound unto E. F. in the penal sum of two thousand pounds sterling, for the payment of which well and truly to be made unto the said E. F., his heirs, executors, administrators, or assigns, I hereby bind myself, my heirs, executors, and administrators, firmly by these presents. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal, this 14th day of December, in the year of our Lord 1796. WHEREAS the above bound A. B. hath taken up and received of the said E. F. the full and just sum of one thousand pounds sterling, which sum is to run at respondentia on the block and freight of the ship Exeter, whereof the said A. B. is now master, from the port or road of Bombay on a voyage to the port of London, having permission to touch, stay at, and proceed to all ports and places within the limits of the voyage, at the rate or premium of twenty-fire per cent. (25 per cent.) for the voyage. In consideration whereof usual risks of the seas, rivers, enemies, fires, pirates, &c. are to be on account of the said E. F. And for the further security of the said E. F. the said A. B. doth by these presents mortgage and assign over to the said E. F. his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns, the said ship Exeter and her freight, together with all her tackle, apparel, &c. And it is hereby declared that the said ship Exeter and her freight is thus assigned over for the security of the respondentia taken up by the said A. B., and shall be delivered to no other use or purpose whatever, until payment of this bond is first made, with the premium that may become due thereon. Now THE CONDITION of this obligation is such, that if the above bound A. B. his heirs, execu- tors, or administrators, shall and do well and truly pay, or cause to be paid, unto the said E. F. or his attorneys in London legally authorised to receive the same. their executors, administrators, or assigns, the full and just sum of 1,000L. sterling, being the principal of this bond, together with the premium which shall become due thereupon, at or before the expiration of ninety days after the safe arrival of the said ship Exeter at her moorings in the river Thames, or in case of the loss of the said ship Exeter, such an average as by custom shall have become due on the salvage, then this obligation to be void and of ne effect, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue. Having signed to three bonds of the same tenor and date, the one of which being accomplished, the other two to be void and of no effect. A. B. for self and C. D.* Signed, sealed, and delivered, where no stamped G.H. paper is to be had, in the presence of SI.K. In this bond the occasion of borrowing the money is not expressed, but the money was in reality borrowed to refit the ship which being on a voyage from Bengal to London was obliged to put back to Bombay to repair. See The EXETER, Whitford, 1 Rob. A. R. 176. The occasion therefore of borrow the money gave the lender the security of the entire interest of the ship. But this bond, although expressed to be executed by the master for himself and the other part-owner, would not bind the other part-owner personally, unless he had by a previous deed authorised the master to executesuch a bend for him.-(Abbott on the Law of Shipping, part iii. C. 1. 1 2.) II. Form of a Bottomry Bill. TO ALL MEN TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME. 1, A. B. of Bengal, mariner, part- owner and master of the ship called the Exeter, of the burthen of five hundred tons and upwards, now riding at anchor in Table Bay, at the Cape of Good Hope, send greeting: W HEREAS 1, the said A. B., part-owner and master of the aforesaid ship, called the Exeter, now in prosecution of a voyage from Bengal to the port of London. having put into Tuble Bay for the purpose of procuring provision and other supplies necessary for the continuation and performance of the Digitized by Google BOUNTY. 235 voyage aforesaid, am at this time necessitated to take up upon the adventure of the said ship, called the Exeter, the sum of one thousand pounds sterling monies of Great Britain, for setting the said ship to sea, and furnishing her with provisions and necessaries for the said voyage, which sum C. D. of the Cape of Good Hope, master attendant, hath at my request lent unto me, and supplied me with, at the rate of twelve hundred and twenty pounds sterling for the said one thousand pounds, being at the rate of one hundred and twenty-two pounds for every hundred pounds advanced as aforesaid, during the voyage of the said ship from Table Buy to Lordon. Now KNOW YE, that 1, the said A. B., by these presents, do, for me, my executors and administrators, covenant and grant to and with the said C. D. that the saidship shall, with the first convoy which shall offer for England after the date of these pre- sents, sail and depart for the port of London, there to finish the voyage aforesaid. And I, the said A. B., in consideration of the sum of one thousand pounds sterling to me in hand paid by the said D. at and before the sealing and delivery of these presents, do hereby bind myself, my heirs, executors, and administrators, my goods and chattels, and particularly the said ship, the tackle and apparel of the same, and also the freight of the said ship, which is, or shall become due for the aforesaid voyage from Bengal to the port of London, to pay unto the said C. D. his executors, administrators, or assigns, the sum of twelve hundred and twenty pounds of lawful British money, within thirty days next after the safe arrival of the said ship at the port of London from the same intended voyage. AND 1, the said A. B. do, for me, my executors and administrators, covenant and grant to and with the said C. D., his executors and administrators, by these presents, that I, the said A. B., at the time of sealing and delivering of these presents, am a true and lawful part-owner and master of the said ship, and have power and authority to charge and engage the said ship with her freight as aforesaid, and that the said ship, with her freight, shall, at all times after the said voyage, be liable and charge- able for the payment of the said twelve hundred and twenty pounds, according to the true intent and meaning of these presents. AND lastly, it is hereby declared and agreed by and between the said parties to these presents, that in case the said ship shall be lost, miscarry, or be cast away before her arrival at the said port of Lon- don from the said intended voyage, that then the payment of the said twelve hundred and twenty pounds shall not be demanded, or be recoverable by the said C. D., his executors, administrators, or assigns, but shall cease and determine, and the loss thereby be wholly borne and sustained by the said C. D., his executors and administrators, and that then and from thenceforth every act, matter, and thing herein mentioned on the part and behalf of the said A. B. shall be void ; any thing berein contained to the contrary notwithstanding. IN WITNESS whereof the parties have interchangeably set their hands and seals to four bonds of this tenor and date, one of which being paid, the others to be null and void. At the Cupe of Good Hope, this 15th day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty. E.F. Witness, G.H. A.B. 1. K. [Besides the works referred to by the author, the reader may consult with advantage the 49th Lecture of Chancellor Kent's Commentary on American Law. It contains a concise and very lucid statement of the subject of maritime loans.-Am. Ed.] BOUNTY, a term used in commerce and the arts, to signify a premium paid by govern- ment to the producers, exporters, or importers of certain articles, or to those who employ ships in certain trades. 1. Bounties on Production are most commonly given in the view of encouraging the establishment of some new branch of industry or they are intended to foster and extend a branch that is believed to be of paramount importance. In neither case, however, is their utility very obvious. In all old settled and wealthy countries, numbers of individuals are always ready to embark in every new undertaking, if it promise to be really advantageous without any stimulus from government: and if a branch of industry, already established, be really important and suitable for the country, it will assuredly be prosecuted to the neces- sary extent, without any encouragement other than the natural demand for its produce. 2. Bounties on Exportation and Importation.-It is enacted by the & 4 Will. 4. c. 52., that a merchant or exporter claiming a bounty or drawback on goods exported, must make oath that they have been actually exported, and have not been relanded, and are not intended to be relanded, in any part of the United Kingdom, or in the Isle of Man (unless entered for the Isle of Man), or in the islands of Faro or Ferro: and it is further enacted, that if any goods cleared to be exported for a bounty or draw- back, shall not be duly exported to parts beyond the seas, or shall be relanded in any part of the United Kingdom, or in the islands of Faro or Ferro, or shall be carried to the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Sark, or Man, (not having been duly entered, cleared, and shipped for exportation to such islands,)such goods shall be forfeited, together with the ship or ships employed in relanding or carrying them; and any person by whom or by whose orders or means such goods shall have been cleared, relanded, or carried, shall forfeit a sum equal to treble the value of such goods.-& . 87-95. 3. Policy of Bounties.-It was formerly customary to grant bounties on the exportation of various articles; but the impolicy of such practice is now very generally admitted. It is universally allowed that bounties, if they be given at all, should be given only to the export- ers of such commodities as could not be exported without them. But it is plain that, by granting a bounty in such cases, we really tax the public, in order to supply the foreigner with commodities at less than they cost. A. has a parcel of goods which he cannot dispose of abroad for less than 110/. ; but they will fetch only 100/. in the foreign market and he claims and gets a bounty of 10/. to enable him to export them. Such is the mode in which bounties on exportation uniformly operate; and to suppose that they can be a means of enriching the public, is equivalent to supposing that a shopkeeper may be enriched by sell- ing his goods for less than they cost ! But however injurious to the state, it has been pretty generally supposed that bounties on exportation are advantageous to those who produce and export the articles on which they are paid. But the fact is not so. A trade that cannot be carried on without the aid of a Digitized by Google 236 BOX-WOOD-BRANDY. bounty, must be a naturally disadvantageous one. Hence, by granting it, individuals are tempted to engage or continue in businesses which are necessarily very insecure, and are rarely capable of being rendered lucrative; at the same time that they are prevented, by trusting to the bounty, from making those exertions they naturally would have made, had they been obliged to depend entirely on superior skill and industry for the sale of their pro- duce. The history of all businesses carried on in this country by the aid of bounties, proves that they are hardly less disadvantageous to those engaged in them than to the public. The truth of these remarks has been acknowledged by government. The bounty on the exportation of corn was repealed in 1816; and the bounties on the exportation of linen and several other articles ceased in 1830. 4. Bounties on Shipping have principally been paid to the owners of vessels engaged in the fishery, and their influence will be treated of under the articles HERRING FISHERY and WHALE FISHERY. For an account of the bounties that still exist, see the article TABIFF. BOX-WOOD (Ger. Buchsbaum; Du. Palmhout; Fr. Buis; It. Busso, Bosso, Bossolo), the wood of the box tree (Buxus sempervirens), growing wild in several places in Great Britain. This tree was greatly admired by the ancient Romans, and has been much culti- vated in modern times, on account of the facility with which it is fashioned into different forms. Box is a very valuable wood. It is of a yellowish colour, closegrained, very hard, and heavy it cuts better than any other wood, is susceptible of a very fine polish, and is very durable. In consequence, it is much used by turners and mathematical and musical instrument makers. It is too heavy for furniture. It is the only wood used by the engravers of wood-cuts for books; and provided due care be exercised, the number of impressions that may be taken from a box-wood cut is very great. In France, box-wood is extensively used for combs, knife-handles, and button-moulds; and sometimes, it has been said, as a sub- stitute for hops in the manufacture of beer. The value of the box-wood sent from Spain to Paris is reported to amount to about 10,000 fr. a year. In 1815, the box trees cut down on Box-hill, near Dorking, in Surrey, produced upwards of 10,000/. They are now, however, become very scarce in England. The duty on box-wood is quite oppressive, being 5L a ton if brought from a foreign country, and 1/. a ton if from a British possession. At an ave- rage of the 3 years ending with 1831, the entries of box-wood for home consumption amounted to 382 tons a year. In 1832, the duty produced 1,867L 17s. 4d. Turkey box- wood sells in the London market for from 71. to 14/. a ton, duty included. BRAN, the thin skins or husks of corn, particularly wheat, ground and separated from the corn by a sieve or boulter. BRANDY (Ger. Brantewein; Du. Brandewyn Fr. Eau de vie, Brandevin It. Aquarzente; Sp. Aguardiente; Port. Aguardente; Rus. Wino; Lat. Vinum adustum), a spirituous and inflammable liquor, obtained by distillation from wine and the husks of grapes. It is prepared in most of the wine countries of Europe; but the superiority of French brandy is universally admitted. The latter is principally distilled at Bordeaux, Ro- chelle, Cognac, the Isle de Rhé, Orleans, Nantes, and in Poitou, Touraine, and Anjou. That of Cognac is in the highest estimation. Wines of all descriptions, but chiefly those that are strong and harsh (poussés), are used in the manufacture of brandy. The superior vintages, and those that have most fla- vour, are said to make the worst brandy. It is naturally clear and colourless. The different shades of colour which it has in commerce, arise partly from the casks in which it is kept, but chiefly from the burnt sugar, saunders wood, and other colouring matter intentionally added to it by the dealers. It is said that the burnt sugar gives mellowness to the flavour of the liquor, and renders it more palatable. The art of distillation is believed to have been first discovered by the Arabians. From a passage in the Testamentum Novissimum of the famous Raymond Lully, who flourished in the 13th century, it would appear that the production of brandy and alcohol from wine was familiar to his contemporaries.-(p. 2. edit. Argent. 1571.) But the practice does not ap- pear to have been introduced into France till 1313.—(Le Grand ď Aussi Vie privé de François, t. iii. p. 64.) When first introduced, brandy or burnt wine (vinum adustum) appears to have been used principally as an antiseptic and restorative medicine and the most extravagant panegyrics were bestowed on its virtues. It was described as a sovereign remedy in almost all the disorders of the human frame; it was commended for its efficacy in comforting the memory, and strengthening the reasoning powers; it was extolled, in short, as the elixir of life, and an infallible preservative of youth and beauty -(Henderson's Hist. of Wine, p. 24.) Dr. Henderson says that the experience of later times has shown how little this eulogy was merited but in this he is contradicted by Burke, who maintains with equal eloquence and ingenuity, that the alembic has been a vast benefit and blessing." -(Thoughts and Details on Scarcity, p. 41.) Brandy has always formed a very prominent article in the exports of France; few ships sailing from Bordeaux, Rochelle, or Nantes, without taking a certain quantity of it on board. The following is an account of the exportation of brandy from France during Digitized by Google BRANDY. 237 the 3 years ending with 1789, and the 14 years ending with 1828.-(Enquête sur les Fers, P. 39.) Years. Hectolitres. Years. Hectolitres. Years. Hectolitres. 1787 - - - 305,638 1817 - - - 61,697 1823 - - - 310,059 1788 - - - 221,499 1818 - - - 99,402 1824 - - - 317,347 1789 - - - 234,500 1819 - - - 231,652 1825 - - - 250,937 1820 - - - 253,349 1826 - - - 194,110 1815 - - - 154,160 1821 - - - 153,408 1827 - - - 273,574 1816 - - - 137,398 1822 - - - 230,186 1828 - - - 403,207 Which, as the hectolitre is equal to 26.42 wine gallons, shows that the exportation in 1828 was equiva- lent to 10,252,728 gallons; but it has since declined considerably. Duties on Brandy in Great Britain and Ireland. Quantities consumed.-In nothing, perhaps, has the injurious operation of oppressive duties been so strikingly exemplified as in the case of brandy. At the latter end of the 17th century, when the duty on brandy did not exceed 9/. a tun, the imports into England amounted to about 6,000 tuns, or 1,512,000 gallons-(Historical and Political Remarks on the Tariff of the late Treaty, 1786, p. 113.) ; whereas at present, notwithstanding our vast increase in wealth and population since the period referred to, we do not import more brandy than we did then ! Nor is this extraordi- nary circumstance to be ascribed to any preference on the part of the public to other beve- rages, but is wholly owing to the exorbitant duties with which brandy is loaded. The price of brandy in bond varies, at this moment, according to quality, from 3s. to 5s. a gallon (Imperial measure), while the duty is no less than 22s. 6d. Had the imposition of such a duty taken away the taste for brandy, it would have been comparatively innocuous. But it has done no such thing. Its only effect has been to convert a trade, that might otherwise have been productive of the most advantageous results, into a most prolific source of crime and demoralisation. The temptation to smuggle, occasioned by the exorbitancy of the duty, is too overpowering to be counteracted by the utmost penalties of the law. All along the coast of Kent and Sussex, and the districts most favourably situated for running spirits, almost the whole of the labouring population are every now and then withdrawn from their ordinary employments, to engage in smuggling adventures. The efforts of the revenue officers to seize foreign brandy and geneva have in innumerable instances been repelled by force. Bloody and desperate contests have, in consequence, taken place. Many individuals, who, but for this fiscal scourge, would have been industrious and virtuous, have become idle, predatory, and ferocious; they have learned to despise the law, to execute summary vengeance on its officers; and are influenced by a spirit that has been, and may be, turned to the most dangerous purposes. Neither can it be truly said that this miserable system is upheld for the sake of revenue. On the contrary, it is easy to show that, besides the other mischievous effects it entails on the public, it occasions the loss of at least 1,000,000/. a year. In 1786, Mr. Pitt, by a wise and politic measure, took 50 per cent. from the duty on brandy and geneva (the duty on the latter has been for a lengthened period the same as that on brandy ;) and instead of being diminished, the revenue was increased. In 1790, when the duty on brandy and geneva was 5s. the wine gallon, the quantity retained for home consumption was 2,225,590 gal- lons. During the 3 years ending with 1803, when the duty was 9s. 2d., the quantities of brandy and geneva retained for home consumption amounted, at an average, to about 2,700,000 gallons; but during the 3 years ending with 1818, when the duty had been in- creased to 18s. 10d. the wine gallon, the quantities retained did not exceed 850,000 gallons, while the quantities actually entered for home consumption were considerably less ! Since then the consumption has increased with the increasing wealth of the country but at this moment, the quantity consumed in Great Britain is fully 635,000 gallons less than in 1790 ! Nothing, therefore, can be more palpably erroneous than to contend that the revenue is im- proved by the present system. Have we not seen the revenue derived from coffee trebled by reducing the duty from 1s. 7d. to 6d. Have we not seen the revenue derived from British spirits greatly increased, by reducing the duty from 5s. 6d. to 2s. the wine gallon ? And where is the ground for supposing that the result would be different, were the duties on brandy equally reduced ! But the experience afforded by Mr. Pitt's measure in 1786, is decisive as to this point. He quadrupled the consumption and increased the revenue, by taking a half from the duty when it was a good deal less oppressive than now. Were a similar reduction made at present, does any one doubt that a similar result would follow ? Smuggling and adulteration would immediately cease our trade with France would be very greatly extended and the revenue would gain, not merely by a direct increase of duty, but indirectly by a very great diminution of the expense of collection. But the effect of the increase of the duties on brandy in Ireland has been still more extra- ordinary. At an average of the 3 years ending with 1802, when the duty was 7s. 3łd. the wine gallon, the average annual consumption of brandy in Ireland amounted to 208,064 gallons, producing a nett revenue of 77,714/. Now, mark the consequence of trebling the duties. The consumption during the last 2 years, notwithstanding the population is more than doubled, only amounted, at an average, to 20,199 gallons, producing about 22,500/. a Digitized by Google 238 BRANDY. year revenue. Dr. Swift has shrewdly remarked, that in the arithmetic of the customs two and two do not always make four, but sometimes only one. But here we have threefold duties, with little more than a fourth part of the revenue, and less than a tenth part of the consumption ! It is surely impossible that such a system-a system evincing in every part a degree of ignorant rapacity, to be paralleled only by that of the savages, who to get at the fruit cut down the tree-should be permitted for a much longer period to disgrace our fiscal code. Those only who are anxious for the continuance of smuggling, with all its consequent crime and misery, can be hostile to a reduction of the duty on brandy. By fixing it at 10s. the gallon, neither the consumption of British spirits nor rum would be sensibly affected. The middle classes would, however, be able to use brandy, on occasions when, perhaps, at pre- sent, they use nothing; its clandestine importation would be prevented; those engaged in smuggling would be obliged to have recourse to industrious pursuits, and the manufacture of the abominable compounds, that are now so frequently substituted in its stead, would be put an end to. It is not easy, indeed, to suggest any measure that would be productive of so much advantage, and be attended with fewer inconveniences. Regulations as to Importations, &e.-Brandy, geneva, and other foreign spirits, must be imported, if in casks, in casks containing not less than 40 gallons, under penalty of forfeiture.-( & 4 Will. 4. c. 52.) They must also be imported in ships of 70 tons burden or upwards, and are not to be exported from a bonded warehouse except in a vessel of like tonnage, under pain of forfeiture.-(bid.) Brandy is not to be imported except in British ships, or in ships of the country or place of which it is the product, or from which it is imported, on pain of forfeiture thereof, and 1001. by the master of the ship.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 54.) Brandy may be exported to Mexico, Chili, or Peru, in casks containing not less than 15 gallons each.-(Treas. Ord. 17th. of December, 1827.) Brandy and geneva may be bottled in bonded warehouses, for exportation to British possessions in the East Indies, under the same conditions as wine and rum.-(See SPIRITS.) In most of the public accounts. the imports of brandy and geneva are blended together. It would appear, too, from the note to the following account, that there are no means of accurately distinguish- ing them, except since 1814. The reader will find, in the article SPIRITS, an account of the quantities of brandy and geneva entered for home consumption, and the rates of duty upon them, in each year since 1789. The following account shows the consumption of brandy, and rates of duty on it, since 1814:- An Account of the Number of Gallons (Imperial Measure) of Foreign Brandy entered for Home Consumption in Great Britain and Ireland, the Rates of Duty affecting the same, and the entire nett Produce of the Duty, each Year since 1814.-(Obtained from the Custom-house.) Quantities entered for Home Rates of Duty Consumption. Nett Produce of Duty (Customs and Excise). per Imperial Gallon (Customs Years. and Excise). United United Gt. Britain. Ireland. Kingdom. Great Britain. Ireland. Kingdom. Gt. Brit. Ireland. Imp. gal. Imp. gal. Imp. gal. L. 8. d. L. 8. d. L. s. d. L. 8. d. L. d. 1814 500,592 7,169 507,761 581,056 1 1 6,618 12 4 587,674 13 5 1 2 61 17 3) 1815 656,555 5,160 661,715 740,747 12 1 4,702 6 1 745,449 18 2 - - 1816 657,062 5,275 662,337 742,304 8 0 4,124 19 5 746,429 7 5 - - 1817 634,017 3,875 637,892 716,734 0 6 3,248 4 4 719,982 4 10 - - 1818 431,583 6,232 537,815 599,586 0 4 5,287 10 1 604,873 10 5 - 1 1819 787,422 7,080 794,502 890,068 19 8 6,090 17 10 896,159 17 61 2 71 1820 842,864 6,025 848,889 956,275 16 9 5,219 8 6 961,495 5 3 - - 1821 914,630 6,001 920,631 1,034,327 17 0 5,173 19 2 1,039,501 16 2 - - 1822 1,001,607 7,308 1,008,915 1,132,416 3 5 6,414 1 10 1,138,830 5 3 - 1823 1,083,104 17,118 1,100,222 1,225,481 19 7 14,330 1 8 1,239,812 1 3 - 1 2 8 1824 1,226,715 984 1,227,699 1,387,204 2 8 1,207 9 8 1,388,411 12 4 - 1825 1,321,327 3,550 1,324,877 1,489,768 11 4 4,177 3 9 1,493,945 15 1 - - 1826 1,473,243 7,371 1,480,614 1,636,499 6 7 8,397 15 3 1,464,897 1 10 126 126 1827 1,313,217 7,271 1,320,488 1,471,501 12 4 8,232 5 0 1,479,733 17 4 - 1828 1,327,929 7,556 1,335,485 1,490,793 4 2 8,629 19 10 1,499,423 4 0 - - 1829 1,301,450 8,529 1,309,979 1,460,764 17 6 9,686 17 8 1,470,451 15 2 - 1830 (See note below.) 1,285,967 - I 1,443,018 5 8 - - 1831 1,226,280 8,821 1,235,101 1,378,244 0 0 9,923 0 0 1,388,166 0 0 - 1832 1,570,075 31,577 1,601,652 1,765,889 0 0 35,511 0 0 1,801,400 0 0 Note.-In consequence of the destruction of the official records by fire, no separate account can be rendered of the consumption of brandy and geneva, or the revenue derived therefrom, for the years prior to 1814. The trade accounts of Great Britain and Ireland having been incorporated during 1830, the particu- lars for that year are stated for the United Kingdom only. s [By the act of March 2d 1827, it was enacted 1. That, from and after the passage of this act, brandy may be imported into the United States, in casks of a capacity not less than 15 gallons, any thing in any law to the contrary notwithstanding Provided, however, that all the provisions of existing laws, not inconsistent with this act, relating to the importation of foreign spirits, be complied with: And provided further, That all brandy, imported in casks of a capacity less than ninety gallons. shall be deposited, at the expense and risk of the im- porter, in such public or other warehouses, as shall be designated by the collector or surveyor, for the port where the same shall be landed, and shall be removed therefrom in the manner prescribed by an act, entitled An act providing for the deposite of wines and distilled spirits in public warehouses, and for other purposes." @ 2. That brandy, imported in casks of a capacity not less than fifteen gallons, may be exported for the benefit of a drawback of the duties which shall have been paid thereon, and the exporter or ex- Digitized by Google BRASS-BRAZIL WOOD. 239 porters of brandy so imported, shall be entitled to receive a debenture or debentures, for the amount of such drawback, agreeably to the existing laws; and all acts now in force regulating the exporta- tion of spirits, and the allowance and payment of drawbacks and debentures, shall be deemed appli- cable to brandy, the importation of which is permitted by this act." This act was limited in its duration to three years; but it was re-enacted in February 1830, and is still in force. See article SPIRITS.-Am. Ed.] BRASS (Ger. Messing; Du. Messing, Missing, Geelkoper ; Fr. Cuivre jaune, Laiton ; It. Ottone , Sp. Laton, Azofar, Rus. Selenoi mjed; Lat. Orichalcum, Aurichalcum) is a factitious metal, made of copper and zinc in certain proportions. It is of a beautiful yellow colour, more fusible than copper, and not so apt to tarnish. It is malleable, so ductile that it may be drawn out into wire, and is much tougher than copper. Its density is greater than the mean density of the two metals. By calculation it ought to be 7.63 nearly, whereas it is actually 8-39; so that its density is increased by about one tenth. The ancients do not seem to have known accurately the difference between copper, brass, and bronze. They consider- ed brass as only a more valuable kind of copper, and therefore used the word as to denote either. They called copper as cyprium, afterwards cyprium; and this in process of time was converted into cuprum. Dr. Watson has proved that it was to brass they gave the name of orichalcum. Brass is malleable when cold, unless the proportion of zinc be exces- sive; but when heated it becomes brittle. It may be readily turned upon the lathe and, indeed, works more kindly than any other metal. There is a vast variety in the proportion of the different species of brass used in com- merce; nor is it easy to determine whether the perfection of this alloy depends on any cer- tain proportions of the two metals. In general, the extremes of the highest and lowest pro- portions of zinc are from 12 to 25 parts in the 100. In some of the British manufactories, the brass made contains one third its weight of zinc. In Germany and Sweden the propor- tion of zinc varies from one fifth to one fourth of the copper. The ductility of brass is not injured when the proportion of zinc is highest. This metal is much used in the escapement wheels, and other nicer parts of watch-making and bars of brass, very carefully made, fetch for this purpose a high price. The use of brass is of very considerable antiquity. Most of the ancient genuine relies are composed of various mixtures of brass with tin and other metals, and are rather to be denominated bronze. The best proportion for brass guns is said to be 1,000 lbs. of copper, 990 lbs. of tin, and 600 lbs. of brass, in 11 or 12 cwt. of metal. The best brass guns are made of malleable metal, not of pure copper and zinc alone; but worse metals are used to make it run closer and sounder, as lead and pot-metal.-(Thomson's Chemistry, Encyc. Britannica, &c.) BRAZILETTO, an inferior species of Brazil wood brought from Jamaica. It is one of the cheapest and least esteemed of the red dye woods. BRAZIL NUTS, or Chesnuts of Brazil, the fruit of the Juvia (Bertholletia excelsa), a majestic tree growing to the height of 100 or 120 feet, abounding on the banks of the Orinoco, and in the northern parts of Brazil. The nuts are triangular, having a cuneiform appearance, with sutures at each of the angles; the shell is rough and hard, and of a brown- ish ash colour. The kernel resembles that of an almond, but is larger, and tastes more like a common hazel nut; it contains a great deal of oil, that may be obtained by expression or otherwise. These nuts do not grow separately, or in clusters, but are contained, to the num- ber of from 15 to 50 or more," in great ligneous pericarps or outer shells, generally of the size of a child's head. This outer shell is very hard and strong, so that it is rather difficult to get at the nuts, which are closely packed in cells inside. The natives are particularly fond of this fruit, and celebrate the harvest of the juvia with rejoicings it is also very much esteemed in Europe. The nuts brought to this country and the Continent are chiefly ex- ported from Para, and form an article of considerable commercial importance.-(Humboldt's Pers. Nar. vol. V. p. 538. Eng. trans.) BRAZIL WOOD (Fr. Bois de Brésil; Ger. Brasilienholz; Du. Brasilienhout; It. Legno del Brasile, Verzino Sp. Madera del Bresil, Port. Pao Brasil). It has been com- monly supposed that this wood derived its name from the country in which it is principally produced. But Dr. Bancroft has conclusively shown that woods yielding a red dye were called Brazil woods long previously to the discovery of America; and that the early voyagers gave the name of Brazil to that part of that continent to which it is still applied from their having ascertained that it abounded in such woods.-(See the learned and excellent work, Philosophy of Colours, vol. ii. pp. 316-321.) It is found in the greatest abundance, and is of the best quality, in the province of Pernambuco, where it is called Pao da rainha, or Queen's wood; but it is also found in many other parts of the Western Hemisphere. The tree is large, crooked, and knotty: the leaves are of a beautiful red, and exhale an agreeable odour. Its botanical name is Casalpinia Brasiletto ; but it is called by the na- Humboldt says he had most frequently found from 15 to 22 nuts in each pericarp; but De Laet, who gave the first and most accurate description of this fruit, says that the pericarp is divided into six compartments, each of which encloses from 8 to 12 nuts.-(See Humbolt in loc. cit.) Digitized by Google 240 BREAD. tives ibiripitanga. Notwithstanding its apparent bulk, the bark is so thick, that a tree as large as a man's body with the bark, will not be so thick as the leg when peeled. When cut into chips, it loses the pale colour it before had, and becomes red ; and when chewed. has a sweet taste. It is used for various purposes by cabinet-inakers, and admits of a beautiful varnish: but its principal use is in dyeing red and though the colour is liable to decay, yet, by mixing with it alum and tartar, it is easily made permanent there is also made of it, by means of acids, a sort of liquid lake or carmine, for painting in miniature. Brazil wood has been for many years past a royal monopoly; its exportation, except on account of government, being prohibited under the severest penalties. Owing to the improvident manner in which it has been cut down by the government agents, it is now rarely found within several leagues of the coast. Indeed, we are assured that many of the planters have privately cut down the trees on their estates, and used the timber as fire-wood, that they might not expose themselves to annoyance from the arbitrary and vexations proceedings of these functionaries. The quantity of Brazil wood imported into this country is but inconsiderable. Its price in the London market, exclusive of the duty (u. per ton), varies from 601. to 801. per ton.-(Dr. Bancroft in loc. cit. Encye. Metrop. Modern Traveller, vol. xxix. p. 87.; Malte Brun, vol. V. p. 525. Eng. ed. &c.) BREAD, the principal article in the food of most civilised nations, consists of a paste or dough formed of the flour or meal of different sorts of grain mixed with water, and baked. When stale dough or yeast is added to the fresh dough, to make it swell, it is said to be leavened; when nothing of this sort is added, it is said to be unleavened. 1. Historical Sketch of Bread.-The President de Goguet has endeavoured, with his usual sagacity and learning, to trace the successive steps by which it is probable men were led to discover the art of making bread-(Origin of Laws, drc. vol. i. pp. 95-105. Eng. trans.) but nothing positive is known on the subject. It is certain, however, from the state- ments in the sacred writings, that the use of unleavened bread was common in the days of Abraham-(Gen. xviii. 8.) and that leavened bread was used in the time of Moses, for be prohibits eating the Paschal lamb with such bread-(Exod. xii. 15.) The Greeks affirmed that Pan had instructed them in the art of making bread but they, no doubt, were indebted for this art, as well as for their knowledge of agriculture, to the Egyptians and Phonicians, who had early settled in their country. The method of grinding corn by hand mills was practised in Egypt and Greece from a very remote epoch; but for a lengthened period the Romans had no other method of making flour, than by beating roasted corn in mortars. The Macedonian war helped to make the Romans acquainted with the arts and refinements of Greece; and Pliny mentions, that public bakers were then, for the first time, established in Rome-(Hist. Nat. lib. xviii. c. 11.). The conquests of the Romans diffused, amongst many other useful discoveries, a knowledge of the art of preparing bread, as practised in Rome, through the whole south of Europe. The use of yeast in the raising of bread seems, however, from a passage of Pliny (lib. xviii. c. 7.), to have been practised by the Germans and Gauls before it was practised by the Romans; the latter, like the Greeks, having leavened their bread by intermixing the fresh dough with that which had become stale. The Roman practice seems to have superseded that which was previously in use in France and Spain; for the art of raising bread by an ad- mixture of yeast was not practised in France in modern times, till towards the end of the seventeenth century. It deserves to be mentioned, that though the bread made in this way was decidedly superior to that previously in use, it was declared, by the faculty of medicine in Paris, to be prejudicial to health; and the use of yeast was prohibited under the severest penalties ! Luckily, however, the taste of the public concurring with the interest of the bakers, proved too powerful for these absurd regulations, which fell gradually into disuse and yeast has long been, almost every where, used in preference to any thing else in the manufacture of bread, to the wholesomeness and excellence of which it has not a little contributed. The species of bread in common use in the country depends partly on the taste of the inhabitants, but more on the sort of grain suitable for its soil. But the superiority of wheat to all other farinaceous plants in the manufacture of bread is so very great, that wherever it is easily and successfully cultivated, wheaten bread is used, to the nearly total exclusion of most others. Where, however, the soil or climate is less favourable to its growth, rye, oats, &c. are used in its stead. A very great change for the better has, in, this respect, taken place in Great Britain within the last century. It is mentioned by Harrison, in his descrip- tion of England (p. 168.), that in the reign of Henry VIII, the gentry had wheat sufficient for their own tables, but that their household and poor neighbours were usually obliged to content themselves with rye, barley, and oats. It appears from the household book of Sir Edward Coke, that in 1596, rye bread and oatmeal formed a considerable part of the diet of servants, even in great families, in the southern counties. Barley bread is stated in the grant of a monopoly by Charles I., in 1626, to be the usual food of the ordinary sort of peo- ple.-(Sir F. M. Eden on the Poor, vol. i. p. 561.) At the Revolution, the wheat produced in England and Wales was estimated by Mr. King and Dr. Davenant to amount to 1,750,000 quarters.-(Davenant's Works, vol. ii. p. 217.) Mr. Charles Smith, the very well informed author of the Tracts on the Corn Trade, originally published in 1758, states, that in his time wheat had become much more generally the food of the common people than it had been in 1689; but he adds (2d ed. p. 182. Lond. 1766.), that notwithstanding this increase, some very intelligent inquirers were of opinion that even then not more than half the people of England fed on wheat. Mr. Smith's own estimate, which is very carefully drawn up, is a Digitized by Google BREAD. 241 little higher for taking the population of England and Wales, in 1760, at 6,000,000, he supposed that 3,750,000 were consumers of wheat; 739,000, of barley 888,000, of rye; and 623,000, of oats. Mr. Smith further supposed that they individually consumed, the first class, 1 quarter of wheat the second, 1 quarter and 3 bushels of barley; the third, 1 quarter and 1 bushel of rye; and the fourth, 2 quarters and 7 bushels of oats. About the middle of last century, hardly any wheat was used in the northern counties of England. In Cumberland, the principal families used only a small quantity about Christ- mas. The crust of the goose pie, with which almost every table in the county is then sup- plied, was, at the period referred to, almost uniformly made of barley meal.-(Eden on the Poor, vol. i. p. 564.) Every one knows how inapplicable these statements are to the condition of the people of England at the present time. Wheaten bread is now universally made use of in towns and villages, and almost every where in the country. Barley is no longer used, except in the distilleries and in brewing oats are employed only in the feeding of horses; and the consump- tion of rye bread is comparatively inconsiderable. The produce of the wheat crops has been, at the very least, trebled since 1760. And if to this immense increase in the supply of wheat, we add the still more extraordinary increase in the supply of butcher's meat- (see art. CATTLE), the fact of a very signal improvement having taken place in the condi- tion of the population, in respect of food, will be obvious. But great as has been the improvement in the condition of the people of England since 1760, it is but trifling compared to the improvement that has taken place, since the same period, in the condition of the people of Scotland. At the middle of last century, Scotch agri- culture was in the most depressed state the tenants were destitute alike of capital and skill green crops were almost wholly unknown and the quantity of wheat that was raised was quite inconsiderable. A field of 8 acres sown with this grain, in the vicinity of Edinburgh, in 1727, was reckoned so great a curiosity that it excited the attention of the whole neigh- d!-(Robertson's Rural Recollections, p. 267.) But even so late as the American war, the wheat raised in the Lothians and Berwickshire did not exceed a third part of what is now grown in them and taking the whole country at an average, it will be a moderate estimate, to say that the cultivation of wheat has increased in a tenfold proportion since 1780. At that period no wheaten bread was to be met with in the country places and vil- lages of Scotland; oat cakes and barley bannocks being universally made use of. But at present the case is widely different. The upper and also the middle and lower classes in towns and villages use only wheaten bread, and even in farmhouses it is very extensively consumed. There is, at this moment, hardly a village to be met with, however limited its extent, that has not a public baker. In many parts of England it is the custom for private families to bake their own bread. This is particularly the case in Kent, and in some parts of Lancashire. In 1804, there was not a single public baker in Manchester ; and their number is still very limited. 2. Regulations as to the Manufacture of Bread.-Owing to the vast importance of bread, its manufacture has been subjected in most countries to various regulations, some of which have had a beneficial and others an injurious operation. a Assize of Bread.-From the year 1266, in the reign of Henry III., down to our own days, it has been customary to regulate the price at which bread should be sold according to the price of wheat or flour at the time. An interference of this sort was supposed to be necessary, to prevent that monopoly on the part of the bakers which it was feared might otherwise take place. But it is needless, perhaps, to say that this apprehension was of the most futile description. The trade of a baker is one that may be easily learned, and it requires no considerable capital to carry it on; 80 that were those engaged in the business in any particular town to attempt to force up prices to an artificial elevation, the combination would be immediately defeated by the competition of others; and even though this were not the case, the facility with which bread may be baked at home would of itself serve to nullify the efforts of any combination. But the assize regulations were not merely useless ; they were in many respects exceedingly injurious they rendered the price of flour a matter of comparative indifference to the baker; and they obliged the baker who used the finest flour, and made the best bread, to sell at the same rate as those who used inferior flour, and whose bread was decidedly of a worse quality. But these considerations, how obvious soever they may now appear, were for a long time entirely overlooked. According, however, as the use of wheaten bread was extended, it was found to be impracticable to set assizes in small towns and villages and notwithstanding the fewness of the bakers in such places gave them greater facilities for combining together, the price of bread was almost uniformly lower in them than in places where assizes were set. In consequence, partly of this circumstance, but still more of the increase of intelligence as to such matters, the practice of setting an assize was gradually relinquished in most places; and in 1815 it was expressly abolished, by an act of the legislature (55 Geo. 3. c. 99.), in London and its environs. In other places, though the power to set an assize still subsists, it is seldom acted upon, and has fallen into comparative disuse. VoL. I-X 31 Digitized by Google 242 BREMEN. b. Regulations as to the Weight, and Ingredients to be used in making Bread-Accord- ing to the assize acts, a sack of flour weighing 280 lbs. is supposed capable of being baked into 80 quartern loaves; one fifth of the loaf being supposed to consist of water and salt, and four fifths of flour. But the number of loaves that may be made from a sack of flour depends entirely on its goodness. Good flour requires more water than bad flour, and old flour than new flour. Sometimes 82, 83, and even 86 loaves have been made from a sack of flour, and sometimes hardly 80. Under the assize acts, bakers are restricted to bake only three kinds of bread, viz. wheaten, stand- ard wheaten, and household; the first being made of the finest flour, the second of the whole flour mixed, and the third of the coarser flour. The loaves are divided into peck, half-peck, and quartern loaves; the legal weight of each, when baked, being, the peck loaf 17 lbs. 6 oz., the half peck 8 lbs. 11 oz., and the quartern 4 lbs. 5f oz. avoirdupois. Now, however, it is enacted, that within the city of London, and in those places in the country where an assize is not set, it shall be lawful for the bakers to make and sell bread made of wheat, barley, rye, oats, buckwheat, Indian corn, peas, beans, rice, or potatoes, or any of them, along with common salt, pure water, eggs, milk, barm. leaven, potato or other yeast, and mixed in such propor- tions as they shall think fit.-( 3 Geo. 4. c. 106. Q 2., and I & 2 Geo. 4. c. 50. . 2.) It is also enacted, by the same statutes, that bakers in London, and in the country, that is, in all places 10 miles from the Royal Exchange where an assize is not set, may make and sell bread of such weight and size as they think fit, any law or assize to the contrary notwithstanding. But it is at the same time enacted, that such bread shall always be sold by avoirdupois weight of 16 ounces to the pound, and in no other manner, under a penalty for every offence of not more than 40s.; except, however, French or fancy bread, or rolls, which may be sold without previously weighing the same. Bakers or sellers of bread are bound to have fixed, in some conspicuous part of their shop, a beain and scales, with proper weights for weighing bread; and a person purchasing bread may require it to be weighed in his presence. Bakers and others sending out bread in carts, are to supply them with beams, scales, &c., and to weigh the bread if required, under a penalty of not more than 51.-(3 Geo. 4. 3. 106. (8.) Bakers, either journeymen or masters, using alum or any other unwholesome ingredient, and con- victed on their own confession, or on the oath of one or more witnesses, to forfeit not exceeding 20/. and not less than 51. if beyond the environs of London, and not exceeding 101. nor less than 51. if within London or its environs. Justices are allowed to publish the names of offenders. The adul- teration of meal or flour is punishable by a like penalty. Loaves made of any other grain than wheat, without the city and its liberties, or beyond 10 miles of the Royal Exchange, to be marked with a large Roman M.; and every person exposing such loaves without such mark shall forfeit not more than 40s. nor less than 10s. for every loaf so exposed.-(1 & 2 Geo. 4. c. 50. (6.) Any ingredient or mixture found within the house, mill, stall, shop, &c. of any miller, mealman, or baker, which after due examination shall be adjudged to have been placed there for the purpose of adulteration, shall be forfeited; and the person within whose premises it is found punished, if within the city of London and its environs, by a penalty not exceeding 101. nor less than 40s. for the first offence, 51. for the second offence, and 10% for every subsequent offence.-(3 Geo. 4. c. 106. 0 14.) And if without London and its environs, the party in whose house or premises ingredients for adulteration shall be found, shall forfeit for every such offence not less than 51. and not more than 20d.-(1 & 2 Geo. 4. c. 5. 0 8.) Bakers in London and its environs are not to sell, or expose to sale, any bread, rolls, or cakes, nor bake or deliver any meat, pudding, pie, tart, or victuals of any sort, on Sundays, except between the hours of nine in the morning and one in the afternoon, under penalty of 10s. for the first offence, 20s. for the second offence, and 40s. for every subsequent offence.-(3 Geo. 4. c. 106. a 16.) Bakers in the country are prohibited from selling, &c. any bread, &c., or baking or delivering any meat, &c., on Sundays, any time after half past 1 o'clock of the afternoon of that day, or during the time of divine service, under penalty of 5s. for the first offence, 10s. for the second, and 20s. for the third and every subsequent offence.-(59 Geo. 3. c. 36. 0 12.) There are several regulations in the acts now in force with respect to the sale, &c. of bread where an assize is set; but as the practice of setting an assize is nearly relinquished, it seems unnecessary to recapitulate them. The weight of the assize bread has already been mentioned, and the principle on which its price is fixed. Notwithstanding the prohibition against the use of alum, it is believed to be very generally em- ployed, particularly by the bakers of London.-" In the metropolis," says Dr. Thomson, (Suppl. to Encyc Brit., art. Baking), where the goodness of bread is estimated entirely by its whiteness, it is usual with those bakers who employ flour of hn inferior quality, to add as much alum as common salt to the dough; or, in other words, the quantity of salt added is diminished a half, and the defi- ciency supplied by an equal weight of alum. This improves the look of the bread, rendering it much whiter and firmer." There are believed to be about 1,700 bakers in London, Westminster, &c. The trade which they carry on is in general but limited, and it is not reckoned a very advantageous line of business. [Government in our own country, too, has undertaken to regulate the quantity and quality of a loaf of bread. There is a law in Pennsylvania inflicting a penalty of five pounds on any baker who shall mix up or adulterate his bread with any impure or unwholesome ingredient; and he is obliged to make his loaves of a certain weight. The legislation of other States on the subject is of the same character.-Am. Ed.] BREMEN, one of the free Hanseatic cities, situated on the river Weser, about 50 miles from its mouth, in lat. 53° N., long. 8° 48' E. Population about 46,000. Its situation on the Weser renders Bremen the principal emporium of Hanover, Brunswick, Hesse, and other countries traversed by that river. The charges on the buying, selling, and shipping of goods, are very moderate. The principal exports are linens, grain, oak bark, glass, smalts, hams. hides, rapeseed, beef and pork, rags, wool and woollen goods, wine, &c. The wheat and barley shipped here are mostly very inferior; but the oats are useful common feed beans are good. The linens are mostly the same as those from Hamburgh. The imports consist of coffee, sugar, and other colonial products; tobacco, whale oil, iron, rice, hides, wines, raw cotton, cotton stuffs and yarn, earthenware, brandy, butter, tar, tea, dyewoods, timber, hemp, &c. Digitized by Google BREMEN. 243 Entrance to Bremen.-The entrance to the Weser lies between the Mellum and other sands on the south-western, and the Teglers Plaat, &c. on the north-eastern side. Its course from Bremerlehe to its mouth is nearly S. E. and N. W. It is buoyed throughout. The buoys on the right or starboard side when entering, being black and marked with letters, while those on the left or larboard are white and numbered. The first or outer black buoy has a gilt key upon it, and is, therefore, called the schlussel or key buoy; it lies in 101 fathoms, bearing N. E. miles from Wrangeroog light. This is an intermitting light, having replaced in 1830, the old coal-fire beacon on the island of Wrangeroog, opposite to the northern extremity of East Friesland. It is, according to the most authentic state- ments, in lat. 53° 471' N., long. 7° 51' 55" E.; is elevated 634 feet above high water mark, being alter- nately visible and invisible for the space of a minute. A light vessel is moored in the fair-way of the Weser, between the black buoys E and F, and the white buoys 2 and 3. She has two masts: during day, a red flag, with a white cross upon it, is kept flying at the mainmast; and at night she exhibits 7 lantern lights, 28 feet above deck. This vessel is on no account to leave her station, unless com- pelled by the ice. Large vessels do not now generally ascend further than Bremerlehe, on the east side of the river, about 38 miles below Bremen, where a new and spacious harbour, called Bremen Haven," has been constructed. But vessels not drawing more than 7 feet water come up to town and those drawing from 13 to 14 feet may come up to Vegesack, about 13 miles from Bremen.-(See the Sailing Directions for the North Sea, published by Mr. Norrie.) A Statement of the Quantities and Value of the principal Articles of Merchandise imported into Bremen, in the year 1835.-(Consular Return). Imports. Imports. Description. Description. Quantities. Value. Quantities. Value. £ £ Barilla - - cwts. 5,277 2,216 Raisins - - cwts. 7,990 7,383 Brandy - - hbds. 1,284 6,741 Rice - - do. 33,655 33,924 Butter - - cwts. 10,377 23,003 Resin - - do. 3,816 961 Coals - - lasts. 234 842 Rum - casks. 852 15,720 Coffee - - lbs. 10,103,000 263,138 Salt - lasts. 684 2,118 Copper - - cwts. 1,107 5,700 Saltpetre - cwts. 4,670 6,277 Copperas - do. 8,268 2,220 Sugar, raw, - do. 108,691 215,571 Cotton - - lbs. 753,700 31,404 refined - do. 17,931 35,564 Currants - cwts. 3,241 6,518 Syrup - - do. 9,675 8,340 Earthenware - - 6,087 Tallow - - do. 1,157 1,944 Fustic - - cwts. 11,607 1,980 Tar - - brls. 6,449 4,035 Indigo - - lbs. 20,800 5,190 Tea - - lbs. 415,860 46,785 Iron - - tons. 2,817 47,325 Tinplates boxes. 1,886 3,394 Linseed - - bris. 11,300 22,878 Tobacco, leaf - lbs. 24,170,870 478,380 Hides - - No. 27,100 32,205 , roll do. 605,634 27,947 Logwood - cwts. 12,080 3,252 , stems do. 4,893,447 55,051 Mahogany - - 3,705 segars No. 1,633,000 3,840 Oil, Greenland brls. 3,400 Miscellaneous - - - 271,647 -, Newfoundland do. 4,500 -, Norwegian do. 5,760 106,440 Total - 1,802,553 -, Archangel do. 600 Further imports by water from the -, South Sea do. 22,000 small towns situated between Pepper - - lbs. 320,900 5,347 Bremen and the mouth of the 32,553 Pimento - - do. 381,360 7,150 river Weser - - - - Pitch - - bris. 501 324 Total imports - 1,835,106 Exports.-Linens are one of the most important articles of export from Bremen. They are mostly sold by the piece. The dimensions of the pieces, and their prices, are similar to those of Hamburgh, which see. The Westphalia hams are mostly shipped from this port. Duties.-An export duty of t per cent., ad valorem, is charged on all merchandise shipped from Bremen. The import duty is 1 per cent., ad valorem, on all articles; having been increased a third per cent. by the ordinance of 1830. The value of the imports is calculated according to the invoice price, adding thereto the freight and the rate of insurance current in Bremen; the value of the exports is estimated from the invoice price only. Should there be no invoice of imports, it is the duty of the importer to make a correct estimate of the value upon his oath as a citizen but the Custom-house has power to institute a stricter ex- amination, if the estimate appears too low. Emigration.-Bremen has become the most considerable port on the Continent for the shipment of emigrants to the United States, and other parts in America. In 1832 the number of emigrants amount- ed to between 9,000 and 10,000; and their conveyance has become an object of much importance, particularly to the American ship-owners. A large proportion of the emigrants are from Hesse. Ship-brokers are licensed officers, and give security, to the amount of 2,000 rix-dollars, for the faith- ful discharge of their duties. These are to engage freights, to sell vessels by auction, to enter ves- nels, and collect freights. They are not permitted to have partners, to transact any commercial business on their own account, to accept commissions or consignments, to sell or purchase bills of exchange, or to engage in any mercantile concerns. None but appointed brokers of this class can undertake any of the duties assigned to them. Any person employing a non-appointed broker, is deprived of legal redress against the unauthorised agent by whose conduct he may sustain injury. Ship-brokers are obliged to keep a register of all vessels coming in or going out, of the names of the captains who employed them, to procure manifests of cargoes, and to attend to the payment of duties and other dues chargeable on vessel or cargo. The fees allowed to them are, for chartering a vessel in bulk, 18 grotes per grain last of this, the owner pays 12 grotes, and the freighter six grotes. For outward-bound vessels, taking merchandise as it may be offered, 2 per cent. on the freight. For entering a vessel from sea measuring 50 lasts, 5 rix-dollars measuring 100 ditto, 71 rix-dol- lars; and if she measure above 100 lasts, 10 rix-dollars. Entry dues are to be paid by the consignees of foreign vessels out of the commission they may charge. Digitized by Google 244 BREMEN. For the collection of freight money, the broker is entitled to receive one per cent., but the consignee of a foreign vessel is to pay this sum. Regulations of the Harbour of Bremen Haven.-All vessels entering the harbour are subject to the superintendence of the harbour-masters, whose directions are to be obeyed by the captains and crews. No ballast or rubbish is to be thrown overboard, under a penalty of 10 rix-dollars for the first offence, which is increased in case of repetition; the offender, too, is obliged to remove the articles he may have 80 cast into the harbour. It is not permitted to keep gunpowder on board, and any which may be in the vessel must be deli- vered up within two hours after she has reached her berth: non-compliance with this subjects the party to a fine of from 10 to 50 rix-dollars; nor is it permitted to discharge any fire-arms in port. The use of all fire on board, from sunset to sunrise, is prohibited; the captain, however, may have a light, in a closed lantern, in his cabin. The crews are not allowed to carry on shore any fire-arms, dirks, or other weapons. Vessels passing in and out of the drawbridge, or which may remain in the harbour during two months, are subject to the payment of the following rates, viz. Rx. D. Gr. Rx. D. Gr. Of 300 lasts and upwards 40 0 Below 60 lasts to 40 lasts 7 36 Below 300 to 250 lasts 35 0 - 40 - to 30 5 o - 250 to 200 - 30 0 - 200 to 150 25 0 If vessels remain longer than two months, they are to pay for - 150 - to 120 - 20 0 every additional month, calculating the entrance on a new month as a full mouth. - 120 - to 100 square-rigged 17 36 - 120 - to 100 galliots, &c. 15 0 Vessels of 300 lasts and upwards 5 0 - 100 - to S0 equare-rigged 15 0 Below 300 - to 250 lasts 4 36 - 100 - to 80 galliots, &c. 12 36 - 250 - to 200 - 3 36 - 80 - to 60 square-rigged 12 36 - 200 - to 100 - X 36 - 80 - to 60 galliots, &c. 10 0 - 100 - to 60 1 36 Arrivals.-During the year 1834, 1,006 ships entered the port of Bremen. Of these, 194 were from Hanover 111 from Great Britain; 103 from the United States; 44 from France; and the remainder from the Netherlands, Russia, South America, Spain, Sweden, &c. The shipping charges at Bremen are particularly low. Money.Accounts are kept in thalers, or rix-dollars, of 72 grootes or grotes; the grotes being di- vided into 5 swares. The Bremen rix-dollar current is worth 3s. 2d. sterling; and the par of exchange is 11. sterling == 6 rix-dollars 22 grotes 4 swares. Weights and Measurcs.-The commercial pound = 2 marks = 16 ounces = 32 loths = 7,690 English grains. Hence, 100 lbs. of Bremen= 1098 avoirdupois, or 49:825 kilog. load of pfundschwer = 300 lbs., but carriers reckon it at 308 lbs. A centner = 116 lbs. ; a shippound = 21 centners, or 290lbs.; a waage of iron = 120 lbs. ; a stone of flax = 20 lbs. ; a stone of wool = 10 lbs. A ton of butter great mea- sure = 300 lbs. and a ton of do. small measure = 220 lbs. The dry measures are, 4 spints == 1 viertel 4 viertels = scheffel; 10 scheffels = 1 quart 4 quarts = 1 last; the last = 80:70 bushels Winchester measure, or 10:087 quarters; that is, 10 quarters and 0.7 bushel. A barrel of salt= 31 scheffels. A last of coals = 2 chaldrons Newcastle measure. The liquid measures are 88 quarts = 1 viertel; 5 viertels = 1 anker; 4 ankers = 1 tierce; It tierce = oxhoft ; the oxhoft = 58 English wine gallons. Wine is sometimes sold by the ahm of lankers = 374 Eng. wine gallons. A barrel of whale oil = 6 steckan, or 216 lbs. nett = 311 Eng. wine gallons. A ship last of herrings, salt, and coals= 12 barrels. The Bremen foot = 11:38 Eng. inches: hence, 100 Bremen feet = 948 Eng. ditto. The Bremen ell is 2 feet; and 100 ells of Bremen = 63.2 Eng. yards. Tares. -The usual tares are, on sugar in casks and Brazil chests, 17 per cent. ; on Havannah boxes, 70 lbs. Maryland tobacco, 90 lbs. per hogshead ditto Virginia and Kentucky, 110 lbs. per hogshead cotton, round bales, 4 per cent. ; square ditto, 6 per cent. tea (green), 20 lbs. per quarter chest ; ditto (black), 221bs. per quarter chest. Most other articles, such as East India indigo, rice, coffee, spices, &c. real (Drawn up principally from the communications of Bremen merchants; and from the Digest of Customs' Laws printed by order of the American Congress, vol. i. p. 434. &c.) [The mercantile marine of Bremen has of late years been very much augmented, and may be now estimated at about 40,000 tons. Since the construction of the harbour of Bremerlehe, above mentioned, ship-building has chiefly been carried on there, instead of at Vegesack, as was formerly the case. And some very fine ships and brigs have been lately constructed on American models. The commercial intercourse of Bremen with the United States is extensive and important. This small city is the principal market in Europe for American tobacco. The average quan- tity imported by it approaches to 30,000 hogsheads annually ; and of this amount the larger portion is Maryland. It is distributed from Bremen all over Germany, Prussia, Austria, and even through Italy and Russia. A considerable number of Bremen vessels resort for it to Baltimore; some to Petersburg and Richmond. The inspection lately established in Philadelphia has already augmented the direct intercourse between it and Bremen; and a regular line of packets is to sail between the two ports. The quantity of cotton annually shipped to Bremen from the United States does not go beyond six or eight thousand bales. Five or six thousand casks of rice are annually export- ed thither. For many years past the Bremen vessels have brought to this country a large number of German emigrants, consisting chiefly of industrious farmers, mechanics, and labourers. During the years 1836 and 1837, they supplied us with grain; but their cargoes ordi- narily consist of goods manufactured in various parts of Germany, such as Silks, manufactured mostly at Elberfeld and Crevelt, in Prussia. Cotton goods, principally hosiery, made in Saxony. Woollens, chiefly merinoes, some coarse woollen hosiery, some light summer cloths, and a small quantity of broad cloth. Hardware and steel, manufactured at Remscheid, Solingen, and neighbouring places, in the Prussian dominions. Hollow glassware, such as tumblers of the commonest description, and wine and por- Digitized by Google BRIBE, BRICKS AND TILES. 245 ter bottles. The importation of these articles is gradually decreasing, as our own glass- works are improving. Linens. All kinds of German linen goods have been in a great measure superseded by the linens of Ireland and Scotland. Some very coarse linen, however, for bagging, called Hes- sians and Hoeden rolls, and some burlaps for negro clothing, as also sail cloth of a good quality, made in imitation of the Dutch, together with linen tapes and bobbins, continue to be imported also damask table linen and napkins, and linen pocket handkerchiefs. Looking-glass plates of small sizes, low priced toilet and pocket glasses, burning glasses, and spectacle glasses procured from Nuremberg, in the kingdom of Bavaria as also hooks and eyes, bone buttons, toys, and a great variety of small articles, procured from the same place. Thread, silk, and cotton lace, lace veils and embroideries, cotton and worsted fringes, brought to Bremen from Saxony. Slates, slate pencils, marbles, and toys from Sonnenberg in Saxony. Oil cloth manufactured in Saxony. Westphalia hams. We may remark that the consumption of German manufactures in this country is, gene- rally speaking, on the increase; the frugality and industry of the Germans enabling them more and more to compete with the English and French.-Am. Ed.] BRIBE. Any person giving or offering a bribe, recompence, or reward, to any officer of the customs, to induce him to neglect his duty, to forfeit 2001.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 53. § 38.) [By the act of the 2d of March, 1799, entitled " An act to regulate the collection of duties on imports and exports," it was enacted, That if any officer of the customs shall, directly or indirectly, take or receive any bribe, reward, or recompense, for conniving, or shall connive, at any false entry of any ship or vessel, or of any goods, wares, or merchandise, and shall be convicted thereof, every such officer, or other person, shall forfeit and pay a sum, not less than two hundred, nor more than two thousand dollars, for each offence; and any person giving or offering any bribe, recompense, or reward, for any such deception, collusion, or fraud, shall forfeit and pay a sum, not less than two hundred dollars, nor more than two thousand dollars, for each offence."-Am. Ed.] BRICKS AND TILES, well known articles used in the building and covering of houses. They are made of baked clay and sand. Until last year (1833) an excise duty was charged both on bricks and tiles, their manufacture being, in consequence, placed under sur- veillance. It is ordered by 17 Geo. 3. c. 42. that all bricks made in England for sale shall be 84 inches long, 21 inches thick, and 4 wide; and all pantiles 13} inches long, 91 inches wide, and 1 an inch thick on pain of forfeiting, for bricks or tiles made of less dimensions when burnt, as follows, viz. 20s. for every 1,000 of bricks, and 10s. for every 1,000 of pan- tiles, and proportionally for a greater or less number. It is also provided, that the size of the sieves or screens for sifting or screening sea-coal ashes to be mixed with brick earth in mak- ing bricks, shall not exceed t of an inch between the meshes. Makers of bricks and tiles must give notice, under a penalty of 100/., to the excise, of their intention to begin the manufacture. Tiles used in draining land were exempted from the duties. But in so far as respects tiles, these regulations are no longer of importance, the duty on them having been abolished in 1833. The revenue derived from it was but trifling. It was, however, very prejudicial to the manufacture, particularly after the repeal of the duty on slates. It were to be wished that the state of the revenue was such as to admit of the repeal of the duty on bricks. Account of the Rates of Duty on, and Quantities of, the different Species of Bricks produced in England and Wales in 1827, 1828, and 1829. Species. Rates of Duty. Quantity. Quantity. Quantity. 1827. 1828. 1829. Common - 5s. 10d. per 1,000 1,092,447,058 1,068,400,330 1,099,744,701 Large - - 10s. per do. 2,683,046 2,645,425 2,540,360 Polished - 12s. 10d. per do. 8,150,750 7,769,075 7,295,366 Large polished 2s. 5d. per 100 98,550 122,810 110,275 Totals 1,103,379,404 1,078,937,640 1,109,690,702 Account of the Rates of Duty on, and Quantities of, the different Species of Bricks produced in Scotland, in 1827, 1828, and 1829. Species. Rates of Duty. Quantity. Quantity. Quantity. 1827. 1828. 1829. Common - 5s. 10d. per 1,000 20,071,337 24,281,032 24,741,582 Large - - 10s. per do. 255,850 406,439 396,187 Polished - 12s. 10d. per do. 3,375 1,850 6,522 Totals 20,330,562 24,689,321 25,144,291 X 2 Digitized by Google 246 BRIMSTONE-BROKERS. Nett Produce of the Duties on Bricks and Tiles in 1829. £ 8. d. £ s. d. England s Bricks 319,051 14 5 - - Scotland - s Bricks 6,714 0 0 - Tiles 34,830 7 5 Tiles 1,922 12 0 Total nett amount of revenue from bricks and tiles in Great Britain, 362,5181. 13s. 10d. There were, in 1830, 5,369 brick and tile manufacturers in England and Wales, and 104 in Scot- land.* The entire duties on bricks and tiles are drawn back upon exportation. Sufficient security must be given before their shipment, that they shall be shipped and exported, and not relanded in Great Britain.-(24 Geo. 3. sess. 2. c. 24. 1 16.) If bricks or tiles shipped for drawback be relanded, the bricks or tiles so relanded shall, over and above the penalty in the bond, be forfeited.-() 17.) Return of the Number of Tiles made in the Year 1830, in Great Britain; stating the Number of each Kind, and the Rate of Duty charged per Thousand on each; also, the Gross Amount of Duty for the Year, and Amount paid for Drawback on Tiles exported; distinguishing each Country, and the Number of Tiles exported. Plain. Rate of Pan or Rate of Small Rate of Large Rate of All Rate of GrossAmount Duty. Ridge. Duty. Paving. Duty. Paving. Duty. other. Duty. of Duty. s. d. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. L. 8. d. England 41,707,915 5 8 20,603,450 12 10 3,972,507 2 5 1,036,300 4 10 399,675 4 10 32,438 19 5 per 1000 per 1000 per 100 per 100 per 1000 Scotland 3,250 - 2,638,942 - 57,330 - 19,370 - 1,750 - 1,810 15 0 Gt. Britain 41,711,165 - 23,242,382 - 4,029,837 - 1,055.670 - 401,425 - 34,249 14 5 Number of Tiles exported. Amount of Draw. Plain. Pan or Ridge. Small Paving. Large Paving. All other. back. £ S. d. England - 17,000 734,742 126,909 143,073 1,424 975 9 5 Scotland - - 52;000 7,900 750 - 44 14 6 Great Britain 17,000 786,742 134,809 143,823 1,424 1,020 3 11 Note.-Bricks and tiles made in Ireland are not subject to excise duty. BRIMSTONE. See SULPHUR. BRISTLES (Fr. Soies; Ger. Borsten; Du. Borstels; It. Setole; Sp. Cerdas, Setas; Pol. Szezeciny; Rus. Schtschetina; Lat. Setæ), the strong glossy hairs growing on the back of the hog and the wild boar. These are very extensively used by brushmakers, shoe- makers, saddlers, &c., and form a considerable article of import. Russia is the great mart for bristles; those of the Ukraine being held in the highest estimation. Of the total quan- tity imported in 1831, amounting to 2,070,306 lbs., Russia furnished 1,867,096 lbs., and Prussia (Königsberg) 136,721 lbs. At an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, the entries for home consumption amounted to 1,789,801 lbs. a year. The duty, which varies from 24d. to 34d. a pound, produced, in 1832, 25,613/. 2s. 10d. nett. BROCADE (Du. Brokade; Fr. Brocade; Ger. Brokal; It. Broccalo; Rus. Partscha; Sp. Brocado), a stuff made of silk variegated with gold and silver. BROKERS, persons employed as middlemen to transact business or negotiate bargains between different merchants or individuals. They are sometimes licensed by public authority, and sometimes not. Brokers are divided into different classes, as bill or exchange brokers, stockholders, ship and insurance brokers, pawnbrokers, and brokers simply so called, or those who sell or appraise household furniture distrained for rent. Exclusive, too, of the classes now men- tioned, the brokers who negotiate sales of produce between different merchants usually con- fine themselves to some one department or line of business; and by attending to it exclu- sively, they acquire a more intimate knowledge of its various details, and of the credit of those engaged in it, than could be looked for on the part of a general merchant; and are consequently able, for the most part, to buy on cheaper and to sell on dearer terms than those less familiar with the business. It is to these circumstances-to a sense of the advantages to be derived from using their intervention in the transacting of business-that the exten- sive employment of brokers in London and all other large commercial cities is wholly to be ascribed. The number of brokers in London is unlimited but by the statute 8 & 9 Will. 3. c. 20. they are to be licensed by the lord mayor and aldermen, under such restrictions and limita- tions as they may think fit to enact. By the 57 Geo. 3. c. 60., brokers acting without being duly admitted are made liable in a penalty of 100/. The fee on admission is fixed by the same act at 51. ; and there is, besides, an annual payment also of 5% The following are some of the regulations established by the mayor and aldermen pursu- ant to the act of Will. 3. :-That every person shall, upon his admission, take an oath truly and faithfully to execute and perform the office of broker between party and party, in all (Compiled from the Parliamentary Papers, No. 194. Sess. 1830, and No. 354. Sess. 1831.) Digitized by Google BROKERAGE. 247 things pertaining to the duty of the said office, without fraud or collusion, to the best and utmost of his skill and knowledge that he shall in all cases reveal the name of his princi- pal and neither deal in goods on his own account, nor barter and sell again, nor make any gain in goods beyond the usual brokerage; and that he shall regularly register all the con- tracts, &c. into which he enters. Brokers grant a bond under a penalty of 500l. for the faithful performance of the duties sworn to in the eath of admission. A medal is delivered to the broker, with his name engraved thereon, which he may pro- duce, if required, as evidence of his qualification. Twelve persons professing the Jewish religion are permitted to act as brokers within the city, under the same regulations, and receive the silver medal accordingly. This medal is transferable sold generally at from 800L. to 1,500/., exclusive of the expense of transfer, which is uncertain. Upon the decease of any of the holders of the medal without its hav- ing been transferred, the appointment falls to the lord mayor for the time being; and for it the sum of 1,500/. has not unfrequently been given.-(Montefiore's Com. Dict. art. Brokers.) If goods in the city of London be sold by a broker, to be paid for by a bill of exchange, the vendor has a right, within a reasonable time, if he be not satisfied with the sufficiency of the purchaser, to annul the contract, provided he intimate his dissent as soon as he has an opportunity of inquiring into the solvency of the purchaser. In a case of this sort (Hodg- son V. Davies, 2 Camp. N. P. C. 536.), Lord Ellenborough was, at first, rather inclined to think that the contract concluded by a broker must be absolute, unless his authority were limited by writing, of which the purchaser had notice. But the special jury said, that "unless the name of the purchaser has been previously communicated to the seller, if the payment is to be by bill, the seller is always understood to reserve to himself the power of disapproving of the sufficiency of the purchaser, and annulling the contract." Lord Ellen- borough allowed that this usage was reasonable and valid. But he clearly thought that the rejection must be intimated as soon as the seller has had time to inquire into the solvency of the purchaser. The jury found, in the case in question, that five days was not too long a period for making the necessary inquiries. Brokers, Bill,-propose and conclude bargains between merchants and others in matters of bills and exchange. They make it their business to know the state of the exchange, and the circumstances likely to elevate or depress it. They sell bills for those drawing on foreign countries, and buy bills for those remitting to them and, from their knowledge of the mutual wants of the one class as compared with those of the other, a few of the principal brokers are able to fix the rate of exchange at a fair average, which it would not be possible to do if the merchants directly transacted with each other. Their charge as brokerage is 2s. per cent. Those," says Mr. Windham Beawes, " who exercise the function of bill brokers, ought to be men of honour and capable of their business; and the more so, as both the credit and fortune of those who employ them may, in some measure, be said to be in their hands; and, therefore, they should avoid babbling, and be prudent in their office, which consists in one sole point, that is, to hear all and say nothing so that they ought never to speak of the negotiations transacted by means of their intervention, or relate any ill report which they have heard against a drawer, nor offer his bills to those who have spread it." Brokers, Stock,-are employed to buy and sell stock in the public funds, or in the funds of joint stock companies. Their business is regulated by certain, acts of parliament, by which, among other things, it is enacted, that contracts in the nature of wagers, or contracts apparently framed for the sale or purchase of stock, but really intended only to enable the parties to speculate on contingent fluctuations of the market, without any stock being actually sold, shall be void, and those engaging in them subjected to a penalty of 500l.-(7 Geo. 2. c. 8, made perpetual by 10 Geo. 2. c. 8.) And by the same act, any one contracting to sell stock of which he is not actually possessed, or to which he is not entitled, forfeits 500L Brokers not keeping a book in which all contracts are regularly inserted, are liable in a penalty of 50/. for each omission half to the king and half to those who sue for it. The charge for brokerage on all public funds, except Exchequer bills and India bonds, is 2s. 6d. per cent. on these it is 18. per cent. No transaction with respect to the purchase and sale of stock in the public funds can be concluded except by the intervention of a licensed broker, unless by the parties themselves. Brokers, Ship and Insurance.-The chief employment of this class of brokers is in the buying and selling of ships, in procuring cargoes on freight, and adjusting the terms of charterparties, settling with the master for his salary and disbursements, &c. Their charge as ship brokers is about 2 per cent. on the gross receipts. When they act as insurance brokers, they charge 5 per cent. on the premium, exclusive of a discount allowed them on settling with the underwriter. The merchant looks to the broker for the regularity of the contract, and a proper selection of underwriters. To him also the underwriters look for a fair and candid disclosure of all material circumstances affecting the risk, and for payment of Digitized by Google 248 BROKERAGE-BUBBLES. their premiums. From the importance of their employment, ship and insurance brokers ought to be, and indeed generally are, persons of respectability and honour, in whom full confidence may be reposed. A ship broker is not within the various acts for the regulation and admission of brokers.- Gibbons V. Rule, C. P. 27th of June, 1827.) Brokers, Custom-house.-It is enacted by the 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52., that no person shall be authorised to act as an agent for transacting business at the Custom-house in the port of London, relative to the entry or clearance of any ship, &c., unless authorised by licence of the commissioners of customs, who are to require bond with one surety for 1,000l. for the faithful conduct of such person and his clerks. This regulation does not, however, apply to the clerk or servant of any person or persons transacting business at the Custom-house on his or their account. The commissioners may extend this regulation to other ports-4$ 144. & 148. Brokers, Pawn. See PAWNBROKERS. Brokers, simply so called, in their character of appraisers and sellers of goods distrained for rent, are regulated by 57 Geo. 3. c. 93., which enacts, that no such person making any distress for rent, where the sum due does not exceed 201., shall take more than the following sums viz. £ s. d. For levying - - - - - - 0 3 0 For men keeping possession, per day - - - 0 2 0 Advertisements, if any - - - - - 0 10 0 Catalogues, sale, commission, &c. in the pound on the nett produce 0 1 0 Stamp duty, lawful amount. Appraisements, whether by one broker or more, 6d. per pound on the value of the goods, under a penalty of treble the amount of the money unlawfully taken, with costs to be reco- vered summarily before a justice of the peace. In France, the brokers who deal in money, exchange, merchandise, insurance, and stock, are called agents de change, and their number, at Paris, is limited to sixty. The company of agents de change is directed by a chamber of syndics (chambre syndicale) chosen annu- ally by the company. They are severally obliged to give bonds to the amount of 125,000 fr. for the prevention of abuses. They are also obliged to keep books; are restricted to a charge of from 1 to t per cent.; and are interdicted from carrying on, or having any inte- rest in, any commercial or banking operations.-See Code de Commerce, & 74. &c. and art. BORDEAUX, in this Dictionary.) In the United States, brokers are not licensed, nor do they give bonds. BROKERAGE, the commission, or percentage, paid to brokers on the sale or purchase of bills, funds, goods, &c.-(See FACTORAGE.) BRONZE (Ger. Stückgut, Stükmetall; Du. Stückgoed; It. Bronzo; Sp. Metal de Canones; Lat. Metallum tormentorum), a mixed metal, consisting chiefly of copper, with a small proportion of tin, and sometimes other metals. It is used for casting statues, cannon, bells, and other articles, in all of which the proportions of the ingredients vary." -(Ure.) BROOMS (Ger. Besen; Fr. Balais; It. Scope, Granate; Sp. Escobas; Rus. Methü), are principally made of birch or heath. Vast quantities are manufactured in Southwark, for the supply of the London market. BRUSHES (Ger. Bürsten; Fr. Brosses; It. Setole, Spazzole; Sp. Brozas, Cepillos, Escobillas; Rus. Schtschetki), well-known implements, made of bristles, and manufactured of various forms. BUBBLES, a familiar name applied generally to fraudulent or unsubstantial commercial projects, which hold out hopes of rapid gain, for the purpose of enriching the projectors at the expense of sanguine and ignorant adventurers; and particularly used to designate those projects, the funds for which are raised by the sale of shares or subscription to a transferable stock. In consequence of the mischief produced by the gambling in transferable shares of bubble companies at the time of the South Sea project, 1719 and 1720, the stat. 6 Geo. 1. c. 18., reciting that several undertakings or projects had been contrived and practised, which " manifestly tended to the common grievance, prejudice, and inconvenience of great num- bers of his Majesty's subjects in their trade and commerce," and describing, among other practices of the time, the ordinary mode of raising money by. shares and subscriptions to a pretended transferable stock, enacted, that the undertakings and attempts so described, and public subscriptions, assignments, and transfers for furthering them, and particularly the raising or pretending to raise transferable stocks without authority of charter or act of parlia- ment, should be deemed illegal and void, and prohibited them under severe penalties. Some decisions limited the operation of, and finally the stat. 6 Geo. 4. c. 91. altogether repealed, these enactments and prohibitions. The projectors of bubbles, therefore, are now punishable only when they can be deemed guilty of frauds or conspiracies at common law; and there is no other check on the adventurers than the loss and troublesome liabilities under the law of partnership, in which participation in these projects often involves them. Digitized by Google BUCKRAM-BUOYS. 249 BUCKRAM (Fr. Bougran; Ger. Schettre, Sleife Leinwand; It. Tela collata 0 gom- mata; Rus. Kleanka; Sp. Bucaran), a sort of coarse cloth made of hemp, gummed, calen- dered, and dyed several colours. BUCKWHEAT (Fr. Blé Sarrasin, Blé noir; Ger. Buchweizen, Heidekorn; It. Grano Saraceno, Faggina, Fraina; Sp. Trigo Saraceno, Trigo negro; Pol. Tatarca, Gryka, Pohanca; Rus. Gretscha; Lat. Fagopyrum) is principally cultivated in order that it may be cut when young and green, and employed as fodder for cattle; when allowed to ripen, the grain is usually employed to feed pigeons and poultry. When ripe it is of a deep yellow colour, the seeds bearing a great resemblance to beech-mast it will grow on the poorest soils. Buckwheat has been cultivated in this country from the latter part of the sixteenth century. Its native country is unknown, but supposed to be Asia. Beckmann has a very learned dissertation on its introduction and early culture in Europe.-(See Hist. of Invent. vol. i. art. Buckwheat.) The average quantity of buckwheat imported, is about 10,000 quarters. The duty is the same as on barley.-(See CORN Laws.) BUENOS AYRES, a city of South America, on the south side of the La Plata, about 200 miles from its junction with the sea, in lat. 34° 364' S., long. 58° 22' W. Population very differently estimated; but said (Bulletin des Sciences Gèographiques, vol. xx. p. 152.) to amount to 81,000. The La Plata is one of the largest rivers of the world, traversing a vast extent of country, of which it is the great outlet. Unluckily, however, it is of very dif- ficult navigation, being shallow, infested with rocks and sand-banks, and exposed to sudden and violent gusts of wind. There is no harbour at Buenos Ayres, or none worthy of the name. Ships can only come within 2 or 3 leagues of the town there they unload their goods into boats; from which they are received at the landing places into carts that convey them to the town, which is about 4 of a league distant. Ships that want careening repair to the bay of Barragon, a kind of port about 10 leagues to the S. E. of the city and there also the outward bound ships wait for their cargoes. All the timber used in the construction of houses, and in the building and repairing of vessels, come down the river from Paraguay in rafts. The principal articles of export consist of hides and tallow, of which vast quantities are sent to England, the United States, Holland, Germany, &c. besides these, there are exported bullion and viccunna wool from Peru, copper from Chili, salt beef, nutria skins, &c. The imports principally consists of cotton and woollen goods from England, hardware and earthenware from ditto, linens from Germany, flour from the United States, spices, wines, salt fish, machinery, furniture, &c. the finest tobacco, sugars, wax, &c. are brought from the interior; as is Paraguay tea, an article in considerable demand in South America. The inland trade carried on between Buenos Ayres, and Peru, and Chili, is very considerable and its trade by sea with foreign countries is daily becoming of more importance. During the year 1832, there were exported from Buenos Ayres. dry hides, 877,132 ditto salted 48,378; horse hides, 40,076; jerked beef, 105,780 quintals; horns, 2,049,017; tips, 101,851 wool, 33,052 arrobas hair, 31,257 ditto; nutria skins, 14,562 dozen, &c. The trade from this country to Buenos Ayres is confounded in our Custom-house accounts with that to Monte Video, under the general name of the States of the Rio de la Plata; but by far the largest share belongs to Buenos Ayres. In 1831, we imported from these states, exclusive of bullion, of which no account is kept, 429,966 nutria skins -(See NUTRIA), 146,008 cwt. hides, 2,470 cwt. tallow, 12,244 lbs. sheep's wool, &c. The declared value of the articles of British produce and manufacture exported to these states during the same year, was 339,870/. ; of which cottons, woollens, hardware, and linens made more than three fourths. In 1828, 64 British ships, of the burden of 12,746 tons, entered the port; the total number of foreign vesscls that annually enter it being from 300 to 400. The commerce of Buenos Ayres will no doubt continue to increase according as the vast countries situated on the La Plata, now in a great degree unoccupled, are settled. Monies, Weights, Measures, &c. same as those of Spain; for which, see CADIZ. [We shall only add to what the author has stated concerning the trade of the United States with Buenos Ayres, or the Argentine Republic, of which it is the capital, that the amount of our domestic manufactured cottons which we export to that country has become by no means inconsiderable. It was respectively $263,000, $101,000, $400,000, and $50,000, in the four years ending the 30th of September, 1837.-Am. Ed.] BUFF (Ger. Büffel, Büffelhäute; Fr. Buffle, Peau de buffles, et Peaux passées en buffles; It. Bufalo, Cuojo di bufalo), a sort of leather prepared from the skin of the buffalo, dressed with oil, after the manner of chamois. The skin of elks, oxen, and other like ani- mals, when prepared after the same manner as that of the buffalo, is likewise called buff. It is used in making sword-belts and other articles, where great thickness and firmness are required. BUGLES, small glass beads of different colours. They are in considerable demand in Africa, to which they are mostly exported. BULLION, uncoined gold and silver in the mass. See GOLD and SILVER. BUOYS, pieces of wood, cork, or some light substance, moored and floating on the water. Those of wood are sometimes solid, and sometimes hollow, like a cask, and strongly hooped they are made of various shapes and sizes; and are either private or public. 32 Digitized by Google 250 BUOYS. Subjoined is an Account specifying the Buoys and Bencons under the Control of the Trinity-House, Deptford Strond, with the Rates of Charge on account of the same on British and Foreign Ships, and the Produce of the Rates in each of the Three Years ending with 1822.-(Parl. Paper, No. 315. Sess. 1833.) Rates of Charge. Amounts collected. British and Fo- Foreign Vessels Coasters. reign privileged not privileged 1830. 1831. 1832. Vessels Oversea, Oversea, per per Ton. Ton. For the buoys In the port of London the following £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. and beacons rates are payable for the inward pas- in the chan- sage only; viz.- nels leading The rates to the river vary from 1 Thames and penny to 1 far- port of Lon- thing per ton, including according to loadsmanage the description and primage, of the vessels' alsoincluding cargoes, and the dues for- the placesfrom 1 penny - 2 pence - 8,623 7 5 9,313 16 51 8,449 16 91 merly return- whence they ed under the arrive. head of Tri- nity House duties from stranger's ships. These dues are also received at the ports of Gravesend, Sheerness, Rochester, Faver- sham, Leigh, Maldon, Colchester, Ipswich, Wood- bridge, Harwich, and Aldborough, at which they are payable for the inward passage only. The rate on foreign vessels not privileged, is 2 pence per ton, but in other respects the rates are determined by the ancient usage of the respective places, and are generally one half the amount of those in the port of London. Buoys off Yar- 1 farthing per 1 farthing 1 farthing 1,806 10 24 1,835 11 41 1,802 8 If mouth - ton. Buoys and 4 pence per vessel under 40 tons, 6 462 7 8 452 17 2 465 7 6 beacons in pence on all others. the river Tees Exeter buoys Stone boats, 5 1 penny - 2 pence 305 14 0 296 5 10 350 19 7 shillings per annum. Conwaybuoys 3 farthings per ton, each and every 48 18 21 49 2 111 45 8 41 time of passing. Carmarthen 3 farthings per ton, each time of pass- 110 12 of 105 14 111 107 7 3 buoys ing. Aberdovey 1 half-penny I 1 penny - 1 penny - 31 14 104 40 9 2 buoys per ton. Total - £ 11,357 10 31 12,085 3 71 11,261 16 91 Trinity House, London, 9th of March, 1833. (Errors excepted.) J. HERBERT, Secretary. Private Buoys are so called from their belonging to private individuals. They are prin- cipally employed to mark the place of the ship's anchor, being fastened to it by a rope or chain, so that the men who go in the boat to weigh it may readily find out where it is. By the 1 & 2 Geo. 4. C. 75. ) 11. it is enacted, that if any person or persons shall wilfully cut away, cast adrift, remove, alter, deface, sink, or destroy, or in any way injure or conceal, any buoy, buoy- rope, or mark belonging to any ship or vessel, or which may be attached to any anchor or cable be- longing to any ship or vessel, whether in distress or otherwise, such person or persons so offending shall upon conviction be adjudged guilty of felony, and shall be liable to be transported for any term not exceeding 7 years, or to be imprisoned for any number of years, at the discretion of the court. Public Buoys, being intended for the public service, cannot be placed, altered, or removed, except by competent authority. They are generally of a pretty large size; and are firmly ,moored by chains or cables to rocks, large stones, anchors, &c. By floating on the surface of the water, they serve at once to mark the channels through which it is safe to steer, and to point out dangers to be avoided, such as sunken rocks, shoals, wrecks of vessels, &c. The places in, and the purposes for, which buoys are exhibited, are always specified in good charts: and as the leading buoys are generally of a peculiar figure or colour, which is also indicated in the chart, the navigator, as soon as he recognises them, shapes his course accordingly. Hence the great importance of having buoys properly placed, and of their being carefully marked in charts. Digitized by Google BURDEN-BUSHIRE. 251 The 6 Geo. 4. c. 125. è 91, enacts, that every person who shall ride by, make fast to, remove, or wilfully run down or run foul of any vessel placed to exhibit lights, or any buoy or beacon belonging to the corporation of the Trinity House of Deptford Strond, or to any other corporation having au- thority to place such vessel, buoy, or beacon, shall, besides making good all damage occasioned thereby, forfeit, for every such offence, any sum not exceeding 501. nor less than 101. BURDEN of a ship. See TONNAGE. BURGUNDY. See WINE. BURGUNDY PITCH, a resin, the produce of the Pinus Abies, or spruce fir. It is obtained by making incisions in the bark down to the wood, whence it flows thickly and languidly, immediately concreting into flakes that adhere firmly to the tree. These being taken off are melted in boiling water, and strained through coarse cloths. It is of a close consistence, rather soft, has a reddish brown colour, and a not unpleasant smell; it is very adhesive. The greatest quantity is collected in the neighbourhood of Neufchâtel, whence it is brought to us packed in casks. A fictitious sort is made in England, and found in the shops under the title of common Burgundy pitch; it may be distinguished by its friability, want of viscidity and of the odour which characterises the genuine sort. A species of Burgundy pitch exudes spontaneously from the Norway spruce fir. This, which undergoes no preparation, is the resin or thus of the old London Pharmacopœias. It is imported in the form of tears or small masses, packed in casks, each containing from 1 to 2 cwt. It fetches about half the price of that which is strained.-(Gray's Supplement to the Pharmacopæias, Thomson's Dispensatory.) BUSHEL, a measure of capacity for dry goods, as grain, fruit, dry pulse, &c. containing 4 pecks, or 8 gallons, or 1/8 of a quarter. The Winchester bushel contains 2150-42 cubic inches, while the Imperial bushel con- tains 2218-192. Hence to convert Winchester bushels into imperial, multiply by the frac- tion 22/8192 2150.42 or .969447, or approximately deduct and 210th; and if great accuracy be required, 2000 and 20000 more. To convert prices per Winchester bushel into prices per Imperial bushel, multiply by the fraction 2318192 215042' or 1-0315157. By the 5 Geo. 4. c. 74. § 7. the bushel shall be the standard measure of capacity for coals, culm, lime, fish, potatoes, or fruit, and all other goods and things commonly sold by heaped measure. The bushel shall contain 80 lbs. avoirdupois of distilled water, being made round, with a plain and even bottom, and being 191 inches from outside to outside. Sec- tions 7 and 8 direct the mode in which the bushel shall be used for heaped measure. -(See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) The standard measure of capacity, by this act, as well for liquids as for dry goods not measured by heaped measure, shall be the gallon, containing 10 lbs. avoirdupois weight of distilled water weighed in air at the temperature of 62° of Fahrenheit's thermometer, the barometer being at 30 inches; and such measure shall be the Imperial standard gallon (containing 277274 cubic inches) and all measures shall be taken in parts or multiples, or certain proportions, of the said Imperial standard gallon; and the quart shall be the fourth part, and the pint shall be an eighth of such standard gallon; and 2 such gal- lons shall be a peck, and 8 such gallons shall be a bushel, and 8 such bushels a quarter of corn or other dry goods not measured by heaped measure. BUSHIRE OR ABUSHIRE, a sea-port town of Persia, in the province of Fars, on the north-east coast of the Persian Gulf, in lat. 29° N., long. 50° 50' E. Population uncertain, but estimated by Major Wilson at from 15,000 to 20,000. Bushire is situated at the north- ern extremity of a sandy peninsula, to the north and east of which is the bay. There is a convenient anchorage for large ships due west from the town, 3 or 4 miles distant, in from 25 to 28 feet water; but ships of 300 tons burden or thereby lie in the inner roads, to the north, about 6 miles from shore; the anchorage is pretty good; but during violent north- westerly gales, they are sometimes obliged to cut their cables, and bear up for Karak, a small island about 15 leagues W. N. W. of Bushire. The water immediately to the east of the town is deep, but the passage to it is obstructed by a bar, which cannot be passed by vessels drawing-more than 8 or 9 feet water, except at spring tides, when there is a rise of from 8 to 10 feet. The variation in 1811 was 4° 43' of the Persian Gulf, by Captain Ritchie, &c.) The climate here, as in all the other ports of the Persian Gulf, is extremely hot, particularly in June, July, and August. The unhealthy season is in the fall of the year. Trade, &c.-Bushire has a good deal of trade, particularly with Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras. Its merchants supply almost all Persia with Indian commodities: as, also, with a good many of those brought from Europe. Of the imports from India, indigo, sugar, sugar candy, and spices are the most important; the steel of India is preferred in Persia to every other, and is made into excellent sabres: tin is brought from Banca; and coffee is princi- pally supplied by Mocha and other ports on the Arabian Gulf. English cotton goods, not- withstanding the admitted inferiority of our red dyes,-a colour in great esteem in Persia,- have already gone far to supersede those that were formerly brought from Hindostau and the demand for them is rapidly extending, and is susceptible of an almost indefinite increase. Besides those imported at Bushire, a good many are introduced through Bussorah, and Digitized by Google 252 BUSHIRE. some through Turkey and Russia ; the latter by way of the Black Sea, the former of Smyrna and Constantinople. Hitherto, indeed, a considerable part of the cottons imported through the last mentioned channels have been supplied by Switzerland and Germany,-their fabrics having been, in some respects, better fitted. than ours for the Turkish and Persian markets; but they seem to have lost this advantage, as our exports of cottons to Turkey are now rapidly increasing. Woollen goods, cutlery, watches, Scc., sent to India from England, are thence exported to Bushire. Imitation shawls, of the proper size and pattern, are said to meet with a fair sale. The exports principally consist of raw silk, Kerman wool, Kerman and Cashmere shawls, carpets, horses, silk goods, dried fruits, wine, grain, copper, turquoises, asafoetida, gall-nuts, pearls, and other articles of minor importance. Turkey annually supplies Persia with a very considerable amount of bullion, most part of which is sent to India. Of the Persian exports, raw silk is the most important. It is produced to some extent in every province; but Gheelan and Mazunderan are those which are most celebrated for its growth. In the former, about 900,000 lbs. are annually raised. Russia is a large customer for this article. Dried fruits and dates are sent in considerable quantities to India. Horses are largely exported to India both by sea and land they serve for mounting our Indian cavalry, and for supplying the large private demand that always obtains in Hindostan for this noble animal. Though neither so swift nor so beautiful as those of Arabia, the Persian horses are large, more powerful, and, all things considered, better for cavalry. They are capable of supporting an extraordinary degree of fatigue. Wine of Shiraz enjoys a degree of celebrity, to which, judging from the few samples we have seen, it seems but ill entitled. Mr. Frazer says, that it is made in so careless a manner, that, in choosing it, not more than 1 bottle in 4 or 5 can be made use of. Persian tobacco and yellow dye berries are highly esteemed the former enters to a considerable extent into the trade to Turkey as well as to India the berries bring a very high price in our markets, but the imports hitherto have been inconsiderable. Turquoises, asafœtida, and various sorts of drugs, rose water, with other minor articles, form part of the exports. Sheeps' and goats' wool is also exported. The best is that of Kerman. The down furnished by the goats of this province is almost as fine as that of the Thibet or shawl goats. Cotton is extensively produced in Persia the Russians carry away some, but the greater part is used in the country. Grain is sent to Muscat, but not in large quantities. The pearl trade is now principally centered at Muscat. The imports of copper into Calcutta from Bushire, Bussorah, and other ports of the Persian Gulf, during the 7 years ending with 1827-28, were valued at about 30,000l. a year. This copper is principally the produce of the Persian mines, mixed, however, with some Russian copper from Georgia. Of manufactured articles, the principal are carpets of the most beau- tiful fabric shawls, partly native, and partly brought from Cashmere velvets, silk goods, gold and silver brocades, and a few other articles. The trade between Persia and Russia by the Caspian Sea is very considerable. Most part of the paper used in the former is sup- plied by the latter. The furs of Russia find a ready market in Persia; but it is a fact worth mentioning, that Persian merchants have recently been seen at the Leipsic fairs, carrying gold thither for American Urquhart on the Resources of Turkey, p. 155.) The Russian provinces on the Caspian derive their supplies of indigo from Persia by way of Bushire. The official returns show that the total value of the entire trade, imports as well as exports, carried on between British India and the Persian Gulf. at an average of the 7 years ending with 1828, was (taking the rupee at 28.) 1,337,1631. a year. Of this amount, Calcutta participated to the extent of 559,6861., Madras of 54,9811., and Bombay of 722,4971. This, however, includes the trade to Muscat and Bussorah, as well as to Bushire, and we have no means of discriminating the separate amount of each. It appears, indeed, from an account in the same paper whence these statements are taken, that of 34 ships belonging to the Persian Gulf that arrived at Bombay during the 7 years referred to, 28 belonged to Muscat, and only 7 to Bushire. But it must not be supposed that the trade to these places is in this proportion, inasmuch as most of the Arabian ships trading to Bussorah belong to Mus- cat. It may, however, be fairly presumed, that the arrivals of Gulf ships at Calcutta and Madras would be in about the saine proportion as those at Bombay; but the destination of the British ships trading to the Gulf not being given, and it being customary for most ships to visit both Bushire and Bussorah, it is impossible to say whether the value of the trade to the former, as compared with that to the latter and Muscat, corresponds with the number of ships they respectively send to India. Water at Bushire is excessively bad and dear but excellent water, and in great abundance, may be had at Karak. The anchorage at this island is safe at all times and ships may lie close to the beach. Sir John Malcolm suggested, that the permanent possession of Karak would be an object of considerable importance and we are rather inclined to agree with him. It is of no value to the Per- sians, and there seems little doubt that they would be glad to cede it for a trifling consideration. Its possession would not only enable us to command the navigation of the Persian Gulf; but it would form a depôt where goods destined for Bushire, Bussorah, &c. might be kept in perfect safety, and in R situation the most convenient, being readily accessible to all sorts of Arabian vessels. A taste for British cottons and woollens is now forming in all the vast countries watered by the Euphrates and the Tigris, or which derive their supplies from the emporia erected on their banks and it is of the great- est consequence that nothing be omitted that may serve to facilitate the diffusion of this taste, and the means of gratifying it. Money.-Accounts are kept in tomans of 50 abasses, or 100 mamoodis. The toman is a Persian gold coin, containing, according to the report of the Bombay mint, from 71.5 to 67 gr. pure metal, being consequently equal to from 12s. 73d. to 11s. 11d. sterling. The toman of Bussorah is worth about 36s., and that of Gombroon about 24s. These, with Persian and foreign silver coins of all denominations, Digitized by Google BUSS-BUTTER. 253 are found at Bushire; but the rates of the foreign coins are perpetually varying, and the weight of the native coins is also subject to-frequent changes. Weights and Measures.-Gold and silver are weighed by the miscal of 2 dwt. 23 7-12 gr., or 3 dwt. very nearly. The commercial weights vary according to the commodities sold, and the places where they are used. The maund tabree weighs 61 lbs. avoirdupois at the Custom-house, but only 61 lbs. at the ba- zaar. This weight is used by dealers in sugar, coffee, copper, and all sorts of drugs. The maund copra is 74 lbs. at the Custom-house, and from it to 71 lbs. at the bazaar. Dealers in rice and other articles of provision use this weight. The maund shaw is double the maund tabree, or 131 lbs. Pearls are weighed by the abbas = 2.25 gr. Troy. There are various sorts of guz's or cubits. One called the royal guz = 37t Eng. inches; the com- mon guz is two thirds of the former, or 25 inches. The Persian league or parasang is 1-20th of a degree of the equator, and should, therefore, be equal to 3 miles 3 furlongs and 25 poles English. The artaba, or principal corn measure. is equivalent to about 2 Winch. quarters. For further particulars, see Niebuhr, Voyage en Arabie, tome ii. p. 75.; Kinneir's Memoir of the Per- sian Empire, p. 70.; Fraser's Travels on the Shores of the Caspian, Appen. pp. 352-384.; Parl. Paper, No. 735.-11. Sess. 1832. pp. 632-638; Kelly's Oriental Metrology; Thoraton's East Indian Calcu- lator, &c. BUSS, a small sea-vessel, used by us and the Dutch in the herring fishery, commonly from 50 to 60 tons burden, and sometimes more. A buss has two small sheds or cabins; one at the prow, and the other at the stern that at the prow serves for a kitchen.-(See FISHERY.) BUSSORAH OR BASRAH, a city of Arabia, on the western bank of the Shat-el-Arab (the name given to the river formed by the junction of the Tigris and the Euphrates), above 70 miles from its mouth, lat. 30° 30' N., long. 47° 32' E. Population about 60,000, consisting of Arabs, Turks, Persians, Armenians, Jews, &c. The houses and streets are mean and filthy. There is a vast area within the walls, occupied principally by gardens and plantations of date trees, and intersected by canals, on which are numerous small craft. The bar at the mouth of the Shat-el-Arab has only about 12 feet water, but the channel within is deep, so that ships of 500 tons burden, provided they cross the bar at the springs, may without difficulty ascend the river as far as the city and both its grand branches may be navigated to a great distance by smaller vessels. Bussorah is the principal inlet on the east, through which Indian and other Eastern products find their way into the Turkish empire. Its commerce is, therefore, even at present, pretty considerable and were the rich and extensive countries traversed by the Tigris and the Euphrates occupied by a civilized and industrious people, it would be very great. Its imports from India and Europe are similar to those at BUSHIRE (which see) ; from Persia it imports shawls, pearls from Bah- rein, &c., and coffee from: Mocha. At an average, 6 or 8 British ships arrive in the course of the year from India; but the principal part of the trade is carried on in Arabian bottoms, the merchants of Muscat being the owners of some of the finest ships that are to be met with in the Indian seas. Its exports are principally bullion, pearls, dates, copper, raw silk, horses, gall nuts, and drugs. Captain Hamilton mentions, that in the early part of last cen- tury, the exports of dates from Bussorah exceeded 10,000 tons a year.-(New account of the East Indies, vol. i. p. 78.) The commerce with the interior is conducted by means of caravans to Aleppo and Bagdad; but it might be carried on to much more advantage by means of steam-boats. It has been proposed to forward mails from India by steam by the Shat-el-Arab and the Euphrates to Bir, thence by land to Scanderoon, and again by steam to Gibraltar and England. Money.-All sorts of coins circulate here, but their values are constantly fluctuating. Accounts are kept in mumoodies of 10 danims, or 100 Roose; 100 mamoodies make a toman, which may be valued at about 15 sicca rupees, or 36s. sterling. Weights and Measures.Gold and silver are weighed by the cheki of 100 miscals, or 7,200 Eng. grains. The commercial weights are the maund atteree. the maund sofy or sesse, and the oke of Bagded. 1 nakia - 19 OZ. avoirdupois; 2f vakias = 1 oke of Bagdad = 471 oz. avoir.; 1 maund atteree = 28 lbs. 8 OZ. avoir.; 1 maund sofy - 90 lbs. 4 OZ. avoir.; 1 cutra of indigo - 138 lbs. 15 OZ. avoir. These are the weights used by the Europeans settled at Bussorah those used by the Arabians dif- fer a little from the above, and frequently also among themselves,-a circumstance to which the mer- chant must pay particular attention. The long measures are the Aleppo yard for silks and woollens = 2 feet 2.4 inches; the Hadded do. for cottons and linens = 2 feet 10.2 Inches; the Bagdad do. for all purposes = 2 feet 7.6 inches. For further details as to the commerce of Bussorah, see Kinneir's Mamoir on the Persian Empire, p. 283.; the art. BUSHIRE in this Dictionary; Kelly's Oriental Metrology; Thornton's East Indian Calcula- tor, p. 424. Niebuhr has given a plan of Bussorab, Voyage en Arubic, tome ii. p. 170. BUTLERAGE. See PRISAGE. BUTT, a vessel or measure for wine, containing 2 hogsheads, or 126 wine gallons. BUTTER (Da. Smör; Du. Boter ; Fr. Beurre; Ger. Butter; It. Burro, Butiro; Lat. Butyrum, Pol. Maslo; Port. Manteiga ; Rus. Masslo Korowe; Sp. Manteca, Sw. Smör), as every one knows, is a fat, unctuous, and, in temperate climates, a pretty firm sub- stance, obtained from milk, or rather from cream, by the process of churning. The various circumstances attending the introduction and use of butter in antiquity have been investigated by Beckmann with great learning and industry. The conclusion at which he arrives is, 'that butter was not used either by the Greeks or Romans in cooking VoL. I.-Y Digitized by Google 254 BUTTER. or the preparation of food, nor was it brought upon their tables by way of dessert, as is every where customary at present. We never find it mentioned by Galen and others as a food, though they have spoken of it as applicable to other purposes. No notice is taken of it by Alpicius; nor is there any thing said of it in that respect by the authors who treat of agri- culture, though they have given us very particular information with respect to milk, cheese, and oil. This, as has been remarked by others, may be easily accounted for, by the ancients having accustomed themselves to the use of good oil and in the like manner butter is very little employed at present in Italy, Spain, Portugal, and the southern parts of, France." -(History of Inventions, vol. ii. p. 413. Eng. ed.) Butter is very extensively used in this and most other northern countries; that of Eng- land and Holland is reckoned the best. In London, the butter of Epping and Cambridge is in the highest repute; the cows which produce the former, feed during summer in the shrubby pastures of Epping Forest; and the leaves of the trees, and numerous wild plants which there abound, are supposed to improve the flavour of the butter. It is brought to market in rolls from one to two feet long, weighing a pound each. The Cambridgeshire butter is produced from cows that feed one part of the year on chalky uplands, and the other on rich meadows or fens; it is made up into long rolls like the Epping butter, and generally salted or cured before being brought to market; the London dealers, having washed it, and wrought the salt out of it, frequently sell it for Epping butter. The butter of Suffolk and Yorkshire is often sold for that of Cambridgeshire, to which it is little inferior. The butter of Somersetshire is thought to equal that of Epping it is brought to market in dishes containing half a pound each out of which it is taken, washed and put into different forms, by the dealers of Bath and Bristol. The butter of Gloucester- shire and Oxfordshire is very good it is made up in half pound packs or prints, packed up in square baskets, and sent to the London market by wagon. The butter of the mountains of Wales and Scotland, and the moors, commons, and heaths of England, is of excellent quality when it is properly managed and though not equal in quantity, it often is confessedly supe- rior, to that produced by the richest meadows.—(Loudon's Ency. of Agriculture.) Considerable quantities of butter are made in Ireland, and it forms a prominent article in the exports of that country generally it is very inferior to that of Britain but this is a consequence rather of the want of cleanliness and attention, than of any inferiority in the milk. Some of the best Irish butter brought to London, after being washed and repacked, is sold as Dorsetshire and Cambridge butter. The salt butter of Holland is superior to that of every other country large quantities of it are annually exported. It forms about three fourths of all the foreign butter we import. The production and consumption of butter in Great Britain is very great. The consumption in the Metropolis may, it is believed, be averaged at about one half pound per week for each individual, being at the rate of 26 lbs. a year; and supposing the population to amount to 1,450,000, the total an- nual consumption would, on this hypothesis, be 37,700,000 lbs or 16,830 tons but to this may be added 4,000 tons, for the butter required for the victualling of ships and other purposes; making the total consumption, in round numbers, 21,000 tons, or 47,040,000 lbs., which at 10d. per lb. would be worth 1,960,0001. The average produce per cow of the butter dairies is estimated by Mr. Marshall at 168 lbs. a year so that, supposing we are nearly right in the above estimates, about 280,000 cows will be required to produce an adequate supply of butter for the London market. The consumption of butter in London has sometimes been estimated at 50,000 tons; which, accord- ing to Mr. Marshall's statement, of the accuracy of which no doubt can be entertained, would require for its supply upwards of 666,000 cows! Further commentary on such a statement would be super- fluous. In order to obviate the practice of fraud in the weighing and packing of butter, different statutes have been passed, particularly the 36 Geo. 3. c. 86., and 38 Geo. 3. C. 73., the principal regulations of which are subjoined. It is very doubtful, however, whether they have been productive of any good effect. It might be proper, perhaps, to order the weight of the butter, exclusive of the vessel, and the dairyman's or seller's name, to be branded on the inside and outside of each vessel but most of the other regulations, especially those as to the thickness of the staves, and the weight of the vessels, seem to be at once vexatious and useless. Every cooper or other person who shall make any vessel for the packing of butter, shall make the same of good well-seasoned timber, tight and not leaky, and shall groove in the heads and bottoms thereof; and every vessel made for the packing of butter, shall be a tub, firkin, or half-firkin, and no other. Every tub shall weigh of itself, including the top and bottom, not less than 11 lbs. nor more than 15 lbs. avoirdupois; and neither the top nor the bottom of any such tub shall exceed in any part five eighths of an inch in thickness. Every firkin shall weigh at least 7 lbs. including the top and the bottom, which shall not exceed four eighths of an inch thick in any part. Half-firkins to weigh not less than 4 lbs. nor more than 6 lbs. including the top and the bottom, which shall not exceed the thickness of three eighths of an inch in any part; upon pain that the cooper or every other person making any such vessel, in any respect contrary to the preceding direc- tions, shall forfeit every such vessel and 10s. Every cooper, &c. shall brand every cask or vessel before going out of his possession. on the out- side, with his name, in legible and permanent letters, under penalty of 10s., together with the exact weight or tare thereof. Every dairyman, farmer, or seller of butter, or other person packing the same for sale, shall pack it in vessels made and marked as aforesaid, and in no other, and shall properly soak and season every such vessel; and on the inside, and on the top on the outside, shall brand his name at length, in permanent and legible letters; and shall also, with an iron, brand on the top on the outside, and Digitized by Google BUTTER. 255 on the bouge or body of every such cask, the true weight or tare of every such vessel, when it shall have been soaked and seasoned and also shall brand his name at length, on the bouge or the body of every such vessel, across two different staves at least, and shall distinctly, and at length, Imprint his Christian and surname upon the top of the butter in such vessel when filled, on pain of forfeiting 51. for every default thereof. Every tub of butter shall contain, exclusive of the tare, of good and merchantable butter, 84 lbs.; every firkin 56 lbs.; every half firkin 28 lbs ; and no old or corrupt butter shall be mixed, or packed in any vessel whatever, with any butter that is new and sound ; nor shall any butter made of whey be packed or mixed with butter made of cream, but the respective sorts shall be packed separately, and the whole vessel shall, throughout, be of one sort and goodness; and no butter shall be salted with any great salt, but all butter shall be salted with small salt; nor shall more salt be intermixed with the butter than is needful for its preservation, under penalty of 51. for offending against any of these regulations. No change, alteration, frand, or deceit, shall be practised by any dealers or packers of butter, either with respect to the vessel or the butter 80 packed, whether in respect to quantity or otherwise, un- der a penalty of 301. to be imposed on every person engaged in the offence. Every cheesemonger, dealer in butter, or other person, who shall sell any tubs, firkins, or half-fir- kins of butter, shall deliver, in every such cask or vessel respectively, the full quantity appointed by this act, or, in default thereof, shall be liable to make satisfaction to the person who shall buy the same for what shall be wanting, according to the price for which it was sold, and shall be liable to an action for recovery of the same, with full costs of suit. No cheesemonger, dealer in butter, &c. shall repack for sale any butter, under penalty of 51. for every tub, firkin, or half-firkin 80 repacked. Nothing in this act shall extend to make any cheesemonger, dealer in butter, or other person, liable to any penalties for using any of the tubs, firkins, or half-firkins, after the British butter used in such vessels shall have been taken thereout, for the repacking for sale of any foreign butter, who shall, before he so repack such foreign butter, entirely cut or efface the several names of the original dairy- man, farmer. or seller of butter, from every such vessel, leaving the name and tare of the cooper, and the tare of the original dairyman, farmer, or seller, thereon; and, after the names are so effaced, shall, with an iron, brand his Christian and surname, and the words foreign butter, upon the bouge of every such vessel, across two staves at least, to denote that such butter is foreign butter. Persons counterfeiting or forging any such names or marks, shall for every such offence forfeit 401. Penalties not exceeding 51. to be determined by one justice, upon the evidence of one witness, and the whole shall go to the informer. Penalties above 51. to be recovered by action of debt, or information, in the courts at Westminster, and the whole to the informer. Nothing to extend to the packing of butter in any pot or vessel which shall not be capable of con- taining more than 14 lbs. Previously to 1826, no butter could be sold in any public market in Ireland, or exported from it, without being previously examined and branded by a public inspector but compliance with this re- gulation is no longer compulsory, but is left to the discretion of the parties. It is enacted by statute 4 Will. 3. c. 7., that every warehouse-keeper, weigher, searcher or shipper of butter and cheese, shall receive all butter and cheese that shall be brought to him for the London cheese- mongers, and ship the same without undue preference and shall have for his pains 2s. 6d. for every load ; and if he shall make default, he shall, on conviction before one justice, on oath of one witness, or confession, forfeit for every firkin of butter 10s., and for every weigh of cheese 5s., half for the use of the poor, and half to the informer. And every such person shall keep a book of entry of receiving and shipping the goods, on pain of 2s. 6d. for every firkin of butter and weigh of cheese. The master of a ship refusing to take in butter or cheese before he is full laden (except it be a cheesemonger's own ship sent for his own goods) shall forfeit for every firkin of butter refused 5s., and for every weigh of cheese 2s. 6d. This act does not extend to any warehouse in Cheshire or Lancashire. Butter made in hot countries is generally liquid. In India it is denominated ghee, and is mostly prepared from the milk of buffaloes; it is usually conveyed in duppers, or bottles made of hide, each of which contains from 10 to 40 gallons. Ghee is an article of consider- able commercial importance in many parts of India. The Arabs are the greatest consumers of butter in the world. Burckhardt tells us, that it is a common practice among all classes to drink every morning a coffee-cup full of melted butter or ghee! and they use it in an infinite variety of other ways. The taste for it is uni- versal and the poorest individuals will expend half their daily income that they may have butter for dinner, and butter in the morning. Large quantities are annually shipped from Cosseir, Souakin and Massuah, on the west coast of the Red Sea, for Djidda and other Arabian ports.-(Burckhard's Travels in Nubia, p. 440.; Travels in Arabia, vol. i. p. 52.) The average contract prices of the butter furnished to Greenwich Hospital from 1730 to 1832, have been as follows:- Years. Prices per lb. Years. Prices per lb. Years. Prices per lb. Years. Prices per lb 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. 1730 0 5 1795 0 81 1813 1 3 1823 0 74 1740 0 5 1800 0 111 1814 1 2 1824 0 81 1750 0 51 1805 0 111 1815 1 2 1825 0 101 1755 0 51 1806 0 111 1816 0 91 1826 0 of 1760 0 51 1807 1 01 1817 0 84 1827 0 84 1765 0 51 1808 1 of 1818 0 11 1828 0 81 1770 0 61 1809 1 1 1819 0 11 1829 0 8 1775 0 64 1810 1 If 1820 0 91 1830 0 61 1780 0 64 1811 1 21 1821 0 84 1831 0 94 1785 0 64 1812 1 31 ? 1822 0 71 1832 0 84 1790 0 of (See art. PRICES.) Digitized by Google 256 BUTTONS. An Account of the Total Quantity (in Hundred Weights) of Butter imported into Great Britain from Foreign Countries and Ireland, in each Year, from 5th of January, 1801, to 5th of January, 1832; distinguishing the Quantity from Ireland, from the Isles of Jersey, Guernsey, and Man, from Hol- land and the Netherlands, and from all other Foreign Countries; and stating the Rate and Amount of Duty in each Year paid thereon. Quantities of Butter imported into Great Bri- tain from all Parts (except Ireland). Quantities of Butter imported into Great Britain from Ireland. Amount of Years. From the Isles of Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Man. From Holland and the Netherlands. From Germany and other Foreign Countries. Total from all Parts, except Duty received Ireland. in Great Britain Rates of Duty on Foreign Butter. on Foreign Butter. Crots. Cwts. Cwts. Cwts. Cwts. £ 8. d. 8. d. 1801 186,821 339 71,206 43,583 115,130 86 4 7 2 9 cwt., and 31. centum ad valorem. 1802 254,248 99 84,100 8,819 93,018 - 2 9 cwt. and 31. 12s. cent- um ad valorem (from 12th of May). 1803 246,388 26 53,682 50,411 104,120 3 11 11 3 64 cwt. (from 5th of July) 1804 196,037 59 100,685 25,989 126,734 960 10 5 3 111 cwt. (from 1st of June) 1805 242,441 56 64,616 32,169 96,843 4 10 2 4 0:45 cwt. (from 5th of Apr.) 1806 261,911 143 66,544 18,968 85,657 244 12 4 4 3.61 P cwt. (from 10th May) 1807 314,386 61 68,315 18,970 87,316 2 12 1 - 1808 312,408 46 73,727 5,816 79,590 0 0 6 - 1809 317,676 36 44,061 32,185 76,283 0 19 0 4 4 cwt. (from 5th of July) 1810 311,551 611 5,956 26,676 33,244 - - 1811 353,791 359 - 2,451 2,810 - - 1812 311,475 27 22,415 3,451 25,894 196 4 4 - 1813 351,832 - the records were destroyed by fire. 5 14 cwt. (from 15th of April) 1814 315,421 1,864 96,560 17,373 115,798 7,397 13 8 - 1815 320,655 944 106,885 17,470 125,300 32,301 10 8 - 1816 280,586 327 61,753 2,062 64,143 48,737 11 5 £1 cwt. (from 5th of April) 1817 305,662 258 20,279 152 20,690 20,540 10 4 - 1818 352,538 1,917 66,232 15,544 83,691 83,550 10 1 - 1819 429,614 1,256 62,498 2,295 66,050 65,836 16 4 - 1820 457,730 275 65,986 2,295 68,557 68,578 15 9 - 1821 413,088 190 99,345 16,291 115,827 115,980 12 4 - 1822 377,651 291 108,501 9,627 118,420 118,263 13 10 - 1823 466,834 387 101,549 20,394 122,331 122,164 14 10 - 1824 431,174 305 132,093 28,255 160,654 160,854 10 2 - 1825 425,070 394 160,048 118,975 279,418 263,861 19 6 - 1826 t - 131 136,779 59,288 196,200 202,130 8 8 - 1827 - 366 142,658 68,117 211,141 209,427 1 3 - 1828 - 493 145,647 55.532 201,673 195,850 7 9 - 1829 - 445 116,233 31,485 148,164 147,997 4 1 - 1830 - 585 77,025 31,222 108,854 102,881 15 11 - 1831 - 622 80,900 42,147 123,670 121,336 12 6 - 1832 - 331 92,409 38,460 131.202 128,330 9 8 - N. B.-We have omitted qrs. and lbs. from this account; but they are allowed for in the column of totals. Custom House, London, 5th of October, 1833. [There is no butter superior to what is made in our own country. Of this, too, the fresh butter with which the Philadelphia market is supplied, has the character of being as good as any other of the same description; while the best butter which is put up, 80 as to keep for a considerable time, is that made at Goshen, in the State of New York. The glades' butter from Somerset county, Pennsylvania, although perhaps inferior generally to the Goshen, is also of an excellent quality. During a period of four years, upwards of 600,000 pounds of butter have been, on the average, exported annually from the United States, mostly to the West Indies and South America.-Am. Ed.] BUTTONS (Du. Knoopen, Fr. Bouton; Ger. Knöpfe; It. Bottoni; Rus. Pogowird; Sp. Botones) are well known articles, serving to fasten clothes, &c. They are manufactured of an endless variety of materials and forms. It might have been supposed, that the manufacture of such an article as this would have been left to be carried on according to the views and interests of those concerned, individuals being allowed to select any sort of button they pleased. Such. however, has not been the case and various statutes have been passed, pointing out the kind of buttons to be worn, and the way in which they are to be Butter imported in British shipping. or in shipping of states in amity with his Majesty, was admitted free of duty under the authority of Orders in Council, by virtue of the act 39 Geo. 3. c. 87., from 12th of July, 1799, continued by subsequent acts until 6 months after the ratification of the definitive treaty of peace, and further continued. by Order in Council, until 25th of September, 1814. t No account can be furnished of the quantities of butter imported from Ireland for the years sub- equent to 1825, the records of the trade between Great Britain and Ireland having been discontinued, 1 consequence of the regulations adopted for the purpose of giving effect to the law which placed the atercourse between the two countries on the footing of a coasting traffic. Digitized by Google CABBAGE, CABLES. 257 made ! Most of these regulations have luckily fallen into disuse, but they still occupy a place in the statute book, and may be enforced. The following are amongst the more prominent of these regula- tions No person shall make, sell, or set upon any clothes, or wearing garments whatsoever, any buttons made of cloth, serge, drugget, frieze, camblet, or any other stuff of which clothes or wearing garinents are made, or any buttons made of wood only, and turned in imitation of other buttons, on pain of for- feiting 40s. per dozen for all such buttons.-(4 Geo. 1. c. 7.) No tailor shall set on any buttons, or button-holes, of serge, drugget, &c., under penalty of 40s. for every dozen of buttons or button-holes so made or set on. No person shall use or wear, on any clothes, garments, or apparel whatsoever, except velvet, any buttons or button-holes made of or bound with cloth, serge, drugget. frieze, camblet, or other stuffs hereof clothes or woollen garments are usually made, on penalty of forfeiting 40s. per dozen, under a similar penalty.- Geo. 1. C. 22.) To prevent the frauds which it is alleged had taken place in the manufacture of gilt and plated but- tons, an act, 36 Geo. 3. c. 6., was passed, which regulates what shall be deemed gilt and what plated buttons; and imposes penalties on those who order as well as on those who make any buttons with the words "gilt" or plated" marked upon them, except they be gilt and plated as the act directs. Inasmuch as this statute goes to obviate a fraud, it is, perhaps, expedient; but no apology can be made for the regulations previously alluded to, which are at once vexatious and absurd. The importation of buttons from abroad was prohibited in the reign of Charles 11. But the Geo. 4. c. 107. 1 52. repealed this prohibition, and they may now be imported, for home consumption, on pay- ing an ad valorem duty. [Buttons constitute an article of exportation from the United States, chiefly to South America.-Am. Ed.] C. CABBAGE, a biennial plant (Brassica Lin.), of which there are many varieties. It is too well known to require any particular description it is extensively cultivated in the vicinity of London. Sour crout, or properly sauer kraut, is a very favourite dish in Ger- many ; it consist of a fermented mass of salted cabbage. CABLES are strong ropes or chains, principally used in the anchoring or mooring of ships. 1. Rope Cables are in Europe principally manufactured of hemp; but in the East they are very frequently made of coir, or of the fibrous part of the coco nut, and in some places, particularly on the Red Sea, of the coating of the branches of the date-tree. Hemp cables are formed of three principal strands, every strand of three ropes, and every rope of three twists. The twists have more or fewer threads according to the greater or less thickness of the cable. All vessels have ready for service three cables which are usually designated the sheet cable, the best bower cable, and the small bower cable but besides these, most ships have some spare cables. The ordinary length of a cable is from 100 to 120 fathoms. The following are the existing regulations as to the manufacture of hemp cables and cordage :- No person shall make or sell any cordage for shipping in which any hemp is used, called short chucking, half clean, whale line, or other toppings, codilla, or any damaged hemp, on pain of forfeiting the same, and also treble the value thereof. Cables, hawsers, or ropes, made of materials not prohibited by this act, and whose quality shall be inferior to clean Petersburgh hemp, shall be deemed inferior cordage, and the same shall be distin- guished by marking on the tally, staple or inferior. Manufacturers making default herein forfeit for every hundred weight of cordage, 10s. Manufacturers are to affix their names and manufactory to new cordage before sold, under the like forfeiture and putting a false name is a forfeiture of 201. Persons making cables of old and overworn stuff, containing above 7 inches in compass, shall forfeit four times the value. Vessels belonging to British subjects, having on board foreign-made cordage, are to make entry thereof, on entering into any British port, on penalty of 20s. for every hundred weight. But this is not to extend to cordage brought from the East Indies, nor to materials at present used by any vessels built abroad before this act.-(25 Geo. 3. c. 56.) 2. Iron Cubles.-The application of strong iron chains or cables to the purposes of navi- gation is a late and an important discovery, for which we are indebted to Captain Samuel Brown, R. N. It is singular, indeed, that this application should not have been made at a much earlier period. On rocky bottoms or where coral is abundant, a hempen cable speedily chafes, and is often quite destroyed in a few months, or perhaps days. A striking instance of this occurred in the voyage of discovery under the orders of M. Bougainville, who lost six anchors in the space of nine days, and narrowly escaped shipwreck; a result, says that able seaman, which would not have happened, si nous cussions été munis des quelques chaines de fer. C'est une précaution que ne doivent jamais oublier tous les navigateurs destinés à de pareils voyages." Voyage autour du Monde, p. 207. 4to ed.) The work from which this extract is taken was published in 1771 and yet it was not till nearly forty years after, that any attempt was made practically to profit by 80 judicious a suggestion. The difficulties in the way of importing hemp from 1808 to 1814, and its consequent high price, gave the first great stimulus to the manufacture of iron cables. Iron cables are constructed in different ways-(see Encye. Metrop.) ; but they are uni- formly tried by a machine, which strains them by a force greater than the absolute strength of the hempen cable they are intended to replace. By this means the risk of accident from Y 2 33 Digitized by Google 258 CACAO, CADIZ. defective links is effectually obviated; and there are exceedingly few instances in which an iron cable has broken at sea. Their great weight also contributes to their strength, inasmuch as the impulse of the ship is checked before the cable is brought nearly to a straight line, or that the strain approaches to a maximum. Bolts and shackles are provided at every fathom or two fathoms, by striking out which the ship may, if necessary, be detached from her anchors with less difficulty than a hempen cable can be cut. Even in their most defective form, iron cables are a great deal stronger than those of hemp; and as to durability, no sort of comparison can be made. No wonder, therefore, that they should be rapidly superseding the latter; which are now almost wholly laid aside in the navy, and, to a great extent, also, in the merchant service. [We import cables and cordage for the most part from Russia, and export these articles to the South American States and the West Indies.-Am. Ed.] CACAO, or, as it is commonly, but incorrectly written in this country, Cocoa (Fr. and Sp. Cacao; Ger. Kakao), the seed, or nuts of the cacao tree (Theobroma cacao), growing in the West Indies, and in many parts of South America. It is said, by Mr. Bryan Ed- wards, to bear some resemblance, both in size and shape, to a young blackheart cherry. The nuts are contained in pods, much like a cucumber, that proceed immediately from all parts of the body and larger branches; each pod contains from 20 to 30 nuts, of the size of large almonds, very compactly set. The shell of the nut is of a dark brown colour, brittle, and thin the kernel is both internally and externally brownish, divided into several unequal portions, adhering together, but separating without much difficulty it has a light agreeable smell, and an unctuous, bitterish, rather rough and peculiar, but not ungrateful taste. The nuts should be chosen full, plump, and shining, without any mustiness, and not worm- eaten. They yield, by expression, a great deal of oil ; but they are cultivated only that they may be employed in the preparation of the excellent beverage cacao, and the manufacture of chocolate, of which they form the principal ingredient. The finest cacao is said to be that of Socomusco. The principal importations are, however, derived from the Caraccas and Guayaquil, particularly the former. The price of the cacao of the Carraccas is, also, at an average, from 30 to 40 per cent. higher than that of Guayaquil. M. Humboldt estimated the consumption of cacao in Europe, in 1806, at 23,000,000 lbs., of which from 6,000,000 to 9,000,000 were supposed to be consumed in Spain. The production of cacao had been languishing in the Caraccas for several years previously to the commencement of the disturbances in South America; and latterly the cultivation of one or other of the great staples of cotton, sugar, and coffee, seems to have been every where gaining the ascendency.-(Humboldt Pers. Narrative, vol. iv. pp. 236-247. Eng. trans.) Duties.-Very little cacao is consumed in England a result which we are inclined to ascribe to the oppressiveness of the duties with which it has hitherto been loaded, and not to its being unsuitable to the public taste. It is now many years since Mr. Bryan Edwards declared that the ruin of the cacao plantations, with which Jamaica once abounded, was the effect of the heavy hand of minis- terial exaction.' of West Indies, vol. ii. p. 363.) And, unaccountable as it may seem, this pres- sure was not materially abated till 1832, when the duties on cacao from a British plantation were re- duced from 56s. to 18s. 8d. a cwt. Foreign cacao is still subject to the oppressive duty of 56s. a cwt. The entries of cacao for home consumption, at an average of the three years ending with 1831, were 440,578 lbs. a year. In 1832, the entries were 502,817 lbs.; and there can be little doubt that the re- duction in the rate of duty will occasion a considerable increase of consumption. Exclusive of the above, 470,000 lbs. of cacao were taken off in 1832 for the use of the navy this, not being liable to the duty, was entirely foreign. The high discriminating duty on the latter is the greatest defect in the new arrangements. Had the duty on foreign cacao been fixed at 28s. per cwt., it is pretty certain that a good deal of it would have been taken for consumption. Even on this footing, there would have been a discriminating duty of no less than 50 per cent. in favour of British cacao ; and, unless our object be to exclude the foreign article altogether, this is surely an ample preference. The duties on cacao produced, in 1832, 12,2241. 12s. British cacao is worth, at present (August, 1833,) from 64s. to 76s. a cwt. in bond. Cacao nut husks and shells are allowed to imported under a duty of 9s. 4d. a cwt. None of them are imported into Great Britain ; but, in 1832. 336.551 lbs. were imported into Ireland. They are brought not only from the West Indies, but from Gibraltar and other places, being the refuse of the chocolate manufactories carried on in them. Cacao cannot be entered as being the produce of some British possession in America, or of the Mau- ritius, until the master of the ship by which it is imported delivers to the collector or comptroller a certificate, and makes oath that the goods are the produce of such places.-(3 and 4. Will. 4. c. 52. è 37.) Neither shall they be deemed to be the produce of such places, unless imported direct from thence.- (7 Geo. 4. c. 48.) Permits are no longer required for the removal of cacao.-(9 Geo. 4. c. 44. 1 5.) CADIZ, the principal commercial city and sea-port of Spain. It is situated on its south- western coast, on the rocky and elevated extremity of a narrow, low peninsula, or tongue of land, projecting from the Isla de Leon, N. N. W. about 41 nautical miles. It is surrounded on all sides, except the south, where it joins the land, by the sea, and is very strongly forti- fied. Population from 60,000 to 70,000. It is well built, and has, at a distance, a very striking appearance. The tower or lighthouse of St. Sebastian stands on the western side of the city, being, according to Tofino, in lat. 36° 31' 7" N., long. 6° 18' 52" W. It is a most conspicuous object to vessels approaching from the Atlantic. The light, which is 172 feet high, is of great brilliancy, revolves once a minute, and in fair weather may be seen more than 6 leagues off. Digitized by Google CADIZ. 259 Boy of Cadiz-The entrance to this noble basin lies between the city and the town and promontory of Rota, bearing N. W. by N., distant about 11 league. The bay is of very great extent, affording, in most places, good anchorage. The port is on the eastern side of the city, where a mole of considera- ble dimensions has been constructed ; but the water is not sufficiently deep to allow large vessels to approach nearer than within about + of a mile, where they anchor in from 5 to 7 fathoms. The rocks called the Cochinos, the Puercas, and the Diamante, lie to the north of the city in the entrance to the bay; the first two at about 3-5ths of a mile distant, and the Diamante at rather more than If mile from the city. Vessels may enter between the Puercas and the Diamante; but none, except those not drawing more than 15 feet water, and well acquainted with the channel, ought to attempt enter- ing between the Cochinos and Puercas and the city. The town of St. Mary's, on the opposite side of the bay, is famous for being the depôt of the wines of Xeres. The outer bay, or that of Cadiz properly so called, is separated from the inner bay by the promontory having at its extremity the castle of Matagorda, which approaches within about + of a mile of the Puntales castle on the Isla de Leon. Within the inner bay is the famous arsenal of the Caraccas, the town of San Carlos, the canal of Trocadero, &c. At spring tides the water in the bay rises 10 or 11 feet, but at neaps the rise does not exceed 6 feet.-(For further particulars see the excellent Chart of the Bay of Cadi:, by Tafino ; Mal- ham's Naval Gazetteer; and Purdy's Sailing Directions for the Bay of Biscay, &c.) History, Trade, &c.-Cadiz is a very ancient city, having been founded by the Phœni- cians about 1,200 years before the Christian era. The temple which they erected in it in honour of Hercules was one of the most celebrated in antiquity.-(Sainte Croix, Des Anciennes Colonies, p. 14.; Pomp. Mela, lib. iii. cap. 6.) Its excellent port, and its situa- tion, favourable alike for commerce and security, have made it, whether possessed by Car- thaginians, Romans, Moors, or Christians, and under every vicissitude, a place of considera- ble commercial and political importance. It has long been one of the principal stations of the Spanish naval force. In 1720, the commerce with Spanish America, which had pre- viously been exclusively carried on from Seville, was transferred to Cadiz. It enjoyed this valuable monopoly till 1765, when it was partially relaxed by the trade to Cuba, St. Do- mingo, Porto Rico, and the other islands being opened to all the greater ports of Spain. The benefits resulting from this relaxation were so very great, that in 1778 the trade to all parts of America was opened to ships from every considerable Spanish port, except those of Biscay, which, not being subjected to the general laws of the kingdom, were not allowed to participate in this privilege. In consequence, however, of her situation, the great capital of her merchants, and their established connections, Cadiz continued, notwithstanding the abolition of the monopoly, to preserve the largest share of the American trade. But since the colonies achieved their independence, her commerce has been contracted within com- paratively narrow limits; nor is there much prospect of its being materially improved, with- out a total change of policy on the part of the Spanish government.-(Robertson's America, b. viii. passim Townsend's Travels in Spain, vol. ii. pp. 395-401. 2d edit.) The white wines of Xeres in its vicinity form by far the principal article of export from Cadiz. The quantity exported may amount to about 20,000 pipes a year. The prices vary from 12/. to 65L per pipe but, as the lower qualities predominate, the price may be taken, at a medium, at about 25/., making the total value of the exports 500,000/. More than 4ths of the whole comes to England. The other articles of export are brandy, oranges, and other fruits, olive oil, wool, quicksilver, &c. The imports consist principally of sugar and coffee from the Havannah and Porto Rico, cacao, hemp, flax, linens, dried fish, hides, cotton wool, and cotton manufactures, rice, spices, indigo, &c. In 1826, the Spanish government published what they termed the Balanza Mercantil, or an account of the commodities imported into, and exported from, Spain during that year. It is a very defective document; but as it is the best that can be obtained, it is subjoined. The values of the articles only are given. We have converted the sums into English money. Note of the most considerable Articles of Importation into Spain in 1826. From From Spa- From From Spa- Europe, nish Ameri- Europe, nish Ameri- Articles Asia, Africa, can Colonies, Articles. Asia, Africa, can Colonies, 1 and United inclusive of and United inclusive of States of the Philip- States of the Philip- America. pines. America. pines. Sugar - - - £7,640 £437,550 Hides - - £120,600 £4,910 Cocoa - - - 104,400 90,425 Cotton wool - - 166,970 7,920 Indigo - - - 4,770 69,030 Ditto yarn - - 63,660 Spices, Cinnamon £95,420 Ditto manufactures - 430,980 Cloves - 40,100 Woollen ditto - - 91,030 Pepper - 67,500 Hemp and flax - - 165,760 203,020 Linen manufactures - 222,870 Wool of all kinds - - 167,560 21,440 Ditto thread - - 12,970 Rice - - 102,270 Silk manufactures - 106,170 Wheat - - 8,110 Iron and brass ditto - 108,700 110,380 Gold and silver, in coin Salt fish - - - 200,560 and bars - - 81,880 15,280 Coffee - - 1 - - 75,830 Earthenware - - 19,700 Olive oil - - - 18,130 Copper - - - 12,400 2,200 Butter - - 57,560 Tin - - - 11,630 Cheese - - 17,660 Crystal and glass ware - 37,000 75,220 Digitized by Google 260 CADIZ. Note of the most considerable Articles of Exportation from Spain in 1826. To Europe, To Spanish To Europe, To Spanish Asia, Africa, American Asia, Africa, American Articles. and United Colonies, in- Articles. and United Colonies, in- States of clusive of the States of clusive of the America. Philippines. America. Philippines. Wines - - - £137,550 £51,790 Raw silk - - - £28,890 Fruits, Almonds £24,355 Indigo - - - 11,240 Filberts - - 29,165 - - 3,030 Silk manufactures - 218,930 £74,590 Lemons & oranges 36,240 Wool - - - 161,650 Raisins - - 59,905 Woollen manufactures - 12,020 Grapes, olives, and Cork-wood and corks - 34,640 figs - - 2,410 Leeches - - 19,080 152,075 2,645 Paper of all kinds - 20,220 17,500 Brandy - - - 107,715 13,156 Gut, fishing - £18,480 Olive oil - - - 7,170 6,030 for guitars - 2,500 Saffron - - - 14,610 2,800 20,980 16,905 Lead - - - 215,360 Thread lace - - 10,285 Ditto ore - - - 7,765 Cast iron - - - 16,626 Quicksilver - - 66,300 Garbanzos, beans, and Barilla - - - 79,290 wheat - - - 3,980 3,600 Flour - - - - - 49,290 Shipping. 1831 there arrived at Cadiz from foreign countries 475 ships, of the burden of 38,582 tons ; and from the Spanish colonies, that is, from Cuba, Porto Rico, the Philippine Islands, &c., 103 ships, of the burden of 17,812 tons. The arrivals from England are not specified; but, in 1828, 184 British ships entered Cadiz. The coasting trade is very considerable. Money.-The monies, weights, and measures, used at Cadiz, are those of Castile. Accounts are kept by the real (of old plate), of which there are 10} in the peso duro, or hard dollar and as the dol- lar = 4s. 34d. the real = 4d. A real is divided into 16 quintos, or 34 maravedis. The ducado de plata, or ducat of plate, is worth 11 reals. Weights and Measures.-The ordinary quintal is divided into 4 arrobas, or 100 lbs. of 2 marcs each: 100 lbs. Castile = 1011 lbs. avoirdupois. The yard, or vara = 927 English yard, or 100 varas - 924 English yards. The cahiz, or measure for corn, is divided into 12 fanegas, or 144 celeminas, or 576 quartillas; 100 cahiz's = 1977 Winch. quarters, and 5 fanegas = 1 quarter. The cantaro, or arroba, the measure for liquids, is divided into 8 azumbres, and 32 quartillos. There are two sorts of arrobas, the greater and the lesser: they are to each other as 32 to 25; the former being equal to 41 English wine gallons, the latter to 37 do. A moyo of wine = 16 arrobas. The botta = 30 arrobas of wine, or 381 of oil. A pipe = 27 arrobas of wine, or 34f of oil. Hence the botta = 1271 English wine gallons, and the pipe 1141 do. British trade with Spain.-Notwithstanding the anti-commercial influence of prohibitions and op- pressive duties, we carry on a very considerable trade with Spain. In 1831 we imported from her 61,921 cwt. barilla, 78,067 cwt. oak and cork bark, 146,234 quarters wheat-(see BILBAO), 769cwt. figs, 972 tons lead, about 28,000 packages oranges and lemons, 1,243,686 gallons olive oil, 269,558 lbs. quick- silver, 105,066 cwt. raisins, 3,700 cwt. sumach, 14,184 lbs. silk, 69,319 gallons brandy, 3,474,823 lbs. wool, and 2,537,968 gallons wine. No account of the declared or real value of the imports is kept at the Custom-house but the official value of the imports from Spain in 1831, exclusive of those from the Canaries, was above 1,000,000L. sterling. During the same year the real value of the various articles of British produce and manufacture cleared out from our ports for Spain was 597.8481. Of these articles linen was the principal, its value being estimated at 222,8381. Cottons amounted to above 148,000L. The other articles were hardware, iron and steel, tin, &c.-(Parl. Paper, No. 550. Sess. 1833.) Smuggling, &c.-In 1829 Cadiz was made a free port, that is, a port where goods may be consumed and bonded without paying duty. This boon would have been of compara- tively little consequence but for the opportunity of smuggling afforded by the oppressively high duties laid on most foreign articles imported into Spain. These, as such duties wherever imposed never fail to do, have given birth to a very extensive contraband trade; and under the free regime Cadiz became the grand focus of this traffic. The government having seen this effect of the franchise, it was withdrawn on the 22d of December, 1832. This, how- ever, is but a very trifling inconvenience to the smuggler. Nothing, fortunately, but the repeal of prohibitions, and the reduction of oppressive duties to a reasonable amount, can ever, materially diminish the field of his exertions. It would appear, however, that the ex- perience of a couple of centuries has been as unable to impress the Spanish government with a conviction of this unquestionable truth, as it has been to open their eyes to the enormous abuses that infect every part of the public administration. Mr. Townsend, the author of by far the best English work on Spain, which he visited in 1786 and 1787, has the following admirable remarks on this subject, in his chapter on Cadiz :- The Spanish government has never yet acquired any liberal ideas respecting trade and even at the present moment, some of their best political writers resemble lag hounds hunting the stale scent, whilst the fleetest are already in possession of the game. Instead of throwing down every obstacle to commerce, they labour to contract its limits, under the vain hope of establishing a monopoly, without considering either their own want of capital, of industry, and of an enterprising spirit, or the utter impossibility of preventing smuggling, whilst other nations, with greater advantages for trade, can undersell them in the market. Until they shall be more enlightened, until they shall have banished their inquisitors, and until the happy period shall arrive when, under the protection of a free govern- ment, they shall have restored public credit, and placed it on a firm foundation all their prohibitions, all their severities exercised on the property and persons of the illicit traders, all their commercial treaties, and all their commercial wars, into which ambition may betray them, will be frivolous and vain because no efforts will ever prevail against the united interests of their own subjects, and of all surrounding nations. Digitized by Google CAGLIARI. 261 Even at home, the watchfulness and energy of every government have never been able to enforce its prohibitions for, notwithstanding these, when I was travelling through Spain, all the men ap- peared in Manchester cotton goods, and no woman was seen without her muslin veil. In Spain, as throughout Europe, it is found that when the price of insurance is less than the duties imposed on the commodity, no laws are sufficient to control the operations of illicit traders."-(Vol. ii. p. 394.) But the Spanish government has been proof against such considerations. Instead of diminishing, they have materially increased, the number of prohibitions and the pressure of the duties and the consequence is, that in many extensive provinces there is no regular trade, and that every thing is carried on by the agency of the smugglers, partly in defiance, but principally through the connivance, of the revenue officers. Notwithstanding their exclusion, English cotton goods may, at this moment, be bought in Madrid, and generally throughout Spain, at from 20 to 30 per cent. above their price in Gibraltar, where they are about as cheap as in Manchester While Cadiz was a free port, about 6,000 persons are said to have been employed in it twisting cigars, which, as soon as finished, were forthwith smuggled into the interior. Three fourths of the foreign trade of Spain may, in fact, be said to be carried on in defiance of the law. And where such is the case, need we wonder at the low state of industry, or at the prevalence of those predatory and ferocious habits that uni- formly mark the character of the smuggler ? In the valuable work of Mr. Ingliss, entitled " Spain in 1830," we find the following statement under the head Cadiz. Though written more than 40 years after the paragraph previously quoted from Mr. Townsend, it shows that not one of the flagrant abuses de- nounced by the latter has been eradicated; but that, on the contrary, they all continue to flourish in still ranker luxuriance. The whole commercial system of Spain is most erroneously conceived. The prohibitory system is carried to a length absolutely ruinous to the fair trader, and highly injurious to the revenue. The immense duties upon admissible articles, and the total prohibition of others, has occasioned a most extensive contraband trade, both externally with the various ports, along the coast of Spain, and internally, throughout the whole of the kingdom and by this trade admissible articles are introduced into the interior, at from 100 to 300 per cent. below the duties imposed. Government could not fail to be benefited by permitting the importation of articles of general use, upon payment of such a duty as would allow the sale of the article at a lower price than is now paid by the consumer to the smug- gler. As one example of the impolicy of the system, I may cite a fact respecting the trade in salted fish, the returns of which 1 have before me. The import of this article into Cadiz in one year, before that city was made a free port, amounted to 4 vessels, whose cargoes reached 4,092 cwt.; while at the free port of Gibraltar, in the same year, 41 vessels entered with 89,106 cwt., the whole of which was intended for the illicit trade, and passed into Spain through the hands of the smugglers. The duty upon this article is more than 100 per cent.; the smuggler considers himself remunerated by a gain of twenty-five per cent.; so that the article which finds its way into the market through the contraband trade is sold per cent. cheaper than that which is admitted upon payment of the regular duties. The duties upon British manufactured goods amount almost to a prohibition they often reach 100 per cent., and this trade is therefore also in the hands of the smugglers, who obtain the profit which, under a more wholesome system, might go into the treasury of the kingdom. The fraudulent dealer is also greatly assisted by the custom of granting a royal licence to individuals to import a certain limited quantity of prohibited goods; an expedient resorted to in order to meet the exigencies of the state and under the licence to enter 100 tons of merchandise, the merchant enters perhaps 1.000 tons ; a deception easily practised in a country where, among the public officers, a scale of bribery is perfectly understood and acted upon. ii. pp. 132-136.) But for the system of misrule to which Spain has been subjected, there can be no reasona- ble doubt that her commerce would have been about the most extensive of any European state. Her natural advantages, superior to most, and not inferior to those enjoyed by any other kingdom her wines, brandies, fruits, &c.; her wheat, of which she might produce the largest supplies; her wool; her iron, which is of the best quality her lead and quicksilver mines, respectively the most productive in the world; the number and excellence of her harbours; the enterprising and adventurous character of her inhabitants, and her favourable situation would, were she permitted to avail herself of them, raise her to a very high rank among commercial nations. Let the government cease to counteract the intentions of na- ture let moderate duties take the place of prohibitions, and freedom of regulation and all sorts of industrious pursuits will speedily revive from the deadly lethargy in which they have been so long sunk. [The trade of the United States with Cadiz is not of much importance. Wines and salt are the principal commodities we get from there. See the article MALAGA.-Am. Ed.] CAGLIARI, the capital of Sardinia, situated on the north-east shore of a spacious bay on the south coast of the island, lat. 39° 12' 13" N., long. 9° 6' 44" E. Population 26,000. The city stands on a rising ground, and has an imposing effect from the sea. The public buildings and churches are numerous, and some of them splendid but the streets are, for the most part, narrow, steep, and filthy. The Gulf of Cagliari extends from Pula on the west to Cape Carbonaro on the east, a distance of about 24 miles across, and about 12 in depth, with good anchorage every where after getting into soundings. A mole projects from the Pratique office, and ships usually lie about 1 mile S. W. by S. from it, in 6 or 8 fathoms water, on an excellent bottom of mud. There is a very convenient pier har- bour at the south angle of the tower wall, capable of containing 14 or 16 vessels of a tolerable size, besides small craft. Altogether, Cagliari is one of the best and safest ports in the Mediterranean. Imports and Erports.-Almost all the trade of Sardinia is carried on by strangers; and even the fish on its coast and in its harbours is caught by Sicilians, Neapolitans, Tuscans, and Genoese. Corn is the principal article of export. In good years, the exports from the whole island may amount to Digitized by Google 262 CAGLIARI. 400,000 starelli, or about 500,000 bushels, of wheat, 200,000 starelli of barley, 6,000 ditto of maize, 100,000 ditto of beans, 200,000 of peas, and 1,000 ditto of lentils. The culture of vines is gradually becoming of more importance ; and about 3,500 Catalan pipes are exported, principally from Alghero and Ogliastra. Cheese is an important object in the rural economy of Sardinia, and considerable quantities are exported. Salt is a royal monopoly, and affords a considerable revenue. Until recently Sweden drew almost all her supplies of this important necessary from Sardinia, and it continues to be exported in considerable quantities. Flax, linseed, hides, oil, saffron, rags, alquifoux, &c. are among the articles of export. The tunny and coral fisheries employ a good many hands; but, as already observed, they are almost wholly managed by foreigners. Almost every article of dress, whether for the gentry or the peasantry, is imported. Soap, station- ery, glass, earthenware, and furniture, as well as sugar, coffee, drugs, spices, &c., are also supplied by foreigners; and notwithstanding the Sards possess many rich mines, several of which were suc- cessfully wrought in antiquity, they import all their iron and steel. The only manufactures carried on in the island are those of gunpowder, salt, tobacco, and woollen caps. In 1831, there entered the ports of Sardinia 166 foreign vessels, of the burden of 6,925 tons. Of these, the greater number were French ; and next to them were Neapolitans, Austrians, Tuscans, &c. Money, Weights, and Measures.-Accounts are kept in lire, reali, and soldi. 5 soldi = I reale = 41d.; 4 reali = 1 lira = 1s. 6d.; 19 reali - 1 scudo - 3s. 9d. The paper money consists of notes for 5, 10, and 20 scudi. Farm produce and the coarser metals are weighed by the pesi di ferro: 12 Sard. oz. - 1 lb. = 14 oz. 5 dr. avoirdupois; 26 lbs. = 1 rubbo ; 4 rubbi = 1 cantaro = 93 lbs. 0 oz. 8 dr. avoirdupois. The starello, or corn measure, is equivalent to 1 bush. 14 peck Eng. The palm 10} Eng. inches. Causes of the depressed state of Sardinia.-The above statements sufficiently show that the commerce of Sardinia is very far from being what might naturally be expected from its extent, fertility, admirable situation, and the excellence of its many harbours. It contains an area of about 9,500 square miles., being, in point of size, but little inferior to Sicily; and in antiquity it was hardly less celebrated for its productiveness :- Non opimas Sardinise segetes feracis."-Her. lib. i. Od. 31. But a long series of wars and revolutions, followed by the establishment of the feudal system in its worst form, and the subjection of the island, first to Spain, and more recently to the house of Savoy, have been attended by the most ruinous consequences. The Ro- mans encouraged the exportation of corn and other produce from the provinces to Rome, where it always met with a ready and advantageous sale. But the modern rulers of Sar- dinia have followed quite an opposite policy; they have prevented the occupiers of the land from carrying their productions abroad and as, owing to the want of a commercial and manufacturing population, there was little or no demand for it at home, no surplus was raised so that the wish, as well as the means, of emerging from poverty and barbarism has been well nigh eradicated. It is to this impolitic conduct on the part of government, and to the insecurity arising from the want of police and of occupation under the worst sort of feudal tenures, that we are inclined principally to attribute that habitual idleness, and indifference to the future, that distinguish the modern Sards. We are glad, however, to have to state, that some improvements have been made within these few years. A good road has been formed from Cagliari to Sassari, and cross roads are being carried from it to some of the most considerable places in the island. The popu- lation, which, in 1816, amounted to only 352,000, is now estimated at 480,000 or 500,000* and some meliorations have been introduced into various departments of industry. But without the establishment of an effective system for the administration of justice and the prevention and punishment of crime, the introduction of a better system of letting land, and the total abolition of the existing restraints on the exportation of corn and other produce from the island, it will be in vain to expect that its capacities should ever be fully developed. At present, it is usual to hire land, for the purposes of tillage, by the year no corn can be exported if its price exceed 30 reals the starello; and a heavy duty is laid on all that is ex- ported, as a substitute for a general land-tax. Nothing can be more preposterously absurd than such regulations. They have paralysed the exertions of the husbandman to such an extent, that this " benignant nurse" of ancient Romet is sometimes, notwithstanding its scanty population, under the necessity of importing a portion of its supplies Most other articles of export have been loaded with similar duties 80 that the industry of the island has been, in effect, completely sacrificed to a short-sighted rapacity, of which, fortunately, there are not many examples. Let this disgraceful system, which, if possible, is even more in- jurious to the government than to the people, be put an end to,-let the freedom of export- ation, with reasonable duties on imports, and the security of property, be established,and we venture to predict that Sardinia will, at no very remote period, recover her ancient pros- perity that the revenues of the crown will be increased in a tenfold proportion and that the population will cease to be conspicuous only for ferocity, idleness, and contempt of in- novation. In compiling this article, we have consulted Captain Smyth's valuable work on Sardinia, particu- larly pp. 106-128. But the most complete work on the island is that of Marmara, already referred to See Marmara, Voyage on Sardaigne, p. 176., and the Foreign Quarterly Review, No. 23. p. 256. Captain Smyth reckons the population, at an average of the 10 years ending with 1825, at about 400,000.-(p. 128.) t 'Siciliam et Sardinlam, benignissimas urbis nostre nutrices."-Val. Maximus, lib. vii. c. 6. Digitized by Google CAJEPUT OIL-CALCUTTA. 263 It, however, touches very gently on the gross and scandalous abuses that infect every part of the administration. We have borrowed some details from the Annales du Commerce Maritime for 1833, p. 302, &c. CAJEPUT OIL, the volatile oil obtained from the leaves of the cajeput tree (Melaleuca Leucadendron Lin.). The name is a corruption of the native term cayu-puti, that is, white- wood oil; because the bark of the tree which yields it has a whitish appearance, like our birch. This tree is common in Amboyna and other Eastern islands. The oil is obtained by distillation from the dried leaves of the smaller of two varieties. It is prepared in great quantities in Banda, and sent to Holland in copper flasks. As it comes to us it is of a green colour, very limpid, lighter than water, of a strong smell resembling camphor, and a strong pungent taste. It burns entirely away without leaving any residuum. It is often adulterated with other essential oils, coloured with resin of milfoil. In the genuine oil, the green colour depends on the presence of copper for, when rectified, it is colourless.-(Thomson's Dis- pensatory.) Cajeput oil not being used except in the materia medica, only small quantities are imported. In July, 1831, it sold in bond at about 7d. an ounce ; but an idea having then got abroad that it was one of the most efficient remedies in cases of cholera, its price rose in November, 1831, to no less than 11s. an ounce! But it soon after fell into discredit with the faculty, and additional supplies having been obtained from Holland, its price declined almost as fast as it had risen. It is not at present (September, 1833) worth more in bond, than from 4d. to 9d. an ounce. CALABAR SKIN (Fr. Petit-gris; Ger. Grauwerk; It. Vaor, Vajo ; Rus. Bjelka; Sp. Gris pequeno), the Siberian squirrel skin, of various colours, used in making muffs, tippets, and trimmings for clothes. CALABASH, a light kind of vessel formed of the shell of a gourd, emptied and dried. The Indians both of the North and South Sea put the pearls they have fished in calabashes, and the natives of Africa do the same by their gold dust. They also are used as a measure in Africa. CALAMANCO (Du. Kallemink, Kalmink Fr. Calmande, Calmandre, It. Durante; Rus. Kolomenka; Sp. Calmaco; Sw. Kalmink), a sort of woollen stuff, manufactured in England and the Netherlands; it has a fine gloss; and being chequered in the warp, the checks appear only on the right side. CALAMANDER WOOD, a beautiful species of timber brought from Ceylon. It is so hard that common edge-tools cannot work it, so that it must be rasped and almost ground into shape. It is singularly remarkable for the variety and admixture of colours. The most prevail- ing is a fine chocolate, now deepening almost into absolute black, now fading into a medium between faw n and cream colours. It arrests the eye from the rich beauty of the intermingled tints, not from any undue showiness. It takes a very high polish; and is wrought into chairs, and particularly into tables. Sir Robert Brownring, late governor of Ceylon. had the doors of the dining-room of his seat in Monmouthshire made of calamander. It is scarce in Ceylon, and is not regularly imported all that is in Great Britain has been imported by private gentlemen, returning from the colony, for their ow use. It is by far the most beautiful of all the fancy woods. The nearer it is taken from the root of the tree, the finer it is.-(Milburn's Orient. Com. ; Lib. of Entertaining Knowledge, Vegetable Sub- stances, p. 179.) CALCUTTA, the principal city of the province of Bengal, the capital of the British dominions in India, and, with the exception perhaps of Canton, the greatest emporium to the eastward of the Cape of Good Hope. Its citadel is in lat. 22° 33' 54" N., long. 88° 20' 17" E. It is about 100 miles distant from the sea, being situated on the eastern bank of the western branch of the Ganges, denominated by Europeans the Hooghly River, which is the only arm of the Ganges navigable to any considerable distance by large ships. At high water the river opposite to the town is about a mile in breadth; hut during the ebb the side opposite to Calcutta exposes a long range of dry sand banks. Owing to the length and in- tricacy of the navigation from the sea, it cannot be undertaken without a pilot so that, even if it did not exceed our limits, it would be useless to attempt any description of it in this place.-(See the reduced Plan of the Mouths of the Hooghly River, in the Mercator's Chart in this work.) In 1717, Calcutta was a petty native village of paltry huts, with a few hundred inhabitants. Little more than a century later, or in 1822, the following were the returns of the population viz. Chris- tians, 13,138; Mohammedans, 48,162; Hindoos, 118,203; Chinese, 414, making in all, 179,917. A great part, however, of what may be fairly considered the population of Calcutta, consisting of labourers, mechanics, and persons engaged in trade, reside at night in the suburbs, or neighbouring villages coming into town early in the morning to their respective employments. These have been estimated by the magistrates, on tolerably good data, at 100,000; and allowing for the increase of in- habitants which is admitted to have taken place within the last dozen years, the existing population may be estimated at about 300,000. The town, excluding suburbs, extends to about 4f miles along the bank of the river, with an average breadth inland of about If mile. Fort William, the citadel, lies on the same side of the river, a little lower down. It is a strong regular fortification but so exten- sive that it would require a garrison of 10,000 men for its effectual defence. Calcutta possesses great natural advantages for inland navigation ; all sorts of foreign produce being transported with great facility on the Ganges and its subsidiary streams to the north-western quarters of Hindostan, over a distance of at least 1,000 miles, while the productions of the interior are received by the same easy channels. The principal merchants and traders of Calcutta consist of the following classes; viz. British and other Europeans, Portuguese born in India, Armenians, Greeks, Jews, Persians from the coast of the Persian Gulf, commonly called Parsees, Moguls, Mobammedans of Hindostan, and Hindoos the lat- ter usually either of the Brahminical or mercantile castes, and natives of Bengal. In 1813, the total number of adult male British subjects, in the Bengal provinces (the great majority being in Calcutta), Digitized by Google 264 CALCUTTA. engaged in trade or agriculture, was 1,225 in 1830, it was 1,707. This is the statement given by the printed register but it is probably much underrated, particularly for the last year. The native Por- tuguese and Armenian merchants have of late greatly declined in wealth and importance. On the other hand, the Persian merchants have increased in numbers and wealth, several of them being worth 250,000/. sterling. The large fortunes of the Hindoo merchants have been much broken down of late years by litigation in the courts, and naturally through the law of equal coparcenary among brothers. To counterbalance this, there has been, since the opening of the free trade in 1814, a vast augmentation of the number of inferior merchants, worth from 20,0001. to 50,000L. sterling. There are but few Hindoo merchants at present whose wealth exceeds 200,000/. sterling. The principal foreign business is conducted by the English merchants; but the other parties also, either in partnership with the English, or on their own account, speculate largely to Europe, Ame- rica, and especially to China. The brokers known under the name of Sircars and Baboos are all Hin- doos. The general rates of agency commission are as follow :- 1. On the sale or purchase of ships, vessels, houses The charge for coining silver at the Calcutta mint is 2 per cent. if and lands 2 1-2 per cent. the bullion be the standard fineness; but where it differs, a propor- 2. On the sale, purchase, or shipment of bullion 1-2 do. tional charge of from 1-4 to 1-2 per cent. is made for refining. Do. of jewellery, diamonds, or other precious The course of exchange by which the customs of Calcutta are at stones 2 do. present regulated is as follows:- Do. of indigo, lac-dye, country piece goods, silk, opium, cochineal, coral, spices, coffee, cop- Sic. rup. An. Pice. per, tin, and tutenague 218 do. Great Britain Pound sterling = 10 0 0 Do. of all other kinds of goods 6 do. Cape of Good Hope Rix-dollar (2s.) = 1 0 0 3. On goods or treasure, &c. consigned, and after- Madras 100 rupees = 93 I 8 wards withdrawn or sent to auction and on Bombay 100 = 94 13 0 goods consigned for conditional delivery to Ceylon Rix-dollar = 0 14 0 others 1-8 commission China tale - 3 5 4 4. On all advances of money for the purposes of Burmah 125 tickals = 100 0 0 trade, whether the goods are consigned to the Manilla Spanish dollar = 2 4 0 agent or not, and where a commission of 5 per Portugal 1,000 reas = 2 12 0 cent. is not charged 21-2 per cent. France 24 francs = 10 0 0 5. On ordering goods, or superintending the fulfil- Holland 21 florins = 2 4 0 ment of contracts, where no other commis- Hamburgh and Co- sion is derived 218 do. 11 mare banco = 1 0 0 penhagen 6. On guaranteeing bills, bonds, or other engage- Leghorn 100 pezzas = 202 8 0 ments, and on becoming security for adminie- trations of estates, or to government or indi- Other sorts of rupees are met with in Bengal, differing in fineness viduals for contracts, agreements, Ac. 818 do. and weight, though their denominations be the same. From this, 7. On del credere, or guaranteeing the responsibili- 1-2 per cent. and from the natives frequently punching holes in the rupees, and ty of persons to whom goods are sold per mensem. filling them up with base metal, and their fraudulently diminishing 8. On acting for the estales of persons deceased, as the weight of the coin after coming from the mint, the currencies of executors or administrators 5 per cent. the different provinces are of different values. This defect has in- 9. On the management of estates for others, on the troduced the custom of employing shroffs, or money-changers, whose amount received 2 12 do. business is to set a value upon the different currencies, according to 10. On procuring freight, or advertising as the agent every circumstance, either in their favour or their prejudice. ben of owners or commanders on the amount of a sum of rupees is brought to one of these shroffs, he examines them freight, whether the same passes through piece by piece, and arranges them according to their fineness; then, the hands of the agent or not 5 do. 11. On chartering ships for other parties by their weight; he then allows for the different legal battas upon 2 do. siccas and sounats and this done, he values in gross, by the rupees 12. On making insurance, or writing orders for current, what the whole are worth so that the rupee current is the insurance 1-8 do. only thing fixed, by which coin is valued. 13. On settling insurance losses, total or partial, and A current rupee is reckoned at 2a, and a sicca rupee of account on procuring returns of premium 1 do. commonly at 2a. 6d. A lac, means 100,000; and a crore 100 lacs, or 14. On effecting remittances, by bills of the agent 10,000,000. The following are the monies of account, premising or otherwise, or purchasing, selling, or nego- that the lowest denomination is represented by a small smooth shell, tiating bills of exchange 1 do. a species of cypraca, chiefly imported as an article of trade from the 15. On debts, when a process at law or arbitration Laccadive and Maldive islands, and current as long as they continue is necessary 2 1-2 do. entire:- And if recovered by such means 5 do. 16. On bills of exchange returned, noted, or pro- 4 Cowries = 1 Gunda. tested I do. 2,560 do. = I Current rupee. 17. On the collecting of house-rent 2 1-8 do. 20 Gundas = 1 Punn. 18. On ships' disbursements 2 1-2 do. 4 Punns, or 12 pice = Anna. 19. On negotiating loans on respondentia 2 do. 4 Annas = 1 Cahaun. 20. On letters of credit granted for mercantile pur- 4 Cahauns = 1 Sicca rupee. poses 2 1-8 do. 16 Sicca rupees = I Gold mohur. 21. On purchasing or selling government securi- Weights.-The great weights are maunds, seers, chittacks, and ties, and on each exchange of the same, in siccas or rupee weights, thus divided the transfer from one loan to another 1-2 do. 22. On delivering up government securities, or 5 Siccas = 1 Chittack. depositing the same in the treasury 1-2 do. 16 Chittacks = Seer. 23. On all advances not punctually liquidated, the 40 Seers = Maund. agent to have the option of charging a second There are two maunds in use, viz. the factory maund, which is commission, as upon a fresh advance, pro- 74 lbs. 10 oz. 10-668 drs. avoirdupois; and the bazaar maund. which vided the charge does not occur twice in the is 10 per cent. better, viz, 82 lbs. oz. 2-133 drs. same year 24. At the option of the agent, on the amount 80 Sieca weight = a Calcutta bazaar secr. debited or credited within the year, including 60 Ditto = a Serampore seer. interest, and excepting only items on which 82 Ditto = a Hooghly seer. a commission of 5 per cent. has been charged 1 do. 84 Ditto a Benaras Mirzapore seer. N. B.-This charge not to apply to paying over 96 Ditto = an Allahabad and Lucknow seer. a balance due on an account made up to a particu- A Calcutta factory seer is equal to 72 sicca weight, II annas, 2 lar period, unless where such balance is withdrawn puns, 10 gundas, 3.63 cowries. without reasonable notice. Money.-Accounts are kept here in imaginary money called ru- Gold and Silver. pees, either current or sicca, with their subdivisions, annas and 4 Punkhos = Dhan, or grain. pice 12 pice make I anna; 16 annas I rupee; and 16 rupees 1 gold 4 Dhans = Ruity. mohur. To this currency must all the real specie be converted. be- 6 1-4 Rutties = Anna. fore any sum can be regularly entered in a merchant's books. The 8 Rutties = 1 Massa. Company keep their accounts in sicca rupees, which bear a hatta 10 Massas I Sicca weight= 179-7 grs. Troy, = (premium) of 16 per cent. over the current. The coins current are or 6-5705 drs. avoirdupois. gold mohurs, with their subdivisions-halves and quarters; sicca ru. 100 Rutties = Tolah. pees, halves and quarters; annas, pice, and half pice. The two 12 1.2 Massas = Tolah. last are o copper. There are two mints under the Rengal presi- 16 Annas = Tolah. dency that at Calcutta; and that of Ferruckabad, in the north- 166 1-4 Rutties = Mohur. western provinces. The first is probably the most splendid esta- 13-28 Massas = Mohur. blishment of the kind in the world the cost of the machinery, sup- 17 Annas = Mohur. plie by Measrs. Bolton and Watt of Birmingham, having exceeded The tolah is equal to 224-588 grs. Troy. 300,000L Gold money is coined at Calcutta only; but silver, which is now, and has always been, the standard of India, equally at both Liquid Measure. mints. The following statement shows the present weight, fineness, and sterling value of the coins, reckoning the value of gold at 3/. 17s. 5 Sicca weight = 1 Chittack. 10 1-2d. per standard ounce, and silver at 5e. 2d.:- 4 Chittacks Pouah, or pice 4 Pouahs = Seer. 40 Seers = Maund. Grains 5 Seers Coins. Grains Grains = Gross Value. Pussaree, or measure. pure. Alloy. 8 Measures = I Bazaar maund. Weight. Grain Measure. L. 8. d. Gold mohur 187-631 17.059 204-710 1 13 2-25 4 Khaonks 1 Raik. Sicca Rupee 175-923 15-993 191-916 0 2 6-25 4 Raiks Pallie= 9-08 lbs. avoird. Ferruckshad rupee 165-215 15-019 180-234 0 1 8-25 20 Pallies - Soallie. 16 Soallies = I Khahoon= 30 bz. mds. Digitized by Google CALCUTTA. 265 Square Measure. Long Measure. 5 Cabits, or hauts, in length 1 Chittack, or 45 feet (Eng. 3 Barleycorna, or jows - square, (barley) } - I Finger. X 4 in breadth 16 Chittacks 1 Cottan. 4 Fingers = Hand. = so Cottain - 1 Biggah - 14,440 sq. n. 3 Hands - Span. 3 1-2 Biggabs = 1 English statute acre. 2 Spans = 1 Cubit, or arms: 18 inches. 4 Cubits - Fathom. Cloth Measure. 1,000 Fathoms. 1 Com = 1 mile 1 furlong 3 ME poles 3 1-2 yards. 3 Jorbes - Angulia. 3 Angulise = I Gheriah. 1 For Goods reckoned by Tale. S Ghorishs - 1 Haut or cubit - 18 inches. 5 Particulars - I Gunda. = Hants = 1 Guz = 1 yard. 4 Gundas, or 20 particulars - 1 Koorje, or 1 corge. Commercial Weights and Measures of India, with their equivalents in English Avoirdupois, Bengal Factory, Madras, and Bombay Weights. Commercial Measures, &c. Avoirdupois. Bengal Factory. Madras. Bombay. lbs. OR. dr. Mds. S. Ch. Mds. Vis. Pol. Mds. S. Pice. Achees Bahar of 200 catties 423 6 13 5 2S 13 16 7 19 15 4 27 guncha of 10 nelly 220 0 0 2 37 13.7 8 6 16 7 34 8-6 Anjengo candy of 20 maunds 580 0 0 7 20 0 23 3 8 20 0 0 Batavia pecul of 100 catties 135 10 0 1 32 10 5 3 16 4 33 22-4 Beacoolen bahar 560 0 0 7 20 0 22 3 8 20 0 0 Bengil factory maund 74 10 10-7 1 0 0 2 7 357 2 26 20 bazaar maund 82 2 2.1 I 4 0 3 2 11.3 2 37 10 Bombay candy of 20 maunds 560 0 0 7 20 0 22 3 8 20 0 0 Bumorah maund of 76 vakias 90 4 0 1 8 5-6 3 4 35-2 3 8 27.9 of 24 ditto 28 8 0 0 15 43 1 1 4.8 1 0 21-4 Calicut maund of 100 pools 30 0 0 0 16 1.1 1 1 24 1 2 25.7 China pecul of 100 catties 133 5 5-3 1 31 6 5 2 26 4 30 14-3 Cochin candy of 20 maunds 543 8 0 7 11 2-6 81 5 36-8 19 16 12.9 Gombroos bazaar candy 7 8 0 0 4 0 0 2 16 0 10 21-4 Gon candy of 20 maunds 495 0 0 6 25 2-9 19 6 16 17 27 4-3 Jonkceylon bahar of 8 capins 485 5 5.3 6 20 0 19 3 18 17 13 10 Madras candy of 20 maunds 500 0 0 6 28 0 20 0 0 17 34 8-6 Malacca babar of 3 peculs 405 0 0 5 16 15 16 1 24 14 18 17.1 Mocha behar of 15 frazils 450 0 0 6 0 I 18 0 0 16 2 25-7 Muscat Custom-house maund 8 12 0 0 4 11 0 2 32 0 12 15 M anre candy of 7 morahs 560 0 0 7 20 0 22 3 8 20 0 0 Pegu candy of 150 vis 500 0 0 6 28 0 20 0 0 17 34 86 Penang pecul of 100 catties 133 5 5.3 1 31 6 5 2 26 4 30 14.3 Sera: maund of 40 seers 37 6 5.3 0 20 0 1 3 379 1 13 10 Pucca maund 74 10 10-7 1 0 0 2 7 35-7 8 26 20 Tellicberry candy of 20 maunds 600 0 0 8 0 2 24 0 0 21 17 43 Banks, Banking.-The paper currency of Calcutta is supplied by the following banks:- Bank of Bengal.-This is the only bank in Calcutta that has a charter. hs capital is 50 lacs, divided into 500 shares of 10,000 sicca rupees each, of which the East India Company hold 100 shares. The shares are now at a premium of 5,000 to 6,000 rupees. It is managed by nine directors; three ap- pointed by government, and six elected by the proprietors time of service, for the latter, three years. The secretary to government in the financial department, the accountant-general, and the sub-trea- surer, are the ex officio government directors. The bank secretary and treasurer is also a civil ser- vant. This bank possesses peculiar advantages, but has not been 80 useful to the public as it might have been. Its notes are received at all the public offices, in payment of revenue, by the collectors in all the districts below Benares; and, consequently, its circulation. averaging 80 to 100 lacs, extends over a very large and the wealthiest portion of our Indian territory. The government being such consi- derable shareholders, too, it is generally supposed by the natives that the Bengal Bank is part and par- cel thereof; and it enjoys, therefore, the same credit. But other circumstances have operated against the usefulness which, with the advantages alluded to, it might have been supposed would have cer- tainly attended it. 1. The government required a deposit in their treasury of 20 lacs of rupees in Company's paper, as security for the notes received at the public offices and the district treasuries. To this extent, there- fore, their means applicable to commercial purposes, or rather to the assistance of the commer- cial community, were crippled. 2. By their charter, they were required to issue their notes in the proportion of one third of specie to two thirds of paper,-in other words, for every 90 rupees of notes issued, they kept 30 rupees of cash in their strong box. 3. Their rules for granting accommodation on personal credit were so severe, that the public rather avoided applications to them, if they could obtain discounts elsewhere and, consequently, the busi- ness of the Bengal Bank was almost entirely confined to the granting of loans on the security of the Company's paper. In 1826, 1827, and 1828, when the Burinese war, and the financial arrangements of the government, occasioned a great demand for money, the amount of discounts of mercantile paper in Calcutta did not exceed 10 or 12 lacs or rupees, whilst loans secured by Company's paper rose to 60 and 70 lacs. The inconvenience of this system having been felt, the government of Calcutta has recommended an alteration and we understand the capital is to be increased to 75 lacs; the proportion of a third specie to be reduced to a fourth the deposit of 20 lacs of Company's paper at the treasury to be done away; and greater facilities to be afforded to the mercantile community in obtaining accommodation. As soon as this alteration is carried into effect, there will unquestionably be a great improvement in the money market in Calcutta. The Union Bank.-This establishment was founded in 1829. It is the only private bank at present (1834) existing in Bengal; for the Bank of Hindostan, the Commercial Bank, and the Calcutta Bank, noticed in the former edition of this work, have all, though solvent. been discontinued. The capital of the Union Bank is 50 lacs of rupees, consisting of 1,000 shares of 5,000 each, held by all classes of the community. Its notes circulate only in Calcutta and its immediate neighbourhood no private notes being received at the collectors' treasuries in the provinces. The main object of this esta- blishment was to fill up the space in the money market, occasioned by the restrictions imposed on the Bank of Bengal by its charter; but it has not yet been able to effect its intentions to their full extent, from its notes not being generally circulated and it is possible that the proposed alterations in the Bengal Bank may, in some measure, limit its operations. There is no doubt, however, but that it will be a favourite establishment; and should it obtain a charter, it will probably get most of the banking business of Calcutta; its rules being well adapted for facilitating commercial transactions, and sus- taining commercial credit and confidence. The rates of discount vary, from time to time, with the state of the money market. The last rates quoted were, at the Union Bank, 6 per cent. per annum on notes at 3 months, 5 ditto, at 2 ditto; 4 VOL. I.-Z 34 Digitized by Google 266 CALCUTTA. ditto, at 1 ditto: the Bank of Bengal, discount on private bills at 3 months, 6 per cent. per annum $ ditto government bills*, ditto, 4 ditto; interest on loans, on deposit, ditto, 5 ditto. Indian Funds.-The public debt contracted by the Indian government, on the security of the terri- tory, is under the management of the treasury department at Calcutta. This debt is of two descrip- tions; that bearing no interest, and that which bears interest. The last is again divided into three parts; viz. monies deposited by public bodies for specific purposes; treasury notes, of the same cha- racter as our Exchequer bills; and the actual funded or registered debt. The latter, on the 30th of April, 1830, was as follows; for Bengal. Statement of the Amount standing on the general Registers of the Presidency of Bengal, in the Name of Europeans and Natives. Debt. Europeans. Natives. Total. Sicca rupees. Sicca rupees. Sicca rupees. 6 per cent. loan of 1822 - - - 703,43,500 43,68,700 747,12,200 5 - - 1823 - - - 709,87,800 206,39,700 916,27,500 5 - - 1825-26 - - - 532,74,800 408,79,500 941,54,300 5 - - 1829-30 - - - 19,51,700 7,01,300 26,53,000 4 - - 1824-25 - - - 3,13,000 5,86,200 8,99,200 4 - - 1828-29 - - - 6,63,600 5,84,100 12,47,700 Sicca rupees 1,975,34,400 677,59,500 2,652,93,900 The 6 per cent. loan of 1822 is irredeemable until the expiration of the Company's present charter, and then 15 months' notice to be given previously to discharge: the interest on this loan is payable either half-yearly in India, or, if the proprietor be resident in Europe, he has the option, as a matter of right, of demanding a bill upon the court of directors for the interest, payable at 12 months' date, at 2s. Id. the sicca rupee. The 5 per cent. loan of 1823 was not payable, in any part, until after the 31st of March, 1825, and then only 11 crore in any one year, after 60 days' notice; the interest is pay- able upon the same termsas that on the 6 per cent. loan, with this important difference, that the pri- vilege which the residents in Europe possess of receiving interest in England belongs as of right to the holders of the 6 per cent. loan, and is only enjoyed by the holders of this loan during the pleasure of the home authorities. Of the 5 per cent. loan of 1825, no part was dischargeable till after the 30th of April, 1832, and then previous notice of 3 months to be given; the interest upon this loan is payable to all the holders, whether resident in Europe or not, either in cash in India, or by bills upon England, at 2s. the rupee. In this case, also, the option of remittance to England may be withdrawn by the home authorities at pleasure. Of the two4 per cent. loans, no part of the first was dischargeable till after the 30th of April, 1830, nor of the second till the 30th of April, 1832; and, in both cases, previous notice of 3 months to be given. From the favourable conditions of the 6 per cent. loan, it has, of late years, borne a premium of from 30 to 40 per cent. The 5 per cent. loans have generally borne a pre- mium of about 5 per cent.; and even the 4 per cent. securities have been at little more than a nominal discount. We have been thus particular in describing the nature of the Indian national funds, because in a country where Europeans have been hitherto precluded from holding property in land beyond the narrow boundaries of the principal cities, and where the principal holders reside in Europe, they have been justly considered as a very desirable security. Pilotage-The navigation of the river Hooghly from the Sand which extends from April to October inclusive; 12 branch pilots, 24 Heads to Calcutta, a distance of about 130 miles, is naturally dan- masters, 24 first mates, 24 second mates, and between 70 and SO TO- gerous and intricate; but rendered comparatively safe by a skilful lunteers. Each branch pilot has a salary of 701. a month each and excellent, though very costly, pilot establishment. This consists master 27L first mates 152.; and second mates and volunteers & of twelve vessels, being brigs of between 150 and 200 tons burthen, each. The following table exhibits the rates of pilotage: capable of maintaining their stations in the most boisterous season, Table of Rates of full and broken Pilotage, chargeable to Ships and Vessels inward and outward of the River Hooghly. Additional Draught of Full Pilotage Water. inward. Pilotage Inward Proportion. Outward Proportion. outward. Feet. L. L. From Sea. From Calcutta. 9 to 10 10 To Saugor 4 12ths To Moyapore or Fulta 2 12ths 10 11 12 1 To Kedgeree 6 12ths To Fulta harbour 3 12:bs 11 12 14 To Culpee 8 12ths To Culpee 4 12ths 12 13 16 To Culpee harbour 9 12ths To Kedgeree 6 12ths 13 14 18 To Fulta, or Moyapore 10 12ths To Saugor 8 12ths 14 15 21 2 To Calcutta, full pilotage To Sea, full pilotage. 15 16 25 16 17 30 17 18 35 4 18 19 40 19 20 45 20 21 50 21 22 55 6 22 23 60 Note-All foreign vessels pay the same pilotage as those under Detention money, at the rate of 4s. per diem, from British and British colours. By broken pilotage is meant the proportion of full foreign vessels, is charged by persons of the pilot service kept on pilotage between the different stages or places of anchorage. All board ships at anchor by desire of the commander or owner. ships, the property of foreigners, as well Asiatic as European, are In the river before Calcutta, and in other parts, there are chain subject to the charge termed lead money ;" it being indispensibly moorings, of which the charges are as follow: necessary that the pilot should have with him a leadsman in whom he can confide. Burthen of Ships. April to October, 7 months. November to March, 6 mouths. L. 8. d. L. a. d. 1 500 tons and upwards Per diem 0 16 0 Per diem 0 12 0 Under 500 tons Ditto 0 14 0 Ditto . 0 10 0 Hire of the chain moorings at Diamond Harbour, IL per diem. blished rate per diem for every day exceeding 10. The charge for The lowest charge to a ship requiring the accommodation of the transporting a ship from her moorings into any of the docks at Kid- chain moorings at either of the places above mentioned, is for 10 derpore, Howrah. or Sulkea, or from any of the docks to her most- days; and using them longer, a further charge is made at the esta- ings, is fixed at 50 rupees; and no higher charge for such service is This partiality to the government bills is objected to. The Union Bank makes no distinction. Digitized by Google CALCUTTA. 267 authorised. Besides pilotage, every ship is chargeable with the hire is with the first only. The export and import duties and drawbacks of a row-boat to accompany her via. for a boat of the first class, 24a; are regulated by an ordinance of the year 1825, and are the same for of the second class, 18a; and of the third class, 14a. Of late years a every port under the government of Bengal ; or, as it is technically light-house bas been erected at Kodgeree, for which the charge on called, the Presidency of Fort William. The tariff is regulated by British or American fings is at the rate of 3d. per ton per annum. three schedules, stating respectively the rates of duty chargeable on Ships proceeding to Calcutta must land their suppowder at the pow- goods imported by sea, the drawbacks allowed on re-exports, and the der magazine at Moyapore the charge is at the rate of I 1-2d. per rates of duty chargeable and drawbacks allowed on exported articles tom for each voyage. The whole pilot establishment and the care of being the produce and manufacture of the country. The duty on the navigation of the Hooghly is under the management of govern- goods and merchandise imported by sea is imposed ad valorem, or ment, and is directed by a mariae board, with a master attendant according to their market value at the time of importation, except and harbour master. when otherwise specially provided. The value of all such goods There are several dry docks at Calcutta, in which vessels of any and merchandise must be stated OR the face of the application to size may be built or repaired. Ships built at Calcutta, are of infe- clear the same from the Custom-house presented by the importer, nor durability to those constructed at Bombay, in consequence of the consignee, or proprietor of such goods, or his known agent or factor, framework being always of the inferior woods of the country and be must subjoin to such application a declaration of the truth of the planks, sheathing, upper works, and decks, alone, of teak; which the same, according to a prescribed form. last is furnished almost entirely from Pegu. The following table contains the import duties on goods produced In 1824, the number of registered ships belonging to the port of or manufactured in the United Kingdom, foreign Europe, or the Calcutta was 120, of the burthen of 44,366 tons being at an average United States. No duty is charged on any article the produce or of about 370 tons for each. The largest class of vessels carry nearly manufacture of the country, if exported in a British vessel, and very 800 tons but ships drawing so much water are unfit for the naviga- rarely when exported in a foreign vessel. The inland duties vary tion of the Hooghly. Not being able to load at Calcutta, they are from 10 to 2 12 per cant., a drawback of two thirds of which is usu- obliged to receive part of their cargo at Diamond Harbour, about 34 ally allowed when the articles on which they are charged are ex- miles farther down the river. The most convenient sized ship for ported in British vessels, and of one third when they are exported in trade between Calcutta, and Europe, and America, is from 300 to foreign veasels. The drawbacks allowed on re-exports of foreign ar- 400 tons. ticles imported in British vessels vary from half to two thirds and Duties, &c.-At Calcutta there are two distinct Custom-bouses three fourths of the import duty; on re-exports in a foreign vessel, the one for the sea, and the other for the inland duties. Our business they are commonly from half to two thirds and seven eighths. Rates of Duty chargeable on Goods, the Produce or Manufacture of the United Kingdom, Foreign Europe, and the United States, imported by Sea into Calcutta, or any Port or Place belonging to the Presidency of Fort William. Enumeration of Goods. Imported on a Imported on a Foreign Bottom. Enumeration of Goods. Imported on a Imported on a British Bottom. British Bottom. Foreign Bottom. 23. Canvas, excepting can-) let. Goods, the Produce or Manufacture of the United Kingdom. vas made of sunn or 1. Bullion and coin Free Free. hemp, or other mate- 2 Horses Free Free. rial, the growth or ma- 3. Marine stores Free 2 1-4 per cent. nufacture of places sub- 4. Metals, wrought and ject to the government 5 ditto 10 ditto. Free 2 1-2 ditto. anwrought of the East India Com- 84 rs. a seer of 48 TE. a seer of pany, which is ex. 5. Opium 80 SL. wt. 80 sa. wt. empted from charge 6. Precious stones and pearls Free Free. of duty on importation 3 rs. a md. of 6 re. a maund of by sea 7. Salt 82 m. wt. 82 m. wt. per 24 Cardamums 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. per seer seer. 25. Carriages and convey. 7 1-8 ditto 8. Spirituous liquors 10 per cent. 20 per cent. ances 16 ditto. 4 asses a md. 8 annas a md. of 26. Cassia 10 ditto 90 ditto. 9. Tobacco of 80 $3. wt. 80 m. wt. per 27. Chanks 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. per seer scer. 28. Cherayta 10 ditto 20 ditto. 10. Wines 10 per coat. 20 per cent. 29. China goods, or goods IL Weellens Free 2 1-2 dista. from China, not other- All articles not included wise enumorated in 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. in the above eleven 2 1-2 per cent. 5 ditto. this table items 30. Cloves 10 ditto 20 ditta 31. Cochineal, or crimdanah 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. Sd. Goods the Produce of Foreign Europe, or of the United States 32. Coffee 71-2 ditto 15 ditto. of America. 33. Coir, the produce of L Arrack at a fixed value. places not subject to the government of the 5 ditto 10 ditto. tion of 30L per cask 10 per cent. 20 per cent. East India Company of 196 gallons in India 2. Ballion and coin Free Free. 34. Coin and bullion Free Free. 3. Horses Free Free. 35. Columbo root 24 rs. a seer of 48 rs. a seer of 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 4. Opium 36. Cooscom fool, or saf- 80 m. wt. 80 sa. wt. flower 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 5. Precious stones and pearls Free Free. 37. Copal, or kahroba 10 ditto 20 ditto. 3 rs. a md. of 6 rs. a maund of 82 sa. wt. 38. Copper, wrought and 6. Salt 82 sa. wt. per 10 ditto 90 ditto. unwrought per seer seer. 39. Coral 10 ditto 20 ditto. 7. Spirits 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 40. Cordage, excepting 4 annas a md. 8 annas a md. of cordage made of supn, a. Tobacco of 80 83. wt. 80 sa. wt. per hemp, or other mate- per seer seer. rial, the produce of 9. Wines 10 per cent. 20 per cent. All articles not included places subject to the 5 ditto 10 ditto. 5 ditto. in the above nine items 10 ditto. government of the East India Company, which 2d. Goods, the Produce or Manufacture of Places other than the shall be exempt from United Kingdom, Foreign Europe, or the United States of the charge of duty on America. importation by sea 41. Crimdanah, or cochineal 71-2 ditto 15 ditto. 1. Allspice 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 42. Dhye flower 7 1.2 ditto 15 ditto. 2 Aloe wood 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 43. Elephants' teeth 7 1-8 ditto 16 ditto. 3. Altah 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 44. Embroidered goods and 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 4. Alom 10 ditto 20 ditto. brocades 5. Ambergris 7 1.2 ditto 15 ditto. 45. Frankincense, or gun- 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 6. Arrack, Batavia 55 m. rs. per 110 sa. rs. per diberosa leager leager. 46. Galbanum 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 7. Arrack. from foreign 30 sa. rs. per 60 sa. ra. per 47. Galingall 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. teritories in Asia leager leager. 48. Ghee (custome) 5 ditto 10 ditto. 5. Areenic, white, red, or Ditto (town duty) 10 ditto 20 ditto. yellow to per cent. 20 per cent. 49. Gin, from foreign terri- 9. Asaketida 10 ditto 30 ditto 60 ditto. 20 ditto. ritories in Asia 10. Awl root, or morinda 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 50. Goopee muttee, or yel. 11. Beads, malas, or romries 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. low ochre 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 12. Betel out (customs) 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 51. Goomootoo, suns, and 5 ditto 10 ditto. Free Free. Ditto (lown duty) hemp 13. Benjamin, or loban 7 14 ditto 15 ditto. 62. Gum Arabic 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 14. Brandy, from foreign 30 ditto 60 ditto. 58. Gundibernza, or frank territories in Asia 15. Bram, wrought and un- inn 90 ditto. - 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. incense 10 ditto 54. Hemp, sunn, or goo- Free Free. wrought mootoo 16. Brimetone 10 ditto 20 ditto. 55. Hurrah, or myrobalan 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 17. Brocades, and embroi- dered goods } 7 1-2 ditto 16 ditto. 56. Horses Free Free. 67. Hurshinghar flower 7 1-2 per cent. 15 per cent. 13. Bubera, or myrobalan 10 ditto 20 ditto. 58. Hurtaul, or orpiment, 19. Bockum, or sapan wood 7 1-8 ditto 15 ditto. or yellow arsenic 20. Bullion and coin Free Free. 59. Iron, wrought or - inn 10 ditto 20 ditto. 10 ditto 90 ditto. 21. Calizorah, or Nigellah 7 1-8 per cont. 16 per cent. wrought 22. Camphire 10 date 90 ditto. 60. Ivory I-8 ditto 15 ditto, Digitized by Google 268 CALCUTTA. Rates of duties-continued. Enumeration of Goods. Imported on a Imported on a Enumeration of Goods. Imported on a Imported on a British Bottom. Foreign Bottom. British Bottom. Foreign Bottom. 61. Juttamunsee, or spike- 10 ditto nard 20 ditto. 97. Rum, from foreign ter- } 30 ditto ritories in Asia 60 ditto. 62. Kullinium 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 93. Saffron 10 ditto 20 ditto. 63. Lead, pig, sheet, milled, 10 ditto 20 ditto. 99. Safflower, or coonoom 7 1-2 ditto and small shot fool 15 ditto. 64. Loadh 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 100. Sago 7 1.2 ditto 15 ditto. 65. Loban, or benjamin 7 1-2 ditto 16 ditto. 3 rs. per md. 6 PL per md. of 66. Mace 10 ditto 20 ditto. 101. Salt, foreign of 82 sa. wt. 82 sa. wt. per 67. Madder, or munjeet 7 1-8 ditto 15 ditto. per seer seer. 68. Mahogany, and all other 102. Sandal wood, red, sorts of wood used in 7 1-8 ditto 15 ditto, white, or yellow 7 1-2 per cent. 15 per cent. cabinet-work 103. Sapan, or buckum wood 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditta. 69. Mastick 10 ditto 20 ditto. 104. Senna 10 ditto 20 ditto. 70. Minium, or red lead 10 ditto 20 ditto. 105. Soonamookey leaf 10 ditto 20 ditto. 71. Morinda, or awl root 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 106. Spikenard, or jutta. 10 ditto 20 ditto. 72. Munjeet, or madder 7 1-2 ditto 16 ditto. munsee 73. Musk 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 107. Spirituous liquors, not 74. Myrobalans, viz buhe- otherwise described 10 ditto 20 ditto. 10 ditto ra, hurrah, and ownls 20 ditta. in this table 75. Myrrh 10 ditto 20 ditto. 109. Steel, wrought or un- 10 ditto 20 ditta. 76. Nutmers 10 ditto 20 ditto. wrought 77. Oils, vegetable or ani- 109. Storax 10 ditto 20 ditto. 7 1-2 ditto mal (customs) 15 ditto. 110. Stones (precious) and Free Free. Ditto, ditto (town duty) 5 ditto 10 ditto. pearls 78. Oil seeds (customs) 7 18 ditto 15 ditto. 111. Sugar, wet or dry, in- Ditto (town duty) 5 ditto 10 ditto. cluding jaggery and 5 per cent. 10 per cent. 79. Oils, perfumed or molasses (customs) sential. or otter and 7 I-2 ditto 15 ditto. Ditto, ditto (town duty) 5 ditto 10 ditto. fooleyl teyl 112. Sulphur, or brimstone 10 ditto 20 ditto. 24 rs. per seer 48 n. per seer 113. Sunn, hemp, and goo- Free Free. 80. Opium, foreign of 80 Cal. of 80 Cal. mootoo sa. wt. sa. wt. 114. Tape 71-2 per cent. 15 per cent. 81. Orpiment, or yellow 10 per cent. 20 per cent. 115. Taizepaut, or mala 10 ditto 20 ditto. arsenic, or hurtaul bathrum leaf 82. Otter, or emential oils 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 116. Tea 10 ditto 20 ditto. 83. Ownla, or myrobalan 10 ditto 20 ditto. 117. Teak timber Free Free. 84. Pepper, black and white 10 ditto 20 ditto. 118. Thread 7 1-2 per cent. 15 per cest. 85. Piece goods, cotton, 119. Tin and tin ware 10 ditto 20 ditta silk, and partly cot- 4 as. per md of 8 26. per md. of ton and partly silk, 180. Tobacco (customs) 80 Wt. per 80 sa. WL per the manufacture of 2 1-2 ditto 5 ditto. seer seer. the Honourable Com- Ditto (town duty) 10 per cent. 20 per cent. pany's territories in 121. Toond flower 7 1-2 per cent. 15 per cent. India 122. Tugger wood 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 86. Ditto, ditto, ditta. when 123. Turmeric (customs) 5 ditto 10 ditto. not the manufacture Ditto (town duty) 5 ditto 10 ditto. of the Honourable 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 124. Tutenague 10 ditto 20 ditto. Company's territories 125. Ugger, or aloe wood 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. in India 126. Vermilion 10 ditto 20 ditta. 87. Piments, or allspice 10 ditto 20 ditto. 127. Verdigris 10 ditto 20 ditto. 88. Pipe staves 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 128. Wax and wax candles 10 ditto 20 ditto. 89. Precious stones and Free Free. 129. Wines and spirits, not pearls otherwise provided 10 ditto 20 ditto. 90. Prussian blue 10 per cent. 20 per cent. for 91. Putcha paut 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 130. Wood of all sorts used 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 92. Quicksilver 10 ditto 20 ditto. in cabinet-work 93. Rattans 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. 131. Yellow ochre, or goo- 10 ditto 20 ditto. 94. Red sandal wood 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditta. pee mutee 95. Red lead, or minium 10 ditto 20 ditto. 132. Articles and anumer- 5 ditto 10 ditto. 96. Rose-water 7 1-2 ditto 15 ditto. ated above Trade of Calcutta-Exports-During the last 20 years the trade of Calcutta has experienced some very striking vicissitudes. Previously to the opening of the trade in 1814-15, cotton piece goods formed the principal article of export from India: the value of those exported from Calcutta, at an average of the 5 years from 1814-15 to 1818-19, being (at 2s. per sicca rupee) 1,260,7361. a year. The extreme cheapness of labour in India, and the excellence to which the natives had long attained in several departments of the manufacture, would, it might have been supposed, have sufficed to place this important department beyond the reach of foreign competition. But the wonderful genius of our mechanists, the admirable skill of our workmen, and our immense capital, have far more than coun- tervailed the apparently insuperable drawback of high wages, and the expense of bringing the raw material of the manufacture from America, and even India itself; and have enabled our manufac- turers to bear down all opposition, and to triumph over the cheaper labour, contiguous material, and traditional art of the Hindoos. The imports of British cottons and twist into India have increased since 1814-15, with a rapidity unexampled in the annals of commerce; and the native manufacture has sustained a shock from which it is not very likely it will ever recover.-(See EAST INDIES.) The influence of these circumstances on the trade in piece goods has been very striking. During the year 1833-34, the value of those exported from Bengal was no more than 77,1751., being only about one sixteenth or one seventeenth part of what it amounted to 16 or 18 years previously! An extraordinary change has also taken place in the trade in bullion at Calcutta. At no distant pe- riod it was one of the principal articles of export from Europe to India; and in 1818-19, there were imported into Calcutta from England only 1,216,1151. of gold and silver! But the current began soon after to change; and now sets 80 strongly in the opposite direction, that in 1832-33 the exports of the precious metals from Calcutta for England amounted to 516,4191. The export of bullion from England to India at the former period, though influenced by other causes. was mainly occasioned by the difficulty under which we were then placed, of providing articles of merchandise suitable for the Indian markets, sufficient to balance our imports. The astonishing in- crease of our exports of cotton goods, besides completely obvlating this difficulty, has actually, as we have just seen, produced an importation of large quantities of bullion from India. But it should be observed, that India derives most part of the bullion sent to Europe from China and Singapore, in payment of opium and other articles, 80 that the drain upon her is by no means 80 heavy as has been represented ; and it may well be doubted, notwithstanding the numerous allegations to the contrary, bether it has had any injurious influence. Undoubtedly, however, it were much to be wished that the returns made by India to Europe in articles of native produce and manufacture, should be materi- ally increased. The taste for British produce is already widely diffused over most parts of Hindostan; and it will, no doubt, continue to gain ground according as the natives become better acquainted with Digitized by Google CALCUTTA. 269 our language, arts, and habits. The difficulty of procuring return cargoes is now, in fact, almost the only obstacle to the rapid and indefinite extension of the trade with India. And it may be reasonably presumed, that this difficulty will progressively diminish, by the adoption of a course of policy and of measures calculated to develope the vast resources and dormant energies of the country. The repeal of the injudicious restrictions that formerly hindered Europeans from acquiring land, and from apply- ing their capital and skill to most sorts of industry, carried on in the interior, with the exception of the culture of indigo, will doubtless be of considerable advantage. But the exorbitant amount of the land revenue, and the restrictions and duties imposed on the transit trade and internal commerce of the country, are unquestionably the principal causes of the depressed state of agriculture, as well as of the poverty of the inhabitants, and their inability to furnish equivalents for foreign products. The former should, if possible, be materially reduced and it is not easy tosee why the latter should not be wholly abolished. The soil and climate of Bengal are both admirably suited for the production of grain, indigo, sugar, opium, silk, cotton, saltpetre, and a vast variety of other desirable articles: the inhabitants are not deficient in industry, nor in a desire to improve their condition; and there wants only the adoption of a sound and liberal system, to render the country prosperous and flourishing, and to lay the foundations of an immense commerce. At present the principal articles of export from Calcutta are, opium, indigo, rice, and other species of grain, silk and silk goods, sugar, saltpetre, cotton and cotton piece goods, lac-dye and shell lac, gunnies and gunny bags, &c. We subjoin a statement of the Quantity and Value (taking the Sicca Rupee at 2s.) of the principal Articles of native Produce, ex- ported from Calcutta during the Years 1832-33, and 1833-34. 1832-33. 1833-34. Articles. Quantity. Value. Quantity. Value. Opium - - - - chests 9,408 £ 1,177,559 12,006 £ 1,240,382 Indigo - - - - Fy. mds. 131,016 1,310,160 90,217 902,175 Rice - - - - - Bz. mds. 1,630,146 240,532 2,667,465 461,455 Raw silk - - - - - 12,4404 343,121 13,550} 376,919 Silk piece goods - - - pieces 450,973 240,061 479,578 247,951 Sugar - - - - Bz. mds. 229,347 182,400 290,363± 230,822 Saltpetre - - - - - 354,8534 190,813 490,554 254,801 Raw Cotton - - - - - 126,943 127,038 143,555 143,250 Cotton piece goods - - - pieces 478,189 82,289 477,571 77,174 Lac dye - - - - Bz. mds. 5,0821 10,956 9,590 22,416 Shell lac - - - - - 19,063} 35,114 26,056} 60,412 Stick lac - - - - - 1,272 1,249 104 199 Gunnies and gunny bags - - No. 3,528,628 24,577 2,615,975 19,567 Skins and hides - - - - 1,013,348 57,238 1,251,577 66,004 Safflower - - - - Bz. mds. 6,9731 17,339 7,6304 18,763 Ginger - - - - - 21,488 7,053 39,877 13,524 It appears from the following table that the total value of the merchandise exported from Calcutta by private traders in 1833-34 was 4,045,7201, and of treasure, 242,5731. The value of the Company's exports of merchandise during the same year was 552,2521. ; but their exports of treasure have not been stated. In these statements indigo and raw silk are valued at the Custom-house rates, which are considerably below their real value. Altogether, the exports from Calcutta in 1833-34 cannot have been much under 5,500,0001. Destination of Exports.-From 40 to 50 per cent. of the exports from Calcutta are for the United Kingdom, from 20 to 25 for China, 6 or 7 for Singapore and Penang, 7 for France, 41 for North and South America, the residue being for the coasts of Malabar and Coromandel, Pegu, the Arabian and Persian Gulfs, the Mauritius, &c. We subjoin a Statement exhibiting the Value of the Merchandise, and the Value of the Treasure, exported from Calcutta on private Account, in 1832-33 and 1833-34, specifying the Shipments for each Country. 1832-34. 1833-34. Countries. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sieca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Great Britain - - 1,27,15,094 51,64,189 1,78,79,283 1,18,88,475 19,68,257 1,38,56,732 France - - - 29,97,422 500 29,97,922 35,54,237 - 35,54,237 Sweden - - - - - - 90,064 - 90,064 Portugal - - 1,60,814 - 1,60,814 I - - - North America - - 20,16,903 5,500 20,22,403 28,46,361 - 28,46,361 Coast of Coromandel - 13,29,198 12,000 13,41,198 28,22,372 200 28,22,572 Ceylon - - - 29,645 - 29,645 38,588 30,000 68,588 Maldives and Laccadives 50,610 - 50,610 53,241 - 53,241 Coast of Malabar - - 17,84,330 - 17,84,330 22,92,998 - 22,92,998 Arabian and Persian Gulfs 9,77,629 - 9,77,629 9,68,577 I 9,68,577 Singapore - - - 24,22,202 33,100 24,55,302 20,99,168 2,025 21,01,193 Penang and Malacca - 5,13,151 - 5,13,151 2,39,237 3,36,237 China - - 97,63,511 32,000 97,95,511 1,09,08,120 37,427 1,09,45,547 New Holland - 10,684 - - 10,684 87,031 6,975 94,006 Sumatra and Java - 29,460 - 29,460 98,189 - 98,189 Pegu - - - 8,44,982 - 8,44,982 9,67,574 4,655 9,72,229 Mauritius - - - 7,51,121 6,49,7781 14,00,899 12,07,598 3,76,188 15,83,786 Bourbon - - - 1,13,331 - 1,13,331 2,17,371 - 2,17,371 Cape and St. Helena - 58,816 - 58,816 78,003 - 78,003 Total sicca rupees - - 3,65,68,903 58,97,0671 4,24,65,970$ 4,04,57,204 24,25,727 4,28,82,931 or at 2s. per sicca rupee £ 3,656,890 589,707 4,246,597 4,045,720 242,573 4,288,293 Sicca Rupees. Total amount, merchandise and treasure, exported in 1833-34 - 4,28,82,931 Total amount, merchandise and treasure, exported in 1832-33 - 4,24,65,9704 Difference in favour of 1833-34 - - - 4,16,9604 z 2 Digitized by Google 270 CALCUTTA. The Company's exports, in 1832-33, were, merchandise and treasure together, 1,00,14,430 sicea ru- pees, or 1,001,4431. Remarks on Exports.-The reader will elsewhere find (see articles CANTON and OPIUM) pretty ample information in relation to the trade in Opium. It is sufficient here to state, that it is rapidly growing in magnitude and importance. At an average of the 5 years ending with 1828-29, the exports from Calcutta were 6,369 chests, worth 944,0711. a year; but at an average of the 5 years end- ing with 1833-34, the exports had increased to 9,014 chests, worth 1,163,8091. a year, being an annual increase of 2,6451 chests, and of 219,7381. of value. China is not the principal merely, but almost the only market for opium; so that the trade between Calcutta and her, is now second only to that between the former and England. Some opium is shipped for Singapore, but China is its ultimate destination.-(Bell's Review for 1833-34, p. 45.) Previously to the close of the American war, the exports of indigo from Calcutta were compara- tively trifling. But about that period Europeans began to engage in the business and the culture of the plant has since been 80 much extended, and the preparation of the drug so much improved, that it has now become an article of primary commercial importance-(See INDIGO.) Next to Great Britain, France is the principal market for indigo. The crop of indigo in Bengal, which had, at an average of the 4 years ending with 1832-33, amount- ed to about 126,000 maunds a year, fell off in 1833-34 to 93,802 maunds. This great decline was occa- sioned partly by the unfavourableness of the season, but more by the diminished cultivation occasioned by the previous low prices, and the failure of some of the principal parties engaged in the trade- (See post.) But notwithstanding this decrease of the crop, and the great reduction in the imports into England in 1834 as compared with previous years, prices have not sustained any very material advance. The consumption of indigo in England has fallen off considerably since 1830, the effect, as is supposed, of the decreasing use of blue cloth. Subjoined is a statement of the Exports of Indigo from Calcutta during the Five Years ending with 1833-34, specifying the Countries for which it has been exported, and the Quantities sent to each. Hamburgh, Years. Great Britain. France. N. America. Sweden, and Arabian and Other Places. Total Portugal. Persian Gulfs. Fac. Mds. Fac. Mds. Fac. Mds. Fac. Mds. Fac. Mds. Fac. Mds. Fac. Mds. 1829-30 104,724 16,451 4,737 - 6,024 319 132,235 1830-31 85,741 23,151 5,899 244 10,939 583 126,556 1831-32 85,330} 15,219 10,488 - 7,110 9031 119,051} 1832-33 93,929 26,319 6,6254 235 2,9911 9151 131,016 1833-34 51,9061 30,212 5,4811 257 12,114 1,1454 90,217 Total 421,6314 111,352 33,2314 736 28,2781 3,8664 599,0951 Fac. Mds. Average total annual exports, 1829-30 to 1833-34 - - - 119,819 Average total annual exports, 1824-25 to 1828-29 - - - 115,846 of the various articles exported from Bengal, sugar is that of which a large increase may, perhaps, be most reasonably anticipated. The processes followed in its culture and production have hitherto been of the rudest description; but, now that Europeans may engage in the business, it is probable they will be materially improved. The excess of 5a. a cwt. of duty laid on East India sugar, imported for home consumption, over that which is laid on West India sugar, ought to be repealed. There neither is nor can be any good reason why similar products, from different dependencies of the em- pire, should not be allowed to come into our markets on the same footing. Should any considerable decline take place in the production of sugar in our West India colonies, the expediency of equalising the duties on sugars of the East and West Indies, would be as obvious as its justice. Cotton is another article of export which might, it is believed, be very greatly increased in quantity, and, probably also, improved in quality, by giving greater attention to its culture and preparation. Recently, however, the trade has been declining. The exports of cotton from Calcutta, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1833-34, did not exceed half the quantity exported during the 3 years end- ing with 1826-27. Bombay and Surat are, however, the great shipping ports for Indian cotton. The exports of rice from Bengal fluctuate very greatly. This is not caused so much by variations in the crops of the country, as by variations in those of other countries; for, when a scarcity occurs in most parts of continental Asia, or in any of its islands, recourse is almost invariably had to Bengal to supply the deficiency and the demands thence arising have been sometimes enormous. In 1831-32, for example, the exports of rice from Calcutta to the coast of Coromandel amounted to only 16,545 maunds, whereas in 1833-34, they amounted to 1,252,056 maunds.-(Bell's Comparative View of 1832-33, and 1833-34, p. 41.) It is worthy of remark, that while Bengal is shipping immense supplies of rice and other grain to distant parts, a largé part of her own population is frequently in a state of great want and suffering. Ireland is not, therefore, the only country in which the most abject po- verty and wretchedness on the part of the inhabitants, are found combined with great fertility of soil, and a large exportation of food. The exports of saltpetre from Calcutta have increased materially during the last dozen years, and were greater in 1833-34 than they have been for a lengthened period. It is doubtful, however, owing to the competition of nitrate of soda from South America, whether this increase will be maintained. France is now principally supplied from America.-(See SALTPETRE.) Besides the articles of native Indian produce exported from Calcutta, she re-exports pretty consi- derable quantities of various articles brought from other parts. The value of the British cotton goods re-exported, amounts to about 90,000L. a year. They are principally bartered with the Burmese for silver. The conveyance of the latter out of the Burmese dominions is strictly prohibited; but in Burma, as in England and elsewhere, the ingenuity of the smuggler is too much for the vigilance of the government, and the trade is carried on without much difficulty. Imports.-The great articles of import into Calcutta are, British cotton manufactures and cotton twist; bullion; copper with spelter, tin, lead, iron, and other metals; woollens; wines and spirits; ale and beer; haberdashery, millinery, &c.; coffee; hardware and cutlery pepper; coral, glass, and bottles; plate, jewellery, watches, &c. books and stationery ; tea, &c. Digitized by Google CALCUTTA. 271 Statement exhibiting the Quantity and Value of the Principal Articles (classed in Alphabetical Order) imported into Calcutta during the Years 1832-33, and 1833-34. 1832-33. 1833-34. Species of Merchandise. Quantity. Value. Quantity. Value. Betel nut - - - - Bz. mds. 29,931 £5,574 12,602 £ 5,504 Bottles, empty - - - dozens 77,825 9,454 109,785 10,833 Books and pamphlets - - - - 22,700 - 16,725 Buffalo horns - - - No. 990,001 6,766 1,166,905 7,090 Camphor - - - - Bz. mds. 7931 3,085 1,3931 6,428 Coffee - - - - - 13,530 22,047 17,9544 26,020 Coals - - - - - 64,642 2,942 140,717 44,100 Coral, real - - - - Sa. wt. 115,630 8,197 288,804 14,117 Glass - - - - Bz. mds. - 12,447 - 13,577 Guns and pistols - - - - - 6,132 - 4,318 Haberdashery, millinery & apparel - 31,569 - 34,565 Hardware and cutlery lbs. - - - 26,548 - 16,882 Lametta - - - - corge 44,669 13,881 56,976 15,356 Metals: Copper - - - - Bz. mds. 84,640 292,907 89,189 285,187 Spelter - - - - - 30,7104 13,095 24,941 9,631 Tin, block - - - - 12,5451 21,283 9,476 16,973 Tin plates - - - boxes 890 1,355 2,017 3,825 Lead - - - - Bz. mds. 28,1211 14,920 12,407 5,842 Lead shot - - - bags 6,554 1,636 3,296 991 Iron - - - - Bz. mds. 155,173 41,965 135,141 43,584 Steel - - - - - 9,049 6,841 12,757 6,987 Quicksilver - - - - 1,321 11,275 1,234± 10,088 Brass, ingot - - - - 419 1,075 1,182 2,512 Metal, sheathing - - - 338 499 - Ironmongery, machinery & anchors - 15,893 - 20,215 Oilman's stores and grocery Bz. mds. - 15,103 - - 19,071 Pepper, black - ⑉ - - 69,2731 56,451 31,219 28,389 Piece goods: White cotton - - - pieces 909,135 1,036,227 yards 35,809 273,233 4,630 339,699 dozens 2,049 492 pieces 346,297 174,320 Coloured cotton - - yards 8,742 153,237 8,831 89,150 dozens 163,325 36,953 Silk and mixed goods - - pieces 13,899 36,694 26,524 70,848 Plate, jewellery, and watches - - 20,800 - 12,948 Salt - - - - Bz. mds. 8,438 2,468 12,496 3,659 Spices, mace and nutmegs - - 8551 6,813 1,100 8,787 Segars and cheroots - - - - 2,823 - 5,329 Stationery and cards - - - - 12,283 - 14,626 Spirits - - - - 30,323 - - 30,536 Ale, beer, and porter - - butts 252 322 hogsheads 8,011 42,483 7,193 26,972 dozens 2,293 2,082 Twist and yarn - - - lbs. 2,993,715 238,781 3,036,621 251,649 Tea - - - - - - 19,831 - 18,850 Vermillion - - - chests 552 4,430 1,941 16,555 Wines - - - - Bz. mds. - 81,805 - 61,391 Wood - - - - - - 22,609 - 14,475 Woollens - - - - - - 80,370 - 115,173 The total amount of all sorts of merchandise imported into Calcutta by private traders in 1833-34 was 1,956,6271., exclusive of 586,3941. of treasure. The Company's imports, during the same year, amounted to 90,3251. Sources of Imports.-These differ in different years, but, speaking generally, Great Britain furnishes about 60 per cent. of the whole France, about 3 per cent.; North America, 21 ; China, from 12 to 15 ; Singapore, from 6 to 8; coast of Coromandel, from 3 to 4; Malabar, from 3 to 4; Pegu, from 3 to 4, &c. We subjoin a Statement exhibiting the Value of the Merchandise, and the Value of the Treasure, imported into Calcutta on private Account, in 1832-33 and 1833-34, specifying the Imports from each Country. 1832-33. 1833-34. Countries. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Sicca Rupees. Great Britain 1,40,26,707 - 1,40,26,707 1,39,91,801 2,900 1,39,94,701 France 7,90,283 - 7,96,283 10,04,133 3,825 10,07,958 Sweden - 57,625 - 57,625 South America . . 20,831 1,24,875 1,45,706 19,004 - 19,004 North America - 3,69,677 2,08,786 1- 5,78,463 3,03,807 3,40,424 6,44,231 Coast of Coromandel 6,58,328 1,88,862 3-4 8,47,190 3-4 7,18,013 1,81,905 1-2 8,99,918 Ceylon 6,975 - 6,975 25,991 - 25,991 Maldives and Laccadives 98,659 - 98,659 91,698 - 91,698 Coast of Malabar 7,92,430 3,000 7,95,430 7,23,750 - 7,23,750 Arabian and Persian Gulfs 3,28,050 16,400 3,44,450 4,39,462 23,900 4,63,362 Singapore 5,81,595 12,65,725 1-4 18,47,320 1-4 5.59.383 9,99,906 15.59.289 Penang and Malacea 2,65,906 1,62,175 4,28,081 2.28,337 1,51,173 3,79,510 China 9,34,228 22,12,431 31,46,659 10,18,170 37,58,524 1-2 47,76,694 1-2 New Holland - 5,347 - 5,347 20,892 20,892 Sumatra and Java 34,441 - 34,441 28,501 24,215 52,716 Pegu 2,56,471 4,89,444 7,45,915 2,06,399 2,86,298 1-2 4,92,687 1-2 Mauritius 34,522 24,864 59,386 30,967 90,870 1-2 1,21,837 1-2 Bourbon 73,775 - 73,775 95,100 - 95,100 Cape and St. Helena 6,974 - 6,974 3,247 - 3,247 Total sicca Rupees . - 1,92,91,199 46,96,563 1-4 2,39.87,762 1-4 1,95,66,270 58,63,942 2,54,30,212 at 2s. per sicca rupee L. 1,929,120 469,656 2,398,776 1,956,627 586,394 2,543,021 Digitized by Google 272 CALCUTTA. Sicca Rupees. Total amount, merchandise and treasure, imported in 1833-34 - 2,54,30,212 Total amount, merchandise and treasure, imported in 1832-33 - 2,39,87,7024 Difference in favour of 1833-34 - - - 14,42,4494 The Company's imports in 1833-34 were - - - - 8,00,221 Account of the Value (in Sicca Rupees) of the private Trade between Great Britain and Bengal, from the 1st of May 1813 to 30th of April 1834.-(Bell's Comparative View for 1832-33 and 1833-34, p. 55.) Imports into Calcutta. Exports from Calcutta. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Sicca Rupees. Sicce Rupces. Sicca Rupees. Sicce Rupees. Siece Rupees. Sicce Rupees. 1813-14 53,76,775 32,750 54,09,525 1,19,63,405 - 1,19,63,405 1814-15 40,99,165 5,25,127 46,24,292 1,21,42,283 - 1,21,42,283 1815-16 57,52,886 11,42,596 68,95,482 1,64,44,208 - 1,64,14,208 1816-17 80,51,112 18,59,853 90,10,965 1,38,06,966 - 1,38,06,966 1817-18 1,35,62,962 61,57,981 1,97,20,943 1,69,12,905 - 1,69,12,905 1818-19 1,59,44,490 1,21,61,159 2,81,05,654 1,38,72,325 - 1,38,72,325 1819-20 66,80,873 63,07,519 1,29,88,392 1,25,64,391 - 1,25,64,391 1820-21 87,19,664 14,89,017 1,02,08,681 2,07,98,860 4,106 2,08,02,966 1821-22 1,25,68,218 1,64,758 1,42,15,676 94,10,405 13,500 94,23,903 1822-23 1,67,98,082 1,70,758 1,69,68,840 1,27,10,960 5,460 1,27,16,420 1823-24 1,37,67,035 5,24,032 1,42,91,067 1,35,64,851 2,23,767 1,37,88,618 1824-25 1,61,84,454 13,250 1,61,97,704 1,39,30,093 2,69,466 1,41,99,559 1825-26 1,24,93,958 1,26,978 1,26,50,936 1,71,31,915 48 1,71,31,963 1826-27 1,26,26,147 20,180 1,26,46,327 99,61,591 3,78,032 1,03,39,623 1827-28 1,86,43,444 73,620 1,87,17,064 1,28,83,130 7,06,979 1,35,90,109 1828-29 2,20,29,791 1,687 2,20,31,478 1,16,40,299 12,41,443 1,28,81,742 1829-30 1,61,25,841 - 1,61,25,841 1,08,40,687 12,20,257 1,20,60,944 1830-31 2,00,73,354 1,000 2,00,74,354 1,18,40,971 30,16,384 1,48,57,355 1831-32 1,73,72,762 - 1,73,72,762 1,18,10,761 37,06,397 1,55,17,158 1832-33 1,40,26,707 - 1,40,26,707 1,27,15,094 51,64,189 1,78,79,283 1833-34 1,39,91,801 2,900 1,39,94,701 1,18,88,475 19,68,257 1,38,56,732 Account of Ships and Tonnage, arrived at and departed from Calcutta, during the Years 1832-33, and 1833-34. (Fractions omitted in this Table, but allowed for in the summing up.) Arrivals. Departures. 1832-33. 1833-34. 1832-33. 1833-34. British Imports. British Exports. Sh. Tons. Sh. Tons. Sh. Tons. Sh. Tons. Honourable Company's regular Hon. Company's regular ships 7 9,391 S 9,918 ships 7 9,383 8 10,587 Hon. Company's chartered ships 8 4,082 6 3,418 Honourable Company's charter- Ships cleared for England, via ed ships 7 3,543 9 5,106 Madras, &c. 68 29,716 S7 37,268 Ships from the U. Kingdom 77 33,379 95 38,297 Ships cleared for Africa (Cape) 2 591 - from Asiatic ports 137 39 264 158 46,050 for Asiatic ports 111 33,560 166 52,096 Dhonies 54 4,445 172 21,042 Dhonies 27 2,805 58 5,235 Vessels laden with coast salt 153 15,339 319 35,793 Ships laden with grain 169 22,386 357 46,072 in ballast 4 1,389 11 3,486 Arab and Turkish 8 3,250 10 4,444 Arab and Turkish 9 3,825 10 4,445 in ballast 48 4,569 102 9,672 Burmese - - 2 490 Burmese - - 1 400 Total 448 110,571 784 165,299 Total 448 110,550 795 168,523 Foreign Imports. Foreign Exports. Ships from foreign Europe 15 4,942 23 7,708 Ships cleared for foreign Eu- from North America 15 4,484 22 7,353 rope 15 5,399 17 5,852 from Asiatic ports 8 2,894 9 3,131 Ships cleared for North America 17 5,103 18 5,932 in ballast - - 3 992 for Asiatic ports 12 3,905 16 4,983 Total 38 12,321 57 19,185 Total 44 14,407 51 16,767 Grand Total 486 122,892 841 184,485 Grand total 492 124,957 846 185.230 Duties.-Account of the Gross Amount of Duties collected on Mer- Duties.-Account of the Gross Amount of Duties collected on Mer- chandise imported at Calcutta by sea. chandise exported from Calcutta by Sea. 1832-33. 1833-34. 1832-33. 1833-34. L. L L. L. Under British colours (including town duty) 57,150 54,267 Under British colours - 3,918 4,203 Foreign colours (ditto) 14,786 13,037 Foreign colours 1,308 2,176 Total L. 71,936 67,304 Total L. 5,226 6,384 Number and Tonnage of Vessels cleared out at Calcutta for Great Britain, Foreign Europe, and the United States, during the Ten Years ending with 1832-33. Years.' Great Britain. Foreign Europe. United States. Venels. Tonnage. Vessels. Tonnage Venela. Tonnage. 1822-23 59 34,832 21 9,277 11 3,378 1823-24 66 34,122 3 1,165 3 911 1824-25 49 26,843 10 3,897 10 3,449 1825-26 65 35,446 12 4,296 17 5,021 1826-27 86 41,124 13 4,941 6 1,823 1827-28 72 35,201 18 5,855 13 3,969 1828-29 80 37,802 29 8,906 13 4,297 1829-30 64 32,816 15 5,475 13 4,068 1830-31 79 36,351 17 5,220 15 4,716 1831-32 74 34,931 7 2,648 25 7,414 1832-33 79 35,240 15 5,399 17 5,013 Digitized by Google CALCUTTA. 273 Failures at Calcutta.-Within the 3 years ending with 1833, some of the principal mercantile esta- blishments in this city failed for immense sums. To examine minutely into the origin of these disasters would lead us into inquiries foreign to the object of this work, and with respect to which it is diffi- cult to acquire accurate information. We believe, however, that the main source of the evil was the combination, by most of the principal houses, of the business of merchants with that of bankers. Their credit being high, at the end of the war large sums were deposited in their hands, for which they engaged to pay a high rate of interest. But instead of employing these deposits, as bankers in England would have done, in the discount of bills at short dates, or in the purchase of government securities readily convertible into money, they employed them, probably because they could with diffi- culty dispose of them otherwise, in all manner of mercantile speculations,-advancing very large sums to the indigo planters, exporting goods to Europe, either directly on their own account, or indi- rectly by lending to those who did,-becoming owners of Indian shipping, &c. Most of those specu- lations turned out exceedingly ill. The production of indigo was 80 much increased, partly in conse- quence of the large capitals turned to the business, and partly of the high prices in England, that fine blue violet," which had brought, in the London market, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1827, from 12s. 10d. to 13s. 4d. per lb., fell, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1832, to from 5s. 8d. to 6s. 4d. per lb., and other sorts in proportion. At these prices the production would not pay and very heavy losses were sustained, and much capital sunk, by the planters and those who had supplied them with funds to extend their undertakings. The investments in Indian shipping turned out even worse than those in the indigo plantations, the shipping of England having nearly driven that of India out of the field. The embarrassment occasioned by thislocking up of their capital, and by the ruinous nature of the adventures in which they were embarked, began to manifest itself simultaneously with the scarcity of money occasioned by the drains on account of the Burmese war. The great mercan- tile houses began then to find that they were entangled in difficulties from which they have been wholly unable to extricate themselves. After struggling on, some for a longer and some for a shorter period, most of them have since failed, the greater number for very large sums. But, however distressing in the mean time, the embarrassment and want of confidence arising from the failures alluded to could not be of long continuance. In the end they will, no doubt, be productive of a better order of things. It is of the utmost consequence that the vicious combination of the busi- ness of a merchant with that of a banker should be put an end to It is singular, indeed, that indi- viduals should be found willing to intrust large sums in the hands of those who, they are aware, are employing them in the most hazardous adventures. The higher the interest promised by such persons, the greater ought to be the caution of the public in dealing with them. Some, perhaps most, branches of the import trade of Calcutta seem also to have been completely overdone. That of cotton twist is an instance. In 1829-30, the imports were 1,625,333 lbs.; in 1830- 31, they were 3,449,044 lbs.; and in 1831-32, 5,433,323 lbs. Such a supply was far beyond the wants of the country; and the returns were so very inadequate. that the imports were reduced in 1832-33 to 2,993,715 lbs. In 1833-34, the imports amounted to 3,036,621 lbs., and the trade is now comparatively steady. The imports of copper were also carried to an excess but the greatest excess was in the article spelter, which has for some time past been almost unsaleable at Calcutta. (See SPELTER.) For further details as to the points now touched upon, the reader is referred to the clear and able evidence of G. G. de H. Larpent, Esq. before the Committee of the House of Commons on Manufac- tures, Commerce, &c.) This article has been compiled from the following authorities :-Milburn's Oriental Commerce; A Review of the external Commerce of Bengul, by Horace Hayman Wilson, Esq., 1830; Bell's Compura- tive View of the external Commerce of Bengal, for the years 1832-33, and 1833-34; The Bengal Direct- ory; Thornton's East Indian Calculator; Parliamentary Papers relating to the Finances of India and the Trade of India and China, 1830-1833 and private communications. Internal Transit Duties.-A very great improvement has recently been effected in the domestic economy of our Indian empire, by the abolition of the duties on the transit of goods from one part of the country to another.* These duties have existed in India from a very remote period and, by obstructing the intercourse between its different districts, have been singularly pernicious. After the East India Company began to acquire a footing in India, they availed themselves of a favourable opportunity to procure an exemption from the transit-duties in favour of their own trade " the goods which they imported being allowed to pass into the interior, and those which they purchased for exportation in the interior being allowed to pass to the sea, without either stoppage or duties.' (Mill's India, 8vo ed. vol. iii. p. 289.) They were not, however, long permitted to monopolise this privilege. Im- mediately after the victories of Clive had raised the Company to the situation of a great territorial power, their servants engaged largely in the inland trade, and endeavoured, partly by fraud and partly by force, to extend to their own goods the exemption from transit duties established in favour of those belonging to the Company. Every reader of Indian history is aware of the multiplied abuses and disturbances that grew out of this attempt of the Company's servants to release themselves from duties and charges that pressed with grinding severity on the natives, and, by consequence, to engross (for such was their object) the whole internal trade of the country. The Company endeavoured to obviate the evil by strictly forbidding its servants from engaging in internal traffic. But its orders to this effect were long either totally disregarded, or but very imperfectly obeyed. At length, in 1788, Lord Cornwallis adopted the decisive and judicious measure of abolishing the duties. They were, however, again renewed in 1801. The exclusion of Englishmen from all participa- tion in the interior traffic of the country having been gradually carried into complete effect for a lengthened period, they were less alive than they would otherwise have been to the injurious influence of the duties, 80 that their re-establishment met with comparatively little * This important measure was preceded, and, we believe, principally brought about, by the publica- tion of an elaborate and very valuable report on the inland customs of Bengal, by Mr. Trevelyan, one of the Secretaries to Government. We avail ourselves of this opportunity to state, that the most ample details as to the foreign trade of Bengal are embodied in the Comparative Reviews thereof, pub- lished annually by Mr. Bell, of the customs' establishment at Calcutta. They contain a greater fund of information, combined with sound remarks, than are to be met with respecting the trade of any other emporium with which we are acquainted. 35 Digitized by Google 274 CALCUTTA. opposition. In 1810, a new tariff was introduced by which the duties " were frightfully augmented and they have continued from that epoch down to their recent abolition seriously to obstruct all sorts of internal traffic, and to oppose the most formidable obstacle to the improvement of the country. Had the inland transit duties been productive of a large amount of revenue, that would have been some set-off against the enormous evils of which they have been productive. But such has not been the case. The expense of collection, and the interruption of communi- cation, have been so very great, that the nett produce of the inland transit duties has been quite insignificant; so much so that, according to Mr. Trevelyan, it has not exceeded, in the extensive province of Bengal, the miserable pittance of 27,500/. a year. (Report, p. 153.) We have no reason to doubt the accuracy of this statement; and assuming it to be correct, we are warranted in affirming that there is not another instance to be found, in the history of taxation, of a tax so fruitful of mischievous results, and so barren of revenue. Town Duties.-These were charged on the principal articles of consumption in 23 of the chief towns of Bengal. They were in many respects similar to the octrois in France; and, though not nearly so injurious as the internal transit duties. were productive of much inconvenience. We are glad, how- ever, to have to state that they, as well as the transit duties, have recently been abolished; and that the internal trade of Bengal is now as free, in 80 far at least as statutory regulations can make it, as the internal trade of England. This emancipation will undoubtedly be productive of the most bene- ficial results. When," says Mr. Bell, "the transit duties shall have been abolished, an impulse will be given to every sinew of commerce, which will cause us only to wonder how such an execrable system should have been permitted to exist for a (Review of the Commerce of Bengal, 1833-34 and 1834-35.) New Customs Duties.-There are no good grounds for thinking that the revenue would have lost any thing by the abolition of the transit and town duties, even though no new taxes had been imposed in their stead. But some small additions have been made to the customs duties, or to the duties charged on the importation and exportation of certain articles. The present customs law, enacted in May 1836, and the duties charged under it, are subjoined :- ACT No. XIV. of 1836. SCHEDULE A.-continued. I. It is hereby enacted, that from the 1st June next, such parts of Regulations IX. and X. 1810, Regulations XV. 1925, and of any other regulations of the Rengal Presidency as prescribe the levy of transit When imported When imported or inland customs duties, or of town duties; and likewise the sche- Enumeration of Goods. on British on Foreign dules of duties and provisions of any kind contained in these or any Bottoms. Bottoms. other regulations for fixing the amount of duty to be levied upon goods imported into or exported from the said Presidency by sea, Woollens, the produce of any shall be repealed. other place or country 4 per ceat. 8 per cent. 11. And it is hereby enacted, that duties of customs shall be levied Cotton and silk piece goods, on goods imported by sea into Calcutta, or into any other place with- cotton twist and yarn, the in the provinces of Bengal and Orism, according to the specified produce of the United King- in Schedule A. annexed to this Act, with the exceptions specified dom, or of any British pos- therein, and the said schedule, with the notes attached thereto, shall session 3 1-2 per cent. 7 per cont. be taken to be a part of this Act. Do., the produce of any other III. And it is hereby further enacted, that duties of customs shall place 7 per cent. 14 per cent. be levied upon country goods exported by sea from any port of Ben- 24 rs. per seer 24 rs. per sear or Opium gal or Orissa, according to the rates specified in Schedule B. annexed of 80 tolas 80 tolas to this Act, with the exceptions therein specified, and the said sche- Rs. 3-4 per md. Rs. 3-4 per md. dule. with the notes attached thereto, shall also be taken to be a part Salt of 80 tolas per of 80 toles per of this Act. seer seer. N. B.-These duties are to be collected under the same regulations Alum 10 per cent. 20 per cent. as fortner duties: and baggage is to be passed by the collector of cus- Camphor 10 per cent. 20 per cent. toms as heretofore. Cassia 10 per cent. 20 per cent. The remainder of the Act relates to regulations respecting ships' Cloves 10 per cent. 20 per cent. manifests, ac. Coffee 7 1-2 per cent. 15 per cent. Coral 10 per cent. 20 per cent. SCHEDULE A. Nutmegs and mace 10 per cent. 20 per cept. Rates of Duty to be charged on Goods imported by Sea into any Port Pepper 10 per cent. 20 per cent. of the Presidency of Fort-William in Bengal. Rattans 7 1-2 per cent. 15 per cent. Tea 10 per cent. 20 per cent. When imported Vermilion When imported 10 per cent. 20 per cent. Enumeration of Goods. on British Wines and liquors 10 per cent. 20 per cent. on Foreign Bottoms. Bottoms. Spiri's, consolidated duty, in- cluding that levied hereto- Rullion and coin Free Free. fore through the police of Calcutta Ditto 9 as. p. Imp. gal. 16 as. p. Im. gil. Precious stones and pearls Ditto. Grain and pulse Ditto Ditto. And the duty on spirits shall be Horses and other living animals Ditto Ditto. rateably increased as the Lee Ditto Ditto. strength exceeds of London proof, and when imported Coal, coke, bricks, chalk, and stones Ditto Ditto. in bottles, five quart bottles shall 18 deemed equal to the Books printed in the United Imperial gallon. Kingdom, or in any British All articles not included in the possession Ditto 3 per cent. above enumeration 3 1-2 per cent. 7 per cent. Foreign books 3 per cent. 6 per cent. Marine stores, the produce or manufacture of the United And when the duty is declared to be ad valorem, it shall be levied Kingdom, or of any British on the market value without deduction and if the collector of - possession 3 per cent. 6 per cent. toms shall see reason to doubt whether the goods come from the Do. do., the produce or manu- country from which they are declared to come by the importer. it facture of any other place or shall be law ful for the collector of customs to call on the importer to country 6 per cent. 12 per cent. furnish evidence as to the place of manufacture or production. and Metals, wrought or unwrought, if such evidence shall not satisfy the said collector of the truth of I the produce or manufacture the declaration, the goods shall be charged with the highest rates and of of the United Kingdom, or duty. subject always to an appeal to the Board of Customs, salt any British possession 3 per cent. 6 per cent. opium excepted. Metals, do. do., excepting tin, And, upon the re-export by sea of goods imported, excepting the produce or manufacture opium and salt, provided the re-export be made within two years of any other place 6 per cent. 12 per cent. of the date of import as per custom-bouse register. and the goods Tin, the produce of any other be identified to the satisfaction of the collector of customs, there place than the United King- shall be retained one-mghth of the amount of duty levied, and be dom, or any British posses- the remainder shall be repaid as drawback. And if goods sion 10 per cent. 20 per cent. re-exported in the same ship without being landed, (always except- Woollems, the produce or ma- ing opium and salt, in regard to which the special rules in force nufacture of the United King- shall continue to apply,) there shall be no import duty levied dom, or any British posses- thereon. slon 8 per cest. 4 per cent. Digitized by Google CALCUTTA. 275 SCHEDULE B. SCHEDULE B.-continued. Rates of Duty to be charged upon Goods exported by Sea from any Port or Place in the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal. Exported on Exported on Enumeration of Goods. British Foreign Exported on Exported on Bottoms. Bottoms. Enumeration of Goods. British Foreign Bottoms. Bottoms. Lac dye and shell lac 4 per cent. 8 per cent. Silk raw, filature 3 1.2 as. p. seer of 7 as. per sear of Bullion and coin Free Free. 80 tolas 80 tolas. Precious stones and pearls Ditto Ditto. Silk, Bengal wound 3 as. p. seer of 80 6 as. per seer of Ditto. tolas 80 tolas. Books printed in India Ditto Tobacco Horses and living animals Ditto Ditto. 4 as. p. maund S as. p. maund, All country articles not enu. Opium purchased at govern- Ditto Ditto. merated or named above 3 per cent. 6 per cent. ment sales in Calcutta Cotton wool exported to Eu- 8 as. p. md. of And when the duty is declared to be ad valcrem, the same shall be rope, the United States of Ditto 80 tolasto the levied on the market value of the article at the place of export, America, or any British seer. without deduction. possessions in America As. 16 p. md. And in settling for the duties on exports by sel, credit shall be Do. do. exported to places As. 8. p. md. of of 80 tolas to given for payment of inland customs duty, and drawback shall be other than above 80 tolas seer the seer. allowed of any excess of duty paid upon production of ruwanas under the following conditions, until the lat April, 1837 Sugar and rum exported to the First, That the goods shall be identified, and destination to the port United Kingdom, or to any Free of export proved in the usual manner. British possession 3 per cent. Do. exported to any other place 3 per cent. Second, That the ruwanas shall bear date before the 1st April, 1836, 6 per cent. I anna per bag, 2 34. per bag not and the goods shall not have been protected thereby, or by the origi- not exceeding exceeding 2 nal thereof, more than two years. mds. of 80 tolas mds. of 80 to- And after the said 1st April, 1837, credit shall not be given, nor las to the seer, shall drawback be allowed of any inland customs or land frontier to the seer, or if Grain and pulse of all sorts exported other- or if exported duty, paid at any custom-house or chokee of the Jumia frontier line, wise than in otherwise than or of Benares, except only upon the article of cotton wool, covered by ruwanas taken out at the custom-houses of the western provinces, bags 1.8 an an- in bage, 1 anna and proved to have been destined for export by sea, when passed out na per maund. per maund. of those provinces. W. H. MACNAGHTEN, Rs. 3 p. md. of Rs. 6 p. md. of Secy. to the Govt. of India. Indigo 80 tolas to the 80 tolas to the seer. sear. Remarks on the above Duties.-The policy of charging duties on exported articles, and of making so great a distinction between the duties on articles imported and exported in British and in foreign ships, seems very questionable. The great difficulty under which India labours, in a commercial point of view, consists principally in her inability to furnish equivalents for foreign imported goods, and to make the necessary payments abroad and when such is the case, it is certainly not a little contradict- ory to lay duties on exports. The most obvious considerations of expediency and common sense would suggest that they should be allowed to be exported duty-free. There can be no doubt that the stimu- lus this would give to their production, would, by increasing the public wealth, infinitely more than compensate the government for the loss of the inconsiderable sum produced by the duties with which they are charged. The duties on most articles of importation do not appear to be at all excessive, provided they were equally distributed. But it seems quite inconsistent, seeing that we have admitted the reciprocity principle into the trade of Britain, that we should exclude it from that of India. The best informed parties concur in opinion, that the effect of the discriminating duties is to diminish trade, without promoting, in any material degree, the employment of British shipping, and to provoke retaliatory measures on the part of the foreigner. The sooner, consequently, that this distinction is abolished, the better will it be for all parties. Regulations of this sort are never productive of any real ad- vantage. Pilotage, &e-The Marine Board at Calcutta have recently issued When the vessel is finally laden. the commander is to give notice the following regulations, with respect to pilotage, atc. thereof to the Master Attendant, when the draft of water is to be as- 1. Commanders are requested, prior to quitting their vessels, on certained and certified by the commander or commanding officer on arrival off Calcutta, to fill up and certify, or cause to be filled up and the part of the vessel, and by the harbour-master on the part of go- certified, a form of certificate, showing the actual registered tonnage, verument; subject, in case of dispute, to the decision of the Master the draft of water, and whether the vessel has or has not been tugged Attendant. On receipt of the certificate, the Master Attendant will by a steamer any part of the way, or has or has not had the use of a cause a bill to be made out for the regular amount of pilotage, and row boat which form will be furnished to the pilot, in order to the for the row-boat hire, according to an average rate, with reference to bills of the vessel being correctly made out. the size of the vemels and the season of the year, fixed by a marine 2. Commanders are further requested, as early after their arrival committee which lately sat at the Bankshall, the majority of which as possible, to notify in writing, to the Master Attendant, the name was composed of members of houses of agency and commanders and residence of the reference for the payment of his vemel's bills. of ships. The bill and certificate will be presented in due course 3. On the receipt by the Master Attendant of the above certificate, for payment. and written reference for payment, a single bill will be prepared, 7. As, however, it frequently happens that veasels are taking in racluding inward pilotage, light-house duty, Moyapore magazine cargo or filling their water up to the last day of their departure, or daty, and row-boat hire (if any,) which, together with the certificate, that from other causes the bills for the chain-moorings and outward will be forwarded to the marine paymaster, for collection within 15 pilotage cannot be made out till the eve of departure, owners, agents, days of the arrival of the vessel, and having on it the name and resi- and commanders, are in such cases particularly requested, with a view dence of the party referred to for payment, which commanders are to despatch, to cause an individual to attend at the Bankshall, and ex- requested to furnish to the Master Attendant, in writing. as early after pedite the transmission of the bill and certificate to the board for re- their arrival as practicable, that officer will more readily be enabled gistry, and to the Pay Office for collection; at each of which offices to present it. By this arrangement, all the charges connected with they may in such cases depend upon the most ready and special at- the vemel, up to her arrival off Calcutta, will be embodied in one bill, tention. instead of, as hitherto, being made up in separate bills. 8. In the event of a vessel being tugged any part of the way down 4. In the event of vessels docking, or being transported at the de- by steam, or not having the use of a row-boat, commanders are to aire of the commander, it is requested that a certificate may be given obtain from the pilot at Kedgeree a certificate to that effect, which by the commanding officer of the operation having been performed, they should, forward by Dak to their agents. On receipt thereof, in order to its accompanying the bill when presented for payment to agents are requested to make out a bill against the honourable com- the referes. pany for the quarter deduction from the pilotage allowed if tugged 5. The practice of charging for hauling to the chain-moorings for by steam, or for the row-boat hire paid, as the case may be and to their monthly hire, and for hauling from the moorings in separate forward it, together with the certificate, to the marine board for audit bills, is discontinued, and henceforward one bill will be prepared, and yment. including the charge for hauling to the moorings, that for occupying 9. In cases where a vemel leaves Calcutta avowedly intended to them, and that for bauling from them and commanders are requested fill up cargo at some place below, the pilotage will be charged at the to give, or cause their commanding officers to give to the Master At- draft at which she leaves Calcutta in like manner, though at the re- tendant, or the harbour-master, certificate of the date of hauling to duced amount, as if she had proceeded to sea; and, with respect to and from the moorings, which certificate, as before, will accompany the subsequent pilotage charge, from the place at which the vessel the bill when presented for payment. The hire of the moorings will takes in the additional cargo to sea, owners or agents of vemels will be charged for the day on which the vemel is hauled thereto, without be required to furnish a special guarantee to pay the amount charge- reference to the period of the day and, in like manner, no charge able according to a certificate of the draft of water to be signed by the will be made for the day on which she hanis from her moorings, commander or commanding officer and pilot. however late in the day she may quit them. The charges connected 10. Six nets of moorings at Diamond Harbour having been fitted with the chain-moorings will thus be embodied in one bill, and be spocially to enable vessels arriving in distress from loss of anchors discharged in one payment instead of three or more, according to the and cables to be readily moored, the charge will be Co's Rs. 50 for number of months the vemel occupied the moorings. mooring and unmooring, and the daily hire the same as for the moor- 6. The system of charging outward pilotage on as estimated logs at Calcutta. The moorings will, of course, be available to ves- draught of water, with an addition of 10 per cent., subject to adjust- sels not in distress from loss of anchors and cables, but the harbour- ment after the vemel has sailed, and of charging a certain number of master will be instructed at all times to keep two sets vacant during days for a row-boat, subject to a like adjustment, is abolished; and the 8. W. momeon, to meet casualties. in future the outward pilotage and charge for row-boat hire on out- (Sup.) ward-bound vemels will be made as follows Digitized by Google 276 CALICO. CALICO (Ger. Kattun ; Du. Katoen; Dan. Kathun; Sw. Cattun ; Fr. Coton, Toile de Coton ; It. Tela Bambagina, Tela dipinta; Sp. Tela de Algodon ; Port. Pano de Algodao; Rus. Wüboika; Pol. Bawelnika), cloth made of cotton; so called from Calicut, on the Malabar coast, whence it was first imported. In England, all white or unprinted cotton cloths are denominated calicoes; but in the United States this term is applied to those only that are printed. Historical Notice of the Art of Calico Printing.-This art, though apparently one of the most difficult, has been practised from a very remote era. Herodotus mentions (lib. 1. § 202), that a nation on the shores of the Caspian were in the habit of painting the figures of animals on their clothes, with a colour formed from the leaves of trees bruised and soaked in water; and he adds, that this colour was not effaceable, and was as durable as the clothes themselves. It is difficult to imagine that the colours could have been so permanent, had not those using them been acquainted with the use of mordants. There is, however, a pas- sage in Pliny (Hist. Nat. lib. XXXV. § 11), which, though in some respects obscure, shows that the ancient Egyptians were fully acquainted with the principle of calico printing. " They paint," says he, " the clothes, not with colours, but with drugs (sorbentibus medica- mentis) that have no colour. This being done, they immerse them in a vat full of boiling dye, and leave them there for a little; when they take them out, they are painted of various colours. It is extraordinary, seeing that there is only one colour in the vat (unus in cortina color), that a variety of colours should be produced by the operation of the drugs." Pliny further states, that the colours were so adhesive they could not be washed out; and that clothes were the stronger for being dyed. A similar process is known to have been fol- lowed in India from the earliest times. The chemical and mechanical inventions of modern ages have been the cause of vast improvements in this ingenious and beautiful art; but the passage now quoted shows distinctly that we have, in this instance, been only perfecting and improving processes practised in the remotest antiquity. Calico Printing in this Country. Duties on Calicoes.-In Great Britain the printing of cottons has formed, for a considerable period, a very important and valuable business. It has been calculated that there are not less than 230,000 individuals employed in, and de- pendent upon, the print trade for subsistence, receiving the annual sum of 2,400,000/. in wages. This important and valuable business may be truly said to have grown up amongst us in despite of repeated efforts for its suppression. To prevent the use of calicoes from inter- fering with the demand for linen and woollen stuffs, a statute was passed in 1721, imposing a penalty of 5L upon the weaver, and of 20/. upon the seller, of a piece of calico ! Fifteen years after, this extraordinary statute was 80 far modified, that calicoes manufactured in Great Britain were allowed to be worn, " provided the warp thereof was entirely of linen yarn." This was the law with respect to calicoes till after the invention of Sir Richard Arkwright introduced a new era into the history of the cotton manufacture, when its im- policy became obvious to every one. In 1774, a statute was passed, allowing printed goods, wholly made of cotton, to be used, after paying a duty of 3d. a yard (raised to 3rd. in 1806) and enacting some regulations as to the marks to be affixed to the ends of the pieces, the stripes, &c. This act continued in force down to 1831 ; but, though an improvement upon the old law, it was much, and justly, complained of. Its injustice and injurious operation were very forcibly pointed out by Mr. Poulett Thompson, in his excellent speech on taxation. It is a matter of surprise to me," said the Right Hon. gent. "that this most impolitic impost should have been allowed to con- tinue, especially when it was declared by the committee of 1818 to be partial and oppressive, and that its repeal was most desirable who, indeed, can examine it, and not feel the truth of this observa- tion? Is it credible, that in order to raise a nett revenue of 599,6691., a gross tax should be imposed of 2,019,7371.1 and yet this was the return, according to the paper on your table, for 1828. And these figures are still far from showing the real cost of the collection of this tax ;-that must be taken upon the gross produce and supposing the rate of the collection for the excise to be 5 per cent., which is less than it really is, you have a cost of 20 per cent. on the nett produce of this tax, for charges. In addition to this, from all the inquiry I have been able to make, the increased cost to the manufacturer is fully 5 per cent. upon the whole quantity made; so that you have thus two sums, each of 100,000l., levied on the public, for the sake of exacting a duty of 600,000Z. But the revenue is again, in this case, far from being the measure of the injury you inflict. The inequality of the tax constitutes its chief objection. The duty is levied upon the square yard, at 3d. per yard. Thus, the piece of calico which sells for 6d., duty paid, contributes equally with that which is worth 5a. a yard. You levy an onerous and oppressive tax of 100 or 150 per cent. upon the poor, who are the purchasers of inferior cottons; whilst the rich, who buy only the finest kinds, pay but 10 or 15 per cent." It is due to Mr. Thompson to state, that, not satisfied with giving this forcible exposition of the in- equality and injurious operation of the duty on printed goods, one of his first measures, on coming into office, was to propose its repeal. By the 34 Geo. 3. c. 23. it is enacted, that the inventor, designer, or printer of any new and original pattern for printing linens, cottons, calicoes, or muslins, shall have the sole right of printing and re- printing the same for three months, to commence from the day of first publishing. The following tables exhibit the quantity of printed cloths produced in Great Britain, the quantity exported, and the amount of revenue and drawback thereon, during the year ended 5th of January, 1830. Digitized by Google CALOMEL-CAMEL. 277 L Return of the Number of Square Yards of Calicoes, Muslins, Linens, and Stuffs, made either of Cotton or Linen, printed, painted, stained, or dyed, in Great Britain (except such as shall have been dyed of one Colour throughout), with the Amount of Excise Duties collected thereon in Eng- land and Scotland, in the Year ended 5th of January, 1830; distinguishing the Number of Square Yards and Amount of Duty collected thereon.-(Purl. Paper, No. 335. Sess. 1830.) Number of yards. Amount of duty. Foreign cali- Linens and Calicoes and Mus- coes. stuffs. lins. £ S. d. England - - - 22,338 1,704,761 102,234,454 1,516,431 14 10 Scotland - - - - 8,755 26,105,550 380,833 12 3 Year ended 5th Jan. 1830 22,338 1,713,516 128,340,004 1,897,265 7 1 II. Return of the Total Number of Square Yards of printed Calicoes, Muslins, Linens, and Stuffs, ex- ported from England and Scotland, in the Year ended 5th of January, 1830; the Amount of Draw- backs paid or allowed thereon ; distinguishing the Quantities and Amount of Drawbacks allowed to Foreign Parts from the Quantities and Drawbacks paid or allowed on the like Articles on the Re- moval coastwise to Ireland. Exported to Foreign Countries. Exported to Ireland. Number of Yards. Number of Yards. Amount of Amount of Linens, Stuffs, Drawback. Linens, Stuffs, Drawback. Foreign Calicoes, and Calicoes, and Calieves. Muslins. Muslins. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. England - - - 3,672 81,445,424 1,187,852 17 4 5,169,683 75,391 4 2 Scotland - - - - 8,417,009 122,748 0 11 869,358 12,678 2 9 Year ended 5th of Jan. 1830 3,672 89,862,433 1,310,600 18 3 6,039,041 88,069 6 11, CALOMEL. Chloride of mercury; frequently called mild muriate of mercury; and sometimes, but less properly, submuriate of mercury. CAMBRIC, OR CAMBRICK (Ger. Kummertuch; Du Kameryksdoek; Fr. Cambray Batiste; It. Cambraja; Sp. Cambrai; Port. Cambraia; Rus. Kamertug), a species of very fine white linen, first made at Cambray, in French Flanders, whence it derives its ap- pellation. It is now produced, of an equally good quality, in Great Britain. CAMEL (Fr. Chameau; It. and Sp. Camelo; Ger. Kameel; Arab. Djimel; Lat. Camelus; Greek, Kaundos) is indigenous to Arabia, and we only mention it in this place on account of its extreme importance in the commerce of the East. The camel is one of the most useful of the animals over which the inhabitants of Asia and Africa have acquired dominion. These continents are intersected by vast tracts of burning sand, the seats of desolation and drought, so as, apparently, to exclude the possibility of any intercourse taking place between the countries that they separate. But as the ocean, which appears at first view to be placed as an insuperable barrier between different regions of the earth, has been rendered, by navigation, subservient to their mutual intercourse; so, by means of the camel, which the Arabians emphatically call the Ship of the Desert, the most dreary wastes are traversed, and the nations which they disjoin are enabled to trade with one another. Those painful journeys, impracticable by any other animal, the camel performs with astonishing despatch. Under heavy burdens of 600, 700, and 800 lbs. weight, they can continue their march during a long period of time, with little food or rest, and sometimes without tasting water for 8 or 9 days. By the wise economy of Providence, the camel seems formed of purpose to be the beast of burden in those regions where he is placed, and where his service is most wanted. In all the districts of Asia and Africa, where deserts are most frequent and extensive, the camel abounds. This is his proper station, and beyond this the sphere of his activity does not extend far. He dreads alike the excesses of heat and cold, and does not agree even with the mild climate of our temperate zone."-(Robertson's Disquisition on Ancient India, Note 53.) The first trade in Indian commodities of which we have any account (Genesis xxxvii. 25.) was carried on by camels; and they still continue to be the instruments employed in the conveyance of merchants and merchandise throughout Turkey, Persia, Arabia, Egypt, Bar- bary, and many contiguous countries. The merchants assemble in considerable numbers, forming themselves into an association or caravan—(see CARAVAN), for their mutual pro- tection against the attacks of robbers, and the dangers incident to a journey through such rude and inhospitable countries. These caravans are often very large and usually consist of more camels than men. The capacity of the camel to endure fatigue, and the small sup- ply of provisions that he requires, is almost incredible. " His ordinary burden," says Vol- ney, is 750 lbs.; his food, whatever is given him-straw, thistles, the stones of dates, beans, barley, &c. With a pound of food a day, and as much water, he will travel for VoL: I-2 A Digitized by Google 278 CAMELS' HAIR-CAMPHOR. weeks. In the journey from Cairo to Suez, which is 40 or 46 hours, they neither eat nor drink; but these long fasts, if often repeated, wear them out. Their usual rate of travelling is very slow, hardly above two miles an hour it is in vain to push them; they will not quicken their pace but, if allowed some short rest, they will travel 15 or 18 hours a day." (Voyage en Syrie, tom. ii. p. 383.) The Arabians regard the camel as a sacred animal, the gift of Heaven, without whose aid they could neither subsist, nor trade, nor travel. Its milk is their ordinary food they also eat its flesh, especially that of the young camel, which they reckon excellent its hair, which is renewed every year, is partly manufactured into stuffs for their clothes and furniture, and partly sent abroad as a valuable article of merchandise; and even its faces serve them for fuel. Blest with their camels, the Arabs want nothing, and fear nothing. In a single day they can traverse 40 or 50 miles of the desert, and interpose its trackless sands as an im- penetrable rampart between them and their foes.-(See the admirable description of the camel, in Buffon.) But, however useful to the inhabitants of parched, sandy deserts, it may be worth while, perhaps, to observe, that the camel is of very little service elsewhere. He cannot walk 100 yards on wet or slippery ground without stumbling. He is totally unknown in all hilly or woody countries; and, with few exceptions, may be said to be as great a stranger in the Eastern Islands, Japan, the southern parts of China, the whole country lying between China and India, and all the southern parts of the latter, including Bengal, as he is in Europe. In all those vast countries the ox is the most useful of the lower animals. It is used for draught (for which the camel is totally unfit), in the cart and plough, in the carrying of burdens, in treading corn, in the oil press, &c., and finally as food. CAMELS' HAIR (Ger. Kameelhaar; Fr. Poil de chameau, Laine de chevron ; It. Pelo di camello; Sp. Pelo ó lana de cámello). The hair of the camel imported into this country is principally used in the manufacture of fine pencils for drawing and painting. In the East, however, it is an important article of commerce, and is extensively used in the arts. It serves for the fabrication of the tents and carpets of the Arabs, and for their wearing apparel. Cloth is also manufactured of it in Persia and other places. The most esteemed hair comes from Persia. It is divided into three qualities; black, red, and grey. The black is the dearest, and the grey is only worth half the red. Considerable quantities of camels' hair are exported from Smyrna, Constantinople, and Alexandria. It is used in the manu- facture of hats, particularly by the French.-(Rees's Cyclopædia, art. Camelus.) CAMLET, OR CAMBLET (Ger. and Du. Kamelot; Fr. Camelot; It. Ciambellotto, Sp. Camelote, Rus. Kamlot), a plain stuff, manufactured on a loom, with two treadles, as linens are. There are camlets of various colours and sorts: some wholly of goats' hair; others, in which the warp is of hair, and the woof half hair and half silk others, again, in which both the warp and the woof are of wool; and, lastly, some, of which the warp is of wool and the woof of thread some are striped, some watered, and some figured. CAMOMILE (Fr. Camomille; It. Camomilla; Sp. Manzanilla; Lat. Chamomilla), a well-known plant, whose flowers are used for medical purposes. Most of what is brought to the London market is grown about Mitcham, in Surrey. CAMPHOR, OR CAMPHIRE (Ger. Kampfer; Du. Kamfer; Fr. Camphre; It. Canfora; Sp. Alcanfor; Rus. Kamfora; Lat. Camphora; Arab. and Pers. Kafoor, Mal. Kaafur). There are two descriptions of this valuable article, which must not not be confounded. 1. Camphor of Commerce, or that met with in Europe, is obtained by boiling the tim- ber of a species of laurel (Laurus Camphora), a tree found in the forests of Fokien, in China, near the city of Chinchew, where there is annually produced from 2,500 to 3,000, and sometimes as much as 4,000 piculs. Most of the camphor imported into Europe comes from China; but a small quantity, considered of superior quality, comes from Japan by way of Batavia. The exports from Canton in 1830 and 1831 were respectively 3,452 and 2,043 piculs, being, at an average, 366,266 lbs. ; if to this we add the exports from Batavia of Japan camphor, amounting to 489 piculs, the total annual produce of China and Japan for ex- portation will be 432,770 lbs. It is brought to this country in chests, drums, and casks and is in small, granular, friable masses, of a dirty white or greyish colour, very much resembling half-refined sugar. When pure, the camphor of commerce has a strong, peculiar, fragrant, penetrating odour, and a bitter, pungent, aromatic taste. It is in reality a concrete essential oil. Camphor, when refined, is in thin hollow cakes of a beautiful virgin whiteness, and, if exposed to the air, totally evaporates. Great care is therefore requisite in packing camphor, to prevent serious loss. 2. Camphor, Malay, commonly called, to distinguish it from the last, camphor of Barus, from the port of Sumatra, where it is mostly shipped. It is a product of the Dryobalanops Camphora, a forest tree confined to Sumatra, Borneo, and the Malay peninsula. It is found in concrete masses in the fissures of the wood there are, however, but very few trees that afford it; and those that do, only in small quantities. This species of camphor is more fra- grant and less biting and pungent than that yielded by the laurel, and is in high repute Digitized by Google CAMPHOR OIL-CANALS. 279 among the Chinese, by whom it is almost wholly consumed. There is an immense dia- parity in the prices of the two species in China. In a price current recently published at Canton, the finest Chinese camphor is quoted at 30 dollars per picul, while the Malay cam- phor is quoted at 30 dollars per catty, making the price of the latter 100 times greater than that of the former ! Malay camphor is wholly unknown in Europe as an article of trade.-(Pri- vate information.) [The quantity of camphor imported into the United States has of late years been rapidly increasing. It used to be procured mostly by way of England and Holland. But it now comes to us directly from China and is in part subsequently re-exported to Europe.-Am. Ed.] CAMPHOR OIL (Malay, Minyak), a fragrant essential oil, obtained in large quantities by heating the wood of the Dryobalanops Camphora. It is nearly as cheap as spirits of turpentine, but is not held in any esteem by the Chinese. It might, perhaps, be profitably imported into England as a substitute for spirits of turpentine in the arts, and for medicinal purposes. We may add, that the timber of the Dryobalanops Camphora is not inferior to any produced in the countries where it grows, for the purposes of house and ship building. -(Private information, and Crawford's Indian Archipelago, vol. i. p. 516.) CAMWOOD, a red dye wood, first brought to Europe from Africa by the Portuguese. It is principally obtained from the vicinity of Sierra Leone. The colouring matter which it affords differs but little from that of ordinary Nicaragua wood, either in quality or quantity and it may be employed with similar mordants.-(Baneroft on Colours. See also Dampier, vol. ii. part ii. p. 58.) Camwood is at present worth, in the London market, from 16/. to 18L a ton, duty (5s. a ton) included. In 1828, 475 tons of camwood were imported; but the imports in 1829 only amounted to 119 tons.-(Parl. Paper, No. 661. Sess. 1830.) CANAL, CANALS. A canal is an artificial channel, filled with water kept at the de- sired level by means of locks or sluices, forming a communication between two or more places. (1.) Historical Sketch of Canals. Ancient Canals.-The comparative cheapness and facility with which goods may be conveyed by sea, or by means of navigable rivers, seem to have suggested, at a very early period, the formation of canals. The best authenticated ac- counts of ancient Egypt represent that country as intersected by canals conveying the waters of the Nile to the more distant parts of the country, partly for the purpose of irrigation, and partly for that of internal navigation, The efforts made by the old Egyptian monarchs, and by the Ptolemies, to construct a canal between the Red Sea and the Nile are well known and evince the high sense which they entertained of the importance of this species of com- munication.-(Ameilhm, Commerce des Egyptiens, p. 76.) Greece was too small a territory, too much intersected by arms of the sea, and sub-divided into too many independent states, to afford much scope for inland navigation. Attempts were, however, made to cut a canal across the Isthmus of Corinth but they did not succeed. The Romans did not distinguish themselves in canal navigation. Their aqueducts, the stupendous ruins of which attest the wealth and power of their founders, were intended to furnish supplies of water to some adjoining city, and not for the conveyance of vessels or produce. (2.) Chinese Canals.-In China, canals, partly for irrigation, and partly for navigation, have existed from a very early period. The most celebrated amongst them is the Imperial or Grand Canal, forming a communication between Pekin and Canton, said to be about 1,660 miles long. But there can be no doubt that this is a very great exaggeration and that it includes the various rivers which really form the greater part of the navigation, the excavated portion being of comparatively limited dimensions. The canal is said not to have, at any time, more than from 5 to 6 feet water and in dry seasons, its depth is frequently reduced to 3 feet. (De la Lande, Canaux de Navigation, p. 529.) The locks are con- structed with very little skill; and as the vessels are generally dragged by men, the naviga- tion is extremely slow. The canals are mostly faced with stone; and the bridges across them are said to be very ingeniously contrived. (3.) Italian Canals.-The Italians were the first people in modern Europe that attempted to plan and execute canals. They were principally, however, undertaken for the purpose of irrigation; and the works of this sort executed in the Milanese and other parts of Lombardy, in the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries, are still regarded as models, and excite the warm admiration of every one capable of appreciating them. In 1271, the Navilio Grande, or canal leading from Milan to Abbiate Grasso and the Tesino, was rendered navigable.- (Young's Travels in France, &c. vol. ii. p. 170.) (4.) Dutch Canals.-No country in Europe contains, in proportion to its size, so many navigable canals as the kingdom of the Netherlands, and particularly the province of Hol- land. The construction of these canals commenced as early as the twelfth century, when, owing to its central and convenient situation, Flanders began to be the entrepôt of the com- merce between the north and south of Europe. Their number has since been astonishingly increased. "Holland," says Mr. Phillips, in his History of Inland Navigation, is inter- sected with innumerable canals. They may be compared in number and size to our public roads and highways and as the latter with us are continually full of coaches, chaises, Digitized by Google 280 CANALS. wagons, carts, and horsemen, going from and to the different cities, towns, and villages so, on the former, the Hollanders, in their boats and pleasure barges, their treckschuyts and vessels of burden, are continually journeying and conveying commodities for consumption or exportation from the interior of the country to the great cities and rivers. An inhabitant of Rotterdam may, by means of these canals, breakfast at Delft or the Hague, dine at Ley- den, and sup at Amsterdam, or return home again before night. By them, also, a most prodigious inland trade is carried on between Holland and every part of France, Flanders, and Germany. When the canals are frozen over, they travel on them with skaits, and perform long journeys in a very short time; while heavy burdens are conveyed in carts and sledges, which are then as much used on the canals as on our streets. " The yearly profits produced by these canals are almost beyond belief; but it is certain, and has been proved, that they amount to more than 250,000/. for about 400 miles of inland navigation, which is 625/. per mile, the square surface of which mile does not exceed two acres of ground a profit so amazing, that it is no wonder other nations should imitate what has been found so advantageous. The canals of Holland are generally 60 feet wide and 6 deep, and are carefully kept clean; the mud, as manure, is very profitable; the canals are generally levels; of course, locks are not wanted. From Rotterdam to Delft, the Hague, and Leyden, the canal is quite level, but is sometimes affected by strong winds. For the most part the canals are elevated above the fields or the country, to enable them to cary off the water, which in winter inun- dates the land. To drain the water from Delftland, a province not more than 60 miles long, they employ 200 windmills in spring time to raise it into the canals. All the canals of Holland are bordered with dams or banks of immense thickness, and on these depends the security of the country from inundation of course it is of great moment to keep them in the best repair to effect which there is a kind of militia, and in every village is a magazine of proper stores and men, whose business it is to convey stones and rubbish in carts to any damaged place. When a certain bell rings, or the waters are at a fixed height, every man repairs to his post. To every house or family there is assigned a certain part of the bank, in the repair of which they are to assist. When a breach is apprehended, they cover the banks all over with cloth and stones." (5.) Canal from Amsterdam to Niewdiep, near the Helder.-The object of this canal, which is the greatest work of its kind in Holland, and probably in the world, is to afford a safe and easy passage for large vessels from Amsterdam to the German Ocean. This city has 40 feet of water in the road in front of its port, but the pampus or bar at the junction of the Y with the Zuyder Zee, 7 miles below, has only a depth of 10 feet and hence all ships of any considerable burden entering or leaving the port must unload and load part of their cargoes without the bar. As the Zuyder Zee is every where full of shallows, all ordinary means of improving the access to Amsterdam were necessarily ineffectual and the resolu- tion was, therefore, at length adopted, of cutting a canal from the city to the Helder, the most northern point of the province of Holland. The distance between these extreme points is 41 English miles, but the length of the canal is about 50}. The breadth at the surface of the water is 124} English feet (120 Rhinland feet) ; the breadth at bottom 36 the depth 20 feet 9 inches. Like the Dutch canals generally, its level is that of the highest tides, and it receives its supply of water from the sea. The only locks it requires are of course, two tide-locks at the extremities but there are, besides, two sluices with floodgates in the intermediate space. It is crossed by about 18 drawbridges. The locks and sluices are double,-that is, there are two in the breadth of the canal and their construction and workmanship are said to be excellent. They are built of brick, for economy ; but bands of limestone are interposed at intervals, and these project about an inch beyond the brick, to protect it from abrasion by the sides of vessels. There is a broad towing path on each side, and the canal is wide enough to admit of two frigates passing.-(For the expense of towing, see AMSTERDAM.) The line which the canal follows may be easily traced on a map of Holland. From the Y at Amsterdam it proceeds north to Purmerend; thence west to Alkmaar Lake; again north by Alkmaar to a point within 2 miles of the coast, near Petten, whence it runs nearly parallel to the coast till it joins the sea a little to the east of the Helder, at the fine harbour of Niewdiep, formed within the last 30 years. At the latter place there is a powerful steam- engine for supplying the canal with water during neap tides, and other purposes. The time spent in towing vessels from Niewdiep to Amsterdam is 18 hours. The Helder is the only spot on the shores of Holland that has deep water; and it owes this advantage to its being opposite to the Texel, which, by contracting the communication between the German Ocean and the Zuyder Zee to a breadth of about a mile, produces a current which scours and deepens the channel. Immediately opposite the Helder there are 100 feet water at high tides, and at the shallowest part of the bar to the westward there are 27 feet. In the same way, the artificial mound which runs into the Y opposite Amsterdam, by contracting the water-way to about 1,000 feet, keeps a depth of 40 feet in the port (at high water), while above and below there is only 10 or 12. Digitized by Google CANALS. 281 The canal was begun in 1819, and finished in 1825. The cost was estimated at 10,000,000 or 12,000,000 florins, or about 1,000,000L sterling. If we compute the magni- tude of this canal by the cubic contents of its bed, it is the greatest, we believe, in the world, unless some of the Chinese canals be exceptions. The volume of water which it contains, or the prisme de remplissage, is twice as great as that of the New York Canal, or the Canal of Languedoc, and two and a half times as great as that of the artificial part of the Caledonian Canal. In consequence, however, of the facility with which the Dutch canal was dug, and of the evenness of the ground through which it passes, the difficulties with which the engineer had to contend in making it were trifling compared to those which had to be overcome in constructing the canals now mentioned. We have not learned what returns this canal yields; most probably it is not, at least in a direct point of view, a profita- ble concern. Even in Holland, notwithstanding the lowness of interest, it would require tolls to the amount of 40,000L a year to cover interest and expenses and so large a sum can hardly, we should think, be raised by the very moderate tolls laid on the ships passing through it.-(See AMSTERDAM.) This, however, is not the only consideration to be attended to in estimating the value of a work of this sort. Its influence in promoting the trade of Amsterdam, and, indeed, of Holland, may far more than compensate for its cost. It is evi- dent, too, that the imposition of oppressive tolls would have effectually counteracted this advantage; that is, they would have defeated the very object for which the canal was con- structed.-(We have derived these details, partly from an able article in the Scotsman, and partly from private information.) (6.) Danish Canals.-The Holstein Canal, in Denmark, is of very considerable import- ance. It joins the river Eyder with Kiel Bay on the north-east coast of Holstein, forming a navigable communication between the North Sea, a little to the north of Heligoland, and the Baltic; enabling vessels to pass from the one to the other by a short cut of about 100 miles, instead of the lengthened and difficult voyage round Jutland, and through the Catte- gat and the Sound. The Eyder is navigable for vessels not drawing more than 9 feet water, from Tonningen, near its mouth, to Rendsburg, where it is joined by the canal, which com- municates with the Baltic at Holtenau, about 3 miles north of Kiel. The canal is about 26 English miles in length, including about 6 miles of what is principally river navigation. The excavated portion is 95 feet wide at top, 51 feet 6 inches at bottom, and 9 feet 6 inches deep (Eng. meas.). Its highest elevation above the level of the sea is 24 feet 4 inches to which height vessels are raised and let down by 6 locks or sluices. It is navigable by vessels of 120 tons burden, or more provided they are constructed in that view. The total cost of the canal was about 500,000Z. It was opened in 1785, and has so far realised the views of its projectors, as to enable coasting vessels from the Danish islands in the Baltic and the east coast of Holstein, Jutland, &c., to proceed to Hamburgh, Holland, England, &c. in less time and with much less risk, than, in the ordinary course of navigation, they could have cleared the point of the Skaw and conversely with ships from the west. The smaller class of foreign vessels, particularly those under the Dutch and Hanseatic flags, navigating the Baltic and North Seas, have largely availed themselves of the facilities afforded by this canal. During the 5 years ending with 1831, no fewer than 2,786 vessels passed each year, at an average, through the canal. This is a sufficient evidence of its utility. It would, however, be much more frequented, were it not for the difficult navigation of the Eyder from the sea to Rendsburg. The dues are moderate.-(Coxe's Travels in the North of Europe, 5th ed. vol. V. p. 239., where there is a plan of the canal; Catteau, Tableau des Etats Danois, tom. ii. pp. 300-304.; and private information.) (7.) Swedish Canals.-The formation of an internal navigation connecting the Cattegat and the Baltic has long engaged the attention, and occupied the efforts, of the people and government of Sweden. Various motives conspired to make them embark in this arduous undertaking. The Sound and other channels to the Baltic being commanded by the Danes, they were able, when at war with the Swedes, greatly to annoy the latter, by cutting off all communication by sea between the eastern and western provinces of the kingdom. And hence, in the view, partly of obviating this annoyance and partly of facilitating the convey- ance of iron, timber, and other bulky products, from the interior to the coast, it was deter- mined to attempt forming an internal navigation, by means of the river Gotha, and the lakes Wener, Wetter, &c. from Gottenburgh to Soderkoeping on the Baltic. The first and most difficult part of this enterprise was the perfecting of the communication from Gottenburgh to the lake Wener. The Gotha, which flows from the latter to the*former, is navigable, through by far the greater part of its course, for vessels of considerable burden but, besides others less difficult to overcome, the navigation at the point called Tröllhætta is interrupted by a series of cataracts about 112 feet in height. Owing to the rapidity of the river, and the stubborn red granite rocks over which it flows, and by perpendicular banks of which it is bounded, the attempt to cut a lateral canal, and still more to render it directly navigable, presented the most formidable obstacles. But, undismayed by these, on which it is, indeed, most probable he had not sufficiently reflected, Polhem, a native engineer, undertook, about the middle of last century, the Herculean task of constructing locks in the channel of the 2 A 2 36 Digitized by Google 282 CANALS. river, and rendering it navigable ! Whether, however, it were owing to the all but insupera- ble obstacles opposed to such a plan, to the defective execution, or deficient strength of the works, they where wholly swept away, after being considerably advanced, and after vast sums had been expended upon them. From this period, down to 1793, the undertaking was abandoned; but in that year, the plan was proposed, which should have been adopted at first, of cutting a lateral canal through the solid rock, about 1} mile from the river. This new enterprise was begun under the auspices of a company incorporated for the purpose in 1794, and was successfully completed in 1800. The canal is about 3 miles in length, and has about 61 feet water.* It has 8 sluices, and admits vessels of about 100 tons. In one part it is cut through the solid rock to the depth of 72 feet. The expense was a good deal less than might have been expected, being only about 80,000/. The lake Wener, the naviga- tion of which was thus opened with Gottenburgh, is very large, deep, and encircled by some of the richest of the Swedish provinces, which now possess the inestimable advantage of a convenient and ready outlet for their products. As soon as the Tröllhætta canal had been completed, there could be no room for doubt as to the practicability of extending the navigation to Soderkoeping. In furtherance of this object, the lake Wener has been joined to the lake Wetter by the Gotha Canal, which admits vessels of the same size as that of Tröllhætta and the prolongation of the navigation to the Baltic from the Wetter, partly by 2 canals of equal magnitude with the above, and partly by lakes, is now, we believe, about completed. The entire undertaking is called the Gotha Navigation, and deservedly ranks among the very first of the kind in Europe. Besides the above, the canal of Arboga unites the lake Hielmar to the lake Maelar and since 1819, a canal has been constructed from the latter to the Baltic at Södertelge. The canal of Stroemsholm, so called from its passing near the castle of that name, has effected a navigable communication between the province of Dalecarlia and the lake Maelar, &cc.- (For further details see, besides the authorities already referred to, Coxe's Travels in the North of Europe, 5th ed. vol. iv. pp. 253-266., and vol. V. pp. 58-66. Thomson's Tra- vels in Sweden, p. 35, &c.) (8.) French Canals.-The first canal executed in France was that of Briare, 341 Eng- lish miles in length, intended to form a communication between the Seine and Loire. It was commenced in 1605, in the reign of Henry IV., and was completed in 1642, under his successor, Louis XIII. The canal of Orleans, which joins the above, was commenced in 1675. But the most stupendous undertaking of this sort that has been executed in France, or indeed on the Continent, is the canal of Languedoc. It was projected under Francis I.; but was begun and completed in the reign of Louis XIV. It reaches from Narbonne to Toulouse; and was intended to form a safe and speedy means of communication between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean. It is 64 French leagues long, and 6 feet deep and has, in all, 114 locks and sluices. In its highest part it is 600 feet above the level of the sea. In some places it is conveyed by bridges of great length and strength, over large rivers. It cost upwards of 1,300,000Z; and reflects infinite credit on the engineer, Riquet, by whom it was planned and executed. Besides this great work, France possesses several magnificent canals, such as that of The Centre, connecting the Loire with the Saone; of St. Quentin, joining the Scheldt and the Somme; of Besançon, joining the Saone, and consequently the Rhone, to the Rhine ; of Burgundy, joining the Rhone to the Seine, &c. Some of these are of very considerable magnitude. The canal of the Centre is about 72 English miles in length. It was com- pleted in 1791, at an expense of about 11,000,000 francs. Its summit level is about 240 feet above the level of the Loire at Digoin ; the breadth at the water's edge is about 48 feet, and at bottom 30 feet depth of water 51 feet number of locks 81. The canal of St. Quen- tin, 28 English miles in length, was completed in 1810. The canal joining the Rhone to the Rhine is the most extensive of any. It stretches from the Saone, a little above St. Jean de Losne, by Dole, Besançon, and Mulhouse, to Strasburg, where it joins the Rhine,-a distance of about 200 English miles. From Dole to Vogaucourt, near Montbéliard, the canal is principally excavated in the bed of the Doubs. It is not quite finished. The canal of Burgundy will, when completed, be about 242 kilom., or 150 English miles in length ; but at present it is only navigable to the distance of about 95 kilom. In addition to these, a great many other canals have been finished, while several are in progress, and others pro- jected. There is an excellent account of the French canals completed, in progress, and projected, in the work of M. Dutens, entitled Histoire de la Navigation Intérieure de la France, 2 vols. 4to, and to it we beg to refer the reader for further details. He will find, at the end of the second volume, a very beautiful map of the rivers and canals of France. It is probable, however, that the railroad projects now set on foot in France may tend, for a while at least, to check the progress of canalisation. We may observe, too, that the state of the law in France is very unfavourable to the undertaking and success of all great public works; and we are inclined to attribute the comparative fewness of canals in France, and This is the statement of Catteau, Tableau de la Mer Baltique, tome ii. p. 77.; Oddy, in his European Commerce, p. 306., and Balbi, Abrégé de la Géographie, p. 385., say that the depth of water is 10 feet. Digitized by Google CANALS. 283 the recent period at which most of them have been constructed, to its influence. In that country, canals, docks, and such like works, are mostly carried on at the expense and for behoof of government, under the control of its agents. No scope has been given to the enterprise of individuals or associations. Before either a road or a canal can be constructed. plans and estimates must be made out and laid before the minister of the interior, by whom they are referred to the prefect of the department, and then to the Bureau des Ponts et des Chaussés, and supposing the project to be approved by these, and the other functionaries consulted with respect to it, the work must after all be carried on under the superintendence of some public officer. In consequence of this preposterous system, very few works of this description have been undertaken as private speculations. And while not a few of those begun by government remain unfinished and comparatively useless, those that are completed have, as was to be expected, rarely proved profitable. There are some good remarks on this subject in the useful work of M. Dupin, on the Forces Commerciales of Great Britain. (9.) Prussian Canals.-The Prussian states are traversed by the great navigable rivers the Elbe, the Oder, and the Vistula; the first having its embouchure in the North Sea, and the others in the Baltic. The formation of an internal navigation, that should join those great water-ways, excited the attention of government at a distant period; and this object has been successfully accomplished, partly by the aid of the secondary rivers falling into the above, and partly by canals. In 1662, the canal of Muhlrose was undertaken, uniting the Oder and the Spree; the latter being a navigable river falling into the Havel, also a naviga- ble river joining the Elbe near Havelburg. But the navigation from the Oder to the Elbe by this channel was difficult and liable to frequent interruption; and to obviate these defects Frederick the Great constructed, towards the middle of last century, the Finnow Canal, stretching from the Oder at Oderberg to the Havel, near Leibenwalde; the communication is thence continued by the latter and a chain of lakes to Plauen from which point a canal has been opened, joining the Elbe near Magdeburg. The Elbe being in this way connected with the Oder by a comparatively easy navigation, the latter has been united to the Vistula, partly by the river Netze, and partly by a canal joining that river to the Brahe, which falls into the Vistula near Bromberg. A vast inland navigation has thus been completed barks passing freely through the whole extent of country from Hamburgh to Dantzic affording the means of shipping the products of the interior, and of importing those of foreign coun- tries, either by the North Sea or the Baltic, as may be found most advantageous.-(Cateau, Tableau de la Mer Baltique, tome ii. p. 11-18. (10.) Russian Canals-The inland navigation of Russia is of vast extent, and very considerable importance. The reader will find some details with respect to it under the article PETERSBURGH. (11.) Austrian Canals-The Austrian empire is traversed in its whole extent by the Danube; but the advantages that might result to the foreign trade of the empire from so great a command of river navigation, have been materially abridged by the jealousy of the Turks, who command the embouchure of the river, and by the difficulties that are in some places incident to its navigation. Two pretty extensive canals have been constructed in Hun- gary. That called the Bega Canal is 73 English miles in length it stretches from Fascet through the Bannat by Temeswar to Becskerek, whence vessels pass by the Bega into the Theiss, a little above its junction with the Danube. The other Hungarian canal is called after the Emperor Francis. It stretches from the Danube by Zambor to the Theiss, which it joins near Földvar, being 62 English miles in length its elevation, where highest, does not exceed 27 feet. Besides the above, the canal of Vienna establishes a communication between that city and Neustadt. It is said to be the intention to continue this canal to Trieste but, however desirable, we doubt much whether this be practicable. A railroad is at present being made from Munthausen on the Danube to Budweiss on the Moldau, a navigable river that falls into the Elbe. This promises to be a highly useful communication. -(Bright's Travels in Hungary, p. 246. Balbi, Abrégé de la Géographie, p. 216.) (12.) Spanish Canals.-No where are canals more necessary, both for the purposes of navigation and irrigation, than in Spain; but the nature of the soil and the poverty and ignorance of the government as well as of the people, oppose formidable obstacles to their construction. During the reign of Charles II., a company of Dutch contractors offered to render the Mançanares navigable from Madrid to where it falls into the Tagus, and the latter from that point to Lisbon, provided they were allowed to levy a duty for a certain number of years on the goods conveyed by this channel. The Council of Castile took this proposal into their serious consideration, and after maturely weighing it, pronounced the singular decision- That if it had pleased God that these two rivers should have been navigable, he would not have wanted human assistance to have made them such but that, as he has not done it, it is plain that he did not think it proper that it should be done. To attempt it, there- fore, would-be to violate the decrees of his providence, and to mend the imperfections which he designedly left in his works!"-(Clarke's Letters on the Spanish Nation, p. 284.) But such undertakings are no longer looked upon as sinful; and many have been projected since Digitized by Google 284 CANALS. the accession of the Bourbon dynasty, though few have been perfected. The canal of the Ebro, begun under the Emperor Charles V., is the most important of the Spanish canals; but it is only partially completed, and during dry seasons it suffers from want of water. It runs parallel to the right bank of the Ebro, from Tudela in Navarre to below Saragossa ; the intention being to carry it to Sastago, where it is to unite with the Ebro. The canal of Castile is intended to lay open the country between the Douro and Reynosa, and to facilitate the conveyance of grain from the interior to Santandar and Bilbao. It passes by Valladolid, Palencia, and Aguilar del Campos; a small part has been executed, and is now in operation. A company has recently undertaken, what the Dutch contractors formerly offered, to render the Tagus navigable from Aranjuez to Lisbon the free navigation of the river having been stipulated at the Congress of Vienna. A project for deepening the Guadalquivir, and some others, are also on foot.-(Foreign Quarterly Review, No. 9. p. 85. Balbi, Abrégé de la Géographie, p. 349.) (13.) British Canals.-Owing partly to the late rise of extensive manufactures and com- merce in Great Britain, but more, perhaps, to the insular situation of the country, no part of which is very distant from the sea or from a navigable river, no attempt was made in Eng- land, to construct canals till a comparatively recent period. The efforts of those who first began to improve the means of internal navigation, were limited to attempts to deepen the beds of rivers, and to render them better fitted for the conveyance of vessels. So early as 1635, a Mr. Sandys of Flatbury, Worcestershire, formed a project for rendering the Avon navigable from the Severn, near Tewkesbury, through the counties of Warwick, Worcester, and Gloucester, " that the towns and country might be better supplied with wood, iron, pit- coal, and other commodities." This scheme was approved by the principal nobility and landowners in the adjoining counties; but the civil war having broken out soon after, the project was abandoned, and does not seem to have been revived. After the restoration, and during the earlier part of last century, various acts were at different times obtained for cheap- ening and improving river navigation. For the most part, however, these attempts were not very successful. The current of the rivers gradually changed the form of their channels; the dykes and other artificial constructions were apt to be destroyed by inundations alluvial sand banks were formed below the weirs; in summer, the channels were frequently too dry to admit of being navigated, while at other periods the current was so strong as to render it quite impossible to ascend the river, which at all times, indeed, was a laborious and expen- give undertaking. These difficulties in the way of river navigation seem to have suggested the expediency of abandoning the channels of most rivers, and of digging parallel to them artificial channels, in which the water might be kept at the proper level by means of locks. The act passed by the legislature in 1755, for improving the navigation of Sankey Brook on the Mersey, gave rise to a lateral canal of this description, about 111 miles in length, which deserves to be mentioned as the earliest effort of the sort in England. But before this canal had been completed, the celebrated Duke of Bridgewater*, and his equally celebrated engineer, the self-instructed James Brindley, had conceived a plan of canalisation independent altogether of natural channels, and intended to afford the greatest facilities to commerce, by carrying canals across rivers and through mountains, wherever it was practicable to construct them.t The Duke was proprietor of a large estate at Worsley, 7 miles from Manchester, in which were some very rich coal-mines, that had hitherto been in a great measure useless, owing to the cost of carrying coal to market. Being desirous of turning his mines to some account, it occurred to his Grace that his purpose would be best accomplished by cutting a canal from Worsley to Manchester. Mr. Brindley, having been consulted, declared that the scheme was practicable; and an act having been obtained, the work was immediately commenced. The principle," says Mr. Phillips, laid down at the commencement of this business, reflects as much honour on the noble undertaker as it does upon his engineer. It was resolved that the canal should be perfect in its kind; and that, in order to preserve the level of the water, it should be free from the usual construction of locks. But in accomplishing this end many difficulties were decmed insurmountable. It was necessary that the canal should be carried over rivers, and many large and deep valleys, where it was evident that such stupendous mounds of earth must be raised, as would scarcely, it was thought by num- bers, be completed by the labour of ages; and, above all, it was not known from what source SO large a supply of water could be drawn, even on this improved plan, as would supply the navigation. But Mr. Brindley, with a strength of mind peculiar to himself, and being pos- sessed of the confidence of his great patron, contrived such admirable machines, and took * This truly noble person expended a princely fortune in the prosecution of his great designs; and to increase his resources, is said to have restricted his own personal expenses to 4001. a year! But his projects were productive of great wealth to himself and his successors; and have promoted, in no ordinary degree, the wealth and prosperity of his country. He died in 1823. t There is a good account of Brindley in Aikin's Biographical Dictionary. His intense application, and the anxiety of mind inseparable from the great enterprises in which he was engaged, terminated his valuable life at the early age of 56. Digitized by Google CANALS. 285 such methods to facilitate the progress of the work, that the world soon began to wonder how it could be thought so difficult. " When the canal was completed as far as Barton, where the Irwell is navigable for large vessels, Mr. Brindley proposed to carry it over that river by an aqueduct 39 feet above the surface of the water in the river. This, however, being considered as a wild and extrava- gant project, he desired, in order to justify his conduct towards his noble employer, that the opinion of another engineer might be taken, believing that he could easily convince an intelligent person of the practicability of the design. A gentleman of eminence was accord- ingly called, who, being conducted to the place where it was intended that the aqueduct should be made, ridiculed the attempt; and, when the height and dimensions were commu- nicated to him, he exclaimed— have often heard of castles in the air, but never was shown before where any of them were to be erected.' This unfavourable verdict did not deter the Duke from following the opinion of his own engineer. The aqueduct was immediately be- gun ; and it was carried on with such rapidity and success as astonished those who, but a little before, thought it impossible." Before the canal from Worsley to Manchester had been completed, it occurred to the Duke and his engineer that it might be practicable to extend it by a branch, which, running through Chester parallel to the river Mersey, should at length terminate in that river, below the limits of its artificial navigation; and thus afford a new, safer, and cheaper means of communication between Manchester and its vicinity and Liverpool. The execution of this plan was authorised by an act passed in 1761. This canal, which is above 29 miles in length, was finished in about 5 years. It was constructed in the best manner, and has proved equally advantageous to its noble proprietor and the public. " When the Duke of Bridgewater," says Dr. Aikin, " undertook this great design, the price of carriage on the river navigation was 12s. the ton from Manchester to Liverpool, while that of land carriage was 40s. the ton. The Duke's charge on this canal was limited, by statute, to six shillings; and together with this vast superiority in cheapness, it had all the speed and regularity of land carriage. The articles conveyed by it were, likewise, much more numerous than those by the river navigation besides manufactured goods and their raw materials, coals from the Duke's own pits were deposited in yards at various parts of the canal, for the supply of Cheshire lime, manure, and building materials were carried from place to place and the markets of Manchester obtained a supply of provisions from districts too remote for the ordinary land conveyances. A branch of useful and profitable carriage, hitherto scarcely known in England, was also undertaken, which was that of passengers. Boats, on the model of the Dutch treckschuyts, but more agreeable and capacious, were set up, which, at very reasonable rates, and with great convenience, carried numbers of persons daily to and from Manchester along the line of the canal."-(Aikin's Description of the Country round Manchester, p. 116.) The success that attended the Duke of Bridgewater's canals stimulated public-spirited individuals in other districts to undertake similar works. Mr. Brindley had early formed the magnificent scheme of joining the great ports of London, Liverpool, Bristol, and Hull, by a system of internal navigation and, though he died in 1772, at the early age of 56, he had the satisfaction to see his grand project in a fair way of being realised. The Trent and Mersey, or, as it has been more commonly termed, the Grand Trunk Canal, 96 miles in length, was begun in 1766 and completed in 1777. It stretches from near Runcorn on the Mersey, where it communicates with the Duke of Bridgewater's Canal, to Newcastle-under- Line; thence southwards to near Titchfield and then north-westerly, till it joins the Trent at Wilden Ferry, at the north-western extremity of Leicestershire. A water communication between Hull and Liverpool was thus completed and by means of the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, which joins the Grand Trunk near Haywood in the former, and the Severn near Stourport in the latter, the same means of communication was extended to Bristol. During the time that the Grand Trunk Canal was being made, a canal was under- taken from Liverpool to Leeds, 130 miles in length; another from Birmingham to the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, joining it near Wolverhampton and one from Birmingham to Fazeley and thence to Coventry. By canals subsequently undertaken, a communication was formed between the Grand Trunk Canal and Oxford, and consequently with London, completing Brindley's magnificent scheme. In 1792, the Grand Junction Canal was begun, which runs in a pretty straight line from Brentford, on the Thames, a little above the metropolis, to Braunston in Northamptonshire, where it unites with the Oxford and other central canals. It is about 90 miles in length. There is also a direct water communication, by means of the river Lea navigation, the Cambridge Junction Canal, &c,, between London and the Wash. In addition to these, an immense number of other canals, some of them of very great magnitude and importance, have been constructed in different parts of the country; so that a command of internal navigation has been obtained, unparal- led in any European country, with the exception of Holland. In Scotland, the great canal to join the Forth and Clyde was begun in 1768, but it was Digitized by Google 286 CANALS. suspended in 1777, and was not resumed till after the close of the American war. It was finally completed in 1790. Its total length, including the collateral cuts to Glasgow and the Monkland Canal, is 184 miles. Where highest it is 150 feet above the level of the sea. It is on a larger scale than any of the English canals. Its medium width at the surface is 56, and at the bottom 27 feet. Originally it was about 8 feet 6 inches deep; but recently its banks have been raised 80 that the depth of water is now about 10 feet. It has, in all, 39 locks. In completing this canal, many serious difficulties had to be encountered. These, however, were all successfully overcome; and though unprofitable for a while, it has, for many years past, yielded a handsome return to its proprietors. Swift boats, on the plan of those subsequently described, were established on this canal in 1832.-(See Cleland's Sta- tistics of Glasgow, p. 170. &c.) The Union Canal joins the Forth and Clyde Canal near Falkirk, and stretches thence to Edinburgh, being 31f miles in length. It is 40 feet wide at the top, 20 at bottom, and 5 deep. It was completed in 1822; but has been, in all respects, a most unprofitable undertaking. Hitherto the proprietors have not received any dividend and their prospects, we understand, are little, if any thing, improved. A canal intended to form a communication between Glasgow, Paisley, and Ardrossan, was commenced in 1807 but only that portion connecting Glasgow with Paisley and the village of Johnstoun, has hitherto been finished. This part is about 12 miles long; the canal being 30 feet broad at top, 18 at bottom, and 41 deep. It was here that the important experiments were originally made on quick travelling by canals, which demonstrated that it was quite practicable to impel a properly constructed boat, carrying passengers and goods, along a canal at the rate of 9 or 10 miles an hour, without injury to the banks (See post.) The Crinan Canal, across the peninsula of Kintyre, is 9 miles long, and 12 feet deep, admitting vessels of 160 tons burden. The Caledonian Canal is the greatest undertaking of the sort attempted in the empire. It stretches S. W. and N. E. across the island from a point near Inverness to another near Fort William. It is chiefly formed by Loch Ness, Loch Oich, and Loch Lochy. The total length of the canal, including the lakes, is 581 miles ; but the excavated part is only 214 miles. At the summit it is 961 feet above the level of the Western Ocean. It has been constructed upon a very grand scale, being 20 feet deep, 50 feet wide at bottom, and 122 at top the locks are 20 feet deep, 172 long, and 40 broad. Frigates of 32 guns and merchant ships of 1,000 tons burden may pass through it. This canal was opened in 1822. It was executed entirely at the expense of government, from the designs and under the superin- tendence of Thomas Telford, Esq., on whose skill and talents as an engineer it reflects the highest credit. The entire cost has been 986,924/. It would, however, appear to have been projected without due consideration, and promises to be a very unprofitable speculation. During the year 1829, the total revenue of the canal, arising from tonnage dues and all other sources, amounted to only 2,5751. 6s. 4d., while the ordinary expenditure, during the same year, amounted to 4,573/. Os. 14d. ! It is, therefore, very doubtful whether the revenue derived from it will ever be able to defray the expenses of keeping it in repair, without allow- ing any thing for interest or capital. The following is a detailed account of the various items of expenditure on account of the Caledo- nian Canal, from 20th of October, 1803, to 1st of May, 1830:- £ 8. d. Management and travelling expenses - - - - 36,691 12 104 Timber, and carriage thereof - - - - 72,317 1 104 Machinery, cast-iron works, tools, and materials - - - 128,886 4 74 Quarries and masonry - - - 9 - - 200,014 4 101 Shipping - - - - - - - 11,719 1 6 Houses and other buildings - - - - - 5,539 10 6 Labour and workmanship (day-work) - - - - 54,209 1 11 Labour and workmanship (measure work) - - - 418,551 16 81 Purchase of land, and payments on account of damages - - 47,956 12 91 Purchase and hire of horses and provender - - - 3,638 12 24 Incidental expenses - - - - - - 2,820 18 10 Roadmaking - - - - 1 - - 4,579 3 64 Total cost - - - £986,924 1 6f Some other canals have been projected and completed in different parts of Scotland. Of these the Monkland Canal, for the supply of Glasgow with coal, has been the most successful. The following extract from the share list of Mr. Edmunds, Broker, (9. Change Alley, Cornhill, 12th of October, 1833,) gives an account of the number of shares in the princi- pal British canals, the cost or sum actually expended upon each share, the dividend payable upon it, its selling price at the abovementioned date, and the periods when the dividends are payable:- :- Digitized by Google CANALS. 287 Number of Amount of Average Cost Names of Canals. Price per Div. per Dividend Shares. Share. per Share. Share. Annum. Payable, £ 8. £ s. d. £s. £ S. d. 1,482 Ashby-de-la-Zouch - - 100 0 113 0 0 74 0 400 Ap. Oct. 1,766 Ashton and Oldham - - - 113 0 0 136 0 500 Ap. Oct. 720 Barnsley - - - 160 0 217 0 0 290 0 14 0 0 Feb. Aug. 1,260 Basingstoke - - - 100 0 - 55 Ditto bonds - - - 100 0 - - - April. 4,000 Birmingham (1th sh.) - 17 10 - 233 10 12 10 0 Ap. Oct. 4,000 Birmingham & Liverpool Junc- 100 0 100 0 Opd. 36 0 tion 477 Bolton and Bury - - 250 0 - 105 0 6 0 0 January. 1,005 Brecknock and Abergavenny 150 0 - 85 0 400 Jan. July. 600 Bridgewater and Taunton - 100 0 100 0 Opd. 70 0 Calder and Hebble - - - - 490 0 1,600 Carlisle - - - 50 0 21 10 Opd. 400 Chelmer and Blackwater - 100 0 - 103 0 5 0 0 January. 1,500 Chesterfield - - - 100 0 - 176 0 8 0 0 500 Coventry - - - 100 0 - 600 0 32 0 0 May, Nov. 1,851 Crinan - - - - 50 0 - 20 460 Cromford - - - 100 0 - 300 0 18 0 0 Jan. July. 4,546 Croydon - - - 100 0 31 2 10 I 0 11,810Z. Ditto bonds - - - 100 0 - 50 6 5 0 0 600Z. Derby - - - - 100 0 110 0 0 117 0 6 0 0 Jan. July. 2,060 Dudley - - - 100 0 - 50 0 2 10 0 Mar. Sept. Edinburgh and Glasgow - 100 0 3,575 Ellesmere and Chester - 133 0 133 0 0 80 0 3150 September. 231 Erewash - - - 100 0 750 0 0 705 0 47 0 0 May, Nov. 1,297 Forth and Clyde - - 100 0 400 10 0 545 0 25 0 0 June, Dec. 600 Glamorganshire 100 0 172 13 4 290 0 13 12 8 s Ma. June, - - (Sep. Dec. 1,187 Gloucester and Berkeley - 100 0 - 13 10 899 Ditto (New) of 10 per cent. - - - 45 0 11,600 Grand Junction - - 100 0 224 10 0 245 0 12 0 0 Jan. July. 1,521 Grand Surrey - - 100 0 - 22 0 - Apr. Oct. 120,000Z. Ditto loan - - - - - 80 0 4 0 0 Jan. July. 2,8491 Grand Union - - - 100 0 - 24 0 100 1st Oct. 3,096 Grand Western - - 100 0 100 0 Opd. 21 0 749 Grantham - - - 150 0 150 0 0 200 0 10 0 0 May. Hereford and Gloucester - 100 0 6,238 Huddersfield - - - 100 0 57 6 6 34 0 10 0 September. 148 Ivel and Ouse Beds - - 100 0 100 0 Opd. 115 10 500 Jan. July. 25,328 Kennet and Avon - - 100 0 39 18 10 27 0 150 September. 150 Kensington - - - 100 0 100 0 Opd. 10 0 11,699} Lancaster - - - 100 0 47 6 8 26 0 100 April. 2,8791 Leeds and Liverpool - - 100 0 - 470 0 20 0 0 May, Nov. 181 Ditto (New) - - - - - - 16 0 0 May, Nov. 540 Leicester - - - - 140 0 0 175 0 .10 0 0 Jan. July. 5 Ditto - - - - - 90 0 0 80 0 13 10 0 Jan. July. 1,897 Leicester and Northampton - 100 0 83 10 0 80 0 400 Jan. July. 70 Loughborough - - - 142 17 0 1,820 0 124 0 0 Jan. July. 3,000 Macclestield - - - 100 0 100 0 Opd. 50 0 250 Melton Mowbray - - 100 0 - 190 0 9 0 0 July. 500 Mersey and Irwell - - 100 0 - 750 0 40 0 0 June. 101 Monkland - 100 0 - - - 90 0 2,409 Monmouthshire . - 100 0 100 0 0 198 0 10 0 0 Jan. July. 700 Montgomeryshire - - 100 0 - 85 0 400 Mar. Aug. 600 North Walsham and Dilham - 50 0 50 0 Opd. 10 0 - January. 247 Neath - - - - 107 10 0 290 0 15 0 0 Aug. Feb. 500 Nottingham - 150 0 - 265 0 12 0 0 - - April, Oct. 130 Nutbrook 109 0 - - 620 - - - 522 Oakham - - - 130 0 - 44 0 200 May. 1,786 Oxford - 100 0 - - 595 0 32 0 0 - - Mar. Sept. 2,400 Peak Forest - - - 100 0 48 0 0 77 0 3 10 0 June, Dec. 2,520 Portsmouth and Arundel - 50 0 50 0 0 10 0 21,418 Regent's - - - 100 0 33 16 8 16 15 0 13 6 July. 5,669 Rochdale - - - 100 0 85 0 0 111 0 460 May. 500 Shrewsbury - - 125 0 - 255 0 11 0 0 - May, Nov. 500 Shropshire 125 0 - - - - 138 0 710 0 June, Dec. 800 Somerset Coal 50 0 - 170 0 10 10 0 - - Jan. July. 45,000 Ditto Lock Fund - - 12 10 - 12 10 5 10 ct. June, Dec. 700 Stafford and Worcester - 140 0 140 0 0 610 0 34 0 0 Feb. Aug. 300 Stourbridge - - I 145 0 - 200 0 900 Jan. July. 3,647 Stratford-on-Avon - - - 79 9 8 36 0 150 August 200 Stroudwater 150 0 - 500 0 23 0 0 - - - May, Nov. 533 Swansea - - 100 0 180 0 0 220 0 12 0 0 November. - 350 Tavistock - - - 100 0 I 105 0 200 4,805 Thames and Medway - - 100 0 30 4 3 10 3,344 Ditto New - - - 3 10 2 15 Opd. Ditto 1st loan - 56 0 0 - 2 10 0 - - - Ditto 2d loan - - 40 0 0 - 2 0 0 - - - Ditto 3d loan - - - - 100 0 0 - 5 0 0 Ditto 4th loan - - - 100 0 0 I 5 0 0 June. 1,150 Thames and Severn, New - - - 33 0 1 10 0 June. 1,300 Ditto Original 1 10 0 June. - - - 27 7 - 2,600 Trent and Mersey (1) 50 0 - 640 0 37 10 0 - May, Nov. 1,000 100 0 Warwick and Birmingham - 278 0 16 0 0 - May, Nov. 1,0001 50 0 980 Warwick and Napton - 100 0 - 210 0 12 0 0 May, Nov. Digitized by Google 288 CANALS. Number of Names of Canals. Amount of Average Cost Price per Div. per Dividends Shares. Share. per Share. Share. Annum. Payable. 905 Wey and Arun - - 110 0 110 0 0 32 0 - May. 20,000 Wilts and Berks - - - - 5 10 0 5 0 June. 126 Wisbeach - - 105 0 105 0 0 : 40 0 - February. 6,000 Worcester and Birmingham - - - 88 10 4 0 0 Feb. Aug. 800 Wyrley and Essington - 125 0 - 75 0 - February. (14.) Irish Canals.-Various canals have been undertaken in Ireland, of which the Grand Canal and the Royal Canal are the principal. The Grand Canal was begun in 1756, by a body of subscribers; but they could not have completed the work without very large advances from government. The canal commences at Dublin, and stretches in a westerly direction, inclining a little to the south, to the Shannon, with which it unites near Banagher, a distance of 87 statute miles. But, exclusive of the main trunk, there is a branch to Athy, where it joins the Barrow, a distance of about 26 miles; and there are branches to Portar- lington, Mount Mellick, and some other places. There is also a westerly branch, recently constructed, from the Shannon to Ballinasloe, about 14 miles in length. The total length of the canal, with its various branches, is about 156 Eng. miles. Its summit elevation is 278 feet above the level of the sea at Dublin. It is 40 feet wide at the surface, from 24 to 20 feet at bottom, and has 6 feet water. It cost, in all, above 2,000,000/. In 1829, 191,774 tons of commodities were conveyed along the canal to and from Dublin, and about 67,000 passengers. The tonnage dues on the former amounted to 31,435/., and the fares of the latter to 10,575/. In 1831, the produce conveyed by the canal had increased to 237,889 tons, and the tonnage dues to 36,736L We have not learned the number of passengers for this year. Two capital errors seem to have been committed in the formation of this canal,-it was framed on too large a scale, and was carried too far north. Had it been 4 or 41 instead of 6 feet deep, its utility would have been but little impaired, while its expense would have been very materially diminished. But the great error was in its direction. Instead of join- ing the Shannon about 15 miles above Lough Derg, it would have joined it below Limerick. By this means, barges and other vessels passing from Dublin to Limerick, and conversely, would have avoided the difficult and dangerous navigation of the upper Shannon; the canal would have passed through a comparatively fertile country and it would not have been necessary to carry it across the bog of Allen, in which, says Mr. Wakefield, " the company have burried more money than would have cut a spacious canal from Dublin to Limerick." -(Account of Ireland, vol. i. p. 642.) The Royal Canal was undertaken in 1789. It stretches westward from Dublin to the Shannon, which it joins at Tormanbury. Its entire length is about 83 miles; its highest elevation is 322 feet above the level of the sea. At bottom it is 24 feet wide, having 6 feet depth of water. It has cost, exclusive of interest on stock, loans, &c. advanced by govern- ment, 1,421,954L The tolls produced, in 1831, 12,729/. 6s. Id.-a sum hardly adequate to defray the ordinary wear and tear of the canal, and the wages of the persons employed upon it, without leaving any thing for interest of capital ! This canal seems to have been planned in the most injudicious manner. It has the same defect as the Grand Canal, of being extravagantly large; and throughout its whole course it is nearly parallel to, and not very distant from, the latter. There are consequently two immense canals, where there ought, perhaps, to be none. At all events, it is abundantly certain that one canal of comparatively moderate dimensions would have been quite enough for all the business of the district, though it were much greater than it is at this moment, or than it is ever likely to become. Besides the above, there are some other canals, as well as various river excavations, in Ireland: but hardly one of them yields a reasonable return for the capital expended upon it. They have almost all been liberally assisted by grants of public money and their history, and that of the two great canals now adverted to, strikingly corroborates the caustic remark of Arthur Young, that " a history of public works in Ireland would be a history of jobs." -(Tour in Ireland, part ii. p. 66. 4to ed.) Those who wish to make themselves fully acquainted with the history and state of the canals of Ireland, may consult the valuable Report by Messrs. Henry, Mullins, and M.Mahon, in the Appendix to the Report of the Select Committee of 1830 on the State of Ireland. The previous statements have been derived principally from it, and from the evidence of Nicholas Fleming, Esq. before the same committee. (15.) American Canals.-The United States are pre-eminently distinguished by the spirit with which they have undertaken, and the perseverance they have displayed in exa cuting the most magnificent plans for improving and extending internal navigation. Besides many others of great, though inferior, magnitude, a canal has been formed connecting the Hudson with Lake Erie. This immense work is 363 miles long, 40 feet wide at the surface, 28 feet wide at the bottom, and 4 feet deep. The locks, 81 in number, exclusive of guard Digitized by Google CANALS. 289 locks, are 90 feet long and 14 feet wide, the average lift of each being 84 feet they are constructed of stone, and finished, like the rest of the canal, in a substantial and handsome manner. The rise and fall along the entire line is 661 feet. This great work was opened on the 8th of October 1823, but was not finally completed till 1825. It cost nearly 1,800,000Z. sterling, and was executed at the expense of the state of New York. It has completely answered the views of the projectors; and will remain an example to the other states fully justifying the encomiums that have been bestowed upon it. Besides Erie Canal, the state of New York has completed Champlain Canal, stretching from the Hudson, near Albany, to the lake of that name, and two smaller ones. The length, cost, and revenue of these canals are as follow :- Canals. Length. Cost. Tolls, 1829. Tolls, 1830. Tolls, 1831. Miles. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Erie - - - 363 9,027,456.05 707,883.49 954,328.05 1,091,714.26 Champlain - 63 - - 1,179,871.95 87,171.03 78,148.63 102,896.23 Oswego 38 - - - 525,115.37 9,439.44 12,335.18 16,271-10 Cayuga and Seneca - 20 214,000.31 8,643.49 11,987-81 12,920.39 484 Navigable feeders - 8 492 10,946,443.68 813,137.45 1,056,799-67 1,222,801.90 The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal is the largest by far of those now in progress. This Guly gigantic work was commenced in 1828. It begins at the tide water of the Potomac River above Georgetown, in the District of Columbia, and is to terminate at Pittsburgh, in Pennsylvania, a distance of 3414 miles. Its dimensions considerably exceed those of the Erie Canal its breadth at the surface of the water being from 60 to 80 feet, do. at bottom 50 feet, with a depth of water varying from 6 to 7 feet. The locks are of stone, 100 feet by 15 ;-amount of lockage required in the whole line, 3,215 feet. At the summit level on the Alleghany mountains, there is a tunnel 4 miles and 80 yards in length. The estimated cost of this vast work was 22,375,000 dollars; but it is believed that it will be finished for less.-(American Almanac for 1833.) A great number of other canals have been completed in different parts of the Union, and many new ones are now in progress. (16.) Canada Canals-The British government has expended a very large sum upon the Rideau River and Canal, stretching from Kingston, on Lake Ontario, to the Ottawa, or Grand River but this work was undertaken as much in the view of improving the military defences of Canada, as of promoting its commerce. The expense has been enormous, while the benefits are contingent and doubtful. (17.) Utility of Canals.-The utility of canals, when judiciously contrived, and opening an easy communication between places capable of maintaining an extensive intercourse with each other, has never been better set forth than in a work published in 1765, entitled "A View of the advantages of Inland Navigation," &c. But the following extract from Mac- pherson's Annals of Commerce (anno 1760) contains a brief, and at the same time elo- quent, summary of the principal advantages resulting from their construction.-" They give fresh life to established manufactures, and they encourage the establishment of new ones, by the ease of transporting the materials of manufacture and provisions; and thence we see new villages start up upon the borders of canals in places formerly condemned to sterility and solitude. They invigorate, and in many places create internal trade, which, for its extent and value, is an object of still more importance than foreign commerce, and is ex- empted from the many hardships and dangers of a maritime life and changes of climate. And they greatly promote foreign trade; and consequently enrich the merchants of the ports where they, or the navigable rivers they are connected with, terminate, by facilitating the exportation of produce from, and the introduction of foreign merchandise into the inte- rior parts of the country, which are thus placed nearly on a level with the maritime parts; or, in other words, the interior parts become coasts, and enjoy the accommodations of ship- ping. The price of provisions is nearly equalised through the whole country the blessings of Providence are more uniformly distributed ; and the monopolist is disappointed in his schemes of iniquity and oppression, by the ease wherewith provisions are transported from a considerable distance. The advantages to agriculture, which provides a great part of the materials, and almost the whole of the subsistence, required in carrying on manufactures and commerce, are pre-eminently great. Manure, marl, lime, and all other bulky articles, which could not possibly bear the great expense of cartage, and also corn and other produce, can be carried at a very light expense on canals; whereby poor lands are enriched, and barren lands are brought into cultivation, to the great emolument of the farmer and land- holder, and the general advantage of the community, in an augmented supply of the neces- saries of life and materials of manufactures; coals (the importance of which to a manufac- turing country, few people, not actually concerned in manufactures, are capable of duly VoL. L-2 B 37 Digitized by Google 290 CANALS. appreciating), stone, lime, iron ore, and minerals in general, as well as many other articles of great bulk in proportion to their value, which had hitherto lain useless to their proprietors by reason of the expense, and, in many cases, impossibility, of carriage, are called into life, and rendered a fund of wealth, by the vicinity of a canal; which thus gives birth to a trade, whereby, in return, it is maintained. The cheap, certain, and pleasant conveyance of tra- vellers by the treckschuyts in Holland, has been admired by all who have been in that country and it must be owing to the universal desire in this country of flying over the ground with the greatest possible rapidity, that a mode of travelling so exceedingly easy to the purse and the person is so little used here. Neither ought we entirely to forget, among the advantages of canals, the pleasure afforded to the eye and the mind by a beautiful mov- ing landscape of boats, men, horses, &c. busied in procuring subsistence to themselves, and in diffusing opulence and conveniences through the country. And, in a word, we have now the experience of about 40 years to establish as a certain truth, what was long ago said by Dr. Adam Smith, that 'navigable canals are among the greatest of all improve- ments." (18.) Increased Speed of Travelling by Canals.-Great, however, as have been the advantages derived from the formation of canals, it is not improbable that their further progress may be in some degree checked by the formation of RAILROADS (which see). We believe, however, that the proprietors of most of the existing canals have very little to fear from this cause. The recent improvements in the art of constructing and propelling canal vessels promise to be of very great national importance, and will enable the canal owners still better to withstand the competition of the railroad companies. The new system was introduced on the Paisley and Glasgow Canal, by Mr. Houston, in June 1831. The results are described in the following statements, to which it is unnecessary to call the read- er's attention. Mr. Thomas Grahame, civil engineer, in his "Letter to Canal Proprietors and Traders" says, The experiments of great velocity have been tried and proved on the narrowest, shallowest, and most curved canal in Scotland, viz. the Ardrossan or Paisley Canal, connecting the city of Glasgow with the town of Paisley and village of Johnstoun,-a distance of 12 miles." The result has disproved every pre- vious theory as to difficulty and expense of attaining great velocity on canals; and as to the danger or damage to their banks by great velocity in moving vessels along them. The ordinary speed for the conveyance of passengers on the Ardrossan Canal has, for nearly 2 years, been from nineto ten miles an hour; and, although there are fourteen journeys along the canal per day, at this rapid speed, its banks have sustained no injury. The boats are 70 feet in length, about 5 feet 6 inches broad, and, but for the extreme narrowness of the canal, might be made broader. They carry easily from 70 to 80 passengers; and when required, can and have carried upwards of 110 passengers. The entire cost of a boat and fittings is about 1251. The hulls are formed of light iron plates and ribs, and the covering is of wood and light oiled cloth. They are more airy, light, and comfortable than any coach. They permit the passengers to move about from the outer to the inner cabin, and the fares per mile are one penny in the first, and three farthings in the second cabin. The passengers are all car- ried under cover, having the privilege also of an uncovered space. These boats are drawn by 2 horses (the prices of which may be from 501. to 601. per pair), in stages of 4 miles in length, which are done in from 22 to 25 minutes, including stoppages to let out and take in passengers, each set of horses doing 3 or 4 stages alternately each day. In fact, the boats are drawn through this narrow and shallow canal, at a velocity which many celebrated engineers had demonstruted, and which the public believed to be impossible. "The entire amount of the whole expenses of attendants and horses, and of running one of these boats 4 trips of 12 miles each (the length of the canal), or 48 miles daily, including interest on the capital, and 20 per cent. laid aside annually for replacement of the boats, or loss on the capital therein vested, and a considerable sum laid aside for accidents and replacement of the horses, is 7001. some odd shillings; or, taking the number of working days to be 312 annually, something under 21. 2s. 4d. per day, or about 11d. per mile. The actual cost of carrying from 80 to 100 persons a distance of 30 miles (the length of the Liverpool railway), at a velocity of nearly 10 miles an hour, on the Paisley Canal, one of the most curved, narrow, and shallow in Britain, is therefore just 11. 7s. 6d. sterling. Such are the facts, and, incredible as they may appear, they are facts which no one who inquires can possibly doubt." The following statement by Mr. Macneill shows the gross expense of running old heavy boats on the Paisley Canal at the rate of 4 miles per hour, and new light boats, on the same canal, at the rate of 10 miles per hour, and the comparative expense per mile ; also the number of passengers carried before and after the introduction of the new system. 1830.* 1831.+ 1832.+ Speed, 10 hours - - - miles - 4 10 10 Number of passengers carried - - - 32,831 79,455 148,561 Number of miles run each day - - - 48 varying 152 £ 3. d. £ 3. d. £ 8. d. Gross expense in the year - - - - 700 4 7 1,316 17 5 218 5 11 Cost per mile, year taken at 312 days - - 0 0 11 - 0 0 104 The power of conveyance thus established on the Paisley canal may be judged of from the fact, that on the 31st of December, 1832, and 31st of January, 1833, there were conveyed in these boats nearly 2,500 passengers. The increase still continues. The number carried in April, 1833, being 20,000, or at the rate of 240,000 a year.-(Macneill on the Resistance of Water, &c. p. 5.) (19.) Profits of Canals.-It is a well-known fact, that canals, at an average, and allow- ing for the length of time that must elapse from the first outlay of capital before they yield * These charges are the bare outlays. + These charges include loss on purchase and sale of additional horses, and 10 per cent. on cost of horses and boats, deposited in a contingent fund. Digitized by Google CANARY SEED, CANDLE. 291 any return, are not very productive. When, indeed, they connect places that have an extensive intercourse, and when no very extraordinary difficulties have to be surmounted in their construction, they most commonly yield very large profits; but, generally speaking, this does not appear to be the case; and, on the whole, they seem to have been more beneficial to the public than to their projectors. It is customary to insert clauses in the acts authorising canals to be cut, limiting the charge which the proprietors shall be entitled to impose upon the goods conveyed by them. But we think that the dividend ought also to be limited and that it should be stipulated that whatever a moderate toll yielded over and above defraying this dividend, and providing for the repair of the canal, should be accumulated as a fund in order to buy up the stock of the canal, 80 that the toll may ultimately be reduced to such a sum as may suffice merely to meet the necessary repairs. We are not aware that any good objection could be made to a plan of this sort and had it been adopted in this country, there are several instances in which it would have been very advantageous for the public. When the canal of Languedoc was completed, the most likely method, it was found, of keeping it in constant repair, was to make a present of the tolls to Riquet the engineer. These tolls constitute," says Dr. Smith, a very large estate to the different branches of the family of that gentleman; who have, therefore, a great interest to keep the work in con- stant repair. But had these tolls been put under the management of commissioners, who had no such interest, they might, perhaps, have been dissipated in ornamental and unnecessary expenses, while the most essential parts of the work were allowed to go to ruin." Dr. Smith ought, however, to have mentioned that Riquet advanced a fourth part of the entire sum Iaid out upon the canal (Dutens, Navigation Intérieure de la France, tom. i. p. 119. &c.) and that officers were appointed by the crown to see that the tolls were not rendered oppress- ive, and the canal kept in good order. At the Revolution, most part of the property of the canal was confiscated; but at the restoration of the Bourbons in 1814, such parts of the confiscated property as had not been sold were restored to the successors of M. Riquet, who have at this moment the principal management of the canal. For a map of the canals, railroads, &c. of Great Britain and Ireland, the reader is referred to the magnificent six sheet map, published by J. Walker, Esq. of Wakefield. This map, which is equally correct and beautiful, is a truly national work, and well deserves the public patronage. An Historical Account of the Navigable Rivers and Canals, &c., of Great Britain," in 4to, attached to it by way of Index, is both an accurate and a useful publication. [To avoid unnecessary repetitions, it is deemed expedient to treat of the ordinary roads, the railroads, and the canals of the United States, or, in other words, of our 'internal improvements," as we choose to style them, under one head, to wit, under that of ROADS; to which article the reader is accordingly referred.-Am. Ed.] CANARY SEED. See SEED. CANDLE (Ger. Lichter, Kerzen; Du. Kaarzen; Fr. Chandelle; It. Candelle; Sp. and Port. Velas; Rus. Swjetschi Lat. Candela;) a taper of tallow, wax, or spermaceti, the wick of which is commonly of several threads of cotton spun and twisted together. Dr. Ure gives the following table, as containing the result of certain experiments he had made, in order to determine the relative intensity of the light, and the duration of different sorts of tallow candles :- Number in a Duration of a Weight in Consumption per Proportion of Economy of Candles equal Pound. Candle. Grains. Hour in Grains. Light. Light. one Argand. 10 mould, 5 h. 9 m. 682 132 121 68 5.7 10 dipped, 4 36 672 150 13 651 5.25 8 mould, 6 31 856 132 101 591 6·6 6 do. 7 21 1,160 163 141 66 5:0 4 do. 9 36 1,787 186 20/- 80 35 Argand oil flame. 512 69.4 100 « A Scotch mutchkin," says Dr. Ure, " or 1 of a gallon of good seal oil, weighs 6,010 gr., or 13 10 OZ. avoirdupois, and lasts in a bright Argand lamp 11 hours 44 minutes. The weight of oil it consumes per hour is equal to 4 times the weight of tallow in candles 8 to the pound, and 34 times the weight of tallow in candles 6 to the pound. But its light being equal to that of 5 of the latter candles, it appears from the above table, that 2 lbs. weight of oil, value 9d., in an Argand, are equivalent in illuminating power to 3 lbs. of tallow candles, which cost about 2s. The larger the flame in the above candles, the greater the economy of light." Until 1831, when it was repealed, candles were, for a lengthened period, subject to all excise duty ; and their consumption was, in consequence, pretty exactly ascertained. Digitized by Google 292 CANDLESTICKS-CANTHARIDES. An Account of the Rates of Duty separately charged on Tallow, Wax, and Spermaceti Candles, the Number of Pounds' Weight of each Sort produced, and the Total annual Nett Revenue derived from Candles, in Great Britain, in each Year since 1820.-(Parl. Paper, No. 468. Sess. 1830.) Pounds' Weight of Candles. Years. Rate of Rate of Rate of Nett Revenue. Tallow. Duty per lb. Wax. Duty per lb. Spermaceti. Duty per lb. d. d. d. £ 3. d. 1820 88,352,461 1 692,705 3t 193,463 31 373,455 14 5 1821 93,816,346 - 697,196 - 165,647 - 395,911 8 7 1822 98,311,801 - 682,241 - 179,208 - 415,609 15 3 1823 102,461,879 - 694,194 - 180,401 - 433,537 15 8 1824 109,810,900 - 759,751 - 179,454 - 466,042 16 1 1825 114,187,550 - 851,370 - 208,377 485,014 8 9 1826 110,102,643 - 705,615 - 201,790 - 467,069 12 1 1827 114,939,578 - 713,655 - 226,277 - 487,318 3 4 1828 117,342,157 - 748,293 - 270,263 - 497,770 2 9 1829 115,156,808 - 746,052 - 330,683 - 489,059 1 9 [Both spermaceti and tallow candles are exported to a very considerable amount from the United States to the West Indies, Mexico, and South America. New Bedford, in Massa- chusetts, is the principal place where the former description of them are made; although Judd's candles, from New York, are those which are in the highest repute.-Am. Ed.] CANDLE, Sale or Auction by Inch of, is when a small piece of candle being lighted, the bystanders are allowed to bid for the merchandise that is selling but the moment the candle is out, the commodity is adjudged to the last bidder. CANDLESTICKS (Ger. Leuchter; Du. Kandelaars; Fr. Chandeliers; It. Candel- lieri; Sp. Candeleros; Rus. Podsweschnikü) are of silver, brass, iron, bronze, tin japanned, or copper plated, made of different patterns and sorts. The best plated candlesticks are manufactured at Sheffield; the common sort of plated ones, as also brass, japanned, &c. are made at Birmingham. CANELLA ALBA (Fr. Canelle blanche Ger. Weisser Zimmet, It. Canella bianca ; Sp. Canella blanca; Lat. Canella alba), the inner bark of the Canella alba, a tree growing in the West Indies. It is brought to this country packed in casks and cases, in long pieces, some rolled in quills and others flat the quilled sort is considerably thicker than cinnamon, and the flat nearly 1 of an inch in thickness. The quilled pieces are yellow on both sides the flat pieces are yellow on the outside and pale brown within. The odour of both kinds, when fresh broken, is aromatic, something like a mixture of cloves and cinnamon; and the taste slightly bitter, and extremely warm and pungent. CANES. See BAMBOO, RATTANS. CANNON, CANNONS (Du. Kanonen Fr. Canons Ger. Kanonen; It. Cannoni; Pal. Dziala; Por. Canhoes; Rus. Puschki; Sp. Canones; Sw. Kanon), a kind of long hollow engines for throwing iron, lead, or stone balls by the force of gunpowder. They are commonly made of iron, but frequently also of a mixture of copper, tin, and brass. They are either cast hollow, or solid and then bored; those made in the latter way being very superior. Brass cannons, or cannons made of mixed metal, are said not to be so well cal- culated for hard service, or quick and continued firing, as those made of iron. The propor- tions of the ingredients used in making the former do not differ materially in different coun- tries, though they rarely coincide. To 240 lbs. of metal fit for casting, we commonly put 68 lbs. of copper, 52 lbs. of brass, and 12 lbs. of tin. To 4,200 lbs. of metal fit for casting, the Germans put 3,687.3 lbs. of copper, 20411 lbs. of brass, and 307 lbs. of tin. Others, again, use 100 lbs. of copper, 6 lbs. of brass, and 9 lbs. of tin; and others, 100 lbs. of copper, 10 lbs. of brass, and 15 lbs. of tin. It seems to be the general opinion that cannon were first made use of in 1336 or 1338 but Don Antonio de Capmany has produced some statements, which render it almost certain that some sort of artillery was used by the Moors in Spain so early as 1312.-(Questiones Criticas, p. 181. &c.) Cannons were certainly used by the English in 1347 at the siege of Calais, and by the Venetians at Chioggia in 1366, and in their wars with the Genoese in 1379 and 1380. The Turks employed them at the sieges of Constantinople, in 1394 and 1453. When first introduced, they were for the most part very heavy and unwieldly, and threw balls of an enormous size; they were, however, owing to their frequently bursting, about as dangerous to those using them as to their opponents. There is a valuable article on the construction and history of cannons in Rees's Cycloprdia; but it was published pre- viously to the appearance of Capmany's work referred to above. CANTHARIDES, OR SPANISH FLY (Fr. Cantharides, Mouches d' Espagne; Ger. Spanische Fliegen; It. Canterelle; Lat. Cantharis; Rus. Hischpanskie muchi; Sp. Cantaridas). This insect is found on a variety of shrubs in Spain, Italy, France, &c. Those used in this country are imported partly from Sicily, but principally from Astracan, packed in casks and small chests. The best are of a lively fresh colour, a small size, and not mouldy. They are frequently adulterated with the Melolontha vitis, but this is distin- Digitized by Google CANTON. 293 guishable by its form, which is squarer than the cantharis, and by its black feet. If they be properly dried and protected from the air, they may be kept for a very long period. -(Thomson's Dispensatory.) CANTON, one of the greatest emporiums in the East, ranking, as a port of trade, either before, or immediately after Calcutta, situated in the province of Quantong, in China being the only place in that empire frequented by European traders lat. 23° 7' 10" N., lon. 113° 14' E. Canton stands on the eastern bank of the Pekiang River, which flows from the interior in a navigable streamf of 300 miles to this city, where it is rather broader than the Thames at London Bridge ; falling, after an additional course of 80 miles, into the southern sea of China. Near its junction with the sea, it is called by foreigners Bocca Tigris. The town is surrounded by a thick wall, built partly of stone and partly of brick, and is divided into 2 parts by another wall running east and west. The northern division is called the Old, and the southern part the New City. In the old city is the Mantchou or Tartar general, with a garrison of Mantchou troops under his command. The lieutenant-governor or Fooyuen's office is also in the old city, but the governor and Hoppo (principal customs offi- cer) reside in the new city, not far from the river. All foreign commerce is conducted in the south-west suburb, where the foreign factories are situated and which, with the other suburbs, is probably not less populous than the city itself. The residence of Europeans is confined to a very small space, on the banks of the river; which might, however, be as pleasant as a crowded mercantile place can well be, were it not for the great number of small dwelling boats, which cover the face of the river. The people who occupy the larger portion of these boats are said to have come originally from the south ; and being a foreign and despised race, were not, at first, allowed to dwell on shore but most of the distinctions between them and the rest of the people have been abolished. Although Canton is situated nearly in the same parallel of latitude as Calcutta, there is a considerable difference in their temperature; the former being much the coolest, and requir- ing fires during the winter months. The streets of Canton are very narrow, paved with little round stones, and flagged close to the sides of the houses. The front of every house is a shop, and those of particular streets are laid out for the supply of strangers; China-street is appropriated to Europeans; and here the productions of almost every part of the globe are to be found. One of the shopkeepers is always to be found sitting on the counter, writing with a camel's hair brush, or calculating with his swanpan, on which instrument a Chinese will perform operations in numbers with as much celerity as the most expert European arithmetician. This part of Canton being much frequented by the scamen, every artifice is used by the Chinese retailers to attract their attention each of them having an English name for himself painted on the outside of his shop, besides a number of advertisements composed for them by the sailors in their own peculiar idiom. The latter, it may be sup- posed, are often duped by their Chinese friends, who have, in general, picked up a few sea phrases, by which the seamen are induced to enter their shops; but they suit each other extremely well as the Chinese dealers possess an imperturbable command of temper, laugh heartily at their jokes without understanding them, and humour the seamen in all their sallies. Ships only ascend the river as far as Whampoa, about 15 miles below Canton loading and unloading by means of native boats. The Chinese, considered as traders, are eminently active, persevering, and intelligent They are, in fact, a highly commercial people and the notion that was once very generally entertained, of their being peculiarly characterised by a contempt of commerce and of strangers, is as utterly unfounded as any notion can possibly be. Business is transacted at Canton with great despatch; and it is affirmed, by Mr. Milburn, and by most of the witnesses examined before the late parliamentary committees, that there is no port in the world where cargoes may be sold and bought, unloaded and loaded, with more business-like speed and activity. The fears, whether real or pretended, of disturbances arising from a want of discipline in the crews of private ships, have been proved to be in a great degree futile; the Americans and other private traders having rarely experienced the slightest inconvenience from any tumults between their sailors and the natives. Provisions and refreshments of all sorts are abundant at Canton, and, in general, of an excellent quality nor is the price exorbitant. Every description of them, dead or alive, is sold by weight. It is a curious fact, that the Chinese make no use of milk, either in its liquid state, or in the shape of curds, butter, or cheese. Among the delicacies of a Chinese market are to be seen horse flesh, dogs, cats, hawks, and owls. The country is well sup- plied with fish from the numerous canals and rivers by which it is intersected. Foreign Factories.-These extend for a considerable way along the banks of the river, at the distance of about 100 yards. They are named, by the Chinese, hongs, and resemble long courts, or closes, without a thoroughfare, which generally contain 4 or 5 separate houses. They are built on a broad quay, and have a parade in front. This promenade is railed in, and is generally called Respondentia Walk and here the European merchants, commanders, and officers of the ships, meet after dinner and enjoy the cool of the evening. % B 2 Digitized by Google 294 CANTON. The English hong, or factory, far surpasses the others in elegance and extent. This, with the American and Dutch hongs, are the only ones that keep their national flags flying. The neighbourhood of the factories is occupied with warehouses for the reception of European goods, or of Chinese productions, until they are shipped. In 1822, during a dreadful con- flagration that took place at Canton, the British factories, and above 10,000 other houses were destroyed; on which occasion the East India Company's loss was estimated at 500,000/. sterling, three fifths in woollens. For the space of 4 or 5 miles opposite to Canton, the river resembles an extensive floating city, consisting of boats and vessels ranged parallel to each other, leaving a narrow passage for others to pass and repass. In these the owners reside with their families; the latter rarely visiting the shore. All the business at Canton with Europeans is transacted in a jargon of the English lan- guage. The sounds of such letters as B, D, R, and X, are utterly unknown in China. In- stead of these they substitute some other letter, such as L for R, which occasions a Chinese dealer in rice to offer for sale in English à rather unmarketable commodity. The name mandarin is unknown among the Chinese; the word used by them to denote a person in authority being quan. Mandarin is a Portuguese word derived from the verb mandar, to command.-(Hamilton's East India Gazetteer; Milburn's Orient. Commerce; Companion to Anglo-Chinese Calendar, Macao, 1832, &c.) Conduct of Chinese Government.-The only real difficulty in trading with China origin- ates in the despotism, pride, and jealousy of the government, and in the general corruption of its officers. The former affects to treat all foreigners with contempt, and is always ex- posing them to insult; while the latter endeavour to multiply and enforce vexatious regula- tions and demands, that they may profit by the douceurs given for their evasion. Hitherto we have submitted with exemplary forbearance to every annoyance the Chinese authorities have chosen to inflict; but it is questioned by some whether this be the most politic course. The imbecility and powerlessness of the government is at least equal to its pride and pre- sumption: and in the event of its attempting to stop the trade, or to subject those engaged in it-to unmerited ill treatment, it is contended that we ought, in the event of redress being re- fused on the presentation of a remonstrance, to vindicate our rights by force. We are rather disposed to concur in this opinion. We believe that little more than a demonstration would be necessary and that the appearance of a single ship of the line in the Chinese seas would have more influence over the court of Pekin than a dozen ambassadors. But it is essential, before employing this sort of negociators, that we be well assured that we have justice on our side, and that our own misconduct has not occasioned the interruptions and annoyances complained of. The superintendents about to be sent to Canton-(see post)-should be vested with full powers to prevent, if possible, and, at all events, suitably to punish, any British subject who may act so as to give just cause of offence to the Chinese. We have a right to claim fair treatment from them, as we have a right to claim it from the Americans, or any other people; but we have no right to expect that our claim should be regarded, unless we respect the prejudices of the people, and the equitable rules and regulations of the government. Trade to the North of China.-At present, all foreign trade with China is confined to the port of Canton ; but this was not the case for a long time after China was visited by British ships, and it appears highly probable that it will be again extended towards the north. The interesting details given in the account of the voyage of the ship Amherst along the Chinese coasts show that the people are every where most anxious for an intercourse with foreigners, and that the law is the only obstacle to its being carried on to a very great extent. But, where the people are so well disposed to trade, the officers 80 corrupt, and the government so imbecile, it may, we think, be fairly anticipated that the unalterable laws of the " Celestial Empire" will not prove a very serious obstacle to such private individuals as may choose to engage in a clandestine trade with the northern provinces. The smuggler is even more om- nipotent in China than in Spain. The extent and perfect regularity with which the trade in opium is carried on, in defiance of all the efforts of government for its suppression. shows how unable it is to contend against the inclinations of its subjects, which, fortunately, are all in favour of a free and liberal intercourse with foreigners. Monies.-Accounts are kept at Canton in taels, mace, candarines, and cash; the tael being divided into 10 mace, 100 candarines, or 1,000 cash. There is but one kind of money made in China, called cash, which is not coined but cast, and which is only used for small payments; it is composed of six parts of copper and 4 of lead; it is round, marked on one side, and rather raised at the edges, with a square hole in the middle. These pieces are commonly carried, like beads, on a string of wire. A tael of fine silver should be worth 1,000 cash; but, on account of their convenience for common use, their price is sometimes so much raised that only 750 cash are given for the tnel. Foreign coins, however, circulate here, particularly Spanish dollars; and for small change they are cut into very exact proportions, but afterwards weighed; for which purpose merchants generally carry scales, called dotchin, made somewhat after the plan of the English steelyards. The tael is reckoned at 6s. 8d. sterling in the books of the East India Company but its value varies, and is generally computed according to the price paid per ounce for Spanish dollars in London. The tables given for this proportional value may be calculated in pence sterling, by the multiplier 1-908. Thus, if the price of the Spanish dollar be 60d. per ounce, the value of the tael will be 60 multiplied by 1-208 = 72:48d.; If at 66d., the value of the tael will be 79-728d.; and for any other price in the same proportion. Digitized by Google CANTON. 295 Fineness of Gold and Silver.-The fineness of gold and silver is expressed by dividing the weight into 100 parts, called toques or touch; similar to the modern practice of France. Thus, if an ingot be 93 touch, it is understood to contain 7 parts of alloy and 93 of pure metal, making in the whole 100. The fineness of the precious metals, expressed in these decimal proportions, may be converted into English proportions by the following analogies :-Suppose gold is 91:66 touch, say, as 100: 91.66 12: 11, the standard, and vice versd and to convert standard silver into touch, say, as 240 222 100: 92.5, the touch of sterling silver. Pure gold or silver without alloy is called by the Chinese sycee and sometimes, when of less purity, the metal is accepted as sycee. Silver Ingots are used as money, and weigh from t a tael to 100 taels, their value being determined by their weight. These ingots are of the best sort of silver: that is, about 94 touch. Gold Ingots.Gold is not considered as money, but as merchandise: it is sold in regular ingots of a determined weight, which the English call shoes of gold; the largest of these weigh 10 taels each and the gold is reckoned 94 touch, though it may be only 92 or 93. Weights-Gold and silver are weighed by the catty of 16 taels; the tael is divided into 10 mace, 100 candarines, or 1,000 cash. 100 taels are reckoned to weigh 120 OZ. 16 dwts. Troy, which makes the tael equal to 579.8 English grains, or 37-566 grammes. The principal weights for merchandise are the picul, the catty, and the tael; the picul being divided into 100 catties, or 1,600 taels. Lbs. OZ. dwts. 1 Tael weighs, avoirdupois - - 0 1 5:333 = If oz. 16 Taels, or 1 catty - - - 1 5 5:333 - 11 lb. 100 Catties, or 1 picul - - - 133 5 5.333 = 133} lbs. Hence the picul weighs 60.472 kilogrammes, or 162 lbs. 0 oz. 8 dwts. 13 grs. Troy. The above weights are sometimes otherwise denominated, especially by the natives: thus, the catty is called gin; the tael, lyang; the mace, tchen ; the candarine, fivan; and the cash, lis. There are no commercial measures in China, as all dry goods and liquids are sold by weight. In delivering a cargo, English weights are used, and afterwards turned into Chinese piculs and catties. Long Measure.-That used in China is the covid or cobre; it is divided into 10 punts, and is equal to 0-3713 metres, or 14,625 English inches. The Chinese have 4 different measures answering to the foot, viz. Metres. Eng. inches. The foot of the mathematical tribunal - 0:333 - 13-125 The builder's foot, called congpu - = 0.3228 = 12.7 The tailors' and tradesmen's foot - = 0.3383 = 13:33 The foot used by engineers - - = 0.3211 = 12:65 The li contains 180 fathoms, each 10 feet of the last mentioned length; therefore the li = 1,8974 Eng- lish feet; and 1921 His measure a mean degree of the meridian nearly; but European missionaries in China have divided the degree into 200 lis, each li making 1,826 English feet which gives the degree 69166 English miles, or 11-131 French myriametres. European Trade at Cunton.-As soon as a vessel arrives among the islands which front the entrance to the Canton river, she is generally boarded by a pilot, who conducts her into Macao roads. The entrance is, however, 80 safe, that ships push on without waiting for the pilot, who, if the weather be bad, is sometimes long in coming on board. The pilots' names are registered at the Keun-min-foo's office, near Macao; and for a licence to act, the sum of 600 dollars is paid. The person who takes out the licence sometimes knows nothing about ships or the river but employs fishermen to do the duty. On the vessel's arrival at Macao roads, the pilot goes on shore, to report her at the office of the keun- min-foo, who, when he has received answers to his inquiries, gives a permit for her to pass through the Bogue, and orders a river pilot on board. This pilot seldom repairs on board the vessel before 24 hours have elapsed. When arrived, the vessel proceeds through the Bogue, and up the Canton river to Whampoa. Every ship that enters the port is required to have a hong merchant as security for the duties, and a linguist, and comprador, before she can commence unloading. The master is required to give a writ- ten declaration, in duplicate, solemnly affirming that the ship has brought no opium. The East India Company's ships alone are excused giving this declaration. The hong or security merchants (at present 10 in number) are the only individuals legally permitted to trade with foreigners. To obtain this privilege, they have to pay largely; and when once become merchants. they are rarely allowed to retire, and are at all times subject to severe exactions from the local government. The linguists are government interpreters, ho procure permits for delivering and tak- ing in cargo, transact all the Custom-house business, and keep accounts of the duties. All the minor charges of the government, also, are paid by them; in consideration of which they receive a fee of about 173 dollars, previously to the vessel's departure. When a vessel wishes to discharge or receive cargo, the linguist is informed, a day or two previously, what kind of goods are to be received or discharged, and in what quantities. He then applies for a permit, which being issued, the lighters or chop-boats proceed to Whampoa, where they usually ar- rive on the evening of the second or morning of the third day. For a single boat the linguist receives a fee of 23 dollars; but if a permit be obtained for from 2 to 6 boats at a time, the fee for each boat is only 11 taels 2 mace 6 cand., or about 151 dollars. When the goods are ready to be landed from or sent to the ship, the hoppo (principal Custom-house officer) sends a domestic, a writer, and a police runner; the hong merchant who has secured the ship sends a domestic, called a court going man (one who attends at the public offices, on ordinary occa- sions, in behalf of his master); and the linguist sends an accountant and interpreter, to attend at the examination of the goods. The hong merchants are always held responsible by the government for paying all duties, whether on imports or exports in foreign vessels; and, therefore, when goods are purchased, it is customary for the parties, before fixing the price, to arrange between themselves who is actually to pay the duties. The hong merchants are required to consider the duties payable to government as the most important part of their affairs. If a merchant fail to pay at the proper period, his hong, house, and all his property are seized, and sold to pay the amount and if all that he pos- sesses be inadequate, he is sent into banishment at Ele, in Western Tartary, which the Chinese call the cold country;" and the body of hong merchants are commanded to pay in his stead. Of an import cargo, each chop-boat, according to rule, which, however, is not rigidly enforced, should contain,-of woollens, camlets, and long-ells, 140 bales; tin, 500 bars; lead, 600 pigs; Bombay cotton, 55 bales; Bengal cotton, 80 bales; betel-nut, pepper, &c. 300 piculs. Of export goods, a chop-boat should take,-of tea, 600 chests of other sorts of goods, 500 piculs. If more than this, the hong merchant gives to the chop-boat, for each additional picul, 61 dollars. In calculating the duties on export goods, 90 cattles are considered 100. The woollens, long-ells, and camlets, are measured by the chang of 10 covids, without any deduction and single articles are numbered. Each ship may export, of silk, 88 piculs the duty on each picul is 10f dollars. Those ships that want more, avail themselves of the names of ships which have exported none and the Custom-house con- nives at this, on receiv ing a fee of 14) dollars per picul. Digitized by Google 296 CANTON. If, after entering the port, any persons tranship goods, it is considered that the one ship sold them to the other and, in that case, the same duty has to be paid as if the goods were brought up to Can- ton. Provisions are not included in this regulation. Ships' boats are not allowed to carry up or down any thing chargeable with duty. Gold, silver, copper, and iron are prohibited to be exported; a few culinary utensils are the only ex- ception. When it is desired to export treasure, the hong merchant must make an estimate of the value of the import and export cargoes and whatever balance there may be in favour of the ship, may then be shipped off as treasure. The whole amount of tutenague that is allowed to be exported by foreign ships, including the Portu- guese at Macao, is 100,000 catties; but regulations of this sort may be easily evaded. If more cargo be sent to a ship than she can take on board, and she wishes it to be shipped on board another, it must be done within three days after announcing the goods at the Custom-house, and a hong merchant must state it to government; if granted, a hong merchant and linguist are ordered to go to Whampoa and take an account of such goods all which, with the expense of boats, runners, &c. at Whampoa, costs 40 or 50 (Companion to Anglo- Chinese Calendar for 1832, pp. 99-101.) Hong, or Security Merchants.-It may be supposed, perhaps, from the previous state- ments, that difficulties are occasionally experienced before a hong merchant can be prevailed upon to become security for a ship but such is not the case. None of them has ever evinced any hesitation in this respect. The Americans, who have had as many as forty ships in one year at Canton, have never met with a refusal. The captain of a merchant ship may resort to any hong merchant he pleases, and, by way of making him some return for his becoming security, he generally buys from him 100l. or 200L worth of goods. Indi- viduals are, however, at perfect liberty to deal with any hong merchant, whether he has secured their ship or not, or with any outside merchant; that is, with any Chinese mer- chant not belonging to the hong. So that, though there are only 10 hong merchants at Canton, there is, notwithstanding, quite as extensive a choice of merchants with whom to deal in that city, as in either Liverpool or New York. Duties.-It is very difficult, or rather, perhaps, impossible, to get any accurate account of the duties on goods exported and imported. They are almost always paid by the Chinese, though they must, of course, frequently be borne by the foreigner. Imported goods are weighed on board, and the duty paid by the purchaser; the duty on those exported is paid by the seller. The officers are notoriously corrupt and it is a common practice to give them a douceur to under-rate the weight of the goods. Foreign Merchants.-These consist of British, American, French, Dutch, Danish, Swed- ish, Spanish, and Portuguese, with Persee and Indian Mohammedan British subjects, and in 1832 amounted in number to above 110. The principal mercantile firms consisted of 8 British establishments, 7 American establishments, and 1 joint French and Dutch establish- ment. The Americans, French, and Dutch have each a consular agent; and though these functionaries be not publicly recognised by the Imperial government, all public business is con- ducted with them by the provincial government, through the agency of the hong merchants. Newspapersand Public Accommodations.-At Canton, there are 2 English newspapers viz. the Can- ton Register," once a fortnight, with a Price Current; and the Chinese Courier,' once a week. There are 3 hotels, a billiard room, and 3 European shops or warehouses upon a large scale, with surgeons, apothecaries, watch-makers, and boat-builders. General Rates of Agency Commission in China, agreed upon the 1st of November, 1831 in confirma- tion of those fixed by a meeting of merchants on the 1st of March, 1825. 1. On all sales or purchases of goods except the 17. Effecting remittances by bills of the agent or following 5 per cent. otherwise, OD purchasing or negociating bills 2 On all sales or purchases of oplum, cotton, co- of exchange 1 per cent. chineal, quicksilver, camphor-barroes, birds' 18. Bills of exchange returned. noted, or pro- neets, diamonds and other precious stones, or tested 1 ditto. pearls, abipa, and houses 3 ditto. 19. Negociating loans on respondentia 2 ditto 3. On returns, if in goods 2 1-2 ditto. 20. Debta, where a process at law or arbitration 4. On ditto, if In treasure, bullion, or bills I ditto. is necessary, 2 1-2 per cent.; and if reco- 5. On sale, purchase, or shipment of bullion 1 ditto. vered 5 ditto. a On all goods, treasure, ac. consigned, and at- 21. Collecting house-rent 2 1-8 date. terwards withdrawn or sent to auction, and 22. Letters of credit granted for mercantile par- on goods consigned for conditional delivery poses 2 1-8 ditta. to others 1-8 commission. 93. Acting for the estate of persons deceased, as 7. Ordering goods, or soperintending the fulfil- executors, or administrators 5 ditta. ment of contracts, where no other commis- 24. The management of the estates of others, on sion is derived 2 1-8 per cent. the amount received 2 142 ditta 8. On all advances of money for the purposes of 25. All cash receipts, not serving for the purchase trade, whether the goods are consigned to of goods, and not-otherwise specified above 1 ditta. the agent or not, and where a commission of 26 Shroffing 1-8 per mil. 5 per cent is not charged 8 1-2 ditta. 27. Transhipping goods 1 per cent. 9. Del credere, or guaranteeing sales, when spo- 28. Upon all advances not punctually liquidated, cially required 2 1-2 ditto. the agent to have the option of charging a 10. Guaranteeing bills, bonds, or other engage- second commission as upon a fresh advance, ments 2 1-8 ditto. provided the charge do not occur twice in 11. Procuring freight, or advertising as agent of the same year. owners or commanders, on the amount of 29. At the option of the agent, on the amount de- freight, whether the same passes through the bited or credited within the year, including hands of agents or not 5 ditto. interest, and excepting only items on which 12. Receiving inward freight 1 ditto. a commission of 5 per cent. has been 18. Ships' disbursements 2 1-2 ditto. charged 1 ditto. 14. Chartering ships for other parties 2 1-8 ditto. N. B.-This charge not to apply to paying over 15. Effecting insurance or writing orders for in- a balance due on an account made up to surance 1-2 ditto. a particular period, unless where such 16. Settling insurance losses, total or partial, and balance is withdrawn without reasonable on procuring return of premium 1 ditto. notice. Port Charges.-All foreign vessels trading to Canton have to pay a measurement charge, varying according to the size of the vessel. For this purpose they are divided into 3 classes viz. 1st. Vessels of 160 covids and upwards, pay - I - - 7-874,755 Taels. per covid. 2d. - above 120 and under 160 covids, - - - - - 7.221,091 3d. - of 120 covids and under - - - - - 5.062,341 - Digitized by Google CANTON. 297 The dimensions are taken from the mizen to the foremast for the length, and between the gangways for the breadth ; these two numbers multiplied together, and divided by 10, give the measurement in covids; and the quotient multiplied by the sum to be paid per covid, according to the vessel's size, gives the whole amount of measurement charge. Of this amount, only 10-11ths are, properly speak- ing, the measurement charge, the other 11th part being a fee of 10 per cent. on the Imperial dues. Once a year the hoppo goes in person to superintend the measurement of vessels, on which occasion he goes on board a Company's ship. At other times an officer is sent to represent him. The item next in importance to the measurement charge, is what is called the cumshaw or present, amounting, according to the reduced rate, to the sum of 1,600 683 taels, or 2,233 dollars, except on French, Austrian, and Prussian vessels, which are required to pay 80 taels more. This charge does not vary with the size of the ship; but is the same whether she carry 100 or 1,000 tons. The cumshaw is made up of the following sums viz. Taels. The entrepôt fees - - - - - - - - 810-691 Port clearance fee - - - - - - - - 480:420 Difference of scales, carriage to Pekin, &c., 6.75 per cent. on the above - - 87-150 Fee to the leang-taou, or superintendent of grain - - 116-424 For difference in the leang-taou's scales, 11 per cent. on the last named fee - - 1-281 For making it into sycee, 7 per cent. on the whole - - - - 104717 Taels 1,600-683 Vessels loaded with rice are exempted from the entrepôt and leang-taou's fees, as also from the measurement charge; the latter by command of the reigning sovereign, in 1825; and the two former by previous orders of the local government. They are likewise exempted from certain small monthly and daily fees, so long as they are engaged in discharging the imported rice; but these charges com- mence as soon as the vessel begins to take in an export cargo ; and the port clearance fee, with the double percentage of 64 and 7 per cent., is levied alike on all vessels. A vessel importing rice, in common with other vessels, is required either to receive an export cargo, or to pay about 300 dollars in default thereof. Until the measurement charge, present, &c. have all been duly paid, no vessel can obtain her grand chop, or port clearance from the hoppo's office. The other fixed charges besides the above are, 120 dollars for pilotage, in and out : fees paid to boats at second bar, and linguist's and comprador's fees. These last are intended to remunerate the expenses incurred on account of various daily and monthly charges, and other petty fees, besides se- veral unauthorised sums exacted by the inferior local officers. Lists of these charges have been printed; but they vary 50 much in particular instances, that it is next to impossible to attain any certainty with respect to them. The following is an example of a vessel of the 1st class subject to the highest rate of measurement charge, from which an idea of the amount of port charges on other vessels may be obtained :- The Glenelg, 867 tons. Length from mizen to foremast, covids - - - - - 83.1 Which multiplied by the breadth, from gangway to gangway - - - 26.0 And divided by 10, gives the dimensions - - - - - 216.06 Multiply that sum by - - - - - - Taels 7.874755 The measurement charge will be 1,701-418 taels, which, at 72 taels per 100 dollars, = Spanish dollars - - - - - - 2,363 Cumshaw, or present, taels 1,600-683, at 72 per 100 - - - - - 2,223 Pilotage in and out - - - - - 120 Bar boats and other small charges, about - - - - - 30 Lingnist's fees, about - - - - - - - 173 Comprador's fees, about - - - [' - - - 50 Spanish dollars 4,959 Vessels of the 2d class are charged in measurement from 1,200 to 1,600 dollars, and those of the 3d size from 600 to 800 dollars. The covid employed is equal to about 141 inches. The consequence of this mode of imposing the port duties is, that while they are very moderate on ships of 400 or 500 tons burden and upwards, they are very heavy on small ships: and hence small country ships frequently lie off Linting Flora, or Large Bay, till some of the large European ships come in sight, when they shift their cargoes on board the latter. They are commonly carried up to Canton for 1 per cent., by which means the duties and cumshaw are both saved. Chinese junks are exempted from the port dues. Captain Coffin, the commander of an American ship of about 400 tons register trading to China, in- formed the late committee of the House of Commons, that the whole charges of every description falling upon his ship, in entering and clearing out from Canton, including measurement duty, cumshaw, pilotage, victualling of theship, and consul's fee, amounted to between 7,000 and 8,000 dollars. (Companion to Anglo-Chinese Calendar, pp. 101-103. ; First Report, Evidence, p. 124.) British Trade with Canton.-The trade between Great Britain and Canton has hitherto been entirely monopolised by the East India Company and its officers. Tea has always been by far the principal article of import and it is mainly owing to the diffusion of the taste for this article, and its consumption by all ranks and orders of the community, that the trade has increased, notwithstanding the pernicious influence of the monopoly, to the extent that it has done. Besides tea, the Company formerly imported from China raw silk, silk piece goods, nankeens, mother-of-pearl shells, sandal wood, and a few other articles ; but of late years the value of these articles has been quite inconsiderable. The articles exported in the East India Company's ships from England to China con- sisted principally of woollens, copper, iron and lead, glass, earthenware, and jewellery. Bullion used, formerly, to be largely exported ; but recently the current has begun to set in the opposite direction, and bullion has been imported from China into England. 38 Digitized by Google 298 CANTON. The invoice value of the Company's trade between China and England in the under-mentioned years has been- Exports from China Imports into China from England. to England. Total Imports and Years. Exports. Merchandise. Treasure. Total. Merchandise. £ £ £ £ £ 1814-15 860,093 127,695 987,788 1,967,978 2,955,766 1815-16 926,920 1,127,518 2,054,433 2,231,366 4,285,799 1830-31 593,755 - 593,755 1,861,980 2,455,735 1831-32 398,475* - 398,475 1,814,043 2,212,518 * Mem.-There is an apparent reduction in the value of exports of merchandise from England, arising from cargoes to the amount of 192,3101. of this season having been despatched after the 1st of May, 1832 allowing for the consignments so deferred, the imports into China from England would be augmented to 590,7851., and the total of imports and exports to 2,404,8281. East India House, 25th of April, 1833. It appears from this account, that the merchandise exported from England to China during the years 1814-15 and 1815-16 amounted, at an average, to 893,5061. a year, exclusive of above 600,000L. a year in treasure; whereas, the exports of merchandise during the years 1830-31 and 1831-32 only amounted to 592,270L. a year, without any treasure! This extraordinary decline strikingly contrasts with the results of the free trade between Great Britain and India in the same years. The following is a detailed Account of the Value of the Exports by the East India Company from Great Britain to China during the Five Years ending the 5th of January, 1828. Species of Goods. 1824. 1825. 1826. 1827. 1828. £ £ £ £ £ Cotton manufactures - - 6,092 - 167 11,995 20,752 Iron in bars (British) - - 13,482 15,502 17,214 36,067 24,350 Lead and shot - - - 8,793 22,430 39,221 41,918 32,154 Skins and furs - - - - 33,516 31,151 - - Woollens - - - 674,585 532,221 652,047 756,968 413,422 All other articles - - 5,095 8,467 5,058 5,082 3,137 Total value of exports by the East India Company to China 708,047 612,139 744,856 852,030 493,815 Account of the registered Tonnage employed by the East India Company, clearing out annually from the Port of Canton for England, and of the Charges imposed by the Chinese on the Company's Ships in Canton during the undermentioned Years. Cleared out for Years. England. Charges in Tack. Rate per Tael. Amount. Tonnage. s. d. L 1829 27,904 91,518 6 8 30,506 1830 29,037 92,976 - 38,989 1831 27,431 85,691 - 28,564 1832 27,852 95,184 - 31,728 The following is a detailed Account of the Quantities and Prices of the different Sorts of Teas ex- ported from China in 1824-25 and 1828-29 by the East India Company, to Great Britain and British America. Exported to England. Exported to the North American Colonies. 1824-25. 1828-29. 1824-25. 1828-29. Teas. Average Average Average Average Quantity. Prime Cost Quantity. Prime Cost Quantity. Prime Cost Quantity. Prime Cost per lb. per lb. per lb. per lb. Lbs. 8. d. Lbs. 8. d. Lbs. 8. d. Lbs. 8. d. Bohea - 3,589,804 0 9:301 4,198,964 0 9:512 87,340 0 9:301 100,385 0 9-404 Congou - 18,773,989 1 3:397 16,951,171 1 2.587 81,733 1 3-600 914,616 1 0.349 Campoi - 214,153 1 6.427 507,881 1 7:461 - Souchong - 269,456 1 10:501 183,498 1 10870 51,312 1 3:067 19,768 1 9-599 Pekoe - 33,973 1 11-569 - - 3,539 2 0-594 Twankay - 3,791,405 1 4-460 5,471,633 1 3.810 579,120 I 3-831 146,753 1 6-796 Hyson skin - 178,596 1 5.526 154,767 I 4.238 163,929 1 3-309 10,195 I 4800 Young hyson - - - - 173,347 2 2:038 Hyson - 666,562 2 7'094 1,149,371 2 2.263 38,830 2 4'730 33,284 2 6-037 Gunpowder - - 4,953 2 6-511 - - 27,517,938 28,617,280 1,179,150 1,229,954 27,517,938 28,617,280 In Whole exports to Britain and America in the year 1824-25. 28,697,088 1828-29 29,847,234 In 1831-32 the total exports of tea by the East India Company were, to England, 30,203,098 lbs. : to North American colonies 1,276,856 lbs. being together 31,479,954 lbs. The aggregate prime cost (par- ticulars not stated) was 1,907,6481.-(N. B.-For full details as to the tea trade, see art. TEA.) Digitized by Google CANTON. 299 The Company's business in China has been carried on by an establishment of public officers, con- sisting of 12 supercargoes and as many writers, promoted according to seniority; the former were paid by a commission chiefly derived from the monopoly sales of tea in England, and the latter by fixed salaries; both being supplied with lodging and a public table at the Company's expense. The 3 senior supercargoes, called the select committee, constituted the governing body, and had the whole control, not only of the Company's trade, but politically of all British interests in China. The entire charges of the Company's China establishment in 1828-29 were 138,5261. ; being £ Twelve supercargoes - - - - - - 53,121 Twelve writers - - - - - - 10,226 Persons filling professional and other distinct offices - - 8,857 Rents and repairs of private apartments - - - - 16,782 Rent of factory, port charges, and other expenses - - 49,440 The Company's business was wholly conducted with the hong merchants, to the exclusion of the unlicensed or outside merchants, as they are called. The select committee divided amongst such of the solvent hong merchants as it pleased, the whole amount of the Company's export and import cargoes, and the business was done by a kind of barter a system long banished among the free traders. The ships employed by the East India Company in the China trade were commonly from 1,000 to between 1,400 and 1,500 tons burden, the greater proportion being from 1,300 to 1,400 tons. Trade between British India and China.-The trade is of decidedly more value and im- portance than that carried on between Great Britain and China; a result which seems mainly ascribable to the circumstance of its being principally in the hands of private in- dividuals. The greatest article of export from India to Canton used to be cotton wool, prin- cipally from Bombay; but it is now far surpassed by opium, the imports of which into China have sextupled since 1816-17, and are worth, at present, about 13,500,000 dollars ! This increase is the more extraordinary, seeing that opium is contraband in China; but the edicts of the emperors are as unable to prevent its introduction, as the proclamations of James and Charles were to hinder the use of tobacco in England. It is every where smuggled with case and safety. The trade was at first principally conducted at Whampoa; but the exac- tions of the Chinese authorities drove it to Macao, where it increased, but whence it was subsequently driven by the exactions of the Portuguese. It is now principally carried on in the Bay of Lintin. Here the opium is kept on board receiving ships, of which there are frequently not less than 12 quietly lying at anchor, without danger or molestation of any sort. The exports from China to India consist of sugar for Western India, tea, porcelain, nan- keens, cassia, camphor, &c. ; but the amount of these is not very considerable, and the re- turns are principally made in bills and bullion. Opiuna is sold by the resident European or American agents; and, on an order from these for its delivery, it is handed over to the smugglers, who come alongside the ships at night to receive it ; putting the naval force, Custom-house establishment, and police of the empire at defiance. We subjoin an Account of the Imports of the different Sorts of Opium into China from 1816-17 to 1830-31, both Inclusive. Patus and Benares. - Malwa. Total. Turkey. Seasons. No. of Aver. Total No. of Aver. Total No. of Chests. Price. Value. Chests. Price. Value. No. of Aver. Total Value. Chests. Chests. Price. Value. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1816-1817 2,610 1,200 3,132,000 600 875 525,000 3,210 3,657,000 750 300 375,000 1817-1818 2,530 1,265 3,200,450 1,150 612 703,800 3,680 3,904,250 1,000 610 610,000 1818-1819 3,050 1,000 3,050,000 1,530 725 1,109,250 4,580 4,159,250 700 625 437,500 1819-1820 2,970 1,235 3,667,950 1,620 1,175 1,915,250 4,600 5,583,200 200 975 195,000 1820-1821 3,050 1,900 5,795,000 1,720 1,515 2,605,800 4,770 8,400,800 30 1,525 45,750 1821-1822 2,910 2,075 6,038,250 1,718 1,325 2,276,350 4,628 8,314,600 500 1,025 512,500 1822-1823 1,822 1,552 2,828,930 4,000 1,290 5,160,000 5,822 7,988,930 226 1,270 267,060 1823-1824 2,910 1,600 4,656,000 4,172 925 3,859,100 7,082 8,515,100 4 1824-1825 2,655 1,175 3,119,625 6,000 750 4,500,000 8,655 7,619,625 1825-1826 3,442 913 3,141,755 6,179 723 4,466,450 9,621 7,608,205 No account has 1826-1827 3,661 1,002 3,668,565 6,308 942 5,941,520 9,969 9,610,085 been kept of Tur- 1827-1828 5,114 998 5,105,073 4,361 1,204 5,251,760 9,475 10,356,833 key opium during 1828-1829 5,961 940 5,604,235 7,171 966 6,928,880 13,132 12,533,115 these years. 1829-1830 7,143 858 5,149,577 6,837 861 5,907,580 14,000 12,057,157 1830-1831 6,660 869 5,789,794 12,100 587 7,110,227 18,760 12,900,031 Total 56,488 - - 64,997,204 65,496 - - 58,260,977 121,984 123,208,181 3,406 - - 2,402,770 In 1831-32, the total import of opium into China was 21,062 chests, of the value of 13,917,426 dollars. The stock on hand, 1st of January, 1833, was 5,110 chests. Nine tenths of the opium trade is in the hands of the British Indians. The following tables exhibit the general results of our trade with China from 1814-15 downwards:- Digitized by Google 800 CANTON. Account of the Annual Value of the Trade between the Subjects of Great Britain and China, from 1814-15 to 1830-31, both inclusive, distinguishing the Trade of the East India Company from that of individuals. Value of Im- Value of Exports and Im- ports and Ex- ports between India and China ports between Total Value of Total. England and the British Value of Trade Value of Trade Years. Trade with of Individuals of the Company China on Ac- count of the China. with China. with China. On Account of On Account of Individuals. the Company. Company. £ £ £ £ £ £ £ 1814-15 2,573,940 221,589 2,795,529 2,955,776 5,751,295 2,573,940 3,177,355 1815-16 2,379,026 356,470 2,735,496 4,285,799 7,021,295 2,379,026 4,642,269 1816-17 3,034,031 230,083 3,264,114 2,962,062 6,226,176 3,034,031 3,192,145 1817-18 3,327,770 710,100 4,037,870 2,183,022 6,220,892 3,327,770 2,893,122 1818-19 3,516,332 364,543 3,880,875 2,065,389 5,946,264 3,516,332 2,429,932 1819-20 2,190,137 334,807 2,524,944 3,092,456 5,617,400 2,190,137 3,427,263 1820-21 3,325,039 602,994 3,931,033 2,935,904 6,866,937 3,328,039 3,538,898 1821-22 3,011,010 469,657 3,480,667 2,700,425 6,181,092 3,011,010 3,170,082 1822-23 3,047,792 189,304 3,237,096 2,642,845 5,879,941 3,047,792 2,832,149 1823-24 2,734,509 721,425 3,455,934 2,815,048 6,270,982 2,734,509 3,536,473 1824-25 2,832,191 326,591 3,158,782 2,600,060 5,758,842 2,832,191 2,926,651 1825-26 3,943,729 291,603 4,235,332 2,687,013 6,922,345 3,943,729 2,978,616 1826-27 3,764,404 362,405 4,126,809 3,176,901 7,303,710 3,764,404 3,539,306 1827-28 4,951,678 376,247 5,327,925 2,836,397 8,164,322 4,951,678 3,212,644 1828-29 3,795,966 433,388 4,229,354 2,517,726 6,747,080 3,795,966 2,951,114 1829-30 - 308,767 - 2,490,947 - - 2,799,714 1830-31 - 363,741 - 2,983,487 - - 3,347,228 The statements from India for 1829-1830 and 1830-31 are not yet received. Account of the Quantity of each Article of Chinese Produce imported into the United Kingdom, in each Year, from 1793 to 1831, both inclusive. Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Years. Tea. Nankees Articles Silk. of Chinese Years. Tea. Silk. Nankeen Articles Cloths. Cloths. of Chinese Produce. Produce. Lbs. Lbs. Pieces. Value L. Lbs. Lbs. Pieces. Value L 1793 16.067,331 171,998 77,808 26,692 1813 The records of this year were destroyed by fire. 1794 23,710,774 99,671 374,398 19,809 1814 26,110,550 150,629 783,253 29,054 1795 27,208,003 158,225 146,365 19,186 1815 25,602,214 216,129 896,797 19,474 1796 6,184,628 12,968 48,642 23,062 1816 36,234,380 88,987 396,453 29,050 1797 16,235,125 78,520 77,338 23,252 1817 31,467,073 103,367 564,226 35,703 1798 44,873,112 136,196 257,473 25,054 1818 20,065,728 146,878 409,349 19,510 1799 15,090,080 63,604 184,490 17,131 1819 23,750,413 141,325 523,852 55,595 1800 15,165,368 92,385 170,917 25,960 1820 30,147,994 271,115 969,746 70,827 1801 29,804,739 131,335 366,851 29,293 1821 30,731,105 275,110 569,062 39,654 1802 27,356,502 75,588 274,921 19,054 1822 27,362,766 222,673 287,431 23,419 1803 30,843,134 74,538 232,894 23,134 1823 29,046,885 392,717 412,076 73,635 1804 26,680,784 90,362 264,407 26,184 1824 31,681,977 293,014 1,010,494 69,618 1805 28,538,825 76,359 252,207 15,198 1825 29,345,699 142,676 392,998 75,963 1806 22,155,557 18,607 376,234 10,504 1826 29,840,401 405.185 431,520 124,569 1807 12,599,236 55,277 72,135 11,474 1827 39,746,147 208,287 99,698 97,752 1808 35,747,224 117,855 484,647 17,617 1828 32,678,546 288,916 529,602 95,412 1809 21,717,310 90,603 287,720 14,268 1829 30,544,382 606,444 919,255 103,077 1810 19,791,356 54,376 305,009 14,890 1830 31,897,546 456,991 593,339 94,131 1811 21,231,849 81,397 316,616 9,630 1831 31,648,922 476,692 857,171 89,796 1812 28,318,153 86,197 503,276 12,929 Account of the Number of Ships, and of their Tonnage, that entered Inwards in the United Kingdom from China in each Year, from 1793-94 to 1831-32, both inclusive. Years. Ships, Tons. Years. Ships. Tons. Years. Shipa Tens. 1793-4 18 17,436 1806-7 9 11,083 1819-20 24 28,451 1794-5 I 21 20,234 1807-8 24 31,797 1820-21 23 28,692 1795-6 5 4,856 1808-9 15 19,290 1821-22 19 24,975 1796-7 17 14,354 1809-10 13 17,272 1822-23 19 26,013 1797-8 32 37,682 1810-11 15 18,984 1823-24 21 28,237 1798-9 13 12,731 1811-12 19 25,324 1824-25 19 25,970 1799-1800 10 12,840 1812-13 21 27,227 1825-26 23 27,894 1800-1 22 27,407 1813-14 19 24,466 1826-27 29 35,969 1801-2 21 24,531 1814-15 21 24,890 1827-28 25 29,833 1802-3 24 25,994 1815-16 26 33,075 1828-29 20 27,904 1803-4 17 22,279 1816-17 27 28,032 1829-30 23 29,111 1804-5 18 24,191 1817-18 15 20,000 1830-31 21 27,879 1805-6 15 19,100 1818-19 16 21,210 1831-32 22 27,940 The following tables give very full details as to the trade between Great Britain and Can- ton, and the trade between the latter and British India, carried on under the British flag, during the years ended the 31st of March, 1831 and 1832. Most part of the trade between India and Canton is conducted by the outside merchants. The hong merchants rarely adventure upon transactions in opium, of which this trade principally consists. We have obtained from Canton the following corrected account of the British trade at that city, in 1831-32. It corresponds pretty closely with the succeeding account, derived from the Parl. Paper, No. 229. Sess. 1833; but it is drawn up in a different form, and more in detail. Being anxious to afford all the information in our power with respect to this great emporium, we did not think we should be warranted in withholding it. Digitized by Google IMPORTS. LATURIS 301 On Account of the East India Company. Taels. Dollars. On Account of the East India Company. Tacis. Tacls. Dollars. Broad cloth bales 5,200 yards 543,132 602,593 Bohea piculs 861,347 1,976,930 340,340 1,577,543 77,000 54 367 Long-ells - 7,000 pieces 140,000 756,000 Congo - 129,106 3,041,473 Camlets 1,200 12,000 168,716 Souchong - - - 2,154 78,411 British cotton piece goods 1,200 - 30,000 89,131 (a) Hyson - - 8,851 430,427 British cotton twist - 2,000 lbs. 480,000 105,759 Hyson skin - 1,181 32,122 British worsted yarn - 50 - 6,250 4,171 Twankay - 30,834 882,207 1,134,623 Dollars. Dollars 3,971,813 5,275,987 842,307 171,542 168,798 British stuffs pieces 40 yards 1,200 389 1,053,326 524,217 Stamped long-ells bales 20 pieces 300 1,650 N. American investment (supercargoes' commission included) 276,042 Union satinets - 3 -- 30 540 Cape stores 20,290 Dyed cotton piece goods - 20 - 500 2,160 St. Helena stores 4,540 British iron tons 1,501 piculs 25,223 49,039 Stores to Bengal, Madras, and Bombay 12,672 Lead pigs 24,643 313,544 - 28,561 91,395 Corrected Statement of the British Trade at the Port of Canton for the Year ending the 31st of March, 1832. Cotton, Bengal bales 18,320 - 41,220 Ts.353,259 1,871,343 (b) Bullion (charges of shipment included) 1,173,967 dollars 845,249 Bombay - 18,156 - 50,642 430,323 783,582 Port charges on 24 ships (Bridgewater included) 89,131 Unloading charges, Canton factory expenses, &c. 110,340 199,471 On Private Account (per E.I. C. Ships). 2,655,125 3,687,674 T. m. Taels. On Private Account. 6,634,251 9,214,238 Cotton, Bengal piculs 63,024 at 8 6 per pic. 542,006 T. Madras - 4,543 - 90 40,887 Congou pieu's 6,069 at 21 per picul 127,449 Bombay - 283,639 - 77 - 2,184,020 2,766,913 3,842,935 Souchong. pouchong - 1,737 - 23 - 39,961 Sycee, equal to dollars Sycee, equal to dollars S. American silver and sycee } N. B.-The sycee is calculated at 718, with 5 per cent. premium added Digitized by Google equal to dollars (c) Pekoe and orange pekoe - 5,015 - 24 1 120,360 Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Twankay - 128 - 20 392,286 - 2,560 Opium, Patna and Benares chests 5,912 at 954 per chest 5,640,048 Hyson and young hyson - 2,139 - 44 - 94,116 Malwa - 8,034 - 705 - 5,663,970 Gunpowder and Imperial - 157 - 60 I 7,850 11,304,018 - - Sundry places, dollars 13,946 (d) { Black tea 1,641 42,446 } 153,201 (e) To England, dollars Calcutta, dollars Green tea - 7,085 - 110,755 Bombay, dollars Total export of bullion, sycee included. - 23,971 545,487 767,625 Sandal wood piculs 6,338 at 113-4 per picul 74,471 Pepper - 15,771 - 7 110,397 Dollars Dollars Dollars, - CANTON: Rattans - 6,349 - 23-4 - 17,459 Raw silk, Nankin piculs 6,283 at 368 per picul 2,312,144 Canton 2,168 158 342,544 } 2,654,688 Betel nut - 6,691 - 3 20,073 - - - Putchuck - 460 - 13 - 5,980 Nankeen cloth pieces 315,570 - 51 per 100 pieces 160,941 Olibanum - 550 - 5 - 2,750 Silk piece goods value 247,861 Broad cloth pieces 7,816 - 31 per piece 242,296 Sugar candy piculs 32,279 at 71.2 per picul 242,093 Camlets - 2,621 - 27 - 70,767 Soft sugar - 60,627 - 51-4 - 318,256 Cotton piece goods 35,298 41-4 150,016 Cassia lignea - 7,096 - 7 - 49,672 - - - Printed cotton piece goods value 24,443 buds - 614 - 18 - . 7,368 Cochineal piculs 46 at 314 per picul 14,444 Tortoiseshell and scraps value 19,017 Cotton yarn - 1,252 42 - 52,584 Mother-o'-pearl shells piculs 2,235 at 17 per picul 37,996 - Lead 1,393 5 6,965 Vermilion boxes 825 - 37 per box 30,525 - - - 24,754.968 lbs. 6,445,800 1,000,490 173,467 1,173,957 dollars. 1,709,466 lbs. 003'336 2.00 I Iron - 13,482 - 31-2 - 47,187 Camphor piculs 279 - 24 per picul 6,696 Tin - 5,032 - 17 - 85,544 Rhubarb - 763 - 54 I 41,202 Tin plates boxes 2,525 93-4 per box 24,619 Alum - 20,475 - 13-4 - 35,831 - Steel piculs 2,101 - 7 1-2 per picul 15,758 Aniseed - 477 10 1-2 5,008 .. a .. - - Quicksilver - 178 - 70 - 12,460 China root, gallangal, and musk value 10,799 Watches and clocks value 11,785 Floor mats - 3,129 Pearls, cornelians, diamonds - 215,475 Bamboos and whangees - 7,476 Ivory piculs 209 at 71 per picul 14,829 Pearls, false pearls, and glass beads - 48,094 Elephants' teeth - 159 - 76 - 12,084 China ware - 23,179 Fish maws - 1,075 - 60 - 64,500 Paper, kethsols, lacquered ware, fire-works - 83,840 Sharks' fins - 3,010 - 24 - 72,240 Cochineal piculs 144 at 209 per picul 30,096 Skins numb. 20,580 - - 9,850 Cotton piece goods value 14,250 Saltpetre piculs 7,068 at 7 per picul 49,476 Cotton yarn piculs 1,532 at 48 per picul 73,536 Rice - 51,496 - 212 - 128,740 Saltpetre - 1,868 7 - 13,076 Rose maloes and myrrh value 7,212 S. American copper - 4,610 - 21 - 96,810 Dollars - 16,200 Tobacco and segars value 9,947 Sundries - 120,906 Sundries - 146,492 Gold - 61,190 To England per 23 ships Importation of Opium, 1831-32. Consum.ofopium On hand. 13,005,618 (c) Silver bullion (sycee, S. American silver dollars) - 2,797,856 On English Account. Port. acct. Total. 1831-32. 1st April, 1832. Disbursements on 20 regular ships, at 10,000 dollars: 4 chartered ships, at 7,967,623 Sycee equal to dollars To England per 23 ships. VoL. I.-2C Patna and Benares 5,912 700 6,612 Patna chts. 4,442 Paina chts. 2,186 4,000 dollars: 33 country ships, at 8,000 dollars; and 33 ships at Listin, } 828,000 Malwah, Bombay 4,000 677 4,577 Benares 1,518 Benares 409 at 1,500 dollars each (a) Black tea Green tea Dollars (4) (c) Black tea Green tea (d) Per country ships. Demaun 4,034 600 4,634 Malwah 8,265 Malwah 2,983 Balance 2,768,741 13,946 1,877 15,823 14,226 20,536,927 Stat of March, 1832. E.E. T. J. MORRIS. 5,678 20,636,227 - 1. Account of the Shipping engaged in the Trade carried on with China by the East India Company; and of the Quantity and Value of the various Articles imported by the Company and its Officers from England and India into China, and of those exported by them from China, in 1830-31 and 1831-32. GOODS IMPORTED INTO CHINA. 302 No. of Ships Quick- Pepp. Rat- Betel Put- Shark Stock Salt- Sandal Cotton Diam. Watch cleared from silver. and tans, Nut. chuck. Fina, Fish. Drugs. petre. &other Yarn. Pearls, and Season. China in the Tonnage. Cotton. Metals. Woollens. Sun Total Total Spices, ac. Wood. Cotton Goods. Corne- Clocks. Bul- Value of Season. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. dries. Value of Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. lians. Value. Goods. lion. imports. Piculs. Dollars. Piculs. Dollars. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolla Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Pieces. Dollars. Pieces. Dollars Dollars Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dollars. Dulls. Dollars. 1830-31 21 27,977 146,788 1,821,876 39,741 144,347 - - - - - - - - - - 177,685 2,306,965 30,000 150,000 81,000 - - - 4,502,888 I 4,502,888 Privilege trade of the com- manders and officers carried } 69,313 781,299 ~~~ Pcls. 6,372 Bxs. 720 70,318 12,816 67,900 16,611 66,409 21,432 23,208 10,075 30,944 9,280 80,821 2,661 89,562 16,936 99,181 11,748 80,789 - 42,680 1,515,073 56,000 1,570,073 on in the Company's ships 6,072,961 1831-321 24 29,179 91,974 1,086,840 Pcls. 53,719 194,806 - - - - - - - - - - 167,934 2,123,730 30,500 132,883 146,886 - - 6,543 3,691,688 - 3,691,688 Privilege trade of the com- manders and officers carried an 69,723 781,863 { - 19,893 Brs. 2,525 148,318 12,460 74,284 11,690 18,849 2,808 - - 14,444 5,257 27,941 5,766 174,546 - 84,997 9,156 3,000 11,785 42,730 1,424,128 16,200 1,440,328 on in the Company's ships 5,132,016 GOODS EXPORTED FROM CHINA. Drugs Tin. Tortoise- Mats. Total Total Season. Tea. Raw Silk. Nanksens. Sugar Silk Piece Goods. Mother-o'-Pearl shell, Bamboos and Sundries. Value of Value of Bullion. and Sugar Candy. Value. Value. Shells. &c. Value. Whangees. Goods. Exports. Piculs. Dollars. Piculs. Dollars. Pieces. Dollars. Piculs. Dollars. Dollars. Pieces. Dollars. Dollars. Piculs. Dollars. Dollars. Dolls. Number Dolls. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1820-31. 228,574 7,964,485 - - - - 96 1,233 - 37 465 - - - - I - - 563 7,966,746 1,962,136 9,928,882 Privilege trade of the commanders and officers carried on in the 15,032 523,104 23 7,820 2,500 1,450 - - - - 38,322 12,096 1,134 22,680 4,125 14,558 584,400 10,124 312 634,591 692,964 1,397,555 Company's ships 11,856,437 1831-32 237,516 7,997,501 - - 1,000 844 - - - - - - - - - I I - 1,706 8,000,061 1,179,119 9,179,170 Privilege trade of the commanders and officers carried on in the 15,845 544,842 1,221 449,328 - - - - 4,254 - 26,400 - 737 12,529 5,767 3,829 - 5,846 6,338 1,069,133 842,949 1,902,082 CANTON. Company's ships 11,081,252 II. Account of the Shipping under the British Flag, engaged in the Private Trade between India and China, and of the Quantity and Value of the various Articles imported in these Ships into China, and exported in them from China, in 1830-31 and 1831-32. GOODS IMPORTED INTO CHINA. Pepp. Rat- Betel Put- Sharks' Sandal Wool- Cotton Diam. Wood, Cotton Salt- and tans. chuck. Fins, Drugs. Pearls, Ivory, No. of Ton- lens. Goods. Total Val. Season. Nut. Value of Cotton. Metals. &c. Yarn. Opium. &c. Corneli- &c. Total Spices. petre, Ships. Rice. Sundries. of Opium other Value of nage. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. ans. Value. Value. and Cotton. Articles. Imports. Piculs. Dollars. Piculs. Dollars. Piculs. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dollars Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dollars. Dolls. Dolls. Piculs. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Digitized by Google 1830-31 58 29,127 an 243 (3,822) Chests. 12,222,525 282,096 3,014,989 Brs. 46,230 63,667 10,161 17,516 960 118,887 10,918 63,479 81,010 - - 30,680 53,034 6,020 24,322 60,805 76,688 15,237,514 640,055 15,877,569 17,458 160 Chests. Piculs 1831-32 59 28,485 13,946 11,304,018 231,483 3,061,072 2,115 31,755 36,113 5 769 1,224 3,172 136,740 9,962 46,530 138,517 89,462 43,425 212,475 44,219 26,913 51,496 123,740 88,116 14,365,090 1,043,135 15,408,225 GOODS EXPORTED FROM CHINA. Cassia Silk Tor- Moth. False China Writing Cotton and Piece toise o'-Pri. Pearls Paper, Cotton Tutenague. Raw Silk. Nankeens. Sugar and Tea. Cassia Cloves Drugs. Ware. Goods. Shell. &c. &c. Copper. Goods. Yarn. Shell, Sundries. Total Value Value. Value. of Goods. Bullion. Total Value Sugar Candy. Buds. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. Value. of Exports. Pets. Dolls. Pols. Dollars. Pieces. Dollars. Piculs. Dollars. Dollars Dollars, 1830-31 Pcls. Dollars Dollars. 2,400 19,200 Dolle. 6,645 Dollars. Dollars. Dolls. Dolls. Dolls. Dolla, Dollars, Piculs. Dolls. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1,560,100 922,700 535,166 1831-32 143,464 952,520 5,562 - 7,230 150,776 111,803 386,989 426,873 9,900 - 2,205,360,315,570 15,880 55,643 34,076 150,620 3,002 78,052 8,300 - 155,956 4,651,854 3,997,432 8,649,286 - 160,941 92,906 560,349 8,7261 212,73 57,040 - 155,903 221,461 13,250 25,406 48,094 23,179 83,840 4,610 96,810 14,250 73,536 164,807 4,117,069 2,006,097 6,123,166 This statement includes the trade carried on between China and the Philippine Islands and New South Wales both by private India ships under the British flag, and by other vessels under that flag, CANTON. 303 TOTAL BRITISH TRADE WITH CHINA. Trade by the Company and their Officers. Trade by Individuals. Total value of the British Trade Season. Imports. Exports. Total. Imports. Exports. Total. with China, Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1830-31 6,072,961 11,256,437 17,329,398 15,877,569 8,649,286 24,526,855 41,856,253 1831-32 6,132,016 41,061,252 16,213,268 15,408,225 6,123,166 21,531,391 37,744,659 East India House, 25th of April, 1833. New Regulations as to the British Trade with Canton.-Notwithstanding the opposition made by the East India Company, the trade to China has at length been thrown open to all classes of his Majesty's subjects and British merchants may now freely trade to all places, accessible to Europeans, to the east of the Straits of Malacca. We congratulate our readers on the opening of this new and almost boundless field for the display of commercial enter- prise. It is not, indeed, a channel in which it would be prudent for any one not possessed of adequate capital and the necessary skill to embark. But the example of the Americans, and of the free traders from India to China, shows conclusively that there is nothing in the nature of the trade to prevent its being as successfully prosecuted by individuals as that to any other country. We are satisfied that the intercourse between the Eastern and Western worlds is as yet quite inconsiderable, compared with what it is destined to become, now that the incubus of monopoly is removed. The opening of the potts of Hindostan, in 1814, has more than trebled our trade with India and a similar result may be fairly anticipated in the case of China. In making these remarks, we are very far from meaning to throw any reflec- tions on the conduct of the East India Company. It is due to its directors to state that they have always evinced the greatest anxiety to extend the trade with India and China, and to carry it on in the most economical manner. But it was not in the nature of things that they could succeed. The affairs of all great associations must necessarily be managed according to a system of routine, by the intervention of salaried officers. And it were an insult to com- mon sense to suppose that such persons should display the same enterprise, or that they should manage the affairs intrusted to their care with the same watchful attention to details, and the same regard to economy, as private individuals trading on their own account, and reaping all the advantage of successful, as they must abide all the loss resulting from unsuc- cessful, adventures. Speculations may be eminently profitable to the latter, that would have been highly injurious had they been attempted by the former. It is true that the too great ardour of competitors may occasionally render even the best business unprofitable to those engaged in it but if this be an evil, it is one that is inseparable from all commercial under- takings; and there is no reason whatever for supposing that it will be oftener or more severely felt in the trade to Canton, than in that to Petersburg or any other port. In conducting an intercourse with the Chinese,-a people whose institutions and habits differ so very widely from those of Europeans,-it is essential that due circumspection should be used, and that nothing should be done by any one to give them reasonable grounds of offence. The experience of the Americans, and of the other foreigners, besides the English, resorting to Canton, shows, we think, pretty clearly, that the amount of danger from the circumstances just adverted to is not very considerable. It is right, however, as already stated, that effectual measures should be taken for preventing any interruption to the trade from the ignorance or misconduct of any individual. To accomplish this object there are provisions in the act opening the trade, enabling his Majesty to appoint superintendents of the trade to China, who are to be authorised to issue regulations in regard to it, to which all individuals engaged therein are to be obliged to submit. These regulations will, no doubt, be framed so as to prevent any just offence being given to the natives, without unnecessarily interfering with the free action of the traders. There is one very questionable clause in the act-that which authorises the imposition of a tonnage duty on the shipping employed in the trade, for defraying the cost of the establishments in China. We subjoin a full abstract of this important statute. ACT 3 & 4 WILL. 4. C. 93. FOR REGULATING THE TRADE TO CHINA AND INDIA. Repeal of the Act 4 Geo. 4. c. 80. &c.-Having stated that it is expedient that the trade to China should be opened to all classes of his Majesty's subjects, it is enacted, that the act 4 Geo. 4. c. 80. should be repealed, except such parts thereof as relate to Asiatic sailors, Lascars, being natives of the territo- ries under the government of the East India Company; and except also as to such voyages and ad- ventures as shall have been actually commenced under the authority of the said act; and as to any suits and proceedings which may have been commenced, and shall be depending on the 22d day of April, 1834 and from and after the said 23d day of April, 1834, the enactments herein-after contained shall come into operation.-d 1. Repeal of Prohibitions upon the Importation of Tea and Goods from China, imposed by 6 Geo. 4. c. 107. and 6 Geo. 4. c. 114.-80 much of the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 107., Intituled An Act for the general Regulation of the Customs," as prohibits the importation of tea, unless from the place of its growth, and by the East India Company, and into the port of London; and also 80 much of the said act as probibits the importation into the United Kingdom of goods from China, unless by the East India Company, and into the port of London; and also so much of the said act as requires that the manifests of ships de- parting from places in China shall be authenticated by the chief supercargo of the East India Com- Digitized by Google 304 CANTON. pany and also that 80 much of the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 114., intituled " An Act to regulate the Trade of the British Possessions abroad," as prohibits the importation of Tea into any of the British Possessions in America, and into the island of Mauritius, except from the United Kingdom, or from some other British possessions in America, and unless by the East India Company, or with their Hcence; shall be, from and after the 22d day of April, 1834, repealed and thenceforth (notwithstanding any provision, enactment, &c. to the contrary) it shall be lawful for any of his Majesty's subjects to carry on trade with any countries beyond the Cape of Good Hope to the Straits of 2. List of Persons on board any Ship arriving in India to be delivered to Officers of Customs.-The person In command of any ship or vessel arriving at any place in the possession of or under the government of the said Company shall make out, sign, and deliver to the principal officer of the customs, or other person lawfully authorised, a true and perfect list, specifying the names, capacities, and descriptions of all persons who shall have been on board such ship or vessel at the time of its arrival; and if any person having the command of such ship or vessel shall not make out, sign, and deliver such list, be shall forfeit 1001., half to such person or persons as shall inform or sue for the same, and the other half to the Company; and if the Company shall inform or sue for the same, then the whole penalty shall belong to the Company.- 3. Penalties how recoverable.-The penalties and forfeitures aforesaid to be recoverable by action of debt, bill, &c. in any court of record in the United Kingdom, or in India, or elsewhere, to which juris- diction shall be afterwards given.- 4. Three Superintendents to the China Trade to be appointed.-Whereas it is expedient for the objects of trade and amicable intercourse with the dominions of the emperor of China, that provision be made for the establishment of a British authority in them ; he it enacted, that it shall be law ful for his Ma- jesty by any commission or warrant under his royal sign manual, to appoint 3 superintendents of the trade of his Majesty's subjects to and from the said dominions, for the purpose of protecting and pro- moting such trade, and to appoint such officers to assist them in the execution of their duties, and to grant such salaries to such superintendents and officers as his Majesty shall from time to time deem expedient.- § 5. His Majesty may issue Orders and Commissions to have force in China.-It shall be lawful for his Ma- jesty, by any such order or commission as to his Majesty in council shall appear expedient and salu- tary, to give to the said superintendents, or any of them, powers and authorities over and in respect of the trade and commerce of his Majesty's subjects within any part of the said dominions; and to issue directions and regulations touching the said trade and commerce, and for the government of his Majesty's subjects within the said dominions; and to impose penalties, forfeitures, or imprisonments, for the breach of any such directions or regulations, to be enforced in such manner as in the said order shall be specified and to create a court of justice with criminal and admiralty jurisdiction for the trial of offences committed by his Majesty's subjects within the said dominions, and the ports and havens thereof, and on the high seas within 100 miles of the coast of China and to appoint one of the super- intendents herein-before mentioned to be the officer to hold such court, and other officers for executing the process thereof; and to grant such salaries to such officers as may appear reasonable.- 6. Superintendents, &c. not to accept Gifts.No superintendent or commissioner appointed under this act shall accept in regard to the discharge of his duties any gift, gratuity, or reward, other than the salary granted to him as aforesaid, or be engaged in any trade or traffic for his own benefit, or for the benefit of any other person or persons.-d 7. A Tonnage Duty to be imposed, to defray the Expense of Establishments in China.-It shall be lawful for his Majesty in council, by any order or orders to be issued from time to time, to impose and to em- power such persons as his Majesty in council shall think fit to collect and levy from or on account of any ship or vessels belonging to any of the subjects of his Majesty entering any port or place where the said superintendents or any of them shall be stationed, such duty on tonnage and goods as shall from time to time be specified in such order or orders, not exceeding in respect of tonnage the sum of 5a. for every ton, and not exceeding in respect of goods the sum of 10s. for every 100/. of the value of the same, the fund arising from the collection of which duties shall be appropriated, in such manner as his Majesty shall direct, towards defraying the expenses of the establishments by this act author- ised within the said dominions provided always, that every order in council issued by authority of this act shall be published in the London Gazette; and that every such order in council, and the amount of expense incurred, and of duties raised under this act, shall be annually laid before both houses of parliament.-d 8. Limitation of Actions.-The next and last clause contains the usual provisions as to the limitation of actions, &c.-P 9. American Trade with China-The American intercourse with China commenced shortly after the termination of the revolutionary war, and speedily became of the most valuable branches of the trade of the United States. The following statement shows the amount of the American trade from 1829-30 to 1831 -32, according to the returns furnished to parliament by the East India Company. An Account of the Value of Imports into, and Exports from, the Port of Canton by the Subjects of the United States of America, in the Years 1829-30 to 1831-32. Imports into China. Exports from China. Total Value Importe Years. Sale Value and Exports. Dollars. Total Value. Merchandise. Total Value. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars 1829-30 2,793,988 1,123,644 3,917,632 4,108,611 1 8,026,243 1830-31 2,871,320 183,655 3,054,975 4,263,551 7,318,526 1831-32 2,383,685 667,252 3,050,937 5,857,732 8,908,669 r Bills of exchange negotiated by the Americans in 1829-30, 393,650 dollars; ditto in 1830-31, 1,168,500 dollars ditto in 1831-32, 2,480,871 dollars.-(Part. Paper, No. 229. Seas. 1833, p. 13.) We have obtained from the United States the subjoined account of the American trade at Canton in 1831-32. This interesting document exhibits in detail the quantity and value of each article im- ported by the Americans into Canton, and of those exported; the latter are divided according to their destination. Digitized by Google CANTON. 305 Statement of the American Import and Export Trade at the Port of Canton, during the Season of 1831-32. Imports. Exports. Dollars. Dollars. To the United States. Bills of exchange - 2,480,871.00 Taels. Dollars. - 667,252.00 Chests. Piculs. Taels. Spanish dollars Dol. 12,182 Bohea 7,309.20 at 11 80,401 2 10,295 piculs Quicksilver, at 70 720,650-00 37,151 Souchong 24,147.85 18 434,661 5 0 24,892 Lead 41-2 112,014-00 3,212 Twankay 1,991.40 24 47,794 5 5 4,481 Iron 23-4 12,332.75 17,671 Hyson skin 8,835.50 24 212,052 00 1,949 Crude ginseng 54 105,246-00 40,065 Young hyson 26,042-25 44 1,145,859 00 799 Clarified do. 72 1-2 54,302-50 9,346 Hyson 4,486-08 46 206,359 68 376 Cochineal 200 75,200.00 4,514 Imperial 3,159.80 54 170,629 2 0 4,652 Copper 201-2 95,366-00 4,603 Gunpowder 3,682.40 58 213,579 2 0 1,400 Sandal wood 5 7,000-00 2,245 Pouchong 1,122.50 20 22,450 00 10,761 Rice and paddy 2 21,342.00 517 Pekoe 258.50 50 12,925 00 402 Opium 550 221,100-00 200 Congou . 120-00 16 1,920 00 Taels. 170 Cotton 8 1,888.88 131,706 81,155.52 2,548,631 4 3,539,725,47 Dollars, 2,510 11,922-50 Dollars. Spelter 3-4 Dollars. 2,286 Cotton yarn 37 84,582.00 34,822 Embroidered crape shawls,at 3 1-2 121,877-00 601 Tobacco 10 6,010-00 68,063 Damask do. do. 134 119,110.00 770 Pearl shells 5 3,850-00 8,507 pieces Crape 7 66,549-00 1,072 Tin 16 17,152.00 23,157 Handkerchiefs 6 138,954.00 900 boxes Tin plates 7 6,300-00 22,292 Senshaws 91-2 211,774.00 Black sarsnets 8 3,418 pieces Broad cloths 30 102,540.00 28,986 231,968.00 820 Camlets - 23 18,860.00 8,459 White do. 8 67,672-00 2,890 Long-ells 8 23,040-00 7,998 Levantines 9 71,982.00 56,178 Long cloths 414 238,756.50 5,645 Do. satin 121-2 70,562.00 - 19,802 Chintz 4 79,208.00 6,963 Satins 13 90,545-00 6,492 Cambrics 2 12,984.00 276 Satin damask 18 4,968.00 3,500 9 10,334 Domestics 3 31,002.00 Camlets 31,500-00 24,566 dozen Handkerchiefs 11-2 36,849-00 10,677 White pongees 11 117,447:00 11,722 Land otter skins 61-2 76,193-00 33,901 Sutchnen do. 41-2 152,554.50 1,591 Sea otter skins 42 66,822.00 4,417 Mixed lutestrings T 30,919-00 9,369 Fox skins 112 11,240.00 350 piculs Sewings 400 140,000.00 1,868 Beaver skins 112 12,339.00 109 Raw silk 370 40,330-00 142-00 1 708-719-90 71 Seal skins 2 12 2,160.00 54,700 pieces Blue Nankeens 70 38,290.00 180,000 Cigars Wine, value 2,300.00 67,585 Company Nankeens 50 33,792.50 Watches 10,000-00 3,541 piculs Cassia 101-2 37.180-00 2,000.00 38 Cassia oil 130 4.940-00 Glass Morocco skins 500-00 25 Camphor 14 600-00 2,283,684.53 584 Rhubarb 30 17,520.00 Sundry merchandise - 100,000-00 1,101 Sweetmeats 15 16,515 00 £ 2,000 4 2,318 Sugar 318 8 } 10,544.00 15,915 boxes Crackers 11-2 23,872-50 313 Vermilion 42 13,146-00 2,844 rolls Matting - 5 14,220.00 65,200 gross Pearl buttons 17 11,084-00 China ware and grass cloth, in value 7,550.00 Sundry merchandise, in value 100,000.00 329,254.50 To Europe. Chests. Piculs. 300 Bohea 210-00 720 Souchong 468.00 1,550 Congou 1,007.50 413 Campoy 268-45 125 Twankay 77.50 321 Hyson skin 160-50 354 Young hyson 170-11 216 Hyson 103-68 74 Imperial 51.80 72 Gunpowder 57 60 294 Pekoe 145.00 4,485 2,720.13 30 piculs Sweetmeats. 150 Cassia. 5 Vermilion. The above investments to Europe, per invoices 130 000-00 To South America and the Sandwich Islands. Brig Chilian's cargo, value 40,000.00 Bogeta's 70,000.00 Diana's . 40,000.00 150,000-00 Dol. Disbursements of 22 vessels, at 6,000 132,000.00 8 Rice vessels 1,000 8,000-00 5 Lintin 400 2,000.00 Balance - 467,924-44 142,000.00 Dollars 5,999,731-97 Dollars - 5,999,731-97 - It results from this statement, that the American trade at Canton, in 1831-32, amounted to about 12,000,000 dollars, being equal to three fourths of that carried on at Canton during the same year on account of the East India Company. It is of importance to observe that the dealings of the Americans are principally carried on with the outside merchants. Captain Coffin, and other American gentlemen examined by the late committee of the House of Commons on the China trade, speak in strong terms of the facility and expedition with which business may be conducted at Canton. Trade of Portuguese, Spaniards, &c. at Canton.-Respecting the extent of the Portuguese, Spanish, French, Swedish, Danish, and Dutch trades, we have no data to lay before the reader on which rell- ance could be placed; but they are inconsiderable and fluctuating, compared with the branches already described. The Dutch trade is probably the largest; but even with the assistance of protecting duties in Holland, the Dutch are unable to withstand the enterprise and activity of the Americans. The 2 c 2 39 Digitized by Google 306 CANTON. Portuguese trade, particularly that with the possessions of Portugal on the continent of India, was considerable during the war, but has since greatly declined. A nation of more spirit than the Portu- guese would, with the advantage they enjoy in the possession of the convenient station of Macao, be able to carry on the Chinese trade with superior success. There is a considerable intercourse, carried on in Spanish ships, between Canton and Manilla. The Philippine Islands afford many commodities in demand in the Chinese markets; and the Spaniards are the only European people allowed openly to trade with the busy and commercial port of Amoy, in the province of Fokien; unfortunately, how- ever, they are deficient in the skill and enterprise required fully to avail themselves of these advan- tages. It appears from the official accounts, published by the French government, that in 1831, only 2 ships, of the burden of 585 tons, cleared out from French ports for China. This, we believe, is prin- cipally to be ascribed to the trifling extent to which the great article of Chinese produce, tea, is con- sumed in France. Trade with the Indian Islands, &c.-In his evidence before the select committee of the House of Commons, Mr. Crawfurd gave the following instructive details with respect to the native foreign trade of China :- Native Foreign Trade of China.- The principal part of the junk trade is carried on by the four con- tiguous provinces of Canton, Fokien, Chekiang, and Kiannan. No foreign trade is permitted with the island of Formosa and I have no means of describing the extent of the traffic which may be conducted between China, Corea, and the Leechew Islands. The following are the countries with which China carries on a trade in junks viz. Japan, the Philippines, the Soo-loo islands, Celebes, the Moluccas, Borneo, Java, Sumatra, Singapore, Rhio, the east coast of the Malayan peninsula, Siam, Cochin China, Cambodia, and Tonquin. The ports of China at which this trade is conducted are Canton, Tchaou-tcheou, Nomhong, Hoeitcheon, Suheng, Kongmoon, Chang-lim, and Hainan in the province of Canton; Amoy and Chinchew, in the province of Fokien Ningpo and Siang-hai, in the province of Chekiang and Soutcheon, in the province of Kiannan. The following may be looked upon as an approximation to the number of junks carrying on trade with the different places already enumerated, viz. Junks. I Junks. Japan 10 junks, two voyages - 20 Singapore 8, Rhio 1 - - 9 Philippine Islands - - - 13 East coast of Malay peninsula - 6 Soo-loo Islands - - - 4 Siam - - - 89 Borneo 13, Celebes 2 - - - 15 Cochin China - - - 20 Java - - - - - 7 Cambodia - - - 9 Sumatra - - - - 10 Tonquin - - - - 20 - Total 222. This statement does not include a great number of small junks belonging to the island of Hainan, which carry on trade with Tonquin, Cochin China, Cambodia, Siam, and Singapore. Those for Siam amount yearly to about 50, and for the Cochin Chinese dominions to about 43; these alone would bring the total number of vessels carrying on a direct trade between China and foreign countries to 307. The trade with Japan is confined to the port of Ningpo, in Chekiang, and expressly limited to 10 vessels; but as the distance from Nangasaki is a voyage of no more than 4 days, it is performed twice a year. " With the exception of this branch of trade, the foreign intercourse of the two provinces Chekiang and Kiannan, which are famous for the production of raw silk, teas, and nankeens, is confined to the Philippine islands, Tonquin, Cochin China, Cambodia, and Siam; and none of this class of vessels, that I am aware of, have ever found their way to the western parts of the Indian Archipelago. The number of these trading with Siam is 24, all of considerable size ; those trading with the Cochin Chi- nese dominions 16, also of considerable size ; and those trading with the Philippines 5; making in all 45, of which the average burden does not fall short of 17,000 tons. I am the more particular in de- scribing this branch of the Chinese commerce, as we do not ourselves at present partake of it, and as we possess no direct means of obtaining information in regard to it. All the junks carrying on this trade with Siam are owned in the latter country and not in China and I am not sure how far it may not also be 80 in the other cases. I do not doubt but that a similar commerce will, in the event of a free trade, extend to Singapore; and that through this channel may eventually be obtained the green teas of Kiannan, and the raw silks of Chekiang. " Besides the junks now described, there is another numerous class, which may be denominated the colonial shipping of the Chinese. Wherever the Chinese are settled in any numbers, junks of this description are to be found such as in Java, Sumatra, the Straits of Malacca, &c.; but the largest commerce of this description is conducted from the Cochin Chinese dominions, especially from Siam, where the number was estimated to me at 200. Several junks of this description from the latter country come annually to Singapore, of which the burden is not less than from 300 to 400 tons. The junks which trade between China and the adjacent countries are some of them owned and built in China; but a considerable number also in the latter countries, particularly in Siam and Cochin China. Of those carrying on the Siamese trade, indeed, no less than 81 out of the 89, of considerable size, were represented to me HS being built and owned in Siam. The small junks, however, carrying on the trade of Hainan, are all built and owned in China. The junks, whether colonial or trading direct with China, vary in burden from 2,000 piculs to 15,000, or carry dead weight from 120 to 900 tons. Of those of the last size I have only seen 3 or 4, and these were at Siam, and the same which were commonly employed in carrying a mission and tribute yearly from Siam to Canton. Of the whole of the large class of junks, I should think the average burden will not be overrated at 300 tons each, which would make the total tonnage employed in the native foreign trade of China between 60,000 and 70,000 tons, exclusive of the small junks of Hainan, which, estimated at 150 tons each, would make in all about 80,000 tons. 'The junks built in China are usually constructed of fir and other inferior woods. When they ar- rive in Cambodia, Siam, and the Malayan islands, they commonly furnish themselves with masts, rudders, and wooden anchors, of the superior timber of these countries. The junks built in Siam are a superior class of vessels, the planks and upper works being invariably teak. The cost of ship build- ing is highest at the port of Amoy in Fokien, and lowest in Siam. At these places, and at Chang-lim in Canton, the cost of a junk of 8,000 piculs, or 476 tons burden, was stated to me, by several command- ers of junks, to be as follows :- At Siam - - - - - - 7,400 dollars. Chang-lim - - - - - 16,000 - Amoy - - - - - - 21,000 - A junk of the size just named has commonly a crew of 90 hands, consisting of the following officers, besides the crew ; a commander, a pilot, an accountant. a captain of the helm, a captain of the an- chor, and a captain of the hold. The commander receives no pay, but has the advantage of the cabin accommodation for passengers, reckoned on the voyage between Canton and Singapore worth 150 Spanish dollars. He is also the agent of the owners, and receives a commission, commonly of 10 per Digitized by Google CANTON. 307 cent. on the profits of such share of the adventure, generally a considerable one, in which they are concerned. The pilot receives for the voyage 200 dollars of wages, and 50 piculs of freight out and home. The helmsman has 15 piculs of freight and no wages. The captains of the anchor and the hold have 9 piculs of freight each ; and the seamen 7 piculs each. None of these have any wages. The officers and seamen of the colonial junks are differently rewarded. In a Siamese junk, for ex- ample, trading between the Siamese capital and Singapore, of 6,000 piculs burden, the commander and pilot had each 100 dollars for the voyage, with 12 piculs of freight apiece. The accountant and helmsman had half of this allowance, and each seaman had 13 dollars, with 5 piculs of freight. " In construction and outfit, Chinese junks are clumsy and awkward in the extreme. The Chinese are quite unacquainted with navigation, saving the knowledge of the compase notwithstanding this, as their pilots are expert, their voyages short, and as they hardly ever sail except at the height of the monsoons, when a fair and steady 7 or 8 knots' breeze carries them directly from port to port, the sea risk is very small. During 13 years' acquaintance with this branch of trade, I can recollect hearing of but 4 shipwrecks; and in all these instances the crews were saved. The construction and rigging of a Chinese junk may be looked upon as her proper registry, and they are a very effectual one ; for the least deviation from them would subject her at once to foreign charges and foreign duties, and to all kinds of suspicion. The colonial junks, which are of a more commodious form and outfit, if visiting China, are subjected to the same duties as foreign vessels. Junks, built in Siam, or any other adjacent country, if constructed and fitted out after the customary model, are admitted to trade to China upon the same terms as those built and owned in the country. If any part of the crew consist of Siamese, Cochin Chinese, or other foreigners, the latter are admit- ted only at the port of Canton; and if found in any other part of China, would be seized and taken up by the police exactly in the same manner as if they were Europeans. The native trade of China conducted with foreign countries is not a clandestine commerce, unacknowledged by the Chinese laws, but bas in every case at least the express sanction of the viceroy or governor of the province, who, on petition, decides the number of junks that shall be allowed to engage in it; and even enu- merates the articles which it shall be legal to export and import. At every port, also, where such a foreign trade is sanctioned, there is a hong or body of security merchants as at Canton a fact which shows clearly enough that this institution is parcel of the laws or customs of China, and not a pecu- liar restraint imposed upon the intercourse with Europeans. The Chinese junks properly constructed pay no measurement duty, and no cumshaw or present ; duties, however, are paid upon goods exported and imported, which seem to differ at the different provinces. They are highest at Amoy, and lowest in the island of Hainan. The Chinese traders of Siam informed me that they carried on the fairest and easiest trade, subject to the fewest restrictions, in the ports of Ningpo and Siang-hai in Chekiang, and Soutcheon in Kiannan. Great dexterity seems every where to be exercised by the Chinese in evading the duties. One practice, which is very often followed, will afford a good example of this. The coasting trade of China is nearly free from all du- ties and other imposts. The merchant takes advantage of this; and intending in reality to proceed to Siam or Cochin China, for example, clears a junk out for the island of Hainan, and thus avoids the payment of duties. When she returns she will lie 4 or 5 days off the mouth of the port, until a regu- lar bargain be made with the Custom-house officers for the reduction of duties. The threat held out in such cases is to proceed to another port, and thus deprive the public officers of their customary perquisites. I was assured of the frequency of this practice by Chinese merchants of Cochin China, as well as by several commanders of junks at Singapore. From the last-named persons I had another fact of some consequence, as connected with the Chinese trade; viz. that a good many of the junks, carrying on trade with foreign ports to the westward of China, often proceeded on voyages to the northward in the same season. In this manner they stated that about 20 considerable junks, besides a great many small ones, proceeded annually from Canton to Souchong, one of the capitals of Kian- nan, and in wealth and commerce the rival of Canton, where they sold about 200 chests of opium at an advance of 50 per cent. beyond the Canton prices. Another place where the Canton junks, to the number of 5 or 6, repair annually, is Chinchew, in the province of Canton, within the Gulf of Peche- ley, or Yellow Sea, and as far north as the 37th degree of latitude. Report of 1830, p. 298.) A Chinese ship or junk is seldom the property of one individual. Sometimes 40, 50, or even 100 different merchants purchase a vessel, and divide her into as many different compart- ments as there are partners; so that each knows his own particular part in the ship, which he is at liberty to fit up and secure as he pleases. The bulk-heads, by which these divisions are formed, consist of stout planks, so well caulked as to be completely water-tight. A ship thus formed may strike on a rock, and yet sustain no serious injury a leak springing in one division of the hold will not be attended with any damage to articles placed in another; and, from her firmness, she is qualified to resist a more than ordinary shock. A considera- ble loss of stowage is, of course, sustained; but the Chinese exports generally contain a considerable value in small bulk. It is only the very largest class of junks that have so many owners; but even in the smallest class the number is very considerable. Population of China-The most conflicting accounts have been given of the population of the Chinese empire. According to the statement of the Chinese authorities, it was found, by a census taken in 1813, to amount, for China Proper, to 367,821,000! Vast as this number must certainly appear, it does not, taking the prodigious extent of territory over which it is spread into account, give more than 268 individuals to a square mile,-a density inferior to that of several European countries. It is said that the inhabitants are in the practice of under-rating their numbers in their returns to government.-(Companion to Anglo-Chinese Calendar, p. 156.) We are, however, wholly without the means of coming to any positive conclusion as to the degree of credit to be attached to the census. Price Current.-A perusal of the subjoined Price Current, published at Canton, the 1st of December, 1832, will give the reader a tolerable notion of the various articles and their prices in the Canton mar- ket, at the very height of the shipping season. CANTON, 1st of December, 1832. Imports. Betel nut 3 J 4 - Amber Sp. drs. 8 to 14 per catty. Birds' nests 26 40 per catty. Associatida 41.2 per picul. Camphor, Barus 10 30 - Biche de mer 8 to 16 Cloves, Molueca 30 32 per pical. very superior 36 50 - Mauritius 18 20 Beer wax 24 25 - Cochineal, Europe, garbled 260 290 - Digitized by Google 308 CANTON. Emports Woollens, Long ells 7 per prece. Cochineal, Earope, ungarbled 180 200 per picul. Scarlet cuttings 80 to 90 per pical. Copper, South America 15 16 - Exports. at Lintin for exportation 23-50 - Japan 18 20 Alum, at Macao, 1 3-4 to 2 here Sp. drs. 2-25 per pical - Coral fragments 30 50 Aniseed, star 10 to 11 - - Cotton, Bombay taels 8 10-4 oil of 1-50 per catty. - Bengal Bamboo canes 85 to 10-5 14 to 16 per 1,000. - Madras (old) 103: (new) Brass leaf 11 45 46 per box. - Cotton goods, British, viz. Camphor, at Macao, none: at Canton 28 30 per pieul. Chintzes 28 yda. Sp. drs. 2 1-2 to 1-2 per piece. Camia (shipped outside), 9: at do. 12 IS - Longeloths 40 do. 31-2 1-2 buds (new) 15 - - Musline 20 do. China root 2 1-2 318 - - Cambrics 12 do. Cubebs 118 13-4 none. - Monteith's bandannoes, scarlet 21-4 81-4 Dragon's blood 80 to 100 - - blue, &c. 1 1-8 13-4 Galangal 414 - - Cotton yaru, No. 16. to 90. 35 per picul Gambage 75 to 85 - No. 90. to 30. Glass beads 42 16 22 - - No. 30. to 40. Hartall 38 12 13 - - No. 40. to 70. not wanted. Lead, white 10 - Cow besoar red 30 11 - per catty. Cudbear 25 to 26 per pieul. Mother-of pearl shells 20 to 22 - Musk Cutch, Pege 41-2 70 110 4 per catty. - Ebony, Mauritius 3 Nankeens, Company's 1st. 72 4 74 - per 100. Ceylon 2 818 9d, 1st sort 52 - - Elephant's teeth, 1st, 5 to 8 to a picul 2d. do. 90 47 to 48 - - 2d, 12 to 15 do. 80 3d, 38 40 - - 3d, 18 to 25 do. small 70 none. - cuttings 70 blue Nankin, small (9 3-4 yds. 12 ins.) do. - Fishmaws 60 to 70 large, (10 1-2 do. 13 do.) 85 to 90 - - Flists Canton 50 62 63 - cts. - Gambier Oil of Cassia 1-8 Sp. drs. 1 to 1-8 per catty - Rhubarb Ginseng, crude 70 80 52 to 55 per picul. - clarified 80 333 - 85 Silk, raw, Nankin, Taymam - Iron bar, 1 to 3 inch Tratlee 21-4 21-2 358 - - rod, 1-4 inch and under 3 Canton, No. 1. taels 260 to 265 - - No. 2. scrap 2 to 21-4 250 - - Lead, pig No. 3. 225 to - 41-2 - Mace No. 4. 140 - none. Myrrh 4 to 18 (! Sp. dra. 90 - - Nutmegs No. 5. 2 70 - none. Olibanum, garbled, 10: ungarbled 5 to 6 (3 63 - - Opium, Patna (nominal) 950 Sugar, raw taels 5-2 to 5-6 - per chest. Benares do. 950 Pingfa 6-2 6-4 - - Bombay do. 896 Sugar candy, Chinchew Sp. drs. 11 - - Damaum do. 825 Canton, 1st sort taels 6-6 - - 2d do Turkey do. 800 per picul. none. Pepper, Malay 3-4 to 8 Tea, Robea 12 to 15 - - Putchuck 14 15 Congou 20 28 - - Quicksilver 58 60 Campoy 28 30 - - Rattans 23-4 31-8 Souchong 19 35 - - Rice Pako 2 2-50 38 60 - - Rose, Maloes 38 Ankoi souchong 18 20 - - Saltpetre at Whampos Hyson 55 70 - none. skin Lintin 1-2 to 9 26 35 - - Sandal wood, Indian 10 16 young 45 50 - - Sandwich Island 112 7 Gunpowder 64 66 - - Sapan wood 1-80 to 2 Twankay 30 32 - - Sharks' fins 23 to 24 Orange peko 20 21 - - very fine 28 40 Caper 20 22 - - Tortoiseshell Skins, rabbit 45 50 per 100. 20 28 - Turmeric seal 1.90 to 2 each. Sp. drs. 5 51e - sea otter 45 to 50 Tutenague 13 - - Vermilion land do. 5 61-2 34 to 35 per box. - beaver 41-2 612 Whangees 25 - per 1,000. fox cts. 70 90 - Bullion. Smalts, (for a small supply) Sp. dra. 20 60 per picul. Steel, English 41-2 Gold - 98 touch drs. 23 3-4 per tasl. Swedish, in kits 5 per cwt. Sycee silver at Lintin, 1 to 2 per cent. premium. Stockfish 6 to 6 per picul. Spanish dollars, entire none. Spelter to 4 - Republican do. do. Thread, gold and silver 32 to 35 per catty. Tin plates 6 per box. Exchanges. Tin, Banca Sp. drs. 15 per picul. London, per Sp. dr., 6 months' sight. Straits', 1st quality 14 to 141-2 - Bills suitable for negotiation in India, dra. 4-3. Woollens, broad-cloth 1.40 to 1.50 per yard. Other bills drs. 4-4 to 4-5. Camlets, English, 55 yds. by 30 ins. 14 to 15 per piece. Bengal Co.'s 207 Sicca rupees, per 100 Sp. dra., 30 days' sight. Dutch, 40 do. by 28 do. 26 28 - Private bills 210 do. do. do. do.broad,4 do. by 33 do. 26 28 - Bombay 218 Bombay rupees do. do. (Account of the Import Trade by British and American Vessels at Canton, from 1st July, 1836, to 30th June, 1837. Imports. British Ships. American Ships. Total Quantity. Price per yard, Total Value is piece, ac. Spanish Dollars. Broad Cloth - - yards 1,295,279 263,344 1,558,623 dol. 1-20 1,870,348 Camlets - - pieces 16,257 5,642 21,299 25. 532,475 Long ells - - - 69,124 34,472 123,596 9. ,112,364 Bombazettes - - - 4,613 6,344 10,957 11. 120,527 Woollen yarn - - pls. 165 76 241 100 24,100 Flannel - - yards 2,400 - 2,400 33 792 Blankets - - pairs 1,322 1,251 2,573 4. 10,292 Velveteens - - yards 4,996 4,400 9,396 -20 1,879 Cotton yarn - - pls. 18,431 4,232 22,663 40 906,520 Long Cloths - - yards 5,629,849 3,605,826 9,235,675 Ditto 12} 1,154,458 - - - - 391,117 391.117 '14 54,756 Domestics - - - 7,286 489,520 496,806 -10 49.681 Handkerchiefs - - dozen 35,620 20,783 56,403 1:50 84,603 Chintzes - - yards 119,808 194,964 314,772 121 39,346 Cambrics - - - 22,850 3,000 25,850 Linen 12t 3,231 - - - - 10,920 5,726 16,646 1. 16,646 Canvas - - bolts 198 420 618 12. 7,416 Gold tbread - - cattles 167 - 167 40. 6,680 Cochineal - - pls. 349 132 481 180 86,580 Smalts - - - 166 - 166 38- 6,308 Digitized by Google CANTON. 309 Account of Imports.-continued. Price per yard, Total Value in Imports. British Ships. American Ships. Total Quantity. piece, ac. Spanish Dollars. Ginseng - - pls. 52 1,509 1,561 60- 93,660 Quicksilver - - - 2,054 501 2,555 115- 293,825 Tin plates - boxes 1,200 - - 1,200 7.50 9,000 Tin - - - pls. 15,732 834 16,566 19. 314,754 Spelter - - - - 2,955 3,049 6,004 5:50 33,022 Lead - - - - 14,961 9,946 24,907 6. 149,442 Iron - - - - 16,238 3,490 19,728 3. 59,184 Copper - - - - 54 2,288 2,342 20. 46,840 Amber, false - - chests 4% - 42 20. 840 Betel nut - - pls. 23,755 2,005 25,760 3. 77,280 Bicho de mar - - - 134 - 134 6. 804 Birds' nests - catties 373 - - 373 20. 7,460 Camphor baroos - - 121 - 121 40. 4,840 Cotton, Bengal - - pls. 240,192 - 240,192 T. 9. 3,002,400 Bombay - 347,580 - - 347,580 8.5 4,103,375 Madras - - 89,579 - 89,579 9. 1,119,738 Cornellans 7 value 135,700 - 135,700 - - 135,700 Cloves - - - pls. 198 122 320 28. 8,960 Ebony - - - - 9,796 - 9,796 3. 29,388 Elephants' teeth - 532 - - 532 85- 45,220 Fish maws - - 1,501 - - 1,501 55. 82,555 Glass beads - chests 10 - - 10 18. 180 Gum olibanum - pls. - - 3,820 3,820 3. 11,460 animi - - - 157 - 157 4. 628 myrrh - - - 205 - 205 5. 1,025 copal - 67 - - - 67 20 1,340 bdellium - - 1,234 - - 1,234 4. 4,936 Horns, Rhinoceros 20 - - - n 20 20 400 Unicorn - - 63 - . 63 40. 2,520 Kayabuco wood - 33 - - 33 5. 165 Mother Cloves - - - 46 - 46 10* 460 Mother o'-Pearl shells - 1,649 449 2,068 4. 8,272 Nutmegs - - - - 39 39 120 4,680 Opium, Patna - chests 7,192 - - 7,192 778 5,595,376 Benares - - 2,575 5 2,580 683 1,762,140 Malwa - 17,687 - - 17,687 675 11,938,725 Turkey - pls. 292 446 738 611- 450,918 Pearls - - value 120,000 - 120,000 - 120,000 Pepper - - pls. 12,311 2,292 14,603 8. 116,824 Pimento -- - 30 - - 30 10* 300 Putchuck - - 357 - - 857 18. 6,426 Rattans - - - 8,155 3,781 11,936 3. 35,808 Rice - - - - 218,949 577,578 796,527 1:50 1,194,791 Saltpetre - - - 10,031 - 10,031 7.50 75,233 Sandal wood - 10,325 - - 10,325 22. - 227,159 Sapan wood - - - 142 - 142 3. 426 Sea-horse teeth - 44 - - 44 40. 1,760 Shark fins 4,650 - - - - 4,650 26. 120,900 Skins, beaver - - No. - 1,465 1,465 4. 5,860 fox - - - - 1,198 1,198 1.20 1,438 land otter - - 7,376 6,773 14,149 6. 84,894 rabbit - - - 9,980 560 1,394 40* 55,760 sea otter 4- - - 834 310 1,023 4,092 ditto tails - - 713 - 9,980 50 4,990 musk-rat 1 - 4,735 410 5,145 1. 5,145 Soap - - - pls. 162 - 162 3. 488 Stock fish - 1,195 - - 1,195 5. - 5,975 Sundries - - value 77,224 8,450 85,674 - 85,674 Treasure, gold - - - 5,912 - 5,912 - 5,912 - plata pina - - 87,393 35,485 122,878 - 122,878 bar silver - 70,226 - 70,226 - - 70,226 dollars - - 307,409 428,485 735,894 - 735,694 Balance - - - - - 352,891 Spanish dollars - - - - - - 38,579,358 Account of the Export Trade by British and American Vessels at Canton, from 1st July, 1836, to 30th June, 1837. Exports. British Ships. American Ships. Total Quantity. Price per yard, Total Value in piece, &c. Spanish Dollars. Alum - - - pls. 35,632 10 35,642 dol. 2.50 85,105 Anniseed - - value 4,213 200 4,413 - 4,413 Arsenic - chests 114 - 114 10: 1,140 - Bangles - 66 - 66 50 3,300 - - Baskets - - value 120 120 120 - 120 Beads - - chests 1,345 - 1,345 18. 24,210 - Brass leaf - - 231 - 231 45° 10,395 - Bricks - No. 100,000 - 100,000 5. 500 - - Camphor - - value 28,489 69,300 97,779 - 97,779 Capoor cutchery - chests 78 - 78 6. 468 Cassia - - - value 58,375 60,900 119,275 - 119,275 Cassia buds - - pls. - 30 30 14° 420 Digitized by Google 310 CANTON. Account of Exports.-continued. Exports. British Ships. American Ships. Price per yard, Total Value is Total Quantity. piece, &c. Spanish Dollars. China ware - - value 16,346 32,179 48,595 - 48,525 ditto ink - - catties - 231 231 1. 231 ditto root - - pls. 665 - 665 3:50 2,328 Cochineal - - - 153 - 153 180 27,540 Copper - - - - 11 + 11 20 230 ditto, white - - boxes 49 - 49 50° 2,450 ditto, ware - - value 830 - 830 - 830 Corals, false - - chests 124 - 124 40. 4,960 Cotton yarn - - pls. 5,643 - 5,643 $ 225,720 Crackers - - boxes 3,762 $1,700 25,462 - 36,748 Dragon's blood - pls. - 6 6 60· 360 Fans and fire screens - No. - 161,143 161,143 i1:50 2,417 Feather fans - - - - 2,200 2,200 40 880 Galangal - - pls. 266 127 393 3.50 1,376 Gamboge - - - - 13 13 55- 715 Gauze - - - value 300 10,100 10,400 - 10,400 Gold ware - - - 4,450 - 4,450 - 4,450 Grass cloth - - - 4,120 [103,940 108,060 - 108,060 Gum Benjamin - chests 38 - 38 40° 1,520 Hartall - - - pls. 612 - 612 |14- 8,568 Hats - - - boxes 56 - 56 50° 2,800 Ivory ware - - value 2,200 5,528 7,728 - 7,728 Kettisall's - - chests 2,007 - 2,007 11- 22,077 ditto, silk - - - 61 - 61 13° 793 Lacquered ware - - 3,630 5,929 9,559 - 9,559 Marble slabs - - boxes 3,856 - 3,856 5. 19,280 Matting - - value 4,532 105,368 109,900 - 109,900 Mats, bamboo - - - - 33 33 - 33 Pearl buttons - - gross - 184,300 [184,300 10. cts. 18,430 slabs - - value - 50 50 - 50 Musk - - - - 17,600 - 17,600 - 17,600 Nankeens - - - 108,718 32,686 141,404 - 141,404 Oils spice - - pls. 78 173 251 - 23,100 Paper - - - value 38,113 200 38,313 - 38,313 Pearls, false - - - 13,991 - 13,991 - 13,201 seed - - - 105 - 105 - 105 Preserves - - boxes 1,050 - [1,050 4- 4,900 Rattans, split - - pls. l 100 100 20- 2,000 Rhubarb - - - 122 95 217 - 57,276 Raw silk - - - 20,397 125 20,522 - 8,154,766 Silk piece goods - value 338,212 2,006,313 2,344,525 - 2,344,525 Silver ware - - - 4,645 - 4,645 - 4,645 Sugar - - - pls. 63,803 15,469 79,272 - 584,552 Sugar candy - - - 31,377 40 31,417 - 305,334 Sweetmeats - - boxes 1,161 2,225 3,386 - 36,375 Sewing silk - - pls. - 410 410 450 184,500 Tea Taels. Bohea - - pls. 1,149 1,266 2,415 30,905 Congo - - - 183,509 - 183,509 5,872,288 Caper - - - 5,094 - 5,094 132,444 Souchong - - - 19,100 17,483 36,583 1,304,660 Pouchong - - - - 2,322 2,322 58,050 Campoi - - - 287 - 287 8,610 Ankoi - - - 1,274 - 1,274 26,754 Hongmuey - - 3,989 - 3,989 127,648 Pekoe - - - 2,952 802 3,754 233,652 Orange Pekoe - - 7,088 - 7,088 219,728 Black - - 224,442 21,873 - 8,014,740 [11,131,584 Hyson - - - 19,923 9,993 29,916 1,664,988 Young hyson - - 5,118 63,278 68,396 1,966,268 Hyson skin - - 12,613 12,524 25,137 603,466 Twankay - - - 31,448 3,181 34,629 1,001,060 Gunpowder - - 4,587 7,790 12,377 655,546 Imperial - - - 3,149 5,722 8,871 442,129 Green - - 76,838 102,488 - 6,333,457 8,796,468 Not specified - 6,925 - 6,925 235,450 327,013 Tiles - - - No. 21,000 - 21,000 10 210 Tobacco - - pls. 400 - 400 1 25 10,000 Trunks - - sets 329 157 486 L 10,849 Umbrellas - - chests 200 - 200 20 4,000 Velvet - - - boxes 119 - 119 70 8,330 Vermilion - - - 1,096 - 1,096 63 69,048 Sundries - - value 62,615 2,287 64,902 - 64,902 Treasure, gold - - taels 43,919 - 43,919 23:50 1,032,096 sycee - - 2,058,754 I 2,058,754 5 per cent. 3,002,350 dollars, Sp. - - - - 728,395 ditto, S. A. - 68,304 - 68,304 3 per cent. 66,255 Disbursements on 171 British ships - 96 American do. - s 561,000 177,000 - - 738,000 Spanish dollars - , - - - - - 38,579,258 Sup.) Digitized by Google CANTON. 311 [We find the following account of the Teas and Silks exported from Canton to the United States between June 30th, 1837, and the same date in 1838. Teas. Silks. Chests Crape shawls - - - - 19,841 Young hyson - - - - 70,146 Handkerchiefs - - - pieces 38,212 Hyson - - - - - 13,112 Linchews - - - - 2,536 Hyson skin - - - - 20,986 Sarsnets - - - - 2,692 Tonkay - - - - - 561 Levantines - - - - 375 Gunpowder - - - - 8,343 Satin do. - - - - 600 Imperial - - - - 6,911 Satins - - - - - 1,200 Bohea - - - - - none. Satin damask - - - - 50 Souchong - - - - 51,378 Camblets - - - - 74 Pouchong - - - - 7,720 Pongees - - - - 24,215 Pecco - - - - - 3,186 Mixed lustrings - - - - 580 Congo - - - - - 757 Crapes - - - - - 22 Sewings - - - peculs 31 Total - - - - 183,100 The above amount of teas is stated to be about 10,000 chests less than the average of the six years preceding.-Am. Ed.] CANVAS (Fr. Toile à voile; Ger. Segeltuch; It. Canevazza, Lona; Rus. Parussnoe polotno, Parussina; Sp. Lona), unbleached cloth of hemp or flax, chiefly used for sails for shipping. Masters of ships are required to make entry of all foreign-made sails and cordage, not being standing or running rigging, in use on board their respective ships, under a penalty of 100L Sails in actual use, and fit and necessary for such ship, are imported free; but when otherwise disposed of, they are liable to an ad valorem duty of 20 per cent.-3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 56.) It had been the practice for a considerable period to grant bounties on the exportation of canvas or sail-cloth; these, however, finally ceased on the 1st of January, 1832. By an act passed in the reign of Geo. 2., new sails were ordered to be stamped with the maker's name and place of abode but this regulation was repealed by the 10 Geo. 4. c. 43. § 9. CAOUTCHOUC. " This substance, which has been improperly termed elastic gum, and vulgarly, from its common application to rub out pencil marks on paper, India rubber, is obtained from the milky juice of different plants in hot countries. The chief of these are the Jatropha elastica, and Urceola elastica. The juice is applied in successive coatings on a mould of clay, and dried by the fire or in the sun and when of a sufficient thickness, the mould is crushed, and the pieces shaken out. Acids separate the caoutchouc from the thin- ner part of the juice at once, by coagulating it. The juice of old plants yields nearly two thirds of its weight; that of younger plants less. Its colour, when fresh, is yellowish white, but it grows darker by exposure to the air. The elasticity of this substance is its most remarkable property when warmed, as by immersion in hot water, slips of it may be drawn out to 7 or 8 times their original length, and will return to their former dimensions nearly. Cold renders it stiff and rigid, but warmth restores its original elasticity. Exposed to the fire, it softens, swells up, and burns with a bright flame. In Cayenne it is used to give light as a candle."-(Ure's Dictionary.) Caoutchouc promises to become an article of very considerable importance. M. de la Condamine, who was one of the first to communicate authentic information with respect to it, mentions, that, owing to its being impervious to water, it was made into boots by the Indians-(Voyage de la Rivicre des Amazones, p. 76.) It is now employed in a similar way here. Means have, within these few years, been discovered of reducing it to a state of solution; and when thin filaments of it are spread over cloth, or any other substance, it is rendered impervious alike to air and water. Air cushions and pillows are manufactured in this way ; as are water-proof cloaks, hats, boots, shoes, &c. It is also extensively used in the manufacture of braces and other articles which it is desirable should possess considerable elasticity and there can be little doubt that it will be employed still more extensively, and in a still greater variety of ways. Previously to 1830, the importations of caoutchouc were comparatively inconsiderable. In that year they amounted to about 52,000 lbs.; while, during the year ended the 5th of April, 1833, the quan- tity entered for consumption amounted to 178,676 lbs. Its price varies from 6d. to 2s. 6d. per lb. The duty has been judiciously reduced from 5d. per lb. to 1s. per cwt. CAPERS (Fr. Capres; Ger. Kappern; Du. Kappers; It. Cappari; Sp. Alcapar- ras ; Rus. Kaperszü; Lat. Capparis), the pickled buds of the Capparis spinosa, a low shrub, generally growing out of the joints of old walls, and the fissures of rocks, in most of the warm parts of Europe. Capers are imported into Great Britain from different parts of the Mediterranean; the best from Toulon in France. Some small salt capers come from Majorca, and a few flat ones from about Lyons. The duty of 6d. per lb. on capers pro- duced, in 1832, 1,553/. 5s. 4d. nett, showing that 62,130 lbs. had been entered for home consumption. CAPE-TOWN, the capital of the British territory in South Africa; lat. 33° 55' 56" S., long. 18° 21' E. It lies at the bottom of Table Bay, about 32 miles north from the Cape of Good Hope; and on the western side of the territory to which it gives its name. The Digitized by Google 312 CAPE-TOWN. town was founded by the Dutch in 1650; and remained, with the territory subject to it, in their possession till it was taken by the British in 1795. It was restored to the Dutch by the treaty of Amiens; but being again captured by the British in 1806, it was finally ceded to us in 1815. The streets are laid out in straight lines, crossing each other at right angles; many of them being watered by canals, and planted on each side with oaks. The popula- tion in 1829-30 amounted, according to the statement in the Cape Almanac, to 13,103 free persons and 5,838 slaves, making together 18,491. The town is defended by a castle of considerable strength. Table Bay is capable of containing any number of ships; but it is exposed to the westerly winds, which, during the months of June, July, and August, throw in a heavy swell, that has been productive of many distressing accidents. This in fact, is the great drawback upon Cape-Town, which in all other respects is most admirably fitted for a commercial station. At the proper season, however, or during the prevalence of the easterly monsoon, Table Bay is perfectly safe; while the cheapness and abundance of pro- visions, the healthiness of the climate, and above all its position, render it a peculiarly desira- ble resting place for ships bound to or from India, China, Australia, &c. The subjoined plan of Table Bay is taken from the survey of the Cape of Good Hope, executed by Lieut. Vidal and others, under the direction of Captain Owen. 10 17 7 7 6 8 4 4 © 9 9 7 6 7 E 3 31 10 41 3 10 9 5 3 6 7 10 5 11 9 5 7 21 9 8 19 41 ++ 15 9 9 8 39 13 12 7 11 6 4 F 5} 16 14 10 3 8 13 11 21 16 9 7 12 41 11 3 10 10 5 T A B L E 7 10 6 20 41 3 B A Y 8 2 23 A 31 10 6 31 54 8 7 8 14 1 4 4 2 3 10 B 1 1 1 W TOWN 02 D C 00 Nautic Miles 1 2 13 Digitized by Google CAPE-TOWN. 313 References to the Plan.-A, light-house, furnished with double lights. They may be seen clearly off deck at 16 miles' distance; but they do not appear double till within 6 or 7 miles to the westward from the northward only one light is seen. B, Lion's Rump. C, Table Mountain. D, Devil's Peak, in lat. 33° 57' 2". E, Robbin Island. F, Salt River. The figures denote the soundings in fathoms. Port Instructions.-Art. 1. On the arrival of merchant vessels in Table Bay, a proper berth will be pointed out to the masters thereof by the port captain, when he boards them; and no master of a mer- chant vessel shall shift his berth without permission from the port captain, unless in case of extreme emergency, when he must report his havingdone so as early as possible at the Port-office. 2 Should it be the intention of a master of a vessel to discharge or receive on board any consider- able quantity of merchandise, a berth will be pointed out to him as close to the jetty, or other landing place, as the safety of the vessel and other circumstances will admit. And the master will then moor with two bower anchors, with an open hawse to the N. N. E., taking especial care, in so mooring, not to overlay the anchors of any other ship, or in any way to give the vessel near him a foul berth. Ships and vessels touching in Table Bay for water and refreshments alone, may ride at single anchor in the outer anchorage; but in this case it is particularly recommended to veer out 80 or 90 fathoms, if they ride by a chain cable, as the liability of starting or fouling the anchor, or breaking the chain, will thereby be greatly lessened; and If riding by a rope or coir cable, to run out a stream or good kedge, to steady the ship; and in both cases the other bower anchor should be kept in perfect readi- ness to let go. When the vessel is properly moored with bower anchors, or well secured with a bower and stream anchor, and with good cables, buoys, and buoy-ropes, the master will then take the exact place of the ship by the bearings of 2 land-marks, and the depth of the water and should accident occur, by which the vessel may drift from this situation, or lose her anchors, a good bearing and depth of water must be taken at the time, and the same must be notified in writing to the port captain. It is particularly recommended that vessels be kept as snug as possible, to counteract the effects of the periodical winds, which at times blow with considerable violence. The district subject to Cape-Town is of very great extent, and contains every variety of soil, from the richest level land to the wildest mountain, and tracts destitute of even the ap- pearance of vegetation. The climate fluctuates between the two extremes of rain and drought. On the whole, its advantages and disadvantages seem to be pretty equally balanced and the prospects which it holds out to the industrious emigrant, if not very allur- ing, are certainly not discouraging. Population.-According to the official returns, the population of the Cape Colony, in 1834, consisted of- Whites and Free Coloured. Negro Apprentices, formerly Slaves. Males. Females. Males. Females. 60,440 56,418 19,580 16,589 Total 153,027 Produce-Large quantities of corn of a very good description are produced in the imme- diate neighbourhood of Cape-Town; but its free exportation is restrained; none being allowed to be sent abroad, except a specified quantity decided upon by government after an investigation into the state of the crops ! This restriction, Mr. Thompson tells us (Travels in Southern Africa, p. 395.), has neither produced regular prices nor averted scarcity. It has, however, been in no common degree injurious to the colony and it is really surprising that systems of policy universally condemned in England should be allowed to exert a per- nicious influence over any of our colonies. The Mauritius and Rio Janeiro are the principal markets for the corn of the Cape. Large quantities of wine, and of what is called brandy, are produced at the Cape but, with the exception of Constantia, they are very inferior. Objections have been made to the duties recently imposed on Cape wines but, as it appears to us, without any good founda- tion. The real effect of allowing their importation at a comparatively low duty is not to occasion their direct consumption, but to cause them to be employed as a convenient means of adulterating others; so that, besides being injurious to the revenue, such reduction of duty promotes fraudulent practices, and detracts from the comforts of the public. Considerable quantities of hides, skins, and horns are exported. They are principally brought from Algoa Bay, on the eastern side of the colony and the trade has increased very fast during the last 6 or 7 years. Horses, butter, beef, ivory, whale oil, aloes, argol, and various other articles, are among the exports. The imports at the Cape consist of woollens, cottons, hardware, earthenware, furniture, haberdashery, soap, paper, books, and portions of most articles used in this country. Piece goods and telk timber are imported from India, tea from China, sugar from India and the Mauritius, &c. Revenue, &c.-The total revenue of the Cape Colony for the year 1832 amounted to 130,80% 7s. 34d.; the expenditure for the same year was 126,889/. 08. 9td.; leaving a balance of 3,919% 6s. 10±d. in favour of the former. Trade.-The trade between the colonists and the independent natives is subjected to various restraints, of which it is not always very easy to discover the policy. The sale of gunpowder and fire-arms to the natives has been prohibited a regulation which might have been a judicious one, had they not been able to obtain them from any one else. But the Americans have begun to trade at Natal, on the eastern coast, and have liberally supplied the natives with these and various other articles; so that by keeping up the regulation in question, we merely exclude ourselves from participating in what might be an advantageous trade. VoL. L-2 D 40 Digitized by Google 314 CAPE-TOWN. According to the official accounts, the values of the products imported into, and exported from the Cape of Good Hope in 1834, were as under :- Estimated Value of Imports. Estimated Value of Exports. G. Britain. British United Other States. Foreign Total. G. Britain. British United Other Colonica. Colonies. States. Foreign Total States. States. £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ Cape-town 275,049 27,200 4,349 86,229 392,827 171,310 106,830 4,603 14,822 207,574 Simon's town 508 3,338 5,391 392 9,624 5,797 670 61 4 6,492 Port-Elizabeth 56,868 3,430 - 19 6,317 61,142 4,156 - 498 65,796 Total. 382,490 33,968 9,740 86,640 462,768 238,258 111,566 4,664 15,324 369,803 During the same year, the ships and tonnage entering inwards from, and clearing outwards to, the undermentioned countries, were :- Ships Inwards. Ships Outwards. United Other United Other G. Britain. B. Colonies. States. Foreign Total. G. Britain. B. Colonies. States. Foreign Total. States. States. Porta. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. ons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tona. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. & T Tons. Ships. I C. Town. 78 25,047 98 35,140 31 9,572 82 18419 299 88,178 115 45,447 102 30,900 25 7,670 41 12,537 283 96,554 S. Town. 9 3,141 8 2,973 20 5,632 4 2,003 41 13,749 8 3,063 12 4,606 19 5,504 4 1,962 43 14,435 P. Eliz. 15 2,771 9 2,227 2 559 2 171 25 5,728 12 1,937 6 1,210 - 6 1,019 24 4,166 Total 102 30,959 115 40,340 2. 15,763 88 20,593 358 107,655 135 50,447 120 36,716 13,174 51 14,818 350 115,155 Articles exported from the Cape.-The following account of the exports from the Cape in 1829 is taken from the Cape Almanac for 1831. It is the most complete of any that we have seen, and its accuracy may be depended upon. Articles, the Produce and Manufacture of the Cape Colony, exported during 1829. Articles. Amount. Articles. Amount £ 8. d. £ 8. d. Aloes, 375,736 lbs. and 61 casks and cases, esti- Salt, 288 muids 28 16 0 mated value 2,794 0 0 Sheep, 3,282 in number pigs, 33; goats, 2 1,506 10 0 Angol, 22,422 lbs. 535 0 0 Spirits, viz. Butter, 105,519 lbs. and 152 casks and jars 5,570 16 43 Brandy, 1,408 1-2 gallons 85 0 0 Beef, pork, and tongues, salted, 1,780 casks and Liqueurs, 24 gallons 20 0 0 kegs 4,353 7 H Soap, 1,218 lbs. 24 0 0 Beer, 3,306 gallons 240 0 0 Saddlery and harness 23 0 0 Biscuits and rusks, 20,000 lbs. 228 0 0 Skins, viz. Corn, grain, meal, &c., viz, Goat, 91,781 pieces and 55 bundles 514 15 0 Barley and oats, 13,553 muids 4,163 6 0 Seal, 3,928 pieces 834 0 0 Beans and peas, 60 muids 87 0 0 Sheep, 77,343 pieces 3,795 0 0 Bran, 36,332 lbs. 121 0 0 Calf, 1,414 pieces and 2 bundles 169 0 0 Flour, 78,224 lbs. 866 0 0 Rabbit and mole, 490 pieces 14 0 0 Wheat, 24,236 muids 23,449 0 0 Karosses, I case 7 10 0 Cheese 31 10 0 Tallow, 13,333 lbs. 409 0 0 Curiosities 467 12 6 Vinegar, 428 gallons 13 0 0 Confectionery 29 0 0 Wine, ordinary, 1,548,977 1-2 gallons 146,936 0 0 Candles, 11,584 lbs. 383 0 0 Constantia, 2,874 gallons 2,137 0 0 Carriages 38 0 0 Wool, 33,280 lbs. and 11 bags 1,220 0 0 Feathers, ostrich, 539 lbs. and 31 boxes 1,917 0 0 Wood 73 10 0 Fish 1,589 10 5 Whalebone, 13,038 lbs. and 229 bundles 1,392 0 0 Fruits, dried, 133,333 lbs. 4,236 0 0 Wax, bees', 910 lbs. 22 0 0 green 49 0 0 Zebras, 4 head 148 0 0 Garden seeds and bulbs 413 2 0 Gum, 16,943 lbs. and 2 cases 96 0 0 Hides, horse and ox, 79,035 pieces 33,722 18 51 Horns, 244,610 in number 5,989 6 0 Supplies to his Majesty's Navy. Hay, 29,160 lbs. 79 0 0 Beef, fresh, 137,662 lbs, 717 0 0 Horses, 314 in number 8,753 0 0 Biscuit, 259,616 lbs. 2,859 0 0 Ivory, 25,497 lbs. and 227 tusks, bundles and Bread, soft. 118,480 lbs. 740 0 0 casks 3,759 0 0 Flour, 57,422 lbs. 632 0 0 Lime, 72 half aams 10 0 0 Hay, 5,630 lbs. 26 0 0 Leather, 2 cases 10 0 0 Raisins, 10,722 lbs. 191 0 0 Mules, 48 head 688 0 0 Sheep, 34 in number, and oxen 23 83 0 0 Oil, whale, 34,662 rallons and 90 casks 4,023 6 0 Vegetables, 30,013 lbs. 306 0 0 Oxen, cows, and calves, 444 head 1,782 0 0 Wine, ordinary, 18,091 Imperial quarts 1,432 0 0 Polonies 63 0 0 Total estimated value of colonial pro- Potatoes and onions, 367 muids 169 0 0 duce and manufactures exported 285,247 15 10 Poultry 138 0 0 during the year 1829. CUSTOM-HOUSE REGULATIONS, FEES, &c. On Admission of a Ship to Entry, observe- 3. Export declarations must be sent in by the several shippers. of 1. The ship's register must be lodged in the Custom-house, until the quantity and value of goods or produce shipped by them, in or- the vessel clear again for sea. der to ascertain the amount of the exports of the colony. 0 2. The manifest of the cargo on board for this place must be de. 4. When Cape wine is shipped for exportation to England, affide- posited there. vit of the particular description of such wine must be delivered, and 3. The cockets of cargoes shipped from any place in Great Britain a certificate granted, by the collector or comptroller of customs, to or Ireland for this place must also be deposited there. the master, of his having received such affidavit. From the endorsement of such cockets, an extract is to be male, 5. Manifests, in triplicate, of such goods as are shipped from the which will show the contents of the different packages on board, Cape for Great Britain, must be delivered, signed, and sworn to by and facilitate the making out of the entries. the master, before the collector or comptroller. 4. In making out the declarations, the value by invoice of the The original of which is to be returned to the master to accompt- different commodities must be given by the importer, in order to my the cargo. enable the Custom-house to estimate the duties payable, and to send The duplicate to be forwarded, by the first conveyance sailing in to government, annually, the required statement of the total duties subsequently to the vessel containing the original, to the commis- received upon the several articles imported. sioners of customs in England or Scotland respectively, as the case In the clearing of a Ship outwards, observe- may happen. 1. The master must produce a certificate from the harbour master, And the triplicate, written on or covered with a stamp, to reseals that the tonnage duties of the port have been paid. as an office copy. 2. The export manifest must be examined with the permits granted, in order to ascertain whether packages have been shipped N. B.-Ships taking in cargoes for other parts of the world, are without a permit. required to deliver only original and duplicate manifests. Digitized by Google CAPE-TOWN. 315 Description of Stamps required. L.t.d. L d. Coastwise: Entrance-gratie From 1 to 10 tons of goods shipped from the Cape 076 Clearance 10 20 15 0 Landing (or shipping) cargo 20 50 10 0 50 and upwards 250 In obtaining Permits, observe- 1. No credit will be given to any person whatever. 6. When whale oil or whale bone is shipped from the Cape for 2. The duties are to be collected on all imports, whether intended England, the proprietor of the whale fishery is to make oath, before for private me, for presents, or for trade; except on wearing appa the collector or comptroller, that the same were bona fide the pro- rel accompanying the propristor. duce of fish, or creatures living in the sea, actually taken and caught Or on specie. wholly by his Majesty's subjects usually residing in this colony and On garden seeds. the collector or comptroller is to grant a certificate under his hand On horses (exclusive of geldings). and seal to the master, testifying that such oath hath been made be- On goods lodged in the Custom house stores for exportation. fore him. On goods transhipped in the bay for other ports (provided neither 7. When salted seal skins are shipped from the Cape for England, bargain nor sale of them have taken place). the shipper is to make oath before the collector or comptroller, that On naval stores. the same are really and bona fide the skins of seals taken and caught On government stores (provided an order be sent from govern- on the coast appertaining to the Cape of Good Hope, wholly by his ment). Majesty's subjects usually residing in this colony; and that all the 3. 1a. 6d. is charged for every permit for goods exceeding the walt used in the curing or preserving of the same was not made in, value of 7L 10e. shippea or landed, and 9d. on goods under 7L 10s. or exported from, Great Britain or Ireland; and the collector or value; as also 9d. for every baggage permit. comptroller is to grant a certificate to the master accordingly. 8. The original manifest, and a copy thereof, of ships touching at Wharfage Dues. L & d. the Cape of Good Hope, with cargoes from the eastward for Every pipe, puncheon, or cask equal in size or larger than England, to be delivered and sworn to by the master before the col- a pipe 016 lector or comptroller. The original to be returned to the master, Every half-pipe, or any description of cask larger than a and the copy forwarded from the Custom-house to the commissioner half-aam 009 of customs. For every hoist at the crane 009 9. If any pirt of such cargo shall be discharged at the Cape of For every horse 076 Good Hope, the collector or comptroller is to endorse upon the mani- For all oxen 016 Sest the part of the cargo so discharged, and verify the same. For sheep 004 10. The usual fees to be charged, viz- L.d.d. For pig 0041 Entrance 060 For every case measuring 1-2 a ton, or larger 016 Clearance 060 Port Dues. Landing (or shipping) cargo 0 15 0 Upon all vessels entering this port for the purposes of trade, per Landing (or shipping) part cargo 076 ton, 4 1-2d. Coastwise: Landing (or shipping) part cargo 016 Upon all versols entering this port to procure refreshments, or Manifest of goods taken in here 016 for any purpose short of trade, per ton, 21-4d. Regulations asto Trade.-All goods, the produce or manufacture of the Cape of Good Hope, or the territories or dependencies thereof, are subject (on importation into England) to the same duties as are imposed on the like articles, the produce or manufacture of the British possessions within the limits of the East India Company's charter, except when any other duty is expressly laid on them.- (3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 56. 0 9.) The 6 Geo. 4. c. 114. enacts, that it shall be lawful for his Majesty, by any order in council to be is- sued from time to time, to give such directions and make such regulations touching the trade and commerce to and from any British possessions in Africa, as to his Majesty in council shall appear most expedient and salutary and if any goods be imported or exported in any manner contrary to such or- der of his Majesty in council, the same shall be forfeited, together with the ship importing or export- ing the same.-> 73. It shall not be lawful for any person to re-export, from any of his Majesty's possessions abroad, to any foreign place, any coals, the produce of the United Kingdom ; and no such coals shall be shipped at any of such possessions, to be exported to any British place, until the exporter or the master of the exporting vessel shall have given bond, with one sufficient surety, in double the value of the coals, that such coals shall not be landed at any foreign place.- 85. It shall be lawful for the shipper of any wine, the produce of the Cape of Good Hope or of its de- pendencies, which is to be exported thence, to go before the chief officer of customs, and make and sign an affidavit before him, that such wine was really and bona fide the produce of the Cape of Good Hope or of its dependencies and such officer is hereby authorised and required to administer such affidavit, and to grant a certificate thereof, setting forth in such certificate the name of the ship in which the wine is to be exported, and the destination of the same.- 78. Duties.-A duty of 34 per cent. is charged on the importation of all articles of the growth, produc- tion, or manufacture of Great Britain, or of the British plantations in the West Indies. A duty of 10 per cent. is charged on the importation (by British vessels) of all articles of the growth, production, or manufacture of foreign Europe, America, or the eastward of the Cape, to be levied according to the declaration of the value by the importer. No abatement or reduction whatever ad- mitted, except of the duties and landing charges payable on the importation thereof. An additional duty of Is. 6d. per gallon is charged on the importation of arrack, rum, gin, liqueurs, whisky, or other spirituous liquors, brandy excepted. No tea may be landed, unless the permission of the East India Company's agent be first obtained. No ammunition may be landed or shipped, unless the permission of government be first obtained. Commission.-The following rates of commission are charged and allowed, namely- Per Cent. 1. On the nett amount of all sales of goods by public sale, and on the gross amount of all other sales - 5 2. Goods consigned, and afterwards withdrawn - - - - 2f 3. On purchases effected from the proceeds of goods on which a commission has already been charged - - - - - - - 21 4. On all other purchases, or shipments of goods - - - - - 5 5. On the sale or purchases of ships, houses, or lands - - - - - 2f 6. On ships' disbursements - - - - - - - 5 7. On procuring freight - - - - - - - 5 8. On collecting freight on ships bound to this place - - - - - 21 9. On guaranteeing bills or bonds by endorsement or otherwise - - - - 2f 10. On collecting debts without recourse to law - - - 21 Ditto, where legal proceedings are taken - - - - - - 5 11. On effecting remittances by bills of exchange - - - - - - 1 12. On the negotiation of bills - - - - - - - - 1 13. On effecting insurances - - 0 - - - - - 04 14. On the administration of estates - - - - - - - 5 15. On cash advances - - - 21 16. On the debtor and creditor sides of cash accounts, on which no other commission is charged 1 Noney.-Accounts are either kept in pounds, shillings, pence, and farthings, or in rix-dollars, schil- lings, and stivers. 1 Stiver = 1 of a Penny. 6 Stivers = 2+ Pence, or 1 schilling. 8 Schillings = 18 Pence, or 1 rix-dollar. The commissariat department grant bills on the Treasury at a premium of It per cent. Digitized by Google 316 CAPITAL-CARAVAN. Weights and Measures.-The weights made use of in the Cape are derived from the standard pound of Amsterdam; and those assized are from 50 lbs. down to 1 loot, or the 32d part of a pound, which is regarded as unity. Liquid Measure. The muid of wheat weighs, at an average, 16 Flasks - 1 Anker. about 110 lbs. Dutch, being somewhat over 196 lbs. 4 Ankers - 1 Aam. English. 4 Aams = 1 Leaguer. Cloth and Long Measures. Corn Measure. 12 Rhynland inches = 1 Rhynland foot. 4 Schepels = 1 Muid. 27 ditto = 1 Dutch ell. 10 Muids - 1 Load. 107 schepels 144 ditto = 1 Square foot. 82 Winch. bushels, or 4 schepels = 3 Imp. bush. 144 Square feet = 1 Rood. very nearly. 600 Roods 1 = 1 Morgen. Colonial Weights and Measures compared with those of England. Weights. 100 lbs. Dutch - nearly 109 lbs. English avoirdupois. 100 lbs. English - nearly 92 lbs. Dutch. Wine or Liquid Measure. 1 Flask = 0.6 Old gallon, or 4946 Imperial gallons. 1 Anker = 91 ditto, 7.9 ditto. 1 Aum = 38 ditto, 311 ditto. 1 Leaguer - 152 ditto, 126.6 ditto. 1 Pipe = 110 ditto, 91.6 ditto. Saldanha Bay, in lat. 33° 6' S., long. 17° 58' 15" E., being 16} leagues north of Cape-Town, is one of the best and most commodious harbours in the world. It is perfectly safe at all seasons. Besides the Cape Almanac, one of the best of that class of publications, and the other authorities referred to, we have derived part of the above details from papers laid before the Finance Com- mittee. CAPITAL, in political economy, is that portion of the produce existing in a country, which may be made directly available, either to the support of human existence, or to the facilitating of production.-(Principles of Political Economy, 2d ed. p. 97.) But in com- merce, and as applied to individuals, it is understood to mean the sum of money which a merchant, banker, or trader adventures in any undertaking, or which he contributes to the common stock of a partnership. It signifies likewise the fund of a trading company, or corporation in which sense the word stock is generally added to it. Thus we say the capital stock of the Bank, &c. The profit derived from any undertaking is estimated by the rate which it bears to the capital that was employed. [The definition of capital given by the author seems to be too general. It makes no real difference between wealth and capital; for surely every portion of wealth " may be made directly available, either to the support of human existence, or to the facilitating of produc- tion." The editor has defined capital to be that portion of wealth which is not simply liable to be applied to the purpose of again producing wealth, but which is actually 80 applied. See his Principles of Political Economy, book i. chapter 4.-Am. Ed.] CAPSICUM. See PEPPER. CARAVAN, an organized company of merchants, or pilgrims, or both, who associate together in many parts of Asia and Africa, that they may travel with greater security through deserts and other places infested with robbers; or where the road is naturally dangerous. The word is derived from the Persian kervan, or cârvân, a trader or dealer.-(Shaw's Tra- vels in the Levant, p. 9. 4to ed.) Every caravan is under the command of a chief or aga (caravan-bachi), who has fre- quently under him such a number of troops or forces as is deemed sufficient for its defence. When it is practicable, they encamp near wells or rivulets; and observe a regular discipline. Camels are used as a means of conveyance, almost uniformly, in preference to the horse or any other animal, on account of their wonderful patience of fatigue, eating little, and sub- sisting three or four days or more without water. There are generally more camels in a caravan than men.-(See CAMEL.) The commercial intercourse of Eastern and African nations has been principally carried on, from the remotest period, by means of caravans. During antiquity, the products of India and China were conveyed either from Suez to Rhinoculura, or from Bussorah, near the head of the Persian Gulf, by the Euphrates, to Babylon, and thence by Palmyra, in the Syrian desert, to the ports of Phoenicia on the Mediterranean, where they were exchanged for the European productions in demand in the East. Sometimes, however, caravans set out directly from China, and, occupying about 250 days in the journey, arrived on the shores of the Levant, after traversing the whole extent of Asia-(Gibbon, vol. vii. p. 93.) The formation of caravans is, in fact, the only way in which it has ever been possible to carry OR any considerable internal commerce in Asia or Africa. The governments that have grown up in those continents have seldom been able, and seldomer indeed have they attempted, to render travelling practicable or safe for individuals. The wandering tribes of Arabs have always infested the immense deserts by which they are intersected ; and those only, who are sufficiently powerful to protect themselves, or sufficiently rich to purchase an exemption from the predatory attacks of these freebooters, can expect to pass through territories subject to their incursions, without being exposed to the risk of robbery and murder. Digitized by Google CARAVAN. 317 Since the establishment of the Mohammedan faith, religious motives, conspiring with those of a less exalted character, have tended to augment the intercourse between different parts of the Eastern world, and to increase the number and magnitude of the caravans. Mohammed enjoined all his followers to visit, once in their lifetime, the Caaba, or square building in the temple of Mecca, the immemorial object of veneration amongst his country- men ; and in order to preserve continually upon their minds a sense of obligation to perform this duty, he directed that, in all the multiplied acts of devotion which his religion prescribes, true believers should always turn their faces towards that holy place. In obedience to a precept so solemnly enjoined and sedulously inculcated, large caravans of pilgrims used to assemble annually in every country where the Mohammedan faith is established and though, owing either to a diminution of religious zeal, or the increasing difficulties to be encountered in the journey, the number of pilgrims has of late years declined greatly, it is still very considerable. Few, however, of the pilgrims are actuated only by devotional feel- ings. Commercial ideas and objects mingle with those of religion and it redounds to the credit of Mohammed, that he granted permission to trade during the pilgrimage to Mecca providing at the same time for the temporal as well as the lasting interests of his votaries. 44 It shall be no crime in you, if ye seek an increase from your Lord by trading during the pilgrimage." (Sale's Koran, c. 2. p. 36. ed. 1764.) The numerous camels of each caravan are loaded with those commodities of every coun- try which are of easiest carriage and readiest sale. The holy city is crowded during the month of Dhalhajja, corresponding to the latter part of June and the beginning of July, not only with zealous devotees, but with opulent merchants. A fair or market is held in Mecca and its vicinity, on the twelve days that the pilgrims are allowed to remain in that city, which used to be one of the best frequented in the world, and continues to be well attended. 'Few pilgrims," says Burckhardt, except the mendicants, arrive without bringing some productions of their respective countries for sale: and this remark is applicable as well to the merchants, with whom commercial pursuits are the main object, as to those who are actuated by religious zeal for, to the latter, the profits derived from selling a few articles at Mecca diminish, in some degree, the heavy expenses of the journey. The Moggrebyns (pilgrims from Morocco and the north coast of Africa) bring their red bonnets and woollen cloaks; the European Turks, shoes and slippers, hardware, embroidered stuffs, sweetmeats, amber, trinkets of European manufacture, knit silk purses, &c. the Turks of Anatolia bring carpets, silks, and Angora shawls; the Persians, Cashmere shawls and large silk handkerchiefs; the Afghans, tooth-brushes, called Mesouak Kattary, made of the spongy boughs of a tree growing in Bokhara, beads of a yellow soapstone, and plain coarse shawls manufactured in their own country; the Indians, the numerous productions of their rich and extensive region; the people of Yemen, snakes for the Persian pipes, sandals and va- rious other works in leather; and the Africans bring various articles adapted to the slave trade. The pilgrims are, however, often disappointed in their expectations of gain want of money makes them hastily sell their little adventures at the public auctions, and often obliges them to accept very low prices."-(Travels in Arabia, vol. ii. p. 21.) The two principal caravans which yearly rendezvous at Mecca are those of Damascus and Cairo. The first is composed of pilgrims from Europe and Western Asia the second of Mohammedans from all parts of Africa. The Syrian caravan is said by Burckhardt to be very well regulated. It is always accom- panied by the pacha of Damascus, or one of his principal officers, who gives the signal for encamping and starting by firing a musket. On the route, a troop of horsemen ride in the front, and another in the rear to bring up the stragglers. The different parties of pilgrims, distinguished by their provinces or towns, keep close together. At night torches are lighted, and the daily distance is usually performed between 3 o'clock in the afternoon and an hour or two after sunrise on the following day. The Bedouins or Arabe, who carry provisions for the troops, travel by day only, and in advance of the caravans; the encampment of which they pass in the morning, and are overtaken in turn and passed by the caravan on the fol- lowing night, at their own resting place. The journey with these Bedouins is less fatiguing than with the great body of the caravan, as a regular night's rest is obtained but their bad character deters most pilgrims from joining them. At every watering-place on the route is a small castle and a large tank, at which the camels water. The castles are garrisoned by a few persons, who remain the whole year to guard the provisions deposited there. It is at these watering-places, which belong to the Bedouins, that the sheikhs of the tribe meet the caravan, and receive the accustomed tribute for allowing it to pass. Water is plentiful on the route; the stations are no where more distant than 11 or 12 hours' march and in winter, pools of rain-water are frequently found. Those pilgrims who can travel with a litter, or on commodious camel-saddles, may sleep at night, and perform the journey with little inconvenience: but of those whom poverty, or the desire of speedily acquiring a large sum of money, induces to follow the caravan on foot, or to hire themselves as servants, many die on the road from fatigue.-(Travels in Arabia, vol. ii. p. 3-9.) 2 D 2 Digitized by Google 318 CARAVAN. The caravan which sets out from Cairo for Mecca is not generally so large as that of Damascus; and its route along the shores of the Red Sea is more dangerous and fatiguing. But many of the African and Egyptian merchants and pilgrims sail from Suez, Cosseir, and other ports on the western shore of the Red Sea, for Djidda, whence the journey to Mecca is short and easy. The Persian caravan for Mecca sets out from Bagdad but many of the Persian pilgrims are now in the habit of embarking at Bussorah, and coming to Djidda by sea. Caravans from Bagdad and Bussorah proceed to Aleppo, Damascus, and Diarbeker, laden with all sorts of Indian, Arabian, and Persian commodities and large quantities of European goods, principally of English cottons, imported at Bussorah, are now distributed throughout all the eastern parts of the Turkish empire by the same means. The intercourse carried on in this way is, indeed, every day becoming of more importance. The commerce carried on by caravans, in the interior of Africa, is widely extended and of considerable value. Besides the great caravan which proceeds from Nubia to Cairo, and is joined by Mohammedan pilgrims from every part of Africa, there are caravans which have no object but commerce, which set out from Fez, Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli, and other states on the sea-coast, and penetrate far into the interior. Some of them take as many as 50 days to reach the place of their destination and as their rate of travelling may be estimated at about 18 miles a day at an average, the extent of their journeys may easily be computed. As both the time of their outset and their route is known, they are met by the people of the countries through which they travel, who trade with them. Indian goods of every kind form a considerable article in this traffic; in exchange for which, the chief commodity the inhabitants have to give is slaves. Three distinct caravans are employed in bringing slaves and other commodities from Central Africa to Cairo. One of them comes direct from Mourzouk, the capital of Fezzan, across the Libyan desert; another from Senaar; and the third from Darfur. They do not arrive at stated periods, but after a greater or less interval, according to the success they have had in procuring slaves, ivory, gold dust, drugs, and such other articles as are fitted for the Egyptian markets. The Mourzouk caravan is said to be under the best regulations. It is generally about 50 days on its passage and seldom consists of less than 100, or of more than 300, travellers. The caravans from Senaar and Darfur used formerly to be very irregular, and were sometimes not seen in Egypt for 2 or 3 years together but since the occupation of the former by the troops of Mohammed Ali, the intercourse between it and Egypt has become comparatively frequent and regular. The number of slaves imported into Egypt by these caravans is said to amount, at present, to about 10,000 a year. The departure of a caravan from Darfur is looked upon as a most important event ; it engages for a while the attention of the whole country, and even forms a kind of era-(Browne's Travels in Africa, 2d ed. p. 278.) A caravan from Darfur is considered large, if it has 2,000 camels and 1,000 slaves. Many of the Moorish pilgrims to Mecca cross the sea from Souakin and Massouah to the opposite coast of Arabia, and then travel by land to Mecca; and Burckhardt states, that of all the poor pilgrims who arrive in the Hedjaz, none bear a more respectable character for industry than those from Central Africa. Caravans are distinguished into heavy and light. Camels loaded with from 500 to 600 lbs.* form a heavy caravan light caravans being the term applied to designate those formed of camels under a moderate load, or perhaps only half loaded. The mean daily rate at which heavy caravans travel is about 181 miles, and that of light caravans 22 miles. The safety of a caravan depends materially on the conduct of the caravan-bachi, or leader. Neibuhr says, that when the latter is intelligent and honest, and the traveller understands the language, and is accustomed to the Oriental method of travelling, an excursion through the desert is rarely either disagreeable or dangerous. But it is not unusual for the Turkish pachas to realise considerable sums by selling the privilege of conducting caravans and it is generally believed in the East, that leaders so appointed, in order to indemnify themselves, not unfrequently arrange with the Arabian sheikhs as to the attack of the caravans, and share with them in the booty! At all events, a leader who has paid a large sum for the situe- tion, even if he should be honest, must impose proportionally heavy charges on the associa- tion. Hence the best way in travelling with caravans is, to attach oneself to one conducted by an active and experienced merchant, who has a considerable property embarked in the expedition. With ordinary precaution, the danger is then very trifling. It would be easy, indeed, were there any thing like proper arrangements made by government, to render tra- velling by caravans, at least on all the great routes, abundantly secure.-(Niebur, Voyage en Arabie, tome ii. p. 194. ed. Amst. 1780.) No particular formalities are required in the formation of a caravan. Those that start at fixed periods are mostly under the control of government, by whom the leaders are appointed. But, generally speaking, any dealer is at liberty to form a company and make one. The individual in whose name it is raised is considered as the leader, or caravan-bachi, unless he This is the burden of the small camel only. The large ones usually carry from 750 to 1,900 lbs. Digitized by Google CARAVANSERA-CARDS. 319 appoint some one else in his place. When a number of merchants associate together in the design, they elect a chief, and appoint officers to decide whatever controversies may arise during the journey.-(For further details with respect to caravans, see the Modern Part of the Universal History, vol. xiv. pp. 214-243. Robertson's Disquisition on Ancient India, Note 54.; Rees's Cyclopædia, art. Caravan, most of which is copied from Robertson, though without a single word of acknowledgment; Burckhardf's Travels in Arabia, vol. ii. passim; Urquhart on Turkey and its Resources, p. 137. p. 151., &c.) CARAVANSERA, a large public building or inn appropriated for the reception and lodgment of the caravans. Though serving in lieu of inns, there is this radical difference between them,-that, generally speaking, the traveller finds nothing in a caravansera for the use either of himself or his cattle. He must carry all his provisions and necessaries with him. They are chiefly built in dry, barren, desert places; and are mostly furnished with water brought from a great distance and at a vast expense. A well of water is, indeed, indispensable to a caravansera. Caravanseras are also numerous in cities; where they serve not only as inns, but as shops, warehouses, and even exchanges. CARAWAY-SEED (Fr. Carvi, Cumin des prés; Ger. Keummel, Brodkümmel; It. Carvi), a small seed, of an old oblong and slender figure, pointed at both ends, and thickest in the middle. It is the produce of a biennial plant (Carum carui), with a taper root like a parsnep, but much smaller. It should be chosen large, new, of a good colour, not dusty, and of a strong agreeable smell. It is principally used by confectioners; and is extensively cultivated in several parts of Essex. CARBUNCLE (Ger. Karfunkel; Fr. Escarboukle; It. Carbonchio; Sp. Carbunculo; Lat. Carbunculus), a precious stone of the ruby kind, of a very rich glowing blood-red colour, highly esteemed by the ancients.-(See Rusr.) CARD (Fr. Cardes; Ger. Kardütschen, Karden, Wollkratzen ; It. Cardi; Rus. Bardü; Sp. Cardas), an instrument, or comb, for arranging or sorting the hairs of wool, cotton, &c. Cards are either fastened to a flat piece of wood, and wrought by the hand or to a cylinder, and wrought by machinery. CARDAMOMS (Fr. Cardamomes; Ger. Kardamom; It. Cardamomi; Sp. Karda- momos; Hind. Gujarati elachi), seed capsules produced by a plant, of which there are different species growing in India, Cochin China, Siam, and Ceylon. The capsules are gathered as they ripen; and when dried in the sun, are fit for sale. The small capsules, or lesser cardamoms, are produced by a particular species of the plant, and are the most valua- ble. They should be chosen full, plump, and difficult to be broken of a bright yellow colour a piercing smell with an acrid, bitterish, though not very unpleasant taste; and particular care should be taken that they are properly dried. They are reckoned to keep best in a body, and are therefore packed in large chests, well jointed, pitched at the seams, and otherwise properly secured; as the least damp greatly reduces their value. The best cardamoms are brought from the Malabar coast. They are produced in the recesses of the mountains, by felling trees, and afterwards burning them for wherever the ashes fall in the openings or fissures of the rocks, the cardamom plant naturally springs up. In Soonda Balagat, and other places where cardamoms are planted, the fruit or berry is very inferior to that produced in the way now mentioned. The Malabar cardamom is described as a species of bulbous plant, growing 3 or 4 feet high. The growers are obliged to sell all their pro- duce to the agents of government, at prices fixed by the latter, varying from 550 to 700 rupees the candy of 600 lbs. avoirdupois; and it is stated that the contractor often puts an enhanced value on the coins with which he pays the mountaineers or makes them take in exchange tobacco, cloths, salt, oil, betel nut, and such necessary articles, at prices which are frequently, no doubt, estimated above their proper level. Such a system ought assuredly to be put an immediate end to. Not more than one hundredth part of the cardamoms raised in Malabar are used in the country. They are sent in large quantities to the ports on the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, to Sind, up the Indus, to Bengal, Bombay, &c. They form a universal ingredient in curries, pillaus, &c. The market price, at the places of exportation on the Malabar coast, varies from 800 to 1,200 rupees the candy.-(Milburn's Orient. Com- merce, and the valuable evidence of T. H. Baber, Esq., before the Lords' Committee of 1830, p. 216.) Malabar cardamoms are worth at present (September, 1833), from 3s. 8d. to 3s. 10d. a pound in the London market, duty (1s.) included. Ceylon cardamoms are worth from 1s. 8d. to 2s. 2d. CARDS, OR PLAYING CARDS (Du. Kaarten, Speelkarden; Fr. Cartes à jouer Ger. Karten, Spiel karten ; It. Carte da giuoco Rus. Kartü; Sp. Carras, Naipes; Sw. Kort). The only thing necessary to be noticed in this place with respect to cards, is the regulations as to their manufacture, sale, and the payment of the duty. It is regulated by the 9 Geo. 4. c. 18., that an annual license duty of 5s. shall be paid by every maker of playing cards and dice. The duty on every pack of cards is 1s. and is to be specified on the ace of spades. Cards are not to be made in any part of Great Britain, except the metropolis; nor in Ireland, except in Dublin and Cork under a penalty of 100/. Cards are to be enclosed in wrappers, with such Digitized by Google 320 CARMEN-CARRIERS. marks as the commissioners of stamps may appoint. Before license can be had, bond must be given to the amount of 500L. for the payment of the duties, &c. Selling or exposing to sale any pack of cards not duly stamped, subjects a licensed maker to a penalty of 50L. ; and any one else to a penalty of 10Z. Any person having in his possession, or using, or permitting to be used, any pack of cards not duly stamped, to forfeit 51. Second-hand cards may be sold by any person, if sold without the wrap- per of a licensed maker; and in packs containing not more than 52 cards, including an ace of spades duly stamped, and enclosed in a wrapper with the words Second-hand Cards" printed or written in distinct characters on the outside: penalty for selling second-hand cards in any other manner, 201. An Account of the Duty received on Playing Cards in Great Britain and Ireland in each Year from 1820, specifying the Rates of Duty charged.-(Parl. Paper, No. 427. Sess. 1832.) Great Britain. Ireland. Year. Rate. Amount of Duty. Rate. Amount of Duty. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 1820 2s. 6d. per pack - 21,267 5 0 2s. per pack - - 2,019 14 1 1821 21,347 5 0 - 1,821 16 81 1822 - - - 21,179 17 6 - - - 1,643 0 11 1823 - - - 22,006 12 6 - - - 1,657 4 51 1824 - - - 25,874 12 6 - - - 1,598 12 81 1825 - - 22,577 17 6 - - - 1,559 8 0 1826 - - - 18,300 15 0 - - - 1,037 12 6 1827 - - 20,864 12 6 - 1,001 12 5 2s.per pack to 5th of Ju- 1828 1s. per pack from May 17,365 5 6 ly, 1s. per pack for the 640 19 0 remainder of the year. 1829 - - - 15,542 14 0 1s. per pack 403 11 0 1830 - - - 14,509 7 0 244 12 0 1831 - - - 14,400 2 0 - - - 104 18 0 CARMEN, of the City of London, are constituted a fellowship by act of common coun- cil. The rates which they are allowed to charge, and the regulations by which they are to be guided, are settled at the quarter sessions. In other respects they are subjected to the rule of the president and governors of Christ's Hospital, to whom the owner of every cart pays an annual licence duty of 17s. 4d. Carmen are to help to load and unload their carts; and if any carman exacts more than the regu- lar rates, upon due proof, before the Lord Mayor, or any two magistrates, he shall suffer imprison- ment for the space of 21 days. If any person shall refuse to pay any carman his hire, according to the regular rates, upon com- plaint made, the president of Christ's Hospital, or a justice of the peace, may compel payment. Merchants or other persons may choose what cart they please, except such as stand for wharf- work, tackle-work, crane-work, at shops and merchants' houses, which are to be taken in turn; and every carman standing with his empty cart next to any goods to be loaded, shall, upon the first de- mand, load the same for the accustomed rates; and if any person shall cause a carman to attend at his house, shop, warehouse, or cellar, with his loaded cart, the carman being willing to help to unload the same, he shall pay the carman after the rate of 12d. for every hour after the first half-hour for his attendance. Every licensed carman is to have a piece of brass fixed upon his cart, upon which is to be engraven a certain number; which number, together with the carman's name, is registered in a register kept at Christ's Hospital; so that, in case of any misbehaviour, the party offended, by taking notice of the number of the cart, may search for it in the register, and the name will be found. Carmen not conforming to these rules, or working without a numbered piece of brass fixed on the cart, may be suspended from their employment. Carmen riding upon the shafts of their carts, or sitting within them, not having some person on foot to guide the horses, shall forfeit 10s. CARMINE (Ger. Karmin; Du. Karmyn; Fr. Carmine; It. Carminio; Lat. Car- minium), a powder of a very beautiful red colour, bordering upon purple, and used by painters in miniature. It is a species of lake, and is formed of finely pulverised cochineal. It is very high priced. CARNELIAN. See AGATE. CARPET, CARPETS (Ger. Teppiche; Du. Tapyten, Vloer-tapyten; Fr. Tapis; It. Tappeti; Sp. Alfombras, Alcatifas, Tapetes Rus. Kowrd, Kilimi). Persian and Turkish carpets are the most esteemed. In England, carpets are principally manufactured at Kid- derminster, Wilton, Cirencester, Worcester, Axminster, &c.; and in Scotland, at Kilmar- nock. Those made at Axminster are believed to be very little, if any thing, inferior to those of Persia and Turkey. CARRIAGES. See COACHES. CARROT (Daucus carota Lin.), a biennial plant, a native of Britain. Though long known as a garden plant, its introduction into agriculture has been comparatively recent. The uses of the carrot in domestic economy are well known. It is extensively cultivated in Suffolk, whence large quantities are sent to the London market. Horses are said to be remarkably fond of carrots. CARRIERS, are persons undertaking for hire to carry goods from one place to another. Proprietors of carts and wagons, masters and owners of ships, hoymen, lightermen, barge- men, ferrymen, &c. are denominated common carriers. The master of a stage coach who only carries passengers for hire, is not liable for goods; but if he undertake to carry goods and passengers, then he is liable for both as a common carrier. The post-master general is not a carrier in the common acceptation of the term, nor is he subjected to his liabilities. Digitized by Google CARRIERS. 321 1. Duties and Liabilities of Carriers.-Carriers are bound to receive and carry the goods of all persons, for a reasonable hire or reward to take proper care of them in their passage to deliver them safely, and in the same condition as when they were received (excepting only such losses as may arise from the act of God or the king's enemies) ; or, in default thereof, to make compensation to the owner for whatever loss or damage the goods may have received while in their custody, that might have been prevented. Hence a carrier is liable, though he be robbed of the goods, or they be taken from him by irresistible force; and though this may seem a hard rule, yet it is the only one that could be safely adopted; for if a carrier were not liable for losses unless it could be shown that he had conducted himself dishonestly or negligently, a door would be opened for every species of fraud and collusion, inasmuch as it would be impossible, in most cases, to ascertain whether the facts were such as the carrier represented. On the same principle a carrier has been held accountable for goods accidentally consumed by fire while in his warehouse. In delivering the opinion of the Court of King's Bench on a case of this sort, Lord Mansfield said-" A carrier, by the nature of his contract, obliges himself to use all due care and dili- gence, and is answerable for any neglect. But there is something more imposed on him by custom, that is, by the common law. A common carrier is in the nature of an insurer. All the cases show him to be 80. This makes him liable for every thing except the act of God and the king's enemies; that is, even from inevitable accidents, with those exceptions. The question then is, What is the act of God ? I consider it to be laid down in opposition to the act of man such as lightning, storms, tempests and the like, which could not hap- pen by any human intervention. To prevent litigation and collusion, the law presumes negligence except in those circumstances. An armed force, though ever so great and irresist- ible, does not excuse the reason is, for fear it may give room for collusion, which can never happen with respect to the act of God. We all, therefore, are of opinion that there should be judgment for the plaintiff." (Forward V. Pittard, 1 T. R. 27.) A carrier is not obliged to have a new carriage for every journey it is sufficient if he provide one that, without any extraordinary accident, may be fairly presumed capable of per- forming the journey. A carrier may be discharged from his liability by any fraud or concealment on the part of the individual employing him, or of the bailor as if the latter represent a parcel as con- taining things of little or no value, when, in fact, it contains things of great value. But when the carrier has not given a notice limiting his responsibility, and when he puts no questions with respect to the parcel to the bailor, the latter need not say any thing with respect to it and though the bailor should represent the thing delivered to the carrier as of no value, yet if the latter know it to be otherwise, he will be responsible in the event of its being lost or damaged. If the bailor deliver goods imperfectly packed, and the carrier does not perceive it, he is not liable in the event of a loss occurring; but if the defect in the pack- age were such that the carrier could not but perceive it, he would be liable. On this prin- ciple a carrier was made to answer for the loss of a greyhound that had been improperly secured when given to him. A carrier may refuse to admit goods into his warehouse at an unseasonable time, or before he is ready to take his journey but he cannot refuse to do the ordinary duties incumbent on a person in his situation. It is felony, if a carrier open a parcel and take goods out of it with intent to steal them and it has been decided, that if goods be delivered to a carrier to be carried to a specified place, and he carry them to a different place, and dispose of them for his own profit, he is guilty of felony but the embezzlement of goods by a carrier, without a felonious taking, merely exposes to a civil action. No carrier, wagonman, carman, or wainman, with their respective carriages, shall travel on Sundays, under a penalty of 20s.-(3 Chas. 1. c. 1.) A carrier is always, unless there be an express agreement to the contrary, entitled to a reward for his care and trouble. In some cases his reward is regulated by the legislature, and in others by a special stipulation between the parties; but though there be no legislative provision or express agreement, he cannot claim more than a reasonable compensation. 2. Limitation of Responsibility.-Until the act of 1530, a carrier might by express stipu- lation, giving public notice to that effect, discharge his liability from all losses by robbery, accident or otherwise, except those which arose from misfeazance and gross negligence (from which no stipulation or notice could exempt him), and provided the notice did not contra- vene the express conditions of an act of parliament. Notices generally bore, that the carrier would not be responsible for more than a certain sum (usually 51.) on any one parcel, the value of which had not been declared and paid for accordingly ; so that a person aware of this notice, entering a box worth 1000l. without declaring its value, or entering it as being worth 200L would, should it be lost, have got in the first case only 51., and in the latter only 2001., unless he could have shown that the carrier had acted fraudulently or with gross negligence. But, to avail himself of this defence, the carrier was bound to show that the bailor or his servant was acquainted with the notice 41 Digitized by Google 322 CARRIERS. at the time of delivering the goods. No particular manner of giving notice was required. It might be done by express communication, by fixing it up in a conspicuous place in the carrier's office, by insertion in the public papers or Gazette, by the circulation of handbills, &c. ; it being in all cases a question for the jury to decide whether the bailor was really acquainted with the notice of the limitation ; since, if he were not, he was entitled to recover, whatever efforts the carrier may have made to publish it. Thus, a notice stuck up in a carrier's warehouse, where goods were delivered, was of no avail against parties who could not read neither was it of any avail against those who could read, and who had seen it, unless they had actually read it. On this principle it was held, that a notice in a newspa- per is not sufficient, even when it was proved that the bailor read the newspaper, unless it could also be proved that he had read the notice itself. These attempts to limit responsibility gave rise to a great deal of litigation and uncer- tainty ; and to obviate the inconveniences thence arising, the important statute, 1 Will. 4. c. 68., was passed. This act declares, that carriers by land shall not be liable for the loss of certain articles specified in the act, when their value exceeds 10/., unless the nature and value of such articles be stated at the time of their delivery to the carrier, and an increased charge paid or agreed to be paid upon the same. It is further declared, that no publication of any notices by carriers shall have power to limit their responsibility at common law for all other articles except those specified in the act but as the act is of great importance, we subjoin it. From and after the passing of this act, no mail contractor, stage coach proprietor, or other common carrier by land for hire, shall be liable for the loss of or injury to any article or articles of property of the description following, viz. gold or silver coin of this realm or of any foreign state, or any gold or silver in a manufactured or unmanufactured state, or any precious stones, jewellery, watches, clocks, or time-pieces of any description, trinkets, bills, notes of the Governor and Company of the Banks of England, Scotland, and Ireland respectively, or of any other bank in Great Britain or Ireland, orders, notes, or securities for payment of money, English or foreign stamps, maps, writings, title-deeds, paintings, engravings, pictures, gold or silver plate or plated articles, glass, china, silks in a manufac- tured or unmanufactured state, and whether wrought up or not wrought up with other materials, furs, or lace, or any of them, contained in any parcel or package which shall have been delivered, either to be carried for hire or to accompany the person of any passenger in any mail or stage coach or other public conveyance, when the value of such article or articles or property aforesaid contained in such parcel or package shall exceed the sum of 101., unless at the time of the delivery thereof at the office, warehouse, or receiving house of such mail contractor, &c. the value and nature of such arti- cle or articles of property shall have been declared by the person or persons sending or delivering the same, and such increased charge as hereinafter mentioned, or an engagement to pay the same be ac- cepted by the person receiving such parcel or package.-d 1. When any parcel or package containing any of the articles above specified shall be 80 delivered, and its value and contents declared as aforesaid, and such value shall exceed the sum of 101., it shall be lawful for such mail contractors, stage coach proprietors, and other common carriers, to demand and receive an increased rate of charge, to be notified by some notice, affixed in legible character in some public and conspicuous part of the office, warehouse, or other receiving house, where such parcels or packages are received by them for the purpose of conveyance, stating the increased rates of charge required to be paid over and above the ordinary rate of carriage, as a compensation for the greater risk and care to be taken for the safe conveyance of such valuable articles; and all persons sending or delivering parcels or packages containing such valuable articles as aforesaid at such office shall be bound by such notice, without further proof of the same having come to their knowledge.-& Provided always, that when the value shall have been 80 declared, and the increased rate of charge paid, or an engagement to pay the same shall have been accepted as herein-before mentioned, the person receiving such increased rate of charge or accepting such agreement shall, if required, sign a receipt for the package or parcel, acknowledging the same to have been insured, which receipt shall not be liable to any stamp duty and if such receipt shall not be given when required, or such notice as aforesaid shall not have been affixed, the mail contractor, stage coach proprietor, or other common carrier as aforesaid, shall not have or be entitled to any benefit or advantage under this act, but shall be liable and responsible as at the common law, and be liable to refund the increased rate of charge.-d 3. And be it enacted, that from and after the 1st day of September, 1830, no public notice or declara- tion heretofore made or hereafter to be made shall be deemed or construed to limit or in any wise affect the liability at common law of any such mail contractors, stage coach proprietors, or other pub- Hc common carriers as aforesaid, for or in respect of any articles or goods to be carried and conveyed by them but that all and every such mail contractors, stage coach proprietors, and other common carriers as aforesaid, shall, from and after the said 1st day of September, be liable, as at the common law, to answer for the loss of any injury [so in the act] to any articles and goods in respect whereof they may not be entitled to the benefit of this act, any public notice or declaration by them made and given contrary thereto, or in anywise limiting such liability, notwithstanding.-| 4. And be it further enacted, that for the purposes of this act every office, warehouse, or receiving house, which shall be used or appointed by any mail contractor, or stage coach proprietor, or other such common carrier, for the receiving of parcels to be conveyed as aforesaid, shall be deemed and taken to be the receiving house, warehouse, or office of such mail contractor, stage coach proprietor, or other common carrier and that any one or more of such mail contractors, stage coach proprietors, or common carriers, shall be liable to be sued by his, her, or their name or names only and that no action or suit commenced to recover damages for loss or injury to any parcel, package, or person. shall abate for the want of joining any co-proprietor or co-partner in such mail, stage coach, or other public conveyance by land for hire as aforesaid.— 5. Provided always, and be it further enacted, that nothing in this act contained shall extend or be construed to annul or in anywise affect any special contract between such mail contractor, stage coach proprietor, or common carrier, and any other parties, for the conveyance of goods and mer- chandises.- δ 6. Provided also, and be it further enacted, that where any parcel or package shall have been delivered at any such office. and the value and contents declared as aforesaid, and the increased rate of charges been paid, and such parcels or packages shall have been lost or damaged, the party entitled to recover damages in respect of such loss or damage shall also be entitled to recover back such increased charges 80 paid as aforesaid, in addition to the value of such package or parcel.- 7. Digitized by Google CARTS-CASHEW NUTS. 323 Provided also, and be it further enacted, that nothing in this act shall be deemed to protect any mail contractor, stage coach proprietor, or other common carrier for hire, from liability to answer for loss or injury to any goods or articles whatsoever, arising from the felonious acts of any coachman, guard, book-keeper, porter, or other servant in his or their employ, nor to protect any such coachman, guard, book-keeper, or other servant, from liability for any loss or injury occasioned by his or their own personal neglect or misconduct.-d 8. Provided also, and be it further enacted, that such mail contractors, stage coach proprietors, or other common carriers for hire, shall not be concluded as to the value of any such parcel or package by the value so declared as aforesaid, but that he or they shall in all cases be entitled to require, from the party suing in respect of any loss or injury, proof of the actual value of the contents by the ordi- nary legal evidence ; and that the mail contractors, stage coach proprietors, or other common carriers as aforesaid, shall be liable to such damages only as shall be so proved as aforesaid, not exceeding the declared value, together with the increased charges as before mentioned.- 9. And be it further enacted, that in all actions to be brought against any such mail contractors, &c., the defendant or defendants may pay the money into court.- Φ 10. It will be observed, that carriers continue, notwithstanding this act, liable, as before, for the felonious acts of their servants, and their own misfeazance or gross negligence. It is not possible, however, to lay down any general rule as to the circumstances which constitute this offence. Differing as they do in almost every case, the question, when raised, must be left to a jury. But it has been decided, that the misdelivery of a parcel, or its nondelivery within a reasonable time, is a misfeazance that cannot be defeated by any notice on the part of the carrier limiting his responsibility. In like manner, the sending of a parcel by a different coach from that directed by the bailor, the removing it from one carriage to another, are misfeazances. Where a parcel is directed to a person at a particular place, and the car- rier, knowing such person, delivers the parcel to another, who represents himself as the con- signee, such delivery is gross negligence. Leaving parcels in a coach or cart unprotected in the streets is also gross negligence. At common law, there is no distinction between carriage performed by sea or land but by the 7 Geo. 2. c. 15. and 26 Geo. 3. c. 86., corrected and amended by the 53 Geo. 3. c. 159., it is enacted that ship-owners are not to be liable for any loss or damage happening to goods on board through the fraud or neglect of the master, without their knowledge or privity, further than the value of the vessel and the freight accruing during the voyage. -(See OWNERS.) 3. Commencement and Termination of Liability.-A carrier's liability commences from the time the goods are actually delivered to him in the character of carrier. A delivery to a carrier's servant is a delivery to himself, and he will be responsible. The delivery of goods in an inn-yard or warehouse, at which other carriers put up, is not a delivery so as to charge a carrier, unless a special notice be given him of their having been so delivered, or some previous intimation to that effect. A carrier's liability ceases, when he vests the property committed to his charge in the hands of the consignee or his agents, by actual delivery or when the property is resumed by the con- signor, in pursuance of his right of stopping it in transitu. It is in all cases the duty of the carrier to deliver the goods. The leaving goods at an inn is not a sufficient delivery. The rule in such cases, in deciding upon the carrier's liability, is to consider whether any thing remains to be done by the carrier, as such and if nothing remains to be done, his lia- bility ceases, and conversely. A carrier has a lien upon goods for his hire. Even if the goods be stolen, the rightful owner is not to have them without paying the carriage. For further details as to this subject see Jeremy on the Law of Carriers, passim Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. pp. 369-387; and Burn's Justice of the Peace, tit. Carriers. There are some excellent observations with respect to it in Sir William Jones' Essay on the Law of Bailments.-(For an account of the regulations as to the conveyance of passengers in stage coaches, see COACHES, STAGE.) CARTS. Every cart, &c. for the carriage of any thing to and from any place, where the streets are paved, within the bills of mortality, shall contain 6 inches in the felly. No per- son shall drive any cart, waggon, &c. within 5 miles of the General Post Office, unless the name, surname, and place of abode of the owner, be painted in conspicuous letters, at least 1 inch in height, on the right or off side thereof, under a penalty of 5/. Any per- son may seize and detain any cart, waggon, &c. without such mark.-(1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 22.) CASH, in commerce, means the ready money, bills, drafts, bonds, and all immediately negotiable paper in an individual's possession. CASH ACCOUNT, in book-keeping, an account to which nothing but cash is carried on the one hand, and from which all the disbursements of the concern are drawn on the other. The balance is the cash in hand. When the credit side more than balances the debit, or disbursement side, the account is said to be in cash; when the contrary, to be out of cash CASH ACCOUNT, in banking, is the name given to the account of the advances made by a banker in Scotland, to an individual who has given security for their repayment.-(See BANKS (Scorch).) CASHEW NUTS, (Ger. Akajunüsse, Westindische Anakarden; Du. Catsjoenooten; Fr. Noix d'acajou; It. Acaju; Sp. Nueces d'acaju; Port. Nozes d'acaju) the produce of the Digitized by Google 324 CASPIAN SEA-CASTOR OIL. Anacardium occidentale. They are externally of a greyish or brownish colour, of the shape of a kidney, somewhat convex on the one side, and depressed on the other. The shell is very hard and the kernel, which is sweet and of a very fine flavour, is covered with a thin film. Between this and the shell is lodged a thick, blackish, inflammable oil, of such a caustic nature in the fresh nuts, that if the lips chance to touch it, blisters immediately fol- low. The kernels are used in cooking, and in the preparation 8f chocolate. CASPIAN SEA. See TAGANROG. CASSIA. There are four species of cassia in the market viz. Cassia Fistula; Cassia Lignea, or Cassia Bark; Cassia Buds, and Cassia Senna. 1. Cassia Fistula (Fr. Casse; Ger. Rhonkasie; It. Polpa di cassia; Lat. Cassix put pa; Arab. Khyar sheber) is a tree which grows in the East and West Indies, and Egypt (Cassia fistula Lin.). The fruit is a woody, dark brown pod, about the thickness of the thumb, and nearly 2 feet in length. Those brought to this country come principally from the West Indies, packed in casks and cases; but a superior kind is brought from the East Indies, and is easily distinguished by its smaller smooth pod, and by the greater blackness of the pulp. 2. Cassia Lignea, or Cassia Bark (Fr. Casse; Ger. Cassia; Port. Cassia lenhosa; Arab. Seleckeh, Hind. Tuj; Malay, Kâyü-legi), the bark of a tree (Laurus Cassia Lin.) growing in Sumatra, Borneo, the Malabar coast, Philippine Islands, &c.; but chiefly in the provinces of Quantong and Kingsi, in China, which furnish the greatest part of the cassia met with in the European markets. The tree grows to the height of 50 or 60 feet, with large, spreading, horizontal branches, the bark resembles that of cinnamon in appearance, smell, and taste, and is very often substituted for it but it may be readily distinguished; it is thicker in substance, less quilled, breaks shorter, and is more pungent. It should be chosen in thin pieces; the best being that which approaches nearest to cinnamon in flavour: that which is small and broken should be rejected. A good deal of the cassia in the Indian markets is brought from Borneo, Sumatra, and Ceylon. Malabar cassia is thicker and darker coloured than that of China, and more subject to foul packing; each bundle should be separately inspected.-(Ainslie's Materia Indica; Milburn's Orient. Com. &c.) The duty on cassia was reduced in 1825 from 2s. 6d. per lb. to 1s., and in 1829 to 6d. Owing partly to these reductions, and partly to the heavy duty on and high price of cinnamon, the consumption of cassia has more than doubled since 1820. Still, however, it is very inconsiderable when compared with the importation. In 1892, the duty of 6d. per lb. produced 1,8071. 2s. 10d., showing that 72,985 lbs. had been cleared for consumption. The imports in ordinary years, vary from about 400,000 lbs. to about 800,000 lbs.; the excess over what is made use of at home being principally sent to Germany, Italy, and Russia. Of 837,589 lbs. imported in 1830, 799,715 lbs. were brought from the East India Company's territories and Ceylon, 25,586 lbs. from the Philippine Islands, 6,290 lbs. from Brazil, and 5,995 lbs. from the Mauritius, Cassia was quoted in the London markets, in August, 1833, at from 86s. to 90s. a cwt. in bond.-(Parl. Paper, No. 367. Sess. 1832, &c.) [See IMPORTS AND Exports.-Am. Ed.] CASSIA BUDS, the dried fruit or berry of the tree (Laurus cassia) which yields the bark described in the previous article. They bear some resemblance to a clove, but are smaller, and, when fresh, have a rich cinnamon flavour. They should be chosen round, fresh, and free from stalks and dirt. Cassia buds are the produce of China. The exports from Canton in 1831 amounted to 1,334 piculs, or 177,866 lbs. The imports into Great Britain in 1832 were 75,173 lbs., but the entries for home consumption are not specified. They were quoted in the London markets in October, 1833, at 80s. a cwt. in bond.-(Milburn's Orient. Com.; Anglo-Chinese Kalendar for 1832 and Parl. Paper, No. 425. Sess. 1833.) Cassia Senna. See SENNA. CASTOR (Fr. Castoreum; Ger. Kastoreunt It. Castoro; Sp. Castoreo), the produce of the beaver. In the inguinal region. of this animal are found four bags, a large and a small one on each side in the two large ones there is contained a softish, greyish yellow or light brown substance, which, on exposure to the air, becomes dry and brittle and of a brown colour. This is castor. It has a heavy but somewhat aromatic smell, not unlike musk and a bitter, nauseous, and subacrid taste. The best comes from Russia; but of late years it has been very scarce; and all that is now found in the shops is the produce of Canada. The goodness of castor is determined by its sensible qualities; that which is black is insipid, inodorous, oily, and unfit for use. Castor is said to be sometimes counterfeited by a mix- ture of some gummy and resinous substances; but the fraud is easily detected, by comparing the smell and taste with those of real castor.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) CASTOR OIL (Fr. Huile du Ricin; Ger. Rizinusohl; It. Olio di Ricino, Sp. Ricin- soel) is obtained from the seeds of the Ricinus communis, or Palma Christi, an annual plant, found in most tropical countries, and in Greece, the south of Spain, &c. The oil is sepa- rated from the seeds either by boiling them in water, or by subjecting them to the action of the press. It is said, that though the largest quantity of oil may be procured by the first method, it is less sweet, and more apt to become rancid, than that procured by expression, which, in consequence, is the process now most commonly followed. Good expressed castor oil is nearly inodorous and insipid but the best leaves a slight sensation of acrimony in the throat after it is swallowed. It is thicker and heavier than the fat oils, being viscid, trans- Digitized by Google CATECHU-CAT SKINS. 325 parent, and colourless, or of a very pale straw colour. That which is obtained by boiling the seeds has a brownish hue; and both kinds, when they become rancid, thicken, deepen in colour to a reddish brown, and acquire a hot nauseous taste. It is very extensively em- ployed in the materia medica as a cathartic.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) The quantity cleared for home consumption in 1831 amounted to 327,940 lbs., being about double the quantity cleared for consumption in 1820; an increase principally ascribable to the reduction of the duty from 1s. 3d. to 3d. Of the total quantity imported in 1830, amounting to 490,558 lbs., no fewer than 441,267 lbs. were from the East Indies, 39,408 lbs. from British North America, 5,139 lbs. from the United States, and 4,718 lbs. from the British West Indies. Castor oil from foreign countries, being loaded with a daty of 1s., is almost wholly re-exported. The price of East India castor oil in bond varies from 10d. to 1s. 7d per lb.; that of the West Indies is much higher.-(Accounts published by the Board of Trade, p. 118.; Parl. Paper, No. 367. Sess. 1832, &c.) CATECHU (Fr. Cachou; Ger. Kaschu; Hind. Cut; Mal. Gambir), a brown astrin- gent substance, formerly known by the name of Terra Japonica, because supposed to be a kind of earth. It is, however, a vegetable substance obtained from two plants; VIZ. the Mimosa, or more correctly the Acacia catechu, and the Uncaria gambir. The first of these is a tree from 20 to 30 feet high, found in abundance in many of the forests of India, from 16° of lat. up to 30°. The places most remarkable for its production are, the Bur- mese territories; a large province of the Malabar coast, called the Concan; and the forests skirting the northern part of Bengal, under the hills which divide it from Nepaul. The catechu is obtained from this tree by the simple process of boiling the heart of the wood for a few hours, when it assumes the look and consistency of tar. The substance hardens by cooling; is formed into small balls or squares; and being dried in the sun, is fit for the market. The price to the first purchaser in the Concan is about 15s. a cwt. According to Dr. Davy, who analysed it, the specific gravity of Concan catechu is 1.39; and that of Pegu, 1-28. The taste of this substance is astringent, leaving behind a sensation of sweet- ness it is almost wholly soluble in water. Of all the astringent substances we know, catechu appears to contain the largest portion of tannin. According to Mr. Purkis, 1 lb. is equivalent to 7 or 8 lbs. of oak bark for tanning leather. From 200 grs. of Concan catechu, Dr. Davy procured 109 of tannin, 68 of extractive matter, 13 of mucilage, and 10 of earths and other impurities the same quantity of Pegu catechu afforded 97 grs. of tannin, 73 of extract, 16 of mucilage, and 14 of impurities. The uncaria gambir is a scandent shrub, extensively cultivated in all the countries lying on both sides of the Straits of Malacca; but chiefly in the small islands at their eastern extremity. The catechu is in this case obtained by boiling the leaves, and inspissating the juice; a small quantity of crude sago being added, to give the mass consistency it is then dried in the sun, and being cut like the Concan catechu into small squares, is ready for use. There is a great consumption of this article throughout all parts of India as a masticatory it forms an ingredient in the compound of betel pepper, areca nut, and lime, which is in almost universal use. Catechu may be purchased at the Dutch settlement of Rhio, or at Malacca, in the Straits of Singapore, at the rate of about 10s. a cwt. The quantity of it, under the corrupted name of cutch, imported yearly into Cal- cutta from Pegu, at an average of the 5 years ending with 1828-29, was about 300 tons, at a cost not exceeding 9s. per cwt. From Bombay a considerable quantity is annually im- ported into China. The quantity of catechu, under the name of gambir, produced in Rhio by the Chinese settlers, is equal to about 4,600 tons a year, about 2,000 of which are ex- ported for the consumption of Java; the rest being sent to China, Cochin China, and other neighbouring countries. Catechu, particularly from Singapore, has lately been imported in considerable quantities for trial in our tanneries; but with a duty of 1/. per cwt., equal to twice the prime cost, we fear the speculation is not likely to succeed.-(See Ainstie's Materia Indica; Ure's Dic- tionary ; Singapore Chronicle; Buchanan's Journey through Mysore Canara, and Mala- bar; Bell's Review of the external Commerce of Bengal.) CAT'S EYE, a mineral of a beautiful appearance, brought from Ceylon. Its colours are grey, green, brown, red, of various shades. Its internal lustre is shining, its fracture imper- fectly conchoidal, and it is translucent. From a peculiar play of light, arising from white fibres interspersed, it has derived its name. The French call the appearance chatoyant. It scratches quartz, is easily broken, and resists the blowpipe. It is set by the jewellers as a precious stone. CAT SKINS. The skin or fur of the cat, is used for a variety of purposes, but is prin- cipally dyed and sold as false sable. It appears from evidence taken before a late Committee of the House of Commons, that it is a common practice in London to decoy the animal and kill it for the sake of its skin. The fur of the wild cat is, however, far more valuable than that of the domestic cat. The wild cat skins imported into this country are brought almost wholly from the territories of the Hudson's Bay Company. The animal from which they are taken is a good deal larger than the English wild cat, and is sometimes called the loup cervier, or Canadian lynx. It is very courageous. At an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, the number of cat skins imported amounted to 40,006 a year, of which about 24,000 a year were retained for home consumption. VOL. L-2 E Digitized by Google 326 CATTLE. CATTLE, a collective term applied to designate all those quadrupeds that are used either as food for man, or in tilling the ground. By neat or horned cattle is meant the two species included under the names of the ox (Bos) and the buffalo (Bubuhus) ; but as the latter is hardly known in this country, it is the former only that we have here in view. The raising and feeding of cattle, and the preparation of the various products which they yield, have formed, in all countries emerged from the savage state, an important branch of industry. It would be quite inconsistent with the objects and limits of this work, to enter into any details with respect to the different breeds of cattle raised in this or other countries. They are exceedingly various. In Great Britain they have been vastly improved, both in the weight of carcase, the quality of the beef, and the abundance of the milk, by the extraordi- nary attention that has been given to the selection and crossing of the best breeds, according to the objects in view. This sort of improvement began about the middle of last century, or rather later, and was excited and very much forwarded by the skill and enterprise of two individuals-Mr. Bakewell of Dishley, and Mr. Culley of Northumberland. The success by which their efforts were attended roused a spirit of emulation in others; and the rapid growth of commerce and manufactures since 1760 having occasioned a corresponding in- crease in the demand for butcher's meat, improved systems of breeding, and improved breeds, have been very generally introduced. But the improvement in the size and the condition of cattle has not been alone owing to the circumstances now mentioned. Much of it is certainly to be ascribed to the great im- provement that has been made in their feeding. The introduction and universal extension of the turnip and clover cultivation has had, in this respect, a most astonishing influence, and has wonderfully increased the food of cattle, and consequently the supply of butcher's meat. It was stated in the First Report of the Select Committee of the House of Commons on Waste Lands (printed in 1795), that cattle and sheep had, at an average, increased in size and weight about a fourth since 1732 but there are strong grounds for supposing that the increase had been much more considerable than is represented by the committee. According to an estimate of Dr. Davenant in 1710, the average weight of the nett carcase of black cattle was only 370 lbs., of calves 50 lbs. and of sheep only 28 lbs. ; but according to Sir F. M. Eden (Hist. of the Poor, vol. iii. Appen. p. 88.) and Mr. Middleton (Agrie. of Middlesex, 2d ed. p. 541.) the weight of the carcase of bullocks killed in London, is now, at an average, 800 lbs., calves 140 lbs., sheep 80 lbs., and lambs 50 lbs. including offal and de- ducting the latter, the nett weight of the carcases is nearer a half than a fourth greater than the weight assigned by Davenant. Consumption of Butcher's Meat in London.-The number of head of cattle, sheep and lambs, sold in Smithfield market, each year since 1732, has been as follows :- Years. Cattle. Sheep. Years. Cattle. Sheep. Years. Cattle. Sheep. Years. Cattle. Sheep. 1732 76,210 514,700 1758 84,252 550,930 1783 101,840 701,610 1808 144,042 1,015,280 1733 80,169 555,050 1759 86,439 582,260 1784 98,143 616,110 1809 137,600 989,250 1734 78,810 566,910 1760 88,594 622,210 1785 99,047 641,470 1810 132,155 962,750 1735 83,894 590,970 1761 82,514 666,010 1786 92,270 665,910 1811 125,012 966,400 1736 87,606 587,420 1762 102,831 772,160 1787 94,946 668,570 1812 133,854 953,630 1737 89,862 607,330 1763 80,851 653,110 1788 92,829 679,100 1813 137,770 891,240 1738 87,010 589,470 1764 75,168 556,360 1789 93,269 693,700 1814 135,071 870,880 1739 86,787 568,980 1765 81,630 537,000 1790 103,708 749,660 1815 124,948 962,840 1740 84,810 501,020 1766 75,534 574,790 1791 101,164 740,360 1816 120,439 968,560 1741 77,714 536,180 1767 77,324 574,050 1792 107,348 760,859 1817 129,888 1,044,710 1742 79,601 503,260 1768 79,660 626,170 1793 116,848 728,480 1818 138,047 963,250 1743 76,475 468,120 1769 82,131 642,910 1794 109,448 719,420 1819 135,296 949,900 1744 76,648 490,620 1770 86,890 649,090 1795 131,092 745,640 1820 132,933 947,990 1745 74,188 563,990 1771 93,573 631,860 1796 117,152 758,840 1821 129,125 1,107,230 1746 71,582 620,790 1772 89,503 609,540 1797 108,377 693,510 1822 142,043 1,340,100 1747 71,150 621,780 1773 90,133 609,740 1798 107,470 753,010 1823 149,552 1,264,920 1748 67,681 610,060 1774 90,419 585,290 1799 122,986 834,400 1824 163,615 1,239,720 1749 72,706 624,220 1775 93,581 623,950 1800 125,073 $42,210 1825 156,985 1,130,310 1750 70,765 656,340 1776 98,372 671,700 1801 134,546 760,560 1826 143,460 1,270,530 1751 69,589 631,890 1777 93,714 714,870 1802 126,389 743,470 1827 138,363 1,335,100 1752 73,708 642,100 1778 97,360 658,540 1803 117,551 787,430 1828 147,698 1,288,460 1753 75,252 648,440 1779 97,352 676,540 1804 113,019 903,940 1829 158,313 1,940,300 1754 70,437 631,350 1780 102,383 706,850 1805 125,043 912,410 1830 159,907 1,287,070 1755 74,290 647,100 1781 102,543 743,330 1806 120,250 858,570 1831 148,168 1,189,010 1756 77,257 624,710 1782 101,176 728,970 1807 134,326 924,030 1832 166,224 1,364,160 1757 82,612 574,960 Down to 1820, this table is extracted from papers laid before parliament since 1820, it is made up from returns procured, for this work, from the Chamberlain's office. The number of fatted calves, exclusive of sucklers, of which no account is taken, sold annually in Smithfield from 1821 inclusive, has been as follows :- 1821 - - - - 21,768 1827 - - - - 20,729 1822 - - - - 24,255 1828 - - - - 20,832 1823 - - - - 22,739 1829 - - - - 20,879 1824 - - - - 21,949 1830 - - - - 20,300 1825 - - - - 20,958 1831 - - - - - 1826 - - - - 22,118 1832 - - - - 19,522 (Obtained from the clerk of the market, 5th of Nov. 1833.) Digitized by Google CATTLE. 327 The contract prices of butcher's meat per cwt. at Greenwich Hospital, since 1730, have been as below:- £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d.' 1730 - - 1 5 8 1785 - - 1 17 of 1823 - - 2 2 7+ 1735 - - 0 16 11 1790 - - 1 16 10 1824 - - 2 2 81 1740 - - 1 8 0 1795 - - 2 2 10 1825 - - 2 19 6f 1745 - - I 2 2 1800 - - 3 4 4 1826 - - 2 17 8 : 1750 - - 1 6 6 1805 - - 3 0 4 1827 - - 2 15 41 1755 - - 1 7 of 1810 - - 3120 1828 - - 2 10 71 1760 - - 1 11 6 1815 - - 3 8 0 1829 - - 2 6 3f 1765 - - 1 7 3 1820 - - 3 10 41 1830 - - 2 3 6 1770 - - 1 8 6 1821 - - 2 18 10 1831 - - 2 4 31 1775 - - 1 13 5 1822 - - 1 19 5} 1832 - - 2 6 21 1780 - - 1 12 6 We suspect, from what we have heard from practical men of great experience, that the weight assigned by Sir F. M. Eden and Mr. Middleton to the cattle sold in Smithfield is a little beyond the average. It must also be observed, as already stated, that it is the gross weight of the carcase, or the weight of the animal under deduction of blood and refuse and therefore to get the nett weight, we have further to deduct the offal, or the hide, tallow, entrails, feet, &c. We have been informed that the following quantities may be deducted from the carcase weights, in order to obtain the nett weights of the different animals; viz. -from neat cattle, 250 lbs. each calves, 35 lbs.; sheep, 24 lbs.; lambs, 12 lbs. If these estimates be nearly right, we should be able, provided we knew the respective numbers of sheep and lambs, to estimate the total quantity of butcher's meat furnished for London by Smithfield market, exclusive of hogs and pigs. Sheep and lambs are not, however, distin- guished in the returns; but it is known that the former are to the latter nearly as 3 to 1; so that we may estimate the average gross weight of the sheep and lambs at about 70 lbs., and their average nett weight at about 50 lbs. The account for 1830 will then stand as under :- Number and Species of Animals. Gross Weight. Offal. Nett Weight. Butcher's Meat. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. 159,907 Cattle - - - 800 250 550 87,948,850 1,287,070 Sheep and lambs - 70 20 50 64,353,500 20,300 Calves - - - 140 35 105 2,131,500 Total 154,434,850 This quantity, estimated at the average price of 6d. would cost 3,860,871/.; at 8d., it would cost 5,147,828% A part of the cattle sold at Smithfield go to supply the town in the vicinity but, on the other hand, many cattle are sold in the adjoining towns, and slaughtered for the use of London, of which no account is taken. We have reason to think that the latter quantity rather exceeds the former; but supposing that they mutually balance each other, the above quantity of 154,434,850 lbs. may be regarded as forming the annual supply of butcher's meat at present required for London; exclusive, however, of hogs, pigs, suckling calves, &c., and exclusive also of bacon, hams, and salted provisions brought from a distance. The quantities thus omitted from the account are very considerable; nor can there, we appre- hend, be any doubt that, with the addition of such parts of the offal as are used for food, they may be considered as more than balancing the butcher's meat required for the victual- ling of ships. On this hypothesis, therefore, it will follow, assuming the population of the metropolis to amount to 1,450,000, that the annual consumption of butcher's meat by each individual, young and old, belonging to it, is, at an average, very near 107 lbs. This, though not nearly so great as has been sometimes represented*, is, we believe, a larger consumption of animal food than takes place any where else by the same number of individuals. According to M. Chabrol, the consumption of butcher's meat in Paris amounts to between 85 lbs. and 86 lbs. for each individual. At Brussels the consumption is a little greater, being supposed to average 89 lbs. each individual; being rather more than 3 lbs. above the mean of Paris, and 18 lbs. under the mean of London. According to the reports of the inspectors of hides and skins, the following are the numbers of cattle, calves, and sheep, slaughtered in Liverpool, Manchoster, Leeds, and Sheffield, from 1815 to 1820 inclusive Cattle. Calves. Sheep. Liverpool - - - - 74,671 100,329 457,268 Manchester - - I 95,054 96,574 489,557 Leeds - - - - 22,976 34,598 317,642 Sheffield - - - - 30,097 28,455 184,859 Totals - 222,798 259,956 1,443,326 (Appen, to Agrie. Report of 1821, p. 267.) * Mr. Middleton (Agriculture of Middlesex, p. 643.) estimates the consumption of animal food in London, exclusive of fish and poultry, at 234 lbs. a year for every individual! And he further esti- mates the total average annual expense incurred by each inhabitant of the metropolis, for all sorts of animal food, at 81. 8s.! To make any comments on such conclusions would be worse than useless; but the fact of their being met with in a work, otherwise of considerable merit, is one of the many proofs. every where to be met with, of the low state of statistical knowledge in this country. Digitized by Google 328 CATTLE. In estimating the weights of the animals killed at these towns, a lower standard must be adopted than that which we have taken for London first, because the largest and finest cattle are brought to the metropolis; and secondly, because a very large proportion of the calves are sucklers, which are excluded from the London accounts. These considerations have not been sufficiently attended to by the framers of the estimate in the report now quoted. Sheep, in the above table, means no doubt sheep and lambs. We extract from Dr. Cleland's valuable work on the statistics of Glasgow the subjoined account of the number, weight, &c. of the animals slaughtered and sold in that city during the year 1822. Butchers' Meat sold in the Glasgow Market, in 1822. Royalty. Suburbs. Total. £ 8. d. £ s. d. Bullocks 13,009 1,557 14,566 average 28 stone, 407,848, at 7s. 142,746 16 0 Calves 7,927 630 8,557 - - 36s. 15,402 12 0 Sheep 48,896 8,624 57,520 - - 20s. 57,520 0 0 Lambs 59,424 9,213 68,637 - - 6s. 20,591 2 0 Swine 5,899 640 6,539 - - 20s. 6,539 0 0 Total 135,155 20,664 155,819 242,790 10 0 Tallow, &c. belonging to these Carcasses. Bullocks - - 14,566, averaging 3f stone, 50,981, at 7s. 17,843 7 o Hides - - 14,566, - - 28s. 20,392 8 0 Heads and offals - 14,566, - - 8s. 5,826 8 0 Calf skins - - 8,557, - - 2s. 855 14 0 Sheep tallow - 57,520, averaging 3} lbs., 201,320, - 5d. 4,194 3 4 Heads and offals - 8,557, - - 1s. 6d. 641 15 6 Sheep skins - 57,520, - - 1s. 6d. 4,314 0 0 Heads and offals - 57,520, - - 7d. 1,677 13 4 Lamb skins - 68,337, - - 1s. 3d. 4,289 16 3 Heads and offals - 68,637, - -- 4d. 1,143 19 0 61,179 4 5 Total value of Carcasses, Tallow, Hides, &c. 303,978 14 5 N. B.-The weight is estimated in this statement by the stone of 16 lbs., each of 221 oz. The office of hide-inspector having been abolished, there are no means of continuing this table to a later period ; but the returns of the cattle sold in the market at Glasgow since 1822, show that the increase in the supply of animal food has at least kept pace with the increase of population. The population of Glasgow, when this account was taken, amounted to 147,043, which shows, that the consumption of butcher's meat in that city, is, as compared with its popula- tion, but little inferior to that of London. This statement, taken in connection with the fact that, 80 late as 1760, the slaughter of bullocks for the supply of the public market was un- known in Glasgow, sets the wonderful improvement that has since taken place in the food of the Scotch people in the most striking point of view. Previously to 1780 it was custom- ary in Glasgow, Edinburgh, and the principal Scotch towns, for families to purchase in No- vember what would now be reckoned a small half-fed cow or ox, the salted carcase of which was the only butcher's meat they tasted throughout the year. In the smaller towns and country districts this practice prevailed till the present century but it is now every where abandoned. We believe, indeed, that there has never been in any country a more rapid increase in the quantity, or a greater improvement in the quality of the food brought to market, than has taken place in Scotland since 1770. In so far as respects butcher's meat, this has been occasioned partly by the growing numbers and opulence of all classes, and partly by the vast increase in the food of cattle consequent to the introduction of green crops, and of an improved system of cultivation.-(See BREAD.) The introduction of steam navigation, and the improved means of communication by rail- roads and otherwise, has already had, and will, no doubt, continue to have, a material influ- ence over the supply of butcher's meat. Owing to the difficulty and expense of their con- veyance, cattle could not formerly be conveniently fattened at any very considerable distance from the great markets; but steam navigation has gone far to remove this difficulty. Instead of selling their cattle, lean or half-fed, to the Norfolk graziers, and by whom they were fattened for the London market, the producers, in various districts of Scotland, are now be- ginning to fatten them at home, either sending the live animals or the carcases by steam to London, Liverpool, &c. This practice is indirectly as well as directly advantageous to the farmer, inasmuch as it enables him to turn his green crops to better account, and to raise larger supplies of manure. The same practice is also extending in Ireland and will, no doubt, spread itself over every part of the country where feeding can be carried on, that has the required facility of transport. Number of Head of Cattle in Great Britain.-It would, on many accounts, be very desirable to be able to form an accurate estimate of the number and value of the stock of cattle in Great Britain, and of the proportion annually killed and made use of; but owing to the little attention that has been paid to such subjects in this country, where every sort of statistical knowledge is at the very lowest ebb, there are no means of arriving at any con- Digitized by Google CATTLE. 329 able. clusions that can be depended upon. The following details may not, however, be unaccept- Arthur Young has given, both in his Eastern and Northern Tours, estimates of the num- ber and value of the different descriptions of stock in England. The greatest discrepancy. unaccompanied by a single explanatory sentence, exists between them but there can be no doubt that the following estimate (Eastern Tour, vol. iv. p. 456.), though, perhaps, rather under the mark, is infinitely nearer the truth than the other, which is about twice as great :- Number of Draught cattle - - - - - - 684,491 Cows - - - - - - 741,532 Fatting cattle - - - - - - 513,369 Young cattle - - - - - - 912,656 Total - - 2,852,048 Now taking this number at the round sum of 3,000,000, and adding a third to it for the increase since 1770, and 1,100,000 for the number of cattle in Scotland (General Report of Scotland, iii. Addenda, p. 6.), we shall have 5,100,000 as the total head of cattle of all sorts in Great Britain. The common estimate is, that about a fourth part of the entire stock is annually slaughtered; which, adopting the foregoing statement, gives 1,275,000 head for the supply of the kingdom a result which all that we have heard inclines us to think is very near the mark. Dr. Colquhoun estimated the total head of cattle in England and Wales only, in 1812, at 5,500,000; but he assigns no data for his estimate, which is entitled to very little attention. cattle from Ireland. Exclusive of the cattle . raised in Great Britain, we import considerable supplies of beef and of live Account of the number of Cows and Oxen, and of the quantities of Beef, imported into Great Britain from Ireland, from 1801 :- Years. Cows Beef. Cows Beef. Cows and Oxen. Years. and Oxen. Years. and Oxen. Beef. No. Barrela No. Barvels. No. Barrels. 1801 31,543 58,911 1810 44,553 71,605 1818 58,165 80,587 1802 42,501 59,448 1811 67,680 108,282 1819 52,176 70,504 1803 28,016 62,226 1812 79,192 114,504 1820 39,014 52,591 1804 15,646 59,342 1813 48,973 101,516 1821 26,725 65,905 1805 21,862 88,519 1814 16,435 83,162 1822 34,659 43,139 1806 27,704 91,261 1815 33,809 60,307 1823 46,351 69,079 1807 26,252 85,255 1816 31,752 39,495 1824 62,314 54,810 1808 13,958 88,366 1817 45,301 105,555 1825 63,519 63,557 1809 17,917 89,771 In 1825 the trade between Great Britain and Ireland was placed on the footing of a coasting trade, 80 that there are no means of continuing this account to a later date ; but for some further particulars, the reader is referred to Liverpool, art. Docks; for an account of the sales of cattle at the great fair of Ballinasloe, see FAIRS AND MARKETS. Cattle of the Continent.-Baron Malchus has given, in his work on European Statistics, published at Stuttgard in 1826, an account of the number of horned cattle, sheep, swine, &c., in most European countries. In so far as respects the British empire, the statements are mostly copied from Colquhoun, and are ludicrously inexact. Perhaps, however, they may, in so far as regards the Continental states, be better entitled to credit. The following are some of the items in his Table :- Countries. Cattle. Countries. Cattle. Sweden and Norway - - 2,647,000 Baden - - - - 421,900 Russia - - - - 19,000,000 Bavaria - - - 1,896,700 Denmark - - - 1,607,000 Austria - - - 9,912,500 Netherlands - - - 2,500,000 France - - - 6,681,900 Prussia - - - 4,275,700 Spain - - - - 2,500,000 Saxony - - - - 345,000 Portugal - - - 650,000 Hanover - - - 794,000 Switzerland - - - 800,000 Wirtemberg - - - 713,000 Italy - - - - 3,500,000 On the whole the Baron estimates the neat or horned cattle of Europe, including the British isles, but excluding Turkey, at 70,270,974. At best, however, this estimate can only be considered as a very rough approximation. Laws as to Cattle.-No salesman, broker, or factor, employed in buying cattle for others, shall buy for himself in London, or within the bills of mortality, on penalty of double the value of the cattle bought and sold.-( Geo. 2. c. 40.) Cattle not to be driven on Sunday, on penalty of 20s.-(3 Cha. 1. c. 1.) Any person unlawfully and maliciously killing, wounding, or maiming any cattle, shall be guilty of felony, and, upon conviction, may be transported, at the discretion of the court, beyond seas for life, or for any term not less than 7 years, or be imprisoned for any term not exceeding 4 years, and kept to hard labour ; and, if a male, may be once, twice, or thrice publicly or privately whipped, if the court shall think fit 90 to order.-(7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 30.) Persons wantonly and cruelly abusing, beating, or ill-treating cattle, may, upon being convicted before a justice of such offence, be fined in any sum not exceeding 51. and not below 10s.; and upon nonpayment of fine, may be committed to the house of correction for any time not exceeding 3 months. Complaint must be made within 10 days after the offence. Justices are instructed to order compen- sation to be made, not exceeding 20s., to persons vexatiously complained against.-(3 Geo. 4. c. 71.) 2 E 2 42 Digitized by Google 330 CAVIAR-CERTIFICATES. CAVIAR (Fr. Caviar, Cavial; Ger. Kaviar; It. Caviario, Camase; Sp. Caviario ; Rus. Ikra; Lat. Caviarium), a substance prepared in Russia, consisting of the salted roes of large fish. The Uralian Cossacks are celebrated for making excellent caviar. The best is made of the roe of the sturgeon, appears to consist entirely of the eggs, and does not easily become fetid. This is packed in small casks or kegs; the inferior sort being in the form of dry cakes. Caviar is highly esteemed in Russia, and considerable quantities are exported to Italy. It is principally made of the sturgeon caught in the Wolga, in the neighbourhood of Astrachan.-(See Tooke's Russia, 2d ed. vol. iii. p. 345.) CAYENNE PEPPER, OR GUINEA PEPPER. See CHILLIES. CEDAR (Ger. Zeder; Du. Ceder; Fr. Cedre; It. and Sp. Cedro; Rus. Kedr; Lat. Cedrus). The cedar of Lebanon, or great cedar (Pinus cedrus), is famous in Scripture; it is a tall, majestic-looking tree. Behold," says the inspired writer, " the Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon with fair branches, and with a shadowing shroud, and of an high stature; and his top was among the thick boughs. His height was exalted above all the trees of the field, and his boughs were multiplied, and his branches became long. The fir trees were not like his boughs, and the chesnut trees were not like his branches; nor any tree in the garden of God was like unto him in beauty."-(Ezekiel, xxxi. 3. 5.8.) The cedar grows to a very great size. The timber is resinous, has a peculiar and powerful odour, a slightly bitter taste, a rich yellowish brown colour, and is not subject to the worm. Its durability is very great; and it was on this account (propter ælernitatem Vitruvius, Lib. ii. § 9.) em- ployed in the construction of the temples, and other public buildings, in the formation of the statues of the gods, and as tablets for writing upon. In the time of Vitruvius, cedars were principally produced in Crete, Africa, and some parts of Syria.-(Loc. cit.) Very few are now found on Lebanon but some of those that still remain are of immense bulk, and in the highest preservation. Cedar exceeds the oak in toughness, but is very inferior to it in strength and stiffness. Some very fine cedars have been produced in England. There are several other kinds of timber that are usually called cedar thus, a species of cypress is called white cedar in America; and the cedar used by the Japanese for building bridges, ships, houses, &c., is a kind of cypress, which Thunberg describes as a beautiful wood, that lasts long without decay. The Juniperus oxycedrus is a native of Spain, the south of France, and the Levant; it is usually called the brown berried cedar. The Bermudian cedar (Juniperus Bermudiana), a native of the Bermuda and Bahama islands, is another species that produces valuable timber for many purposes; such as internal joiners' work, furniture, and the like. The red cedar, so well known from its being used in making black-lead pencils, is produced by the Virginian cedar (Juniperus Virginiana), a native of North America, the West India islands, and Japan. The tree seldom exceeds 45 feet in height. The wood is very durable, and, like the cedar of Lebanon, is not attacked by worms. It is employed in various ways, but principally in the manufacture of drawers, wardrobes, &c., and as a cover to pencils. The internal wood is of a dark red colour, and has a very strong odour. It is of a nearly uniform texture, brittle, and light-See Tredgold's Princi- ples of Carpentry; Lib. of Entertaining Knowledge, Veget. Substances; Rees's Cyclop. &c.) The duty on cedar (21. 10s. a ton from a foreign country, and 10s. from a British possession) pro- duced 2,5491. 19s. 11d. in 1832. Its price in bond varies from 6d. to 9d. a foot. CERTIFICATES, in the customs. No goods can be exported by certificate, except foreign goods formerly imported, on which the whole or a part of the customs paid on im- portation is to be drawn back. The manner of proceeding is regulated by the 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. s 68, &c. The person intending to enter outwards such goods, is to deliver to the collector or comptroller of the port where the goods were imported or warehoused, two or more bills, specifying the particulars of the importation of such goods, and of the entry out- wards intended to be made; and the officers, if they find such bills to agree with the entry inwards, are to issue a certificate of such entry, with the particulars necessary for the com- putation of the drawback upon the goods, the names of the person and ship by whom and in which the goods are to be exported, &c. The merchant then enters the goods outwards, as in the common way of exportation. The cocket granted upon this oceasion is called a certi- ficate cocket, and differs a little in form from common over-sea cockets. Notice of the time of shipping is to be given to the searcher. Some time after the departure of the vessel, the exporter may apply for the drawback. The collector and comptroller than make out on a proper stamp a debenture, containing a distinct narration of the transaction, with the export- er's or merchant's oath that the goods are really and truly exported beyond seas, and not relanded, nor intended to be relanded and also with the searcher's certificate of the quan- tity and quality of the goods at the time of shipping. The debenture being thus duly made out and sworn to, the duties to be repaid are indorsed, the merchant's receipt taken below, and the money paid. Certificates of origin, subscribed by the proper officers of the places where the goods were shipped, are required, to entitle the importers of sugar, coffee, cocoa, and spirits from any Digitized by Google CHAIN-CHARLESTON. 331 British plantation, to get them entered as such. A similar certificate is required in the case of blubber-(see BLUBBER); and in the case of wine from the Cape of Good Hope and sugar from the limits of the East India Company's charter, &c.-(See IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION.) CHAIN, in surveying, a measure of length, composed of a certain number of links made of iron wire, serving to take the distance between two or more places. Gunter's chain contains 100 such links, each measuring 7108 inches, consequently equal to 66 feet, or 4 poles. CHALDRON, a dry English measure. 36 coal bushels make a chaldron, and 21 chal- drons a score. The coal bushel is 19} inches wide from the outside, and 8 inches deep. It contains 2,217.6 cubic inches; but when heaped, 2,815.5, making the chaldron 58.65 cubic feet. There are 12 sacks of coal in a chaldron; and if 5 chaldrons be purchased at the same time, the seller must deliver 63 sacks; the 3 sacks additional are called the ingrain. But coals are now sold in London, and almost every where else, by the ton of 20 cwt. avoirdu- pois. The Newcastle chaldron of coals is 53 cwt., and is just double the London chaldron. -(See COAL.) CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, is an assembly of merchants and traders, where affairs relating to trade are treated of. There are several establishments of this sort in most of the chief cities of France; and in this country, chambers of this kind have been created for various purposes. CHAMBER OF ASSURANCE, in France, denotes a society of merchants and others for car- rying on the business of insurance; but in Holland it signifies a court of justice, where causes relating to insurances are tried. CHAMPAGNE, one of the most esteemed and celebrated of the French wines. See WINE. CHANKS, OR CHANK SHELLS, common conch shells, are fished up by divers in the Gulf of Manar, on the coast opposite Jaffnapatam, in Ceylon, in about 2 fathoms of water; and at Travancore, Tuticoreen, and other places. Large fossil beds of chanks have also been found. They are of a spiral form, and form a considerable article of trade in India, where they are in extensive demand all over the country. They are sawn into narrow rings or bracelets, and are worn as ornaments for the arms, legs, fingers, &c. by the Hindoo wo- men; many of them are also buried with the bodies of opulent and distinguished persons. Those which, from being taken with the fish, are called green chanks, are most in demand. The white chank, which is the shell thrown upon the beach by strong tides, having lost its gloss and consistency, is not worth the freight up to Calcutta. The value of the green chank depends upon its size. A chank opening to the right, called in Calcutta the right- handed chank, is so highly prized as sometimes to sell for 400, or 500, or even 1,000 rupees. -(Bell's Commerce of Bengal, and private communications.) The fishery of chanks is monopolised by government, who most commonly let the banks for about 4,000L a year. Sometimes, however, they are fished by the servants of government on its account. But as the fishermen of the coast, and those belonging to the little islands where they are found, cannot be prevented from taking chanks, the better plan, as it appears to us, would be to give every one leave to fish them but to lay a somewhat heavier duty on their exportation. We have been assured by those well acquainted with the circumstances, that this would be advantageous to all parties, but especially to government. We have heard that an arrangement of this sort has recently been made, but we have not learned any thing positive respecting it. CHARCOAL (Fr. Charbon de bois; Ger. Reine Kohle; It. Carbone di legna; Sp. Carbon de lena; Lat. Carbo ligni), a sort of artificial coal, consisting of wood burned with as little exposure to the action of the air as possible. " It was customary among the ancients to char the outside of those stakes which were to be driven into the ground or placed in wa- ter, in order to preserve the wood from spoiling. New-made charcoal, by being rolled up in clothes which have contracted a disagreeable odour, effectually destroys it. When boiled with meat beginning to putrefy, it takes away the bad taint it is, perhaps, the best tooth- powder known. When putrid water at sea is mixed with about 1 of its weight of charcoal powder, it is rendered quite fresh; and a much smaller quantity of charcoal will serve, if the precaution be taken to add a little sulphuric acid previously to the water. If the water casks be charred before they are filled with water, the liquid remains good in them for years; this precaution ought always to be taken for long sea voyages. The same precaution, when attended to for wine casks, will be found very much to improve the quality of the wine." -(Thomson's Chemistry.) CHARLESTON, a city and sea-port of the United States, of South Carolina, in lat. 32° 47' N., long. 79° 48' W. Population in 1830, including the suburbs, 40,300. The situa- tion of Charleston has a good deal of resemblance to that of New York, being built on a point of land between the Ashley and Cooper rivers, at their point of confluence. The ex- ports principally consist of cotton and rice (particularly the former), which are the staple products of the state. There are a few other articles exported, such as naval stores, hams, Digitized by Google 382 CHARLESTON. bacon, &c., but their value is quite inconsiderable. All the cotton sent from South Caro- lina to foreign countries is shipped at Charleston. In 1831-32, the exports are said to have amounted to 182,628 bales, of which 138,683 were for Great Britain.* The value of the cot- ton exported in 1831 amounted, according to the customhouse valuation, to 4,885,431 dollars, and that of the rice to 1,218,859 do. But exclusive of the exports to foreign countries, South Carolina sends a great deal of cotton and rice to other ports of the Union. The ship- ments of cotton coastwise in 1831-32 were estimated at about 43,000 bales. The imports from foreign countries principally consist of cottons, woollens, and linens, hardware, iron, and steel, coffee, sugar, tea, wine, spices, &c. The greater part of the imports do not, however, come from abroad, but from the northern and middle states. The former supply her with fish, shoes, and all sorts of coarse manufactured goods for the use of the slave population; while the latter supply her with wheat, flour, &c. Most part of the imports of foreign pro- duce are also brought at second-hand from New York, which occupies the same rank in the Union that Liverpool and London do in Great Britain. There were, in 1830, 5 banks in this city, including the branch of the United States Bank, with an aggregate capital of 4,975,000 dollars the total dividends for the same year amounted to 317,000 dollars being at the rate of 6.371 per cent. There were also 2 marine insurance companies, having a capital of 750,000 dollars.-(Statement by J. H. Goddard, Esq., New York Daily Advertiser, 29th of January, 1831.) The registered, enrolled, and licensed tonnage belonging to Charleston, in 1831, amounted to 13,008 tons, of which 7,147 tons were employed in the coasting trade. The total value of the articles imported into South Carolina, in the year ending 30th of September, 1832, was 1,213,725 dollars; the total value of the exports dur- ing the same year being 7,752,781 dollars.—(Papers laid before Congress, 15th of Febru- ary, 1833.) In South Carolina, the dollar is worth 4s. 8d. currency; so that 11. sterling -14 Os. 83d. currency. Weights and Measures same as in England.-(For further details, see NEW YORK.) Port-Charleston harbour is spacious and convenient; but the entrance to it is incommoded by a range of sand-banks, stretching from Sullivan's Island on the north to Folly Island on the south, about 21 leagues. There are several channels through these banks, but only three, the middle or direct channel, the ship channel, and Lawford channel, between the latter and the mainland, that ought to be attempted by ships of considerable burden. The entrance to the ship channel is in lat. 39° 40'. The depth of water on the shallowest part of the bar at ebb tide is 12 feet, and at flood from 17 to 18 feet; whilst the depth in the middle channel at low water does not exceed 9 feet, and in Lawford channel it does not exceed 10 or 11 feet. A lighthouse has been erected on the south point of Light- house Island, bearing from the middle of the bar of the ship channel W. N. W. 1 N. It is 80 feet high, having a revelving light, alternately brilliant and obscure, the period of obscuration being double that of brilliancy but on approaching the light, the latter gains upon the former, and within It league it is never wholly dark. The light may be seen in fine weather at from 3 to 4 leagues off. After getting into the channel, which is marked by the breakers and buoys on each side, the proper course for a ship to steer is to bring the lighthouse to bear N. W. by W., and stand direct for it till you get within the banks, when the course is N. by W. But it is unnecessary to enter into further details on these points, as all ships entering Charleston harbour are bound, provided they are bailed by a licensed pilot off the bar, to pay him full pilotage fees whether they accept his services or not. In point of fact, however, they are always accepted; for the shifting of the sands, the influence of the tides, &c. render the entrance 80 difficult to those not perfectly familiar with it, that even the packet ships that sail regularly to and from New York uniformly heave-to without the bar for a pilot.-(See Plan of Charleston Harbour, reduced from the original survey of Major H. Bache.) Ships usually moor alongside quays or wharfs, where they are in perfect safety. Departures from Charleston-The following is Dollars. cents. L.d An Account of the Number of Ships, with the Specification of their Pilotage inwards and outwards sup- posing the ship to draw 14 ft. water 50 - 10 13 18 Tonnage, and the Countries to which they belonged, that cleared from Charleston for Foreign Ports during each of the Three Years Wharfage, per diem 1 0 31-4 ending with 1831 - The difference in the fees on the clearance at the Custom-house of a native and a foreign ship, is owing to the former being obliged to give certain bonds which are not required of the latter. 1829. 1880. 1831. The greater or smaller tonnage of the ship makes no difference on Nation. Vala. Tons. Vsis. Tons. Vals. Tons. any of the above charges, except that of pilotage, which is is pro- portion to her draft of water, and is the same whether for a foreign British 55 19,052 51 16,250 91 26,631 or a native ship. United States 258 61,783 269 64,742 186 43,369 Rates of Commision-The rates of commission or factorage French 22 5,481 11 2,777 6 1,848 Spanish 5 490 18 1,108 27 2,671 usually charged and allowed at Charleston on transacting different Bremen 8 811 5 872 3 371 sorts of business, are as follows, viz- Dutch 1 193 - - - - For selling domestic produce 2 1-2 per cent. Danish 1 45 1 125 1 125 For selling foreign merchandise 5 per cent. For guaranteeing either of these sales, 2 1.2 per cent. additional is Total 345 87,785 349 85,872 314 75,016 commonly allowed. For purchasing with funds in hand, or drawing domestic bills for reimbursement, 2 1-2 per cent. Shipping Charges.-The charges of a public nature paid by ships entering this port differ but little in amount on a native and a foreign For purchasing goods and drawing foreign bills for reimbursement, ship. On a vessel supposed to be of 300 tons burden, entering, un- 5 per cent. is charged. loading, taking on board a mixed cargo, and clearing out, they For the sale of real or personal estate, the regular charge is 5 per cent. but where the property to be sold is of any considerable would be as under value, the parties in general enter into an agreement beforebead, Dollars. cents. L s. d. and a much lower rate of commission is allowed. Fee on entry at the custombouse 2 60 011 114 Surveyor's fee, on a foreign ship 5 00 1 I 11-4 Charges on Rice and Cotton shipped at Charleston... Ditto. on a native ship 3 00 0 12 93-4 8 00 0 8 61-2 Cents. Harbour-master's fee Port warden's survey, when required 10 00 8 2 812 Drayage, wharfage, be. Fees on clearance at the customhouse, of Cooperage : 1818 per barrel. 183-4 ditto. $ 50 a native ship 0 14 11 1-4 Ditto of a foreign ship 2 70 011 6 1-4 Total 31 1-4 cents per barral. * This statement is taken from an American paper, and is believed to be nearly accurate, but It is not official. Digitized by Google CHART, CHARTERPARTY. 333 On cotton the charges are- On round bales or bags, Cards. On square bales, Cents. Drayage, wharfage, &c. 10 per bale. Drayage, wharfage, ac. 10 per bale. Labour, mending bagging, &c. 15 ditto. Labour, mending bagging, atc. 10 ditto. Total 23 cents per bale. Total 20 cents per bale. For commission, see above. Three particulars have been principally derived from the answers made by the Consul at Charleston, to the circular quaries; answers which do great credit to his intelligence and industry. [The capital of the Charleston banks had been augmented, in 1836, to $6,480,000 the banking capital of the entire state of South Carolina then amounting to the sum of $7,936,318. For information concerning the commerce and shipping of the port of Charleston, the reader is referred to the articles IMPORTS AND EXPORTS, and SHIPS.-Am. Ed.] CHART (Ger. Seekarten; Du. Zeekarten; Fr. Cartes marines; It. Carte marine; Sp. and Port. Cartas de marear) is properly applied to a projection of some part of the sea, as the term Map is to a portion of the land; wherefore charts are sometimes denominated " Hydrographical Maps." They are distinguished into several kinds, as plain, globular, and Mercator charts. CHARTERPARTY, the name given to a contract in writing, betwoen the owner or master of a ship and the freighter, by which the former hires or lets the ship, or a part of the ship, under certain specified conditions, for the conveyance of the goods of the freighter to some particular place or places. Generally, however, a charterparty is a contract for the use of the whole ship it is in commercial law, what an indenture is at common law. No precise form of words, or set of stipulations, is requisite in a charterparty. The forms subjoined to this article are those most commonly in use; but these may, and, indeed, in many cases must, be varied, to suit the views and intentions of the parties. A charterparty is generally under seal but sometimes a printed or written instrument is signed by the parties, called a memorandum of a charterparty; and this, if a formal char- terparty be not afterwards executed, is binding. The stamp in either case is the same. Charterparties, when ships are let or hired at the place of the owners' residence, are gene- rally executed by them, or some of them; but when the ship is in a foreign port, it must necessarily be executed by the master, and the merchant or his agent, unless the owners have an agent in such port, having proper authority to act for them in such matters. A charterparty made by the master in his name, when he is in a foreign port in the usual course of the ship's employment, and, therefore, under circumstances which do not afford evidence of fraud; or when it is made by him at home, under circumstances which afford evidence of the expressed or implied assent of the owners; is binding upon the latter. But, according to the law of England, no direct action can be maintained upon the instrument itself against the owners, unless it be signed and sealed by them, or unless they authorise the master (or agent, as the case may bc) to enter into the contract, and unless it be dis- tinctly expressed in the charterparty that he acts only as agent. When a ship is chartered by several owners to several persons, the charterparty should be executed by each, or they will not be liable to an action for nonperformance. But if the charterparty be not expressed to be made between the parties, but runs thus-" This char- terparty indented witnesseth, that C., master of the ship W., with consent of A. and B., the owners thereof, lets the ship to freight to E. and F.," and the instrument contains covenants by E. and F. to and with A. and B.; in this case A. and B. may bring an action upon the covenants expressed to be made with them but unless they seal the deed, they cannot be sued upon it. This, therefore, is a very proper form. The general rule of law adopted in the construction of this, as of other mercantile instru- ments, is, that the interpretation should be liberal, agreeable to the real intention of the parties, and conformable to the usage of trade in general, and of the particular trade to which the contract relates. The charterparty usually expresses the burden of the ship; and by the famous French Ordinance of 1681, it is required to do so. According to Molloy (book ii. c. 4. § 8.), if a ship be freighted by the ton, and found of less burden than expressed, the payment shall be only for the real burden; and if a ship be freighted for 200 tons, or thereabouts, the addition of thereabouts (says the same author) is commonly reduced to five tons more or less but it is now usual to say so many tons register measurement." The usual covenant, that the ship shall be seaworthy, and in a condition to carry the goods, binds the owners to prepare and complete every thing to commence and fulfil the voyage. But though the charterparty contained no such covenant, the owner of the vessel would be, at common law, bound, as a carrier, to take care that the ship should be fit to per- form the voyage and even though he should give notice, limiting his responsibility from losses occasioned to any cargo put on board his vessel, unless such loss should arise from want of ordinary care, &c., he would be liable if his ship were not seaworthy.-(See SEA- WORTHY.) In all maritime transactions, expedition is of the utmost consequence; for even by a short delay, the object or season of a voyage may be lost; and therefore, if either party be not Digitized by Google 834 CHARTERPARTY. ready by the time appointed for the loading of the ship, the other may seek another ship or cargo, and bring an action to recover the damages he has sustained. The manner in which the owner is to lade the cargo is, for the most part, regulated by the custom and usage of the place where he is to lade it, unless there be an express stipula- tion in the charterparty with respect to it. Generally, however, the owner is bound to arrange the different articles of the cargo in the most proper manner, and to take the greatest care of them. If a cask be accidentally staved, in letting it down into the hold of the ship, the master must answer for the loss. If the owner covenants to load a full and complete cargo, the master must take as much on board as he can do with safety, and without injury to the vessel. The master must not take on board any contraband goods, whereby the ship or cargo may be liable to forfeiture and detention nor must he take on board any false or colourable papers but he must take and keep on board all the papers and documents required for the protection and manifestation of the ship and cargo by the law of the countries from and to which the ship is bound, by the law of nations in general, or by any treaties between par- ticular states. If the master receive goods at the quay or beach, or send his boat for them, his responsi- bility commences with the receipt in the port of London. With respect to goods intended to be sent coastwise, it has been held, that the responsibility of the wharfinger ceases by the delivery of them to the mate of the vessel upon the wharf. As soon as he receives the goods, the master must provide adequate means for their protection and security for even if the crew be overpowered by a superior force, and the goods taken while the ship is in a port or river within the country, the master and owners are liable for the loss, though they may have committed neither fraud or fault. This may seem a harsh rule; but it is necessary, to put down attempts at collusive or fraudulent combinations. The master must, according to the terms of the charterparty, commence the voyage with- out delay, as soon as the weather is favourable, but not otherwise. Sometimes it is covenanted and agreed upon between the parties, that the specified num- ber of days shall be allowed for loading and unloading, and that it shall be lawful for the freighter to obtain the vessel a further specified time, on payment of a daily sum as demur- rage.-(See DEMURRAGE.) If the vessel be detained beyond both periods, the freighter is liable to an action on the contract. The rate of demurrage mentioned in the charterparty will, in general, be the measure of the damages to be paid; but it is not the absolute or necessary measure; more or less may be payable, as justice may require, regard being had to the expense and loss incurred by the owner. When the time is thus expressly ascer- tained and limited by the terms of the contract, the freighter is liable to an action for damages if the thing be not done within the time, although this may not be attributable to any fault or omission on his part for he has engaged that it shall be done.-(Abbett on the Law of Shipping, part iii. c. 1.) If there has been any undertaking or warranty to sail with convoy, the vessel must repair to the place of rendezvous for that purpose and if the master neglect to proceed with con- voy, he will be answerable for all losses that may arise from want of it. The owners or master should sail with the ship for the place of her destination with all due diligence, and by the usual or shortest course, unless in cases of convoy, which the master must follow as far as possible. Sometimes the course is pointed out in the charterparty. A deviation from the usual course may be justified for the purpose of repairs, or for avoiding an enemy or the perils of the seas, as well as by the sickness of the master or mariners, and the mutiny of the crew. By an exception in the charterparty, not to be liable for injuries arising from the act of God and the king's enemies, the owner or master is not responsible for any injury arising from the sea or the winds, unless it was in his power to prevent it, or it was occasioned by his imprudence or gross neglect. The question," said Lord Mansfield, in an action brought by the East India Company, is, whether the owners are to pay for the damage occasioned by the storm, the act of God and this must be determined by the intention of the parties, and the nature of the contract. It is a charter of freight. The owners let their ships to hire, and there never was an idea that they insure the cargo against the perils of the sea. What are the obligations of the owners which arise out of the fair construction of the char- terparty ? Why, that they shall be liable for damages incurred by their own fault, or that of their servants, as from defects in the ship, or improper stowage, &c. If they were liable for damages occasioned by storms, they would become insurers." The House of Lords confirmed this doctrine by deciding (20th of May, 1788) that the owner is not liable to make satisfaction for damage done to goods by storm. The charterer of a ship may lade it either with his own goods, or, if he have not sufficient, may take in the goods of other persons, or (if not prevented by a clause to that effect in the charterparty) he may wholly underlet the ship to another.-(For further details, see Abbott on the Law of Shipping, part iii. c. 1.; Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. C. 9, &c.; and the articles BILL OF LADING, FREIGHT, MASTER, &c. in this Dictionary.) Digitized by Google CHARTERPARTY. 335 Forms of Charterparties. The following is one of the most usual forms of a charterparty :- THIS charterparty, indented, made, &c., between A. B., &c., mariner, master, and owner, of the good ship or vessel, called, &c., now riding at anchor, &c., of the burthen of 200 tons. or thereabouts, of the one part, and C. D. &c., merchant, of the other part, witnesseth, that the said A. B., for the consideration hereinafter mentioned, bath granted, and to freight letten, and by these presents doth grant, and to freight let, unto the said C. D., his executors, administrators, and assigns, the whole tonnage of the hold, stern-sheets, and half deck of the said ship or vessel, called, &c., from the port of London, to, &c., in a voyage to be made by the said A. B. with the said ship, in manner hereinafter mentioned, (that is to say,) to sail with the first fair wind and weather that shall happen after, &c., next, from the port of London, with the goods and merchandise of the said C. D., his factors or as- signs, on board, to, &c., aforesaid, (the act of God, the king's enemies, fire, and all and every other dangers and accidents of the seas, rivers, and navigation, of whatever nature and kind, in so far as ships are liable thereto, during the said voyage always excepted,) and there unlade and make dis- charge of the said goods and merchandises; and also shall there take into and on board the said ship again, the goods and merchandises of the said C. D., his factors or assigns, and shall then return to the port of London with the said goods, in the space of, &c. limited for the end of the said voyage. In consideration whereof, the said C. D., for himself, his executors, and administrators, doth cove- nant, promise, and grant, to and with the said A. B., his executors, administrators, or assigns, by these presents, that the said C. D., his executors, administrators, factors, or assigns, shall and will well and truly pay, or cause to be paid, unto the said A. B., his executors, administrators, or assigns, for the freight of the said ship and goods, the sum of, &c. (or so much per ton,) within twenty-one days after the said ship arrived, and goods returned, and discharged at the port of London aforesaid, for the end of the said voyage and also shall and will pay for demurrage, (if any shall be by default of him, the said C. D., his factors or assigns,) the sum of, &c. per day, daily, and every day, as the same shall grow due. And the said A. B., for himself, his executors, and administrators, doth cove- mant, promise, and grant, to and with the said C. D., his executors, administrators, and assigns, by these presents, that the said ship or vessel shall be ready at the port of London to take in goods by the said C. D., on or before, &c. next coming. And the said C. D., for himself, his, &c., doth covenant and promise, within ten days after the said ship or vessel shall be thus ready, to have his goods on board the said ship, to proceed on in the said voyage; and also, on arrival of the said ship at, &c., within, &c. days to have his goods ready to put on board the said ship, to return on the said voyage. And the said A. B., for himself, his executors, and administrators, doth further covenant and grant, to and with the said C. D., his executors, administrators, and assigns, that the said ship or vessel now is, and at all times during the voyage shall be, to the best endeavours of him, the said A. B., his ex- ecutors and administrators, and at his and their own proper costs and charges, in all things made and kept stiff, staunch, strong, well apparelled, furnished, and provided, as well with men and mariners sufficient and able to sail, guide, and govern the said ship, as with all manner of rigging, boats, tackle, and apparel, furniture, provision, and appurtenances, fitting and necessary for the said men and mariners, and for the said ship during the voyage aforesaid. In witness, &c. The great variety of circumstances under which different voyages are made produce a corresponding diversity in charterparties. The charterparty of which the following is a copy affords a good example of the more complex species of these instruments. It is this day mutually agreed between Mr. T. B. Rann, owner of the good ship or vessel called the Mermaid, William Henniker, master, of the measurement of 472 tons, or thereabouts, now in the river Thames, and Mr. David Thomson, of the firm of Messrs. Thomson, Passmore, and Thomson, of auritius, merchants, that the said ship, being tight, staunch, and strong, and every way fitted for the voyage, shall with all convenient speed, sail and proceed to Calcutta, with leave to take convicts out to New South Wales, and from thence troops, merchandise, or passengers, to the aforementioned port of Calcutta, with leave to touch at Madras on her way thither, if required on owner's account, or so near thereunto as she may safely get, and there load from the factors of the said merchants at Calcutta, a full and complete cargo of rice, or any other lawful goods which the charterer engages to ship, and proceed with the same to Port Louis, in the Isle of France, and deliver the same free of freight; afterwards load there a full and complete cargo of sugar in bags, or other lawful merchandise of as favourable tonnage, which the charterer engages to ship, not exceeding what she can reasonably stow and carry over and above her tackle, apparel, provisions, and furniture; and, being SO loaded, shall therewith proceed to London, or 80 near thereunto as whe may safely get, and deliver the same on being paid freight, viz. for such quantity of sugar equal to the actual quantity of rice, or other goods, that may be shipped at Calcutta, at the rate of 51. 12s. 6d. per ton of 20 cwt. nett, shipped there and should the vessel deliver more nett sugar in the port of London than the quantity of rice, or other goods, actually shipped in Calcutta, the owners to be paid on the excess at the regular current rate of freight for sugar which other vessels, loading at the same time at Port Louis, receive; the tonnage of the rice, wheat, or grain, to be reckoned at 20 cwt. nett per ton; that of other goods at the usual measurement (the act of God, the king's enemies, fire, and all and every other dangers and accidents of the seas, rivers, and navigation, of whatever nature and kind soever, during the said voyage, always excepted). The freight to be paid on unloading and right delivery of the cargo, as is custom- ary in the port of London. Ninety running days are to be allowed the said merchant (If the ship is not sooner despatched) for loading the shipat Calcutta, discharging the cargo at Port Louis, and load- ing the cargo there; the said lay days to commence on the vessel being ready to receive cargo, the master giving notice in writing of the same at Calcutta, and to continue during the loading there and from the time of her arrival at Port Louis, and being ready to discharge, till the final loading at that port, and to be discharged in the port of London with all possible despatch; and 20 days on de- murrage over and above the said laying days, at 12/. per day. Penalty for non-performance of this agreement, 4,000% The cargo to be brought to and taken from alongwide at the expense and risk of the merchants. The necessary cash for the disbursements of the vessel at Calcutta, not exceeding 350L., to be advanced by the charterer's agents; they taking the master's drafts on the owner for the same, at the regular current rate of exchange, and at three months' sight; and if the said bills be not regularly accepted and paid when due, the same to be deducted from the freight payable by this char- terparty. The vessel to be disbursed at Port Louis by the chartering agents ; sum not to exceed 3001., free of commission and the amount to be deducted from the freight at the final settlement at the port of London. Captain not to ship goods without consent. In the event of the ship being prevented, by damage or any other cause, reaching the Mauritius on or before the 1st day of January, 1831, the charterer or his agents shall be at liberty to employ the vessel for one or two voyages to Calcutta, at the rate of 21. per ton of rice, or other goods, delivered at Mauritius. Fifty running days, to load and discharge, to be allowed on each voyage it being understood that the charterer or his agents shall load the ship, as before agreed, either at the end of the first or second voyage, as the case may be. Digitized by Google 336 CHAY ROOT-CHEESE. The freight on the intermediate voyages (if any) to be paid on delivery of the cargo, in cash, or by bills on London at usance, at the option of the master. The vessel to be addressed, both at Calcutta and Isle of France, to the agents of the charterer. In witness whereof, the said parties have here- unto set their hands and seals, at London, the 2d day of December, 1829. Signed, sealed, and delivered, (Signed) THOS. B. RANN, (L.S.) in the presence of D. THOMSON, (L.S.) (Signed) E. FORSYTH. Stamp Duty on Charterparties-The statute 55 Geo. 3. c. 184. enacts, that any char- terparty or any agreement or contract for the charter of any ship or vessel, or any memo- randum, letter, or other writing, between the captain, master, or owner of any ship or vessel, and any other person, for or relating to the freight or conveyance of any money, goods, or effects, on board of such ship or vessel, shall be charged with a duty of 1/. 15s. And when the same, together with any schedule, receipt, or other matter, put or indorsed thereon, or annexed thereto, shall contain 2,160 words or upwards, then for every entire quantity of 1,080 words contained therein over and above the first 1,080 words, there shall be charged a further progressive duty of 1L 5s. CHAY OR CHOY ROOT, the roots of a small biennial, rarely triennial, plant, growing spontaneously in light, dry, sandy ground near the sea; and extensively cultivated, especially on the coast of Coromandel. The cultivated roots are very slender, and from 1 to 2 feet in length with a few lateral fibres; but the wild are shorter, and supposed to yield one fourth part more of colouring matter, and of a better quality. The roots are employed to dye the durable reds for which the Indian cotton yarn and chintzes have been long famous, and which can only be equalled by the Turkey red. Chay root forms a considerable article of export from Ceylon. Only a particular set of people are allowed to dig it. It is all bought up by government, who pay the diggers a fixed price of 75 or 80 rix-dollars a candy, and sell it for exportation at about 175 rix-dol- lars.-(Bertolacci's Ceylon, p. 270.) This root has been imported into Europe, but with no success. Dr. Bancroft suspects it may be injured by the long voyage but he adds, that it can produce no effect which may not be more cheaply produced from madder. It is a very bulky article, and is consequently burdened with a very heavy (Permanent Colours, vol. ii. p. 282-303.) CHECKS, CHEQUES, OR DRAFTS, are orders addressed to some person, generally a banker, directing him to pay the sum specified in the check to the person named in it, or bearer on demand. The following is the usual form :- London, 30th October, 1833. £100. Pay Mr. A. B. or bearer, One Hundred Pounds, on account of C. D. Messrs. Jones, Loyd, and Co. In point of form, checks nearly resemble bills of exchange, except that they are uniformly payable to bearer, and should be drawn upon a regular banker, though this latter point is not essential. They are assignable by delivery only and are payable instantly on present- ment, without any days of grace being allowed. But by the custom of London, a banker has until 5 of the afternoon of the day on which a check is presented for payment to return it; 80 that where a check was returned before 5, with a memorandum of " cancelled by mis- take" written under it, it was held a refusal to pay. If a check upon a banker be lodged with another banker, a presentment by the latter at the clearing-house is sufficient. Checks are usually taken conditionally as cash; for unless an express stipulation be made to the contrary, if they be presented in due time and not paid, they are not a payment. It is diffi- cult to define what is the due or reasonable time within which checks, notes, or bills, should be presented. A man, as Lord Ellenborough has observed, is not obliged to neglect all other business that he may immediately present them nevertheless it is the safest plan to present them without any avoidable delay; and if received in the place where payable, they had better be presented that day, or next at furthest. If a check be not presented within a rea- sonable time, the party on whom it is drawn will be justified in refusing to pay it; and the holder will lose his recourse upon the drawer. Checks drawn on bankers residing 10 miles or more from the place where they are drawn, must be on a stamp of the same value as a bill of exchange of an equal amount; but checks drawn on a banker, acting as such within 10 miles of the place where they are issued, may be on plain paper.-(Chitty on Commer- cial Law, vol. iii. p. 591.; Woolrych on Commercial Law, c. 3. § 2., &c.) CHEESE, (Ger. Käse; Du. Kaas; Fr. Fromage; It. Fromaggio, Cucio; Sp. Queso; Rus. Sur; Lat. Caseus), the curd of the milk separated from the whey, and pressed or hardened. It has been used as an article of food from the earliest ages vast quantities of it are consumed in Great Britain, and in most countries in Europe. There is an immense variety of cheeses, the qualities of which depend principally on the richness and flavour of the milk of which they are made, and partly on the way in which they are prepared. England is particularly celebrated for the abundance and excellence of Digitized by Google CHEESE. 337 its cheese. Cheshire and Gloucestershire are, in this respect, two of its most famous coun- ties; the cheese produced in the former has been estimated at 11,500 tons a year. There are two kinds of Gloucester cheese, double and single; the first is made of the milk and cream, the latter of the milk deprived of about half the cream. They are of various sizes, from 20 to 70 and even 80 lbs.; but they generally run from 50 to 60 lbs. A great deal of cheese is also made in that part of Shropshire which borders upon Cheshire, and in North Wiltshire. The former goes under the name of Cheshire cheese: the latter was, till lately, called Gloucestershire cheese; now it receives its appellation from the county where it is made. A strong cheese, somewhat resembling Parmesan, is made at Chedder in Somerset- shire. The celebrated rich cheese, called Stilton, is made in Leicestershire, principally in the villages round Melton Mowbray. It is not reckoned sufficiently mellow for cutting un- less it be two years old; and is not saleable unless it be decayed, blue, and moist. A rich cheese is also made at Leigh, in Lancashire. The other cheeses made in England, which have acquired a peculiar name, either from the quantity made, or from the quality, are the Derbyshire, Cottenham, and Southam cheeses. The two last are new milk cheeses, of a peculiarly fine flavour: the places where they are made are in Cambridgeshire. Bath and York are remarkable for their cream cheeses. The county of Warwick, and Banbury in Oxfordshire, are also remarkable for cheeses; the former for the quantity made in it, about 20,000 tons being annually sent to London, besides a very large supply to Birming- ham. Banbury cheese is distinguished for its richness. Scotland is not celebrated for its cheese: the best is called Dunlop cheese, from a parish in Ayrshire, where it was originally manufactured. Dunlop cheeses generally weigh from 20 to 60 lbs. each; and are, in all respects, similar to those of Derbyshire, except that the latter are smaller. Turmeric, marigolds, hawthorn buds, &c. were formerly used to heighten and improve the colour of cheese; but annotto (which see) is decidedly the best ingredient that can be employed for that purpose, and is at present used in Cheshire and Gloucestershire to the exclusion of every thing else. An ounce of genuine annotto will colour a hundred weight of cheese. Large quantities of very good cheese are produced in Holland. In the manufacture of Gouda cheese, which is reckoned the best made in Holland, muriatic acid is used in curd- ling the milk instead of rennet. This renders it pungent, and preserves it from mites. Parmesan cheese, so called from Parma in Italy, where it is manufactured, is merely a skim-milk cheese, which owes its rich flavour to the fine herbage of the meadows along the Po, where the cows feed. The best Parmesan cheese is kept for 3 or 4 years, and none is ever carried to market till it be at least 6 months old. Swiss cheese, particularly that denominated Gruyère, from the bailiwick of that name in the canton of Fribourg, is very celebrated. Gruyère cheeses are made of skimmed or par- tially skimmed milk, and are flavoured with herbs. They generally weigh from 40 to 60 lbs. each, and are packed for exportation in casks containing 10 cheeses each. According to Mr. Marshall the average yearly produce of cheese from the milk of a cow in England is from 3 to 4 cwt., or more than double the weight of the butter. For further details, see Loudon's Ency. of Agriculture; art. Dairy in Supp. to Ency. Brit ; Stevenson's art. on England, in the Edinburgh Ency., &c. The imports of cheese, in 1831, amounted to 134,459 cwt., almost the whole of which came from the Netherlands. The quantity re-exported was but inconsiderable. The duty of 10s. 6d. a cwt. on imported cheese produced, in 1823, 69,049/. 2s. 8d.; showing that the quantity entered for home consumption amounted to about 132,000 cwt. The contract price of the cheese furnished to Greenwich Hospital, in the undermentioned years, has been as follows Years. Prices per lb. Years. Prices per lb. Years. Prices per lb. Years. Prices per lb. d. d. d. d. 1730 31 1800 61/ 1814 8% 1824 41 1740 3½ 1805 74 1815 8 1825 51 1750 31 1806 74 1816 61 1826 6f 1760 31 1807 71 1817 51 1827 5+ 1770 31 1808 77 1818 6 1828 51 1775 3½ 1809 8 1819 8 1829 5 1780 31 1810 81 1820 7 1830 4 1785 34 1811 81 1821 6 1831 41 1790 4 1812 81 1822 5 1832 32 1795 54 1813 8% 1823 4 See art. PRICES. It is not possible to form any estimate of the value of the cheese annually consumed in Great Britain. Dr. Colquhoun states that the butter and cheese consumed in the United Kingdom must be worth at least 5,000,000L. a year, exclusive of the milk of which they are made but he assigns no grounds for this statement which we are inclined to think is very greatly exaggerated.-(See BUTTER.) [The quality of the cheese made in the United States has been gradually improving, and VoL. L-2 F 43 Digitized by Google 338 CHERRIES-CHOCOLATE. is in such estimation that while, on an average of four years, the value of the foreign article consumed in the United States has been only $12,800, the annual amount of American cheese exported to foreign countries, chiefly to the West Indies and the British North American colonies, has been as much as $650,000.-Am. Ed.] CHERRIES, the fruit of a tree (Prunus Cerasus Lin.) too well known to require any description. They derive their name from Cerasus, a city of Pontus, whence the tree was brought by Lucullus, about half a century before the Christian era. It soon after spread into most parts of Europe, and is supposed to have been carried to Britain about a century after it came to Rome. The principal supplies of cherries for the London market are brought from the cherry orchards in Kent and Herts. The wood of the cherry is close, takes a fine polish, and is not liable to split-(Rees's Cyclopædia; Loudon's Ency. of Agric., &c.) CHESNUT, a forest tree (Fagus castanea) growing abundantly in most parts of the southern countries of Europe. It was at one time very common in England; and is still frequently met with. It is long lived grows to an immense size; and is very ornamental. The wood is hard and compact; when young, it is tough and flexible; but when old, it is brittle, and often shaky. The chesnut contains only a very small proportion of sap-wood; and hence the wood of young trees is found to be superior to even the oak in durability. It is doubtful whether the roof of Westminster Hall be of oak or chesnut; the two woods being, when old, very like each other, and having been formerly used almost indifferently in the construction of buildings. A good deal of chesnut has been planted within the last thirty (Tredgold's Principles of Carpentry.) CHESNUTS (Fr. Châtaignes; Ger. Kastanien; It. Castagne Sp. Castanas), the fruit of the cheanut tree. Chesnuts grows in this country, but are very inferior both in size and perfection to those imported from the south of Europe. In some parts of the Conti- nent they are frequently used as a substitute for bread, and form a large proportion of the food of the inhabitants. This is particularly the case in the Limousin, in Corsica, and in several districts of Spain and Italy. The inhabitants of the Limousin are said to prepare them in a peculiar manner, which deprives them of their astringent and bitter properties. Chesnuts imported from Spain and Italy are frequently kiln-dried, to prevent their germina- tion on the passage. In this country they are principally served up roasted at desserts. During the 3 years ending with 1831, the entries of foreign chesnuts for home consumption averaged 20,948 bushels a year. The duty of 2s. a bushel produced, in 1832, 2,321L. 12s. 10d. nett, allowing that the consumption must have amounted to 23,216 bushels. CHETWERT, a measure of corn in Russia, equal to 51/20 Winchester bushels, so that 100 chetwerts - 74h Winchester quarters. CHILLIES (Hind. Gas Murridge; Javan. Lombok; Malay, Chabai), the pods or fruit of the Capsicum annuum, or Guinea pepper. This is one of the hardiest and most pro- ductive plants found in tropical climates; growing luxuriantly in almost all dry soils, how- ever indifferent. In the wild state, the pods are small, and so pungent and acrid as to blister the tongue; but when raised on rich soils, they are large, and comparatively mild. The plant is said to be a native of both Indies. It is very extensively cultivated and, with the exception of salt, is far more extensively used than any other condiment. In tropical countries, the pods are frequently made use of when unripe and green when ripe, they be- come of a deep red colour; and in this state they are exported dry and entire, or reduced to powder-that is, to Cayenne pepper which, when genuine, consists wholly of the ground pods of the capsicum.-See PEPPER.) CHINA ROOT (Ger. Chinawurzel; Du. Chinawortel; Fr. Squine, Esquine, Sp. Raiz China, Cocolmeca; Arab. Rhubsinie), the root of a species of climber (Smilax China Lin.). It comes from the West Indies as well as from China; but that from the latter is best. It is oblong and thick-joined, full of irregular knobs, of a reddish brown colour on the outside, and a pale red within while new, it will snap short, and look glittering within; if old, the dust flies from it when broken, and it is light and kecky. It should be chosen large, sound, heavy, and of a pale red colour internally. It is of no value if the worm be in it. -(Milburn's Orient. Commerce.) CHINA WARE. See PORCELAIN. CHINTS OR CHINTZ (Fr. Indiennes; Ger. Zitze; It. Indiane; Rus. Siz; Sp. Chites, Zaraza), fine printed calico, first manufactured in the East Indies, but now largely manu- factured in Europe, particularly in Great Britain.-(See CALICO.) CHIP HATS. See HATS. CHOCOLATE (Du. Chocolade; Fr. Chocolat; Ger. Schokolate; It. Cioccolata; Por. Chocolate; Rus. Shokolad; Sp. Chocolate), a kind of cake or confection, prepared princi- pally from the cacao nut. The nuts are first roasted like coffee; and being next reduced to powder and mixed with water, the paste is put into tin moulds of the desired shape, in which it speedily hardens, being, when taken out and wrapped in paper, fit for the market. Besides cacao nut, the Spaniards use vanilla, sugar, maize, &c. in the preparation of choco- late. This article which is celebrated for its nutritious qualities, is but little used in Great Britain; a circumstance that seems to be principally owing to the very heavy duties with Digitized by Google CHRISTIANIA. 339 which it has been loaded. The importation of chocolate used formerly to be prohibited; and though this prohibition no longer exists, yet, as the duties on it are proportionally much heavier than upon cacao, we manufacture at home almost all that is required for our con- sumption. British chocolate is said to be very largely adulterated with flour and Castile soap.-(See Edward's West Indies, vol. ii. p. 364. ed. 1819.; and the art. CACAO.) The quantity of chocolate brought from abroad, entered for home consumption in the United Kingdom, in 1830, only amounted to 1,324₫ lbs., producing 160L of revenue. "Alike easy to convey and employ as an aliment, it contains a large quantity of nutritive and stimulating particles in a small compass. It has been said with truth, that in Africa, rice, gum, and shea butter, assist man in crossing the deserts. In the New World, chocolate and the flour of maize have rendered accessible to him the table lands of the Andes, and vast uninhabited forests."-(Humboldt's Pers. Nar. vol. iv. p. 234. Eng. trans.) CHRISTIANIA, the capital of Norway, situated at the bottom of a fiord or gulf, in the province of Aggerhuus; in lat. 59° 55¥ N., lon. 10° 484' E. Population, according to the Weimar Almanack for 1832, about 20,000. Christiania is about 60 miles from the open sea the gulf is in some places very narrow, and its navigation somewhat difficult; but it is sufficiently deep for the largest vessels, having 6 or 7 fathoms water close to the quay. It is compulsory on all ships to take a pilot on board at the mouth of the bay. The trade of the town is considerable. The principal exports are timber and deals; glass, particularly bottles linseed and oil-cake, iron and nails, smalts, bones, oak bark, &c. Salted and pickled fish, one of the staple products of Norway, is principally exported from Bergen. The deals of Christiania have always been in the highest estimation a consequence of the excellence of the timber, and of the care with which the sap-wood and other defective parts is cut away and not, as Mr. Coxe seems to have supposed, of the skilful sawing of the plank. The saw mills were formerly licensed to cut a certain quantity only, and the proprietors were bound to make oath that it was not exceeded.-(Coxe's Travels in the North of Europe, 5th edit. vol. iv. p. 28.) This absurd regulation no longer exists. There are far fewer restric- tions on industry and commerce in Norway than in Sweden. In the former, British manu- factured goods are admitted on moderate duties, and are very generally made use of. The principal articles of import are corn, colonial produce woollen, linen, and cotton goods butter, wine, brandy, &c. Trade of Norway-The following tables give a comprehensive view of the foreign trade of Norway. Imports.-An Account of the Quantities of the principal Articles imported into Norway, during each of the Three Years ending with 1831. 1829. 1830. 1831. Articles. Norwegian English Weight Norwegian Weight English Weight Norwegian Weight English Weight and Measure. and Measure. and Measure. and Measure. and Measure. and Measure. Cotton goods 132,629 lbs. 6,499 tons. 180,563 lbs. 88-47 tons 174,385 lbs. 85.45 tons French brandy 551,397 pot. 140,589 gals. 809,630 pot. 206,431 gals. 314,184 pot. 80,107 gals. Coffee - 1,547,575 lbs. 758.31 tons 1,576,130 lbs. 772.30 tons 1,814,185 lbs. 888.95 tons Vinegar - 104,430 pot. 26,626 gals. 119,826 pot. 30,552 gals. 73,956 pot. 18,856 gals. Hemp - 2,209,653 lbs. 1,082-73tons 1,369,549 lbs. 671:08 tons 1,416,248 lbs 693.96 tons Hops - 96,984 47.52 75,164 36.83 66,807 32.73 Flax - 763,973 374.35 651,802 319:38 462,552 226.65 tons Grain, wheat 13,766tond. 6,700 qrs. 15,675 tond. 7,625 qrs. 11,962 tond. 5,822 qrs. Rye 232,603 113,219 252,405 122,858 305,306 148,607 Barley 300,644 146,338 304,019 147,981 330,730 160,982 Oats 15,179 7,384 10,330 5,028 32,045 15,597 Malt 42,530 20,701 56,240 27,374 36,277 17.657 Wheaten flour 573,087 lbs. 280.81 tons 682,071 lbs. 334:21 tons 688,640 lbs. 337.43 tons Rye flour - 27,395 13.42 90,525 44:35 146,464 71.76 Barley flour 146,815 71.94 165,616 76.25 65,696 32:18 tons Peas - 11,202tond. 5,452 qrs. 8,264 tond. 4,022 qrs. 9,330 tond. 4,541.36 qrs. OR - 203,423 lbs. 99-68tons 223,144 lbs. 109:34 tons 254,623 lbs. 124.76 tons Cheese - 238,438 116.83 222,363 108:96 215,885 105.78 Rice - 273,093 133:81 341,110 167.14 255,917 125:40 Raisins - 102,271 50:11 103,836 50.88 117,955 57.80 Rum - 12,142 pot. 3,095 gals. 17,386 pot. 4,432 gals. 13,815 pot. 3,522 gals. Salt - 284,375 tond. 138,419 qrs. 283,600 tond. - 294,799 tond. 3,580 pcs. 2,013 pieces Salltioth - - - &49,400 lbs. an 21.02 tons 235 pees. & 78.55 tons 160,316 lbs. Silks - 4,270 lbs. 2.09tons 4,883 lbs. 2.39 4,902 lbs. 2:40 Syrup 720,738 353-16 807,635 395-74 719,631 352.62 133 chald. 22 chald. & Grindstones - - } - - No return. & 5,587 pcs. 1,337 pieces Butter - 417,824 lbs. 204-73 tons 365,808 lbs. 179.24 tons 391,818 lbs. 191.99 tons Coals - 39,506 tond. 4.807-48 chald. 27,001 tond 3,285.75 chal. 21,233 tond. 2,583.83 chal. Sugar : 2,195,752 lbs. 1,075.91 tons 2,342,225 1,147.69 tons 2,421,816 lbs. 1,186.69 to::8 Soap, green 126,219 61-85; 145,774 71:43 137,708 67.48 Soap, white 100,456 49-22| 123,023 60:28 132,959 65-15 Tea - 41,435 20:30 45,560 22:32 44,247 21.68 Tobacco - 1,405,952 688.91 2,209,469 1,082-63 1,083,193 530.76 Woollens - 180,926 88.65 186,058 91:17 193,900 95.01 Wine - 474,218 pot. 120,911 galls. 638,794 pot. 162,873 gals. 189,001 pot. 48,313gris. 1826. 1827. 1828. Linen cloth 205,291 lbs. 100.59 tons 159,226 lbs. 78.02 tons 263,325 lbs. 129.02 tons Digitized by Google 340 CHRISTIANIA. Exports.-An Account of the Quantities of the principal Articles exported from Norway during each of the Three Years ending with 1831. 1829. 1830. 1831. Articles. Norwegian Weight English Weight Norwegian Weight English Weight Norwegian Weight English Weight and Measure. and Measure. and Measure. and Measure. and deasure. and Measure. Anchovies, (pickled 7,390 kegs - 6,172 kegs - 9,413 kegs sprats) Oak bark - - - - 6,876 sk. lbs. 1,078-15tons 12,320 sk. lbs. 1,931.77 tons Bones - 820,916 lbs. 402.25 tons 1,097,755 537.89 955,742 468.31 Bottles - 161,520 bot. - 144,028 bot. - 344,987 bot. Smalts - 208,418 lbs. 102-12 257,340 lbs. 126.09 183,700 lbs. 90-01 Chromate of 578,658 283.53 538,608 263.91 594,506 201:30 lead - Lobsters 1,034,905 lobs. - - 1,196,904 lob. - 872,944 lob. Dried fish - 44,417,712 lbs. 21,764.67 43,447,887 lbs. 21,289-46 25,448,895 lbs. 12,469.95 Salted fish 397,846 tnd. 38,039 bar. 313,993 tnd. 300,218 bar. 469,659 tnd. 449,051-15bar. Horns - 26,198 lbs. 12-83 tons 52,391 lbs. 25.67 tns. 39,858 lbs. 19-41 tons Iron - 6,458,192 3,164.51 6,123,037 3,000-28 5,135,677 2,516.48 Rags - 6,686 3.27 14,238 6.97 8,640 4-23 Copper - 610,225 299 751,825 368.39 524,894 257.20 Caraway seed 1,605 0.78645 1,518 0.74382 1,535 0.75215 Fish roes - 17,029 tnd. 16,282 bar. 22,677 tnd. 21,682 bar. 17,011 tnd. 16,264bar. Buck & goat 84,101 lbs. 41-20 tons 113,847 lbs. 55.78 tns. 114,951 lbs. 56:32 tons skins Rock moss 357,515 175.17 109,803 53-80 tns. 91,812 44-98 Tar - 1,257 tnd. 1,201 bar 1,017 tnd. 972 bar. 604 tnd. 577.50 bar. Train oil - 21,806 20,849 20,476 19,577 18,708 17,887 Wood, tim- 183,802 - 194,615 - 172,979 ber & deals s woodlester 360,251.92 tons woodlester 381,445'4tms. woodlester 339,038-84tns. Zaffre 33,860 lbs. 16-59 tons no return - - 610 lbs. 0-29,890 Trade with England.-According to the official accounts rendered by the British Custom-house, there were imported from Norway, in 1831, 48,151 cwt. oak bark, 377 tons iron, 18,219 goat skins, 206,840 lbs. smalts, 118 cwt. tallow, 8,439 great hundreds battens and batten ends, 10,457 great do. deal and deal ends, 4,826 masts, &c. under 12 inches diameter, and 23,527 loads of timber, exclusive of about 1,000,000 lobsters, of which no account is kept. During the same year we exported to Norway 535, lbs. coffee, 7,765 lbs. indigo, 8,189 1bs. pepper, 4,981 lbs. pimento, 4,585 gallons rum, 3,169 cwt. muscovado sugar, 366,024 lbs. tobacco, 83,566 lbs. cotton wool, 3,774 tons coal, 434,744 yards cotton cloth, earthenware of the value of 3,4021., cuttery of the value of 2,6481., 92,150 bushels of salt, soap and candles of the value of 2,9381., woollen manufactures of the value of about 13,000l., and some minor articles - (Part. Paper, No. 550. Sess. 1833.) Nothing would do so much to extend our trade with Norway, and not with it only, but with the whole north of Europe, as the repeal of the discriminating duty on Norwegian and Baltic timber. And, as this measure would be, in other respects, highly advantageous, it is to be hoped that its adop- tion may not be long deferred. Customs Duties.-As previously remarked, these, when compared with the Swedish duties-(see GOTTENBURGH), are moderate. They amounted, in 1831, inwards, to 161,8401. 5s. 3d. outwards, to 47,3811. 8s. 3d. making together, 209,2214. 13s. 6d. To these have to be added 27,4361. 19s. 5d. received on account of tonnage duties, lights, &c. Customs Regulations-Within 24 hours after a vessel has got to be bonded for a certain period, in order to facilitate the payment of her mooriage, the master should deliver to the collector his general the duties. . report as to ship and cargn, or present the requisite documents for The former is called " transit oping," that is, depositing or having such report made out with the assistance of a ship broker, warehousing goods for exportation, subject to transit duties only. whose services masters of foreign vessels cannot entirely dispense The latter is called 44 credit oping," that is, warehousing OF bonding with. On making this general report, the measuring bill is to be ex- on credit. hibited, and payment of the tonnage and other dues inward is to be 1. Transit Oplag.-Under this system, goods from abroad may be made. If the ship have not been previously measured in Norway, warehoused for exportation free of import duty, paying OR exports- and is, consequently, not provided withs Norwegian measuring bill, tion a transit duty, which, in most cases, is 1-10th of what they she is to be measured, to ascertain her burden in Norwegian com- would pay if entered for home consumption. If the goods are mercial lasts, for the calculation of the tonnage duty. deposited in the Custom-house warehouses, they lie free of rest or The general report having been made, the Custom-house officers dues during 14 days, and if in private warehouses, under the bey in charge of the vessel are furnished with the books for delivery, and and seal of the customs, during 6 months. If they remain long, viz. the discharge of the cargo commences under their inspection and beyond 14 days in the one, and beyond 6 months in the other the consignees may make their special reports under their responsi- case, they pay rent or dues equal to 1-8th of the transit duty per bility and signature. If they are without precise information as to month which, after the lapse of 3 months, as regards goods in the the contents of any or all of the packages or bales to their address, Custom-home warehouses, is increased to 1-4th of the transit duty these bales or packages may, at their request, be opened in the pre- per month. sence of the officers before report is made. If a consignee omits 2 Credit Oplag.-This system allows most goods imported from availing himself of this permission, his pretending thereafter that abroad to be placed in the owner's or importer's own warehouses, more or other goods than be had ordered, or been advised of, have under his own lock, free of duty, for a given time, on his reporting been sent to his address, will not be attended to. In the reports or to the customs, every 3 months, how much he has sold, otherwise entries is to be stated, whether it is intended to pay the duties forth- consumed, or exported, and then paying the duty on such amount; with, whether the goods are intended for exportation, or whether the Custom-house officers, who are bound quarterly to examine they are to be landed. the goods, convincing themselves, by ocular demonstration, that Prior to commencing loading outwards, the master is to give ver- no more is missing than the quantity reported to have been taken bal notice of bis intention at the Custom-house. If he have no Nor- away. wegian measuring bill, the vessel is to be measured. This being This credit on the duties in no case to exceed 2 years from the time done, the shipper or shippers of the outward bound cargo are each the goods were imported. of them to make their special entries as to the quality, weight, and By way of security for payment of the duties on which the credit measure of the goods they mean to load. A copy of such entries is is granted, government reserve to themselves- to be deposited at the Custom-bouse, and the loading commences I. Priority of mortgage on all the goods in question. under the control of the officers. This applies to all mixed cargoes; 2. Priority, or first right, in the property, goods, and effects of but if the outward bound cargo consist exclusively of wood, the ship- every description belonging to the trader availing himself of this per or shippers are only to notify that they intend Inading wood, credit, in as far M such property is not previously legally mort without specifying quantity, measure, &c., as the export duty on gaged. wood is charged according to the burden of the vessel. When the 3. Liberty for the Custom-house officers, when and as often as master cleare outwards, he produces the proper documents for show. they shall deem it expedient, between the stated quarterly impect ing the burden of his veasel, and to what port she belongs, and he is tino, to look over the stock on hand, with a view of acceptaing then, on proper application being made, provided with a pilot, who whether there remains sufficient value for the duties; and if they ⑉ takes his vessel to sea. reason to doubt this, full right, In default of other satisfactory secu- Warehousing.-In Norway, goods brought from abroad may be rity being offered, to seize the stock, and to sell the whole, or . bonded or warehoused, with a view to their being again exported at much as shall cover the duties. some future period. Goods entered for home consumption may also 4. In case of death or failure of the party, BD equal right to all Digitized by Google CHRISTIANIA. 341 Sorthwith the whole of his stock at public anction, and to retain M 9. d. much of the proceeds as shall cover the duties; and in case of de- On a quarter of wheat, for the first 3 Reiency, an established claim for the remainder on the estate of the months 0 0-5538 per month. deceased or bankrupt, as the case may be. Afterwards 0 1-1076 - in charging he duties, no allowance is made for waste or damage On a ton of raw sugar, for the first in the warehouses. months 0 11-5384 per month. The warehouse rent charged on goods bended under the transit Afterwards 1 11-0769 - system, in the Custom-house warehouses, is as follows Money, Weights, and Measures.-In Norway there are no gold coins. The principal silver coin, called a species dollar, is divided into 120 skillings. There are, also, half species, or 60 skilling pieces ; 1-5th species, or 24 skilling pieces; 1-15th species, or 8 skilling pieces ; and what is denominated skillemynt, or small change-that is, 4 and 2 skilling pieces. The species dollar contains 390.58 Eng. grs. pure silver, and is, consequently, worth 4s. 6}d. sterling, the par of exchange being 4 species dol- lars 42 6-17 skill. = 11. All Norway coins, except the small change, are alloyed with 1-7th copper, so that the species dollar weighs 448.38 Eng. grs., and its divisions in proportion. Small change coins are alloyed with three times their weight of copper. There are 1 and 2 skilling pieces of copper. Weights and Measures, same as at COPENHAGEN; which see. Table showing the Number of Ships, their Destination, and Tonnage in Norwegian Lasts and English Tons, that cleared out from Christiania; and also the Number of Ships, their Destination, and Tonnage, that cleared out from Norwegian Ports generally, Christiania included; during each of the Three Years ending with 1831. Sailed from Christiania. Sailed from Norway. Destination. Year. Ships. Lasts. Tons. Ships. Lasts. Tons. 1829 15 376 940 568 13,172 32,930 Sweden - - - 1830 10 217 542 423 10,323 25,807 1831 11 302 755 546 13,226 33,065 1829 117 1,899 4,747 2,062 24,442 61,105 Denmark, Altona excepted 1830 126 2,216 5,540 1,968 24,396 60,990 1831 155 2,678 6,695 2,096 26,817 67,042 1829 Russia - - - 1830 - - - 117 4,537 11,342 1831 1 17 42 133 6,638 16,595 1829 2 44 110 354 11,827 29,567 Other Baltic ports - 1830 2 60 150 222 6,092 15,230 1831 8 302 755 240 7,210 18,025 1829 6 207 Hamburgh, Altona, and 517 89 2,067 5,167 1830 Bremen - 7 239 597 97 2,268 5,670 - - 1831 9 326 815 114 2,865 7,162 1829 96 8,144 20,360 228 44,027 110,067 Great Britain and Ireland 1830 86 7,189 17,972 840 44,819 112,047 1831 122 9,981 24,952 970 53,735 134,337 1829 1 Holland, Hanover, and Ol- 60 150 982 43,595 108,977 1830 5 381 952 denburgh 1,030 50,170 125,425 - - 1831 5 349 872 823 33,024 82,560 1829 127 8,825 22,062 579 35,706 89,265 France - - - 1830 145 9,683 24,207 569 35,120 87,800 1831 101 6,685 16,712 423 25,855 64,637 1829 - - - 86 3,674 9,185 Portugal and Spain - 1830 - - - 81 3,189 7,972 1831 1 91 227 63 3,015 7,537 1829 - - - 65 4,307 10,767 Other Mediterranean ports 1830 - - - 90 6,357 15,892 1831 - - - 67 5,004 12,510 1829 - - - 2 71 177 Ports beyond Europe - 1830 1831 Shipping Charges-The various charges of a public nature pay. way; but there is a public bank, having its principal office at Dron- able by a ship of about 300 tons burden, entering the port of Christi- theim, with branches at Christiania, Bergen, and Christiansand. It ania with a mixed cargo on board, unloading there, taking on board was established by a compulsory assessment in 1816. its capital another cargo, and clearing out, are as follow - consists of 2,000,000 species dollars, in transferable shares, divided L 8. d. amongst those who were forced to contribute to its formation. These 1. Charges Interds-Pilotage from Farder, at the mouth shares are now at a premium of 30 per cent. Its managers are ap- of Christiania Bay, where all ships must take a pilot pointed by, and are accountable to, the Storthing or Norwegian par- on board 222 liament. It issues notes for 100, 50, 10, and so low as 1 species Bill of health, assuming that the crew, including the dollar. These notes should be payable in specie on demand but master, consists of 14 persons 0 17 9 they are at a discount of 36 per cent., and are paid by the bank at Tounage dues and light money 16 9 that rate. It discounts bills at 2 and 3 months date at 6 per cent. per Brokers' fees 5 4 annum; advances money on mortgage at 4 per cent.; and transacts the ordinary banking business of individuals. It does not allow in- L 14 2 0 terest on deposits. The dividend is, at present, from 8 2-3ds to 7 per cent. 2. Charger Outstrds.-Pilotage 092 Credit.-Gonds are sold partly for ready money, and partly on Castle dues 0 7 credit, but principally the former. Muster roll of crew 1 0 5 Commission, &e-The number of brokers in Christiania is limited Pale of stake money 0 3 8 to 4. Commission on the sile of goods, 2 per cent., or, del creders Measuring bill 2 4 5 included, 3 per cent. Brokerage is fixed by law at 5-6the per cent., Charity chest 0 7 which, to practice, is paid by the sellers. Tonnage dues and light money 10 11 1 Insurance-All houses situated in Norwegian market towns must Higholm light 0 0 9 be insured is the General Insurance Company at Christiania, which Pilotage to Farder 16 8 is guaranteed by the state. The premium is moderate, being, on Brokers' fees 18 11 buildings situated in towns, 1-4th, and on those situated in the coun- try, 1-8th per cent. Sometimes, however, when very destructive L 18 6 " fires occur, It is raised. Provisions, &c.-Christiania is not a favourable place for careen- ing and repairing ships; but supplies of beef, bread, water, and other N. B.-There to no difference between the charges on native sea stores, may be had as cheap or cheaper than in any other part of ships in Norwagian ports, and privileged foreign ships, that is, the Norway; but its distance from the sea is too great to allow of its ships of countries having reciprocity treaties with Norway nor in being visited by ships desirous merely of victualling.-(We have de. the duties on goods imported by native ships and such privilaged rived these details from various sources, but principally from the foreign ships. Great Britain is a privileged country. able Annoers of the Consul at Christiania to the Circular Quaries.) The shipping of Norway has declined considerably of late years; Timber.-A standard Christiania deal is 11 feet long, 1 1-4 inch a proof, if any such were wanting, of the groundlessness of the thick. and 9 inches broad and 51-2 such deals make a load. clamours kept up in this country as to the supposed pernicious influ- Freight of deals from Norway to England is calculated at the rate once of reciprocity treaties on our shipping. of single deals, the standard measure of which for Christiania and all Benking-T re are no private banking establishments is Nor- the southern ports of Norway, except Dram (a small town on the 212 Digitized by Google 342 CHUNAM-CINNAMON. Drammen, about 20 miles 8. W. of Christiania), is 11 feet long, and lump, or according to the number of deals which the and may 1 1-4 inch in thickness. A single deal from Dram is reckoned 10 have taken on board on a former occasion. feet long and 1 1.8 inch thick. One hundred deals - 120. Battens Three battens make 2 deals, retaining their own length A ton = 40 solid feet of timber, cut to a square. and thickness. Half deals are only counted as deal ends, if they run One load of balk, or timber, = 50 solid feet. under 6 feet but if they run 6 or 7 feet long, then 2 half deals are Two loads of timber are reckoned for 150 deals. counted a deal, retaining their own thickness. The several bills of lading contain together as exact account of the Ends of Deals.-Four ends of deals, although 5 feet long, make cargo which the captain has received on board ship. consequently but a deal 11 feet long, retaining their thickness, which the owners binding him to deliver according to their contents when, therefore, and captains of ships think unreasonable; but M the freighters of the deals are mentioned as usual 9 and 10 feet, and 11 and 12 fact, he ships seldom wish to have this assortment, which commonly run cannot insist on more freight than half of the length, according to its from 3 to 5 feet, and are taken on board as stowage, consequently for description. the advantage of the ship and not the freighter, the ship ought to bear One thousand Norway standard deals are reckoned equal to a keel the burden. of coals, which is 21 tone. End of Battens, called Larwich Palings-No less than 6 ought Boweprits pay duty as masts capravens are above 12 and under to be counted a single deal, 11 feet long and 1 1-4 inch thick. 18 inches in circumference at the middle, and without bark. Clap- Pale-boards, when they have their proper length, are 7 feet long board is exported in whole pieces and unquartered. Deals from Gen $ pale-boards are counted a single deal. many pass as Norway deals; spruce deals are upwards of 90 feet in Staves for bogeheads take up much room in consequence of which length; deals from Norway, above 7 feet long, are counted as whole more than 10 cannot be computed a single deal. deals above 5 feet, and not above 7 feet in length, are accounted as The width of deal is Dever noticed in the calculation of freight; a half deals, and 2 of them pass as one vhole deal. good deal ought to run 9 inches within the mp, which not a twen- The difference between the Christiania and Dram standard being tieth part of a cargo does at present; but, though some may be above nearly 1-11th part, the freights to Dram ought to be varied propor- 9 inches wide, many are only 8, therefore one must make up for the tionally. It has sometimes happened that ships both for Christiasia other. and Dram have boen in company, and those for Christiania have got Timber, or Hown Goods-cannot be exactly computed according up, loaded, and sailed, before the others for Dram have got over to the contents in deals, because it cannot be stowed in a ship in the Drametroom, which runs very strong down in the spring of the year. same manner as deals: the freight is, therefore, agreed for by the -(Rordans' European Commerce.) CHUNAM, the name given in India to lime. The best, obtained by the calcination of shells, is employed in the composition of BETEL-(which see), to prevent, it is said, its injuring the stomach. CIDER, OR CYDER (Fr. Cidre; Ger. Zider, Apfelwein; It. Cidro; Rus. Sidor; Sp. Sidra), the juice of apples expressed and fermented. The produce of the duty on cider and perry (the expressed and fermented juice of pears) amounted, in 1828, to 37,220/.; which, as the duty was 10s. a barrel, shows that the quantity produced must have amounted to 74,440 barrels, exclusive of what might be clandestinely manufactured. The perry is sup- posed to have amounted to about a fourth part of this quantity. The duty was repealed in 1830.-(See APPLES.) CIGARS. See TOBACCO. CINNABAR (Ger. Zinnober Du. Cinaber, Virmilioen; Fr. Cinnabre; It. Cinabro; Sp. Cinabrio; Rus. Kinowar Lat. Cinnabrium). 1. Native Cinnabar-a mineral substance, red, heavy, and brilliant. It is found in va- rious places, chiefly in quicksilver mines, being one of the ores of that metal. The cinnaber of the Philippine Islands is said to be of the highest colour; but that of Almaden in Spain, is the richest. The best native cinnabar is of a high colour, brilliant, and free from earthy or stony matter. 2. Artificial Cinnabar.-" When two parts of mercury and one of sulphur are triturated together in a mortar, the mercury gradually disappears, and the whole assumes the form of a black powder, formerly called Ethiops mineral. When this mineral is heated red hot, it sublimes; and if a proper vessel be placed to receive it, a cake is obtained of a fine red colour. This cake was formerly called cinnabar; and when reduced to a fine powder, is well known in commerce under the name of vermilion."-(Thomson's Chemistry.) CINNAMON (Du. Kaneel; Fr. Cannelle; Ger. Zimmet, Kanehl; It. Canella; Lat. Cinnamomum, Canella; Por. Canella; Sp. Canela; Pers. and Hind. Darchinie; Arab. Darsini; Malay, Kaimanis; Greek, Kivxfror), the bark of the cinnamon tree (Laurus cinna- momum), a native of Ceylon, where it grows in great abundance; it is also found in Cochin China, but no where else. The cinnamon said to be found in China, Borneo, &c. is merely Cassia lignea. It is brought home in bags or bales weighing 921 lbs. each; and in stowing it, black pepper is mixed with the bales to preserve the cinnamon. The best cinnamon is thin and rather pliable it ought to be about the substance of royal paper, or somewhat thicker; is of a light yellow colour, approaching nearly to that of Venetian gold; it is smooth and shining fractures splintery has an agreeable, warm, aromatic flavour, and a mild sweetish taste when chewed, the pieces become soft and seem to melt in the mouth; it is not 80 pungent but that it may be borne on the tongue without pain, and is not succeeded by any after taste. Whatever is hard, thick as a half-crown piece, dark-coloured or brown, or so hot that it cannot be borne, should be rejected. Particular care should be taken that it be not false packed, or mixed with cinnamon of an inferior sort.-(Milburn's Orient. Comm; Marshall's Essay, quoted below.) The cinnamon of Cochin China grows in the dry sandy districts lying N. W. of the town of Faifoe, between 15° and 16° N. lat. It is preferred in China to the cinnamon of Cey- lon the annual imports into Canton and other ports vary from 250,000 to 300,000 lbs. There are no fewer than 10 varieties of this species in the market. It is not cured, like that of Ceylon, by freeing it from the epidermis.-(Crawford's Embassy to Siam, &c. p. 475.) Cinnamon Monopoly.-Down to the present year, the cultivation of cinnamon in Ceylon was restricted to a few gardens in the neighbourhood of Colombo the production and sale of the article being wholly monopolised by government. Upon the transference of the island from the East India Company to the king's government, the former agreed to pay Digitized by Google CINNAMON. 343 60,000Z. a year for 400,000 lbs. or 4,342₫ bales of cinnamon; it being stipulated, that if the quantity collected exceeded this amount, the surplus was to be burned But this agreement was afterwards broken off; and, for these some years past, the cinnamon has been sent to England by government, and sold on its account at quarterly sales. The revenue derived by the Ceylon treasury from the cinnamon monopoly, in 1831, it said to have amounted to 106,434L 11s. 11d.; but it is not said whether this is the nett or gross revenue, that is, whether it be exclusive or inclusive of the expenses attending its manage- (Ceylon Almanac for 1833, p. 82.) As the monopoly could not be enforced except by confining the culture of cinnamon to certain districts, it necessarily led to the most op- pressive interference with the rights of individuals, to the creation of numberless imaginary offences, and the multiplication of punishments, forming a heavy drawback upon the pros- perity of the island. We are, therefore, glad to have to state that it has been at length abandoned; and that we are no longer liable to the charge of upholding, without improving, the worst part of the Dutch policy but have restored to the natives their right to cultivate cinnamon any where and in any way they think fit. We subjoin a copy of the advertise- ment issued by the Ceylon government in reference to this important subject. Notice is hereby given, that in direct pursuance of instructions received from the secretary of state, from and after the 10th of July next, the general export of cinnamon from the ports of Colombo and Point de Galle exclusively, in the island of Ceylon, will be allowed, on payment of an export duty of 3a. per pound, without distinction of quality. From the same period, all restrictions and prohibitions against the cultivation, possession, or sale of cinnamon by private individuals will cease; and such quantities of cinnamon as government now has in its possession, or may hereafter be obliged to receive in payment of rent, or from the govern- ment plantations (until they can otherwise be disposed of), will be sold at periodical sales, subject always to the payment of the said export duty, and under conditions as to the completion of the pur- chase, and the actual payment of the purchase money in cash or government bills, on delivery of the cinnamon, similar to those heretofore stipulated at the sales held in London, and which will be fully notified and explained hereafter. No collections will, for the future, be made in the forests on account of government. The first sale will be held on the 10th day of July next, at the office of the commissioner of re- venue; when 1,000 bales of cinnamon will be put up to sale in lots at the undermentioned prices, and will be sold to the highest bidder above the reserved price. 8. d. Ist sort, per lb. 3 6 2d - 2 0 3d 0 9 The proportion of each sort to be put up will be notified hereafter. The stock of cinnamon in the hands of the agent in London, in September, 1832, and which was to be sold at the 4 usual quarterly sales, in October, 1832, and January, April, and July, 1833, amounted to 4,688 bales; two consignments, amounting to 826 bales, have since been sent to England, viz. 500 bales in July, 1832; 326 bales In October, 1832; since which no shipments have been made, and none will be made hereafter. The sales for the 2 years ending with that of July, 1832, somewhat exceeded 5,500 bales per annum. Chief Secretary's office, Colombo, March 9, 1833. Duties on Cinnamon.-Nothing can be more satisfactory than this document, in so far as the free culture of cinnamon is concerned but it is deeply to be regretted, that the abolition of the old monopoly system should be accompanied by the imposition of the exorbitant duty of 3s. per lb. on all cinnamon, exported, without distinction of quality. Its natural cost does not, we believe, exceed 6d. or 8d. per lb.; but taking it at 1s., the duty is no less than 300 per cent. ! So enormous a tax, by confining the export of cinnamon within the narrow- est limits, will go far to deprive the island of the advantages it would otherwise derive from the repeal of the monopoly, and will be, in all respects, most injurious. We have heard, that it is contended, in vindication of this oppressive tax, that Ceylon having a natural monopoly of cinnamon, it is sound policy to burden it with the highest duty it will bear; as the largest revenue is thus obtained at the least expense to the island. But in addition to the cinnamon produced in Cochin China, and which it is more than probable will speedily find its way to the European markets, the extent to which cassia lignea is substituted for cinnamon, shows that the monopoly possessed by Ceylon is of very trifling importance. But though it were otherwise, though cassia lignea did not exist, and cinnamon were to be found no where but in Ceylon, we should not the less object to 80 exorbitant an export duty. So long as it is maintained, it will confine within the narrowest limits, what might otherwise become a most important branch of industry, and a copious source of wealth to the island. According to the crown commissioners, the average quantity and value of the different sorts of cinnamon annually sold of late years has been,- Sorts of Cinnamon. Quantity. Rate. Amount Lbs. 8. d. £ 8. First sort 90,000 7 21 32,842 15 Second sort - - 230,000 5 101 67,562 10 Third sort - - 180,000 4 3t 38,437 10 All sorts 8 - 500,000 - - 138,343 15 * See an article by H. Marshall, Esq., staff surgeon to the forces in Ceylon, in Thomson's Annals of Philosophy, vol. X. p. 356. Digitized by Google 344 CINQUE PORTS. It is not at all probable that the exports will materially increase under the new system; but had the duty varied from about 6d. per lb. on the best, to 3d. or 4d. on the inferior sorts, we have little doubt, now that the culture is free, that the exports would, at no very distant period, have amounted to some millions of pounds. It is the high price of cinnamon,-a price not caused by its scarcity or the difficulty of its production, but by the oppressive monopo- lies and duties to which it has been subjected,-that has made it be regarded as a luxury attainable only by the rich. There is no other spice that is so universally acceptable and there is none, were it charged with a reasonable duty, that would be 20 sure to command an immense sale. We know, quite as well as the writer of an article on this subject in the Colombo Journal, " that the cook who employs 1 ounce of cinnamon to improve the flavour of his dishes, will not employ 4 ounces when the spice is a fourth of the price but we further know, what the journalist would seem to be ignorant of, that were its price reduced, as it might be, to a third of what it has hitherto cost, it would be used by ten or a dozen cooks, for every one who employs it at present. In fact, the entire consumption of cinna- mon in Great Britain is under 20,000 lbs. a year Should the exports of cinnamon from Ceylon under the new plan amount to 500,000 lbs. a year, government will receive from it an annual revenue of 75,000L and supposing them to amount to 600,000 lbs., the revenue will be 90,000L And to secure the immediate pay- ment of this trifling sum, every ulterior consideration of profit and advantage has been sacri- ficed. It is, however, pretty clear, that this short-sighted rapacity will be, in the end, no less injurious to the revenue, than to the industry and trade of the island. Were cinnamon allow- ed to be exported for a few years under a low duty, or till such time as the taste for it was fully diffused throughout this and other countries, it would then be easy, by gradually raising the duty, to obtain from it, without materially checking the consumption, a very large revenue ; at least 5 or 6 times more than it will ever produce under the present plan. Suppose that we had had the power effectually to monopolise the inventions by which Sir Richard Arkwright and others have so prodigiously facilitated the spinning of cotton; what would have been thought of the policy of those who should have proposed laying a duty on exported cottons equivalent to the peculiar advantages we enjoyed in their production Had this been done, we should have got a monopoly value for our exports of cotton; but instead of amounting, as at present, to 17,000,000/. a year, they would not, under such a plan, have amounted, to 170,000L and instead of affording subsistence for some 1,300,000 or 1,400,000 individuals, the cotton manufacture would not have supported 50,000 And yet this is the mischievous nostrum, for it would be an abuse of terms to call it a principle,-on which we have proceeded to regulate the export of the staple product of Ceylon. The following table shows the quantities of cinnamon retained for home consumption, the rates of duty, and the nett amount of the duties in each year, since 1810. Quantities Quantities retained for Nett Amount of retained for Home Con- Nett Amount of Years. Duty received Rates of Duty charged thereon. Years. Home Con- Rates of Duty charged sumption in thereon. sumption in Duty received thereon. thereon. the United the United Kingdom. Kingdom. Lbs. £ 8. d. Of the East Indies. Lbs. £ 8. d. Of the East Indies. 2s. per lb. and 21. 1820 10,618} 1,331 3 6 2s. 6d. per lb. 1810 12,793 5,609 7 3 13s. 4d. per cent. 1821 12,002 1,503 18 2 do. ad valorem. 1822 14,507} 1,816 19 0 do. 1811 8,748 3,715 16 7 do. 1823 14,225 1,767 8 7 do. 1812 13,416 4,081 10 1 do. 1824 13,7664 1,723 16 4 do. (From April 15.) 1925 14,0984 1,766 0 2 do. 1813 Records destroyed - 2s. 4jd. per lb. and 1826 14,155 1,782 14 9 do. 31. 3s. 4d. per cent. 1827 14,4514 1,807 19 7 do. ad valorem. 1828 15,6964 1,773 16 9 do. 1814 9,565 8,977 3 11 (From April 10.) (From June 21.) 2s. 6d. per lb. 1815 9,355 1,175 17 7 1829 29,720 1,342 8 4 6d. per lb. from do. British posses- 1816 9,863 1,235 14 1 do. sions. 1817 10,689 1,824 0 9 do. 1830 Nil.* 709 5 0 do. 1818 11,381 1,424 18 11 do. 1831 23,172 583 17 6 do. 1819 13,077 1,637 1 1 (From April 10.) 1832 15,271 435 0 10 do. 2s. 6d. per lb. In the London market, cinnamon is divided into 3 sorts. The first is worth, at present (Sept. 1633), duty included, from 8s. 6d. to 10s. per lb.; the second, 6s. to 7s. 6d.; and the third from 5a. to 6s. [See IMPORTS AND Exports.-Am. Ed.] CINQUE PORTS. These are ancient trading towns, lying on the coast of Kent and Sussex, which were selected from their proximity to France, and early superiority in navi- gation, to assist in protecting the realm against invasion, and vested with certain privileges by royal charter. " The ports so privileged, as we at present account them, are Dover, Sandwich, Romney, Hastings, Hythe, and the two ancient towns of Winchelsea and Rye although the two latter places appear to have been originally only members. The services which they were The export having exceeded the quantity charged with duty within the year. Digitized by Google CITRON-CIVITA VECCHIA. 345 appointed to perform, were either honorary, viz. assisting at the coronation and sending members to parliament; or auxiliary to the defence of the realm, as furnishing a certain supply of vessels and seamen, on being summoned to that service by the king's writ. In process of time the Cinque Ports grew so powerful, and, by the possession of a war- like fleet, so audacious, that they made piratical excursions in defiance of all public faith on some occasions they made war, and formed confederacies as separate independent states. It seems, however, that these irregularities were soon suppressed, when the government was strong, and sufficiently confident to exert its powers. So long as the mode of raising a navy by contributions from different towns continued, the Cinque Ports afforded an ample sup- ply; but since that time their privileges have been preserved, but their separate or peculiar services dispensed with. Their charters are traced to the time of Edward the Confessor ; they were confirmed by the Conqueror, and by subsequent monarchs. William the Con- queror, considering Dover Castle the key of England, gave the charge of the adjacent coast, with the shipping belonging to it, to the constable of Dover Castle, with the title of Warden of the Cinque Ports; an office resembling that of the Count of the Saxon coast (Comes littoris Saxonici) on the decline of the Roman power in this island. The lord warden has the authority of admiral in the Cinque Ports and its dependencies, with power to hold a court of admiralty he has authority to hold courts both of law and equity is the general returning officer of all the ports,-parliamentary writs being directed to him, on which he issues his precepts; and, in many respects, he was vested with powers similar to those pos- sessed by the heads of counties palatine. At present the efficient authority, charge, or patronage, of the lord warden is not very great the situation is, however, considered very honourable, and the salary is 3,000/. He has under him a lieutenant and some subordinate officers; and there are captains at Deal, Walmer, and Sandgate Castles, Archcliff Fort, and Moats Bulwark. " There is an exclusive jurisdiction in the Cinque Ports (before the mayor and jurats of the ports), into which exclusive jurisdiction the king's ordinary writ does not run; that is, the court cannot direct their process immediately to the sheriff, as in other cases. In the Cinque Ports, their process is directed to the constable of Dover Castle, his deputy, or lieu- tenant. A writ of error lies from the mayor and jurats of each port to the lord warden of the Cinque Ports, in his court of Shepway, and from the court of Shepway to the King's Bench a memorial of superiority reserved to the crown at the original creation of the franchise; and prerogative writs, as those of habeas corpus, prohibition, certiorari, and man- damus, may issue, for the same reason, to all these exempt jurisdictions, because the privi- lege that the king's writ runs not must be intended between party and party, and there can be no such privilege against the '-(Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. ii. p. 12.) CITRON (Ger. Succade; Da. Sukkat; It. Confetti di cedro, Sp. Acitron verde; Fr. Citronat verd), an agreeable fruit, resembling a lemon in colour, smell, and taste. The principal difference lies in the juice of the citron being somewhat less acid, and the yellow rind being somewhat hotter, and accompanied with a considerable bitterness.-(Lewis's Mat. Med.) It is imported, preserved and candied, from Madeira, of the finest quality. CIVET (Ger. Zibeth, Du. Civet; Fr. Civette; It. Zibetto, Sp. Algalia), a perfume taken from the civet cat. It is brought from the Brazils, Guinea, and the interior of Africa. When genuine, it is worth 30s. or 40s. an ounce. CIVITA VECCHIA, a fortified sea-port town of the papal dominions, on the Mediter- ranean, in lat. 42° 4' 38" N., lon. 11° 44' 52" E. Population 7,000. Harbonr.-The port of Civita Vecchia is artificial, and is formed by three large moles. Two of them projecting from the mainland, inclined one to the north and the other to the south, form the sides of the harbour; while a third mole, or breakwater, constructed opposite to the gap between the other two, serves to protect the harbour from the heavy sea that would otherwise be thrown in by the westerly gales. A lighthouse, having the lantern elevated 74 feet above the level of the sea, is erected on the southern extremity of the outward mole; the distance from its extremities to the ex- tremities of the lateral moles, on which there are towers, being about 90 fathoms. Vessels may enter either by the south or north end of the outer mole, but the southern channel is the deepest, having from 8 to 6 and 4 fathoms. Ships may anchor within the port, in from 16 to 18 feet water, or between it and the outer mole where the water is deeper. Within the port there is a dock and an arsenal.-(Plan of Civita Vecchia.) Historical Notice.-This harbour, which is by far the best on the western side of the papal domi- nions, owes its origin to the Emperor Trajan, and affords the most unequivocal proof, not of his power merely, but of his sagacity and desire to promote the interests of commerce and navigation. There is in one of Pliny's Letters (lib. vi. epist. 31.) a clear and interesting account of this great work, which has obviously been planned and constructed with equal skill and judgment. The outer mole was mostly formed, precisely like the breakwater at Plymouth, by sinking immense blocks of stone into the sea, which became fixed and consolidated by their own weight, till by degrees it was raised above the waters. (Assurgit autem arts visenda: ingentia suxa latissima navis provehit. Contra hec alia super alia dejecta ipse pondere manent, ac sensim quodam velut aggere construuntur.) Originally it was called Trajanus Portus, and it is to be regretted that it did not always bear the name of its illus- trious founder. But in the latter ages of the Roman empire it was called Centum Cella, and in modern times Civita Vecchia.- Cellurii Notitia Orbis Antiqua, 1. p. 734.) Money.-Accounts are kept here, and throughout the papal states, a species of bank notes; but these, not being payable in specie on in crowns or acudi, called scudi Romani and scudi moneta. 1 acudo demand, are uniformly at a discount. = 10 paoli, and I paoli = 10 bajocchi. The scudo contains 403 Weights.-The libra, or pound of 12 one or 6,912 grani, contains grains of English standard silver, and is, consequently, worth 4s. 4d. 5,234 English grains. Hence, 100 Roman pounds = 74,771 lbs. sterling. Payments above 5 seudi are made in cadale, or schedules, avoirdupois = 90,968 lbs. troy - 33,906 kilogrammes - 70,008 lbs. 44 Digitized by Google 346 CLARET-CLOCKS. of Hamburg. There are three different cantaros or quintals; viz. the barrel of wine = 12,841 Imp. gallons, and the Barral of oil = of 100, 160, and 250 lbs. The migliajo - 1,000 lbs. 12-64 imp. galls; the soma of oil = 36-13 imp. do.; the rubbio of Maasures-The Roman foot= 11.72 Enginches: the canna= Eng. inches; the canna used by builders = 87.96 English inches; corn = S-143 imp. bosbels.-(Mally's Cambist; Nelhenbrecher, Manual Universel) Imports and Exports.-Though the wealth and population of the country round Civita Vecchia be much fallen off in modern times compared with antiquity, it still continues to be the entrepôt of Rome, and engrosses almost the entire trade of the papal dominions on the side of the Mediterra- nean. The imports consist principally of cotton, woollen, silk, and linen stuffs; coffee, sugar, cocoa, and other colonial products; salt and salted fish, wines, jewellery, glass and earthenware, &c. The exports consist of staves and timber, corn, coal, wool, cheese, potash, pumice-stone, alum, from Tolfa, in the vicinity, and other articles. The total value of the imports may be reckoned at from 650,000L. to 700,0001., and it may be fairly presumed that the real value of the exports is not much inferior. Marseilles and Genoa have the largest share of the foreign trade of Civita Vecchia, and next to them England. Duties.-Civita Vecchia is a free port, that is, a port into which produce may be imported, and either consumed or re-exported, free of duty Quarantine regulations are strictly enforced no vessel with a foul bill of health being permitted to enter any of the papal ports.-(Annuaire du Commerce Maritime, tom. ii. p. 366, &c.) Return of the Number and Tonnage of Vessels, distinguishing the Countries to which they belonged, which entered inwards in the Papal States in 1833. Of the vessels entering the ports on the Mediterranean, fully three fourths entered Civita Vecchia. In Ports of the Mediterranean. In Ports in the Adriatic. Flags. Touching or Touching or For Trading calling, not for Purposes. Trading Pur- Fishing Vessels. For Trading calling, not for Purposes. Trading Pur- Fishing Vessels. poses. poses. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Austrian 32 3,592 2 133 - - 1,100 40,765 53 1,678 1,190 7,835 Greek 2 599 - - - - 6 450 Modenese - - - - - - 167 4,261 French 64 5,726 42 4,539 British 26 4,165 - - 2 2 34 5,637 Ionian - - - - - - 16 1,101 Lombardo-Venetian - - - - - - 442 14,881 48 2,521 3,393 23,001 Lucchese 145 3,485 45 897 1 4 Neapolitan 745 45,532 423 19,647 244 2,662 95 3,766 35 1,287 49 942 Parma - - - - 4 62 I 41 Papal 632 31,433 217 11,701 82 799 3,182 127,443 434 15,828 11,802 151,585 Sardinian 166 13,437 109 10,321 - - 44 5,634 1 531 Spanish 27 1,132 Swedish - - - - - 6 842 1 183 Tuscan 412 17,722 183 8,613 3 9 Totals 2,251 126,823 1,021 55,851 332 3,476 5,096 204,842 573 22,069 16,434 183,363 Sup.) CLARET, one of the best French wines. See the articles BORDEAUX and WINE. CLEARING, " among London Bankers, is a method adopted by them for exchanging the drafts on each other's houses, and settling the differences. Thus, at half-past 3 o'clock, a clerk from each banker attends at the clearing-house, where he brings all the drafts on the other bankers, which have been paid into his house that day, and deposits them in their proper drawers (a drawer being allotted to each banker) ; he then credits their accounts separately with the articles which they have against him, as found in the drawer. Balances are then struck from all the accounts, and the claims transferred from one to another, until they are so wound up and cancelled that each clerk has only to settle with two or three others, and their balances are immediately paid. Such drafts as are paid into a banker's too late for clearing, are sent to the houses on which they are drawn, to be marked, which is understood as an engagement that they will be paid the next day."-(Kelly's Cambist.)-(For an account of the saving of money effected by this device, see antè, p. 71. The technical operations carried on at the clear- ing-house have been described by Mr. Gilbart, in his Practical Treatise on Banking, pp. 16-20.) CLEARING-HOUSE, the place where the operation termed clearing is carried on. CLOCK, CLOCKS, (Ger. Uhren, Grosse Uhren, Wianduhren; Du. Uuren, Uurwerken, Horologien; Fr. Horloges; It. Orologgi, Oriuoli; Sp. Relojes; Rus. Tschasü), a kind of machine, put in motion by a gravitating body, and so constructed as to divide, measure, and indicate the successive portions of time with very great accuracy. Most clocks mark the hour by striking or chiming. It is a highly useful instrument, and is extensively em- ployed for domestic and philosophical purposes. Clocks are made of an endless variety of materials and models, 80 as to suit the different uses to which they are to be applied, and the different tastes of their purchasers. Their price consequently varies from a few shillings to more than 100/. The Germans and Dutch are particularly celebrated for their skill in the manufacture of wooden clocks; while the English, French, and Genevese, especially the former, have carried the art of making metallic clocks, so as to keep time with the greatest precision, to a high degree of perfection. The history of the invention, introduction, and successive improvements in the manufac- ture of clocks has been carefully investigated by some very learned and industrious antiqua- ries—(see Beckmann's Hist. of Inventions, vol. i. pp. 419-462. Eng. ed.; and Rees's Cy- clopadia); but, notwithstanding these researches, the subject is still involved in considera- blo obscurity. It seems, however, that the middle of the fourteenth century may be regard- Digitized by Google CLOTH-CLOVES. 347 ed as the epoch when clocks, having weights suspended as a moving power, and a regulator, began to be introduced. The period when, and the individual by whom, the pendulum was first applied to clockwork, have been subjects of much contention. Galileo and Huygens have disputed the honour of the discovery. " But whoever may have been the inventor, it is certain that the invention never flourished till it came into the hands of Huygens, who insists, that if ever Galileo thought of such a thing, he never brought it to any degree of perfection. The first pendulum clock made in England was in the year 1662, by one Fro- mantel, a Dutchman."-(Hutton's Math. Dictionary.) The clock manufacture is of considerable importance and value. It is carried on to a great extent in London. The ad valorem duty of 25 per cent. on foreign clocks produced, in 1832, 6,023L 8s. nett. It is principally derived from the wooden clocks brought from Holland and Germany. Under the article WATCHES, the reader will find some statements as to the importation and exportation of clocks as well as watches. Clockmakers are obliged to engrave upon the dial-plate of all clocks made by them their name, and the place of their residence. No outward or inward box, case, or dial-plate of any clock or watch, with the maker's name engraved thereon, shall be exported without the movement or machinery being in or with such box or case, under forfeiture of double its value.-( & 4 Will. 4. cap. 52. 8 104.) It is illegal to import, or to enter to be warehoused, any clock or watch impressed with any mark purporting to represent any legal British mark, or not having the name of some foreign maker visible on the frame, and also on the face, or not being in a complete state.-() 57.) It is said, however, not to be an uncommon practice, among the less reputable portion of the trade, to engrave their names and London" on foreign clocks and watches, and to sell them to the public as English work. The fraud may be detected by referring to any respectable watchmaker. By a Treasury order of the 4th of September, 1828, clocks and watches for private use, though not marked in the manner now specified, may be admitted on payment of the duty, on the parties making affidavit of their entire ignorance of the law in question. Persons hired by or in the employment of, clock and watch makers, who shall fraudulently em- bezzle, secrete, sell, &c. any metal, material, or precious stone, with which he may happen to be in- trusted, shall, upon trial and conviction before a justice of the peace, forfeit 201. for the first offence and for the second, and every subsequent offence, he shall forfeit 401.; and, in default of payment, is to be committed to the house of correction.-(27 Geo. 2. c. 7. è 1.)-(See WATCH.) CLOTH. See WooL, LINEN, &c. CLOVER (Ger. Klee; Du. Klaver; Fr. Trefle, Luzerne; It. Trifoglio Sp. Trebol; Rus. Trilistnik; Lat. Trifolium), a very important species of grass. Some of the species in cultivation are annual others biennial or triennial and others perennial. The seed used formerly to be principally imported from Holland; but that which is raised in this country is now said to be of a superior quality.- Encyclopedia of Agriculture.) Culture for seed is, however, very precarious, and of uncertain profit. The entries of foreign clover seed for home consumption, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, were 99,046 cwt. a year. But for the high duty of 20s. a cwt., there can be little doubt that the importation would be much more considerable. The price of foreign clover seed in the London mar- ket, at present (September, 1833), varies, duty included, from 50s. to 66s. a cwt. CLOVES (Ger. Näglein, Gewürznelken; Du. Kruidnagelen; Fr. Clous de girofle, Gi- rofles; It. Chiovi di garofano, Garofani; Garoffoli; Sp. Clavos de especia, Clavillos Rus. Gwosdika; Arab. Kerenful; Malay, Chankee), the fruit, or rather cups of the un- opened flowers, of the clove tree, or Caryophyllus aromaticus. The clove tree is a native of the Moluccas, where it was originally found but plants have since been carried to Cay- enne and other places, where they succeed tolerably well. Cloves are shaped like a nail whence the name, from the French clou, nail. They are imported from the Dutch settle- ments; the best in chests, and an inferior kind in bags. The best variety of the Amboyna cloves is smaller and blacker than the other varieties, very scarce, and as a mark of pre-emi- nence, is termed the Royal clove. Good cloves have a strong, fragrant, aromatic odour and a hot, acrid, aromatic taste, which is very permanent. They should be chosen large sized, perfect in all parts; the colour should be a dark brown, almost approaching to black; and, when handled, should leave an oily moisture upon the fingers. Good cloves are some- times adulterated by mixing them with those from which oil has been drawn but these are weaker than the rest, and of a paler colour; and whenever they look shrivelled, having lost the knob at the top, and are light and broken, with but little smell or taste, they should be rejected. As cloves readily absorb moisture, it is not uncommon, when a quantity is ordered, to keep them beside a vessel of water, by which means a considerable addition is made to their weight.-(Thomson's Dispensatory; Milburn's Oriental Commerce.) Policy of the Dutch as to the Trade in Cloves.-From the expulsion of the English from Amboyna, in 1623, the Dutch have, a few short intervals only excepted, enjoyed the exclu- sive possession of the Moluccas, or Clove Islands. In their conduct as to the clove trade, they have exhibited a degree of short-sighted rapacity, which has been, we believe, seldom equalled even tn the annals of monopoly. Their object has not been to encourage the growth and trade of cloves, but to confine both within the narrowest limits. They have preferred deriving a large profit from a stunted and petty trade, to a moderate profit from a trade that might have afforded employment for a very large amount of capital and to 'pre- vent their narrow and selfish projects from being counteracted by the operations of the na- Digitized by Google 348 'CLOVES. tives, they have subjected them to the most revolting tyranny. That they might," says Mr. Crawfurd, regulate and control production and price just as they thought proper, the clove trees were extirpated every where but in Amboyna, the seat of their power and the sur- rounding princes were bribed, by annual stipends, to league with them for the destruction of their subjects' property and birthright. This plan was begun about the year 1551. The contracts are still in force, and an annual fleet visits the surrounding islands to suppress the growth of cloves, which, in their native country, spring up with a luxuriance which these measures of Satanic rigour and of sacrilege towards bountiful nature, can scarce repress. By the plan on which the clove trade is now conducted,-a plan carried into effect through so much iniquity and bloodshed,-the country of spices is rendered a petty farm, of which the natural owners are reduced to the worst condition of predial slavery ; and the great monopoliser and oppressor is that government, whose duty it should have been to insure freedom and afford protection. Human ingenuity could hardly devise a plan more destruc- tive of industry, more hostile to the growth of public wealth, or injurious to morals, than this system framed in a barbarous age and it reflects disgrace upon the character of a civil- ised people to persevere in it. " It is curious to remark how the monopolisers, in carrying the details of this system into effect, at once impose upon the natives and deceive themselves. The nominal price paid to the natives is actually above the natural price of the commodity, but they are cheated in the details. The cultivator brings his produce to the public stores, where it is subjected at once to a deduction of one fifth for payment of the salaries of the civil and military officers. The price of the remainder is fixed at the rate of 96 Spanish dollars the picul but before payment is made, another deduction of one fifth is made one half of which is for the chiefs or rajas, and the other for the native elders, who are overseers of the forced culture. The real price, therefore, paid to the grower is 8 Spanish dollars per picul, or 3łd. per lb. avoirdupois, in- stead of 11100 Spanish dollars per picul, or 43d. per lb. which is pretended to be given. " When cloves have been sold on the spot, the price usually exacted has been about 64 Spanish dollars the picul, or 8 times the price paid to the cultivator. The average price in Holland, previously to the war of the French revolution, may be taken at 6s. per lb., or 177100 Spanish dollars per picul, being 2,122 per cent. advance on the real cost of the commodity in the place of its growth. When brought direct to England, they have cost at an average 3s. 8d. the lb., making 108,84 Spanish dollars per picul, an advance on the natural export price of 1,258 per cent."-Eastern Archipelago, vol. iii. pp. 388-390.) An Account of the Quantity of Cloves entered for Home Consumption each Year since 1810; of the Nett Amount of Duty received therefrom, and the Rates of Duty. Quantities retained for Rates of Duty charged thereon. Years. Home Con- Nett Amount of Duty sumption in the received thereon. or the Foreign Possemions United King- Of the East Indies. Of the British Pos- sessions in America. in America. dom. Lbs. £ s. d. 4s. 8d. per lb. and 1810 35,584 10,197 19 10 21. 13s. 4d. per cent. } 2s. per 1b. 4s. 8d. per lb. ad valorem. 1811 28,977 8,370 1 1 - do. - - do. - - do. 1812 35,552 8,547 19 10 - do. - - do. - - do. From 15th of April 1813 Records destroyed 5s. 6ld. per lb. and - 2s. 4jd. per lb. 5s. 6ld. per lb. 31. 3a. 4d. per cent. ad valorem. 1814 31,975 9,540 9 3 From 10th of April - do. - - do. 5s. 7fd. per lb. 311. 13s. 4d. per cent. 1815 50,462 5,708 3 9 - do. - - do. - ad valorem,equal to about Is. Od. per lb. 1816 16,470 1,867 6 10 - do. - - do. - - do. 1817 73,973 6,390 13 6 - do. - - do. - - do. 1818 18,281 1,777 5 3 - do. - - do. - - do. 1819 34,2544 3,354 4 7 From 5thof July2s. 2s. per lb. 3x. per lb. 1820 36,554} 3,657 0 5 - do. - - do. - - do. 1821 32,933 3,285 9 2 - do. - - do. - - do. 1822 49,7654 5,026 16 8 - do. - - do. - - do. 1823 57,7804 5,747 14 4 - do. - - do. - - do. 1824 60,3234 6,035 10 0 - do. - - do. - - do. 1825 45,261 4,543 9 10 - do. - - do. - - do. Of British Possessions. Of Foreign Possessions. 1826 52,7017 5,279 4 9 - - 2s. per lb. - - - - 3s. per lb. - - 1827 85,9904 8,602 1 9 do. - - - - - - - - do. 1828 61,2164 6,148 19 2 - - do. - - do. - - - - 1829 48,6374 4,875 13 2 - - do. - - - - do. - - 1830 60,111 6,061 9 7 - - do. - - - - do. - - 1831 83,885 8,379 8 2 - - do. - - - - do. - - 1832 82,672 8,169 6 9 - - do. - - - - do. - - Digitized by Google COACHES. 349 Duty on Clores.-This was considerably reduced in 1819; and there has, in consequence, been a decided increase in the consumption of the article, though not nearly 80 great as it would have been, had it been supplied under a more liberal system. The cloves at present entered for home consumption in Great Britain amount to about 80,000 lbs. a year, of which a part comes from Cayenne. But the cultivation of the clove in Cayenne depends entirely on the existence of the present system in the Moluccas. The superiority which the latter enjoy over every other place in the production of cloves is so very great that were any thing like freedom given to those engaged in their culture, they would very speedily exclude every other from the market, It is not to be imagined, that so liberal and intelligent a govern- ment as that of Holland can much longer continue insensible to the disgrace of support- ing a system like the present, and to the many advantages that would result from its abo- lition. The price of cloves, exclusive of the duty, in the London market, is, at present (October, 1823), as follows:- Amboyna, Bencoolen, &c. - - 1s. 2d. to 1a. 6d. per lb. Bourbon, Cayenne, &c. - - 1s. 2d. to la 3d. per lb. [See IMPORTS AND Exports.-Am. Ed.] CLOVES, OIL OR, is procured from cloves by distillation. When new, it is of a pale red- dish brown colour, which becomes darker by age. It is extremely hot and fiery, and sinks in water. The kind generally imported from India contains nearly half its weight of an insipid expressed oil, which is discovered by dropping a little into spirits of wine, and on shaking it, the genuine oil mixes with the spirit, and the insipid separating, the fraud is dis- covered.-(Milburn.) COACHES, vehicles for commodious travelling. They have sometimes two and some- times four wheels. The body of the coach is generally suspended, by means of springs, upon the framework to which the wheels are attached. They are usually drawn by horses, but recently have been impelled by steam. The forms and varieties of coaches are almost innumerable. 1. Historical Notice.-Beckmann has investigated the early history of coaches with his usual care and learning. It is certain that a species of coaches were used at Rome; but whether they were hung on springs, like those now made use of, is not certain. After the subversion of the Roman power, horseback was almost the only mode of travelling. About the end of the fifteenth century, however, covered carriages began to be employed by per- sons of distinction on great occasions. In 1550, there were at Paris only three coaches: one of which belonged to the queen; another to the celebrated Diana of Poitiers; and the third to a corpulent, unwieldy nobleman, René de Laval, lord of Bois Dauphin. Coaches were seen, for the first time, in Spain, in 1546. They began to be used in England about 1580; and were in common use among the nobility in the beginning of the seventeenth century.-(Hist. of Invent. vol. i. pp. 111. 127. Eng. trans.) 2. Manufacture of Carriages.-This is a department of considerable value and import- ance. The best built and handsomest carriages are made in London, where only the trade of a coach currier is carried on; but the carriages made at Edinburgh, and some other places, are also very superior. Down to 1825, a duty was laid on all carriages made for sale; and it appears from the following account, that in 1812, 1,531 four-wheeled carriages, 1,700 two-wheeled ditto, and 105 taxed carts (small carriages without springs), were made for sale. 3. Duties on Carriages.-These duties have been long imposed, and have fluctuated con- siderably at different periods. The table on p. 350 shows the number of four-wheeled and other carriages (exclusive of hackney coaches) charged with duties in the years 1812, 1825, and 1830, the rates of duty on each species of carriages, and the produce of the duties. (Compiled from Parl. Paper, No. 686. Sess. 1830. and Papers published by the Board of Trade.) Rates of Duty on Carriages.-On those having- Rate. Rate. Rate. Wour wheels. Lad. L.s.d. L.i.d. Persons keeping 1 -600 Persons keeping 8.840 Carriages drawn by one horse - 2-6100 - 7-8100 Carriages used by common carriers : : :110 - 3.700 - 8 -8160 Two wheels. - 4 7 10 0 9 and upwards 916 Drawn by I horse 350 - 5 7176 Drawn by 2 or more 10 0 Additional bottles - -330 Additional bodies 11 6 Carriages let to hire 600 Described in act 2 & 3 Will. 4. cap. 32. No. 1. Post chaises 550 charged - 1 0 0 Carriages with wheels of less diameter than 30 Ditto, ditto, No. II., common stage carts 10 0 inches, drawn by ponies or mules not exceeding Let out to hire 360 13 hands . -850 Carringes used by common carriers -150 VOL. L-2 Digitized by Google 1812. 1825. 1830. Number of Rates of Carriages. Duty. Amount of Duty. Number of Rates of Amount of Duty. Number of 350 Carriages. Duty. Carriages. Rates of Duty. Amount of Duty. FOUR-WHEELED CARRIAGES. Carriages charged at progressive rates £s.d. £ s.d. £ 8. d. £ s.d. £ s.d. Persons keeping 1 - - - 12,866 12 00 154,392 00 17,242 6 00 103,452 00 19,417 as for 1825 } The same 116,502 00 - 2 - - - 2,792 13 0 0 39,296 00 3,292 6100 21,398 00 5,173 do. 33,624 10 0 - 3 - - - 657 14 00 9,198 00 693 7 00 4,851 00 1,006 do. 7,042 0 0 - 4 - - - 180 15 00 horses and drivers are but little superior forming a striking contrast to the elegance and coaches are the dirtiest, most disagreeable vehicles that can well be imagined, and the nothing can be said in favour of its hackney coach establishment. Speaking generally, the ing the business open, and trusting to competition to rectify abuses. As respects London, whether the public would not be as well accommodated, at least in all large towns, by throw- It may be doubted, however, whether these regulations have had any good effect, and regulations, intended to prevent strangers and others using them from fraud and imposition. tances travelled. They have generally been licensed by authority, and subjected to certain to carry such persons as require their services, for certain rates of hire according to the dis- 27,000 00 172 7 10 0 1,290 00 216 do. 1,620 00 - 4. Hackney Coaches are coaches stationed in the streets or other public places, and bound 5 - - - 60 15 15 0 945 00 75 7176 590 12 6 101 do. 795 76 - 6 - - - 18 16 8 0 295 40 30 8 40 246 00 30 do. 246 00 - 7 - - - 7 17 00 119 00 - - 8 10 0 - - - 35 do. 297 10 0 - 8 - - - 16 17 12 0 281 0 - - 8160 - - - - - do. - - - - 9 - - - - - 18 3 0 - - - 10 9 16 90 15 0 14 do. 127 10 Total 16,596 - 204,226 16 0 21,514 - - 131,918 76 25,992 - - - 160,254 86 Additional bodies - - - - 143 660 900 18 0 68 3 30 214 40 54 do. 170 20 Carriages let to hire without horses - 249 12 0 0 2,288 00 419 6 00 2,514 00 518 do. 3,108 00 Post chaises and other carriages let to hire } with horses 5,295 10 10 0 55,597 10 0 5,786 5 5 0 30,376 10 0 6,983 do. - 36,660 15 0 - - - Public stage coaches - - - 1,355 10 10 0 14,227 10 0 2,747 5 5 0 14,421 15 0 3,138 do. 16,474 10 0 TWO-WHEELED CARRIAGES. Drawn by 1 horse - - - - 25,957 6 10 0 168,720 10 0 39,121 350 127,143 5 0 47,962 do. 155,811 10 0 2 or more horses - - 1,329 900 11,961 00 539 4100 2,425 10 0 408 do. 1,836 00 COACHES. Total 27,286 - - - 180,681 10 0 39,660 - - 129,568 15 0 59,133 - - - 214,060 17 0 Additional bodies - - . . 11 330 34 13 0 20 1116 31 10 0 18 do. 28 0 TAXED CARTS. Without springs - - - 7,592 190 11,008 80 Exclusive of the above, there paid duty in 1830- With springs, not metallic - . - 11,549 2 15 0 31,759 15 0 £ s.d. Four-wheeled carriages drawnby 1 horse, 5,838, Total at 42. 10s. 19,141 42,768 30 26,271 00 - - with wheels of less diameter than 30 inches, Digitized by Google DUTIES paid by coachmakers and by persons Repealed in 1825. drawn by ponies, 383, at 31. 5a. 1,944 50 selling carriages. used by carriers, 179, at 2/. 10s. 447 10 0 Four-wheeled carriages made for sale - 1,531 150 1,913 15 0 Two-wheeled carriages let to hire 2,246, at 31. 5s. 7,299 10 0 Two-wheeled do. do. - 1,701 0 12 6 1,063 26 used by carriers 241, at 12. 5s, 301 50 Taxed carts made for sale - 407 030 61 10 Four-wheeled carriages sold by auction, or 105 150 131 5 0 85,563 10 0 on commission Two wheeled carriages do. - . 184 0126 115 0 0 Total duty collected from carriages in 1830 409,907 20 Taxed carts - do. - - 46 030 6 180 Total 3,974 - - - 3,291 16 COACHES. 351 commodiousness of the private carriages, the excellence of the horses, and the neatness of the servants. Hackney coaches were first established in London in 1625 but they were not then sta- tioned in the streets, but at the principal inns. In the reign of Charles II. their number was considerable. Commissioners for licensing and superintending hackney coaches were esta- blished by the act 9 Ann. c. 23.; and successive acts have been passed, specifying the num- ber of coaches that might be licensed, the duties payable to government, and the conditions under which licenses were to be granted. The total number of hackney coaches, chariots, and cabriolets, actually licensed in the metropolis, on the 1st of January, 1830, appears, from the following table, to have been 1,265. An account of the Number of Hackney Coaches, Chariots, and Cabriolets, licensed in the Metropolis, in each of the Five Years to the 1st of January, 1830; showing the Rates of Duty, and the Pro- duce of the Duties.-(Parl. Paper, No. 667. Sess. 1830.) Number licensed. Rates of Duty. Produce of the Duties, including Fines. £ s. d. Years ending 1st of January 1826 1,150 2/. per lunar month each carriage. } 29,392 12 6 - 1st of January 1827 1,200 do. 30,606 12 6 - 1st of January 1828 1,200 do. 31,333 7 6 - 1st of January 1829 1,265 do. 32,176 17 6 - 1st of January 1830 1,265 do. 32,908 18 6 5. Hackney Coach Regulations, Fures, &c.-The laws as to hackney coaches in the city of London were consolidated by the act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 22., which placed the collection of the duties, &c. in the hands of the commissioners of stamps. We notice a few of the more important clauses. Definition.-1 hackney coach is any carriage with 2 or more wheels, standing or plying for hire in any public street or road.-d 4. Licensing, Plates, &c.-A license to keep a hackney coach costs 51., and a weekly sum of 10s. has to be paid per advance on every licence. A plate specifying the number of the licence is to be placed inside the coach; and 2 other plates, on which are painted the names of the proprietor, or of one of the proprietors of the coach, are to be placed externally one on each side. Penalty on proprietor for letting or employing a hackney coach without having properly numbered plates properly fixed upon such coach, 10% : ditto on driver, if proprietor, 10Γ.; if not, 51.-0 R 22, 23. Obligation to ply.-Carriages standing on the streets with plates, to be deemed backney coaches and, unless actually hired, shall be compellable, under a penalty of 40s., to go with any person offer- ing to hire the same.-d 35. Distance.-Drivers of hackney coaches compellable, under a penalty of 40s., to go any distance not exceeding 5 miles from the General Post Office, or from the place where they shall have been hired. -p 34. Number of Passengers.-To prevent disputes, the number of persons to be carried by hackney coaches is to be painted in some conspicuous place outside; and they are compellable, under a pe- nalty of 40s., to carry this number if required.-d 46. Rates and Fares-These may be charged, at the option of the pro- Fares when taken by time are-For any time within and not ex- prietor or driver, either by time or distance; that is, by the hour or ceeding 30 minutes, 1s. above 30 minu'es and not exceeding mile, but not by the day. The terms are, when charged by die- 45 do., 1s. 6d. above 45 minutes and not exceeding 1 hour, tena, 2a. and for any further time exceeding one hour, then after the rate and proportion of 6d. for every 15 minutes com- For every backney coach drawn by 2 horses, for any distance pleted, and 6d. for any fractional part of the period of 15 within and not exceeding I mile, 1a. and for every distance minutes. exceeding one after the rate of 6d. for every t mile, and Cabriolets, or carriages with one horse, are entitled to two thirds, for any fractional part of t a mile over and above any num- and no more, of the rates and charges above mentioned.-s. 3a. and ber of 1 miles completed. schedules. Back Fare-The driver of a hackney coach discharged beyond the limits of the metropolis, that is, beyond 3 miles from the General Post Office, after 8 o'clock in the evening, or before 5 o'clock in the morning, shall be entitled to full fare from the place of such discharge to the nearest part of said limits, or to the stand where the coach shall have been hired beyond the limits, at the option of the hirer. Coaches discharged during the day beyond the limits, are entitled to a back fare at the rate of 6d. a mile; but such back fare is not payable for any distance less than 4 nilles.- 39. Coaches waiting are entitled to a reasonable deposit, to be accounted for in the fare. Penalty on drivers refusing to wait, or to account for deposit, 40s.-0 47. Refusal to pay Fare, or defacing or injuring any hackney eoach, may be punished, unless reasonable satisfaction be made for the same, by imprisonment for 1 calendar month.- 41. Drivers exacting more than legal Fare liable to a penalty of 40s.-d 42. Agreement to pay more than legal Fare, not binding sum paid beyond such legal fare may be reco- vered back, and driver be liable in a penalty of 40s.-> 43. Drivers demanding more than Sum agreed upon, though distance be exceeded, or it be less than the legal fare, forfeit 40s. for each offence.- 2 44, 45. Drivers to hold Check Strings, under a penalty of 20s.-0 48. Property left in Hackney Coaches to be carried to Stamp Office, under a penalty of 201. If not claimed within a year, to be given up to driver; or If not applied for, to be sold.- 49. Court of Aldermen authorised to make orders for regulating hackney coaches in city-d 54. Offences may be tried either by a justice appointed for that purpose by the secretary of state, or by any other of his Majesty's justices.-d 62. Hackney coaches were first established at Edinburgh in 1673 but the number licensed was inconsiderable till after the American war. 5. Stage Coaches, Travelling by.-Owing to the improvement in the breed of horses and the building of carriages, but, above all, to the extraordinary improvements that have been effected, within these few years, in the laying out, construction, and keeping of roads, the ordinary rate of travelling by stage coaches is seldom under 9 or 10 miles an hour, stop- pages included, and, on some roads, is as much as 11 or 12! The stages having been shortened, this wonderful speed is not found to be materially more injurious to the horses Digitized by Google 352 COACHES. than the slower rate at which they travelled some years ago. The surface of the roads be ing perfectly smooth, and most sharp turns or rapid descents having been got rid of, travel- ling even at this speed has been rendered comparatively safe; and it is astonishing, consider- ing the number of coaches, how few accidents occur. They are occasioned, for the most part, by the misconduct of the drivers; and principally by their endeavouring to make up by increased speed for time lost at stoppages, or by their attempting to pass each other. 6. Law as to Stage Coaches.-This is now embodied in the acts 2 & 3 Will. 4. C. 120. and 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 48. Definition.-A stage coach is any carriage travelling along the road at the rate of 3 miles or more an hour, without regard to form, provided the passengers pay separate fares for their places therein; but all carriages used wholly on a railway, or impelled by steam, are excepted from this definition.- (2 & 3 Will. 4. c. 120. (4.) Licenses, Duties, &c.-A large portion of the act is occupied with regulations as to licences, duties, plates, &c. But it is sufficient for our purpose to give the following schedule of the duties :- Duty. Daty. Lid Lid For and in respect of every original license to be taken And if such stage carriage shall be licensed to carry out yearly by the person who shall keep, use, or cm- more than 21 passengers, then for every 3 addi- ploy any stage carriage in Great Britain, (that is to tional passengers exceeding 21 which such stage car- my,) for every such stage carriage 500 riage shall be licensed to carry, the additional daty of 0 0 of And for and in respect of every supplementary license for the same carriage, for which any such original And where such excess above 21 shall not be exactly s, or a mul- licence shall have been granted, which shall be taken tiple of 3, then such additional duty of td. shall be payable for any out in any of the several cases provided for by this number of such excess being less than 3, or progremively less then act, during the period for which such original licence any multiple of 3, which such stage carriage shall be licensed to was granted. 010 carry. And for and in respect of every mile which any such Provided always, that the number of passengers for carrying of stage carriage shall be licensed to travel, the several which any stage carriage shall be licensed, shall be reckoned exclu- sums following respectively, (that is to say,) if such sive of the coachman or driver, and also exclusive of the conductor stage carriage shall be licensed to carry- Duty or guard, if there shall be a conductor or guard. per mile. And also the duties on passengers conveyed for hire by carriages Not more than 4 passengers 0 0 1 travelling upon railways; (that is to say,) More than 4 and not more than 6 passengers 0 0 if The proprietor or company of propristors of every railway - More than 6 and not more than 9 passengers 002 Great Britain, along which any passengers shall be conveyed for More than 9 and not more than 12 passengers 002 hire, in or upon carriages drawn or impelled by the power of More than 12 and not more than 15 passengers 003 steam, or otherwise, shall pay for and in respect of all such passen- More than 15 and not more than TS passengers 0031 gers of and after the rate of fd. per mile for every 4 passengers so More than 18 and not more than 21 passengers 004 conveyed. Want of Licence, &e.-Keeping, using, &c. any stage carriage without a licence, or without plates, or with recalled plates, or contrary to their licences, or with improper plates, are offences punishable each by a penalty of 201.-0 0 27, 28. Penalty on Drivers of Coaches without Plates, If not the owner, 10% if the owner 201.-d'3 Forging Plates, a misdemeanor.— 32. Names of Proprietors, &c. to be painted outside, in legible and conspicuous characters, the names of the extreme places between which such carriage shall be licensed to go, and also the greatest num- ber of passengers licensed to be carried inside and outside. Penalty for neglect in this particular, 51. -0 36. Certain Carriages not to carry outside Passengers or Luggage, viz. those, the top or roof of which shall be more than 8 feet 9 Inches from the ground, or the bearing of which on the ground, that is, the distance between the centres of the tracks of the wheels, shall be less than 4 feet 6 inches. Penalty 51.- 37. Luggage on the Roof not to exceed a certain Height, viz. 10 feet 9 inches from the ground on a carriage drawn by 4 or more horses; and 10 feet 3 inches from ditto, if on a carsiage drawn by 2 OF 3 horses. Driver of any carriage where such offence is committed liable in a penalty of 51.-0 43. The clauses in the act 2 & 3 Win. 4. c. 120. relating to the distribution of outside passengers, &cc. have been repealed by the act 3 & 4 Win. 4. C. 48., which substitutes the following in their stead. Number of outside Passengers, &c.-Any licensed stage carriage with 4 wheels or more, the top or roof of which shall not be more than 8 feet 9 inches from the ground, and the bearing of which on the ground shall not be less than 4 feet 6 inches from the centre of the tracks of the wheels, if such car- riage shall be licensed to carry any number not more than 9 passengers, shall be allowed to carry not more than 5 of such passengers outside; and if licensed to carry more than 9 and not more than 12 passengers, shall be allowed to carry not more than 8 of such passengers outside; and if licensed to carry more than 12 and not more than 15 passengers, shall be allowed to carry not more than 11 of such passengers outside; and if licensed to carry more than 15 and not more than 18 passengers, shall be allowed to carry not more than 12 of such passengers outside and if licensed to carry any greater number than 18 passengers, shall be allowed to carry not more than 2 additional passengers outside for every 3 additional passengers which such carriage shall be so licensed to carry in the whole pro- vided that in no case a greater number of passengers shall be carried on the outside than is authorised by the licence. If more be carried, driver to forfeit 51.-2. Driver, Guard, and Children in lap, not to be counted as passengers 2 children under 7 years reckoned as 1 passenger.- 3. No Person to sit on Luggage on the Roof, nor more than 1 person besides driver on the box. Penalty 51.-0 14. Justices, Road-surveyors, Toll-keepers, &c. authorised to cause stage carriages and Ruggage to be measured; any passenger authorised to require the driver to stop at a toll-gate, and to require the gate-keeper to measure the carriage and luggage, and to count the number of inside and outside pas- sengers. Penalty on driver refusing to stop, 51. on gate-keeper neglecting to provide a measure, or refusing to measure and count, 51.-(% & 3 Will. 4. c. 120. 1 45.) Conduct of Drivers, &c.-Drivers quitting the box before a proper person shall stand at the head of the horses such person leaving the horses before some other person shall be placed in like manner, or have the command of the horses, or before the driver has resumed his seat on the box and taken the reins driver allowing any passenger or other person to drive for him, or leaving the box without any reasonable occasion, or for a longer time than is absolutely necessary; concealing or misplacing plates; guard discharging fire-arms unnecessarily; driver, conductor, or guard, neglecting to take care of luggage asking more than the proper fare; neglecting to account to his employer; or as- saulting or using abusive language to any person having travelled, or about to travel, as a passenger, or to any person accompanying the same: shall in each and every such case forfeit 51.-1 47. Drunkenness, &c.-Drivers, conductors, or guards having the care of any stage carriage, endanger- ing, through intoxication, negligence, or wanton and furious driving, the safety of any passenger or other person, or the property of the owner of such carriage or other person, shall each person so offending forfeit 51.- 49. Digitized by Google COAL. 353 Owners liable for penalties, when driver or guard is not known, or cannot be found 49. Railway Proprietors are to render accounts of the passengers conveyed along the same to the Stamp Office, and to give security to keep and render such accounts, and to pay the duties.-> 1 50, 51. Treasury may compound with proprietors of railways for the duties chargeable on passengers con- veyed by them.- 52. MAIL COACHES are under the regulations of the post-master general; and the enactments in this act as to plates, inscriptions, outside passengers, and luggage, do not extend to them; but the other regulations as to the conduct of drivers, guards, &c. do apply to them. Mail coaches have only four outside passengers one on the box, and three immediately behind the box. No passenger allowed to sit beside the guard. The rate of travelling, the time allowed for stoppages, the quantity of lug- gage to be carried, &c. are all regulated by the post-master general. COAL (Da. Steenkull; Du. Steenkoolen; Fr. Charbon de terre; Ger. Steinkohlen, It. Carboni fossili; Lat. Lithanthrax; Port. Carvoes de terra, ou de pedra; Rus. Ugolj, Kamennoe; Sp. Carbones de tierra, Carbones de piedra; Sw. Stenkol). This highly important combustible mineral is divided by mineralogists into the three great families of black coal, uninflammable coal, and brown coal; each of these being again divided into many subordinate species. All the common coals, as slate coal, foliated coal, cannel coal, &c., belong to the black coal family. Slate and foliated coal is found in vast quantities in Durham and Northumber- land, at Whitehaven in Cumberland, in the river district of the Forth and Clyde, &c. The best Newcastle coal kindles easily in burning it cakes or runs together into a solid mass, emitting a great deal of heat, as well as of smoke and flame; it leaves a small quantity of heavy, dark-culoured residuum or ashes. Most of the Scotch coals are what are familiarly called open burning coals. They do not last so long as the Newcastle coal, yield less heat, de not cake or run together in burning, and usually leave a considerable quantity of light, white ashes. They make, however, a very pleasant, cheerful fire and, for most house- hold purposes, the best fire is said to be made of a mixture of Scotch and Newcastle coal. Cannel coal is sometimes met with in the Newcastle pits, in Ayrshire, &c. but the largest beds of it, and of the purest kind, are near Wigan in Lancashire. It burns with a beautiful clear flame, emitting a great deal of light, but not a great deal of heat. It takes a good polish and articles made of it are often passed off for pure jet. The uninflammable coals are those known by the names of Welsh culm or stone coal, Kilkenny coal, and the blind or deaf coal of Scotland. These coals are difficult to kindle, which has given rise to their name but when once thoroughly ignited, they burn for a long time: they make a hot, glowing fire, like charcoal, without either flame or smoke; but owing to their emitting noxious vapours, they cannot be used in dwelling houses, though they are in considerable demand among malsters, dyers, &c. Brown, or Bovey coal, so called from its being principally found at Bovey near Exeter, is light, yields but little heat in burning, and is seldom used as fuel. In all, about seventy species of coal are said to be imported into London, of which forty- five are sent from Newcastle! Of course, many of them differ from each other by almost imperceptible degrees, and can only be distinguished by those thoroughly conversant with the trade. Origin of Coal. Phenomena of Combustion, &c.-Coal beds, or strata, lie among those of gravel, sand, chalk, clay, &c. which form great part of the present surface of the earth, and have been evidently accumulated during remote ages by the agency of " moving water," -similar to accumulations now in process of formation at the mouths of all great rivers, and in the bottoms of lakes and seas. When these strata had, by long contact and pres- sure, been solidified into a rocky crust to the earth, this crust, by subsequent convulsions of nature, of which innumerable other proofs remain, has been in various parts broken and heaved up above the level of the sea, so as to form the greater part of our dry or habitable land in some places appearing as lofty mountains, in others as extended plains. In many situations, the fracture of the crust exhibits the edges of the various distinct strata found in a given thickness of it. When the fracture has the form of a precipitous cliff, these edges appear one above another, like the edges of piled planks or books; but often also they are met with in horizontal succession along a plain, as the edges of a pile of books laid down upon a table or they may be seen surrounding hills of granite which protrude through them. Coal, and other precious minerals. were first discovered by man at the fractures of the strata above described, and by his continued digging of the strata or veins he has gra- dually formed the vast excavations called mines. When it was at last discovered, that all the world over, the mineral strata occur among themselves in nearly the same order or suc- cession, so that the exposure any where of a portion of one stratum is a good indication of the other strata lying near, the operations of the miner became of much surer result, and expensive boring through superior strata might be prudently undertaken, even where no specimen of the desired but more deeply buried substance had yet been seen. Before the discovery of coal mines, or the invention of cheap means of working them, wood was the general fuel of the earth; and in many countries where the arts have not much flourished, it is still the chief fuel. Coal, however, for many purposes, answers much better than wood. Now, coal and wood, although in appearance 80 different, are in their 2 & 2 45 Digitized by Google 354 COAL. ultimate composition very nearly allied. They both have for their basis or chief ingredient the substance called by the chemists carbon, and for their chief other ingredient, the sub- stance called hydrogen, which, when separated, exists in the form of air or gas. The hy- drogen is easily driven away or volatilised from either coal or wood, by heating in a close place and when it is caught and preserved, it forms the gas now used to light our streets and public buildings. What remains of coal, after being 80 treated, is the substance called coke; and what remains of wood, similarly treated, is the substance called charcoal,-both being nearly pure carbon, but differing as to the states of compactness. This kindred nature of coal and wood does not surprise, when the fact is known, that much of our coal is really transformed wood; many coal mines being evidently the remains of antediluvian forests, swept together in the course of the terrestrial changes already alluded to, and afterwards solidified to the state now seen. In these mines, the species of the plants or trees which formed them are still quite evident in abundant specimens mixed often with the remnants of the animals which inhabited the earth at the same time. The extensive peat-mosses now existing on the surface of the earth, consist chiefly of vegetable remains in an early stage of the kind of change which terminates in the formation of coal. A substance which, like coal or wood, cheaply answers the purpose of producting great heat and light, is called fuel, and the phenomenon of that production is called combustion. Now, modern discovery has ascertained that, in every instance, combustion is merely an appearance which accompanies the mutual action, when very intense, of two substances in the act of forming an intimate or chemical union. Where that act is less energetic, the heat produced is less intense, and there is no light. Thus water and sulphuric acid when mixing produce great heat, but no light. Water and quicklime produce still greater heat suf- ficient, it is known, to set fire to a ship in which the mixture unfortunately occurs. It is an occurrence of the same kind when heat is evolved from an acid dissolving a metal and it is still of the same kind when a mass of coal or wood in a fire-grate is, with the appearance of combustion, undergoing solution in the oxygen of the atmosphere. In this last case, however, the temperature of the fuel is, by the very intense action, raised so much that the fuel becomes incandescent or luminous; an appearance assumed by every substance, whether burning or not,-of a stone, for instance, or piece of metal,-when heated beyond the tem- perature indicated by 800° of Fahrenheit's thermometer. The inferior degrees of such incandescence are called red heat, the superior degrees white heat. The reason why any strongly heated body throws out light, we cannot yet explain. When a quantity of wood or coal has been burned to ash in a confined portion of air, the whole of the fuel, vanished from view, is held in solution by the air, as salt is held in water, and is again recoverable by the art of the chemist. The phenomenon of common fire, or combustion, then, is merely the fuel being chemically dissolved in the air of the atmosphere. If the fuel has nothing volatile in it, as is true of pure carbon, and therefore nearly true of coke and charcoal, it burns with the appearance of red-hot stones; but if there be an ingredient, as hydrogen, which, on being heated, readily assumes the form of air, that ingredient dilates before burn- ing, and in the act produces the more bulky incandescence called flame. The two great purposes which combustion serves to man, are to give light and heat. By the former he may be said to lengthen considerably the duration of his natural existence; for he converts the dismal and almost useless night into what, for many ends, serves him as well as day ; and by the latter, besides converting winter into any climate which he desires, he is enabled to effect most important mutations on many of the substances which nature offers for his use and, since the invention of the steam engine, he makes heat perform a great proportion of the work of society. From these considerations may be perceived the importance of having fire at command; and, as the cheapest means of commanding fire, of having abundance of coal. In respect to the natural supply of coal, Britain, among the nations, is most singularly favoured much of the surface of the country conceals under it continuous and thick beds of that valuable mineral,-vastly more precious to us than would have been mines of the precious metals, like those of Peru and Mexico; for coal, since applied to the steam engine, is really hoarded power, applicable to almost every purpose which human labour directed by ingenuity can accomplish. It is the possession of her coal mines which has rendered Britain, in relation to the whole world, what a city is to the rural district which surrounds it,-the producer and dispenser of the rich products of art and industry. Calling her coal mines the coal cellars of the great city, there is in them a supply, which, at the present rate of expenditure, will last for 2,000 years at least; and therefore a provision which, as coming improvements in the arts of life will naturally effect economy of fuel, or substitution of other means to effect similar purposes, may be regarded as inexhaustible. The comparative values of the different kinds of fuel have been ascertained by frnding how much ice a certain quantity of the different kinds, while burning, will melt and thes, 1 lb. of good coal - - melts of ice 90 lbs. 1 lb. of good wood - melts of ice 58 lbs. - coke - - - 94 do. - peat - - 19 do. - charcoal of wood - 95 do. - hydrogengas - 370 do. Digitized by Google COAL. 355 The kinds or differences of coal depend on the comparative proportions in them of carbon and hydrogen, and of earthy impurities totally incombustible. While some species of coal contain nearly a third of their weight of hydrogen, others have not a fiftieth. The former kinds are flaming coal, pleasing in parlour fires, and fit for the manufacture of gas. The other kinds-some of the Welsh stone coal, for instance-will only burn when in large heaps, or when mixed with more inflammable coal ; they have no flame. When flaming coal is burned where a sufficiency of oxygen cannot pass through or enter above the fire, to combine with and consume the hydrogen as fast as it rises, a dense smoke is given out, con- sisting of hydrogen and carbon combined in the proportions which form a pitchy substance. The Welsh coal above mentioned can as little give out smoke as flame, and hence is now much used in great breweries, and in the steam engine furnaces of towns, where smoke is a serious nuisance. According to Mr. Kirwan, Charcoal. Bitumen. Earth. Sp. gr. 100 parts Kilkenny coal yield - - 97.3 0 37 1:596 - comp. cannel - - - 75% 21.68 maltha 3.1 1'232 - Swansea - - - 73.53 23.14 mixt. 3:33 1.357 - Leitrim - - - 71'43 23.37 do. 5-20 1-351 - Wigan - - - - 61.73 36.7 do. 1.57 1.268 - Newcastle - - - 58:00 40.0 do. - 1'271 - Whitehaven - - - 57.0 41.3 17 1.257 - slaty cannel - - - 47.62 32.52 maltha 20.0 1.426 - asphaltum - 31.0 68.0 bitumen. - - - 1.117 - maltha - - - 8.0 - - 2.07 100 parts of the best English coal give, of coke 63.0 by Mr. Jars. 100 do. - - - 73.0 Hielm. 100 do. Newcastle do. - - - 58.0 Dr. Watson. The foliated or cubical coal, and slate coal, are chiefly used as fuel in private houses ; the caking coals, for smithy forges the slate coal, from its keeping open, answers best for giving great heats in a wind furnace, as in distillation on a large scale and glance coal, found in Staffordshire, is used for drying grain and malt. The coals of South Wales contain less volatile matter than either the English or the Scotch and hence, in equal weight, produce a double quantity of cast iron in smelting the ores of this metal. It is supposed that 3 parts of good Newcastle coal are equivalent, as fuel, to 4 parts of good Scotch coal. Consumption of Coal. Number of Persons engaged in the Trade. Supply of Coal.- The great repositories of coal in this kingdom are in Northumberland and Durham, whence London and most parts of the south of England are at present supplied; in Cumberland, whence large quantities of coal are exported to Ireland; and in Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Leicestershire, Warwickshire, South Wales, &c. In Scotland, coal is found in the Lothians, Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, Ayrshire, and other counties. In Ireland, coal is both deficient in quantity and inferior in quality to that of Great Britain and turf forms the great article of fuel. Mr. Taylor, an experienced coal owner and coal agent, estimates the annual consumption of coal in Great Britain, as follows Tons. The annual vend of coals carried coastwise from Durham and Northumberland is - 3,300,000 Home consumption, say one fifth - 660,000 Which quantity supplies about 5,000,000 persons; and supposing the whole population of Great Britain to be 15,000,000, this must be trebled for though these two thirds of population are perhaps less able to afford fuel, yet taking into consideration the manu- facturing districts, and the cheapness of coal in the interior, the estimate will not be too high - - 11,880,000 Consumed by iron works, say 600,000 tons of metal, to produce which requires at least 4 times the quantity of coal in making even pig metal, and the extraordinary consump- tion in the Cornwall, &c. mines - - - - - - - - 3,000,000 Consumed in great Britain - - - - - - - - - 14,880,000 Exported to Ireland, say - - - - - - - - - 700,000 Total tons, exclusive of foreign exportation - - 15,580,000 This estimate does not differ materially from that of Mr. Stevenson (Edinburgh Encye. art. England, P. 740), and Mr. Bakewell-(see post) ; and may be regarded as sufficiently accurate. Mr. Buddle of Wallsend, an extremely well informed coal engineer, gives the following estimate of the number of persons engaged in the different departments of the coal trade on the Tyne and Wear, in the conveyance of coal to London, and in the London coal trade: :- I hold a paper in my hand stating the number of people employed in the coal trade in each department. I would beg to observe, the returns from the Tyne are official documents; from the Wear I have no returns, but it is by an approximate calculation. The number of persons employed under-ground on the Tyne are,-men, 4,937; boys, 3,554; together, 8,491 above-ground,-men, 2,745 ; boys 718; making 3,463 making the total employed Digitized by Google 356 COAL. in the mines above and below ground, 11,954, which in round numbers I call 12,000. be- cause I am pretty sure there were some omissions in the returns. On the river Wear, I conceive there are 9,000 employed making 21,000 employed in digging the coal, and delivering it to the ships on the two rivers. From the best calculations I have been able to make, it would appear that, averaging the coasting vessels that carry coals at the size of 220 London chaldrons each vessel, there would be 1,400 vessels employed, which would require 15,000 seamen and boys. I have made a summary. There are, seamen, 15,000 pitmen and above-ground people employed at the colleries, 21,000 keelmen, coal-boatmen, casters, and trimmers, 2,000 : making the total number employed in what I call the North- ern Coal Trade, 38,000. In London, whippers, lightermen, and 80 forth, 5,000 factors, agents, &c. on the Coal Exchange, 2,500;-7,500 in all, in London. Making the grand total in the North country and London departments of the trade, 45,500. This does not, of course, include the persons employed at the outports in discharging the ships there." In another place, Mr. Buddle states, that colliers are always paid by the piece," and con- sequently their wages, although at the same rate per chaldron, vary according to the quan- tity of work they have to do; and it is difficult to form an average, they vary so very con- siderably they have varied from 14s. a week, to, in some instances, 40s. "The colliers can earn up to 5s. or even more per day; but there is not full employment for them; they sometimes do not earn more than half that sum 2s. 6d. is the certain wages that they are hired to receive from their employers, whether they are employed or not; that is, conse- quently, a tax on the coal owner, during the suspension of his colliery from any accident. The men have the option of finding work elsewhere; but if they cannot do this, they may call upon their master to pay them 14s. per week; it was 15s. a week till 1828." We regret that we are unable to lay any estimates before our readers of the number of persons employed in the other branches of the coal trade; but taking into view the propor- tion which the trade on the Tyne and the Wear bears to the trade of Great Britain, as shown in Mr. Taylor's statement, we are inclined to think that the total number of persons directly engaged in the coal trade may be set down at from 160,000 to 180,000. The importance of coal as a necessary of life, and the degree in which our superiority in arts and manufactures depends upon our obtaining supplies of it at a cheap rate, has natu- rally attracted a good deal of attention to the question as to the period when the exhaustion of the coal mines may be anticipated. But the investigations hitherto made as to the magni- tude and thickness of the different coal-beds, and the extent to which they may be wrought, are too vague and unsatisfactory to afford grounds for forming any thing like a tolerably near approximation to a solution of this question. But such as they are, they are sufficient to show that many centuries must elapse before posterity can feel any serious difficulties from a diminished supply of coal. According to Mr. Taylor, whose estimate of the con- sumption of coal is given above, the coal-fields of Durham and Northumberland are ade- quate to furnish the present annual supply for more than 1,700 years. We subjoin Mr. Taylor's estimate. ESTIMATE OF THE EXTENT AND PRODUCE OF THE DURHAM AND NORTHUMBERLAND COAL-FIELDS. Durham. Sq. Miles. " From South Shields southward to Castle Eden, 21 miles; thence westward to West Auck- land, 32 miles; north-east from West Auckland to Eltringham, 33 miles ; and then to Shields, 22 miles ; being an extent of area of - - - - - - 504 Northumberland. " From Shields northward, 27 miles, by an average breadth of 9 miles - - - 243 - 837 Portion excavated. " In Durham, on Tyne, say - - - - . - - - - 39 - on Wear - - - - - - - - - 40 - 79 "In Northumberland, say 13 miles by 2 - - - - - - - - 26 - 105 732 Tona. " Estimating the workable coal strata at an average thickness of 12 feet, the contents of 1 square mile will be 12,390,000 tons, and of 732 square miles - - - 9,069,480,000 " Deduct one third part for loss by small coal, interceptions by dikes, and other inter- ruptions - - - - - 3,023,160,000 Remainder - 6,046,320,000 64 This remainder is adequate to supply the present vend from Newcastle, Sunderland, Hartley, Blyth, and Stockton, of 3,500,000 tons, for a period of 1,727 years. " It will be understood that this estimate of the quantity of coal in Durham and Northumberland can only be an approximation, especially as the south-eastern coal district of Durham is yet almost wholly unexplored; but the attempt is made, in the hope of satisfying your Lordships that no apprehension need be entertained of this valuable mineral being exhausted for many future gene- rations. Digitized by Google COAL. 357 There is also a considerable extent of coal-field in the northern and south-western districts of Northumberland but the foregoing comprises that which is continuous, and most suitable and avail- able for exportation."-(Lords' Report, 1829, p. 124.) Dr. Buckland, the celebrated geologist, considers this estimate as very greatly exaggerated; but in his examination before the committee of the House of Commons, he quotes and ap- proves a passage of Bakewell's Geology, in which it is stated that the coal-beds in South Wales are alone sufficient to supply the whole present demand of England for coal for 2,000 years. The passage is as follows " Fortunately we have in South Wales, adjoining the Bristol Channel, an almost exhaust- less supply of coal and ironstone, which are yet nearly unwrought. It has been stated, that this coal-field extends over about 1,200 square miles and that there are 23 beds of worka- ble coal, the total average thickness of which is 95 feet; and the quantity contained in each acre is 100,000 tons, or 65,000,000 tons per square mile. If from this we deduct one half for waste, and for the minor extent of the upper beds, we shall have a clear supply of coal equal to 32,000,000 tons per square mile. Now, if we admit that 5,000,000 tons from the Northumberland and Durham mines is equal to nearly one third of the total consumption of coal in England, each square mile of the Welsh coal-field would yield coal for 100 years' consumption; and as there are from 1,000 to 1,200 square miles in this coal-field, it would supply England with fuel for 2,000 years, after all our English coal mines are worked out!" It is therefore quite idle either to prohibit, or impose heavy duties on, the exportation of coal, on the ground of its accelerating the exhaustion of the mines. The abolition of the expensive and destructive process of screening-(see post)-will more than balance any export that is ever likely to take place to foreign countries. Profits of Coal Mining. Coal Owners' Monopoly, &c.-Instead of the business of coal mining being, generally speaking, an advantageous one, it is distinctly the reverse. Some- times, no doubt, large fortunes have been made by individuals and associations engaged in this business; but these are rare instances. The opening of a mine is a very expensive and hazardous operation, and of very uncertain result. Collieries are exposed to an infinite number of accidents, against which no caution can guard. The chances of explosion have, it is true, been a good deal lessened by the introduction of Sir Humphry Davy's lamp and some mines are now wrought, that but for the invention of this admirable instrument, must have been entirely abandoned. But besides explosions, which are still every now and then occurring, from the carelessness of the workmen and other contingencies, mines are very liable to be destroyed by creeps, or by the sinking of the roof, and by drowning, or the irruption of water from old workings, through fissures which cannot be seen, and conse- quently cannot be guarded against. So great, indeed, is the hazard attending this sort of property, that it has never been possible to effect an insurance on a coal-work, against fire, water, or any other accident. Mr. Buddle, who is intimately acquainted with the state of the coal trade, informed the committee of the House of Lords, that "Although many collieries, in the hands of fortunate individuals and companies, have been, perhaps making more than might be deemed a rea- sonable and fair profit, according to their risk, like a prize in a lottery ; yet, as a trade, tak- ing the whole capital employed on both rivers, he should say that certainly it has not been so."-(First Report, p. 56.) Again, being asked, " What have the coal owners on the Tyne and Wear, in your opinion, generally made on their capital employed ?" he replied, "Ac- cording to the best of my knowledge, I should think that by no means ten per cent. has been made at simple interest, without allowing any extra interest for the redemption of capital." (p. 57.) In addition to the vast expense attending the sinking of shafts, the erection of steam en- gines, &c., and the risk of accidents, the coal, after being brought to the surface, has fre- quently to be conveyed 7 or 8 miles to the place of shipping and those whose collieries are in that situation, have to pay way-leave rents, amounting, in some cases, to 500L a year, for liberty to open a communication, or a railroad, through the properties lying between them and the shore. Much has frequently been said of the monopoly of the coal owners on the Tyne and the Wear; but we are satisfied, after a pretty careful investigation of the circumstances, that no such monopoly has ever existed; and that the high price of coal in the metropolis is to be ascribed wholly to the various duties and charges that have been laid upon it, from the time that it has passed from the hands of the owner, to the time that it is lodged in the cellar of the consumer. What means have the coal owners of obtaining a monopoly price for their coal ? They enjoy no exclusive privileges of any sort; they are a numerous body and the trade is as open as any other to all capitalists to engage in. The number of places on the east and west coasts, both of England and Scotland, and the southern parts of Wales, from which coals are exported, render it quite visionary to suppose that any general agreement to keep up prices can take place amongst the various coal proprietors. And though such an agreement were entered into, it is impossible it could be maintained. The power of produc- ing coal greatly exceeds the present demand; many new mines have been recently opened, Digitized by Google 358 COAL. and many others would be brought into activity were the price artificially enhanced. It is true that the coal owners referred to, having experienced the ruinous effects of throwing a superabundant quantity of coal upon restricted and already glutted markets, have occasionally met together ; and each having named the price he thinks his coal will command, and at which he intends to sell it, they have proceeded jointly to regulate, according to the proba- ble demand, the quantity that each shall raise during any particular period. By means of this arrangement, the supply and price of coal have been kept, during the time it has existed, comparatively steady. Common prudence prompts and justifies such an arrange- ment; but it also suggests the necessity of reducing the price of coal to the lowest level that will afford the customary rate of profit. For were the price demanded by the northern coal owners raised above this level, new mines would be opened in Durham and Northumber- land; the imports from the Tees, whence a large supply of excellent coal is at present brought to the London market, would be augmented and fresh competitors, from Swansea and other places, would come into the field and undersell them. Government should en- courage and promote this fair competition but it ought, at the same time, to do equal jus- tice by all the competitors. It is not to lend assistance to, or remove burdens from, one set of adventurers, which it does not lend to or remove from others. It is no part of its duty to say how coals, or any species of produce, shall be carried to market. It is bound to give every reasonable facility for the opening of new channels or modes of conveyance between all parts of the country; but it would be glaringly unjust to lay a tax on the coals conveyed by a particular channel, from which those conveyed by other channels were exempted. Mr. Buddle thinks that the aggregate capital employed by the coal owners on the Tyne amounts to about 1,500,000l. exclusive of the craft in the river and supposing this esti- mate to be nearly correct, it will follow, allowing for the value of the ships, that the total capital employed in the coal trade may be moderately estimated at from eight to ten mil- lions an immense sum to be almost wholly at the risk of the owners, without any insur- ance upon it. Progressive Consumption of Coal. Duties and Regulations affecting it, particularly in the Port of London.-There are no mines of coal in either Greece or Italy and no evi- dence has been produced to show that the ancients had learned to avail themselves of this most useful mineral. Even in England it does not seem to have been used previously to the beginning of the thirteenth century for the first mention of it occurs in a charter of Henry III., granting licence to the burgesses of Newcastle to dig for coal. In 1281, New- castle is said to have had a considerable trade in this article. About the end of this century, or the beginning of the fourteenth, coals began to be imported into London, being at first used only by smiths, brewers, dyers, soap-boilers, &c. This innovation was, however loudly complained of. A notion got abroad, that the smoke was highly injurious to the public health ; and, in 1316, parliament petitioned the king, Edward I., to prohibit the burning of coal, on the ground of its being an intolerable nuisance. His Majesty issued a proclamation conformably to the prayer of the petition ; but it being but little attended to, recourse was had to more vigorous measures; a commission of oyer and terminer being issued out, with in- structions to inquire as to all who burned sea-coal within the city, or parts adjoining, to pu- nish them for the first offence, by " pecuniary mulcts;" and upon a second offence to de- molish their furnaces; and to provide for the strict observance of the proclamation in all time to come. But notwithstanding the efforts that were thus made to prohibit the use of coal, and the prejudice that was long entertained against it it continued progressively to gain ground. This was partly, no doubt, owing to experience having shown that coal smoke had not the noxious influence ascribed to it, but far more to the superior excellence of coal as an article of fuel, and the growing scarcity and consequent high price of timber. In the reign of Charles I. the use of coal became universal in London, where it has ever since been used to the exclusion of all other articles of fuel. At the Restoration, the quantity imported was sup- posed to amount to about 200,000 chaldrons. In 1670, the imports had increased to 270,000 chaldrons. At the Revolution, they amounted to about 300,000 chaldrons, and have since gone on increasing with the growing magnitude and population of the city being, in 1750, about 500,000 chaldrons; in 1800, about 900,000 chaldrons; and at present about 1,700,000 chaldrons.—( Campbell's Political Survey of Great Britain, vol. ii. p. 30.; Edington on the Coal Trade, p. 41. &c.) It might have been supposed, considering that coal is, in this country, a prime necessary of life, and by far the most important of all the instruments of manufacturing industry, that it would have been exempted from every species of tax ; and that every possible facility would have been given for its conveyance from the mines to the districts in the south of England, and other places in want of it. But such, we regret to say, has not been the case. The coal trade of Great Britain has been for more than a century and a half subjected to the most oppressive regulations. From a very early period, the corporation had under- taken the task of weighing and measuring the coal brought to London; and had been accustomed to charge 8d. a ton for their trouble. In 1613, the power to make this charge Digitized by Google COAL. 359 was confirmed to the city by royal charter, it being at the same time ordered that no coal should be unladen from any vessel till the Lord Mayor had given leave. The right to charge this sum according to the chaldron of coal, has since been confirmed to the city by act of parliament; and as the labouring meters, notwithstanding they have been very well paid, have received only 5d. out of the 8d., the balance of 3d. per chaldron, producing at present about 20,000L a year, goes to the city treasury. But besides the above, duties for civic purposes have been laid on the coal imported into London from the reign of Charles II. downwards. They were originally imposed in 1667, after the great fire, in order to assist in the rebuilding of churches and other public edifices and have ever since been continued, to enable the corporation to execute improvements in the city; though it is probable most of our readers will be inclined to think that few im- provements could be so great, as a reduction in the price of so very important an article as coal. At present, a duty of 10d. per chaldron, denominated the orphans' duty, is appropriated, until 1858, to defray the expense of the approaches to London Bridge. Exclusive of the corporation duties, a duty payable to government was laid on all sea- borne coal in the reign of William III., which was only repealed in 1830. This duty was at ence glaringly unjust and oppressive unjust, inasmuch as it fell only on those parts of the empire to which coals had to be carried by sea; and oppressive, inasmuch as it amounted to full fifty per cent. upon the price paid to the coal owner for the coal. It is not very easy to calculate the mischief that this tax has done to the southern counties. We, however, are satisfied that the depressed condition of the peasantry of the south, as compared with those of the north, is, in no inconsiderable degree, to be ascribed to the operation of the coal tax. This tax, after being long stationary at 5s. a chaldron, was raised to 9s. 4d. during the late war but was reduced to 6s. in 1824. But the inequality of the tax was not confined to its affecting those parts only of the empire to which coal had to be carried by sea. Even there its pressure was not equal for, while it amounted to 6s. a chaldron, or 4s. a ton, in the metropolis and all the south of England, it only amounted to 1s. 74d. a ton on coal carried by sea to Ireland, and to 1s. 8d. on that carried to Wales; while Scotland was for many years entirely exempted from the duty. Besides this striking partiality and injustice, various troublesome Custom-house regula- tiens were required, in consequence of distinctions being made between the duties on large and small coal, between those on coal and culm (a species of coal), and coal and cinders, and of coal being allowed to be imported duty free into Cornwall, Devon, &c. for the use of the mines. These distinctions are now, however, wholly abolished and no duties exist on coal except those collected in London and a few other ports, and appropriated to local purposes. A small supply of coal was of late years brought to London from Staffordshire, by canal navigation. This coal was charged with a duty of 1s. a chaldron; but this is now also repealed. The regulations to which the sale and delivery of coals have been subjected in the city of London, have been, if possible, still more objectionable than the duties imposed on them. Instead of being sold by weight, all coals imported into the Thames have been sold by measure. It is curious to observe the sort of abuses to which this practice has given rise. It is stated by the celebrated mathematician, Dr. Hutton, who, being a native of Newcastle, was well acquainted with the coal trade, that, "If one coal, measuring exactly a cubic yard (nearly equal to 5 bolls), be broken into pieces of a moderate size, it will measure 71 bolls; if broken very small, it will measure 9 bolls; which shows that the proportion of the weight to the measure depends upon the size of the coals; therefore, accounting by weight is the most rational method." The shippers were well aware of this, and insisted upon the coal owners supplying them with large coal only and to such an extent was this principle car- ried, that all coal for the London market was screened, as it is technically termed, or passed over gratings, to separate the smaller pieces. Inasmuch, however, as coals were sold in all their subsequent stages by measure, no sooner had they been delivered by the owner, than it was for the interest of every one else into whose hands they came before reaching the consumer, to break them into smaller portions. In fact, the profit of many of the re- tailers in London has arisen chiefly from the increase of measure by the breakage of coal. And Mr. Brandling, a very intelligent and extensive coal owner, stated to the Commons' committee, that, in consequence of the breakage, coals are reduced in London to a size in- ferior to what they would be, were they put on board unscreened, and subjected to no addi- tional breakage. The statements now made sufficiently evince the nullity of all the regulations enforcing the sale of coal by correct measures for even though these regulations had been enforced, instead of being, as they usually were, wholly neglected, they would have been of almost no use; inasmuch as any dishonest dealer was as able to cheat, by breaking his coals a little smaller than usual, as if he had sold them in deficient measures. The loss occasioned by the useless process of screening has been very great. The quantity of coal seperated by it has amounted in some cases to from 20 to 25 per cent. of the whole Digitized by Google 360 COAL. and the greater part of this residue, containing a portion of the very best coal, is burned on the spot. " I have known," says Mr. Buddle, " at one colliery, as many as from 90 to 100 chaldrons a day destroyed. If they were not consumed, they would cover the whole surface, and in the burnings of them they are extremely destructive; they destroy the crops a great way round, and we pay large sums for injury done to the crops, and for damage to the ground."- (First Lords' Rep. p. 72.) The waste of coal has been in this way enormous and the coal owner has been obliged to charge a higher price upon the coal sold, in order to indemnify himself for the loss of so great a quantity, and for the mischief he does to others in burning. The fact, that so monstrous a system should have been persevered in for more than a century, sets the power of habit in reconciling us to the most pernicious absurdities in a very striking point of view. Happily, however, the nuisance has been at last abated; the sale of coal by weight taking away both the temptation to break coal, and the necessity of screening. But the abuses that have infected the coal trade were not confined to those that grew out of the duties, and the sale by measure. They have insinuated themselves into most de- partments of the business; and to such an extent have they been carried, that it takes, at this moment, a larger sum to convey a chaldron of coal from the pool, a little below London Bridge, to the consumers in the city, than is sufficient to defray the entire cost of the coal in the north, including the expense of digging them from the mine, their conveyance to the shore, landlord's rent, &c.! The following statement shows the various items that made up the price of coal to the London consumer, in October, 1830, distributed under their proper heads. They have been carefully abstracted from the evidence before the parliamentary committees. CHARGES UP TO THE TIME OF ARRIVAL IN THE PORT OF LONDON. £ s. d. £ s. d. Coal Owner. Paid coal owner for coals - - - - - - - 0 14 0 Deduct river duty paid by him for improvement of Sunderland harbour 003 0 13 9 Coal Fitter. Keel dues, and fittage (including 7 miles' water-carriage) - - 023 Skip Owner. For freight, including insurance of ship and cargo, pilotage, seamen's wages, wear and tear of the ship and materials, discharging ballast, &c. - 0 8 6f Municipal Dues. £ 8. d. River duty, as above - - - - - - 0 0 3 Pier duty, lights, &c. paid by ship - - - - 0051 0081 .. 0 11 51 CHARGES IN THE PORT OF LONDON. Government Tax - - - - - - - - - 060 Municipal Dues. Trinity and Nore lights, tonnage duty, Trinity House for bal- last, &c. - - - - - 0 0 5 Entries, &c. - - - - - - - 0 0 21 Corporation of London metage - - - - - 0 0 4 Ditto orphans' dues - - - - - - 0 0 10 Ditto meter's pay and allowance - - - - 004 Ditto market dues - - - - - - 001 Ditto Lord Mayor's groundage, &c. - - - - 0 0 of Ditto land metage - - - - - - 006 Ditto undertaker - - - - - - - 001 Coal-whippers - - - - - - - 017 044 Coal Factor. Factorage and del credere commission - - - - - - 0 0 4f Coal Merchant. Buyer's commission - - - - - - 0 1 0 Lighterage - - - - - - - 0 2 0 Cartage - - - - - - - - 0 6 0 Credit - - - - - - - - 020 Shootage - - - - - - - - 013 Add for even money - - - - , - 003 (See Com. Rep. p. 8.) 0 12 6 Add for discount, scorage, and ingrain* (see same Rep. p. 9.) 0221 0 14 8f 1 5 5f Making the price paid by the consumer - - - - - - 2 10 74 Which is thus apportioned Coal owner for coal - - - - - - - 0 13 9 Ship owner, &c. for voyage to London - - - - - 0 11 54 Government duty, corporation charges, and London coal merchant - 1 5 5 210 71 * Scorage and ingrain were allowances that grew out of the system of selling by measure. As this system is now repealed, it is unnecessary to describe them. Digitized by Google COAL. 361 or these charges but little reduction need be looked for in those incurred in the rivers Tyne and Wear, and in the rate of freight: and as the government duty of 6s. per chaldron has been abolished, the charges that admit of further reduction are the municipal dues, and those attending the delivery of coal to the consumers and in these, certainly, there is ample room for retrenchment. Of the items which make up the sum of 4s. tod. of charges in the port of London, a sum of 1s. 2d. (IOd. as orphan duty, appropriated to the new bridge, and Ad. as corporation metage) is a species of public tax. So soon. however, as the term for which the orphan duty is appropriated has expired, it ought to be abolished and it would be highly desirable were some means then also found of indemni- fying the corporation for the 4d. of metage claimed by them; inasmuch as the abolition of these duties would not only occasion a direct saving in the price of coal, but would afford great facilities for its delivery.-(See post, for an account of the local duties in 1832.) The most important item, in those forming the charges in the port of London, is the fee of the coal- whipper, or coal-heaver-that is, the deliverer of the coals from the ship to the barge or lighter. This fee is about 1s. 7d., and is at least 5 times as great as it ought to be. At Newcastle and Sunderland the filling of a chaldron of coal into the wagon costs from 14d. to 11d. ; and admitting that to raise coal from the hold is a little more difficult, still, if 4d. were allowed, it would be a most liberal payment. But the truth is, that this item should be struck off altogether. It is occasioned by a regulation pe- culiar to the Thames, which prevents the crews of colliers from performing this indispensable part of their peculiar duty. In the outports, to which luckily this preposterous regulation does not extend, the crews act as coal-heavers, and they do so without efther asking or obtaining additional wages. And there certainly is no reason whatever for supposing that the case would be materially different in the port of London, were it not for the regulation referred to. In 1829, the total amount of money paid to the coal-heavers was 107,5667. 13s.; of which at least 90,000Z. may be saved to the citizens, by simply allowing the crew to perform the function of coal-heavers. The evidence given by the ship owners and captains before the parliamentary committees esta- blishes, in the fullest manner, all that has been stated. To discharge a ship when loaded with timber is admitted to be rather more difficult than when she is loaded with coal. Luckily, however, the masters of all ships other than colliers may employ, in their discharge, either the crew, or such other tabourers as they think fit, without any sort of interference. And it is proved, that while the cost of discharging a ship of 300 tons, laden with coal, amounts to about 361., a ship of the same burden, laden with timber, may be discharged for 91. or (Com. Rep. p. 321.) This, certainly, is a subject deserving of the immediate attention of parliament. Besides the charge of 8d. on account of ship metage, there has been a further charge of 6d. per chaldron on account of land metage. But the new regulations enforcing sale by weight will lead to the abolition of the land as well as the ship meters. Their inefficiency for all useful purposes was conclusively shown by the witnesses examined by the parliamentary committees. In fact, the system of metage has rather been a means of concealing than of discovering fraud. The duties appropriated to public purposes, those claimed by the city of London as private property, and those required to defray the cost of the coal exchange, and the weighing establishments, &c., are, in future, to be charged in the aggregate at 50 much a ton on the coal imported, and paid into the City Chamberlain's office: accounts of the distribution of the produce of the duty being annually prepared and laid before parliament. But the charges on account of the delivery of coal from the ship to the consumer are the most oppressive. They amount in all to no less than 14s. 8jd. ! One item is lighterage, being a sum of 2s. a chaldron paid for conveying the coals from the ship to the wharf. This charge seems to be in no ordinary degree exorbitant. It is mentioned by Mr. Buddle, in his evidence (First Lords' Rep. p. 121.), that the Tyne keelmen, who take the coals from the spouts or staiths, as they are termed, to deliver them to the ships, are paid only Is. 6d. a chaldron, though they have to navigate their keels from 7 to 8 miles, and though it is far more difficult to shovel the coals from the keels into the port-holes of the ships, than from a Jighter to a wharf. Were the charge for lighterage reduced to the same level in the Thames as in the Tyne, it would not certainly exceed 8d. or 9d. a chaldron. But before this desirable result can be accomplished, this department of the trade must, like all the rest, be thrown open. Here again the trammels of monopoly interfere. At present no individual can act as a lighter- man, who is not free of the Waterman's Company, and who has not served 7 years as an apprentice upon the siver. Competition is thus wholly excluded, and the charges rendered far higher than they would be under a different system. The next item in the charge for delivery is 6s. a chaldron for cartage from the wharf to the con- sumer's residence. The best way, perhaps, to judge of the reasonableness of this charge, is by com- paring it with the sums charged for similar work done elsewhere. Now, assuming the average weight of the chaldron to be 27 cwt., and the average distance to which coals are carted If mile, the charge will be 3s. 5td. per ton per mile; but in the north, in Durham, Lancashire, &c., it is usual to let the eartage of coais, including the loading, by contract, at from 7d. to 8d. a ton on turnpike roads, and 9d. and 10d. on heavy country roads. So that the expense of cartage in London is four or five times as much as it costs in the north. It seems difficult to account for this difference by the greater expense attending keep of men, horses, &c. in the metropolis, though that certainly is very heavy. Perhaps a part of it is owing to the system of licensing carts, and regulating the fees of cartage. At all events the subject is one that ought to be investigated. Exclusive of the charge of 6a. for cartage, there is a further charge of 1a. 6d. for shooting, that is, for unloading the wagon into the cellar. Next to the item for whippers, this is the most outrageous overcharge in this lengthened catalogue of abuses. There are thousands of labourers in London who would be glad to be allowed to perform the same work for 3d. or 4d., for which the citizens are obliged to pay Is. 6d. Indeed, we believe it might be done for a good deal less. Mr. Buddle says, At the rate we pay our wagon-men for filling the wagons, I believe they would be very glad, for 2d., to heave these same coals out of the cellar again up the hole,"-(First Lords' Rep. p. 121.) ; an operation which, every one knows, would be about 10 times as troublesome as pouring them down. Such of our readers as may have gone through these statements will, we think, feel but little dis- posed to differ from the committee of the House of Lords, who observe, in the Second Report. 'that in every stage, from the port of shipment to the enal merchant's wharf, and thence to the consumer's cellar, the regulations under which the trade is conducted are productive of delay, of an aggravation of expense, and an encouragement to p. 8.) The sale of coal by weight, and the abolition of the metage system, have undoubtedly eradicated some of the more flagrant abuses that infected the trade. But the statements now laid before the reader show that there are other departments that require to be thoroughly examined. The exorbitancy of the existing charges for the delivery of coal from the ships to the wharf, and for carting, shooting, &c. demand that nothing should be left untried that may have any chance of contributing to their effectual reduction. Regulations as to Safe in Lendon.-A seller's ticket is to accompany all coal sold within the city of London and its environs, specifying the species of coal, and the number of sucks and weight of coal sent. The coals may be either in bags containing 1 or 2 cwt., or in bulk. The carman is in all cases bound to carry a weighing machine with the coal, which machine is to be made conformably to regu- VoL. L-2 H 46 Digitized by Google 362 COAL. lation, and, upon being desired, he is to weigh any one suck, or the whole sacks in his wagon. Penalty on refusing to weigh, or otherwise obstructing the weighing, 20% Penalty on non-delivery of ticket to purchaser, 201. In the event of the weight being deficient, a penalty is imposed of 10l. or 50%, according to deficiency. Quantities of less than 560 lbs. may be sold without being weighed.- (1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76.) In order to save trouble in collecting the duties that still attach to coal in the port of London, the corporation is authorised to compound with the owner or master of any ship or vessel importing coal, for the tonnage upon which the duties are to be paid. A certificate of such composition, expressing the number of tons of coal, cinders, or culm, agreed to be taken as the cargo of the ship or vessel com- pounded for, is to be given to the master or owner of the same, and to be taken as evidence of the quantity on board. When no composition is entered into, the coal is to be weighed in the presence of an officer of the customs at the port of shipment and the duties are to be paid upon the weight so shipped. The shipment of coal in the Tyne is at present regulated by the act 5 Geo. 4. c. 72., commonly called the Turn Act. The object of this act is to make all ships engaged in the trade of the Tyne be loaded in the order in which they arrive. It prevents any preference being given to particular ships; and renders it nearly impossible for any coal owner to give constant employment to any vessel in the trade which he may wish to employ. In some respects this act is probably advantageous, but, on the whole, its policy seems very questionable. Why should a coal owner be prevented from employing certain ships in preference to others 1 Under this act, if more ships engage in the trade than can be profitably employed in it, the loss produced by detention in port, and waiting for a cargo, instead of falling, as it naturally would, were the trade free, on particular ships, and driving them from the business, falls equally on every ship employed, and depresses the whole trade. There is no regula- tion of this sort in the Wear. Exportation of Coal.-For a considerable number of years past a duty of 17s. 6d. a chaldron was laid on all large, and of 4s. 6d. a chaldron on all small coal exported. The first of these duties is quite ex- cessive and is not to be vindicated, unless the policy of preventing the exportation of coal were ad- mitted. Inasmuch, however, as small coal is the only species used in manufactories, no ground could be assigned for prohibiting the exportation of round coal, except the risk of exhausting the mines. But the statements previously made show the futility of this apprehension. There cannet, therefore, be any reasonable doubt as to the policy of the reduction that has recently been made in the duty on large coal exported. We believe, indeed, that it might have been carried a good deal further, with advantage to the revenue and to all parties.-(For the existing duties on cost exported, see TARIFF.) Price of Coal.-The following is an account of the contract price of coal supplied to Greenwich Hospital in the undermentioned years :- Years. Per Chaldron. Years. Per Chaldron. Years. Per Chaldron. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 1730 1 4 .6 1785 1 14 21 1824 2 3 8 1735 1 5 0 1790 1 14 44 1826 1 $ 2 1740 1 9 a 1795 1 19 9 1826 2 o 4 1745 1 10 0 1800 2 11 7 1827 2 1 51 1750 1 7 71 1805 2 11 84 1828 2 0 84 1755 1 8 71 1810 3 0 8 1829 1 16 7 1760 I 12 8 1815 2 15 64 1830 1 12 11 1765 1 12 41 1820 2 5 9 1831 1 7 e 1770 1 9 If 1821 2 6 6 1832 1 & 3 1775 1 10 11t 1822 2 4 64 1780 1 17 34 1823 2 6 7 (See art# PRICES.) This table sets the beneficial influence of the abolition of the duty on coals, and of the other altera- tions that have been made in the management of the trade, in a very striking point of view. Imports of Coal into London, and public Duties thereon.-The following table shows the quantity of coal and culm (small coal) imported into London during each of the 7 years ending with 1832, the public duties charged on the same, and the produce of the duties.-(Part. Paper, No. 197. Sess. 1833.) Coals, Chaders, and Culm, imported into the Port of London. Total Quantity imported, Years. Stated in Tons, allowing Rates of Public Duties charged on Importation Produce of the Stated in 25 1-2 cwt. to the Chaldron, Dutise. - Chaldrons. 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76. a. 44. £ 1826 1,600,229 2,040,291 Coals and cinders: 467,852 1827 1,476,331 1,882,321 Charged by measure, 6s. per chaldron. 416,804 1828 1,537,694 1,960,559 Charged by weight, 4s. per ton. 443,217 1829 1,583,511 2,018,975 Culm, 6d. per chaldron. 464,659 1830 1,630,804 2,079,275 Duties repealed from 1st of March, 1831, 407,716 1831 1,604,151 2,045,292 per act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 16. 40,708 1832 1,677,708 2,139,078 Account of the various Local or Municipal Duties charged on Coals imported into the Port of London since 1825 specifying such Duties in detail, the Rate of each, and the Amount of Duty annually produced by each.-(Parl. Paper, No. 296. Sess. 1833.) Years. Description of Duties. Rate of each Duty. Annual Produce of each Duty. 1826 Duty on coals delivered in the year ending 5th of January, £ a. d. 1827, pursuant to the act of the 5th & 6th of Will. & Mary, c. 10., for the relief of the orphans and other creditors of the city of London, and continued by various acts of par- liament for effecting public works 6d. per chald.' Additional metage duty, pursuant to the said act of 5 & 6 W. & M. and applicable to the purposes of the said or- } 65,548 $ 5 phans' fund - 4d. per chald. Digitized by Google COAL. 363 Table of Duties on Coal.-continued. Years. Rate of each Duty. Annual Produce of Description of Duties. each Duty. 1827 Additional metage duty, pursuant to the said act of 5 & 6 W. & M. and applicable to the purposes of the said orphans' fund - - - - - - 4d. per chald. 59,292 9 9 1828 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 63,211 14 6 1829 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 65,029 14 10 1830 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 66,689 10 11 1831 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 65,364 15 6 1832 Commutation pursuant to the act of 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76. for the said duties of 6d. and 4d. per chaldron, continued by the act of 10 Geo. 4. c. 136. for making the approaches to London Bridge - - - - - 8d. per ton 71,020 5 4 1826 Duty charged by 43 Geo. 3. c. 134. for establishing a market in the city of London for the sale of coals - - 1d. per chald. 6,649 8 101 1827 Ditto - - - - - - ditto 6,091 18 21 1828 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 6,472 15 11 1829 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 6,639 18 51 1830 Ditto - - - - - - ditto 6,785 9 11 1831 Ditto including 2677. 8s. 61d. for duty on coals import- ed in 1831, but delivered in 1832 - ditto 6,865 2 of 1832 Continued by the act of the 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76. for the sup- port of the said market, and for paying the compensations of the land coal-meters of London, Westminster, and Middlesex, for the abolition of their offices - - 1d. per ton 8,877 10 8 1826 Duty payable to the corporation of the city of London, for metage - - - - - 4d. per chald. 26,624 1 4 1827 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 24,367 12 11 1828 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 25,893 13 11 1829 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 26,559 13 10 1830 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 27,141 19 5 1831 Ditto - - - - - - ditto 26,390 14 0 1832 Commutation for the said duty of 4d. per chaldron, water- bailliage and groundage of coals, and fees to Lord Mayor on permit, &c. pursuant to the act of the 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76., chargeable with the compensations to the clerks, officers, and deputy sea-coal meters, for the abolition of their places by the said act - - - - 4d. per ton 35,510 2 8 4d. per New- 1826 Duty of water-bailliage on coals and groundage of colliers, castle ,or dou- payable to the corporation of London by non-freemen ble chald. and 999 4 71 only 6d. per ship groundage 1827 Ditto - - - - - - ditto 903 11 31 1828 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 942 11 9 1829 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 990 2 5 1830 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 1,010 6 31 1831 Ditto - - - - - ditto 991 15 04 1832 Commuted by said act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76., as before stated Nil. 1826 Fees payable to the Lord Mayor of London for permit and registering certificates of the quantity and quality of coals, pursuant to the act 9 Anne, c. 28. - - - 1s. 6d. per ship 517 11 6 1827 Ditto - - - - ditto 467 16 0 1828 Ditto - - - - - - - ditte 495 19 0 1829 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 515 13 6 1830 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 524 19 0 1831 Ditto - - - - - - - ditto 481 14 6 1832 Commuted under the said act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76., as before Nil. mentioned. - - - - - - Note.-The act of the 47 Geo. 3. c. 68. (repealed by the act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 76.), imposed a duty of 6d. per chaldron on all coals sold by wharf measure, and 1s. per 5 chaldrons, sold by pool measure ; but the corporation of London have no means of ascertaining the amount of those duties paid in the districts of Westminster, Middlesex, and Surrey.-GuildhaM, 15th of May, 1833. It appears from this account, that the various local and municipal duties charged on coal in the port of London in 1832, amounted to 115,407L. 18s. 8d., being at the rate of about 1s. 4d. per chaldron on the coal imported that year. Were these duties wholly abolished, or commuted for some other tax, and all regulations as to the unloading of ships in the river, with the exception of those necessary to pre- serve order, swept off, we have no doubt that the price of coal would be materially reduced. (We are glad to have to state, that the duty on coal exported in English ships is repealed and that the duty on all descriptions of coal exported in foreign ships is reduced to 4s. a ton. The increased exportation of coal this measure has occasioned cannot fail of being highly advantageous. Ships, that might otherwise have had to go out in ballast, have now an op- portunity of taking with them what may prove a profitable cargo, at the same time that the cost of conveying the mineral abroad operates as a premium in favour of our own manufac- tures. The fact, too, that there is, in South Wales alone, a supply of coal sufficient to meet the present demand of the empire for more than 2,000 years, shows the futility of imagining that the measure can be injurious, by its hastening the exhaustion of the mines.-Sup.) Digitized by Google An Account of the Quantity of Coals, Culin, and Cinders exported from the different Ports of England, Scotland, and Wales, for the Ten years ending with 1828; distinguishing those sent Coastways, to Ireland, to British Colonies, and to all Foreign Countries; and distinguishing the Quantities sent to each.-(Parl. Paper. No. 37. Sess. 1829.) 364 To other Ports of Great Britain (Coastwise). To Ireland. To British Colonies. To Foreign Countries. Coals (except Small Small Coals (except Small Small Coals (except Coals. Culm. Culm. Coals) and Cinders. Small Coals) and Small Coals (except Years. Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Total Quantity sent Coast- wise, stated in Tons Weight. Coals) and Cinders. Coals. Total Quantity Tons. Imperial Imperial exported to Ire- land, stated in Tons Weight. Coals. Culm. Cinders. Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Total Quantity exported to Imperial Imperial British Colonies, Small Tons Weight. Small Coals) and Culm. stated in Cinders. Coals. Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Total Quantity exported to stated in Tons. Imperial Imperial Imperial Tons Weight. Tons. Imperial Imperial Tens. Newcastle Measure. Newcasile Newcastle Measure. Measure. Measure. Measure. Measure. Measure Measure. Measure. Measure. Measure. Measure. 1819 438,045 2,105,745 18 70,934 3,459,508 156,581 354,439 21 15,168 669,660 9,895 42,813 1,333 233 71,497 9,475 22,732 35,712 9 164,375 1820 437,074 2,423,263 71 105,911 3,947,908 119,609 399,743 - 10,946 606,400 9,191 56,500 1,784 254 90,447 7,081 20,536 36,509 159 158,672 1821 463,974 2,256,757 105 97,396 3,731,908 140,851 352,600 - 10,441 644,787 10,521 55,431 2,016 115 90,423 8,236 23,671 37,509 218 170,941 1822 491,094 2,301,770 427 88,953 3,810,239 156,236 376,943 10,486 694,024 9,741 54,821 18,719 - 111,822 9,692 22,425 38,892 216 172,754 1823 534,835 2,672,456 62 92,425 4,372,839 166,131 373,333 112 6,415 693,413 13,606 51,281 3,448 99 89,713 5,446 16,579 42,599 526 163,662 1824 547,939 2,587,880 232 121,091 4,308,571 162,878 367,815 1,607 11,352 691,429 12,211 60,254 2,684 - 99,575 10,952 18,783 44,349 515 179,617 1825 539,760 2,623,354 25,036 121,357 4,384,433 159,723 368,815 2,368 15,036 695,832 10,527 69,618 5,022 63 114,264 27,827 15,501 47,671 755 197,234 1826 557,355 2,788,125 78,758 139,360 4,730,307 236,052 367,849 119 23,599 779,584 42,490 55,231 2,796 288 123,437 45,518 9,222 57,565 270 223,219 1827 595,278 2,539,871 103,115 127,026 4,440,318 198,857 306,289 30 19,214 650,728 43,963 53,645 3,095 278 123,109 54,090 11,403 59,867 478 244,222 1828 645,471 2,586,266 75,097 121,201 4,507,935 242,944 336,550 486 21,100 740,071 50,563 53,277 2,458 118 128,092 38,507 11,056 60,315 26 227,709 COAL. Aggregate Quantities shipped to all Parts. Customs Revenue on Coals, Cinders, and Culm. Coals (except Small Coals, and Cinders. Small Coals. Culm. Gross Revenue. Total Quantity Nett Produce of the Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons Chaldrons shipped to On Coals, Cinders, and Years. Tons. Newcastle Imperial Newcastle Imperial Newcastle Imperial all Parts, stated Culm, brought or carried Total Gross Revenue, Duties on Coals, Cinders, On Coals, Cinders Measure. Measure. Measure. in Tons Weight. Years. and Culm in the United Measure. Measure. Measure. Coastwise, or by Inland and Culm exported to Digitized by Navigation, in the United Foreign Parts. Kingdom. Kingdom. 1819 613,996 22.732 2,502,997 35,712 1,372 9 86,335 4,365,040 £ s. d. 1820 2,819,506 36,509 £ 572,955 20,536 1,855 159 S. d. £ 8. d. 117,111 £ 4,803,427 8. d. 1819 623,582 23,671 957,899 9 37,509 101 1821 2,121 48,861 7 2,664,788 218 11t 1,006,760 17 01 107,952 4,638,059 986,869 4 71 1820 1822 666,763 22,425 2,723,534 38,892 19,146 1,086,564 17 31 216 48,359 3 9 99,439 1,134,924 1 01 4,788,839 1,115,995 7 91 Google 1821 1823 720,018 16,579 3,097,070 42,599 3,622 526 1,019,865 10 51 50,911 13 11 98,939 1,070,777 3 6% 5,319,627 1,050,032 14 41 1822 1824 733,980 18,783 3,015,949 44,349 4,523 515 1,006,506 2 34 52,771 4 61 1,059,277 6 10 132,443 1,037,852 6 2 5,279,192 1825 737,837 15,501 3,061,817 47,671 32,426 1823 1,145,659 1 755 31 44,020 5 64 1,189,679 6 91 136,456 1,167,767 17 11 5,391,763 1826 881,415 1824 9,222 3,211,205 57,565 81,673 270 948,810 16 10 42,821 16 10$ 991,632 13 83 968,291 16 5f 163,247 5,856,547 1825 1827 892,188 11,403 2,899,805 59,867 106,240 899,918 14 91 43,421 1 10 943,339 16 78 917,230 4 101- 478 146,518 5,458,377 1826 1828 977,485 11,056 2,976,093 60,315 26 972,839 19 01 40,553 17 8 78,041 1,013,393 17 51 987,083 17 71 142,419 5,603,807 1827 862,526 8 61 45,182 9 3 907,718 17 91 883,369 9 44 1828 922,682 1 41 41,423 6 2 964,105 7 61 936,088 4 10 COAL. 365 [The great coal field of the United States is situated west of the Alleghany ridge of moun- tains, which constitutes its eastern boundary from the county of Bradford, in Pennsylvania, through that State, Maryland, and Virginia. This boundary line then bends towards the west, through Tennessee, and into the State of Alabama; coal being found as far south as the neighbourhood of Tuscaloose. Its western boundary passes from Pennsylvania into Ohio near the town of Sharon, and enters Kentucky near the mouth of the Little Sandy river; whence it proceeds into Tennessee, in the direction of the town of Irvine, and of the point where the Cumberland river intersects the boundary line between the two last men- tiened States. The coal in this field is of a bituminous character. Abundance of bituminous coal has been recently found in the States of Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri, which no doubt belongs to one extensive coal field. It has been noticed par- ticularly in the vicinity of St. Louis, a very important position. On the Raystown branch of the Juniata there is a small bituminous ceal field, which is likely to become important in a commercial point of view; and the same description of coal has been lately found in Dauphin county, near Harrisburg, being at the western termi- nation of the Pottsville or Schuylkill field of anthracite coal. But the most important of the smaller bituminous coal fields is that lying in the coun- ties of Henrico, Goochland, Chesterfield, Prince Edward, and Cumberland, in the State of Virginia. A considerable amount of capital has been here invested within a few years, in mining and conveying the coal to market. Previous to 1820, it is said that the whole ex- port of it from Virginia to the northern ports of the Union did not exceed 500,000 bushels. In the year 1835, the amount exported from Richmond to different ports of the United States had attained to about 3,500,000 bushels, with a supply to the home market of nearly a million of bushels." The bituminous coals are more particularly designed for manufacturing purposes. The veins are generally found in positions nearly horizontal, and in parallel strata. The close- burning species is the kind which melts, and forms a crust, or what smiths call a hollow fire, and emits a bituminous smell. The open-burning kind produces an extensive flame, which passes freely through the coals, and emits little or no bituminous smell when burnt in a grate." Even in the State of Pennsylvania, where the anthracite coal is to be found most abun- dantly, the anthracite coal districts are of very limited extent, in comparison to that of the bituminous districts. These were estimated by Mr. Packer, in his report to the Senate of the State, in 1834, on the subject of the coal trade, to consist respectively of 624,000 and 13,440,000 acres. From the peculiar situation, however, of the anthracite coal districts 80 near the Atlantic coast, and the rapidly increasing rate with which their product has been brought into market, as well as the extraordinary enterprise of the parties who have invested their capitals in them, they have become an object of especial interest to the community for which reason we shall now throw together some of the most important facts we have been able to collect concerning them and the trade to which they have given origin. The anthracite coal fields under consideration are three in number, averaging about 65 mile in length and 5 miles in width. The first, or southern, or Schuylkill field, includes the Lehigh, Little Schuylkill, Schuylkill, Swatara, and Dauphin districts. The second comprises the Beaver Meadow, Shamokin, and Mahanoy districts. The third, or northern, includes the Lackawanna, and Wilkesbarre or Susquehanna districts. " Each of these fields forms a long elliptical basin, with a well defined border of red shale, and surrounded by a barrier of long and sharp mountain ridges. Two of these fields, the first and the second, run side by side, ranging a little north of east ; the remaining one is somewhat apart from them, and has a more northerly direction." Of the above mentioned districts, the most important, at the present time, are the Schuyl- kill, Lehigh, Beaver Meadow, and Lackawanna. The Shamokin district is just opening, and will soon take a station among the first in the quality of its coal and extent of its products. The first field is remarkable from its containing Red Ash coal, which is supposed to exist in none of the others to any extent. This coal is easily ignited, burns freely, and its residuum is more ponderous than that of the White Ash. It occupies nearly two-thirds of this field. The White Ash produces a more intense heat. and leaves less residuum than the Red Ash. It is free from what are called clinkers, which a white heat produces in all the Red Ash coals. On these accounts it is better suited for stoves, and for manufacturing purposes. This is the product of the northern portion of the first or Schuylkill, as well as of the other two fields. The consumption of anthracite coal is rapidly increasing. It is superseding all other kinds of fuel in a considerable part of this country for almost every purpose. It is now very generally used for domestic purposes upon the seaboard. In stationary steam engines it is now a common fuel; and in locomotives it is every day becoming more general. During the last year it has been effectually introduced into steamboats. It is the common fuel in the coal regions for blacksmith's forges, in preference to any other. And it has lately been 2 H 2 Digitized by Google 366 COAL. introduced with success in the manufacture of iron; in Wales on a large scale; in this country on a scale sufficient to prove its economy. It may be fair to put the saving in the use of anthracite coal, instead of wood, as high as fifty per cent. The progressive consumption of anthracite coal, for the first fifteen years after its intro- duction into use, was quite extraordinary, amounting to about 33 per cent. per annum. For the last 3 years the increase has been only about 16 per cent. per annum. About 830,000 tons were consumed in 1838. As our forests, too, disappear, and as the demand for timber for building purposes increases, the consumption of coal must also increase and the period is fast approaching when its importance to us may not be less than is that of the collieries of England to her. Before the year 1820, the anthracite ooal fields of Pennsylvania were entirely unworked. The quantity brought to market from that time to the present is exhibited below in a tabular form. Quantities of Anthracite shipped from the mines. By the Union Lacks- Years. Canal, from Lehigh. Schuyikill. wanna. Totals. Years. Lehigh. Schuylkill. Lackawanna. the Pine- Shamokin. Totals. grove. Tons. Tone. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tona. Tens. 1820 365 - - 365 1830 42,790 89,984 43,000 - - 175,774 1821 1,073 - - 1,073 1831 41,085 81,854 54,000 - - 176,939 1822 2,240 - - 2,240 1832 80,000 209,271 84,600 - - 1373,871 1823 5,823 - - 5,823 1833 123,000 250,588 112,000 2,383 - 487,971 1824 9,541 - - 9,541 1834 106,244 224,242 47,700 2,450 - 380,636 1825 28,393 6,500 - 34,893 1835 131,250 334,872 90,660 5,226 - 562,008 1826 31,280 16,767 - 48,047 1836 146,502 432,045 106,270 11,709 - 696,525 1827 32,070 31,360 - 63,430 1837 223,902 523,152 115,387 12,098 - 874,539 1828 30,232 47,284 - 77,516 1838 212,831 433,875 76,321 13,809 3,746 727,582 1829 25,110 79,973 7,000 112,083 The country along the North Branch of the Susquehanna is supplied with coal from the Wilkes- barre district, of which no account is taken above. General Statement of the whole Anthracite Coal business. On hand at tide water Total receipts at On hand, and brought Consumed of all kinds Years. tide water. April 1st, being surplus down during the in year ending Annual increase of over consumption. year. April 15th. consumption. Tons Tons. Tons. Tons. Tons. 1820 365 - 365 365 1821 1,073 - 1,073 1,073 708 1822 2,240 - 2,240 2,240 1,167 1823 5,823 - 5,823 5,823 3,583 1824 9,541 - 9,541 9,541 3,718 1825 34,893 - 34,893 34,893- 25,352 1826 48,047 - 148,047 43,047 8,154 1827 63,430 5,000 68,430 60,430 17,383 1828 77,516 8,000 85,516 73,516 13,086 1829 112,083 12,000 124,083 106,083 32,567 1830 175,774 18,000 193,774 133,774 27,691 1831 176,939 60,000 236,939 236,939 103,165 1832 373,871 - 373,871 313,871 76,932 1833 487,971 60,000 547,971 427,971 114,100 1834 380,636 120,000 500,636 420,820 2,849* 1835 562,008 79,816 641,824 641,824 221,004 1836 696,525 - 696,525 646,525 4,701 1837 874,539 50,000 924,539 724,539 78,014 1838 727,582 200,000 927,582 827,582 103,043 Decrease. We subjoin the following Statement of the Retail prices during a series of Years, for Unbroken Coal delivered in Philadelphia, per ton of 2240 pounds. Years. Lehigh, Schuylkill. Years. Lehigh. Schuylkill. (White Ash.) (Red Ash.) (White Ash.) (Red Ash.) 1820 #8 40 1830 $6 50 $6.50 1821 8 40 1831 6 00 5 00 a 10 00 1822 8 40 1832 6 00 a 6 50 5 50 a 7 50 1823 8 40 1833 6 00 5 50 1824 7 33 1834 4 75 a 5 25 5 25 1825 7 33 1835 4 75 a 5 25 5 25 a 600 1826 7 33 1836 6 25 a 6 50 6 00 a 8 50 1827 7 00 $6 50 1837 575 6 50 a 9 50 1828 6 50 7 00 1838 6 25 a 6 75 5 50 a 7 00 1829 6 50 6 50 a 7 50 Hitherto the coal fields of Pennsylvania have presented almost the exclusive source whence anthracite coal is procurable in the United States. The explorations lately made in Massachusetts and Rhode Island have met with little or no success the coal procured ap- pearing to be of an inferior quality. Digitized by Google COAL. 867 The duty on coal imported into this country from abroad was five cents per bushel from 1794 to 1812; and it was doubled during the war. In 1816, after the war, it was reduced to five cents on the heaped bushel. It continued at this rate until 1824, when it was raised to six cents on the heaped bushel. And in the year 1833, the law, commonly regarded as a compromise of the tariff question, provided for the limited continuance, and for the reduction of this, in common with other duties. The average amount of the coal annually imported from abroad, that is to say almost altogether from Nova Scotia and from Great Britain, during the four years ending Septem- ber 30th, 1837, was 2,750,000 bushels, valued at about 240,000 dollars. For an account of the quantity of coal exported from Philadelphia and Richmond to other places, the reader is referred to the comparative statement of the trade of our principal ports, under the head of IMPORTS AND Exports. Additional information concerning American coal may be obtained by consulting a Re- port of the Committee of the Senate of Pennsylvania upon the subject of the Coal Trade, S. Y. Packer, Chairman; an article on the coal trade of Pennsylvania in the 42d volume of the North American Review; the reports on the geological survey of this state, by Pro- fessor Henry D. Rogers; a letter from Isaac Lea, Esq. to Nicholas Biddle, Esq. dated April 4th, 1838, and published in the National Gazette of Philadelphia; &c.-Am. Ed.} COASTING TRADE, the trade or intercourse carried on by sea between two or more ports or places of the same country. It has been customary in most countries to exclude foreigners from all participation in the coasting trade. This policy began in England in the reign of Elizabeth (5 Eliz. c. 5,), or, perhaps, at a more remote era; and was perfected by the acts of navigation passed in 1651 and 1660. A vast number of regulations have been since enacted at different periods. The existing rules with respect to it, which have been a good deal simplified, are embodied in the act 3 and 4 Will. 4. c. 52., and are as follow :- Definition of Coasting Trade-All trade by sea from any one part of the United Kingdom to any other part thereof, or from one part of the Isle of Man to another thereof, shall be deemed to be a coasting trade, and all ships while employed therein shall be deemed to be coasting ships and no part of the United Kingdom, however situated with regard to any other part thereof, shall be deemed in law, with reference to each other, to be parts beyond the seas in any matter relating to the trade or navigation or revenue of this realm.- 105. Lords of Treasury to regulate what shall be deemed trading by sea under this Act.-It shall be lawful for the said commissioners of his Majesty's treasury to determine and direct in what cases the trade by water from any place on the coast of the United Kingdom to another of the same shall or shall not be deemed a trade by sea within the meaning of this act or of any act relating to the customs.-> 106. Coasting Ship confined to coasting Voyuge.-No goods shall be carried in any coasting ship, except such as shall be laden to be 80 carried at some port or place in the United Kingdom, or at some port or place in the Isle of Man respectively and no goods shall be laden on board any ship to be carried coastwise until all goods brought in such ship from parts beyond the seas shall have been unladen and if any goods shall be taken into or put out of any coasting ship at sea or over the sea, or if any coasting ship shall touch at any place over the sea, or deviate from her voyage, unless forced by un- avoidable circumstances, or if the master of any coasting ship which shall have touched at any place over the sea shall not declare the same in writing under his hand to the collector or comptroller at the port in the United Kingdom or in the Isle of Man, where such ship shall afterwards first arrive, the master of such ship shall forfeit the sum of 2001.-d 107. Before Goods be laden or unladen, Notice of Intention, &c. to be given, and proper Documents to issue.- No goods shall be laden on board any ship in any port or place in the United Kingdom or in the Isle of Man to be carried coastwise, nor having been brought coastwise shall be unladen in any such port or place from any ship, until due notice in writing, signed by the master, shall have been given to the collector or comptroller, by the master, owner, wharfinger, or agent of such ship, of the intention to lade goods on board the same to be 80 carried, or of the arrival of such ship with goods so brought, as the case may be, nor until proper documents shall have been granted as hereinafter directed for the lading or for the unlading of such goods; and such goods shall not be laden or unladen except at such times and places, and in such manner, and by such persons, and under the care of such officers, as are hereinafter directed; and all goods laden to be so carried, or brought to be so unladen, con- trary hereto, shall be forfeited.- 108. Particulars in Notice.-In such notice shall be stated the name and tonnage of the ship, and the name of the port to which she belongs, and the name of the master, and the name of the port to which she is bound or from which she has arrived, and the name or description of the wharf or place at which her lading is to be taken in or discharged, as the case may be and such notice shall be signed by the master, owner, wharfinger, or agent of such ship, and shall be entered in a book to be kept by the collector, for the information of all parties interested; and every such notice for the unlading of any ship or vessel shall be delivered within 24 hours after the arrival of such ship or vessel, under a penalty of 201. to be paid by the master of such ship or vessel and in every such notice for the lading of any ship or vessel shall be stated the last voyage on which such ship or vessel shall have arrived at such port; and if such voyage shall have been from parts beyond the seas there shall be produced with such notice a certificate from the proper officer of the discharge of all goods, if any, brought in such ship, and of the due clearance of such ship or vessel inwards of such voyage.-d 109. From and to Ireland.-Upon the arrival of any coasting ship at any port in Great Britain from Ire- land, or at any port in Ireland from Great Britain, the master of such ship shall, within 24 hours after such arrival, attend and deliver such notice, signed by him, to the collector or comptroller; and if such ship shall have on board any goods subject on arrival to any duty of excise, or any goods which had been imported from parts beyond the seas, the particulars of such goods, with the marks and numbers of the packages containing the same, shall be set forth in such notice and if there shall be no such goods on board, then it shall be declared in such notice that no such goods are on board and the master shall also answer any questions relating to the voyage as shall be demanded of him by the collector or comptroller; and every master who shall fail in due time to deliver such notice, and truly to answer such questions, shall forfeit the sum of 1001.- 110. After Notice given of lading, Collector may grunt a general Suferance.-When due notice shall have been given to the collector or comptroller at the port of lading of the intention to lade goods on board Digitized by Google 368 COASTING TRADE. any coasting ship, such collector or comptroller shall grant a general sufference for the lading of goods (without specifying the same) on board such ship, at the wharf or place which shall be expressed in such sufferance; and such sufferance shall be a sufficient authority for the lading of any sort of goods, except such, if any, as shall be expressly excepted therein: provided always, that before any suf- ferance be granted for any goods prohibited to be exported, or subject to any export duty other than any ad valorem duty, the master or owner of any such ship, or the shipper of such goods, shall give bond with one sufficient surety, in treble the value of the goods, that the same shall be landed at the port for which such sufferance is required, or shall be otherwise accounted for to the satisfaction of the commissioners of his Majesty's customs.- 111. Master of Coasting Vessel to keep a Cargo Book-The master of every coasting ship shall keep or cause to be kept a cargo book of the same, stating the name of the ship and of the master, and of the port to which she belongs, and of the port to which bound on each voyage; and in which book shall be entered, at the port of lading, an account of all goods taken on board such ship, stating the descrip- tions of the packages, and the quantities and descriptions of the goods therein, and the quantities and descriptions of any goods stowed loose, and the names of the respective shippers and consignees, as far as any of such particulars shall be known to him ; and in which book, at the port of discharge, shall be noted the respective days upon which any of such goods be delivered out of such ship, and also the respective times of departure from the port of lading, and of arrival at any port of unlading; and such master shall produce such book for the inspection of the coast-waiter or other proper officer, so often as the same shall be demanded, and who shall be at liberty to make any note or remark therein; and if such master shall fail correctly to keep such book, or to produce the same, or if at any time there be found on board such ship any goods not entered in the cargo book as laden, or any goods noted as delivered, or if at any time it be found that any goods entered as laden, or any goods not noted as delivered, be not on board, the master of such ship shall forfeit the sum of 501.; and if, upon examina- tion at the port of lading, any package entered in the cargo book as containing any foreign goods shall be found not to contain such goods, such package, with its contents, shall be forfeited and if at the port of discharge any package shall be found to contain any foreign goods which are not entered in such book, such goods shall be forfeited.-> 112. Accounts of Foreign Goods, &c. to be delivered to Collector.-Before any coasting ship shall depart from the port of lading, an account, together with a duplicate of the same, all fairly written, and signed by the master, shall be delivered to the collector or comptroller; and in such account shall be set forth such particulars as are required to be entered in the cargo book of all foreign goods, and of all goods subject to export duty (other than any ad valorem duty), and of all corn, grain, meal, flour, or malt, laden on board, and generally, whether any other British goods or no other British goods be laden on board, as the case may he, or whether such ship be wholly laden with British goods not being of any of the descriptions before mentioned, as the case may be and the collector or comptroller shall select and retain one of such accounts, and shall return the other, dated and signed by him, and noting the clearance of the ship thereon; and such account shall be the clearance of the ship for the voyage, and the transire for the goods expressed therein and if any such account be false, or shall not cor- respond with the cargo book, the master shall forfeit the sum of 501.-d 113. Transire to be delivered to Collector.-Before any goods be unladen from any coasting ship at the port of discharge, the master, owner, wharfinger, or agent of such ship shall deliver the transire to the collector or comptroller of such port, who shall thereupon grant an order for the unlading of such ship at the wharf or place specified in such order provided always, that if any of the goods on board such ship be subject to any duty of customs or excise payable on arrival coastwise at such port, the master, owner, wharfinger, or agent of such ship, or the consignee of such goods, shall also deliver to the collector or comptroller a bill of the entry of the particulars of such goods, expressed in words at length, together with a copy thereof, in which all sums and numbers may be expressed in figures, and shall pay down all duties of customs, or produce a permit in respect of all duties of excise, which shall be due and payable on any of such goods, as the case may be and thereupon the collector and comptroller shall grant an order for the landing of such goods, in the presence or by the authority of the coast-waiter.-d 114. Collector in certain Cases may grant general Transire for Coasting Vessels.-It shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller, in the cases herein-after mentioned, to grant for any coasting ship a general transire, to continue in force for any time not exceeding one year from the date thereof, for the lading of any goods (except such goods, if any, as shall be expressly excepted therein), and for the clearance of the ship in which the goods shall be laden, and for the unlading of the goods at the place of dis- charge (that is to say,) For any ship regularly trading between places in the river Severn eastward of the Holmes For any ship regularly trading between places in the river Humber For any ship regularly trading between places in the Frith of Forth; For any ship regularly trading between places to be named in the transire, and carrying only manure, lime, chalk, stone, gravel, sand, or any earth, not being fullers' earth: Provided always, that such transire shall be written in the cargo book herein-before required to be kept by the masters of coasting ships: provided also, that if the collector and comptroller shall at any time revoke such transire, and notice thereof shall be given to the master or owner of the ship, or shall be given to any of the crew when on board the ship, or shall be entered in the cargo book by any officer of the customs, such transire shall become void, and shall be delivered up by the master or owner to the collector or comptroller.-d 115. Coast-waiter, &c. may go on board and examine any Coasting Ship.-It shall be lawful in any case, and at all legal times, for the coast-waiter, and also for the landing-waiter, and for the searcher, and for any other proper officer of the customs, to go on board any coasting ship in any port or place in the United Kingdom or in the Isle of Man, or at any period of her voyage, and strictly to search such ship, and to examine all goods on board, and all goods being laden or unladen, and to demand all documents which ought to be on board such ship.-d 116. Times and Places for landing and shipping.- goods shall be unshipped from any ship arriving coastwise in the United Kingdom or in the Isle of Man, and no goods shall be shipped or waterborne to be shipped, in the United Kingdom or in the Isle of Man, to be carried coastwise, but only on days not being Sundays or holidays, and in the daytime, (that is to say,) from the 1st of September until the last day of March betwixt sun-rising and sun-setting, and from the last day of March until the 1st of September between the hours of 7 clock in the morning and 4 'clock in the afternoon nor shall any such goods be so unshipped, shipped, or waterborne, unless in the presence or with the authority of the proper officer of the customs, nor unless at places which shall be appointed or approved by the proper officer of the customs.- 117. Goods prohibited or restraincd.-Whenever any goods which may be prohibited to be exported by proclamation or by order in council under the authority of this act shall be 80 prohibited, it shall be lawful in such proclamation or order in council to prohibit or restrict the carrying of such goods coast- wise and if any such goods shall be carried coastwise, or shall be shipped or waterborne to be carried coastwise, contrary to any such prohibition or restriction, the same shall be forfeited.-d 118. Dues of the City of London.-For the purpose of enabling the dues payable to the city on articles Digitized by Google COBALT-COCHINEAL. 369 imported coastwise to be ascertained and collected, it is enacted, that if all or any of the following goods, VIZ. firkins of butter, tons of cheese, fish, eggs, salt, fruit, roots eatable, and onions, brought coastwise into the port of the said city, and which are liable to the said dues, be landed or unshipped at or in the said port before a proper certificate of the payment of the said dues shall have been ob- tained, such goods shall be forfeited, and may be seized by an officer of customs empowered to seize any goods that may be landed without due entry thereof.-(7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 56. 8 15.) Account of the Tonnage of Vessels employed in the Coasting Trade, which have entered at and cleared out from the Ports of Great Britain, from 1827 to 1831, both inclusive.-(Part. Paper, No. 429. Sess. 1832.) Years. Tomage entered Tonnage cleared Tonnage entered Tonnage cleared Inwards. Outwards. Years. Inwards. Outwards. 1827 8,186,004 8,648,868 1830 9,121,619 9,439,099 1828 8,811,109 8,957,286 1831 9,176,758 9,372,870 1829 8,933,633 9,158,525 [As in England, so in the United States, the coasting trade is forbidden to foreigners. It is enacted that no goods shall be imported, under penalty of forfeiture thereof, from one to another port of the United States, in a vessel belonging wholly or in part to a subject of any foreign power. This, however, is not to be construed to prohibit the sailing of any foreign vessel from one to another of such ports, carrying goods imported in it from some foreign port, which goods shall not have been unladen. Vessels of twenty tons and upwards, enrolled, and having a license in force, or if less than twenty tons, not enrolled, but having a license in force, shall be deemed vessels of the United States, entitled to the privileges of vessels employed in the coasting trade and fisheries. Every vessel of twenty tons or upwards, (other than such as are registered,) found trading between district and district, or between different places in the same district, or carrying on the fishery, without being enrolled and licensed, or if less than twenty tons, and not less than five tons, without a license, if laden with goods the growth or manufacture of the United States only, (distilled spirits only excepted,) or in ballast, shall pay the same fees and tonnage in every port at which she may arrive, as vessels not belonging to citizens of the United States; and if she have on board any articles of foreign growth or manufacture, or dis- tilled spirits, other than sea stores, the vessel, together with her tackle, apparel, and furniture, and the lading found on board, shall be forfeited. But if such vessel be at sea at the ex- piration of the time for which the license was given, and the master shall swear that such was the case, and shall also, within forty-eight hours after his arrival, deliver to the collector of the district, in which he shall first arrive, the license which shall have expired, the for- feiture aforesaid shall not be incurred, nor shall the vessel be liable to pay the fees and ton- nage aforesaid. For the regulations concerning the enrollment, licensing, and registry of vessels, as well as for the regulations generally of the coasting trade, see Gordon's Digest of the Laws of the United States, or the acts of Congress of February 18th, 1793; of March 2d, 1795; of March 12th, 1812; of March 1st, 1817; of March 3d of the same year; of March 2d, 1819 of May 7th. 1822; of February 11th, 1830 and of March 2d, 1831.-Am. Ed.] COBALT (Ger. Kobalt; Du. Kobal; Sw. Cobolt; Fr. Cobalt; It. Cobalto; Rus. Kobolt; Lat. Cobaltum), a mineral of a grey colour, with a shade of red, and by no means brilliant. It has scarcely any taste or smell; is rather soft; specific gravity about 8.6. Sometimes it is composed of plates, sometimes of grains, and sometimes of small fibres ad- hering to each other. Its oxides are principally employed-(See SMALTS, or SMALTZ.) They form the most permanent blue with which we are acquainted. The colouring power of oxide of cobalt on vitrifiable mixtures is greater, perhaps, than that of any other metal. One grain gives a full blue to 240 grains of glass.-(Thomson's Chemistry, and Ure's Dic- tionary.) COCCULUS INDICUS, OR INDIAN BERRY (Sans. Kakamari; Malay, Tuba- bidgi), the fruit of the Menispermum Cocculus, a large tree of the Malabar coast, Ceylon, &c. It is a small kidney-shaped berry, having a white kernel inside, of a most unpleasant taste. It is of a poisonous and intoxicating quality, and has been employed to adulterate ale and beer. But its employment in that way is prohibited, under a penalty of 2001. upon the brewer, and of 500L. upon the seller of the drug, by the 56 Geo. 3. c. 58. COCHINEAL (Ger. Koscherilje; Du. Conchenilje; Fr. Cochenille; It. Cocciniglia; Sp. Cochinilla, Grana; Port. Cochenilha; Rus. Konssenel), an insect (Coccus cacti) found in Mexico, Georgia, South Carolina, and some of the West India islands; but it is in Mexico only that it is reared with care, and forms an important article of commerce. It is a small insect, seldom exceeding the size of a grain of barley and was generally believed, for a considerable time after it began to be imported into Europe, to be a sort of vegetable grain or seed. There are two sorts or varieties of cochineal the best or domesticated, which the Spaniards called grana fina, or fine grain; and the wild, which they call grana sylvestra. The former is nearly twice as large as the latter; probably because its size has been improved by the favourable effects of human care, and of a more copious and suitable nourishment, 47 Digitized by Google 370 COCOA, COCO. derived solely from the Cactus cochinellifer, during many generations. Wild cochineal is collected six times in the year; but that which is cultivated is only collected thrice during the same period. The insects are detached from the plants on which they feed by a blunt knife; they are then put into bags, and dipped in boiling water to kill them, after which they are dried in the sun; and though they lose about two thirds of their weight by this process, about 600,000 or 700,000 lbs. (each pound being supposed to contain 70,000 in- sects) are brought annually to Europe. It is principally used in the dyeing of scarlet, crimson, and other esteemed colours. The watery infusion is of a violet crimson; the alcoholic of a deep crimson; and the alkaline of a deep purple, or rather violet hue. It is imported in bags, each containing about 200 lbs.; and has the appearance of small, dry, shrivelled rugose berries or seeds, of a deep brown, purple, or mulberry colour, with a white matter between the wrinkles. In this state they suffer no change from length of keeping. Dr. Bancroft says that that cochineal is the best, which " is large, plump, dry, and of a silver white colour on the surface." The species of cochineal called granilla, or dust, is supposed by Dr. Bancroft to be prin- cipally formed of grana sylvestra. The insects of which it consists are smaller than those composing the fine cochineal; and it does not yield more than a third of the colouring mat- ter that is yielded by the latter. The cochineal insect was introduced into India in 1795 but a very inferior sort only is produced. It has also been introduced into Java and Spain, but with what success remains to be seen-(Thomson's Dispensatory; Bancreft on Colours, &c.) The imports of cochineal usually vary from 1,100 to 1,650 bags, or from 220,000 to 330,000 lbs. In 1831, the quantity imported amounted to 224,371 lbs.; of which 95,728 lbs. were brought from Mexico, 69,824 lbs. from the United States, 51,146 lbs. from the British West Indies, and 4,370 lbs. from Cuba and the foreign West Indies. The exports during the same year amounted to about 90,000 lbs. The duty on foreign cochineal was reduced, in 1826, from 1s. per lb. to 6d. At an average of the three years ending with 1831, the entries for home consumption amounted to 148,131 lbs. a year. The price of cochineal fluctuated very much during the war, partly on account of the obstacles which it occasionally threw in the way of importation, and partly on account of its being an article of direct government expenditure. In 1814, the price of the best cochineal was as high as 36s. and 39s.; and it has since gone on regularly declining, with hardly a single rally, till it has sunk to 8s. or 10s. Previously to the war it had never been under 12s. or 13s. Lac dye has recently been employed to some extent in dyeing scarlet; but notwithstanding this circumstance, the consumption of cochineal, occasioned, no doubt, partly by its cheapness, and partly, perhaps, by some change of fashion, has been materially increased since 1824. This, however, has not had any material influence on its price; and it would appear, from the long continuance of low prices, without any diminution of imports, that they are still sufficient to remunerate the growers of the arti- cle.-(Tooke on High and Low Prices; Cook's Commerce of Great Britain for 1830; Parl. Papers, &c.) COCOA. See CACAO. COCO, COKER, OR, more properly, COCOA NUTS (Ger. Kokosnüsse; Du. Kokos- nooten; Fr. and Sp. Cocos; It. Cocchi; Rus. Kokos; Sans. Narikela), the fruit of a species of palm tree (Cocos nucifera Lin.). This tree is common almost every where with- in the tropics, and is one of the most valuable in the world. It grows to the height of from 50 to 90 feet; it has no branches, but the leaves are from 12 to 14 feet in length, with a very strong middle rib. The fruit is nearly as large as a man's head; the external rind is thin, tough, and of a brownish red colour; beneath this there is a quantity of very tough fibrous matter, which is used in many countries in the manufacture of cordage, and coarse sail- cloth—(see COIR); within this fibrous coating is the shell of the nut, which is nearly glo- bular, very hard, susceptible of a high polish, and used for many domestic purposes; the kernel is white, in taste and firmness resembling that of a hazel nut; it is hollow in the in- terior, the hollow being filled with a milky fluid. While the nut is green, the whole hollow of the shell is filled with fluid, which is refreshing, agreeable, and pleasant to the taste. The solid part of the ripe kernel is extremely nutritious, but rather indigestible. The kernels yield by expression a great deal of oil, which, when recent, is equal to that of sweet almonds, but it soon becomes rancid, and is then employed by painters. A tree generally yields about 100 nuts, in clusters near the top of about a dozen each. The wood of the tree is made into boats, rafters, the frames of houses, and gutters to convey water. The leaves are used for thatching buildings; and are wrought into mats, baskets, and many other things, for which osiers are employed in Europe; 80 that every part of it is applied to some useful purpose. If the body of the tree be bored, there exudes from the wound a white liquor, called palm wine or toddy. It is very sweet when fresh; kept a few hours, it becomes more poig- nant and agreeable; but next day it begins to grow sour, and in the space of 24 hours is changed into vinegar. When distilled, it produces the best species of Indian arrack; it Digitized by Google COD. 371 also yields a great deal of sugar. Toddy is obtained from several species of palms, but that of the Cocos nucifera is the best.-(See Ainslie's Materia Indica; Rees's Cyclo- predia, &c.) An improvement has recently been effected in the preparation of cocoa oil, which pro- mises to be of much importance in the arts, by making it available in the manufacture of candles and soap, and for various purposes to which it was not previously applicable. The palm oil met with in the market is not obtained from the Cocos nucifera, but from another species of palm. It is chiefly imported from the coast of Guinea.-(See PALM OIL.) Cocoa nuts are produced in immense quantities in Ceylon, forming, with their products,- oil, arrack, and coir,-the principal articles of export from that island. They are also very abundant in the Maldive Islands, Siam, and on several places of the coast of Brazil. Cocoa oil is in very extensive use all over India, and large quantities are manufactured in the lower provinces of Bengal. This latter is said to be superior to that imported from Ceylon. The duty on cocoa nuts, which is imposed by tale, was judiciously reduced in 1832, from 5a. per 120 on those from a British possession to 1s. per 1,200; those from a foreign country pay 20 per cent. ad valorem. COD (Ger. Kabljau, Bakalau; Du. Kabeljaauw, Baukaelja; Da. Kabliau, Skreitorsk, Bakelau; Sw. Kabeljo, Bakelau; Fr. Morue, Cabillaud; It. Baccala, Baccalare; Sp. Bacalao Port. Bacalhão; Lat. Gadus), a species of fish, too well known to require any description. It is amazingly prolific. Leewenhoek counted 9,384,000 eggs in a cod-fish of a middling size; a number that will baffle all the efforts of man to exterminate. In our seas they begin to spawn in January, and deposit their eggs in rough ground, among rocks. Some continue in roe till the beginning of April. 'The cod is only found in the northern parts of the world it is an ocean fish, and never met with in the Mediterranean. The great rendezvous of the cod-fish is on the banks of Newfoundland, and the other sand banks that lie off the coasts of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, and New England. They prefer those situations, by reason of the quantity of worms pro- duced in these sandy bottoms, which tempt them to resort there for food. But another cause of the particular attachment the fish have to these spots is their vicinity to the polar seas, where they return to spawn there they deposit their roes in full security but want of food forces them, as soon as the more southern seas are open, to repair thither for subsistence. Few are taken to the north of Iceland, but they abound on its south and west coasts. They are also found to swarm on the coasts of Norway, in the Baltic, and off the Orkney and Western Isles; after which their numbers decrease in proportion as they advance towards the south, when they seem quite to cease before they reach the mouth of the Straits of Gib- raltar. " Before the discovery of Newfoundland, the greater fisheries of cod were on the seas of Iceland, and of our Western Isles, which were the grand resort of ships from all the com- mercial nations; but it seems that the greatest plenty was met with near Iceland. The English resorted thither before the year 1415; for we find that Henry V. was disposed to give satisfaction to the King of Denmark, for certain irregularities committed by his subjects on those seas. In the reign of Edward IV. the English were excluded from the fishery, by treaty. In later times, we find Queen Elizabeth condescending to ask permission to fish in those seas, from Christian IV. of Denmark. In the reign of her successor, however, no fewer than 150 English ships were employed in the Iceland fishery; which indulgence might arise from the marriage of James with a princess of Denmark."-(Pennant's British Zoology.) Cod is prepared in two different ways; that is, it is either gutted, salted, and then bar- relled,-in which state it is denominated green or pickled cod,-or it is dried and cured-in which state it is called dried cod. Ready access to the shore is indispensable to the prosecu- tion of the latter species of fishery. Cod Fishery, British.-Newfoundland was discovered by John or Sebastian Cabot, in 1497 and the extraordinary abundance of cod-fish on its banks was speedily ascertained. The French, Portuguese, and Spaniards engaged in the fishery soon after this discovery. The English were later in coming into the field. In 1578, France had on the banks of Newfoundland 150 vessels, Spain 120 or 130, Portugal 50, and England from 30 to 50. During the first half of last century, the fishery was principally carried on by the English, including the Anglo-Americans, and the French; but the capture of Cape Breton, and of their other possessions in America, gave a severe blow to the fishery of the latter. The American war divided the British fishery that portion of it which had previously been carried on from New England, being thereafter merged in that of the United States. Still, however, we contrived to preserve the largest share. At an average of the 3 years ending with 1789, we are said to have had 402 ships, 1,911 boats, and 16,856 men, engaged in the American fisheries. During last war, the French being excluded from the fisheries, those England attained to an extraordinary degree of prosperity the total value of the produce Digitized by Google 872 COD. of the Newfoundland fishery in 1814 having exceeded 2,800,000L But since the peace, the British fishery on the Newfoundland banks has rapidly declined; and can hardly, in- deed, be said, at this moment, to exist. It is now carried on almost entirely by the French and the Americans; the facilities enjoyed by the latter for its prosecution being greater than those of any other people, and the former being tempted to engage in it by the extraordinary encouragements afforded by government. At present, the British fishery carried on by the inhabitants of Newfoundland, is confined entirely to the shore or boat fishery. But this, though probably not so good a nursery of sailors as the bank fishery, is admitted to be the most productive of merchantable fish and oil."-(MiGregor's British America, 2d ed. vol.i. p. 206.) The average annual produce of the fisheries of all sorts, including seal, salmon, &c., exported from Newfoundland, during the 3 years ended with 1832, is stated by Mr. M'Gregor at 516,417%-(vol. i. p. 161.) A considerable fishery is also carried on from the ports and harbours of Nova Scotia and Cape Breton, New Brunswick, &c. But next to that of Newfoundland, the principal British fishery is carried on along the coast of Labrador. We borrow from the valuable work now referred to, the following recent and authentic state- ments with respect to it:- " During the fishing season, from 280 to 300 schooners proceed from Newfoundland to the different fishing stations on the coast of Labrador, where about 20,000 British subjects are employed for the season. About one third of the schooners make two voyages, loaded with dry fish, back to New- foundland during the summer; and several merchant vessels proceed from Labrador with their cargoes direct to Europe, leaving, generally, full cargoes for the fishing vessels to carry to Newfoundland. A considerable part of the fish of the second voyage is in a green or pickled state, and dried after- wards at Newfoundland. Eight or 9schooners from Quebec frequent the coast, having on board about 80 seamen and 100 fishermen. Some of the fish caught by them is sent to Europe, and the rest to Quebec; besides which, they carry annually about 6,0001. worth of furs, oil, and salmon, to Canada. From Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, but chiefly from the former, 100 to 120 vessels resort to Labrador; the burden of these vessels may amount to 6,000 or 7,000 tons, carrying about 1,200 seamen and fishermen. They generally carry the principal part of their cargoes home in a green state. " One third of the resident inhabitants are English, Irish, or Jersey servants, left in charge of the property in the fishing rooms, and who also employ themselves, in the spring and full, catching seals in nets. The other two thirds live constantly at Labrador, as furriers and seal-catchers on their own account, but chiefly in the former capacity, during winter and all are engaged in the fisheries during summer. Half of these people are Jerseymen and Canadians, most of whom have families. " From 16,000 to 18,000 seals are taken at Labrador in the beginning of winter and in spring. They are very large and the Canadians, and other winter residents, are said to feast and fatten on their flesh.-About 4,000 of these seals are killed by the Esquimaux. The whole number caught produce about 350 tuns of oil, value about 8,0001. There are 6 or 7 English houses, and 4 or 5 Jersey houses, established at Labrador, unconnected with Newfoundland, who export their fish and oil direct to Europe. The quantity exported last year (1832) to the Mediterranean was about 54,000 quintals cod-fish, at 10s. - - - £27,000 1,050 tierces salmon, at 60s. a - - 3,150 To England, about 200 tons cod oil - - - - - 5,200 220 do. seal do. - - - - - 4,880 Furs - - - - - - - 3,150 £43,380 By Newfoundland houses, 27,500 quintals cod-fish, at 10s. - - - 13,750 280 tierces salmon, at 10s. - - - 840 Total direct export from Labrador - £57,970 Produce sent direct to Newfoundland from Labrador :- 32,120 quintals cod-fish, at 10s. best quality - 16,060 312,000 quintals cod-fish, at Ss. - - 124,800 1,800 tuns cod oil, at 201. - 1 - - 36,000 Salmon, &c. - - - - 3,220 Fish, &c. sent to Canada, about - - - 12,000 Do. carried to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, should be in value at least 52,000 Estimated value of the produce of Labrador, exclusive of what the Mo- ravians send to London £302,050 "The Labrador fishery has, since 1814, increased more than sirfold, principally in consequence of our fishermen being driven from the grounds (on the Newfoundland coast) now occupied by the French. In 1829, the Americans had about 500 vessels and 15,000 men employed on the coast; and three "catch' amounted to 1,100,000 quintals fish, and about 3,000 tuns oil ; value together about 610,000l."-(British America, vol. i. pp. 185-187.) The total produce of the British fisheries in the various seas and rivers of America, including seal oil and skins, is estimated by Mr. M'Gregor, at an average of the 5 years ending with 1832, at 857,210L a year.—(Vol. ii. p. 596; see, also, for further particulars, the useful pamphlet of Mr. Blies on the Statistics, Trade, &c. of British America.) About eight tenths of the dried fish exported from Newfoundland by British subjects, are sent to Spain, Portugal, Italy, and other Continental nations; the rest goes to the West Indies and to Great Britain. By the act 26 Geo. 3. c. 26. bounties were given, under certain conditions specified in the act, to a certain number of vessels employed in the fishery on the coasts and banks of New- foundland; but these bounties have entirely ceased several years since. A bounty was, how- ever, paid, down to the 5th of April, 1830, to all persons residing in Great Britain and Ire- land, curing, drying, or pickling cod-fish, ling, or hake; the bounty being 4s. a cwt. on the Digitized by Google COD. 373 dried cod, &c., and 2s. 6d. a barrel on that which was pickled. A tonnage bounty was at the same time paid on vessels fitted out for the cod, ling, and hake fishery on the coasts of Great Britain and Ireland; but this has also ceased. The act 5 Geo. 4. c. 51. contains several regulations with respect to the Newfoundland fisheries Aliens are prohibited from fishing on the coasts, or in the bays or rivers of Newfoundland except- ing, however, the rights and privileges granted by treaty to foreign states at amity with his Majesty. All British subjects may take, cure, and dry fish, occupy vacant places, cut down trees for building, and do other things useful for the trade.- 3. Certificates shall be granted to vessels clearing out for the fishery; and on arrival at Newfoundland a report shall be made of such certificate, and registered; and on leaving the fishery the usual clearance shall be obtained. Vessels having on board any goods other than fish, &c. to forfeit the fishing certificate.- 4. Persons throwing out ballast, &c. to the prejudice of the harbours in Newfoundiand, shall be sub- ject to a penalty.-d 5. A contract in writing, specifying wages, and how to be paid, must be entered into with seamen and fishermen--07. A fisherman is prohibited receiving more than three fourths of his wages during service but the balance due to him is to be paid immediately upon the expiration of the covenanted time of service. No fisherman to be turned off, except for wilful neglect of duty, or other sufficient cause, under a penalty, for each offence, of not less than 51. nor more than 50l. In order to fulfil the conditions in any treaty with a foreign state, his Majesty may empower the governor of Newfoundland to remove any works erected by British subjects for the purpose of carry- ing on the fishery between Cape St. John and Cape Ray, and to compel them to depart to another place.-2 12. Every person so refusing to depart shall forfeit 502-> 13. The governor is empowered to sell or lease places within the island called Ship-rooms.-> 14. There are no means whatever by which to form any estimate of the number of ships and boats employed, either regularly or occasionally, in the cod-fishery on the coasts of Great Britain, and on those of Norway, the Orkney and Shetland Islands, the Well-bank, the Dogger-bank, the Broad-fourteens, &c. or of the quantity and value of the fish annually caught. They must, however, be very considerable. See FISH. For the regulations, &c. as to the importation of fish into Great Britain, see FISH. It is deubtful whether the distant cod fishery may not have passed its zenith. Spain, Italy, and other Catholic countries, have always been the great markets for dried fish but the observance of Lent is every day becoming less strict and the demand for dried fish will, it is most likely, sustain a corresponding decline. The relaxed observance of Lent in the Netherlands and elsewhere has done more than any thing else to injure the herring fishery of Holland. Cod Fishery, American.-The Americans have at all times prosecuted the cod fishery with great vigour and success. Their fishermen are remarkable for their activity and enter- prise, sobriety and frugality and their proximity to the fishing grounds, and the other facili- ties they possess for carrying on the fishery, give them advantages with which it is very difficult to contend. In 1795, the Americans employed in the cod-fishery about 31,000 tons of shipping; in 1807, they are said to have employed 70,306 tons but it subsequently de- clined for several years, and was almost entirely suspended during the late war. According to the official returns, the Americans had 85,687 tons of shipping engaged in the cod fishery in 1828 but owing to the slovenly and inaccurate way in which the navigation accounts laid before Congress have been prepared,-(for proofs of this, see New York,)-this state- ment is entitled to no credit. The corrected accounts for 1831 (laid before Congress the 15th of February, 1833) represent the shipping engaged that year in the cod fishery as amounting to 60,977 tons. During the year ended the 30th of September, 1832, the Americans exported 250,514 quintals of dried, and 102,770 barrels of pickled cod their aggregate value being about 1,050,000 dollars. "The Americans follow two or more modes of fitting out for the fisheries. The first is accomplished by 6 or 7 farmers, or their sons, building a schooner during winter, which they man themselves (as all the Americans on the sea coast are more or less seamen as well as farmers) and after fitting the vessel with necessary stores, they proceed to the banks, Gulf of St. Lawrence, or Labrador: and, loading their vessel with fish, make a voyage between spring and harvest. The proceeds they divide, after paying any balance they may owe for outfit. They remain at home to assist in gathering their crops, and proceed again for another cargo, which is salted down, and not afterwards dried: this is termed mud-fish, and kept for home consumption. The other plan is, when a merchant, or any other, owning a vessel, lets her to 10 or 15 men on shares. He finds the vessel and nets. The men pay for all the provisions, books, and lines, and for the salt necessary to cure their proportion of the fish. One of the number is acknowledged master; but he has to catch fish as well as the others, and receives only about 20s. per month for navigating the vessel the crew have five eighths of the fish caught, and the owners three eighths of the whole. The first spring voyage is made to the banks; the second either to the banks, Gulf of St. Lawrence. or the coast of Labrador; the third, or fall voyage, is again to the banks; and a fourth, or second fall voyage, is also made, sometimes, to the banks." Gregor, vol. i. p. 220.) It is stipulated in the first article of a convention between Great Britain and the United States, signed at London, 20th of October, 1818, that the subjects of the United States shall have liberty to take all sorts of fish on that part of the coast of Newfoundland from Cape Ray to the Rameau Islands, on the western and northern coasts of Newfoundland from Cape Ray to the Quirpon Islands, on the Magdalen Islands, and also on the coasts, bays, harbours, and creeks, from Mount Joly, on the southern coast of Labrador, to and through the Straits of Belleisle, and thence northwardly indefinitely along the coast, without prejudice, however, to any of the exclusive rights of the Hudson's Bay Company and that the American fishermen shall also have liberty, for ever, to dry and cure fish in any of the unsettled bays, harbours, and creeks, of the southern part of the coast of Newfoundland here above VoL. L-2 I Digitized by Google 374 COFFEE. described, and of the coast of Labrador; but so soon as the same, or any portion thereof, shall be settled, it shall not be lawful for the said fishermen to dry or cure fish without previous agreement for such purpose with the inhabitants, proprietors, or possessors of the ground. And the United States hereby renounce forever any liberty heretofore enjoyed or claimed by the inhabitants thereof, to take, dry, or cure fish on or within 3 marine miles of any of the coasts, bays, creeks, or harbours of his Britannic Majesty's dominions in America not included within the above mentioned limits." The American fishermen are, however, admitted into all bays, &c. for the purpose of shelter, of repairing damages, of purchasing wood, and of obtaining water, and for no other purpose whatever; and when there, they are to be placed under such restrictions as may be necessary to prevent their abusing the privileges hereby reserved to them. Cod Fishery, French.-France has always enjoyed a considerable share of the cod fishery. The following Table shows the extent to which she has carried it since the peace :- Account of the number of Ships, with their Tonnage, Crews, and Cargoes, that have entered the different Ports of France from the Cod Fishery during the Nine Years ending with 1831.-(From the Tableau Général du Commerce de la France for 1831, p. 346.) Years. Ships. Tonnage. Crew. Cod, green. Cod, dry. Oil. Kilog. Kilog. Kilog. 1823 184 16,258 3,655 4,407,730 4,423,739 415,210 1824 348 36,999 6,672 7,677,824 14,691,189 1,353,898 1825 336 35,172 6,311 7,288,949 15,823,731 1,294,336 1826 341 38,938 7,088 8,627,341 15,591,664 1,063,670 1827 387 44,868 8,238 9,046,145 15,970,250 1,201,023 1828 381 45,094 7,957 12,838,291 17,256,155 1,395,897 1829 414 50,574 9,428 10,548,878 30,377,594 1,909,147 1830 377 45,036 8,174 10,410,302 13,645,790 1,156,059 1831 302 35,180 6,243 9,922,680 12,817,943 1,162,299 The quantities of oil are exclusive of draches (huiles non epurés) there are also sounds, &c. Marseilles, Granville, Dunkirk, Bordeaux, La Rochelle, and Nantes, are the principal ports whence ships are fitted out for the fishery. But notwithstanding the apparent prosperity of this branch of industry, it may be doubted whether it be really so beneficial to France as would at first sight appear. It depends more upon artificial regulations than upon any thing else. Foreign cod is excluded from the French markets by the oppressive duty with which it is loaded and the comparatively great demand for dried fish in Catholic countries renders this a very great boon to the French fishermen. But it is admitted, that this would not be enough to sustain the fishery; and bounties amounting to about 1,500,000 fr., or 60,000L. a year are paid to those engaged in it. These, however, have been recently reduced. St. Pierre and Miquelon, small islands on the coast of Newfoundland, belong to the French. Their right of fishing upon the shores of that island, and upon the great bank, was replaced, in 1814, upon the footing on which it stood in 1792. This concession has been much objected to by Mr. McGregor and others; we believe, however, that they have materially over- rated its influence. [See article Fish for further accounts of the American cod fishery.-Am. Ed.] COFFEE (Ger. Koffe, Koffebohnen; Du. Koffy, Koffiboonen; Da. Kaffe, Kaffebönner Sw. Koffe; Fr. It. and Port. Caffé; Sp. Café; Rus. Kofé; Pol. Kawa; Lat. Coffea, Caffea; Arab. Bun; Malay, Kawa; Pers. Tochem, Keweh; Turk. Chaube), the berries of the coffee plant (Coffea Arabica Lin.). They are generally of an oval form, smaller than a horse-bean, and of a tough, close, and hard texture; they are prominent on the one side and flattened on the other, having a deeply marked furrow running lengthwise along the flattened side; they are moderately heavy, of a greenish colour, and a somewhat bitterish taste. Historical Notice of Coffee-The coffee plant is a native of that part of Arabia called Yemen; but it is now very extensively cultivated in the southern extremity of India, in Java, the West Indies, Brazil, &c. We are ignorant of the precise period when it began to be roasted, and the decoction used as a drink, though the discovery is not supposed to date further back than the early part of the fifteenth century. No mention of it is made by any ancient writer; nor by any of the moderns previously to the sixteenth century. Leon- hart Rauwolf, a German physician, is believed to be the first European who has taken any notice of coffee. His work was published in 1573, and his account is, in some respects, inaccurate. Coffee was, however, very accurately described by Prosper Albinus, who had been in Egypt as physician to the Venetian consul, in his works de Plantis Egypti, and de Medicina Egyptiorum, published in 1591 and 1592. A public coffee-house was opened for the first time, in London, in 1652. A Turkey mer- chant, of the name of Edwards, having brought along with him from the Levant some bags of coffee, and a Greek servant accustomed to make it, his house was thronged with visiters to see and taste this new sort of liquor. And being desirous to gratify his friends without putting himself to inconvenience, he allowed his servant to make and sell coffee publicly. In consequence of this permission, the latter opened a coffee-house in St. Michael's Alley, Digitized by Google COFFEE. 375 Cornhill, on the spot where the Virginia Coffee-house now stands. Garraway's was the first coffee-house opened after the great fire in 1666.-(Moseley on Coffee, 5th ed. p. 15.)* M. de la Roque mentions that the use of coffee was first introduced into France in the period between 1640 and 1660; and he further. states, that the first coffee-house for the sale of coffee in France was opened at Marseilles, in 1671 and that one was opened at Paris in the following year.-(Voyage de la Syrie, tom. ii. pp. 310-319.) Some time between 1680 and 1690, the Dutch planted coffee beans they had procured from Mocha, in the vicinity of Batavia. In 1690, they sent a plant to Europe ; and it was from berries obtained from this plant that the first coffee plantations in the West Indies and Surinam were derived. Progressive Consumption of Coffee in Great Britain. Influence of the Duties.-In 1660, a duty of 4d. a gallon was laid on all coffee made and sold. Previously to 1732, the duty on coffee amounted to 2s. a pound; but an act was then passed, in compliance with the selicitations of the West India planters, reducing the duty to 1s. 6d. a pound; at which it stood for many years, producing, at an average, about 10,000L a year. In consequence, however, of the prevalence of smuggling, caused by the too great magnitude of the duty, the revenue declined, in 1783, to 2,869/. 10s. 10}d. And it having been found impossible otherwise to check the practice of clandestine importation, the duty was reduced, in 1784, to 6d. The consequences of this wise and salutary measure were most beneficial. Instead of being reduced, the revenue was immediately raised to near three times its previous amount, or to 7,200L 15s. 9d., showing that the consumption of legally imported coffee must have increased in about a ninefold proportion !-a striking and conclusive proof, as Mr. Bryan Edwards has observed, of the effect of heavy taxation in defeating its own object.- (Hist. of the West Indies, vol. ii. p. 340. 8vo ed.) The history of the coffee trade abounds with similar and even more striking examples of the superior productiveness of low duties. In 1807, the duty was 1s. 8d. a pound and the quantity entered for home consumption amounted to 1,170,164 lbs., yielding a revenue of 161,245L 11s. 4d. In 1808, the duty was reduced from 1s. 8d. to 7d.; and in 1809, there were no fewer than 9,251,847 lbs. entered for home consumption, yielding, notwithstanding the reduction of duty, a revenue of 245,856/. 8s. 4d. The duty having been raised, in 1819, from 7d. to 1s. a pound, the quantity entered for home consumption, in 1824, was 7,993,041 lbs., yielding a revenue of 407,5444 4s. 3d. In 1824, however, the duty being again reduced from 1a. to 6d., the quantity entered for home consumption, in 1825, was 10,766,112 lbs., and in 1831 it had increased to 22,740,627 lbs., yielding a nett revenue of 583,751L The consumption of the United Kingdom may, at present, be estimated at about 23,000,000 lbs., producing about 600,000L of revenue. We subjoin 1. Quantities of the different Sorts of Coffee entered for Home Consumption in the United Kingdom, each Year since 1822. Foreign Years ended Years ended British Foreign British Plant- East Total. Plant- East Total. Plantation. ation. India. Plantation. ation. India. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. I.be. Lbs. Us. 5th Jan. 1822 7,386,060 764 206,177 7,598.001 5th Jan. 1828 14,676,968 1,210 888,198 15,566,376 - 1823 7,494,218 3,416 171,717 7,669,351 - 1829 16,151,239 2,984 973,410 17,127,633 - 1824 8,218,342 881 235,697 8,454,920 - 1830 18,495,407 6,197 974,576 19,476,180 - 1825 7,947,890 1,540 313,513 8,262,943 - 1831 21,697,966 3,971 969,585 22 691,522 - 1826 10,622,376 2,849 457,745 11,082,970 - 1832 21,501,966 3,910 1,234,721 22,740,627 - 1827 12,409,000 2,753 791,570 13,203,323 - 1833 20,964,301 17,591 1,970,635 22,952,527 II. An Account of the quantity of Coffee retained for Home Consumption in Great Britain, the Rates of Duty thereon, and the Produce of the Duties, each Year since 1789. Years. Quantities retained Rates of Duty on for Home Nett Revenue of Customs and Consumption British Plantation. East India. Excise. Lbs. Per lb. Per lb. Percenta valorem. £ 8. d. 8. d. & d. £ 8. d. 1789 930,141 0 10f 2 of Nil. 46,286 17 11 1790 973,110 - - -- 50,799 7 4 1791 1,047,276 - - I 57,659 5 11 1792 946,666 I - - 48,825 6 2 1793 1,070,438 - - I 67,357 11 9 1794 969,512 - - - 74,430 4 6 1795 1,054,588 1 5f 2 of - 65,788 3 7 * Charles II. attempted, by proclamation issued in 1675, to suppress coffee-houses, on the ground of their being resorted to by disaffected persons who devised and spread abroad divers false, malicious, and scandalous reports, to the defamation of his Majesty's government, and to the disturbance of the peace and quiet of the nation." The opinion of the Judges having been taken as to the legality of the proceeding, they resolved, That retailing coffee might be an innocent trade; but as it was used to mourish sedition, spread lies, and scandalise great men, it might also be a common nuisance!" Digitized by Google 376 COFFEE. II. An Account of the Quantity of Coffee retained for Home Consumption in Great Britain-continued. Quantities retained Rates of Duty on Nett Revenue of Customs and Years. for Home Excise. Consumption. British Plantation. East India. Lbs. Per lb. Per lb. Per cent. ad valorem. £ s. d. S. d. 3. d. £ s. d. 1796 396,953 1 51 2 6f Nil. 30,048 6 11 1797 637,001 1 51 3 7 - 92,469 3 11 1798 697,487 1 57 2 77 - 78,966 6 9 1799 682,432 1 57 2 7t 2 0 0 74,001 2 2 1800 826,590 - - - 142,867 11 5 1801 750,861 1 51 2 7 2 0 0 106,076 2 7 1802 829,435 1 6 2 71 2 0 0 72,183 2 3 1803 905,532 1 63 I 114 2 16 3 72,093 15 8 1804 1,061,327 1 71/ 2 04 3 2 6 151,388 0 11 1805 1,201,736 1 71 2 01 3 3 9 120,172 18 7 1806 1,157,014 1 77 2 01 3 7 11 152,759 6 9 1807 1,170,164 - - - 161,245 11 4 1808 1,069,691 0 7 0 10 3 7 11 229,738 16 8 1809 9,251,837 0 7 0 10 3 6 8 245,886 8 4 1810 5,308,096 - - - 175,567 1 4 1811 6,390,122 - I 212,890 12 10 - 1812 8,118,734 - - - 255,184 7 1 1813 8,788,601 0 71 0 104 3 19 2 Custom records destroyed. 1814 6,324,267 0 78 0 11t Nil. 213,513 18 4 1815 6,117,311 258,762 18 3 - - - 1816 7,557,471 - - - 298,834 0 II 1817 8,688,726 - - - 298,540 5 1 1818 7,967,857 - - - 250,106 4 10 1819 7,429,352 1 0 1 6 - 292,154 8 10 1820 6,869,286 - - 340,223 6 7 - 1821 7,327,283 - - - 371,252 5 6 1822 7,404,204 - - - 374,596 19 7 1823 8,209,245 I - - 416,324 3) 9 1824 7,993,040 - - & - 407,544 4 3 1825 10,766,112 0 6 0 9 - 307,204 M 2 1826 12,724,139 - - - 324,667 11 1 1827 14,974,378 - - - 384,994 13 2 1828 16,522,423 - - - 425,389 3 7 1829 18,906,373 - - I 484,975 10 8 1830 21,840,520 - - - 558,544 3 10 1831 21,747,813 - - - 559,431 19 6 1832 22,053,326 - - - 575,264 18 8 III. Account of the Quantity of Coffee imported into the United Kingdom from the several British Colonies and Plantations, from the British possessions in the East Indies, and from Foreign Coun- tries, in the Year ending the 5th of January, 1836; distinguishing the several Sorts of Coffee, and the Colonies and Countries from which the same was imported.-(Furnished by the Custom House.) Of the British Possessions in or the East Indies or the Foreign Total Quantity Colonies and Countries from which imported. America, and of and Masritius. Plantations. Imported. Sierra Leone. Los. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. British colonies and plantations in Ame- rica ; viz. Antigua - 580 580 - - - - - - 57,825 - - 57,825 Barbadoes - - - - - 112,557 - 112,557 - Dominica - - - - - 8,236 - 8,236 - Grenada - 11,154,307 1 - 11,154,307 Jamaica - - - - St. Christopher 40 40 - I - - - - - - - 53,582 - - 53,582 St. Lucia - 118 - 118 - St. Vincent's - - Trinidad - - - - 21,950 - 11,110 33,060 28 Tortola - - 28 - I - - 280,156 280,156 - Bahamas - - - - - 1,139,054 - 1,139,054 - Demerara - - - - - - - 2,027,037 - - 2,627,037 Berbice - British North American Colonies 5,416 - - 8,899 14,315 - - 50 50 - Egypt - - West Coast of Africa 32,306 - 31,032 63,338 - - - 338 338 - Cape of Good Hope - - - - Eastern Coast of Africa - 214 214 I - - Mauritius - - - 243,296 - 243,996 British possessions in the East Indies; viz. - East India Company's territories, - 2,462,813 - 2,462,813 exclusive of Singapore - I - 849,900 - 249,900 Singapore - - - - - - - I 1,870,143 - 1,870,143 Ceylon - - - Java - - - - 1,034,202 - 3,084,998 - - - - 34,019 - 34,019 Philippine Islands - - Other islands of the Indian Seas - 442 442 - - 27 27 - China - - - - - - Digitized by Google COFFEE. 377 III. Account of the Quantity of Coffee imported into the United Kingdom-continued. of the British Possessions in Of the East Indies Of the Foreign Total Quantity Colonies and Countries from which imported. America, and of and Mauritius. Plantations. imported. Sierra Leone. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. New South Wales - - - - 110 - 110 Hayti - - - - - 1,124,213 1,124,213 Foreign colonies in the west Indies ; viz. Cuba - - - 609,418 609,418 United States of America - - - - 37,360 37,360 Guatemala - - - - - - 57,539 57,539 Columbia - - - - - - 228 228 Brazil - - - - - - - 4,117,094 4,117,094 Europe - - - - - 4,010 672,350 336,434 1,012,794 Totals - 14,617,046 7,167,914 6,613,533 28,398,493 IV. Account of the Quantity of Coffee exported from the United Kingdom, in the Year ended the 5th of January, 1836; distinguishing the several Sorts of Coffee, and the Countries to which the same was exported.-(Furnished by Custom House.) or the British Possessions in Of the East Indies of the Foreign Countries to which exported. Total Quantity America, and of and Mauritius. Plantations. exported. Sierra Leone. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Russia - - - - 18,852 3,750 1,319,652 1,342,254 Sweden - - - - - 102 9,985 10,087 Norway - - - - - 722 309,737 310,459 Denmark - - - - - 13,839 615,328 629,167 Prussia - - do - - 94,156 133,613 157,769 Germany - - - - 44,867 194,081 866,730 1,105,678 The Netherlands - - - 43,597 2,008,468 4,397,527 6,449,592 France - - - 95,951 - - 95,951 Portugal, the Azores, and Madeira - 30 642 7,534 8,206 Spain and the Canaries - - - 479 149 628 Gibraltar - - - - - - 6,279 6,279 Italy - - - - 35,512 209,686 1,489,905 1,735,103 Malta - - - - 42,026 4,907 364,888 411,881 The Ionian Islands - - - - 260 37,621 37,881 Turkey and Continental Greece - - 8,821 739,114 747,935 Morea and Greek Islands - - - - 104,139 104,139 Guerneey, Jersey, Alderney, and Man - 8,892 10,488 3,837 23,217 193,776 2,576,412 10,406,038 113,176,226 Cape of Good Hope - - - - - 34,776 34,776 Other parts of Africa - - - 2,108 5,370 5,255 12,733 East Indies and China - - - - 966 302 1,268 New South Wales, Swan River, and Van Dieman's Land - - 2,447 9,749 7,348 19,544 British North American Colonies - 1,648 14,702 52,819 69,169 British West Indies - - - 8,676 19,988 28,664 United States of America - - - - 640 640 Brazil - - - - 761 - 761 States of the Rio de la Plata - - - - 781 781 Chill - - - - 112 245 1,330 1,687 Peru - - - - - - 121 121 - Totals from Great Britain - 200,091 2,616,881 10,529,398 13,346,370 British North American Colonies - 167 - - 167 Total quantity exported from the United Kingdom - - 200,258 2,616,881 10,529,398 13,346,537 V. Account of the Amount of Duties received on Coffee in Great Britain and Ireland respectively in the Year ending 5th of January, 1836 distinguishing each Sort of Coffee, and the nett Produce of the Duties on Coffee in the United Kingdom in such (Furnished by the Custom-house.) In the United Year ending 5th January, 1836. In Great Britain. In Ireland. Kingdom. & £ £ Of the British possessions in America and Sierra Leone } 428,416 14,581 442,997 - Of the East Indies and Mauritius - - - 203,340 6,120 209,460 Other sorts - - - - - 145 1 146 Total gross receipt - - - - 631,901 20,702 652,603 Nett produce - - - - - 631,422 20,702 652,124 The introduction of tea and coffee, it has been well remarked, " has led to the most won- derful change that ever took place in the diet of modern civilized nations,-a change highly important both in a moral and physical point of view. These beverages have the admirable advantage of affording stimulus without producing intoxication, or any of its evil conse- 2 I 2 48 Digitized by Google 378 COFFEE. quences. Lovers of tea or coffee are, in fact, rarely drinkers; and hence the use of these beverages has benefited both manners and morals. Raynal observes that the use of tea has contributed more to the sobriety of the Chinese than the severest laws, the most eloquent discourses, or the best treatises on morality."-(Seoteman, 17th of October, 1827.) Supply and Consumption of Coffee.-Owing to the rapidly increasing consumption of coffee in this country, the Continent, and America, the great value of the article, the large amount of capital and labour employed in its production, and the shipping required for its transport, it has become a commodity of primary commercial importance. It deserves par- ticular attention, too, inasmuch as there are few, if any, articles that exhibit such variations, not only as to consumption, but also as to growth and price. These are occasioned partly by changes of commercial regulations and duties, and partly, also, by the plant requiring 4 or 5 years before it comes to bear; so that the supply is neither suddenly increased when the demand increases, nor diminished when it falls off. St. Domingo used formerly to be one of the greatest sources of supply, having exported, in 1786, about 35,000 tons; and it is supposed that, but for the negro insurrection which broke out in 1792, the exports of that year would have amounted to 42,000 tons. The devastation occasioned by this event caused, for a series of years, an almost total cessation of supplies. Recently, however, they have again begun to increase; and are understood to amount, at present, to above 20,000 tons a year. From Cuba, the exports of coffee have within these few years rather declined, owing partly to an increased consumption in the island, and partly to the efforts of the planters having, a little time back, been more directed to the cultivation of sugar they may at present amount to from 18,000 to 20,000 tons; or, including Porto Rico, to 25,000 or 27,000 tons. In Java, also, the exports of coffee have, of late, been on the decline, but not to any consi- derable extent. In Jamaica and the other British West India colonies, the cultivation of coffee was greatly extended during the prevalence of the high prices, but the imports have fallen off from 12,000 tons in 1829, to about 10,800 tons in 1832. In Brazil, the growth of coffee has increased with unprecedented rapidity. So late as 1821, the quantity of coffee exported from Rio de Janeiro did not exceed 7,500 tons; whereas it now amounts to about 30,000 tons This extraordinary increase has probably been, in some measure, owing to the continuance of the slave trade; and it remains to be seen, whether the growth of coffee may not now be checked by the late cessation of that abominable traffic. The culture of coffee in India and Ceylon is daily becoming of more importance. In India, it is raised chiefly on the coast of Malabar, and the quantity exported is, at present, believed to exceed 4,000,000 lbs. The exports from Ceylon, in 1830, were 1,669,490 lbs. The total imports of coffee into Great Britain from the East Indies, in 1832, were 10,407,897 lbs. The following may, we believe, be regarded as a pretty fair estimate of the annual exports of coffee from the principal places where it is produced, and of the annual consumption in those countries into which it is imported from abroad, at the present time :- Exports. Tons. Mocha, Hodeida, and other Arabian ports - - - - 10,000 Java - - - - - 18,000 Sumatra and other parts of India - - - - - 8,000 Brazil and the Spanish Main - - - - - - 42,000 St. Domingo - - - - - - - 20,000 Cuba and Porto Rico - - - - - - - 25,000 British West India colonies - - - - - - 11,000 Dutch West India colonies - - - - - - 5,000 French West India colonies and the Isle de Bourbon - - - 8,000 147,000 Consumption. Tons. Great Britain - - - - - - - 10,500 Netherlands and Holland - - - - - - 40,500 Germany and countries round the Baltie - - - - - 32,000 France, Spain, Italy, Turkey in Europe, the Levant, &e. - - 35,000 America - - - 20,580 138,500 Of this quantity, the consumption of Great Britain and America amounts to nearly a fourth part, and may be said to have arisen almost entirely since 1807. Of the entire export of coffee from Arabia, not more, perhaps, than 5,000 or 6,000 tons finds its way to the places mentioned above; 80 that, supposing these estimates to be about correct, it follows that the supply of coffee is, at present, about equal to the demand. The latter is, however, rapidly increasing; and it is impossible to say whether it be destined to outrun, keep pace with, or fall short of the supply. On the whole, however, we should be inclined to think, that though they may occasionally vary to the extent of a few thousand tons on the one side or the other, the probability is that they will be pretty nearly balanced * M. Montveran is pleased to inform us, in his Essai de Statistique sur les Colonies, a work in other respects of considerable merit (Pièces Justificatives, p. 11.), that the exports of coffee from Brasil in 1830-31 amounted to 1,865,000 kilog. - 1,836 tons In point of fact they were more than 20 times as much. Digitized by Google COFFEE. 379 80 that, supposing peace to be preserved, we do not anticipate any very great variation of price. The prices of 1827, 1828, 1829, and 1830, seem to have been a good deal below the average. This depression naturally checked production and stimulated consumption, so that prices rose considerably in 1831, 1832, and 1833 but the advance, in the last, has not been maintained, at least to the whole extent. Such oscillations will, no doubt, continue to take place; but unless the cost of producing coffee should be permanently increased or diminish- ed, they can only be temporary. The consumption of coffee in the United States has been more than quadrupled since 1821, in which year it amounted to 6,680 tons. Part of this increase is, no doubt, to be ascribed to the reduction of the duty, first from 5 to 2 cents per pound, and its subsequent repeal part to the fall in the price of coffee; and a part, perhaps, to the increase of temper- ance societies. Probably, also, it was in some degree ascribable to the comparatively high duties formerly laid on the teas imported into the United States; these, however, finally ceased in 1833. Account of the Imports of Coffee into the United States, the Exports from the same, and the Quan- tities left for Home Consumption, during each of the Fifteen Years ending the 30th of September, 1835.-(Papers published by Order of Congress.) Years. Imports. Exports. Left for Home Consumption. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Tons. 1821 21,273,659 9,387,596 11,886,063 5,306 1822 25,782,390 7,267,119 18,515,271 8,266 1823 37,337,732 20,900,687 16,437,045 7,338 1824 39,224,251 19,427,227 19,797,024 8,838 1825 45,190,630 24,512,568 20,078,002 9,231 1896 43,319,497 11,584,713 31,734,784 14,167 1827 50,051,986 21,697,789 28,354,197 12,658 1828 55,194,697 16,037,964 39,156,733 17,481 1829 51,133,538 18,063,843 33,049,695 14,754 1890 51,488,248 13,194,561 38,363,087 17,127 1831 81,759,386 6,056,629 75,702,757 33,796 1832 91,722,329 55,251,158 40,471,171 18,067 1833 99,955,020 24,897,114 75,057,906 33,508 1834 80,153,366 35,806,861 44,346,505 19,797 1835 103,199,577 11,446,775 91,752,802 40,961 Mr. Cook gives the following statement of the imports of coffee into the Continent and Great Britain, and of the stocks on hand on the 31st of December each year :- Imports. Stocks. Places. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1830. 1831. 1832. Tone. Tons. Tons. Tons. Tone. Tons. France - - - - 13,000 8,300 13,130 6,150 2,900 5,100 Trieste, Genoa, and Leghorn - 12,100 6,430 13,570 4,300 1,250 6,200 Antwerp - - - - 21,200 5,130 8,400 4,000 2,850 1,900 Rotterdam - - - 4,500 11,740 14,200 3,600 4,500 7,500 Amsterdam - - - 9,000 10,700 10,550 5,800 6,000 7,480 Hamburgh - - - 20,250 17,380 22,500 10,700 7,500 11,000 Bremen - - - - 4,960 4,330 6,130 2,000 1,750 2,680 Copenhagen - - - 1,340 1,570 1,670 350 490 600 Petersburgh - - - 500 1,200 1,700 300 1,000 960 Totals - 86,850 66,780 91,850 37,200 28,240 43,490 Great Britain - - - 18,290 19,350 22,370 13,420 12,530 12,180 Continent and Great Britain - 105,140 86,130 114,290 50,620 40,770 55,600 (State of Commerce of Great Britain for 1832, p. 19 & 21.) According to Mr. Cook, the prices of Jamaica and St. Domingo (Hayti) coffee, exclusive of duty, in the London market, at the close of each year since 1814, have been- Years. Jamaica. St. Domingo. Years. Jamaica. St. Domingo. 1814 81s. to 105s. per cwt. 90s. to 104s. per cwt. 1826 42s. to 95s. per. cwt. 50s. to 51s. per cwt. 1815 61 - 110 72 - 80 1827 30 80 37 - 39 1816 68 - 102 74 - 75 1828 28- 80 36 - 38 1817 86 - 105 93 - 98 1829 30 - 75 32 - 34 1818 134 - 155 144 - 148 1830 32- 78 34 - 35 1819 147 - 165 128 - 134 1831 50- 86 45 - 46 1820 112 - 135 118 - 120 1832 60- 90 55 - 57 1821 85 - 125 98 - 102 1833 77 - 110 65 - 66 1822 85 - 135 95 - 100 1834 68- 124 48 - 52 1823 79 - 117 75 - 79 1835 80- 113 51 - 53 1824 50 - 102 58 - 61 let Nov. 1895 48 - 100 55 - 56 1836 71- 120 51 - 54 Digitized by Google 880 COFFEE. The following extract from Prince's Price Current shows the prices of the different sorts of coffee in London on the 4th of November, 1836. Coffee, per cwt. in bond,- 8. d. 8. d. Duty. s.d. s.d. Duty. fine mid. and fine 110 0 to 119 E. St. Domingo 51 to 54 on E. In. middling 94 106 0 Brazil 44 54 0 low do. Ind. Brit. Jamalea 90 93 0 Brit. Havannah and Cuba, good and fine PL & fine ord. 85 89 0 Pl. & ord. 48 0 W.I. good ord. 75 80 Porto Rico 53 78 0 W.I. B.P. ord. and triage 66 72 e 40 48 B.P. East India, Java 6d. Demerara good mid. to fine 107 118 6d. Cheribon and Bat. good 50 70 F.E. and middling 93 106 0 Coy certificate 71 72 0 77 91 0 F.E. I.9d. Berbice good and fine ard. 70 76 0 I.9d. for export 44 48 F. ordinary Sumatra and Samarang 38 48 Ls. 3d. Dominica mid. and fine 92 116 0 F. Mocha 52 106 1a. 3d. per and good and fine ord. 80 91 0 St. Lucia triage and ord. 70 76 per lb. Coffee is sold is bond , the business is done in the public market, count, and 4 per cent. for cash. The tares are the same as allowed either by public sale or private contract. The terms are-E. 1. and by the revenue. The draft on B. P., namely, casks of 5 cwt. and - W. 1. British Plantation, I month, 1 per cent. discount, allowing 4 wards 5 lbs. under 5 cwt. 4 lbs.; barrels and bags 2 lbs. Foreign per cent for cash East India at a prompt of three months from the and East India 1 lb. day of sale, without discount; Foreign 1 month, 21 per cent. dis. Notwithstanding the great reduction of the duties on coffee in 1824, there can be no doubt that they are still too high. At this moment they amount to 50 per cent. on the price of very fine coffee, and to 75 or 90 per cent. on the price of inferior sorts. Were the duties on British plantation coffee reduced to 3d. per lb. (28s. a cwt.), and those on Mocha and Foreign India coffee to 4d. per lb. (37s. 4d. a cwt.), the consumption would be so much extended, that, instead of being diminished, the revenue would be decidedly increased. The increase of consumption mentioned above must not, however, be wholly attributed to the reduction of the duty in 1824 the low prices from that year to 1830 had, no doubt, a ma- terial effect in facilitating the formation of a taste for coffee. The great reduction in the price of low brown sugar (at least 14d. per lb.) must also have assisted the consumption of coffee,-the one being so necessary to the extensive use of the other. The small increase of consumption since 1830 is wholly to be ascribed to the rise of prices; but were the duty reduced to 3d., this rise would be counteracted, and the consumption would again rapidly increase nor, provided East India were admitted at a duty of 4d., and foreign at a duty of 6d., is there any reason to fear that the increased consumption would have any material in- fluence on the price. Species of Coffee. Roasting, &c.-The coffee of Mocha is generally esteemed the best; then follow the coffees of Jamaica, Dominica, Berbice, Demerara, Bourbon, Java, Martinique, and Hayti. Arabian or Mocha coffee is produced in a very dry climate, the best being raised upon mountainous slopes and sandy soils. The most fertile soils are not suitable for the growth of very fine coffee. Mr. Bryan Edwards observes, that a rich deep soil, fre- quently meliorated by showers, will produce a luxuriant tree and a great crop; but the beans, which are large, and of a dingy green, prove, for many years, rank and vapid." And the same remark is made by Mr. Crawfurd, with respect to the coffee of Java-(East Indian Archipelago, vol. i. p. 487.) Coffee is improved by being kept; it then becomes of a paler colour. Mocha or, as it is commonly called, Turkey coffee, should be chosen of a greenish light olive hue, fresh and new, free from any mustiness, the berries of a middling size, clean, plump, and without any intermixture of sticks or other impurities. Particular care should be taken that it be not false packed. Good West India coffee should be of a greenish colour, fresh, free from any unpleasant small, the berries small and unbroken. Coffee berries readily imbibe exhalations from other bodies, and thereby acquire an adven- titious and disagreeable flavour. Sugar placed near coffee will, in a short time, so impreg- nate the berries, as to injure their flavour. Dr. Moseley mentions, that a few bags of pep- per, on board a ship from India, spoiled a whole cargo of coffee. " The roasting of the berry to a proper degree requires great nicety; the virtue and agree- ableness of the drink depend upon it; and both are often injured by the ordinary method. Bernier says, when he was at Cairo, where coffee is so much used, he was assured by the best judges, that there were only two people in that great city who understood how to pre- pare it in perfection. If it be under-done, its virtues will not be imparted, and, in use, it will load and oppress the stomach if it be over-done, it will yield a flat, burnt, and bitter taste, its virtues will be destroyed, and, in use, it will heat the body, and act as an astrin- gent."-(Moseley, p. 39.) Adulteration of Coffee.-A mill for grinding coffee may be bought for a small sum and no one who has the means of grinding it at home ought to purchase it ground, unless from shops of the first respectability. Ground coffee is liable to be, and in point of fact is, very extensively adulterated with succory, beans, roasted corn, &c. The facilities for this fraud- ulent intermixture are so very great as to render it impossible materially to lessen them other- wise than by a reduction of the duty. Regulations with respect to Sale, Importation, &c.-Ronsted beans and rye, reduced to powder, have frequently been used to adulterate ground coffee and the possession of such substitutes for coffee was formerly an offence punishable by the forfeiture of the articles, and a penalty of 100{. But by the act 3 Geo. 4. c. 53., persons who are not dealers in coffee may take a license for roasting and selling Digitized by Google COFFEE. 381 corn, peas, beans, or parsneps, labelling the parcels with the names, and conforming to the various regulations prescribed in the act. Dealers in coffee must take out a licence, renewable annually, which, at present, costs 11s. No coffee can be imported in packages of less than 100 lbs. nett weight. No abatement of duties is made on account of any damage coffee may have received. Coffee cannot be entered as being the produce of any British possession in America or of the Mau- ritius, until the master of the ship in which the coffee is imported deliver to the collector or comp- troller a certificate of its origin, and declare that the coffee is the produce of such place.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. " 36, 37.) We subjoin two pro forma accounts, one of the sale of 100 bags Brazil coffee, the other of the sale of 10 tierces Jamaica coffee. They may be depended upon as accurate; and are interesting from their showing in detail the various charges, exclusive of duty, affecting this important article. Pro forma Account Sale of B. 100 Bags Coffee per London," from Rio Janeiro, on Account of C. D. and Co. 1 1833. L. a. d. L. & d. Oct. 30. By E. F. for 100 bags. Prompt 1 month. Cut. qrs. lbs. Lots 1 to 5. weighing 145 0 gross 3 2 8 Tare 2 lb. Draft 2 lb. per bag. 141 1 20 nett . at SL 3a. 445 10 0 Discount 2 1-2 per cent. 11 9 434 7 8 Charges L. 8. d. To Sea Insurance on 4002. at 21. per cent .800 Policy 5a. 6d. per cent. 2 0 Commission 1.2 per cent. 2 0 0 11 0 Dock rates OD 143 cwt. 0 qr. 24 lbs. at Is. Rd. Lotting Id. per bag -871 8 15 5 Insurance against fire 0 12 5 Freight on 143 cwt. 0 qr. 24 lbs. at 3a. 21 9 8 Primage 5 per cent. 11. Is. 6d. Pierage 2s. Id. 1 3 7 22 13 3 Public sale charges 17s. 6d. Petty expenses 8a. 6d. 160 Brokerage 1 per cent. Commission 2 18 per cent. : 491 11 2 9 60 0 11 Errors excepted. Nett proceeds L.374 6 4 (Cash, 30th of November, 1833.) London, 2d of November, 1833. Pro forms Account Sale of G. H. 10 Tierces Coffee per Kingston," from Jamaica, on Account of I.K. and Co. 1833. L d. L. a. d. Oct. 30 By L M. for 10 tierces. Prompt 1 month. Cashs. Cut. qrs. lbs. Crote. qre. lbs. Lot. 4. 5 weighing 45 0 0 Tare 3 2 18 3 0 15 Draft 0 0 25 31 0 13 nett at 51. 10s. 171 8 9 25 - 3500 Tare 3 2 18 3 3 15 Draft 0 0 25 81 0 13 nett at 42. 5a. 132 4 10 303 7 7 Discount 1 per cent. 300 300 6 11 Charges. L. d. To Sea Insurance on 3001. at 91. per cent. 000 Policy 5a. 6d. per cent. : 0 16 6 Commission 1-2 per cent. 1 10 0 806 Dock rates on 62 cwt. 8 qrs. 20 lbs. at 1s. 6d. 4 14 0 Lotting at 9d. per tierce 076 5 6 Insurance against fire 083 Freight on 62 cwt. 2 qrs. 20 lbs. at 6a. 18 16 1 Primage 5a. and pierage 3a. 9d. 0 8 9 19 10 Public sale charges 7s. Petty expenses 7a. 6d, 0 14 6 Brokerage 1 per cent. 308 Commission 2 1-2 per cent. 7 11 8 44 7 11 Errors excepted. Nett proceeds L.255 19 0 (Cash, 30th of November, 1833.) London, 2d of November, 1833 We pointed out (art. EAST INDIES) the injustice and impolicy of charging 3d. per lb. more on the coffee of our Eastern dominions, when imported for home consumption, than on that imported from the West Indies. This distinction has, however, been put an end to; the 5 and 6 Will. 4. c. 66. having enacted that coffee, the produce of British possessions within the limits of the East India Company's charter and of Sierra Leone, shall pay, when entered for home consumption, a duty of 6d. per lb. Such coffee must, however, be accompanied with a certificate of origin, that is, R certificate sub- scribed by the proper officer of the place where it was shipped. bearing that he had received from the master, and examined, a declaration under the hand and seal of the shipper of the coffee, stating that It was really and bona fide the produce of some such British possession, and that he (the officer) be- * Coffee in bags pays 1s. 2d., and in casks 1s. 6d. of dock dues. Digitized by Google 382 COINS. lieved such declaration to be true. The master must also, when he arrives in this country, make and subscribe a declaration before the collector or comptroller, stating that the certificate of origin was received by him at the port where the coffee was taken on board, and that the coffee imported is the same that is mentioned therein. (We believe that this is the sense of the clause (2) relating to the certificate; but, from some error of the press or otherwise, it is all but unimtelligible.)-Sup.) [The consumption of coffee in the United States is very large. As much as 91,321,000 pounds of it were annually imported, on an average of the four years ending September 30th, 1837, chiefly from Brazil, Cuba, Hayti, Colombia, and Java. Of this amount, how- ever, nearly 19 millions of pounds were re-exported to France, the Hanse towns, Holland, Belgium, Trieste, Turkey, the Levant, &c.-Am. Ed.] COINS, pieces of metal, most commonly gold, silver, or copper, impressed with a public stamp, and frequently made legal tender in payment of debts, either to a limited or an un- limited extent. 1. Circumstances which led to the Introduction and Use of Coins.-When the precious metals first began to be used as money, or as standards by which to measure the value of different articles, and the equivalents for which they were most commonly exchanged, they were in an unfashioned state, in bars or ingots. The parties having agreed upon the quantity of metal to be given for a commodity, the exact amount was then ascertained by weight. But it is obvious that a practice of this sort must have been attended with a great deal of trouble and inconvenience. There can, however, be little doubt that the greatest obstacle to the use of unfashioned metals as money would be found in the difficulty of determining their quality, or the degree of their purity, with sufficient precision. The operation of assaying is one of great nicety and difficulty and could not be performed in the early ages otherwise than in a clumsy, tedious, and inaccurate manner. It is, indeed, most probable, that when the precious metals were first used as money, their quality would be appreciated only by their weight and colour. A very short experience would, however, be sufficient to show the extreme inexactness of conclusions derived from such loose and unsatisfactory criteria and the dèvising of some method, by which the fineness of the metal might be easily and cor- rectly ascertained, would very soon be felt as indispensable to the general use of gold and silver as money. Such a method was not long in presenting itself: it was early discovered, that, to ascertain the purity of the metal, and also to avoid the trouble and expense of weigh- ing it, no more was necessary than to mark each piece with a stamp declaring its weight and fineness. This invention was made at a very early period. According to Herodotus, the Lydians were the first who coined money.-Lib. i. c. 94. Other ancient authors say that the art of coining was invented during the period when Saturn and Janus reigned in Italy ; that is, in a period antecedent to authentic history.-Goguet, de I Origine des Loix, &c. tom. i. p. 267.) 2. Metal used in the Manufacture of Coins.-Before the art of metallurgy was well under- stood, the baser metals were frequently used as money. Iron was the primitive money of the Lacedmmonians, and copper of the Romans. But both iron and copper deteriorate by being kept; and besides this defect, the rapid improvement of the arts, by lowering their price, rendered their bulk too great in proportion to their value to permit of their continuing to be used as money. Copper, indeed, is still used in the form of tokens, convertible into silver in very small payments. In this country, copper pence and halfpence are rated at about 72 per cent. above their real value; but as their issue is exclusively in the hands of government, and as they are only legal tender to the extent of one shilling in any one pay- ment, this over-valuation is not productive of any bad effect. The use of copper in other countries is limited in much the same way gold and silver being every where the only metals made use of in the manufacture of the coins used in considerable payments. 3. Standard of Coins.-By the standard of a coin, is meant the degree of its' purity and its weight; that is, the fineness of the metal of which it is made, and the quantity of metal contained in it. (1.) Silver Coins.-A pound Troy, or 12 ounces, of the metal of which English silver coins are made, contains 11 OZ. 2 dwts. pure silver, and 18 dwts. alloy. This pound is coined into 66 shillings so that each shilling contains 80.727 grains fine silver, and 87.27 grains standard silver; and the money pound, consisting of 20 shillings, contains 1614-545 grains pure silver, and 1745.454 grains standard silver. From 1600 down to 1816, the pound weight of standard silver bullion was coined into 62 shillings. All the English silver coins have been coined out of silver of 11 OZ. 2 dwts. fine, from the Conquest to this moment, except for the short period of 16 years, from the 34th Henry VIII. to the 2d Elizabeth. (2.) Gold Coins.-The purity of gold is not estimated by the weights commonly in use, but by an Abyssinian weight called a carat. The carats are subdivided into four parts, called grains, and these again into quarters; so that a carat grain, with respect to the com- mon divisions of a pound Troy, is equivalent to 2f dwts. Gold of the highest degree of fineness, or pure, is said to be 24 carats fine. When gold coins were first made at the English mint, the standard of the gold put in them was of 23 carats 34 grains fine and 1 Digitized by Google COINS. 383 grain alloy; and so it continued, without any variation, to the 18th of Henry VIII., who, in that year, first introduced a new standard of gold of 22 carats fine, and 2 carats alloy. The first of these standards was called the old and the second the new standard, or crown gold; because crowns, or pieces of the value of 5s., were first coined of this new standard. Henry VIII. made his gold coins of both these standards under different denominations; and this practice was continued by his successors until 1633. From that period to the present, the gold of which the coins of this kingdom have been made has been invariably of the new standard, or crown gold; though some of the coins made of the old standard, previously to 1633, continued to circulate till 1732, when they were forbidden to be any longer current. (Liverpool on Coins, p. 27.) The purity of our present gold coins is, therefore, 11 parts fine gold and 1 part alloy. The sovereign or 20 shilling piece, contains 113.001 grains fine gold and 123274 grains stand- ard gold. The pound Troy of standard gold is coined into 46 18D 30 sovereigns, or into 46L 14s. 6d. The mint or standard price of gold is, therefore, said to be 46/. 14s. 6d. per lb. Troy, or 3L 17s. 10}d. an ounce. The alloy in coins is reckoned of no value, It is allowed, in order to save the trouble and experise that would be incurred in refining the metals, so as to bring them to the highest degree of purity and because, when its quantity is small, it has a tendency to render the coins harder, and less liable to be worn or rubbed. If the quantity of alloy were considera- ble, it would lessen the splendour and ductility of the metals, and would add too much to the weight of the coins. The standard of the coins of foreign countries may be learned at a glance, by inspecting the Table of Coins subjoined to this article. 4. Variations of the Standard.-The value of all sorts of property being estimated, and the stipulations in almost all contracts for its purchase, sale, or hire, being made in money or coins, it is plain that no change can take place in the value of such money or coins, with- out virtually subverting these estimates and contracts, and enriching the debtor portion of society at the expense of the creditor portion, or vice versâ. As the cost of producing all commodities is liable to vary from improvements in the arts, the exhaustion of the present or the discovery of new sources of supply, none can be selected to serve as money or coin, that may. not vary in its real value. It is believed, however, that the precious metals vary less than any material that could be suggested. And with the exception of the extraordinary fall in their value caused by the discovery of the American mines, it seems to have been remarkably constant at other periods. But in addition to the fluctuations naturally inherent in the value of coins, arising from variations in the cost of the metal of which they are made, their standard has been repeat- edly changed. Notwithstanding that money or coin, from its being universally used as a scale by which to compute the value of all commodities, and as the equivalent for which they are commonly exchanged, is by far the most important of all the measures used in society ; and should, consequently, be preserved as invariable as possible; there is none that has been 80 frequently altered. The necessities or extravagance of government have forced them to borrow and to relieve themselves of the incumbrances thus contracted, they have almost universally had recourse to the disgraceful expedient of degrading the coin ; that is, of cheating those who lent them money, to the extent of the degradation, and of enabling every other debtor in their dominions to do the same. The ignorance of the public in remote ages facilitated this species of fraud. Had the names of the coins been changed when the quantity of metal contained in them was di- minished, there would have been no room for misapprehension. But, although the weight of the coins was undergoing perpetual, and their purity occasional, reductions, their ancient denominations were almost uniformly preserved; and the people who saw the same names still remaining after the substance was diminished who saw coins of a certain weight and fineness circulate under the names of florins, livres, dollars, and pounds; and who saw them continue to circulate as such, after both their weight and the degree of their fineness had been lessened began to think that they derived their value more from the stamp affixed to them by authority of government, than from the quantity of the precious metals they con- tained. This was long a very prevalent opinion. But the rise of prices which invariably followed every reduction of the standard, and the derangement that was thereby occasioned in every pecuniary transaction, undeceived the public, and taught them, and their rulers, the expediency of preserving the standard of money inviolate. The standard may be reduced by simply raising the denomination of the coin by order- ing, for example, that a half-sovereign should pass for a sovereign, and the latter for a double sovereign, &c. If injustice be resolved upon, this is the least mischievous way in which it can be perpetrated, inasmuch as it saves all the trouble and expense of a recoinage. But as it renders the fraud obvious and glaring, it has rarely been resorted to and most reductions have been effected either by diminishing the weight of the coins, or by increasing the pro- portion of alloy in the metal of which they are made, or both. Originally the coins of all countries seem to have had the same denomination as the Digitized by Google 884 COINS. weights commonly used in them and contained the exact quantity of the precious metals indicated by their name. Thus, the talent was a weight used in the earliest period by the Greeks, the as or pondo by the Romans, the livre by the French, and the pound by the English and Scotch; and the coins originally in use in Greece, Italy, France, and England, bore the same names, and weighed precisely a talent, a pondo, a livre, and a pound. The standard has not, however, been preserved inviolate, either in modern or ancient times. It has been less degraded in England than any where else but even here the quantity of sil- ver in a pound sterling is less than a third part of a pound weight,-the quantity it con- tained in 1300. In France, the livre current in 1789 contained less than one sixty-sixth part of the silver implied in its name, and which it had actually contained previously to 1103. In Spain, and some other countries, the degradation has been carried still further.* From 1296 to 1355, the coins of England and Scotland were of the same weight and purity ; but at the last mentioned epoch the standard of Scotch money was, for the first time, sunk below that of England; and by successive degradations, the value of Scotch money, at the union of the crowns in 1600, was only a twelfth part of the value of the English money of the same denomination. It remained at this point till the union of the kingdoms cancelled the separate coinage of Scotland. The gold and silver coins of Ireland have been for a considerable period the same as those of Great Britain but, until 1825, they were nominally rated 81 per cent. higher. This difference of valuation, which was attended with considerable inconveniences, was put an end to by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 79., which assimilated the currency throughout the empire. The Tables annexed to this article contain all the information that can be desired by mercantile men with respect to the weight, fineness, &c. of English and Scotch gold and silver coins, from the earliest periods to the present moment. 5. Mint, or Government valuation of Gold and Silver Coins.-If both gold and silver coins be made legal tenders, it is obviously indispensable that their value with respect to each other should be fixed by authority or that it should be declared, that individuals shall be entitled to discharge the claims upon them by payments, either of gold or silver coins, according to some regulated proportion. The practice of making both metals legal tenders was long adopted in England. From 1257 till 1664, the value of gold coins was regulated by proclamation; or, which is the same thing, it was ordered that the gold coins, then cur- rent, should be taken as equivalent to certain specified sums of silver.-(Liverpool on Coins, p. 128.) From 1664, down to 1717, the relation of gold to silver was not fixed by authority; and silver being then the only legal tender, the value of gold coins fluctuated, according to the fluctuations in the relative worth of the metals in the market. But, in 1717, the ancient practice was again reverted to and it was fixed that the guinea should be taken as the equivalent of 21 shillings, and conversely. But the value of each of the precious metals is liable to perpetual changes. And hence, how accurately soever their proportional value, as fixed by the mint regulations, may corre- spond with the proportion which they actually bear to each other in the market when the regulation is made, the chances are 10 to 1 that it will speedily cease to express their re- lation to each other. But the moment that such a change takes place, it becomes the obvious interest of every one who has a payment to make, to make it in the overvalued metal which, consequently, becomes the sole, or nearly the sole, currency of the country. Hence the reason why the coins of some countries are almost wholly of silver, and others almost wholly of gold. It is estimated, for example, that when it was fixed, in 1717, that the guinea should exchange for 21 shillings, gold was overvalued as compared with silver to the extent of 111 per cent-(Liverpool on Coins, p. 85.) ; and as the real value of silver with respect to gold continued to increase during the greater part of last century, the advantage of pay- ing in gold in preference to silver became more decided, and ultimately led to the universal use of gold in all large payments, and to the fusion or exportation of all silver coins of full weight-(Liverpool, loco cit.) In France, a different valuation of the metals has had a different effect. Previously to the recoinage in 1785, the Louis d'or was rated in the mint proportion at only 24 livres, when it was really worth 25 livres 10 sols. Those, therefore, who should have discharged the obligations they had contracted by payments of gold coin instead of silver, would plainly have lost one livre 10 sols on every sum of 24 livres. In consequence, very few such pay- ments were made; gold was almost entirely banished from circulation, and silver became almost the only species of metallic money used in France.-(Say, Traité "Economie Poli- tique, tom. i. p. 393.) In 1816, however, a new system was adopted in this country it being then enacted (56 Geo. 3. c. 68.), that gold coins only should be legal tender in all payments of more * For an account of the degradation of the coins of the ancient and modern Continental nations, see the article Money, in the Supplement to the old, or in the new edition of the Encyclepadia Britannica. Digitized by Google COINS. 385 than 40 shillings. The pound of silver bullion, that had previously been coined into 62 shillings, was then also coined into 66 shillings, the additional four shillings being retained by government as a seignorage or duty (amounting to 614 per cent.) upon the coinage. To prevent the silver coins from becoming redundant, government has retained the power to issue them in its own hands. Under these regulations, silver has ceased to be a standard of value, and forms merely a subordinate or subsidiary species of currency, or change, occu- pying the same place in relation to gold that copper occupies in relation to itself. This sys- tem has been found to answer exceedingly well. A good deal of difference of opinion has existed as to whether gold or silver coins are best fitted for being made a legal tender. It does not seem that the one possesses any very striking advantage over the other; none, certainly, that would justify a change, after a selection had been made, and acted upon for any considerable period. Down to 1626, a seignorage or duty upon the coinage was usually charged upon the gold and silver coins issued by the mint; and it may be easily shown that the imposition of such a duty, when it is not carried to an undue height, is advantageous. A coin is more useful than a piece of uncoined bullion of the same weight and purity the coinage fitting it for being used as inoney, while it does not unfit it for being used for any other purpose. When, therefore, a duty of seignorage is laid upon coin equal to the expense of coinage, it circulates at its real value; but when this charge is defrayed by the public, it circulates at less than its real value, and is consequently either melted down or exported whenever there is any demand for bullion in the arts, or any fall in the exchange. It is, indeed, true, that were a seignorage to be laid on gold coins, it would be necessary, to prevent an enhancement of the value of the currency, that their weight should be proportionally reduced; and it is on this account better, perhaps, to let them remain on the present footing. But when a seignor- age was laid on the silver coins, in 1816, it was not necessary to take the circumstance now alluded to into consideration; for as they were made subordinate to gold, and were in- tended to serve as change merely, its imposition had no tendency to raise the value of the currency, at the same time that it was calculated effectually to prevent the fusion of the coins, and to yield a small revenue to government. 6. Coinage since 1790. Amount of Coin in Circulation.-No. V. of the subjoined Tables shows the amount of the gold and silver coinage at the British mint, each year, from 1790 downwards. It will be seen from this account, that gold coin to the amount of about 47,000,000L has been coined at the mint between 1817 and 1831, both inclusive. It is not easy to form any very precise estimate of the portion of this immense sum now in circulation. In conse- quence of the exemption of our gold coin from any seignorage, large quantities of the coins carried abroad during an unfavourable exchange find their way to the foreign mints, where they are melted and recoined. We are not, however, wholly destitute of the means of ap- proximating to the quantity of coin in circulation. The mint works wholly, or almost wholly, for the Bank of England, so that, by comparing the issues of coin by the Bank with the coin paid to her, and allowing for. the export, we are able to get at a tolerably accurate result. We are indebted to Mr. Horsley Palmer for the following estimate, made up on this principle, of the gold coin in circulation in February, 1833. It may not be quite accurate, but we are sure that it is as accurate as it is possible to make any estimate of the sort-(See next page.) 7. The Exportation and Importation of Gold and Silver Coins was formerly prohibited but in 1819 it was enacted (59 Geo. 3. c. 49.), that they might be freely exported and im- ported, without being liable to any charge or duty whatever; and they may be imported without being either reported or entered at the Custom-house. This regulation has rendered it next to impossible to ascertain the value of the bullion imported. 8. Forgery of Coin. Issue of forged or spurious Coins.-The forgery of coin is an office that is practised more or less at all periods. The most effectual means of preventing it is to improve the fabric of the genuine coins, to cut the dies with great delicacy, and occa- sionally to vary the form of the coins. During the lengthened period from 1770 down to 1816, the genuine silver coins in circulation were so much worn and defaced, that it was very difficult to distinguish between them and counterfeits, which, in despite of the severest penalties, were thrown into circulation in immense quantities. But since the issue of the new coins, in 1816, forgery has been comparatively rare. There has, however, been a con- siderable increase of forgery during the last 7 years, as compared with the previous 7. Sufficient time has not yet been afforded for determining the influence of the law exempting the offence of counterfeiting from the punishment of death. VOL. L-2 K 49 Digitized by Google 886 COINS. Estimate of Gold Coin in circulation in February, 1833. Issued by the Bank. Observations. £ From January, 1821, to July, 1824, inclu- } 17,370,000 The exchanges during this period were in favour of the sive country, and gold was imported. - The exchanges during the major part of this period were against the country, and gold was exported. or the total From August, 1824, inclusive } issue of 8,660,000L. about 2,500,0001. were issued from Oc- to December, 1825, 8,660,000 tober to the end of December, 1825, to supply the place of - - the country notes then discredited, leaving 6,080,000L. as the estimated export of coin, in addition to the bar and other uncoined gold sold by the Bank during this period. From January, 1826, to April, 1828, in- } 2,370,000 The exchanges during this period were in favour of the clusive country, and gold was imported. - - 1st. The exchanges were against the country from Novem- ber, 1828, to February, 1829, during which period the issue From May, 1828, to } amounted to 1,500,000L. of which 1,000,000L. is estimated 15th of February, 9,600,000 to have been applied in the withdrawal of the country 11. 1832 - - notes, leaving 500,000L. as the amount of estimated export during that period. 38,000,000 2d. From August, 1830, to February, 1832, the exchanges were also against the country, during which period the issue was 4,000,000Γ. 1,000,000. of this sum was issued in Deduct for export. November, 1831, upon the rejection of the Reform Bill, and 1824-25 £6,000,000 1,000,0001. more may fairly be estimated as the further 1828-29 500,000 8,500,000 amount applied within the whole period, from August, 1830-32 2,000,000 1830, in the withdrawal of the country small notes; leaving 2,000,000/. as the estimated amount of coin exported from 29,500,000 1830 to 1932. From 15th of Febru- ary, 1832, to 15th of This sum was taken out during the political discredit of 1,800,000 February, 1833. May, 1832, and has not yet returned to the Bank. 31,300,000 Deduct the stock at the branch banks, which has been taken as part of the 1,300,000 issue from the Bank in London - Leaving in circulation in the hands of the public on the 15th 30,000,000 of February, 1833 - 9. Law as to the counterfeiting, &c. of Coin.-The acts as to this were consolidated and amended by the 2 & 3 Will. 4. c. 34, of which the following is a brief abstract :- Counterfeiting the gold or silver coin of the realm, transportation for life, or for not less than 7 years, or imprisonment for not exceeding 4 years ; and every such offence shall be deemed to be cem- plete, although the counterfeiting be not finished.-> 3. Colouring counterfeit coin, or any pieces of metal, with intent to make them pass for gold or silver coin ; colouring or altering genuine coin with intent to make it pass for higher coin; transportation for life, or for any term not less than 7 years, or imprisonment for any term not exceeding 4 years.- 4. Impairing the gold or silver coin, with intent to make the coin so impaired pass for gold or silver coin of full weight, transportation for not exceeding 14, nor less than 7 years, or imprisonment for not exceeding 3 yearn.- 8. Buying or selling, &c. counterfeit gold or silver coin for lower value than its denomination, import- ing counterfeit coin from beyond seas, transportation for life, or for not less than 7 years, or imprison- ment for not exceeding 4 years.- 6. Uttering counterfeit gold or silver coin, imprisonment for not exceeding 1 year and uttering, accom- panied by possession of other counterfeit coin, or followed by a second uttering within 10 days, im- prisonment for not exceeding 2 years every second offence of uttering after a previous conviction, shall be felony, transportation for life, or for not less than 7 years, or imprisonment for not exceeding 4 years.- 7. Having 3 or more pieces of counterfeit gold or silver coin in possession, with intent to utter the same, imprisonment for not exceeding 3 years; second offence, transportation for life, or for not less than 7 years, or imprisonment for not exceeding 4 years.-d 8. Making, mending, having possession of, or selling any mould, &c. or cotning tools, or any press or engine, conveying tools of monies out of the mint without authority, felony transportation for life, or for not less than 7 years, or imprisonment for not exceeding 4 years.-dd 10, 11. Counterfeiting any current copper coin, or making, mending, or having in his possession any coin- ing tool, or buying, selling, &c. any counterfeit copper coin for lower value than its denomination, transportation for not exceeding 7 years, or imprisonment for not exceeding 2 years: and attering any counterfeit copper coin, or having in his possession 3 or more pieces of counterfeit copper coin, imprisonment for not exceeding 1 year.-d 12. Gold or silver coin tendered to any person suspecting any piece to be counterfeit, may be broken by such person and If it shall appear to be counterfeit, the person tendering shall bear the loss but if it shall be of due weight, and appear to be of lawful coin, the person breaking it is to receive it at the rate it was coined for, and any dispute shall be finally determined by any justice; and the tellers of the Exchequer and the receivers-general of the revenue are to break or deface every piece of counterfeit coin tendered for payment.- 13. Any person discovering any counterfeit coin, gold, silver, or copper, or any coining tool, is to carry the same forthwith, before some justice, and on reasonable cause to suspect any person of counter- feiting, or having such coin, or any tool, Ac., such justice may cause any place under the control of such suspected person to be searched, either in the day or night, and if any such coin or tool shall be Digitized by Google COINS. 387 found, to cause the same to be seised forthwith, and carried before a justice, who is to secure the same for the purpose of being produced in evidence, and afterwards of being delivered up to the mint.- 14. The necessity of the evidence of any officer of the mint to prove counterfeit coin dispensed with.-> 17. The court may order hard labour or solitary confinement.- 19. The words "king's coin" include all coin lawfully current in the United Kingdom and wilfully having, in any dwelling-house or other building, lodging, apartment, field, or other place, open or inclosed, whether belonging to or occupied by himself or not, and whether for his own use or benefit, or for that of another, shall be deemed having in his possession within this act.-d 21. Persons acting in the execution of this act, protected in the usual manner, by requiring notice of action, &c., and allowing tender of amends, &c.-d 22. 10. Convictions for Coining and Uttering.-In the 7 years ending with 1818, 63 persons were con- victed in England and Wales of the offence of counterfeiting the coin of the realm, of whom 1 was executed. In the next 7 years the convictions for coining were reduced to 14, but of these 5 were executed. In the last septennial period, ending with 1832, the convictions were 34, and the execu- tions 7. The convictions for issuing forged coins in the first of the above periods were 21, in the second 2, and in the third, 32. TABLES RELATIVE TO THE COINS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND OTHER COUNTRIES. No. I. ENGLISH Corns.-Account of the English Silver and Gold Coins; showing their Value, the Seignorage or Profit upon the Coinage, and the Price of the Pound Troy of Standard Gold and Silver, from the Conquest to the present time.-(This and the next Table, No. II., are taken from Part 11. of Essays on Money, Exchanges, and Political Economy, by Henry James.) Silver. Gold. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Equal to the Equal to the Fineness Pound Profit or Mint Price Fineness Pound Profit or Mint Price A.D. Anno Regni. of the Sil- Weight of Seignorage for Standard of the Weight of Seignorage for Standard ver in the such Silver on the Silver of Gold in such Gold on the Gold of 22 Coins. coined into Coinage. 11 OK. 2 dwts. the Colum. coined into Coinage. Carats fine fine Troy Troy weight. weight. Oz. drs. L.a.d. Led. L. d. Crts. grea. Led L a. d. L & d 1066 Conquest - 11 2 100 1280 8 Edward I. - - - 100 01 0 1 0 34 1300 28 1 03 01 21 1344 18 Edward III. - - - 103 01 3 1034 23 31 13 34 084 12 10 8 1349 23 1 26 013 128 - - 14 00 0118 13 3 9 1356 30 150 0 0 10 1591 - - 15 00 068 14 8 4 1394 18 Richard II. - - - 150 0010 15 % - - 15 00 050 14 9 11 1401 3 Henry 1V. - - - 150 0010 159 - - 15 00 050 14 11 1421 9 Henry V. - - - 100 010 1 10 111 - - 16 13 4 050 16 2 9 1425 4 Henry VI. - - - 1 10 0 010 1 10 111 - - 16 13 4 0 5 10 16 1 11 1464 4 Edward IV. - - - 1 17 6 046 1 15 21 - - 20 16 8 210 0 18 0 5 1465 5 - - 1 17 6 046 1 15 21 - 22 10 0 1010 21 1 10 1470 49 Henry VI. - - - 1 17 6 02 0 1 17 101 - - 22 10 0 0 13 0 21 9 7 1482 22 Edward IV. - - - 1 17 6 016 1 18 44 - 22 10 0 076 21 15 0 1483 1 Richard III. - - - 1 17 6 016 1 18 41 - 22 10 0 076 21 15 0 1485 1 Henry VII. - - - 1 17 6 016 1 18 41 - - 22 10 0 076 21 15 0 1509 1 Henry VIII. - 1176 010 1 18 111 - 22 100 026 22 0 0 *1527 18 200 01 04 1 18 111 - 24 00 028 200 2 50 010 240 - 27 00 029 - - - - - - 22 0 25 26 030 24 19 6 1543 34 10 0 280 08 0 2 4 41 23 0 28 16 0 140 2680 1545 36 6 0 2 80 20 0 2 11 91 220 30 00 2100 97 10 0 1546 37 40 280 440 2 15 6 20 0 30 00 500 27 10 0 1547 1 Edward VI. 40 280 440 2 15 6 20 0 30 00 1100 3170 1549 3 60 3120 400 2 19 2f 220 34 00 110 3300 1551 5 3 0 3120 11 0 300 - - - - 23 31 36 00 - - - - - - - - 22 0 33 00 1552 6 11 1 .00 010 2 19 31 23 3f S 36 00 020 - - - - - - - 2202 33 00 030 32 17 8 1553 1 Mary - 11 0 300 01 0 2 19 61 23 31 36 00 030 3308 1560 2 Elizabeth - 11 2 300 016 2 18 6 23315 36 00 050 - - - - 2201 33 00 040 32 16 0 1600 43 320 080 3 0 0 233}S 36 10 0 0 10 0 - - - - - 2202 33 10 0 0 10 0 3300 1604 2 James I. - - 320 026 2 19 6 22 0 37 4 0 1 10 0 35 14 0 1626 2 Charles I. - - 320 020 300 41 00 115 39 18 7 +1666 18 Charles IL - - 320 000 320 - 44 10 - - 44 10 0 1717 3 George I. - - 320 000 320 - 46 6 - - 46 14 6 1816 56 George III. - 3 040 - - - 46 6 - - 46 14 6 * 1587-Heary VIII.] The Saxon or Tower pound was used at the mint up to this time, when the pound Troy was substituted in its stead. The Tower pound was but 11 oz. 5 dwts. Troy so that, from the Conquest to the 28th of Edward I., 20 shillings in tale were exactly a pound in weight. t 1666-18 Charles II.] The seignorage on the coinage was at this time given up, and the gold bullion brought to the mint has ever since been coined free of expense. A seignorage of 614 31 per cent was imposed on the coinage of silver by 56 Geo. 3. Digitized by Google 388 COINS. No. II. ENGLISH Coins.-Account of the Quantity of Fine Sliver coined into 90s. or the Pound Ster- ling; the Quantity of Standard Silver, of 11 oz. 2 dwts. Fine and 18 dwts. Alloy, contained in 20s. or the Pound Sterling, in the different Reigns, from the Time of Edward I. to the Reign of William IV.-A similar Account with respect to Gold.-And an Account of the proportional Value of Fine Gold to Fine Silver, according to the Number of Grains contained in the Coins.-Calculatad in Grains and 1000th Parts Troy Weight. Silver. Gold. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Number of Grains Number of Grains Number of Grains Number of Grains Proportionate A.D. of Fine Silver in of Standard Sil- Anno Regni. of Fine Gold in of Standard Gold, Value of Fine 20 Shillings, or ver, 11 oz. 2 dwts. Fine in 20 Shil- 20 Shillings, or 22 Carats fine, in Gold to Fine the Pound Ster- the Pound Ster- 20 Shillings, or Silver, according ling, as coined by lings, or the the Pound Ster- ling, as coined by to the Quantity of the Mint Inden- Pound Sterling, the Mint Inden- ling, as coined by each Metal con- tures. as coined by the the Mint Inden- tures. tained in the Mint Indentures. tures. Grains. Grains. Grains. Grains. Gold to Silver. 1066 Conquest - - - 4,995-000 5,400.000 1280 8 Edward I. - 4,995-000 5,400-000 1344 18 Edward III. - 4,933-333 5,333.333 407-990 445-080 I to 12-091 1349 23 - 4,440.000 4,800-000 383-705 418-588 1- 11-571 1356 30 - 3,996.000 4,320-000 358 125 390-682 1 - 11.158 1401 3 Henry IV. - 3,996.000 4,320-000 358:125 390 682 1 - 11-158 1421 9 Henry V. - 3,330-000 3,600.000 322-312 351-613 1- 10:331 1464 4 Edward IV. - 2,664.000 2,880.000 257.850 281.291 1 - 10:331 1465 5 - 2,664.000 2,880.000 238.750 260 454 1 — 11-158 1470 49 Henry VI. - 2,664.000 2,880.000 238.750 260-454 1 — 11-158 1482 22 Edward IV. - 2,664.000 2,880.000 238-750 260-454 1- 11-158 1509 1 Henry VIII. - 2,664.000 2,880-000 238-750 260-454 1 - 11-158 1527 18 - 2,368.000 2,560.000 210.149 229-253 1- 11-268 1543 34 - 2,000.000 2,162.162 191 666 209.090 I — 10-434 1545 36 - 1,200.000 1,297-297 176-000 192-000 1 - 6-818 1546 37 - 800-000 864-864 160-000 174-545 1 - 5-000 1547 1 Edward VI. - 800-000 864-864 160-000 174.545 1- 5-000 1549 3 - 800-000 864-864 155.294 169-412 1 - 5.151 *1551 5 - 400:000 - 1,769.000 1,902.702 160-000 174-545 1- 11:000 1552 6 - 1,768.000 1,911.351 160-000 174545 11-050 1553 I Mary - - 1,760*000 1,902.702 159:166 173-636 1 - 11-057 1560 2 Elizabeth - 1,776.000 1,920-000 160-000 174-545 1- 11-100 1600 43 - 1,718:709 1,858-064 157.612 171:940 1- 10-904 1604 2 James I. - 1,718.709 1,858-064 141-935 154-838 1 - 12-109 1626 2 Charles I.- - 1,718.709 1,858.064 128780 140-487 1- 13-346 1666 18 Charles II. - 1,718.709 1,858-064 118.651 129-438 1- 14-485 1717 3 George I. - 1,718.709 1,858.064 113-001 123:274 1 - 15-209 41816 56 George III. - 1,614.545 1,745.454 113-001 123.274 1- 14-287 No. III. SCOTCH Come.-Account of the Number of Pounds. Shillings, and Pennies Scotch, which have been coined out of One Pound Weight of Silver, at different Times; with the Degree of Purity of such Silver, or its Fineness, from the year 1107 to the year 1601.-(From Cardonnel's Munismata Scotia, p. 24.) Value of the Value of the Money coin- Money coin- A.D. Anno Begni. Purity. Alloy. ed out of a A.D. Anno Regni. Purity. Alloy. ed out of a Lb. Weight Lb. Weight of Silver. of Silver. From Oz. pro. Oz. pro. £ s. d. Oz. pro. Oz. pto. £ 8. d. 1107 Alexander I. 1451 James II. 15 11 2 0 18 340 David I. } 1456 20 11 2 0 18 4 16 6 William 018 1 0 0 1475 James IPI. 16 11 2 11 2 0 18 740 to Alexander II. 1484 24 11 2 0 18 7 0 0 Alexander III. 1488 1296 John Baliol 1489 James IV. an 11 2 0 18 7 0 o From 1529 James V. 16 11 0 10 912 0 1306 Robert 1. 11 2 0 18 110 1544 Mary 3 11 0 10 912 0 - to 1556 14 11 0 10 13 0 o 1329 1565 23 11 0 10 18 0 0 1366 David II. 38 11 2 0 18 150 1567 James VI. 1 11 0 10 18 0 6 1367 39 11 % 0 18 194 1571 5 90 30 16 14 0 From 1576 10 80 40 16 14 0 1371 Robert II. 11 2 0 18 194 1579 13 11 0 10 22 0 0 - to 1581 15 11 0 10 94 0 0 1390 1597 31 11 0 10 30 0 0 1393 Robert III. 4 11 2 0 18 1 12 0 1601 35 11 0 10 3600 1424 James 1. 19 11 % 0 18 1 17 6 * 1551-5 Edward VI.] The coinage of debased silver money in the 5th year of Edward VI. of 3 oz. fine, ought more properly to be considered as Tokens. The sum of 120,000l. only was so coined.- (See James's Essays, chap. iv.) + 1816-56 George III.] The government having taken the coinage of silver Into its own hands, there is at present no fixed price paid to the public, by the mint, for standard silver. And supposing the government to continue the present mint regulations, and to keep gold at 77s. 10Hd. an ounce, as the price of silver varies, the relative value of gold to sliver will vary in like proportion. Digitized by Google COINS. 389 No. IV. SCOTCH Come.-Account of the Number of Pounds, Shillings, and Pennies Scotch, which have been coined out of One Pound Weight of Gold; with the degree of their Purity, and the Pro- portion that the Gold bore to the Silver.-(Cardonnel, p. 25.) Value of the Coin Pound of Pure Gold B. Anno Regal. Fineness. Alloy. coined out of One weighed of Pure Pound of Gold. Silven Oz. pro. gr. Oz. pro. gn. £ 8. d. Lbs. oz. pto. gr. 1371, &c. Robert II. - 11 18 18 0 1 6 17 12 0 11 1 17 22 1390,&c. Robert II. - 11 18 18 0 1 6 19 4 0 11 1 17 22 1424 James I. 19 11 18 18 0 1 6 22 10 0 11 1 17 22 1451 James II. 15 11 18 18 016 33 6 0 9 8 4 14 1456 20 11 18 18 0 1 6 50 0 0 98 4 14 1475 James III. 16 11 18 18 0 1 6 78 15 0 10 2 0 20 1484 24 11 18 18 0 1 6 78 15 0 10 5 7 9 1488 James IV. 1 11 18 18 0 1 6 78 15 0 10 5 7 9 1529 James V. 16 11 18 18 0 1 6 108 0 0 10 5 7 9 1556 Mary 14 11 0 0 1 0 0 144 0 0 10 5 8 6 1567 James VI. 10 11 0 0 1 0 o 240 00 10 5 8 6 1579 13 10 10 0 1 10 0 240 0 0 11 5 2 20 1597 31 11 0 0 1 0 0 360 0 0 12 0 0 0 1001 35 11 0 0 1 0 0 432 0 0 12 0 0 0 1633 Charles I. 9 11 0 0 1 0 0 492 0 0 13 2 7 11 No. V.-Account of the value of the Gold and Silver Coins, specifying each, coined at the Mint, each Year since 1790.-(Parl. Paper, No. 138. Sess. 1833; and papers published by the Board of Trade.) Years. Gold coined. Silver coined. Years. Gold coined. Silver coined. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 1790 2,660,521 10 0 Nil. 1812 Nil. 52 14 0 1791 2,456,566 17 6 Nil. 1813 519,722 36 89 18 0 1792 1,171,863 0 0 251 17 6 1814 Nil. 161 4 0 1793 2,747,430 0 0 Nil. 1815 Nil. Nil. 1794 2,558,894 12 6 Nil. 1816 Nil. 1,805,251 16 0 1795 493,416 0 0 293 11 11 1817 4,275,337 10 0 2,436,297 12 0 1796 464,680 2 6 Nil. 1818 2,862,373 10 0 576,279 0 0 1797 2,000,297 5 0 Nil. 1819 3,574 10 8 1,267,272 12 0 1798 2,967,504 15 0 Nil. 1820 949,516 0 10 847,717 4 0 1799 449,961 15 0 Nil. 1821 9,520,758 13 10 433,686 0 0 1800 189,937 2 6 Nil. 1822 5,356,787 12 6 31,430 7 1 1801 450,242 2 0 53 7 1 1823 759,748 10 0 285,271 16 0 1802 437,018 18 6 62 0 0 1824 (4,065,075 0 0 282,070 16 0 1803 596,444 12 6 72 6 8 1825 4,580,919 0 0 417,535 16 0 1804 718,396 17 6 77 10 0 1826 5,896,461 7 6 608,605 16 0 1805 54,668 5 0 182 18 0 1827 2,512,636 17 6 33,019 16 0 1806 405,105 15 0 Nil. 1828 1,008,559 2 6 16,288 3 0 1807 Nil. 108 10 0 1829 2,446,754 12 6 108,259 16 0 1808 371,744 2 0 Nil. 1830 2,387,881 2 6 151 16 0 1809 298,946 11 0 114 14 0 1831 587,949 14 5 33,696 5 8 1810 316,935 13 6 120 18 0 1811 312,263 3 6 Nil. Total - £69,856,894 8 9 9,183,259 5 9 No. VI. GOLD COINS OF DIFFERENT COUNTRIES.-A Table containing the Assays, Weights, and Values of the principal Gold Coins of all Countries, computed according to the Mint Price of Gold in England, and from Assays made both at London and Paris, which have been found to verify each other.* *** The publishers of this work have purchased the right to publish this Table from Dr. Kelly, in the second edition of whose Cambist it originally appeared. Standard Contents Weight. Value in COINS. Assay. Weight. in Pure Gold. Sterling. Car.gr. Drot.gr. Dut.gr.mi. Grains. 3. d. AUSTRIAN Souverain - - - - W.0 04 3 14 3 13 15 78.6 13 10:92 DOMINIONS Double ducat - - B. 1 21 4 12 420 5 106.4 18 9.97 Ducat Kremnitz, or Hungarian - B.1 3 2 54 2103 53.3 9 5:91 BAVARIA - Carolin - W.3 2 6 51/ 5 5 10 115- 20 4.23 Max d'or, or Maximilian - - W.3 21 44 3140 77. 13 7.44 Ducat - B. 1 21 2 5% 2 19 11 52.8 9 4-12 BERN - Ducat (double, &c. in proportion) - - B. 1 11 1 23 221 45.9 8 1.48 Pistole - W.0 11 4 21 4 19 0 105-5 18 7:86 BRUNSWICK Pistole (double in proportion) - W.0 11 4 214 4 19 5 105.7 18 8:48 Ducat - - - - B. 1 01 2 54 289 518 9 2- COLOGNE - Ducat - - - - B. 1 2 2 51 298 52.6 9 3:70 DENMARK - Ducat current - - - W.0 31 20 1 21 19 42.2 7 5.62 Ducat specie - - - B. 1 2 2 51 298 52.6 9 3.70 Christian d'or - - - W.0 1 47 4 5 16 93.3 16 6.14 The London assays in this Table were made by Robert Bingley, Esq. F. R. N. the King's Assay Master of the Mint, and those at Paris by Pierre Frédéric Bonneville, Essayeur du Commerce, as published in his elaborate work on the coins of all nations. Specimens of all the foreign coins brought to London for commercial purposes have been supplied for this Table from the Bullion-office, Bank of England, by order of the Bank Directors, and have been selected by John Humble, Esq., the chief clerk of that office, who also examined the Tables in their progress. It may likewise be added, that the Mint Reports of these commercial coins are chiefly from average assays; and that all the computations have been carefully verified by different calcu- lators.-(Note by Dr. Kelly, to second edition of the Cambist, published in 1821.) 2x2 Digitized by Google 890 COINS. Standard Contracts COINS. Weight. in pare Value in Anny. Weight. Gold. Sterling. Car. gr. Dut. 5. Dust.gr.mi. Grains. a. d ENGLAND - Guinea - - - - Stand. 5 of 5910 1187 я o Half-guines - - - - Stand. 2 164 2 16 15 593 10 6· Seven shilling piece - - Stand. 19 19 0 39.6 7 0° Sovereign - - Stand. 5 3t 585 113.1 20 o FRANCE - Double Louis (coined before 1786) . W.0 2 10 11 1056 294.9 39 9-64 Louis . W.0 2 5 5f 522 112.4 10 10-71 Double Louis (coined since 1786) - W.0 It 9 20 9 15 19 212's 37 7.53 Louis - . W.0 If 4 22 4 19 19 106·3 18 9-75 - Double Napoleon, or piece of 40 franca - - W.0 It 87 830 179- 31 8.36 Napoleon, or piece of 20 france - W.0 11 4 3f 4 1 10 897 15 10'5 New Louis (double, &c.) the same as the Napoleon. FRANCEFORT ON THE MAINE Ducat - - - 21 2 57 2914 58-9 9 424 GENEVA - Pistole, old - - - - W.0 2 4 7t 4 4 18 925 16 4-45 Pistole new - - - - W.0 of 8 154 3 15 4 80. 14 19 GENOA - Sequin - - - - B.1 8 % 54 2106 53.4 9 5-41 HAMBUROH - Ducat (double in proportion) - B.1 % 2 54 2914 52.9 9 4-25 HANOVER - George d'or - - - - W.0 It 4 of 453 92.6 16 466 Ducat - - B.1 3 2 51 10 3 533 - - 9 5.19 Gold florin (double in proportion) - W.8 0f % 2 1186 39. 6 10-83 HOLLAND - Double ryder - - Stand. 1221 12 21 0 283.2 50 1·46 - Ryder - - Stand. 69 690 140-2 24 9-75 - Ducat - - - - B. 1 & 2 51 2.9.12 528 9 4-13 MALTA - Double Louis 9 18 18 215.3 - - - W.1 34 10 16 38 1.25 Louis - - - - W.1 3 58 4 21 16 106 19 1.37 Demi Louis - - - - W.1 % 216 2118 545 9 775 MILAN - - Sequin - - - - B.13 2 54 200 53.2 9 4-98 Doppia or pistole - - - W.0 1 4 11 408 884 15 774 40 Lire piece of 1808 - - W.0 If 88 840 1797 31 9-64 NAPLES - Six ducat piece of 1783 - - W.0 2/ 516 5 12 18 121-9 21 6.89 Two ducat piece, or sequin, of 1762 W.1 % 24 1 204 166 37.4 6 7.42 Three ducat piece, or oncetta, of 1818 B.1 3| 2 104 2 15 1 58-1 10 3-40 NETHERLANDS Gold lion, or 14 florin piece - Stand. 5 74 5 7 16 117.1 20 8-60 Ten florin plece (1820) - W.0 11 4 74 4 5 15 93% 16 5-93 PARMA - Quadruple pistole (double in propor- tion) - - W.1 0 18 9 17 12 18 386 08 378 Pistole or doppia of 1787 - - W.0 3 414 410 4 97.4 17 2-85 Ditto of 1796 - - W.1 of 414 4 8 14 95-9 16 11-07 Maria Theresa (1818) - - W.0 14 4 31 410 89-7 15 10-5 PIEDMONT - Pistole coined since 1785 (t, &e. in proportion) - - - W.0 11 5 20 5170 125-6 22 275 Sequin (t in proportion) - - B. 21 2 54 2912 52-9 9 4-34 Carlino, coined since 1785 (t, &c. in proportion) - - W.0 It 20 6 28 20 0 634-4 112 3-36 Piece of 20 francs, called Marango W.2 0 4 34 184 827 H 7-63 POLAND - Ducat - - B.1 % 2 54 2912 529 9 4-34 PORTUGAL - Dobraon of 24,000 rees - - Stand. 34 12 34 12 0 750- 134 3-96 Dobra of 12,800 rees - - Stand. 18 6 18 6 0 401-5 71 0-70 Moidore or Lisbonnine " &c. in pre- portion) - Stand. 6 22 6220 152-2 26 11-24 Piece of 16 testoons, or 1,600 rees W. of 26 2 5 14 493 8 8-70 Old crusado of 400 rees - - W.0 of 0 15 0 14 18 13.6 2 4-88 New crusado of 480 rees - - W.0 of 0 16} 0162 148 2 7-43 Milree (coined for the African colo- nies 1755) - - - . Stand. 0 194 0 19 15 181 3 2-44 PRUSSIA - Ducat of 1748 - - - B.1 21 2 51 2914 529 9 4-04 Ducat of 1787 - - - B.12 2 54 295 52.6 9 3-71 Frederick (double) of 1769 - - W.0 14 8 14 8 918 185- 32 8-90 Frederick (single) of 1778 - - W.0 If 47 454 92.8 16 5-08 Frederick (double) of 1800 - - W.0 2 8 14 896 184-5 32 7-64 Frederick (single) of 1800 - - W.0 2 47 4 13 92.2 16 3-42 ROME - - Sequin (coined since 1760) - - B. 1 31 % 41 290 52% 9 2-66 Scudo of the Republic - - W 0 14 17 of 16 16 6 367 64 11-43 RUSSIA - Ducat of 1796 - - - B.1 2ₜ 26 200 53-2 9 4-28 Ducat of 1763 - - - B.1 % 2 54 298 526 9 371 Gold ruble of 1756 - - - Stand. 1 of 1010 22-5 3 1178 Ditto of 1799 - - - W.0 04 0 184 0 18 14 17.1 3 0-31 Gold poltin of 1777 - - - Stand. 09 090 8-2 I 5.41 Imperial of 1801 I - - B.1 % 171 868 181-9 32 2-31 Half Imperial of 1801 - - B.1 2 3201 434 90-9 16 1-05 Ditto of 1818 - - - B.00 4 3f 4 3 12 913 16 1-98 SARDINIA - Carlino (i in proportion) - - W.0 2! 10 71 9 23 10 2198 30 8:10 SAXONY - Ducat of 1784 - - - B.1 2 2 51 298 52.6 9 3-71 Ducat of 1797 - - - B.1 % % 51 2914 529 9 4.34 Augustus of 1754 - - - W.0 % 4 6/ 438 91.2 16 1-69 Augustus of 1784 - - - W.0 11 4 6f 4 4 12 92.2 16 3-81 SICILY* - Ounce of 1751 - - - W.1 21 2 20, 2158 58.2 10 3-69 Double ounce of 1758 - - W.1 2 5 17 5 7 14 117 99 8-48 SPAIN - - Doubloon of 1772 (double and single in proportion) - - W.0 21 17 81, 61 21 16 372 65 10-05 Quadruple pistole of 1801 - - W.1 1 17 9 1696 369-5 63 9-08 * Much variation is found in the finences of the Sicilian gold coins. Digitized by Google COINS. 891 COINS. Assay. Weight. Standard Contents in pure Value in Weight. Gold. Starling. Car. gr. Dest. Dest. mi. Grains. ad SPAIN - Pistole of 1801 - - - W.11 4 81 426 90-1 15 11-85 Coronilla, gold dollar, or vintem of 1801 - - - W. 1 2j 1 : 1 0 18 22.8 4 0.42 SWEDEN - Ducat - - - - B.12 25 2812 51-9 9 9.23 SWITZERLAND Pistole of the Helvetic Republic of 1800 - - - - W. 0 It 4 211 4199 105.9 18 8-91 TREVES - Ducat - - - B.1 % 2 54 298 52-6 9 371 TURKEY - Sequin fonducli of Constantinople of 1773 - - - W.2 % 2 64 1236 43.3 7 7.94 Sequin fonducti of 1789 - - W. 2 3t 2 54 19916 42.9 7 711 Half missier (1818) - - W.5 3 0 18 0185 12:16 2 182 Sequin fonducil - - - W.2 3 25 1987 42.5 7 6.96 Yermeebeshiek - - - B.0 31 2 11 3 4 13 70.3 12 5:30 TUSCANY - Zecchino or sequin - - - B. 1 34 1 54 2014 53.6 9 5.83 Ruspone of the Kingdom of Etruria B.1 & 6 174 7 7 13 161. 28 5-93 UNITED STATES * Eagle (t and + in proportion) - W.0 0f 11 6 1148 246.1 43 6.66 VENICE - Zecchino or sequin (t and t in pro- portion) - - - - B. 1 It 26 2 10 10 53-6 9 5.83 WISTEMBERG Carolin - - - - W.3 2 6 31 540 1137 20 1-47 Ducat - - - - B.12 25 2.812 51.9 9 2.22 Ducat (double and t ducat in propor- tion) - - - - B.1 % 2 51 298 52.6 9 3-71 EAST INDIES. Mohur of 1770 - - - B. 1 21 7 221 8 11 15 186.8 33 0.72 Mohur, Half (1787), t in proportion B.1 2 3234 4 16 10 94 16 7-64 Mohur Sicca of Bengal - - B. 1 34 7 23 8 15 0 1898 30 1-04 Mohur of the Dutch East India W.3 H 10 2 Company, (1783) 880 183.4 32 5:50 Mohur, Half Ditto (1801) - - W.8 lt 5 st 4 18 18 96.2 17 0.30 Rupee, Bombay (1818) - - B.0 0f 7 11 7 11 13 1647 29 178 Rupee of Madras (1818) - - Stand. 7 12 7120 165 20 2.42 Pagoda, star - - - - W.8 0 24 1 21 11 41.8 7 4'77 No: VII. SILVER Coins OF DIFFERENT COUNTRIES.-A Table containing the Assays, Weights, and Values of the principal Silver Coins of all Countries, computed at the rate of 5a. 2d. per Ounce Standard, from Assays made both at the Loadon and Paris Mints. Standard Contents COINS. Amay. Weight. Weight. in Pure Value in Silver. Sterling. Oz. dut. Dut. gr. Dut.gr.mi. Grains. s. d. AUSTRIA - Rixdollar of Francis II., 1800 - W.1 5 18 1 16 0 4 355.5 4 1.64 Rixdollar of the kingdom of Hengary W.1 2 18 1 16 6 1 360.9 4 2:39 Half rixdollar, or florin, Convention W.1 8 9 04 8 % 1 1796 2 1:07 Copftsuck, or 20 creutzer piece - W.43 4 of 2163 59.4 0 8-29 17 Creutzer piece - - W.4 8 40 2 9 18 53.5 0 7.47 Halbe copf, or 10 creutzer piece - W.5 5 211 171 28.8 0 4-01 BADEN - Rixdollar - W.1 4 18 % 16 3 1 358-1 4 2. BAVARIA - Rixdollar of 1800 (t in proportion) W. 1 4f 17 12 15 13 13 345-6 4 0:25 Copftsuck - W.4 3 4 of 2163 59.4 0 8-29 BERN - - Patagon or crown (t in proportion) W.0 7 18 22 18 7 14 406.7 4 879 Piece of 10 batzen - - W.1 % 53 41417 102.5 1 231 BREMEN - Piece of 48 grotes - - - W.2 2 11 0 8 8 22 22 1 198 % 3-64 BRUNSWICK Rixdollar, Convention - - W.1 3 18 1 1644 359.2 4 2:15 Half rixdollar - - - W.1 3 9 of 822 179-6 1 T07 Gulden, or piece of 1, fine, of 1764 B. 0 16 8 101 911 2008 2 4-03 Gulden, common, of 1764 - - W.1 % 90 8 2 10 180 2 1.13 Gulden, ditto of 1795 - - W.2 2 11 If 8937 199-1 2 3.80 Half gulden, or piece of 1, of 1764 - W.1 2 412 415 90 1 0.56 DENMARK - Ryksdaler, specie, of 1798 - - W.013 18 14 17 11 17 388.4 4 6.23 New piece of 4 marks - - W.0 12 12 9 II 16 14 259.8 3 0.27 Half ryksdaler - - W.013 97 8 17 8 1942 % 3'11 Mark, specie, or t rykadaler - W.3 1 40 2112 64-4 0 7.59 Rixdollar, specie, of Sleswig and Holstein (pleces of t and t in pro- portion.) - - - W.012 18 13 17 12 6 389.4 4 6.37 Piece of 24 skillings - - W.4 7 5 21 3 2 10 68.9 0 9.6% EWULAND - Crown (old) - - - Stand. 19 81 19 8 10 429.7 5 0. Half-crown - - - - Stand. 9 10+ 916 5 214.8 2 6. Shilling - - - Stand. 3 21 3210 85.9 1 0. Sixpence - . - Stand. 1921 1 88 10 42.9 0 6. Crown (new) - 0 - Stand. 18 44 1847 403.6 4 8-36 Half-crown - - - - Stand. 92 9 % 4 2018 2 4'18 Shilling - - - - Stand. 3 315 6 80.7 0 11 27 Sixpence - - - - Stand. I 191 1914 40:3 0 5-63 FRANCE - Ecn of 6 livres - . - W.0 7 18 18 18 7 16 403-1 4 8.28 Demi ecu - - - - W.0 7 99 9 1 18 201.5 2 4'13 Piece of 24 sous (divisions in prop.) W.0 7 3 20 31619 83.4 0 11-64 Piece of 30 sous (t in proportion) W.3 8 612 4124 100.2 1 1.99 Piece of 5 francs of the Convention W.0 10} 16 0 15 5 14 :38:3 3 11:94 Piece of 5 francs (Napoleon) of 1808 W.0 7 16 1 15 12 4 344.9 4 0:16 Piece of 2 france of 1808 . - W.0 7 6 11 662 138.8 1 7.38 * This value of the American eagle is taken from average assays of the coins of twelve years. Digitized by Google 392 COINS. Standard Contents COINS. Assay. Weight. Value in Weight. in Pure Silver. Sterling. Oz. dut. Dut. gr. Dut.gr.mi. Grains. a. d. FRANCE - Franc of 1809 - . - W.0 7 3 5f 331 69-4 0 9-09 Demi franc - - - - W.0 & 115 4136 347 0 4.84 Franc (Louis) of 1816, same as franc of 1809. GENEVA - Patagon - - - W.10 17 9 15 19 8 351- 4 1-08 Piece of 15 sous of 1794 - - W.26 2 11 1 15 1 36.1 0 5-04 GENOA - - Scudo, of 8 lire, of 1796 (t, 1, &c. in proportion) - W.0 8 21 9 20 14 10 457.4 5 3.87 Scudo of the Ligurian Republic - W. of 21 9 20 11 8 454-3 5 3.43 HAMBURGH - Rixdollar, specie - - - W.0 10 18 18 17 21 12 397.5 4 7.49 Double mark, or 32 schilling piece (single in proportion) - - W.23 11 18 9118 210-3 2 5:36 Piete of 8 schillings - - W.3 12 3 84 264 50:1 0 6-99 Piece of 4 schillings . - W.46 22 1612 28.3 0 3.95 HANDVER - Rixdollar, Constitution - - W.0 9 18 19 18 14 400'3 4 7.89 Florin, or piece of 1, fine - - B.016 810 9 010 2003 2 3-96 Half florin, or piece of t, ditto - B.0 16 44 4114 99.2 I 1.85 Quarter, or piece of 6 good groschen, ditto - - B.016 21 2410 486 0 678 Florin, "or piece of 1, base - - W.2 1 11 04 8 23 15 1996 2 3.87 HESSE CASSEL Rixdollar, Convention - - W.16 18 1 15 22 6 353 4 1:39 Florin, or piece of 1 (t in proportion) W.1 6 9 of 7 23 3 176.8 2 0.08 Thaler of 1789 - - W.0 10f 12 7t 11 17 5 2597 3 026 Ecu, Convention (1815) - - W.16 17 234 15 2 3493 4 077 Bon gros - - - - W.614 14 0 11 5 10'3 0 1:43 HOLLAND - Ducatoon - - - . B.03 20 22 21 15 4716 5 5.85 Piece of 3 florins - - - W.0 2 20 7 20 12 446.4 5 2:33 Rixdollar (the assay varies) - W.0 16 18 6 16 20 8 375.9 4 4-99 Half rixdollar - - - W.0 16 90 888 185.4 % 1-88 Florin or guilder (t in proportion) - W.0 41 6 18 6 14 14 1468 I 8:49 12 Stiver piece - - - W.0 16 412 4 3 18 92.4 1 0.90 Florin of Batavia - - - W. 5f 6 13 692 141.6 1 777 Rixdollar, of 50 stiver piece, of the kingdom of Holland - - W.0 5 17 0 16 13 18 367.9 4 3:37 LUBEC - - Rixdollar, specie - - - W.013 18 8 17 15 12 391-9 4 6.72 Double mark - - - W.2 3 11 18 9 11 8 210.3 2 5.36 Mark - - - - W.2 3 5 21 4 17 14 105.1 1 2-67 LUCCA - - Scudo - - - - W.0 3 17 0 16 18 10 372.3 4 3.98 Barbone - - - - W.3 3 1 201 1 7 14 293 0 4-09 MALTA"- - Ounce of 30 tari of Emmanuel Pinto W.25 19 It 15 4 14 337.4 3 11.11 2 Tari piece - - - W.219 1 2 0192 17.7 0 241 MILAN - - Scudo of 6 lire (t in proportion) - W.0 7 14 201 14 9 10 319-6 3 8.62 Lira, new - - - - W.4 10 40 290 528 0 7:37 Lira, old - - - - W.0 3 210 294 52.9 0 7:38 Scudo of the Cisalpine Republic - W.0 7 14 211 14 10 4 320.2 3 8-71 Piece of 30 soldi of ditto - - W.2 18 417 3 11 8 77.2 0 10.78 MODENA - Scudo of 15 lire, 1739 (double, &c. in proportion) - - - W.0 14 18 121 1789 385-2 4 5.78 Scudo of 5 lire, of 1782 - - W.0 3 5 19 5172 126.8 1 5.70 Scudo of 1796 - - - W.3 3 18 14 12 22 12 287.4 3 4.13 NAPLES - Ducat, new (t in proportion) - W.1 0 14 15 1378 295.4 3 5.94 Piece of 12 Carlini of 1791 - W.1 0 17 15 16 18 356 4 171 Ditto of 1796 - - - W.1 2 17 164 15 22 12 353.9 4 1.41 Ditto of 1805 (I in proportion) W.1 2 17 18 15 23 18 355.2 4 1-60 Ditto of 10 Carlini (1818) - - W.1 % 14 18 1370 @95.1 3 5-20 NETHERLANDS Ducatoon, old - - B.04 21 0 21 9 0 474.6 5 6-27 Ducatoon of Maria Theresa - W.0 14 21 10 20 1 12 445.5 5 2-20 Crown, (t, &c. in proportion) - W.0 14 19 0 17 19 4 395-2 4 7.18 5 Stiver piece - - - W.6 3 34 1 9 18 31.3 0 4.37 Florin of 1790 - - - W.014 5 231 5149 124'3 1 5.35 Florin of 1816 - - - W.0 7t 6 22 6166 148.4 1 8.78 Half florin (with divisions in prop.) W.4 5f 511 392 75. 0 10-46 PARMA Ducat of 1784 - - - W.0 9 16 11 15 18 350-6 4 0.95 Ducat of 1796 (I in proportion) - W.0 51 16 121 16 18 357.9 4 1.97 Piece of 3 lire - - W.1 4 4 14 422 90-7 1 0.66 PIEDMONT - Scudo, 1755 (t, &c. in proportion) - W.0 51 22 14 22 0 10 488.9 5 8-26 Scudo, 1770 (t and 1 in proportion) - W.0 5 22 14 22 1 16 490 5 8.42 Piece of 2 lire (1714) - - W.0 4f 7 201 7 16 13 170.8 1 11-85 5 Franc piece (1801) - - W.0 8 16 It 15 11 12 343.7 3 11-99 POLAND - Rixdollar, old - - - W.1 2 18 1 16 6 0 360.8 4 2.38 Rixdollar, new (1794) - - W.2 17 15 104 11 11 6 254'3 2 11.51 Florin, or gulden - - - W.4 2 00 3 18 16 84 0 1178 PORTUGAL - New crusado (1690) - - W.0 4 11 0 10 19 0 239-2 2 9'40 Ditto (1718) - - W.0 6f 98 910 2002 2 3-95 Ditto (1795) I - W.0 7 99 9 1 18 2016 2 4.15 Doze vintema, or piece of 240 rees (1799) - - - - W.0 7 4 16 4 12 10 100·4 1 2-01 Testoon (1799) - - - W.0 7 2 01 1 22 18 43'4 0 6-06 New crusado (1809) - - W.0 4 93 8 23 0 198-2 2 407 Seis vintems, or piece of 120 rees (1802) - - - - W.0 9 2 41 228 46-6 0 6.50 Testoon (1802) - - - W.0 9 20 1220 42.5 0 5.93 Tres vintems, or piece of 60 rees (1802) W.0 9 1 21 114 23.3 0 3.25 Half testoon (1802) - - - W.0 9 0 23 0 22 0 20.4 0 264 Digitized by Google COINS. 393 1 Standard Contents COINS. Assay. Weight. Weight. in Pure Value in Silver. Sterling. Oz. dut. Dut. gr. Dut. Grains. a d. PORTUGUESE 1 Piece of 8 macutes, of Portuguese COLONIES s Africa - - - - W.0 9 7 12 7 4 14 159 8 1 10:31 Ditto of 6 ditto - - - W.0 9 5 13 5 712 118. 1 4.47 Ditto of 4 ditto - - - W.0 9 316 3128 781 0 10:90 PRUSSIA - *Rixdollar, Prussian currency, (I in proportion) - - - W.2 5 14 64 1190 252.6 2 11'27 Rixdollar, Convention - - W.1 3 18 1 1642 359 4 2.13 Florin, or piece of 1 - - - W.2 3 11 2 8228 198.4 2 3'70 Florin of Silesia - - W.2 2 911 7160 170.3 1 11.78 Drittel or piece of 8 good groschen W.3 3 5 81 3204 85.3 0 11.91 Piece of 6 groschen - W.2 8 3 14 2196 623 0 8.69 ROME - - Scudo, or crown (coined since 1753) W.0 4 17 1 16 17 13 371.5 4 3.87 Mezzo scudo, or half-crown - W.0 4 8 124 8 8 16 185-7 2 193 Testone (1785) - - - W.0 5 5 % 4 23 4 110·3 1 3:40 Paolo (1785) - - - W.0 4 1 17 1 16 4 37.2 0 5-19 Grosso, or half Paolo (1785) - W.0 5 0 90t 0200 18.5 0 2.58 Scudo of the Roman Republic (1799) W.0 6 17 1 16 13 18 368'1 4 3:40 RUSSIA - Ruble of Peter the Great - - W.2 7 18 1 14 1 8 312'1 3 7.58 Ditto of Catherine I. (1725) - W.2 4 17 11 13 0 309.9 3 7.27 Ditto of Peter II. (1727) - - W.212 18 57 13 4 310- 3 7.28 Ditto of Anne (1734) - - W.111 1614 14 616 317'8 3 8.29 Ditto of Elizabeth (1750) - - W.1 7 16 12 14 11 16 321.8 3 8.93 Ditto of Peter III. (1762) - - W.2 2 15 10 12 12 0 277.5 3 2.75 Ditto of Catherine II. (1780) - W..2 4 15 12 12 10 6 275.9 3 2.52 Ditto of Paul (1799) - - W.014 13 12 12 15 10 2808 3 3.21 Ditto of Alexander (1802) - - W.0 13 13 If 17 7 2 273 3 2.12 Ditto of ditto (1805) - - W.0 16 13 12 12 12 12 278.1 3 2.83 20 Copeck piece (1767) - - W.2 2 3 104 219 0 62.6 0 8.74 Ditto (1784) - - - - W.2 2 33 2 12 18 56.2 0 7.84 15 Copeck piece (1778) - - W.2 2 26 1 19 18 40.5 0 5-65 10 Copeck piece - - - W.2 6 21 1 14 16 35.9 0 5.11 Ditto (1798) - - - - W.014 19 1616 23.5 0 3.97 Ditto (1802) - - - - W.0 13 1 81 1 611 28.3 0 3.95 5 Copeck piece (1801) - - W. 0 131 0101 0 15 10 15.3 0 213 SARDINIA - Scudo, or crown (i and t in prop.) W.0 7 15 If 14 15 0 3247 3 9:34 SAXONY - Rix-dollar, Convention (i and t in proportion) - - W.1 3 18 0 16 3 4 358-2 4 2-01 Piece of 16 groschen of Leipsic - W.2 2 9 91 7 14 16 169.1 1 11.61 Rixdollar current of Saxe Gotha - W.4 41 18 1 1142 248.1 2 10-64 1-6th Thaler of 1804 - - W.4 11 311 2 0 19 45.3 0 6.32 Ditto of 1808 - - - W.4 11t 3 51 1 21 8 42.1 0 5:87 Ditto of Jerome Bonaparte of 1809 - W.5 4 3 17 1236 437 0 6.10 SICELY - Scudo (t in proportion) - - W.1 4 17 14 15 16 6 348-2 4 0.62 Piece of 40 grains - - W.1 2 5 21 572 117.5 1 4-40 SPAIN - - +Dollar, of late coinage - - W.0 8 17 8 16 17 0 370.9 4 3-79 Half dollar, ditto - - W.0 8 8 16 8 8 10 185.4 2 1.88 Mexican peceta (1774) - - W.0 8 4 71 4 3 16 92.3 1 0.88 Real of Mexican plate (1775) - W.0 8 % 31 2 1 20 46-1 0 6.43 Peceta provincial of 2 reals of new plate (1775) - - W. 1 91 3 18 360 72.2 0 10:08 Real of new plate (1795) - - W.1 % 121 1 15 0 36.1 0 5:04 SWEDEN - Rixdollar (1762) - - - W.012 18 20 17 19 10 395.5 4 7-22 Rixdollar of late coinage - - W.014 18 17 17 12 0 388.5 4 6.28 SWITEHELAND Ecu, or rixdollar of Lucerne, 1, &c. In proportion (1715) - - W.014 17 81 16 5 8 360-1 4 2.28 Old gulden, or florin of Lucerne (1714) W. 1 19 8 14 728 157.5 1 9-99 Ecu of 40 batzen of Lucerne (1796) W.0 5 19 0 18 13 14 4123 4 9.57 Half ditto - W.1 2 9 20 8 20 12 1967 2 3.46 Florin, or piece of 40 schillings of Lucerne (1793) - - W.1 5 4 22 4 8 14 96.8 1 1-51 Ecu of 40 batzen of the Helvetic Re- public, 1798 (t in proportion) - W.0 6 18 23 18 10 14 409.5 4 918 Ecu of 4 franken (1801) - - W.0 7 18 23 18 8 12 407.6 4 9:18 TURKEY - Plastre of Selim of 1801 - - W.5 6 86 478 95.7 1 1.36 Piastre of Crim Tartary (1778) - W.6 13 10 5 424 90.9 1 0.69 Plastre of Tunis (1787) - - W.6 5 10 0 486 96.5 1 1.47 Plastre (1818) - - W.5 14 6 61 314 67.7 0 9-45 TUSCANY - Piece of 10 Paoli of the Kingdom of Etruria (1801) - - W.0 4 17 131 17 5 18 382.9 4 5:46 Scudo Pisa of ditto (1803) - - W.0 2 17 12 17 84 385.0 4 5-76 Piece of 10 lire ditto (1803) - - B. 0 7 25 6 26 1 12 578.7 6 8.80 Lira (1808) - - B.0 7 28 2 9 16 53'4 0 7:45 UNITED STATES IDollar, 1795 (1, &c. in proportion) W.0 6f 17 8 16 19 16 373.5 4 ^ 4'15 Dollar (1798) - - W.0 7 17 10+ 16 21 6 374-9 4 435 Dollar (1802) - - - - W.0 101 17 10 16 14 0 368.3 4 3:42 Dollar, an average of 8 years - W.0 81 17 8 16 16 0 370-1 4 3.68 Dime, or one-tenth dollar (1796) - W.0 4 1 1 18 14 39.5 0 5.71 Half dime (1796) - - - W.0 7 0211 021 0 19.5 0 2.72 * The Prussian coins, having been debased at different periods. vary in their reports. + This is the coin which is universally circulated under the name of the Spanish dollar. $ The American dollars, and inferior silver pieces of late coinage, vary in fineness from W. 4 dwts. to W. If dwts. 50 Digitized by Google 394 COINS. Contents COINS. Assay. Weight. Standard Value in Weight. in pure Gold. Sterling. Oz. deat. Dut. gr. Dut. gr. mi. Grains. & d VENICE - Piece of 2 lire, or 24 creutzers (1800) W.8 4 5 191 112 33.4 0 4-66 Ditto of 2 lire, called moneta pro- vinciale (1808) W.8 3 513t 1 11 8 328 0 4.58 Ditto of 2 lire, 1802 (I and t in prop.) W.8 4 5 64 1819 305 0 4-25 WIRTEMBURG Rixdollar, specie - - W.1 3 18 1 16 14 2 359-1 4 2.14 Copftsuck - - - - W.4 2 4 16} 2 16 12 59.8 0 8-35 EAST INDIES. Rupee Sicca, coined by the East In- dia Company at Calcutta - - B. 0 13 7 111 7 22 0 175.8 2 0.54 Calcutta (1818) - - Stand. 80 800 175.9 2 0:56 Bombay, new, or Surat (1818) W. 0 07 7 11 7104 1647 1 11-01 Fanam, Cananore - - - W.0 1t 1 111 1 11 10 32.9 0 4-5 Bombay, old - - - - B. 0 13 1 111 I 13 16 35 0 4-88 Pondicherry - - - B.0 5f 1 of 112 22.8 0 3-18 Ditto, double - - W.0 3 1 181 1182 39- 0 5.44 Gulden of the Dutch E. I. Co. (1820) W.0 7f 6 22 6166 148.4 1 872 The sterling value of the foreign coins, in the foregoing tables. has been computed from the assays as follows:-Let it be required to assign the value in sterling of a French double Louis d'or coined since 1786, the assay master's report being as follows:- Weight, 9 dwts. 20 grs.; assay W. If grs.," that is, 0 car. It grs. worse than the English standard. We proceed as under :- From 22 car. 0 gr. the fineness of English standard gold, Take 0 If gr. Remains 21 24 Then, as 22 car. 21 car. If grs. :: 9 dwts. 20 grs. 9 dwt. 16 gra., the standard gold contained in the Louis d'or; and hence, as 1 OZ. : 31. 17s. 104d. :: 9 dwts. 16 grs. : 11. 17s. 7d., the value of the Louis in ster- ling money, and so for any of the other coins. Ancient Coins.-We subjoin, for the convenience of such of our readers as may at any time have occasion to consult works in which reference is made to ancient coins, the following tables of those that were principally current among the Jews, Greeks, and Romans. They were calculated by Dr. Arbuthnot (Tables of Ancient Coins, Weights, &c. 4to ed. Lond. 1754.), and do not differ materially from the tables of Paucton, whose Métrologie (4to. Paris, 1780), is the most complete and elaborate work that has ever been published with respect to ancient monies, weights, and measures. At the same time we confess we should not be disposed to place much reliance on these tables, and we have else- where stated our reasons for holding this opinion.-(Art. Money, Supp. to Encyc. Britennice.) JEWISH Come. Names and Proportions. Value in Storling. £ 8. d. Gerah - - - - - - - - - - 0 0 159 100 10 Bekah - - - - - - - - - 0 1 11 16 20 2 Shekel , - - - - - - - - 0234 1,200 120 50 Manch Mina Hebraisa } - - - - - 5 14 of 60,000 6,000 3,000 60 Talent - - - - - - 342 3 9 Solidus aureus, or sextula, worth - - - - - - - 0 12 of Siclus aureus, worth - - - - - - - - - 1 16 6 A talent of gold, worth - - - - - - - - 5,475 0 0 GRECIAN Coins. 8. d. qrs. Lepton - - - - - - - - - - 00 021 336 7 Chalcus - - - - - - - - - 0 0 021 14 2 Dichalcus - - - - - - - - 0 0 152 28 4 2 # Hemiobolum - - - - - - - 0 0 56 8 4 2 Obolus - - - - - - - 0 1 11 112 16 8 4 2 Diobolum - - - - - I 0 2 21 224 32 16 8 3 2 Tetrobolum - - - - - 0 5 of 336 48 24 12 6 4 It Drachma - - - - - 0 7 3 662 96 48 24 12 6 3 2 Didrachma - - - - 1 3 2 1,324 112 96 48 24 12 6 4 2 Tetradrachma - - 2 7 0 1,660 384 120 60 30 15 7t 5 If It Pentadrachma - - 3 2 3 Of these the drachma and didrachma were of silver; the rest, for the most part, of brass. The drachma is here, with the generality of authors, supposed equal to the denarius; though there is reason to believe that the drachma was somewhat the weightier. Digitized by Google COINS. 395 Value in Sterling. £ s. d. The Grecian gold coin was the stater aureus, weighing 2 Attic drachms, or half of the stater argenteus; and exchanging usually for 25 Attic drachmas of silver } 0 16 14 But according to our proportion of gold to silver it was worth - - - 1 0 9 There were likewise the stater Cyzicenus, exchanging for 28 Attic drachmas, or - 0 18 1 The stater Philippicus, and stater Alexandrinus, were of the same value. Stater Daricus, according to Josephus, worth 50 Attic drachmas, or - - - 1 12 3} Stater Crossius, of the same value. VALUE AND PROPORTION OF THE ROMAN Coins. Sterling. s. d. qrs. Teruncius - - - - - - - - 0 0 0775 1000 2 Sembella - - - - - - - - - - 0 0 155 100 4 2 Libella As s - - - - - - - - - 0 0 31 10 10 5 2f Sestertius - - - - - - - - 01 34 20 10 5 2 Quinarius Victoriatus } - - - - - - - 0 3 st 40 20 10 4 2 Denarius - - - - - - - 073 £ s. d. The Roman gold coin, or aureus, weighed generally double the denarius; its value, } according to the proportion of gold to silver, mentioned by Pliny, was 1 4 34 - - According to the proportion that now obtains amongst us - - 109 According to the decuple proportion mentioned by Livy and Julius Pollux - - 0 12 11 According to the proportion mentioned by Tacitus, by which the aureus exchanged for } 0 25 denarii, its value 16 11 - - - (1. AMERICAN EAGLE. This, which, with its subdivisions, is the only American gold coin, has lately undergone an important alteration. By the mint regulations of the United States, the eagle, which is declared to be the equivalent of 10 dollars, contained, previously to the 31st of July, 1834, 270 grains of standard gold, viz.: 246 grains pure, and 24 grains alloy. But, by an act of Congress, which came into operation at the above date, the weight of the eagle is reduced to 258 grains, of which 232 are pure and 26 alloy. In consequence of this alteration, the sovereign, that was formerly worth 4 dollars 57 cents, is now worth 4 dollars 87 cents, and is received by the Americans at this rate. We do not know whether it was the object of the American government, in enacting this law, to substitute a gold in the place of a silver currency; but it will most probably have that effect. Under the former system, silver was over-valued in the American mint as compared with gold; and, as it consequently became everybody's interest to pay his debts in silver rather than in gold, the latter was nearly banished from circulation, precisely in the same way that the over-valuation of gold in the British mint benished all silver coins of full weight from this country, and that the over-valuation of silver is the French mint banished gold.- (Dict. p. 382.) Under the present American system, it is believed that gold is over-valued from + to 14 per cent., so that an individual who has to pay a debt of 100l. and who employs metallic money for that purpose, will save from 25s. to 30s. by using gold rather than silver. This has certainly been the principal cause of that exportation of gold to the United States from Europe that has been carried on at intervals during the last four years, though it, no doubt, has been partly owing to other causes, and especially, perhaps, to the suppression of notes for less than 5 dollars in New York and other States.-(See BANKS, American, pp. 180-168.) Amount of Gold received annually from the Gold Region of the United States from 1824 to 1838, both inclusive. Years. Virginia. N. Carolina. 8. Carolina. Georgia. Not Tennessee. Alabama. accertained. Total. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1834 - 5,000 - - - - - 5,000 1825 - 17,000 - - - - 17,000 1896 - 20,000 - - - - 20,000 1827 - 21,000 I - - - 21,000 1828 - 46,000 - - - - 46,000 1830 2,500 134,000 8,600 - - - - 140,000 1830 24,000 904,000 26,000 212,000 - - - 466,000 1831 26,000 294,000 22,000 176,000 1,000 1,000 - 520,000 1882 34,000 458,000 45,000 149,000 1,000 - 678,000 1833 104,000 475,000 66,000 $16,000 7,000 - 868,000 1684 62,000 $80,000 38,000 416,000 3,000 - 898,000 1836 60,400 263,900 48,500 319,900 100 - 12,200 698,000 *1836 62,000 148,100 55,200 201,400 300 - 467,000 1837 52,100 116,900 29,400 83,600 - I 282,000 1838 55,000 66,000 13,000 $6,000 1,500 - 200 171,700 482,000 2,648,500 340,500 1,799,900 13,900 1,000 12,400 5,298,200 * The amounts for the last three years have been added by the American Editor. Digitized by Google 396 COINS. Value of Foreign Gold Coins in the Currency of the United States.-It was ordered by an act of Con- gress, passed at the same time with the New Mint Act, that there shall pass current as money, and be receivable in all payments, by weight, for the payment of all debts and demands, from and after the 31st day of July, 1834," viz. 1. The gold coins of Great Britain, Portugal, and Brazil, of not less than 22 carnts fine, at the rate of 93 8-10 cents per pennyweight 2. The gold coins of Prance, 9-10ths fine, at the rate of 93 1-10 cents per pennyweight; and, & The gold coins of Spain, of the fineness of 20 carats 3-7-16 grains, at the rate of 89 9-10 cents per pennyweight. On this principle the following table has been calculated. Gold Coins of Great Britain, Portugal & Brazil, 22 carats fine. Gold Coins of France, 9-10ths fine. Value in Value in U. S. cur- U. S. cur- rency, es- rency, es- Weight. Contents in pure gold. Value in U.S. currency at 8-10 cts. per dwt. timated by the pure gold compared with that Contents in pure gold. Value in U. currency, at 95 1-10 cts. per dwt. timated by the quantity of quantity of Weight. pure gold compared with that in the new in the new eagle of engle of 232 grains. 232 grains. G. BRITAIN. dut. E grains d. c. m. d. c. m. dut. gr. grains d. c. m. d. c. m. Guinea, (half and Double louis, coined 7a. piece in pro- since 1786, (single in portion) 5 9 39-89 118.6 5 11 0 5 11 2 proportion) 9 0 212-6 9 15 4 9 16 3 Sovereign (half in Double napoleon, (sin- proportion) 5 3 171-623 113 4 86 9 4 87* gle in proportion) 8 7 179 7 71 8 7 71 5. PORTUGAL New louis 4312 82.5 3 85 9 3 85 7 Dobraon of 24,000 Note.-The double louis, louis, and demi-louis, coined before 1786, rees (half in pro- portion) 34 12 759 32 70 6 32 71 9 not being 9-10ths fine, are not included in the table, because they Dobra of 12,800 rees 18 6 401-5 17 30 I 17 30 6 are not legal tenders. Neither are the double and single napoleon, Moidore 6 22 152-2 6 64 2 or the new louis, exactly 9-10ths fine, but the deficiency is so very 6 55 7 Milree, 1755 19 3-4 18-1 0 78 0 0 78 0 small that it is believed it is covered by what is called the remedy of the mint. BRAZIL. Dobraon 34 12 759 32 70 6 32 71 9 Dobra 18 6 401-5 17 30 1 17 30 6 Gold Coins of Spain, 20 carats 3 7-16 grains fine. Moidore 22 152-2 6 55 7 6 64 2 N. B.-There are several gold coins of Portugal and Brazil, the Value in joannese, the pieces of 16, 12, and 8 festoons, and the old and new crusado, which are not included in the above table, because they are not 22 carats fine, and of course are not legal tenders, the words of Weight. Contents in pure gold. Value in U. S. currency at 89 9-10 cts. per dwt. U. S. cur- rency, es- timated by the act being express.-" The gold coins of Great Britain, Portugal, the quanti- and Brazil, of not less than 22 carats fine. ty of pure gold, &c. In the above table the coins are all presumed to be of full weight, but fractional parts of a. mill have been disregarded in the dut. gr. grains d. cm. d. c. 772. calculation of their value. It will be found to be a sufficient approx- Quadruple pistole or imation to the truth for all ordinary purposes. To those who wish doubloon, coined be- perfect accuracy, it may be observed that the quantity of pure gold fore 1772, (double, in the sovereign is 113 18-11, 214 grains, and that the true value of single, and half in the sovereign, compared with the new eagle of 232 grains, is proportion) 17 81-2 375-3 15 59 0 16 17 6 4 87-7 100. This is also the true par of exchange between the Quarter pistole,or gold United States and London, and is equal to a premium of 7-10 per dollar, coined before cent., as near as can be calculated, on the nominal par of 444 or 1772 1 3 24-2 1 01 1 I 04 3 109 7-10 for 100. Doubloon of 1772,(dou- ble and single in pro- portion) 17 81-2 372 15 59 0 16 03 Half pistole of 1772 2 4 463 1 94 7 I 99 5 Quarter pistole of 1772 13 23-9 1 01 1 03 G 2. INDIAN RUPEE.-The variety of rupees of different weights and values, circulating in different parts of India, was long found to be productive of considerable inconvenience. But this is now nearly obviated, it having been enacted that, from the 1st of September, 1835, the coinage of former rupees should cease at all the mints throughout India, and that in future there should be coined a rupee (with doubles, halves, and quarters), to be called The Company's rupee," which contains 165 grains (1) pure silver, and 15 grains (T'S) alloy. This new rupee, which is made legal tender in all payments, is equal to the former Bombay, Madras, and Furrackabad standard rupees, and is receivable as an equivalent for them and for the Sonat rupee, and for 18ths of the Calcutta sicca rupee. It is worth, reckoning silver at 5s. 2d. and 5s. 6d. an ounce, 1s. 11d. and 2s. old. sterling. The new, or Company's rupee, bears on the one side the head of the reigning sovereign of Great Britain, and on the obverse the words 'East India Company," and the designation of the coin in English and Persian. MOHUR.-It has also been enacted, that from the 1st of September, 1835, no gold coins shall be coined at any mint in India, except gold mohurs or 15 rupee pieces (with the subdivisions), containing each 165 grains (11-12ths) pure gold, and 15 grains (1-12th alloy. Such mohurs are consequently worth 29s. 2d. each. These coins are marked in the same way as the new rupees, but they are not legal tender.-Sup.) [We subjoin the act of Congress of January 18th, 1837, relative to the Mint and Coinage of the United States; annexing to it the other legal provisions still in force on the same subject. An act supplementary to the act, entitled "An act establishing a mint, and regulating the coins of the United States." Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the officers of the mint of theUnited States shall be a director, a treasurer, an assayer, a melter and refiner, a chief coiner, and an engraver, to be appointed by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. 1 2. And be it further enacted, That the respective duties of the officers of the mint shall be as follows: Digitized by Google COINS. 397 First, The director shall have the control and management of the mint, the superintendence of the officers and persons employed therein, and the general regulation and supervision of the business of the several branches. And in the month of January of every year he shall make report to the President of the United States of the operations of the mint and its branches for the year preceding and also to the Secretary of the Treasury, from time to time, as said Secretary shall require, setting forth all the operations of the mint subsequent to the last report made upon the subject. Second. The treasurer shall receive and safely keep, all moneys which shall be for the use and sup- port of the mint shall keep all the current accounts of the mint, and pay all moneys due by the mint, on warrants from the director. He shall receive all bullion brought to the mint for coinage; shall be the keeper of all bullion and coin in the mint, except while the same is legally placed in the hands of other officers; and shall, on warrants from the director, deliver all coins struck at the mint to the persons to whom they shall be legally payable. And he shall keep regular and faithful accounts of all the transactions of the mint, in bullion and coins, both with the officers of the mint and the depositors and shall present, quarter yearly, to the Treasury Department of the United States, according to such forms as shall be prescribed by that department, an account of the receipts and disbursements of the mint, for the purpose of being adjusted and settled. Third. The assayer shall carefully assay all metals used in coinage, whenever such assays are required in the operations of the mint; he shall also make assays of coins whenever instructed to do so by the director. Fourth. The melter and refiner shall execute all the operations which are necessary in order to form ingots of standard silver or gold, suitable for the chief coiner, from the metals legally delivered to him for that purpose. Fifth. The chief coiner shall execute all the operations which are necessary in order to form coins, conformable in all respects to the law, from the standard silver and gold ingots, and the copper planchets, legally delivered to him for this purpose. Sixth. The engraver shall prepare and engrave, with the legal devices and inscriptions, all the dies used in the coinage of the mint and its branches. è 3. And be it further enacted, That the director shall appoint, with the approbation of the President, assistants to the assayer, melter, and refiner, chief coiner and engraver, and clerks for the director and treasurer, whenever, on representation made by the director to the President, it shall be the opinion of the President that such assistants or clerks are necessary. And it shall be the duty of the assistants to aid their principals in the execution of their respective offices, and of the clerks to per- form such duties as shall be prescribed for them by the director. è 4. And be it further enacted, That whenever any officer of the mint shall be temporarily absent, on account of sickness, or any other sufficient cause, it shall be lawful for the director, with the consent of the said officer, to appoint some person attached to the mint to act in the place of such officer dur- ing his absence and to employ such workmen and servants in the mint as he shall from time to time find necessary. è 5. And be it further enacted, That every officer, assistant, and clerk of the mint, shall, before he enters upon the execution of his office, take an oath or affirmation before some judge of the United States, or judge of the superior court, or any court of record of any State, faithfully and diligently to perform the duties thereof. è 6. And be it further enacted, That the following officers of the mint, before entering upon the exe- cution of their respective offices, shall become bound to the United States, with one or more sureties, to the satisfaction of the Secretary of the Treasury, in the sums hereinafter mentioned, with condition for the faithful and diligent performance of the duties of their offices, viz.: The treasurer in the sum of ten thousand dollars; the assayer in the sum of five thousand dollars; the melter and refiner in the sum of ten thousand dollars; and the chief coiner in the sum of ten thousand dollars. And that similar bonds may also be required of the assistants and clerks, in such sums as the director shall de- termine, with the approbation of the Secretary of the Treasury. 0 7. And be it further enacted, That there shall be allowed to the officers of the mint the following salaries per annum To the director, for his services, including travelling expenses incurred in visit- ing the different branches, and all other charges whatever, three thousand five hundred dollars ; to the treasurer, assayer, melter and refiner, chief coiner, and engraver, each two thousand dollars to the assistants and clerks, such annual salaries shall be allowed as the director may determine, with the approbation of the President: Provided, That an assistant shall not receive more than fifteen hundred dollars, and that a clerk shall not receive more than twelve hundred dollars. To the work- men and servants shall be allowed such wages, to be determined by the director, as may be custom- ary and reasonable, according to their respective stations and occupations and that the salaries provided for in this section shall be payable in quarterly instalments. 28. And be it further enacted, That the standard for both gold and silver coins of the United States shall hereafter be such, that of one thousand parts by weight, nine hundred shall be of pure metal, and one hundred of alloy ; and the alloy of the silver coins shall be of copper; and the alloy of the gold coins shall be of copper and silver, provided that the silver do not exceed one half of the whole alloy. R 9. And be it further enacted, That of the silver coins, the dollar shall be of the weight of four hundred and twelve and one half grains the half dollar of the weight of two hundred and six and one fourth grains the quarter dollar of the weight of one hundred and three and one eighth grains the dime, or tenth part of a dollar, of the weight of forty-one and one fourth grains; and the half dime, or twentieth part of a dollar, of the weight of twenty and five eighth grains. And that dollars, half dollars, quarter dollars, dimes, and half dimes, shall be legal tenders of payment, according to their nominal value, for any sums whatever. $ 10. And be it further enacted, That of the gold coins, the weight of the eagle shall be two hundred and fifty-eight grains that of the half eagle one hundred and twenty-nine grains; and that of the quarter eagle sixty-four and one half grains. And that, for all sums whatever, the eagle shall be a legal tender of payment for ten dollars; the half eagle for five dollars : and the quarter eagle for two and a half dollars. 1 11. And be it further enacted, That the silver coins heretofore issued at the mint of the United States, and the gold coins issued since the thirty-first day of July, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-four, shall continue to be legal tenders of payment, for their nominal values, on the same terms as if they were of the coinage provided for by this act. . 12. And be it further enacted, That of the copper coins, the weight of the cent shall be one hundred and sixty-eight grains, and the weight of the half cent eighty-four grains. And the cent shall be considered of the value of one hundredth part of a dollar, and the half cent of the value of one two- hundredth part of a dollar. 1 13. And be it further enacted, That upon the coins struck at the mint there shall be the following devices and legends: Upon one side of each of said coins there shall be an impression emblematic of liberty, with an inscription of the word LIBERTY, and the year of the coinage; and upon the reverse of each of the gold and silver coins, there shall be the figure or representation of an eagle, with the in- VOL. I.-2 L Digitized by Google 398 COINS. scription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, and a designation of the value of the coin but on the reverse of the dime and half dime, cent and half cent, the figure of the cagle shall be omitted. 0 14. And be it further enacted, That gold and silver bullion brought to the mint, for coinage, shall be received and coined, by the proper officers, for the benefit of the depositor: Provided, That it shall be lawful to refuse, at the mint, any deposite of less value than one hundred dollars, and any bullion so base as to be unsuitable for the operations of the mint And provided, also, That when gold and silver are combined, if either of these metals be in such small proportion that it cannot be separated advantageously, no allowance shall be made to the depositor for the value of such metal. è 15. And be it further enacted, That when bullion is brought to the mint, for coinage, it shall be weighed by the Treasurer, in the presence of the depositor, when practicable, and a receipt given, which shall state the description and weight of the bullion: Provided, That when the bullion is in such a state as to require melting before its value can be ascertained, the weight after melting shall be considered as the true weight of the bullion deposited. 1 16. And be it further enacted, That from every parcel of bullion deposited for coinage, the trea- surer shall deliver to the assayer, a sufficient portion for the purpose of being assayed but all such bullion remaining from the operations of the assay shall be returned to the treasurer by the assayer. $ 17. And be it further enacted, That the assayer shall report to the treasurer the quality OF standard of the bullion assayed by him; and he shall also communicate to the treasurer such in- formation as will enable him to estimate the amount of the charges hereinafter provided for, to be made to the depositor, for the expenses of converting the bullion into standard metal fit for coinage. è 18. And be it further enacted, That the only subjects of charge by the mint to the depositor shall be the following:-For refining, when the bullion is below standard for toughening, when metals are contained in it which render it unfit for coinage; for copper used for alloy, when the bullion is above standard for silver introduced into the alloy of gold ; and for separating the gold and silver, when these metals exist together in the bullion and that the rate of these charges shall be fixed, from time to time, by the director, with the concurrence of the Secretary of the Treasury, so as not to exceed, in their judgment, the actual expense to the mint of the materials and labour employed in each of the cases aforementioned and that the amount received from these charges shall be accounted for, and appropriated for defraying the contingent expenses of the mint. 2 19. And be it further enacted, That from the report of the assayer, and the weight of the bullion, the trensurer shall estimate the whole value of each deposite, and also the amount of the charges or deductions, if any; of all which be shall give a detailed memorandum to the depositor; and he shall also give, at the same time, under his band, a certificate of the nett amount of the deposite, to be paid in coins of the same species of bullion as that deposited. I 20. And be it further enacted, That parcels of bullion shall be, from time to time, transferred by the treasurer to the melter and refiner; that a careful record of these transfers, noting the weight and character of the bullion, shall be kept; and that the bullion thus placed in the hands of the melter and refiner shall be subjected to the several processes which may be necessary to form it into ingots of the legal standard, and of a quality suitable for coinage. è 21. And be it further enacted, That the ingots thus prepared shall be assayed by the assayer, and if they prove to be within the limits allowed for deviation from the standard, they shall be transferred by the melter and refiner to the treasurer, accompanied by the assayer's certificate of their fine- ness ; and that a careful record of the transfer shall be kept by the treasurer. 1 22. And be it further enacted, That no ingots of gold shall be used for coinage of which the quality differs more than two thousandths from the legal standard and that no ingots of silver shall be used for coinage of which the quality differs more than three thousandths from the legal standard. R 23. And be it further enacted, That in the treasurer's account with the melter and refiner, the melter and refiner shall be debited with the standard weight of all the bullion placed in his hands, that is to say, with the weight of metal of legal standard fineness which it will make ; and that he shall be credited by the standard weight of all the ingots delivered by him to the treasurer; and that one at least in every year, at such time as the director shall appoint, the melter and refiner shall deliver up to the treasurer all the bullion in his possession, in order that his accounts may be settled up to that time and, in this settlement, be shall be entitled to a credit for the difference between the whole amount of bullion delivered to him and received from him, since the last settlement, as an allowance for necessary waste: Provided, That this allowance shall not exceed two thousandths of the whole amount of gold and silver bullion, respectively, that had been delivered to him by the treasurer. 24. And be it further enacted, That the treasurer shall, from time to time, deliver over to the chief coiner, ingots for the purpose of coinage ; and he shall keep a careful record of these transfers, noting the weight and description of the ingots; and that the ingots thus placed in the hands of the chief coiner shall be passed through the several processes necessary to make from them coins in all respects conformable to law. $ 25. And be it further enacted, That in adjusting the weights of the coins, the following deviations from the standard weight shall not be exceeded in any of the single pieces :-In the dollar and half dollar, one grain and a half; in the quarter dollar, one grain; in the dime and half dime, half a grain in the gold coins, one quarter of a grain ; in the copper coins, one grain in the pennyweight; and that in weighing a large number of pieces together, when delivered from the chief coiner to the trea- surer, and from the treasurer to the depositors, the deviations from the standard weight shall not exceed the following limits: Four pennyweights in one thousand dollars; three pennyweights in one thousand half dollars; two pennyweights in one thousand quarter dollars; one peany weight in one thousand dimes one pennyweight in one thousand half-dimes two pennyweights in one thousand eagles; one and a half pennyweight in one thousand half eagles; one pennyweight in one thousand quarter eagles. 0 26. And be it further enacted, That the chief coiner shall, from time to time, as the coins are pre- pared, deliver them over to the treasurer, who shall keep a careful record of their kind, number, and weight; and that in receiving the coins it shall be the duty of the treasurer to see whether the coins of that delivery are within the legal limits of the standard weight: and if his trials for this purpose shall not prove satisfactory, he shall cause all the coins of this delivery to be weighed separately, and such as are not of legal weight shall be delivered to the melter and refiner, as standard bullion, to be again formed into ingots and recoined. ( 27. And be it further enacted, That at every delivery of coins made by the chief coiner to the treasurer, it shall be the duty of the treasurer, in the presence of the assayer, to take, indiscriminate- ly, a certain number of pieces of each variety for the annual trial of coins, (the number being pre- scribed by the director,) which shall be carefully labelled and deposited in a chest appropriated for the purpose, kept under the joint care of the treasurer and assayer, and so secured that neither can have access to its contents without the presence of the other. e 26. And be it further enacted, That the chief coiner shall, from time to time, deliver to the trea- Digitized by Google COINS. 399 wurer, the clippings and other portions of bullion remaining after the process of coining, and that the treasurer shall keep a careful record of their amount. è 29. And be it further enacted, That, in the treasurer's account with the chief coiner. the chief coiner shall be debited with the amount In weight of standard metal of all the bullion placed in his hands, and credited with the amount, also by weight, of all the coins, clippings, and other bullion de- Hvered by him to the treasurer, and that once at least in every year, at such time as the director shall appoint, the chief coiner shall deliver to the treasurer all the coins and bullion in his posses- sion, 80 that his accounts may be settled up to that time; and, in this settlement, he shall be entitled to a credit for the difference between the whole amount of ingots delivered to him, and of the coins and bullion received from him, since the last settlement, as an allowance for necessary waste Pro- vided, That this allowance shall not exceed two thousandths of the whole amount of the silver, or one and one half thousandth of the whole amount of the gold that had been delivered to him by the treasurer. è 30. And be it further enacted, That when the coins which are the equivalent to any deposite of bullion are ready for delivery, they shall be paid over to the depositor, or his order, by the treasurer, on a warrant from the director ; and the payments shall be made, if demanded, in the order in which the bullion shall have been brought to the mint, giving priority according to priority of deposite only ; and that in the denominations of coin delivered, the treasurer shall comply with the wishes of the depositor, unless when impracticable or inconvenient to do so, in which case the denominations of coin shall be designated by the director. è 31. And be it further enacted, That, for the purpose of enabling the mint to make the returns to depositors with as little delay as possible, it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to keep in the said mint, when the state of the treasury will admit thereof, a deposite of such amount of public money, or of bullion procured for the purpose, as he shall judge convenient and necessary, not exceeding one million of dollars, out of which those who bring bullion to the mint may be paid the value thereof, as soon as practicable after this value has been ascertained that the bullion so de- posited shall become the property of the United States; that no discount or interest shall be charged on money so advanced ; and that the Secretary of the Treasury may at any time withdraw the said deposite, or any part thereof, or may, at his discretion, allow the coins formed at the mint to be given for their equivalent in other money. @ 32. And be it further enacted, That, to secure a due conformity in the gold and silver coins to their respective standards and weights, an annual trial shall be made of the pieces reserved for this pur- pose at the mint and its branches, before the judge of the district court of the United States for the eastern district of Pennsylvania, the attorney of the United States for the eastern district of Penn- sylvania, and the collector of the port of Philadelphia, and such other persons as the President shall from time to time designate for that purpose, who shall meet as commissioners for the performance of this duty, on the second Monday in February, annually, and may continue their meetings by adjourn- ment, if necessary and if n majority of the commissioners shall fail to attend at any time appointed for their meeting, then the director of the mint shall call a meeting of the commissioners at such other time as he may deem convenient and that before these commissioners, or a majority of them, and in the presence of the officers of the mint, such examination shall be made of the reserved pieces as shall be judged sufficient; and if it shall appear that these pieces do not differ from the standard fineness and weight by a greater quantity than is allowed by law, the trial shall be considered and reported as satisfactory but if any greater deviation from the legal standard or weight shall appear, this fact shall be certified to the President of the United States, and if, on a view of the cir- cumstances of the case, he shall $0 decide, the officer or officers implicated in the error shall be thenceforward disqualified from holding their respective offices. 1 33. And be it further enacted, That copper bullion shall be purchased for the mint, from time to time, by the treasurer, under instructions from the director; that the cost shall be paid from the fund here- inafter provided for; and that the copper bullion shall be of good quality, and in the form of planchets fit for passing at once into the hands of the chief coiner. 1 34. And be it further enacted, That the copper planchets shall be delivered, from time to time, by the treasurer to the chief coiner, to be by him coined and all such copper shall be returned to the treasurer by the chief coiner, weight for weight, without allowance for waste. 2 35. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the treasurer of the mint to deliver the cop- per coins in exchange for their legal equivalent in other money, to any persons who shall apply for them: Provided, That the sum asked for be not less than a certain amount to be determined by the director, and that it be not so great as, in his judgment, to interfere with the capacity of the mint to supply other applicants. ? 36. And be it further enacted, That the copper coins may, at the discretion of the director, be de- livered in any of the principal cities and towns of the United States, at the cost of the mint for transportation. 2 37. And be it further enacted, That the money received by the treasurer in exchange for copper coins, shall form a fund in his hands, which shall be used to purchase copper planchets, and to pay the expense of transportation of copper coins and that if there be a surplus, the same shall be appro- printed to defray the contingent expenses of the mint. . 39. And be it further enacted, That all acts or parts of acts heretofore passed, relating to the mint and coins of the United States, which are inconsistent with the provisions of this act, be, and the same are hereby, repealed. Approved, Jan. 18th, 1837. Other legal Provisions still in force. I. Provisions of the Constitution of the United States. The Congress shall have power to coin money regulate the value thereof, and of foreign coins; and fix the standard of weights and measures.-(Art. I. 8.) No State shall coin money, or make any thing but gold and silver a legal tender in payment of debts.-(Art. I. 1 10.) II. Establishment and location of the Mint. Be it onacted, &c.-That a mist, for the purpose of a national coinage, be, and the same is established, to be situate and carried on at the seat of government of the United States for the time being.-(Act of April 2d, 1792: the seat of government being then at Philadelphia.) Be it enacted, &c., That, until the 4th day of March, 1801, the mint shall remain in the city of Phila- delphia, and be carried on as heretofore, under the laws now in force, any law to the contrary not- withstanding.-(Act of May 14th, 1800.) Be it enacted, &c., That the mint shall remain in Philadelphia until the 4th day of March, in the year 1803.-(Act of March 3d, 1801.) This act was revived and continued in force and operation, for successive periods of five years, until the 4th of March, 1828, when the location of the mint at Philadelphia was made permanent, by the following enactment Digitized by Google 400 COINS. Be it enacted, &c., That the act entitled An act concerning the mint," approved March the third one thousand eight hundred and one, be, and the same hereby is, revived and continued in force and operation, until otherwise provided by of May 19th, 1828, 1 1.) III. Money of account of the United States. Be it enacted, &c., That the money of account of the United States shall be expressed in dollars or units, dimes or tenths, cents or hundredths, and mills or thousandths ; a dime being the tenth part of a dollar, a cent the hundredth part of a dollar, a mill the thousandth part of a dollar; and that all accounts in the public offices, and all proceedings in the courts of the United States, shall be kept and had in conformity to this regulation.-(Act of April 2d, 1792, è 20.) IV. Copper Coins current. Be it enacted, &c., That after the expiration of six calendar months from the time when there shall have been paid into the treasury, by the said director, in cents and half cents, a sum not less than fifty thousand dollars-which time shall forthwith be announced by the treasurer in at least two gazettes or newspapers, published at the seat of the government of the United States, for the time being-no copper coins or pieces whatsoever, except the said cents and half cents, shall pass current as money, or shall be paid or offered to be paid, or received in payment for any debt, demand, claim, matter or thing whatsover and all copper coins or pieces, except the said cents and half cents, which shall be paid or offered to be paid, or received in payment, contrary to the prohibition aforesaid, shall be forfeited and every person by whom any of them shall have been so paid or offered to be paid, or received in payment, shall also forfeit the sum of ten dollars; and the said forfeiture and penalty shall and may be recovered with costs of suit, for the benefit of any person by whom information of the incurring thereof shall have been given.-(Act of May 8th, 1792, 2. The announcement re- quired having been duly made by the Treasurer of the United States, this enactment is in full force.) V. Foreign Coins Current. GOLD COINS. 1. Be it enacted, &c., That, from and after the thirty-first day of July next, the following gold coins shall pass current as money within the United States, and be receivable in all payments, by weight, for the payment of all debts and demands, at the rates following; that is to say-the gold coins of Great Britain, Portugal, and Brazil, of not less than twenty-two carats fine, at the rate of ninety- four cents and eight tenths of a cent per pennyweight; the gold coins of France, nine tenths fine, at the rate of ninety-three cents and one tenth of a cent per pennyweight; and the gold coins of Spain, Mexico, and Colombia, of the fineness of twenty carats, three grains and seven sixteenths of a grain, at the rate of eighty-nine cents and nine tenths of a cent per pennyweight. 2. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to cause assays of the aforesaid gold coins, made current by this act, to be had at the mint of the United States, at least once in every year, and to make report of the result thereof to Congress. SILVER COINS. 1 1. Be it enacted, &c., That, from and after the passage of this act, the following silver coins shall be of the legal value, and shall pass current as money within the United States, by tale, for the pay- ment of all debts and demands, at the rate of one hundred cents the dollar; that is to say-the dollars of Mexico, Peru, Chili, and Central America, of not less weight than four hundred and fifteen grains each; and those restamped in Brazil of the like weight; and of not less fineness than ten ounces fifteen pennyweights pure silver in the Troy pound of twelve ounces of standard silver. And the five-franc piece of France, when of not less fineness than ten ounces and sixteen pennyweights, in twelve ounces Troy weight of standard silver, and weighing not less than 384 grains each, at the rate of ninety-three cents each. 12. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to cause assays of the aforesaid sHver coins, made current by this act, to be had at the mint of the United States. at least once in every year, and to make report of the result thereof to Congress. (Acts of June 28th, 1834.) VI. Old Standards and Weights of Coins. SILVER COINS. Be it enacted, &c., That the standard for all silver coins of the United States shall be one thousand four hundred and eighty-five parts fine, to one hundred and seventy-nine parts alloy and, accord- ingly, that one thousand four hundred and eighty-five parts, in one thousand six hundred and sixty- four parts of the entire weight of each of the said coins, shall consist of pure silver, and the remain- ing one hundred and seventy-nine parts of alloy-which alloy shall be wholly of copper. (Act of April 2d, 1792, $ 13.) This standard corresponds to 892.4 thousandths. By 1 9 of the same act, the weight of the dollar is fixed at four hundred and sixteen grains of the above standard, and the weight of the parts of the dollar in proportion. This standard and weight were retained until the end of the year 1836 and the coids of this period are still legal tenders of payment. GOLD COINS. Be it enacted, &c., That the standard for all gold coins of the United States shall be eleven parts fine to one part alloy ; and, accordingly, that eleven parts in twelve of the entire weight of each of the said coins shall consist of pure gold, and the remaining one twelfth part of alloy and the said alloy shall be composed of silver and copper, not exceeding one half silver, as shall be found con- venient. (Act of April 2d, 1792, part of è 12.) This standard corresponds to twenty-two carats, or to 916f thousandths. By 1 9 of the same act, the weight of the eagle was fixed at two hundred and seventy grains, and the weight of the half and quarter eagle in proportion. This standard and weight were retained until the end of July, 1834, when the following enactments came into force. Be it enacted, &c., That the gold coins of the United States shall contain the following quantities of metal; that is to say-each eagle shall contain two hundred and thirty-two grains of pure gold, and two hundred and fifty-eight grains of standard gold; each half eagle, one hundred and sixteen grains of pure gold, and one hundred and twenty-nine grains of standard gold; each quarter eagle shall contain fifty-eight grains of pure gold, and sixty-four and a half grains of standard gold. Every such eagle shall be of the value of ten dollars; every such half eagle shall be of the value of five dollars; and every such quarter eagle shall be of the value of two dollars and fifty cents. And the said gold coins shall be received in all payments, when of full weight, according to their said respective values; Digitized by Google COINS. 401 and, when of less than full weight, at less values, proportioned to their respective actual weights. (Act of June 28th, 1834, $ 1.) Be it further enacted, That all gold coins of the United States, minted anterior to the thirty-first day of July next, shall be receivable in all payments at the rate of ninety-four and eight tenths of a cent per pennyweight. ( 3 of the same act.) The above standard, which corresponds to 21 carats 14-43 grains, or 899-225 thousandths, conti- nued until the act of January, 1837, when it was changed to 900 thousandths. The weights of the gold coins were not, however, altered; and all gold coins made after July, 31, 1834, are legal tenders, ac- cording to their nominal values. VII. Against Counterfeiting Coins. Be it enacted, &a, That if any person or persons shall falsely make, forge, or counterfeit, or cause or procure to be falsely made, forged, or counterfeited or willingly aid or assist in falsely making, forging, or counterfeiting, any coin in resemblance or similitude of the gold or silver coin which has been, or hereafter may be, coined at the Mint of the United States; or in the resemblance or simili- tude of any foreign gold or silver coin which by law now is, or hereafter may be made, current in the United States; or shall pass, utter, publish, or sell, or attempt to pass, utter, publish, or sell, or bring into the United States from any foreign place, with intent to pass, utter, publish, or sell, as true, any such false, forged, or counterfeited coin, knowing the same to be false, forged, or counterfeited, with intent to defraud any body, politic or corporate, or any other person or persons whatsoever; every person, so offending, shall be deemed guilty of felony, and shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by fine, not exceeding five thousand dollars, and by imprisonment and confinement at hard labour, not exceeding ten years, according to the aggravation of the offence. And be it further enacted, That if any person or persons shall falsely make, forge, or counterfeit, or cause or procure to be falsely made, forged, or counterfeited, or willingly aid or assist in falsely making, forging, or counterfeiting any coin in the resemblance or similitude of any copper coin which has been, or hereafter may be, coined at the mint of the United States : or shall pass, utter, publish, or sell ; or attempt to pass, utter, publish, or sell; or bring into the United States from any foreign place, with intent to pass, utter, publish, or sell, as true, any such false, forged, or counterfeited coin, with intent to defraud any body, politic or corporate, or any person or persons whatsoever every person so offending shall be deemed guilty of felony, and shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by fine, not exceeding one thousand dollars, and by imprisonment, and confinement to hard labour, not exceeding three years. (Act of March 3d, 1825, " 20, 21.) VIII. Against offences at the Mint. Be it enacted, &c., That if any of the gold or silver coins, which shall be struck or coined at the mint of the United States, shall be debased, or made worse as to the proportion of fine gold or fine silver therein contained; or shall be of less weight or value than the same ought to be. pursuant to the several acts relative thereto, through the default or connivance of any of the officers or persons who shall be employed at the said mint, for the purposes of profit or gain, or otherwise, with a fraudu- lent intent; and if any of the said officers or persons shall embezzle any of the metals which shall, at any time, be committed to their charge for the purpose of being coined, or any of the coins which shall be struck, or coined, at the said mint, every such officer or person who shall commit any, or either of the said offences, shall be deemed guilty of felony, and shall be sentenced to imprisonment and hard labour, for a term not less than one year, nor more than ten years; and shall be fined in a sum not exceeding ten thousand dollars. (Act of March 3d, 1825, e 24.) IX. Standard weights of the Mint. Be it enacted, &c., That, for the purpose of securing a due conformity in weight of the coins of the United States, to the provisions of the ninth section of the act, passed the second of April, one thou- sand seven hundred and ninety-two, entitled, An act establishing a mint, and regulating the coins of the United States," the brass Troy pound weight procured by the minister of the United States, at London, in the year one thousand eight hundred and twenty-seven, for the use of the mint, and now In the custody of the director thereof, shall be the standard Troy pound of the mint of the United States, conformably to which the coinage thereof shall be regulated. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the director of the mint to procure, and safely to keep, a series of standard weights, corresponding to the aforesaid Troy pound, consisting of a one pound weight and the requisite subdivisions and multiples thereof, from the hundredth part of a grain to twenty-five pounds; and that the Troy weights ordinarily employed in the transactions of the mint, shall be regulated according to the above standards, at least once in every year, under his inspection, and their accuracy tested annually in the presence of the assay commissioners, on the day of the annual assay. (Act of May 19th, 1828, " 2, 3.) X. Assay of bullion not intended for coinage. Be it enacted, &c., That it shall be lawful for the director of the mint to receive, and cause to be assayed, bullion not intended for coinage, and to cause certificates to be given of the fineness thereof, by such officer as he shall designate for that purpose, at such rates of charge, to be paid by the owner of said bullion, and under such regulations as the said director may from time to time establish. (Act of May 19th, 1828, 1 7.) XI. Unexpended appropriations. Be it enacted, &c., That in regard to any sum which shall have remained unexpended upon any appropriation other than for the payment of interest on the funded debt; for the payment of interest upon, and reimbursement, according to contract, of any loan or loans made on account of the United States; for the purpose of the sinking-fund; or for a purpose, in respect to which a longer duration is specially assigned by law, for more than two years after the expiration of the calendar year in which the act of appropriation shall have been passed, such appropriation shall be deemed to have ceased and been determined and the sum 80 unexpended shall be curried to an account, on the books of the treasury, to be denominated, The surplus fund," &c. (Act of March 3d, 1795, 1 16.) XII. Provision for the purchase of bullion for coinage. Prorided, That it may be lawful for the President of the United States to direct transfers of the public money to be made from time to time, to the mint and branch mints of the United States, for supplying metal for coinage. (Provise in 1 12 of the law regulating the deposites of public moneys: approved, July, 1836.) XIII. Act to establish branches of the mint of the United States. Be it enacted, &c., That branches of the mint of the United States shall be established as follows :- One branch at the city of New Orleans for the coinage of goid and silver: one branch at the town of Charlotte in Mecklenburg county, in the state of North Carolina, for the coinage of gold only and one branch at or near Dahlonega in Lumpkin county, in the state of Georgia, also for the coinage of gold only. And for the purpose of purchasing sites, erecting suitable buildings, and completing the neces- 2 L 2 51 Digitized by Google 402 COINS. sary combinations of machinery for the several branches aforesaid, the following sums, to be paid out of any money in the treasury, not otherwise appropriated, shall be and hereby are appropriated for the branch at New Orleans, the sum of two hundred thousand dollars for the branch at Charlotte, fifty thousand dollars ; and for the branch at Dahlonega, fifty thousand dollars. 2. And be it further enacted, That so soon as the necessary buildings are erected, for the well con- ducting the business of each of the said branches, the following officers shall be appointed upon the nomination of the President, and with the advice and consent of the Senate :-One superintendent, one treasurer, one assayer, one chief coiner, one melter, and one refiner. And the superintendent of each mint shall engage and employ as many clerks, and as many subordinate workmen and ser- vants, as shall be provided for by law and the salaries of the said officers and clerks shall be as follows :-For the branch mint at New Orleans :-to the superintendent, the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars to the treasurer, the sum of two thousand dollars : to the chief coiner, the sum of two thousand dollars to the assayer, melter and refiner, the sum of two thousand dollars each: to two clerks, the sum of twelve hundred dollars each to the subordinate workmen and servants, not exceeding twenty in number, such wages and allowances as are customary and reasonable, accord- ing to their respective stations and occupations. For the branches at Charlotte and Dahlomega, to the superintendents, each the sum of two thousand dollars, who shall respectively discharge the duty of treasurers: to the chief coiners, each the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars: to the assayers, melters, and refiners, each the sum of one thousand five bundred dollars: to the clerks, not exceeding one at each branch, the sum of one thousand dollars: and to the subordinate workmen and servants, not exceeding the number of five at each of the said branches, such wages and allow- ances shall be paid as are customary and reasonable, according to their respective stations and occu- pations. And for the purpose of paying the said salaries, wages, allowances, and the incidental expenses of the said branches of the mint for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-five, the following sums, to be paid out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated :-for the branch at New Orleans, the sum of thirty-five thousand dollars; for the branches at Charlotte and Dahlonega, the sum of fifteen thousand dollars each. 3. And be it further enacted, That the officers and clerks to be appointed under this act, before enter- ing upon the duties thereof, shall take an oath or affirmation, before some judge of the United States, faithfully and diligently to perform the duties thereof; and shall each become bound to the United States of America, with one or more sureties to the satisfaction of the Director of the Mint, and the Secretary of the Treasury, with condition for the faithful and diligent performance of the duties of their offices. 4. And be it further enacted, That the general business of the said branches of the mint of the United States, shall be under the control and regulation of the director of the mint at Philadelphia, subject to the approbation of the Secretary of the Treasury and for that purpose, it shall be the duty of the said director to prescribe such regulations, and require such returns, periodically, and oc- casionally, as shall appear to him to be necessary, for the purpose of carrying into effect the intention of this act in establishing the said branches: also, for discriminating the coins which shall be stamped at each branch, and at the mint itself: also for the purpose of preserving uniformity of weight, form, and fineness in the coins stamped at each place. And for that purpose, to require the transmission and delivery to him at the mint. from time to time, such parcels of the coinage of each branch as be shall think proper, to be subjected to such assays and tests as he shall direct. $5. And be it further enacted, That all the laws, and parts of laws, made for the regulation of the mint of the United States, and for the government of the officers and persons employed therein, and for the punishment of all offences connected with the mint or coinage of the United States, shall be, and the same are hereby declared to be, in full force, in relation to each of the branches of the mint, by this act established, so far as the same shall be applicable thereto. (Act of March 3d, 1835.) XIV. Amendment to the foregoing act establishing Branch Mints. Be it enacted, &c. That the officers of the branch mint at New Orleans shall be one superintendent, one treasurer, one assayer, one melter and refiner, and one cotner; and that the officers of the branch mints at Charlotte and Dahlonega, severally, shall be one superintendent, whe shall also per- form the duties of treasurer; one assayer, who shall also perform the duties of melter and refiner; and one coiner: and the annual salaries of the said officers shall be RS follows: for the branch at New Orleans, to the superintendent, two thousand five hundred dollars; to the treasurer, the as- sayer, the melter and refiner, and the coiner, each, two thousand dollars; for the branches at Char- lotte and at Dahlonega, to the superintendent, two thousand dollars; and to the assayer and the coiner, each, fifteen hundred dollars. 1 2. And be it further enacted, That so much of the act entitled An Act to establish branches of the mint of the United States," approved the third day of March, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-five, as is inconsistent with the provisions of this act, be, and the same is hereby, repealed. Act of 1837.) The following table exhibits the amount of coinage at the mint, from the commenesment of its operations in 1792 until the 31st of December, 1838, inclusive. Tabular Statement of the Amount of Coinage at the Mint of the United States, Philadelphia, in the several Denominations of Coin, from the commencement of its operations until the 31st of De- cember, 1838, inclusive. Years. Half Eagles. Quarter Eagles. Dollara. Half Dollars. Quarter Dollars. Dimes. Half Dimes. Costs. 1792 1793 8,707 - 204,791 323,144 - - 86,416 1,086,633 1794 1795 1796 6,196 963 72,920 3,918 5,894 22,135 10,230 974,700 1797 3,609 859 7,776 - 252 25,961 44,527 897,510 1798 24,867 614 327,536 - - 27,550 - 979,789 1799 7,451 480 423,515 - I - - 994,585 1800 11,022 - 220,920 - - 21,760 24,000 2,823,175 1801 26,006 - 54,454 30,289 - 34,640 33,910 1,302,837 1802 53,176 2,612 41,650 29,890 - 10,975 13,010 3,425,100 1803 33,506 423 66,064 31,715 - 33,040 37,850 2,475,263 1804 30,475 3,327 19,570 156,519 6,738 8,265 - 1805 33,183 1,781 321 211,722 121,394 120,790 15,600 1806 64,098 1,616 - 839,576 206,121 - 1807 84,093 6,812 - 1,051,756 220,643 165,000 - Digitized by Google COINS. 403 Tabular Statement of the amount of Coinage-continued. Years. Half Eagles. Quarter Eagles- Dollars. Half Dollars. Quarter Dollars. Dimes. Half Dimes. Cents. 1808 55,578 2,710 - 1,368,600 - - - 1809 1,109,000 33,875 - - 1,405,810 - 44,710 - 1810 222,867 100,287 - - 1,276,276 - 6,355 - 1811 1,458,500 99,581 1 - 1,203,644 - 65,180 - 1812 218,025 58,087 - - 1,628,059 - - - 1813 1,075,500 95,428 - - 1,241,903 - - - 1814 418,000 15,454 - - 1,039,075 - 421,500 - 1815 357,830 635 - - - 69,232 - - 1816 - - - 47,150 20,003 - - 2,820,982 1817 - - - 1,125,567 - - - 1818 3,948,400 48,588 - - 1,960,322 361,174 - - 3,167,000 1819 51,723 - - 2,208,000 144,000 - - 1820 2,671,000 263,806 - - 751,122 127,444 942,587 - 1821 4,407,550 34,641 6,448 - 1,305,797 216,851 1,186,512 - 1822 389,000 17,796 - - 1,559,573 64,080 100,000 - 1823 2,072,339 14,485 - - 1,694,200 17,800 440,000 - 1824 17,340 2,600 - 3,504,954 - 1825 1,262,000 29,060 4,434 - 2,943,166 168,000 1826 510,000 - 1,461,100 18,069 760 - 4,004,180 - 1827 1,517,425 24,913 2,800 - 5,493,400 4,000 1,215,000 - 1828 2,357,732 28,029 - - 3,075,200 102,000 125,000 - 1829 2,260,624 57,442 3,403 - 3,712,156 - 770,000 1,230,000 1830 1,414,500 126,351 4,540 - 4,764,800 - 510,000 1,240,000 1,711,500 1831 140,594 4,520 - 5,873,660 398,000 771,350 1,242,700 3,359,260 1832 157,487 4,400 - 4,797,000 320,000 522,500 965,000 2,362,000 1833 193,630 4,160 - 5,206,000 156,000 485,000 1,370,000 2,739,000 1834 732,169 117,370 - 6,412,004 286,000 635,000 1,480,000 1,855,100 1835 371,534 131,402 - 5,352,006 1,952,000 1,410,000 2,760,000 3,878,400 1836 553,147 547,986 1,000 6,546,200 472,000 1,190,000 1,900,000 2,111,000 1837 207,121 45,080 - 3,629,820 252,400 1,042,000 2,276,000 5,558,300 1838 286,588 47,030 - 3,546,000 832,000 1,992,500 1,255,000 6,370,200 Total. 4,220,422 949,130 1,440,517 91,443,993 6,524,069 14,854,600 15,984,243 82,241,302 excepted. The above table contains the number of the several denominations of coin, eagles and half cents Previous to 1805, the whole number of eagles coined amounted to 132,592. Since then none have been coined until the year 1838, during which the number of eagles coined amounted to 7,200. The number of half cents coined, down to the end of the year 1838, was 7,888,713. Deposites and Coinage at the Mint and its Branches for the Year 1838. DEPOSITES. Mists. Gold. Silver. Total. U. Gold. Foreign Gold. Total of Gold. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Philadelphia - 171,700 1,452,800 1,624,500 2,301,200 3,925,700 Charlotte - 127,000 3,600 130,600 - 130,600 Dahlonega - - 135,700 6,100 141,800 - 141,800 New Orleans - 700 39,900 40,600 237,000 277,600 435,100 1,502,400 1,937,500 2,538,200 4,475,700 COINAGE. Mints. Gold. Silver. Copper. Total. Pieces. Value. Pieces. Value. Pieces. Value. Pieces. Value. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Philadelphia - 340,818 1,622,515 8,625,500 2,293,000 6,370,200 63,702 15,336,518 3,979,217 Charlotte - - 20,780 84,165 - - - - 20,780 84,165 Dahlonega - - 20,583 102,915 - - - - 20,583 102,915 New Orleans - - - 402,430 40,243 - - 402,430 40,243 382,181 1,809,595 9,027,930 2,333,243 6,370,200 63,702 15,780,311 4,206,540 COIR, a species of yarn manufactured out of the husk of cocoa nuts. The husks being steeped in water, the dry dusty substance mixed with the fibres is separated. These are afterwards spun into yarn, and manufactured into cordage, that is deemed by some superior to that made of hemp. The goodness of coir depends on the fineness of the filaments, and on their being of a bright yellow colour. About 3,000,000 lbs. weight are annually ex- ported from Ceylon, principally to Calcutta, and other ports in the East Indies: It is also prepared in the Maldive Islands, and many other places; and is very extensively used throughout the East.- (Bertolacci's Ceylon; Bell's Commerce of Bengal, &c.) COLOCYNTHIS, COLOQUINTIDA, OR BITTER CUCUMBER (Ger. Koloquinten; Du. Bitter-appelen; Fr. Coloquintes; It. Coloquintida; Sp. Coloquintidas; Arab. and Pers. Hunzil), the produce of an annual plant (Cucumis colucynthis Lin.) growing in Digitized by Google 404 COLONIES. Turkey, Nubia, India, and other places, much resembling the cucumber in herbage. When ripe, the fruit is peeled and dried in a stove; and in this state is brought to England. It is inodorous, but has an extremely bitter, nauseous taste. It is an exceedingly powerful drastic cathartic. When it is larger than a St. Michael's orange, and has black acute pointed ends, it is not good.-(Ainslie's Materia Indica.) COLONIES.-COLONY TRADE-Colonies are establishments founded in foreign countries by individuals who either voluntarily emigrate from, or are forcibly sent abroad by, their mother country. The colony trade is the trade carried on between colonies and their parent states. I. ESTABLISHMENT OF COLONIES. II. INFLUENCE OF THE MONOPOLY OF THE COLONY TRADE.-SLAVERY. III. MAGNITUDE, POPULATION, TRADE, &c. OF BRITISH COLONIES. IV. REGULATIONS UNDER WHICH COLONY TRADE IS CONDUCTED.DISFOSAL or LAND IN THE COLONIES, &c. V. FOREIGN COLONIES. I. ESTABLISHMENT OF COLONIES. (1.) Greek Colonies.-Various motives have, in different countries and ages, led to the formation of colonies.* The Greek colonies of antiquity seem to have been chiefly founded by citizens whom the violence and fury of contending factions forced to leave their native land; but they were sometimes formed for the purpose of relieving the mother country of a redundant population, and sometimes also for the purpose of extending the sphere of com- mercial transactions, or of providing for their security. The relations between the mother country and the colony depended, in a great measure, on the motives which led to the esta- blishment of the latter. When a colony was founded by fugitives, forcibly expelled from their ancient homes; or when it was founded, as was frequently the case, by bodies of volun- tary emigrants, who received no assistance from, and were in no respect controlled by, the parent state, it was from the first independent: and even in those rarer cases in which the emigration was conducted under the superintendence of the parent city, and when the colony was protected by her power and influence, the dependence was, mostly, far from being abso- lute and complete. The great bulk of the Greek colonies were really independent states; and though they commonly regarded the land of their forefathers with filial respect, though they yielded to its citizens the place of distinction at public games and religious solemnities, and were expected to assist them in time of war, they did so as allies only, on fair and equal terms, and never as subjects. Owing to the freedom of their institutions, and their superiority in the arts of civilized life to the native inhabitants of the countries among whom they were generally placed, these colonies rose, in a comparatively short period, to a high pitch of opulence and refinement; and many among them, as Miletus and Ephesus in Asia Minor, Syracuse and Agrigentum in Sicily, and Tarentum and Locri in Italy, not only equalled, but greatly surpassed, their mother cities in wealth and power. (2.) Roman Colonies.-The Roman colonies were, for the most part, founded by and under the authority of government; being intended to serve both as outlets for poor and dis- contented citizens, and as military stations, or garrisons, to secure the subjection of the con- quered provinces over which they were scattered. The most intimate political union was always maintained between them and the mother city. Their internal government was modelled on that of Rome; and, while their superior officers were mostly sent from the capi- tal, they were made to contribute their full quota of troops and taxes, to assist in carrying on the contests in which the Republic was almost constantly engaged. (3.) Spanish Colonies.-The early colonies of most modern nations were founded by private adventurers, influenced either by the hope of gain, or by a desire to escape from reli- gious persecution, without any wish to relieve the mother country of a surplus population, or to bridle subjugated provinces. On their first institution, therefore, the modern colonies approached, though with some essential variations, more nearly to the Grecian than the Roman model-but the period of their freedom was of very limited duration. They were very soon subjected to laws and regulations framed in the metropolis, and calculated, as was to be supposed, rather to promote its interests than those of the colony. At a somewhat later period the foundation of colonial establishments was eagerly patronised by most Eu- ropean governments, in the view of extending commerce, and of enriching the mother country, * Seneca has given, in a few words, a very clear and accurate statement of the different motives that induced the ancients to found colonies.-" Nec omnibus eadem causa relinquendi quarendique patriam fuit. Alios excidia urbium suarum, hostilibus armis elapsos, in aliena, spoliatos suis, expulerant: Alios domestica seditio submovit: Alios nimia superfluentis populi frequentia, ad exonerandas vires, emisit: Alios pestilentia, aut frequens terrarum hiatus, aut aliqua intoleranda infelicis soli ejecerunt Quesian fertilis ore, et in majus laudata, fama corrupit: Alios alia causa excivit domibus suis."-(Consol. ad Helviam, c. 6.) Digitized by Google COLONIES. 405 by securing to her the exclusive possession of the market of distant countries; and where, from the thinness of the aboriginal population, or their inferiority in the arts of civilized life, the colonists were enabled to amass fortunes with comparative rapidity. The Spaniards who first resorted to America after its discovery, had no intention of settling in the country, or of colonising it. The idea that gold and silver alone constituted wealth was then universally prevalent; and the bold and enterprising companions and fol- lowers of Columbus, instead of engaging in industrious undertakings, which they neither understood nor relished, sought only to enrich themselves by plundering the feeble and de- fenceless natives of the gold and silver in their possession, and of the abundance of which the most exaggerated accounts were immediately spread throughout Europe. When new adventurers arrived on an unknown coast, their single inquiry was, whether it abounded in gold. If it did, they remained, for some time at least, in the country; if not, they imme- diately set sail for some other quarter. Auri rabida sitis a cultura Hispanos divertit, is the expressive statement of a contemporary writer (Petrus Martyrus, in the Novus Orbis of Gryneus, p. 511.). The slow progress of the Spanish colonies, after their first discovery, must principally be ascribed to this cause. The gold and silver accumulated by the natives were very soon exhausted and the skill and energy of the successive swarms of adventurers, who continued to pour into the country, were principally directed to the unproductive and generally ruinous trade of mining. The few large fortunes that were made in this way, like the large prizes in a lottery, inflamed the cupidity of the multitude, and gave an appearance of credibility to the fabulous accounts of the excessive productiveness of the mines. After the gambling spirit which had exclusively actuated the early adventurers had begun to sub- side, the colonists gradually betook themselves to agricultural and commercial pursuits: and the vast variety of valuable productions with which Mexico and the other Spanish colonies abound, the extreme richness of their soil, and their advantageous situation, would, had they been only tolerably well governed, have occasioned their rapid increase in wealth and civiliza- tion. But a blind and intolerant despotism paralysed their energies, and fettered and retarded their progress. All the abuses and defects of the government of Old Spain were transferred to, and multiplied in, the colonies. The whole property of those vast regions was considered as vested in the crown of Spain; and every law or regulation, whether of a local or general nature, affecting their government, emanated from the council of the Indies, in which it was supposed the king was always present. We cannot stop to describe the sort of regulations to which the colonists were subjected with any degree of minuteness; but we may notice a few of them, to furnish the means of judging of their general spirit and probable effect. It was, for example, made a capital offence to carry on any intercourse with foreign- ers; and the inhabitants of the different colonies were even forbidden any intercourse with each other, unless under the strictest and most vexatious regulations. There were several articles, such as flax, hemp, and wine, which they were not permitted to cultivate at the same time that the crown reserved to itself the monopoly of salt, tobacco, gunpowder, and some other less important articles. The alcavala, and other oppressive imposts, which had proved destructive of industry in Old Spain, were rigorously levied as well on the exports as on the imports of the colonies. No situation of power or emolument could be filled except by a native of Old Spain. The Catholic religion was established, to the exclusion of every other; and bishops, tithes, and the inquisition, followed in its train while, in order still better to consolidate and strengthen the foundations of this monstrous despotism, the go- vernment endeavoured to make the colonists insensible of their degradation, by proscribing every species of instruction, and watchfully opposing the introduction and progress of all useful knowledge! Under such circumstances, we cannot be surprised that the Continental colonists, among whom the monopoly system was maintained in its greatest purity, should have languished for above two centuries in a state of sluggish inactivity. Though surrounded by all the means of producing wealth, they were not generally wealthy. Oppression rendered them indolent; and went far to deprive them not only of the power, but also of the wish, to emerge from poverty. The progress of the colonists who occupied the West India islands was not quite 80 slow. It is certain, however, that down to the middle of last century, Spain reaped no greater advantage from the possession of Cuba, Hispaniola, and Porto Rico, than England or France from the smallest of its dependencies. In proof of this we may mention, that the noble island of Cuba, which could without difficulty supply all Europe with sugar, did not, in 1750, produce a sufficient quantity even for the consumption of Old Spain. But the combined influence of an arbitrary and intolerant government, and of a degrading supersti- tion, could not balance the means of improvement, which the fertility of the soil, and the command thence arising over most of the necessaries and many of the conveniences of life, gave to the colonists. Owing also to the total incapacity of Old Spain to furnish her trans- atlantic provinces with a sufficient supply of the articles she had forced them to import from Europe, and the consequent extension of the contraband trade carried on with them by the other European nations, she had been compelled gradually to relax the severity of her com- mercial monopoly. A new impulse was thus given to the spirit of industry. The colonists Digitized by Google 406 COLONIES AND began to be more sensible of the natural advantages of their situation, and less inclined to submit to the blind and bigoted policy of the Spanish Court. In 1781, a rebellion broke in Peru, in consequence of an attempt made by the government to establish a new monopoly in that province, which threatened to end in the total dissolution of the connection between Spain and South America, and was not quelled without great difficulty and much bloodshed. But the spirit of liberty, when once excited, could not be suppressed. It continued to gain ground progressively, until the commencement of the late contest between France and Spain interrupted the communication with the mother country, and gave the colonists an oppor- tunity of proclaiming that independence which, after a lengthened and bloody struggle, they happily succeeded in achieving. (4.) British Colonies.-The English, who, like all the other nations of Europe, had been impressed with mingled feelings of admiration and envy by the extent and importance of the acquisitions made by the Spaniards in the New World, speedily entered with enthusiasm and ardour into the career of discovery. Owing, however, to the bull which Ferdinand and Isabella had obtained from the Pope, conveying to them the ample donation of all the coun- tries inhabited by infidels that the Spaniards had discovered, or might discover, the English, to avoid encroaching on the dominions of their rivals, directed their efforts further to the north. Several attempts to found colonies on the coast of America were made in the reign of Elizabeth by Sir Humphrey Gilbert, Sir Richard Grenville, Sir Walter Raleigh, and others. But in consequence of their ignorance of the country, the deficiency of their supplies of provisions, the loss of time in fruitless searches after gold, and the various difficulties in- cident to the first settlement of a colony, none of these attempts proved successful and it was not until 1607, that a small body of adventurers founded the first permanent establish- ment of the English in America, at Jamestown in Virginia. Letters patent were granted in 1609, by King James, to the principal persons resident in London, by whom the expense attending the formation of the colony was to be defrayed, incorporating them into a com- pany, and establishing a council in England for the direction of their proceedings, the mem- bers of which were to be chosen by, and removable at the pleasure of, the majority of the partners of the company permitting whatever was necessary for the support and sustenance of the colony for the first 7 years to be exported free of duty; declaring that the colonists and their descendants were to be secured in all the rights and privileges of Englishmen, the same as if they had remained at home, or been born in England; and reserving only, as the stipulated price of these concessions, and in imitation of the policy of the Spaniards, one fifth part of the gold and silver ore to be found in the colonies, which was to be paid to his Ma- jesty and his successors in all time to come. In virtue of these powers, the company issued, in 1621, a charter or ordinance, which gave a legal and permanent form to the constitution of the colony. By this charter the supreme legislative authority was lodged, partly in the governor, who held the place of the sovereign, partly in a council of state named by the company, and partly in a general council, or assembly composed of the representatives of the people, in which were vested powers and privileges similar to those of the House of Com- mons. It was not long, however, before the king and the company quarrelled. The latter were in consequence divested of all their rights, partly by open violence, and partly under colour of law, without compensation, after having expended upwards of 150,000L in found- ing the colony; and a governor and council of state appointed by the king succeeded to the powers of those appointed by the committee.-(Robertson's History of America, book ix. passim; Jefferson's Notes on Virginia, p. 179.) The founders of the colony in Virginia had been actuated solely by the hopes of gain: but the colonies that were soon after established in New England, were chiefly planted by men who fied from religious and political persecution. The form of government in the New England colonies, though at first modified a good deal by the peculiar religious opinions en- tertained by the colonists, was in its leading principles essentially free. For a considerable period, the colonists elected their own governors, coined money, and exercised most of the rights of sovereignty while the English, wholly engrossed with the contest between free- dom and prerogative at home, had no leisure to attend to their proceedings. Subsequently to the restoration, however, the governments of most of the New England states were es- tablished nearly on the same footing as that of Virginia; which, indeed, became the favour- ite model, not only for the constitution of the colonies established on the Continent, with the exception of the proprietary governments of Pennsylvania and Maryland, but also for those that were established in the West India islands. But under every vicissitude of government and fortune, the New England colonists were distinguished by the same ardent and enthusi- astic love of liberty that had first induced them to quit their native land. Every thing relat- ing to the internal regulation and administration of the different colonies was determined, in the colonial assemblies, by representatives freely chosen by the settlers. The personal liberty of the citizens was well secured and vigilantly protected. And if we except the restraints on their commerce, the monopoly of which was jealously guarded by the mother country, the inhabitants of Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New England, enjoyed nearly the same de- gree of freedom, when colonists of England, that they now enjoy as citizens of the powerful Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 407 republic of North America. Their progress in wealth and population was in consequence quite unprecedented in the history of the world. The white population of the colonies had increased in 1776, at the commencement of the revolutionary war, to above 2,000,000, and the value of the exports from Great Britain to them amounted to about 1,300,000/. a year ! It is not difficult to discover the causes of the unexampled prosperity and rapid growth of our North American colonies, and generally of all colonies placed under similar circum- stances. The North American colonists carried with them a knowledge of the arts and sciences practised by a civilized and polished people. They had been trained from their infancy to habits of industry and subordination. They were practically acquainted with the best and wisest form of civil polity that had been established in Europe; and they were placed in a situation that enabled them, without difficulty, to remedy its defects, and to try every institution by the test of utility. But the thinness of the aboriginal population, and the consequent facility of obtaining inexhaustible supplies of fertile and unoccupied land, must certainly be placed at the head of all the causes which have promoted the rapid increase of wealth and population in the United States, and in all the other colonies both of North and South America. On the first foundation of a colony, and for long after, each colonist gets an ample supply of land of the best quality; and having no rent, and scarcely any taxes, to pay, his industry necessarily becomes exceedingly productive, and he has every means, and every motive, to amass capital. In consequence, he is eager to collect labourers from all quarters, and is both willing and able to reward them with high wages. But these high wages afford the means of accumulation, and, joined to the plenty and cheapness of the land, speedily change the more industrious labourers into proprietors, and enable them, in their turn, to become the employers of fresh labourers; so that every class participates in the general im- provement, and capital and population advance with a rapidity hardly conceivable in old settled and fully peopled countries. It has been frequently said, that the establishment of our American and West India colonies was a device of the supporters of the exclusive or mercantile system-that they founded them in the view of raising up a vast agricultural population, whose commerce should be confined entirely to an exchange of their raw products for our manufactured goods. There is, however, no truth in these assertions. On the contrary, the charters granted to the founders of the settlement in Virginia distinctly empower the colonists to carry on a direct intercourse with foreign states. Nor were they slow to avail themselves of this permission; for they had, so early as 1620, established tobacco warehouses in Middleburgh and Flush- ing.-(Robertson's America, book ix. p. 104.) and the subsequent proceedings of the British government, depriving them of this freedom of commerce, were the chief cause of those disputes, which broke out, in 1676, in an open rebellion of ominous and threatening import.- (Robertson's America, p. 147.) It was not until the colonists had surmounted the diffi- culties and hardships incident to their first establishment, and had begun to increase rapidly in wealth, that their commerce became an object of importance, and that regulations were framed in the view of restricting its freedom, and of rendering it peculiarly advantageous to the mother country. The act of 1650, passed by the republican parliament, laid the first foundations of the monopoly system, by confining the import and export trade of the colonies exclusively to British or colony built ships. But the famous Navigation Act of 1660 (12 Charles 2. c. 18.) went much further. It enacted, that certain specified articles, the produce of the colonies, and since well known in commerce by the name of enumerated articles, should not be exported directly from the colonies to any foreign country; but that they should first be sent to Britain, and there unladen (the words of the act are, laid upon the shore), before they could be forwarded to their final destination. Sugar, molasses, ginger, fustic, tobacco, cotton, and indigo, were originally enumerated; and the list was subsequently enlarged by the addition of coffee, hides and skins, iron, corn, lumber, &c. In 1739, the monopoly system was so far relaxed, that sugars were permitted to be carried directly from the British plantations to any port or place southward of Cape Finisterre; but the conditions under which this indulgence was granted, continued so strict and numerous down to 1803, when they were a good deal simplified, as to render it in a great degree nugatory.-(Edwards's West Indies, vol. ii. p. 452. ed. 1819.); and with this exception, the oppressive and vexatious restrictions on their direct exportation to foreign countries were maintained on most of the other enumerated commodities of any importance, down to the recent alterations. But besides compelling the colonists to sell their produce exclusively in the English markets, it was next thought advisable to oblige them to buy such foreign articles as they might stand in need of entirely from the merchants and manufacturers of England. For this purpose it was enacted, in 1663, that no commodity of the growth, production, or manu- facture of Europe, shall be imported into the British plantations, but such as are laden and put on board in England, Wales, or Berwick-upon-Tweed, and in English built shipping, whereof the master and three fourths of the crew are English." The preamble to this statute, which effectually excluded the colonists from every market for European produce, except that of England, assigns the motive for this restriction to be, " the maintaining a greater correspondence and kindness between the subjects at home and those in the plantations; Digitized by Google 408 COLONIES AND keeping the colonies in a firmer dependence on the mother country making them yet more beneficial to it, in the further employment and increase of English shipping, and the vent of English manufactures and commodities; rendering the navigation to and from them more safe and cheap; and making this kingdom a staple, not only of the commodities of the plan- tations, but also of the commodities of other countries and places for their supply it being the usage of other nations to keep their plantation trade exclusively to themselves." It was also a leading principle in the system of colonial policy, adopted as well by Eng- land as by the other European nations, to discourage all attempts to marrufacture such articles in the colonies as could be provided for them by the mother country. The history of our colonial system is full of efforts of this sort; and so essential was this principle deemed to the idea of a colony, that Lord Chatham did not hesitate to declare, in his place in par- liament, that " the British colonists of North America had no RIGHT to manufacture even a nail for a horseshne!"-(Edwards's West Indies, vol. ii. p. 566.) And when such were the enactments made by the legislature, and such the avowed sentiments of a great parliamentary leader and a friend to the colonies, we need not be surprised at a declaration of the late Lord Sheffield, who did no more, indeed, than express the opinion of almost all the merchants and politicians of his time, when he affirmed that THE ONLY use of American colonies or West India islands is THE MONOPOLY of their consumption, and the carriage of their produce!" II. INFLUENCE OF THE MONOPOLY OF THE COLONY TRADE.SLAVERY. It is not necessary to enter into any lengthened disquisitions with respect to this part of our subject. The rules by which we are to form our judgment upon it, are unfolded in the article COMMERCE. Here it is sufficient to observe, in the first place, that, though it could be shown that restrictions on the colony trade were really advantageous to the mother coun- try, that is not enough to prove that they should be adopted. In dealing with a colony, we are not dealing with a foreign country, but with an integral part of our own empire. And hence, in order to show that restrictions on the colony trade are advantageous, it must not merely be shown that they are beneficial to the mother country, but it must further be shown that they are beneficial, or, at all events, not injurious, to the colony. The advantage of one part of the empire is not to be purchased by the depression of some other part. The duty of government is to promote the prosperity, and to maintain the equal rights and privileges of all not to enrich one class, or one province, at the expense of others. This principle is decisive of the whole question. Owing to the identity of language, manners, and religion, the merchants of the mother country must always have very great advantages in the colony markets; and if the commodities which they have to sell be about as suitable for them, and as low priced, as those of others, none else will be imported into them; but if they be not, it would plainly be to the injury of the colony to compel her to buy from the mother country what she might procure cheaper from others. It will imme- diately be seen that such forced sale could be of no real advantage to the mother country; but whether that were 80 or not, its mischievous influence upon the colony is manifest. Were Jamaica, for example, obliged to import any article from England which cost her 100,000L a year more than she could procure a similar article for elsewhere, she would manifestly lose this amount; and though it were true that every shilling of this sum found its way as extra profit into the pockets of the merchants or manufacturers of England, that would be no sufficient justification of the policy of such a system. The protection due by a government to its subjects does not depend on the varying degrees of latitude and longitude under which they happen to live. It would not be more glaringly unjust to lay peculiar burdens on the Lothians for the sake of Middlesex, than it is to lay them on Jamaica for the sake of England. In point of fact, however, the monopoly of the colony trade is of no real use, but the reverse, to the mother country. If, as has been already observed, she can supply her colo- nists with goods as cheaply as they can be supplied by others, she will have no competitors in their markets; and if she cannot do this, the monopoly is really hostile to her interests. Each country has some natural or acquired capabilities that enable her to carry on certain branches of industry more advantageously than any one else. But the fact of a country being liable to be undersold in the markets of her colonies, shows conclusively, that instead of having any superiority, she labours under a disadvantage, as compared with others, in the production of the peculiar articles in demand in them. And hence, in providing a forced market in the colonies for articles that we should not otherwise be able to dispose of, we really engage a portion of the capital and labour of the country in a less advantageous chan- nel than that into which it would naturally have flowed. We impress upon it an artificial direction and withdraw it from those secure and really beneficial businesses in which it would have been employed, to engage it in business the existence of which depends only on the continuance of oppressive regulations, and in which we are surpassed by foreigners. Even were it conceded that the possession of an outlet in the colonies for goods that could not otherwise be disposed of, was an advantage, it is one that can exist in theory only. Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 409 Practically it can never be realised. The interests of the colonists, and the dexterity and devices of the smuggler, are too much for Custom-house regulations. Cheap goods never fail of making their way through every obstacle. All the tyrannical laws and guarda costas of Old Spain did not hinder her colonies from being glutted with prohibited commodities. And we may be assured that the moment a competitor appears in the field capable of supplying the Canadians and people of Jamaica with cottons, woollens, hardware, &c. cheaper than we can supply them, that moment will they cease to be our customers. All the revenue officers, and all the ships of England, supposing them to be employed for that purpose, would be unable to avert this result. The consequence of the American war ought to have led to sounder opinions than those that are still current as to the value of the monopoly of the colony trade. Has the independ- ence of the United States been in any respect injurious to us? So far from this, it is cer- tain that it has redounded materially to our advantage. We have been relieved from the expense and trouble of governing extensive countries at a great distance from our shores, at the same time that we have continued to reap all the advantage that we previously reaped from our intercourse with them. It is visionary to imagine that we could have succeeded either in preventing them from establishing manufactories at home, or from importing pro- ducts from abroad, had any one been able to undersell us. Our command of the American market depends, at this moment, on the very same principle-the comparative cheapness of our goods-on which it depended when we had a governor in every state. So long as we preserve this advantage, we preserve the only means by which the monopoly of any distant market can be maintained, and the only means by which such monopoly is rendered of the least advantage. But it is not to be supposed that, because restrictions on the trade of colonies can be of no real advantage to their mother countries, they are not often very injurious to them and to the colonies. We could not, however anxious, exclude manufactured articles, and such foreign goods as are valuable without being very bulky, from our West India islands, pro- vided they were offered cheaper by others. But such is not the case with lumber, provi- sions, &c. They are too bulky to be easily smuggled; and may be, and indeed are, very much raised in price by restrictions on their importation. For many years past, all direct intercourse between our West India colonies and the United States was interdicted and, in consequence, the planters were compelled either to supply themselves with lumber, staves, &c. by a distant voyage from Canada, or, which was by far the most common practice, from the United States, through the circuitous and expensive channel of St. Thomas and other neutral islands In papers laid by the West India merchants and planters before the House of Commons (No. 120. Session 1831), they estimate the increased expense they thus in- curred on lumber, staves, flour, shingles, fish, &c. at 15 per cent. of the entire value of these articles, or at 187,5761. a year. And it will be observed, that no part of this sum went into the pockets of any British merchant. It went wholly to indemnify the Americans and others for being obfiged to bring their products round about by St. Thomas, instead of direct from the States. This system grew out of the American war; but it is due to Mr. Pitt to state that it received no countenance from him. On the contrary, he introduced a bill, in 1785, for reviving the beneficial intercourse that existed previously to the war, between the United States and the West India islands. But being opposed by a powerful party in parliament, and by the ship owners and Canada merchants, he was obliged reluctantly to withdraw the bill. The following remarks of Mr. Bryan Edwards on this subject are as applicable at this moment, as they were at the period (1794) when they were written. This," says he, is not a business of selfishness or faction ; nor (like many of those ques- tions which are daily moved in parliament merely to agitate and perplex government) can it be dismissed by vote. It will come forward again and again, and haunt administration in a thousand hideous shapes, until a more liberal policy shall take place; for no folly can pos- sibly exceed the notion that any measures pursued by Great Britain will prevent the Ameri- can states from having, some time or other, a commercial intercourse with our West India territories on their own terms. With a chain of coast of 20° of latitude, possessing the finest harbours for the purpose in the world, all lying so near the sugar colonies and the track to Europe, with a country abounding in every thing the islands have occasion for, and which they can obtain no where else all these circumstances necessarily and naturally lead to a commercial intercourse between our islands and the United States. It is true we may ruin our sugar colonies, and ourselves also, in the attempt to prevent it; but it is an experi- ment which God and nature have marked out as impossible to succeed. The present re- straining system is forbidding men to help each other ; men who, by their necessities, their climate, and their productions, are standing in perpetual need of mutual assistance, and able to supply it."-(Hist. West Indies, Preface to 2d ed.) We have also thought fit to interdict the West Indians from the refining, or, as it is tech- nically termed, the claying of sugars. This is one of the few manufactures that might be advantageously set up in the islands. The process adds considerably to the value of sugar; VOL. L-2 M 52 Digitized by Google 410 COLONIES AND and it might be carried on in the buildings, and by the hands that are required to boil the cane, or to prepare the raw or muscovado sugar. Instead, however, of being allowed to refine their sugars on the spot, and where it might be done for a third of the expense that is required in England, the planters have been prohibited from engaging in this branch of industry and have been obliged to export all their sugars, either raw or crushed, to England. Nothing can exceed the oppressiveness of such a regulation and what is most singular, it has not been enforced, like most regulations of the sort, in order to bolster up any of the leading in- terests of the country, but merely to give a factitious employment to a very small class,-that of the sugar refiners, whose natural residence is in the West Indies. The planters and mer- chants estimate the loss caused by this preposterous regulation at 75,550L a year. The distillation of spirits from sugar has only been occasionally allowed but provided the duties were so adjusted as to give no advantage to the planters over the growers of bar- ley, or to the latter over the former, we think the distillers should be, at all times, allowed to distil indiscriminately from sugar, molasses, or grain. It is the duty of government to take care that the duties be 80 arranged as to give no unfair advantage to any party over another; but, having done this, it should do nothing more. To prohibit distillation from sugar, that a forced market may be opened for grain; or distillation from grain, that a forced market may be opened for sugar; are interferences with the freedom of industry, for which no good reason has been, nor we believe can be, assigned. The interests of the planters have been sacrificed in many other ways besides those now pointed out, in the view of securing some illusory advantage to our merchants and ship- owners. Perseverance in this line of policy is the less excusable, as it is in direct opposition to the principle of the measures introduced by Mr. Robinson (now Lord Goderich) in 1822, and Mr. Huskisson in 1825; and sanctioned by the legislature. The avowed object of these measures was the subversion of the old colonial system, and the repeal of the vexa- tious restrictions laid on the trade of the colonies. If we look," said Mr. Robinson, to the dominions of England in the Eastern hemisphere, we shall find the restrictive system has been entirely and systematically abandoned. The whole of the East India Company's territories have never been shackled with the peculiar restrictions of the navigation laws; and who will say that the interests of commerce and navigation have suffered ? or rather, who will deny that they have been materially benefited by the freedom they have enjoyed " I propose," said Mr. Huskisson, in 1825, " to admit a free intercourse between all our colonies and other countries, either in British ships, or in the ships of those countries, allow- ing the latter to import all articles, the growth, produce, or manufacture of the country to which the ship belongs; and to export from such colonies all articles whatever of their growth, produce, or manufacture, either to the country from which such ship came, or to any other port of the world; the United Kingdom and all its dependencies only excepted." Unluckily, however, the conditions and regulations introduced into the bills were, for the most part, in direct contradiction to the principle laid down in the speeches now quoted nor is it easy, indeed, to conceive for what purpose the latter were made, unless it were to ex- hibit the impolicy of the former. Among others which will subsequently be specified, the act of 1825 imposed the following duties for the express purpose of securing to Canada and to British ships the supply of the West India islands with food and lumber. Table of Duties imposed by 6 Geo. 4. c. 114. on certain Articles of L a d. Provision, and of Wood and Lumber, not being the Growth, Pro- Other wood and lumber, the 1,000 feet of 1 inch thick 1 8 0 duction, or Manufacture of the United Kingdom, nor of any Bri- Fish, beef, pork, prohibited. tish Possession, imported or brought into the British Possessions on the Continent of South America, or in the West Indies, the Ba- The revenue derived from these and the other duties imposed by , hama and Bermuda Islands included. the act of 1825, amounted to about 75,000/. a year, and the charges of collection to about 68,000/.: Provisions, VIE. L. & d. The effects of these duties in adding to the prices of the food and Wheat, the bushel 0 1 0 lumber imported by the planters, is exhibited in the following Wheat flour, the barrel 0 5 0 statement of the prices of some of the principal of these articles in Bread or biscuit, the cwt. 0 6 the United States and the Continent, and in Canada and the United Flour or meal, not of wheat, the barrel -086 Kingdom Peas, beans, rye, calavances, oats, barley, Indian corn, L a d. the bushel 0 0 7 Herrings (Danish) at the Island of St. Thomas, the barrel 100 Rice, the 1,000 lbs. nett weight 026 Ditto (British) in the colonies, the barrel 11 0 Live stock, 10 per cent. Mem beef, in Hamburgh, the barrel 300 Lumber, viz Ditto, in the United Kingdom, ditto 400 Shingles, not being more than 12 inches in length, Pork, in Hamburgh, the barrel 260 the 1,000 070 Ditto, in the United Kingdom, ditto 850 Shingles, being more than 18 inches in length, the Red oak staves, in the United States, per 1,000 400 1,000 0 14 0 Ditto, at Quebec, per ditto -784 Staves and headings, viz. White oak staves, in the United States, per ditto 10 $ Red oak, the 1,000 0 15 0 Ditto, at Quebec, per ditto 10 2 White oak, the 1,000 0126 Flour, in the United States, the barrel 0 Wood hoops, the 1,000 063 Ditto, at Quebec, ditto 5 White, yellow, and pitch pine lumber, the 1,000 feet Shingles, in the United States, per 1,000 14 0 of 1 inch thick 1 0 Ditto, in Canada, per ditto IS 0 The United States, who felt themselves aggrieved by the imposition of such oppressive duties on flour, wheat, and lumber, refused to accede to those conditions of reciprocity under which the colonial ports were to be opened to their ships; and, owing to this circumstance, it was not till the end of 1830, when fresh negotiations were entered into with the United States, and it was agreed to modify some of the duties, that the West India colonies derived any sensible advantage from the changes, such as they were, that were made in 1825. But notwithstanding the modifications introduced by the act 1 Will. 4. c. 24, and now, Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 411 embodied in the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 59.-(see post),-the regulations under which the colony trade is at present conducted, are in the highest degree objectionable. There is, for example, a duty of 5s. a barrel on all flour brought from a foreign country into our posses- sions in the West Indies and South America, and also into Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island. At first sight there seems nothing to object to in this regulation, except the imposition of the duty ; in point of fact, however, this is its least objectionable feature, and is used merely as a pretext to conceal its real object. The necessity of raising a revenue might, in some degree, excuse even the imposition of a duty on the food of the colonists but there cannot be so much as the shadow of an apology for taxing it for the benefit of another class. Such, however, is the sole end and purpose of this ingeniously contrived regulation. It will be observed, that though no wheat flour can be carried duty free direct, from a foreign country to our possessions in the West Indies, or to our posses- sions to the north of the United States on the Atlantic, it may be imported duty free into Canada, where it is not needed The consequence is, that a large proportion of the United States' flour intended for the West Indies, instead of being shipped direct from New York, Philadelphia, &c. for the islands, is carried, in the first instance, to Montreal and Quebec, and is thence conveyed in British ships to its final destination. The duty is imposed to force this trade; that is, to make the food of the colonists be carried to them by a round- about course of more than 2,000 miles, in order that a few hundred pounds may be forced into the pockets of the ship-owners, at an expense of many thousand pounds to the colonists. Such, indeed, is the influence of the system, that there have been instances of wheat having been carried from Archangel to Quebec, landed there, and again shipped for Jamaica ! Shingles, lumber, &c. are subjected to the same regulations, with this difference merely, that they may be imported duty free into Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, &c., being thence car- ried to the West Indies; whereas, by confining the importation of duty free flour to Canada, it must pass, before it can reach the consumers, through the lengthened, difficult, and dan- gerous navigation of the St. Lawrence. It is unnecessary to make any commentary on such regulations. None more objections- ble in principle, or mischievous in practice, are to be met with in the worst parts of the old Spanish colonial régime. All duties on and regulations with respect to the importation of articles of provision, lumber, &c. into the colonies, ought to be wholly abolished. Jamaica, and our other West India colonies, may be viewed as immense sugar, rum, and coffee manufactories, which, though situated at a distance from England, belong to Englishmen, and are carried on by English capital. But to promote the prosperity of any manufacture without injuring that of others, there are no means at once so obvious and effectual, as to give those engaged in it every facility for supplying themselves with the materials necessary to carry it on at the lowest price, and to keep the duties on its produce as low as possible. This is the sound. and obvious principle that ought to have been kept steadily in view in legislating for the colonies; though, as already seen, it has been totally lost sight of. That the system of forcing importation from Canada may be advantageous to that province, we do not presume to deny ; but we are not to impoverish one part of our dominions that we may enrich another, more especially when it is certain, as in the present case, that the advantage conferred is trifling indeed compared with the injury inflicted. In other respects, the operation of the present system is most pernicious. Sugar is an important necessary of life, and enters largely into the consumption of every individual in Great Britain. Surely, then, it is highly important that every means should be resorted to for reducing its cost; and as we have ex- cluded foreign sugars from our markets, the only way in which any such reduction can be effected is by abolishing the existing restrictions, and allowing the planters to furnish them- selves with the materials necessary for their manufacture at the lowest rate, and to dispose of their produce in the state and at the places they prefer. The vexatious regulations now alluded to, have been, for the most part, imposed to benefit the mother country at the expense of the colonies. There has, however, been, in this re- spect, a reciprocity of injuries. Being obliged to buy whatever they wanted in the markets of the mother country, the colonists early succeeded in obtaining, what, indeed, could not, under the circumstances of the case, be denied to them, the monopoly of these markets for the sale of their peculiar productions. And hence the high discriminating duties on foreign sugars, coffee, timber, &c. Owing to the very great fertility of the colonics of Demerara, Berbice, &c., acquired during the late war, the exclusion of foreign sugar has not latterly been so great a burden as it used to be, though it still occasions an enhancement of its price. But there are no palliating circumstances about the discriminating duty on foreign timber. Not satisfied with giving the Canadians an unfair advantage in the markets of the West In- dies, we give them a still more unjustifiable advantage in those of England. It was proved in evidence taken before a committee of the House of Lords, that timber from Canada is not half so durable as that from the Baltic, and is, besides, peculiarly liable to dry rot. It is not allowed to be used in the building of ships for the navy, and is rejected by all the more respectable house-builders : and yet, under the miserable pretext of giving employment to Digitized by Google 412 COLONIES AND saw mills in Canada, and to a few thousand tons of additional shipping, we actually force the use of this worthless article, by imposing a discriminating duty of no less than 45s. a load on all timber from the north of Europe. It has been shown, by papers laid before par- liament, that were the same duty laid on timber from Canada that is laid on timber from the Baltic, the revenue would gain 1,500,000Z. a year, while the durability of our ships and houses would be doubled.-(For a further discussion of this subject, see TIMBER.) These restrictions tend to render the colony trade a source of loss, and of irritation and disgust to all parties. In other respects, too, their influence is most pernicious. So long as the colonies are prevented from purchasing lumber, provisions, &c. in the cheapest markets, and as their trade continues subjected to regulations injurious to their interests, they are jus- tified in resisting all efforts to make them contribute any thing considerable to the expenses of the armaments required for their protection. "Attempts," said Lord Palmerston, have been made in all the West India islands to induce them to contribute to the expenses of the establishments; and they have always represented that their means of doing so were crip- pled by the commercial arrangements of the mother country they have said, 'If you will let us trade as we like, and collect our own custom duties, and 30 on, we will do it." And no proposal could be fairer.-(Finance Committee, Evidence, P. 146.) The expense of the colonies is a very heavy item in the national expenditure-far more 80 than is generally supposed. Not only are we subjected, as in the case of timber, to op- pressive discriminating duties on foreign articles, that similar articles from the colonies may enjoy the monopoly of our markets, but we have to defray a very large sum on account of their military and naval expenditure. There are no means by which to estimate the precise amount of this expense but it is, notwithstanding. abundantly certain, that Canada and the islands in the West Indies cost us annually, in military and naval outlays, upwards of a million and a half in time of peace, exclusive of the revenue collected in them. And if to this heavy expense were added the vast additional sums their defence costs during war, the debtor side of a fairly drawn up colonial budget would attain to a very formidable magni- tude ; and one which we apprehend could not possibly be balanced. In entertaining this opinion we are not singular. If," said Lord Sheffield, " we have not purchased our experience sufficiently dear, let us derive a lesson of wisdom from the mia fortunes of other nations, who, like us, pursued the phantom of foreign conquest and distant colonisation; and who, in the end, found themselves less populous, opulent, and powerful. By the war of 1739, which may be truly called an American contest, we incurred a debt of upwards of 31,000,000/; by the war of 1755 we incurred a further debt of 71,500,000L; and by the war of the revolt we have added to both these debts nearly 100,000,000L more And thus we have expended a far larger sum in defending and retaining our colonies, than the value of all the merchandise we have ever sent them. So egregious has our impolicy been, in rearing colonists for the sake of their custom !"—(On the Commerce of the Ameri- can States, p. 240.) But our object is not to excite unavailing regrets for hygone follies, but to induce the re- turn to a better system. The repeal of the restrictions on the colony trade seems indispensa- ble, as a preliminary to other reforms. We have already seen that the legislature has recog- nised the principle of this repeal and until it has taken place, or the existing restrictions been materially modified, we shall neither be able to rid ourselves of the discriminating duties in favour of colonial products, nor to make the colonies defray any considerable part of the expenditure incurred on their account. If there be no room for surprise at the complaints so constantly put forth by the West In- dians, there is very great room for surprise that so few attempts should have been made to redress the grievances of which they complain. Met in every quarter by the keen and ac- tive competition of the Brazilians and Cubans, who have been emancipated from the tram- mels of monopoly, and permitted freely to resort, whether as buyers or sellers, to every market, the planters in the British colonies could not be otherwise than depressed. They have been made the victims of an erroneous system of policy; for there is nothing in the circumstances under which they are naturally placed, to lead to a belief that their distresses are incurable. Were they permitted freely to supply themselves with such articles as they require, to refine their sugar in the islands, and were the exorbitant duties that are now laid on some of their staple products adequately reduced, can any one doubt that their condition would be materially improved or that these measures would not equally redound to the general advantage of the public? The colonies being integral parts of the empire, the trade with them should, as far as cir- cumstances will permit, be conducted on the footing of a coasting trade. The state of the revenue requires that moderate duties should be laid on sugar, coffee, and rum, when im- ported into Great Britain or Ireland; but the duties on cotton, cacao, and most other colonial products, might be repealed without injury to the revenue, and with advantage to all parties. The system we have hitherto pursued has been a radically different one, and in most respects the reverse of what it ought to have been. By excluding the colonists from the cheapest Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 413 markets for their food and lumber, we have artificially raised the cost of their produce; and then, to protect them from the consequences of such short-sighted policy, we give them a monopoly of the British market ! It is thus that one unjust and vicious regulation is sure to give birth to others; and that those who depart from sound principle have nothing left but to endeavour to bolster up one absurdity by another. It is time, surely, that an end were put to 60 ruinous a system. It is as much for the interest as it is the duty of England, to remove all restrictions from the colonists, not essential for the sake of revenue; for this is the only means by which she can provide for their real prosperity, and rid herself of those mono- polies that form the beaviest clog upon her industry. We hope it will not be supposed, from any thing now stated, that we consider the founda- tion of colonial establishments as, generally speaking, inexpedient. We entertain no such opinion. It is not to the establishment of colonies, provided they be placed in advantageous situations, but to the trammels that have been laid on their industry, and the interference exercised by the mother countries in their domestic concerns, that we object. Every indi- vidual ought to have full liberty to leave his native country; and occasions very frequently occur, when governments may advantageously interfere to settle emigrants in foreign coun- tries, and when the soundest policy dictates the propriety of their supporting and protecting them until they are in a situation to support and protect themselves. There can be no ques- tion whatever that Europe has been prodigiously benefited by the colonisation of America. The colonists carried the arts, the sciences, the language, and the religion of the most civi- lized communities of the Old World to regions of vast extent and great natural fertility, oc- cupied only by a few miserable savages. The empire of civilisation has in consequence been immeasurably extended: and while the experience afforded by the rise and progress of communities placed under such novel circumstances, has served to elucidate and establish many most important and fundamental principles in government and legislation, Europe has been enriched by the vast variety of new products America has afforded to stimulate the in- ventive powers of genius, and to reward the patient hand of industry. But whatever may have been the advantages hitherto derived from the colonisation of America, they are trifling compared to what they would have been, had the European powers left the colonists at liberty to avail themselves of all the advantages of their situation, and avoided encumbering themselves with the government of extensive territories, 3,000 miles distant. Fortunately, however, a new era is, at length, begun-Novus sæclorum nascitur ordo! The monopoly of the trade of America is destroyed, and her independence achieved. From Canada to Cape Horn, every port is ready to receive adventurers from Europe; and a boundless field has, in consequence, been opened for the reception of our surplus popula- tion, and for the advantageous employment of European arts, capital, and skill. The few re- mains of the old colonial system which still exist, and which are principally to be found in the mercantile policy of this country and France, cannot be of long duration. Their mis- chievous operation is no longer doubtful; and they will disappear according as the know- ledge of sound commercial principles is more generally diffused. Slavery.-Since the publication of the former edition of this work, a law has been made which will effect a radical change in the condition of society in the British West Indies. The abolition of the slave trade has been consummated by the act for the freedom of the un- happy persons now in a state of bondage. The statute 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 73. enacts, that on the 1st of August, 1834, slavery is to cease throughout the British dominions, and that the then existing slaves are to become apprenticed labourers; the term of their apprenticeship partly ceasing on the 1st of August, 1838, and partly on the 1st of August, 1840; when the black and coloured population will become altogether free. A sum of 20,000,000/. is to be distributed in certain proportions, and according to certain conditions, to the planters, as a compensation for the loss of their slaves.-(See article SLAVES AND SLAVE TRADE.) Such are the prominent features of this famous statute, by which the British parliament has endeavoured at once to meet and satisfy the claims of humanity and justice. The pay- ment of 20,000,000L to the colonists, though not more than they were fairly entitled to, is, perhaps, the most striking instance to be met with in history, of a resolution to vindicate and maintain the right of property and reflects as much credit on the wisdom as on the liberality of the British nation. Nothing but vague conjectures can, of course, be indulged in as to the future working of this measure in the colonies. We believe, however, that those who have contended that it will not be productive of any falling off in the industry of the blacks will be found to have taken a very erroneous view of the matter. Field labour in the West Indies has hitherto been always associated with slavery and degradation, and been enforced by the lash. The fair inference, consequently, is, that when the fetters are struck off the slave, and he is left to follow his bwn inclinations, he will be desirous of escaping from what he cannot fail to consider an ignominious occupation. Necessity, no doubt, will prevent him from becoming. altogether indolent; but the effect will in this, as in other instances, be proportioned to its cause and necessity in the West Indies is very different from necessity in Europe. Most articles that are here deemed indispensable, would there be positive encumbrances; and those 2 M 2 Digitized by Google 414 COLONIES AND essential to subsistence may be procured with less certainly than half the labour hitherto ex- acted from the slaves. At some future period, perhaps, when the recollection of their degra- dation has begun to fade, and a taste for conveniences and gratifications has been introduced amongst them, they may become more industrious; but this is a distant and a very uncertain prospect. We, therefore, look, at first, for a very considerable decline in the industry of the slaves, and a proportional falling off in the exports from the islands. It will give us pleasure should our anticipations be disappointed; and assuredly we do not state them by way of ob- jection to, or deduction from, the great measure of emancipation. It would be monstrous to suppose that we might retain above 750,000 of our fellow-creatures in a state of bond- age, for no better reason than that sugar might be sent to England from Jamaica or Barba- does, rather than from India, Java, or Cuba. For further information on this subject, we beg to refer our readers to an article on Colo- nial Policy, in No. 84. of the Edinburgh Review, to the chapter on Colonies, in Sir Henry Parnell's invaluable work on Financial Reform," and to the Parliamentary Paper No. 120. Sess. 1831. This paper, being prepared by a committee of West India merchants and plant- ers, occasionally, probably, exaggerates the injury they sustain from the existing regulations; it is, however, a very instructive and valuable document. Some of the previous statements are taken from the article in the Edinburgh Review; but we are not, on that account, liable to the charge of appropriating the labours of others. III. MAGNITUDE, POPULATION, TRADE, ETC. OF THE BRITISH COLONIES. Notwithstanding the loss of the United States, the colonies of Great Britain, exclusive of India, exceed in number, extent, and value, those of every other country. Previously, in- deed, to the breaking out of the late contests, the colonial dominions of Spain far exceeded in extent and importance those of any other power. But Cuba, Porto Rico, and the Philip- pine Islands, are now all that remain to her. These, indeed, are very valuable possessions, though inferior to those of England. (1.) North American Colonies.In North America we possess the provinces of Lower and Upper Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, with their dependencies. The situa- tion and boundaries of these provinces will be more easily learned from the inspection of the accompanying map, than they could be from any description. The shores of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick are washed by the Atlantic Ocean and the noble river St. Lawrence, by its communication with the great American lakes, gives to Canada all the benefits of a most extensive inland navigation, and forms a natural outlet for her surplus produce, as well as for the surplus produce of that part of the United States which is washed by the lakes. There is every variety in the soil and climate of these regions. In Lower Canada, the winter is very severe. The surface of the country is covered with snow for nearly half the year. From the beginning of December to the middle of April, the St. Lawrence is frozen over, and affords a smooth and convenient passage for the sledges by which it is then covered. But though severe, the climate is far from being unhealthy or disagreeable. The weather is generally clear and bracing; and the labour of artisans, at their out-door employments, is rarely suspended for many days in succession. On the breaking up of the ice in the latter end of April, or the beginning of May, the powers of vegetation almost immediately resume their activity, and bring on the fine season with a rapidity that is astonishing to a stranger. The highest temperature in Lower Canada varies from 96° to 102° of Fahrenheit; but the purity of the atmosphere abates the oppressive heat that is felt in most countries where the mercury ranges so high and the weather is, on the whole, decidedly pleasant. In 1814, it was ascertained that the province of Lower Canada contained about 335,000 inhabitants; at present the number may amount to about 580,000. The population is chiefly confined to the banks of the St. Lawrence. That part of the province of Upper Canada, which stretches from Lake Simcoe and the rivers Trent and Severn, westward to Lake Huron and the St. Clair River, and southward to Lake Erie, and part of Lake Ontario, has a soil of extraordinary fertility, capable of pro- ducing the most luxuriant crops of wheat, and every sort of grain. The climate," says Mr. Bouchette, surveyor-general of Lower Canada, is so particularly salubrious, that epi- demic diseases, either among men or cattle, are almost entirely unknown. Its influence on the fertility of the soil is more generally perceptible than it is in Lower Canada, and is sup- posed to be congenial to vegetation in a much superior degree. The winters are shorter, and not always marked with such rigour as in the latter. The duration of frost is always ac- companied with a finé clear sky and a dry atmosphere. The spring opens, and the resump- tion of agricultural labours takes place, from 6 weeks to 2 months earlier than in the neigh- bourhood of Quebec. The summer heats rarely prevail to excess, and the autumns are usually very friendly to the harvests, and favourable for securing all the late crops."- (Bouchette's Topographical Description of Canada, p. 595.) The ground on the shores of Lake Ontario and Lake Erie, as far west as the junction of the Themes with the St. Claim Lake, is laid out in townships, and partly settled. But the population is so very thin as Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 415 not, on an average, to amount to more than twenty persons to a square mile, in settled townships; while the fertility of the soil is such, that 120 persons to a square mile would not be a dense population. To the north of the River Thames, along the banks of the St. Clair, and the shores of Lake Huron, round to the River Severn, and thence to the river that joins Lake Nippissing and Lake Huron, is a boundless extent of country that is almost entirely unoccupied. The interior of this space has hitherto been but imperfectly explored but the banks of the St. Clair and the shores of Lake Huron afford the finest situations for settle- ments. The soil is in many places of the greatest fertility, the river and lake teem with fish, and every variety of the best timber is found in the greatest profusion. In 1783, the settlers in Upper Canada were estimated at only 10,000 in 1825 they amounted to upwards of 157,000; and now amount, according to Mr. M'Gregor, to above 300,000: a miserably small population for a country that could easily support many millions of inhabitants in a state of the greatest comfort. The winters in the provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick are more severe than in Upper Canada, and they are a good deal infested with fogs and mists. But their proximity to England, and their favourable situation for the fishing business, give them considerable advantages. In addition to the above, we possess the Hudson's Bay territory,-a tract of vast extent, but situated in an inhospitable climate, and worth very little except as hunting grounds. We also possess the large islands of Newfoundland and Cape Breton; but the soil is bar- ren, and the climate severe and foggy 80 that they are valuable principally as fishing sta- tions. We extract from the valuable work of Mr. M'Gregor on British North America (2d ed. vol. ii. p. 589.) the following statistical Table, representing the population, stock of cattle, cultivated land, &c. in the different provinces in 1832:- Horned Acres culti- Inhabitants. Horses. Cattle. Hogs. Sheep. vated. Upper Canada - - - 310,000 34,380 214,692 220,000 240,000 1,800,000 Canada - - - - 580,000 126,000 440,000 350,000 610,000 2,125,000 New Brunswick - - - 110,000 12,000 87,000 65,000 105,000 365,000 Nova Scotia - - - 196,000 19,000 144,796 98,214 234,658 398,964 Prince Edward Island - - 35,000 4,500 32,000 30,000 48,000 180,000 Newfoundland and Labrador - 76,000 600 8,000 16,000 10,000 45,000 Total - - 1,307,000 196,480 926,488 779,214 1,247,658 4,913,964 Number of Emigrants.-There emigrated to the British Colonies in North America in Individuals. Individuals. Individuals. 1825 8,741 1828 12,084 1831 58,067 1826 12,818 1829 13,307 1832 66,339 1827 12,648 1830 30,574 (Parl. Paper, No. 696. Sess. 1833.) Of these, the great majority have been destined for Upper Canada.-(For the total emigration from the United Kingdom, see PASSENGERS.) Information for Emigrants to British North America.-In the latter part of 1831, a set of commissioners were appointed by government for the purpose of digesting plans of emi- gration, procuring information useful for emigrants, &c. On the 9th of February, 1832, they issued the following paper, the statements in which may be, consequently, regarded as quite authentic. Colonial Office, 9th of February, 1832. The object of the present notice is to afford such information as is likely to be useful to persons who desire either to emigrate, or to assist others to emigrate, to the British possessions in North America. In the first place, it seems desirable to define the nature of the assistance to be expected from go- vernment by persons proceeding to these colonies. No pecuniary aid will be allowed by government to emigrants to the North American colonies; nor after their arrival will they receive grants of land, or gifts of tools, or a supply of provisions. Hopes of all these things have been sometimes held out to emigrants by speculators in this country, desirous of making a profit by their conveyance to North America, and willing for that purpose to delude them with unfounded expectations, regardless of their subsequent disappointment. But the wish of government is to furnish those who emigrate with a real knowledge of the circumstances they will find in the countries to which they are going. No assistance of the extraordinary extent above described is allowed. because, in colonies, where those who desire to work cannot fail to do well for themselves, none such is needed. Land, indeed, used formerly to be granted gratuitously; but when it was taken by poor people, they found that they had not the means of living during the interval necessary to raise their crops; and further, that they knew not enough of the manner of farming in the colonies, to make any progress. After all, there- fore, they were obliged to work for wages, until they could make a few savings, and could learn a little of the way of farming in Canada. But now, land is not disposed of except by sale. The produce of sales, although the price is very moderate, is likely to become a considerable fund, which can be turned to the benefit of the colonies, and therefore of the emigrants while yet no hardship is inflicted on the poor emigrant, who will work for wages just as he did before, and may after a while acquire and, if land be his object, by the savings which the high wages in these colonies enable him speedily to make. These are the reasons why government does not think it necessary to give away land in a country, where, by the lowness of its price, the plentifulness of work, and high rate of wages, an industrious man can earn enough in a few seasons to become a freeholder by means of his own acquisitions. The land which is for sale will be open to public competition, and of course, therefore, its price Digitized by Google 416 COLONIES AND must depend upon the offers that may be made but it will generally not be sold for less than from 4a. to 5s. per acre and in situations where roads have been made, or the ground has been partially cleared, the common prices lately have been 7s. 6d., 10s., and 15s. Further particulars will be best learned upon the spot, where every endeavour will be made to meet the different circumstances and views of different purchasers. Although government will not make any gifts at the public expense to emigrants to North America, agents will be maintained at the principal colonial ports, whose duty it will be, without fee or reward from private individuals, to protect emigrants against imposition upon their first landing, to acquaint them with the demand for labour in different districts, to point out the most advantageous routes, and to furnish them generally with all useful advice upon the objects which they have had in view in emigrating: and when a private engagement cannot be immediately obtained, employment will be afforded on some of the public works in progress in the colonies. Persons newly arrived should not omit to consult the government agent for emigrants, and as much as possible should avoid detention in the ports, where they are exposed to all kinds of impositions, and of pretexts for keeping them at taverns till any money they may possess has been expended.-For the same purpose of guarding against the frauds practised on new comers, and of preventing an improvident expenditure at the first moment of arrival, it seems very desirable that individuals who may wish to furnish emigrants with money for their use in the colony should have the means of making the money payable there, instead of giving it into the hands of the emigrants in this country. The commissioners for emigration are engaged in effecting general arrangements for this purpose, and due notice will be given to the public when they shall be completed. Agents for emigration have been appointed at St. John's, St. An- drew's, and Miramichi in New Brunswick, and at Quebec and York in Canada. On the whole sub- ject of the manner of proceeding upon landing, it may be observed, in conclusion, that no effort will be spared to exempt emigrants from any necessity for delay at the place of disembarkation, and from uncertainty as to the opportunities of at once turning their labour to account. After this explanation of the extent of the aid to be expected from government, the following state- ments are subjoined of the ordinary charges for passage to the North American colonies, as well as of the usual rates of wages and usual prices in thein, in order that every individual may have the means of judging for himself of the inducements to emigrate to these parts of the British dominions. Passage.-Passages to Quebec or New Brunswick may either be engaged inclusive of provisions, or exclusive of próvisions, in which case the ship owner finds nothing but water. fuel, and bed places, without bedding. Children under 14 years of age are charged one half, and under 7 years of age one third, of the full price; and for children under 12 months of age no charge is made. Upon these con- ditions the price of passage from London, or from places on the east coast of Great Britain, has gene- rally been 61. with provisions, or 31. without. From Liverpool, Greenock, and the principal ports of Ireland, as the chances of delay are fewer, the charge is somewhat lower; this year it will probably be from 21. to 21. 10s. without provisions, or from 41. to 51. including provisions. It is possible that in March and April passages may be obtained from Dublin for 35s. or even 30s.; but the prices always grow higher as the season advances. In ships sailing from Scotland or Ireland, it has mostly been the custom for passengers to find their own provisions but this practice has not been so general in London and some ship owners, sensible of the dangerous mistakes which may be made in this mat- ter through ignorance, are very averse to receive passengers who will not agree to be victualled by the ship. Those who do resolve to supply their own provisions, should at least be careful not to lay in an insufficient stock; 50 days is the shortest period for which it is safe to provide; and from Lon- don the passage is sometimes prolonged to 75 days. The best months for leaving England are certainly March and April; the later emigrants do not find employment so abundant, and have less time in the colony before the cominencement of winter. Various frauds are attempted upon emigrants, which can only be effectually defeated by the good sense of the parties against whom they are contrived. Sometimes agents take payment from the emigrant for his passage, and then recommend him to some tavern, where he is detained from day to day under false pretences for delay, until, before the departure of the ship, the whole of his money is extracted from bim. This of course cannot happen with agents connected with respectable houses; but the best security is to name in the bargain for passage a particular day, after which, whether or not the ship salls, the passenger is to be received on board and victualled by the owners. In this manner the emigrant cannot be intentionally brought to the place of embarkation too soon, and be compelled to spend his money at public houses, by false accounts of the time of sailing; for from the very day of his arrival at the port, being the day previously agreed upon, the ship becomes his home. The conveyance of passengers to the British possessions in North America is regulated by an act of parliament (9 Geo. 4. c. 21.), of which the following are the principal provisions :-Ships are not allowed to carry passengers to these colonies unless they be of the height of 5f feet between decks; and they must not carry more than 3 passengers for every 4 tons of the registered burden ; there must be on board at least 50 gallons of pure water, and 50 lbs. of bread, biscuit, oatmeal, or bread stuff. for each passenger. When the ship carries the full number of passengers allowed by law, no part of the cargo, and no stores or provisions, may be carried between decks; but if there be less than the com- plete number of passengers, goods may be stowed between decks in a proportion not exceeding 3 cu- bical feet for each passenger wanting of the highest number. Masters of vessels who land passengers unless with their own consent, at a place different from that originally agreed upon, are subject to a penalty of 202., recoverable by summary process before 2 justices of the peace in any of the North American colonies. The enforcement of this law rests chiefly with the officers of his Majesty's customs and persons having complaints to make of its infraction, should address themselves to the nearest Custom-house. Besides the sea voyage from England, persons proceeding to Canada should be provided with the means of paying for the journey which they may have to make after their arrival at Quebes. The cost of this journey must, of course, depend upon the situation of the place where the individual may find employment, or where he may have previously formed a wish tosettle; but to all it will probably be useful to possess the following report of the prices of conveyance, during the last season, on the route from Quebec to York, the capital of Upper Canada. From Quebec to Montreal (180 miles), by steam-boat, the charge for an adult was 6s. 6d. from Montreal to Prescott (120 miles), by boats or barges, 7a. from Prescott to York (250 miles), by steamboat, 7a. The journey, performed in this manner, usually occupies 10 or 12 days: adding, therefore, 11s. for provisions, the total cost from Quebec to York (a distance of 550 miles) may be stated, according to the charges of last year, at 11. 11a. 6d. Persons who are possessed of sufficient means prefer to travel by land that part of the route where the River St. Lawrence is not navigable by steam-boats, and the journey is then usually performed in 6 days. at a cost of 61. It must be observed, that the prices of conveyance are necessarily fluctuating, and that the foregoing account is only presented as sufficiently accurate for purposes of information in this country, leaving it to the government agent at Quebec to supply emigrants with more exact particu- lars, according to the circumstances of the time at which they may arrive. Rates of Wages and Market Prices.-The colonies in North America, to which emigrants can with advantage proceed, are Lower Canada, Upper Canada, and New Brunswick. From the reports re- ceived from the other British colonies in North America, namely, Prince Edward's Island, Newfound- Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 417 land, Nova Scotia, and Cape Breton, it appears that they do not contain the means either of affording employment at wages to a considerable number of emigrants, or of settling them upon land. Upper Canada.-From a comparison of all the documents before the commissioners for emigration, it appears that the yearly wages of labourers in Upper Canada, hired by the year, are from 271. to 301.; that their monthly wages, in different situations and at different seasons, range from 11. 10s. to 3/. 10s. per month; and that daily wages range from 2s. to 3s. 9d. In all these rates of wages, board and lodging are found by the employer. Without board, daily wages vary from 3s. 6d. out of harvest to 5s. during harvest; 6s. 3d., besides provisions, is sometimes given to harvest men. The wages of mechanics may be stated universally at from 5a. to 7a. 6d. per day. The following Table exhibits the lowest and the highest price which the several articles therein named bore, during the year 1831, in each of the principal districts of Upper Canada Seconds Fine Flour 100 lbs. Veal Pork Mutton Beef , I Meat, per lb. Bread, lb. loaf Straw, per load Hay, per ton Turkeys Geese Fowls 11 Ducks, per pair Eggs, per doz. Cheese Ditto (salt) Butter (fr.) lb. Potatoes, cwt. Barley Oats Maize Wheat, per bu. 1 , # , 8 . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 15 0 0 91 - 0 0 0 15 & 4 - - 0 0 0 0 0 2 6 0 - 3 0 20 6 0 S 0 L. 8. d. 6 0 3 4 3 to 6 8 0 0 0 4 8 5 6 bushel per E I 0 1831. in Price Lowest 12 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 17 bushel. 0 2 6 8 I 0 0 8 0 9 9 0 Eastern District. 0 0 0 0 16 5 9 5 - - 0 0 0 0 per I 6 6 3 5 4 18 0 8 9 6 9 6 S. d. Ditto. 10 Highest 8 0 0 6 7f 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 15 0 0 0 0 0 5 10 3 00 - - 0 0 0 0 I I - I 5 L. 8. d. Lowest. 6 0 to 4 NO 20 6 0 0 6 4 0 9 6 4 71 6 to 6 3 6 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 = 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L. 15 " 0 Johnstown ditte. 0 0 0 0 0 10 10 4 to I to 0 0 0 0 I - I 2 9 8. Highest. 0 6 3 6 4 - 8 0 0 0 6 3 0 10 6 10 6 6 0 9 3 6 P 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 DD 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L. or 12 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 4 - I to 0 0 0 0 I be I to 5 8. Lowest. 6 6 4 3 4 4 OI 9 0 0 0 8 6 4 9 71 9 3 0 6 9 0 d. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L. Bathurst ditto. 9 BI 0 16 0 0 0 0 0 7 10 4 - to to 0 0 0 0 I 3 DD 3 5 8. Highest. 0 4 3 4 4 10 6 0 0 0 3 0 8 6 71 8 6 6 0 0 0 d. 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ó 0 0 L. of 0 0 12 0 0 0 0 0 5 10 to to - DD 0 0 0 0 to to I 0 0 so CO 8. Lowest. 0 6 3 3 NO 18 & 0 0 3 9 3 0 6 5 71 72 0 6 3 6 d. 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L. 0 15 0 0 17 6 Newcastle ditto. 0 0 0 0 0 5 10 3 3 I to 0 0 0 0 3 be to 3 6 8. Highest. FE - 3 3 71 Q 0 9 6 3 6 71 71 9 6 0 I 0 0 3 d. 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 L. 0 11 3 0 12 0 0 0 0 0 15 10 5 3 I I 0 0 0 0 0 & 0 2 10 6 E 0 8. Lowest. 6 3 3 5 3 4 0 0 0 3 3 3 71 9 0 71 3 10 0 d. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 15 0 0 0 0 0 15 10 10 9 - I I 0 0 - to 80 to 7 0 0 6 10 10+ - 0 5 3 L. a. 8. Home ditto. Highest. 9 0 5 6 7t 5 0 0 for for 6 0 9 6 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 6 0 12 6 0 0 0 0 0 5 15 5 3 - I 0 0 0 0 - to E I 0 20 = 6 6 E 0 L. 8. d. Lowest. 2 is 3 to DD 7 0 0 0 6 3 3 9 4 19 71 3 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 51 0 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 10 7 3 - 3 - 0 0 0 2 2 I 2 5 L. 8. d. Niagara ditto. Highest. 0 0 34 3 31 3 16 3 18 8 0 0 9 6 6 0 9 6 71 71 9 9 9 6 0 15 0 0 0 0 to to 2 0 0 0 0 3 4 0 = 71 # 34 6 6 3 0 7f 7t 71 71 10+ - 9 11 E 6 $ "8 0 d. Low. 15 0 0 0 0 8 2 - 2 0 0 I I 2 3 3 3 5 5. (pan nomp) London ditto 0 # = # #8 6 9 3 0 71 0 0 6 6 If 6 0 P High. 53 Digitized by Google 418 COLONIES AND Lower Canada.-From Lower Canada the commissioners for emigration have not received the official reports which were required from the North American colonies, for the purpose of compiling the pre- sent statement. They believe, however, that the following account of the prices of grain and of wages may be relied upon for its general correctness: 8. d. Wheat - - per bushel - - - - 46 Rye - - - - - - - 30 Maize - - - - - - - 26 Oats - - - - - - -13 Wages of labourers - per day - - - -26 Ship-builders, carpenters, joiners, coopers, masons, and tailors - 5 0 New Brunswick-The following is a list of prices compiled from documents sent in from various parts of New Brunswick:- L.s.d. L.a.d. Lad. Led Wheat per bushel 050 to 0100 Bread per 4 lb. loaf 10 to 010 Maine - 046-050 Beef per stone 033 040 Oats - 016-026 Motton - 024-040 Barley - 040 - 060 Pork - 020-040 Potatoes per cwt. 013 - 036 Veal - 024 - 048 Butter (fresh) per lb. 009 - 010 Flour per 100 lbs. 0 16 0 - 0176 Ditto (salt) - 008-0010 Salt pork per barrel 4150 - 550 Cheese - 004-007 Ditto beef - 300 - 3100 Eggs per dozen - 010 Malt per bushel 068 - 064 Ducks per pair 0 2 0 - 036 Rye flour per Larrel 126 Fowls - 016-026 Indian ditto - 126 Geese - 030-650 Oatmeal per cwt. 0 16 0 0180 Turkeys - 076 - 0100 Salt cod per 112 1bs. 0 10 0 - 0 Hay per ton 1100 - 210 Ditto mackared per barrel 0 17 0 - 100 Straw - 100-150 Ditto alewives - 0100 0 Coals are sold at 30s. per chaldron. House rent is from 51. to 61. per annum for families occupying one room; and for families occupying two rooms, from 61. to 10/. Common labourers receive from 3s. to 4s. a day, finding their own subsistence but when employed at the ports in loading vessels, their subsistence is found for them. Mechanics receive from 5s. to 7a. 6d. per day, and superior workmen from 7a. 6d. to 10s. Upon the foregoing statements, It must be observed that emigrants, especially such of them as are agricultural labourers, should not expect the highest wages named until they have become accustomed to the work of the colony. The mechanics most in demand are those connected with the business of house-building. Shoemakers and tailors, and ship-builders, also find abundant employment. Mr. Buchanan, his Majesty's chief agent for the superintendence of emigrants in Upper and Lower Canada, has issued the following information, dated Quebec, 16th of July, 1833. There is nothing of more importance to emigrants on arrival at Quebec, than correct information on the leading points connected with their future pursuits. Many have suffered much by a want of caution. and by listening to the opinions of interested designing characters, who frequently offer their advice unsolicited, and who are met generally about wharfs and landing places frequented by strangers. To guard emigrants from falling into such errors, they should, immediately on arrival at Que- hec, proceed to the office of the chief agent for emigrants in Sault-au-Matelot Street, Lower Town, Where every information requisite for their future guidance, in either getting settlement on lands, or obtaining employment in Upper or Lower Canada, will be obtained gratis. On your route from Que- bec to your destination you will find many plans and schemes offered to your consideration, but turn away from them unless you are well satisfied of the purity of the statements. On all occasions when you stand in need of advice, apply to the government agents. Emigrants are informed that they may remain on board ship 48 hours after arrival nor can they be deprived of any of their usual accommodations for cooking or berthing during that period and the master of the ship is bound to land the emigrants and their baggage, free of expense, at the usual land- ing places and at seasonable hours. Should you require to change your English money, go to some respectable merchant or to the banks. The currency in the Canadas is at the rate of 5s. the dollar, and is called Halifax currency; at present the gold sovereign is worth 24s. currency in Montreal; in New York, 8s. is calculated for the dollar hence many are deceived when hearing of the rates of labour, &c.: 5a. in Canada is equal to 8s. New York; thus, 8s. New York currency is equivalent to 5s. Halifax currency. Emigrants who wish to settle in Lower Canada, or to obtain employment, are informed that many desirable situations are to be met with. Wild lands of superior quality may be obtained by purchase on very easy terms from the commissioners of Crown lands in various townships in the province, and good farm labourers and mechanics are much in request, particularly in the eastern townships, where also many excellent situations and improved farms may be purchased from private proprietors. At the Chambly Canal many labourers will find immediate employment. In every part of Upper Canada the demand for labourers and mechanics is also very great. All labouring emigrants who reach York, and who may be in want of immediate employment, will be provided with it by the government. The principal situations in Upper Canada where arrangements are made for locating emigrants, are in the Bathurst, Midland, Newcastle, Home, London, and Western districts. Settlers with means will have opportunities of purchasing Crown lands in several parts of the province at the monthly sales, Information of which may be obtained on application at the Crown Land Office, York, or to A. B. Hawke, Esq. the government agent for emigrants there, to whom they will apply, on arrival, for such further advice as they may require. Emigrants proceeding to Upper Canada, above Kingston, either by the Ottawa or St. Lawrence route, are advised to supply themselves with provisions at Montreal, such as bread, tea, sugar, and butter, which they will purchase cheaper and of better quality than along the route. They are also particularly cautioned against the use of ardent spirits, or drinking cold river water, or lying on the banks of the river exposed to the night dews; they should proceed at once from the steamboat at Montreal for Lachine, 8 miles above, from whence the Durham and steamboats start for Prescott and Bytown daily. Emigrants will obtain from Mr. John Hays, the government agent at Lachine, such advice and assistance as they may require and they will find there a convenient barrack log house, where those wishing may remain for the night, and avoid exposure and expense of lodgings. Mr. John Patton, the government agent at Prescott, will render every advice and assistance to emigrants. Labourers or mechanics dependent on immediate employment are requested to proceed immediately on arrival into the country. The chief agent will consider such persons as may loiter about the ports Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 419 or landing beyond one week after arrival to have no further claims on the protection of his Majesty's agents for assistance or employment, unless they have been detained by sickness or some other satis- factory cause. The following information with respect to Upper Canada has been circulated by the Ca- nada Company :- Persons desirous of obtaining employment, and having the means of emigrating to Upper Canada, may get work at high prices compared with what they have been accustomed to receive in this country as agricultural labourers. The wages given in Upper Canada are from 21. to 31. per month, with board and lodging. At these wages there is a constant demand for labour in all parts of Upper Canada; and there is no doubt that a very great number, beyond those now there, would find employ- ment. Working artisans, particularly blacksmiths, carpenters, bricklayers, masons, coopers, mill- wrights, wheelwrights, shoemakers, and tailors, get high wages, and are much wanted. Industrious men may look forward with confidence to an improvement in their situation, as they may save enough out of one season's work to buy land themselves in settled townships. 'Freehold land of excellent quality is to be sold at 8s. 9d. to 20s. currency per acre, payable as fol- lows: :-One fifth of the purchase money to be paid down at the time of making choice of the land in Canada, and the remainder in 5 annual payments with interest, which an industrious settler would be able to pay out of the crops. " Upper Canada is a British province, within a few weeks' sail of this country. The climate is good all the fruits and vegetables common to the English kitchen garden thrive well sugar, for domestic purposes, is made from the maple tree, on the land. The soil and country possess every requisite for farming purposes and comfortable settlement, which is proved by the experience of the numerous industrious emigrants now settled there. The samples of Upper Canada wheat have not been exceeded in quality by any in the British market during the past year. The population of the province, which is rapidly increasing, consists almost exclusively of persons from Great Britain and Ireland, who have gone there to settle. The taxes are very trifling, and there are no tithes. The expense of clearing the land ready for seed is about 41. per acre if paid for in money but if done by the purchasers themselves, they must employ part of their time at wages, or possess some means of their own. The expense of removing from this country to Quebec or Montreal, including provisions for the voyage, is, for grown persons, men or women, from 61. to 71., and half price for children under 14 years of age: if the parties find their own provisions, the passage money is 31. or 31. 10s. for an adult, and in proportion for children. From Ireland and Scotland the expense is considerably less. The expense of the transport of an adult emigrant from Quebec to York and the head of Lake Ontario, will not exceed from 11. to 11. 2s. 6d. currency, or 18a. or 19s. sterling, exclusive of provisions. The Canada Company, to encourage settlement in the Huron tract, have determined for this year (1833) to allow all families, settlers in that district, purchasing 160 acres or more, of the Company, the expenses of conveyance, at a stipulated rate, from Quebec or Montreal to the head of Lake Ontario, allowing each family to consist of 2 adults and three children, by deducting those expenses from the second instalment of the purchase money of their farm. The present prices of land in the Huron tract, which is of the finest quality in America, are from 8s. 9d. to 10s. provincial currency, that is, from 11 to 2 dollars per acre. " The Canada Company, to facilitate the transmission of money to the Upper and Lower Provinces, will receive from Intending emigrants any deposits in London, for which they will issue letters of credit on their agents, allowing the parties the full benefit of the rate of exchange, which usually ranges from 8 to 10 per cent. Persons resident in this country, desirous of making remittances to their friends in the Canadas, are afforded the same facilities and advantages. Further information, and the papers distributed by the Canada Company, may be obtained on application to the secretary, John Perry, Esq. London, October, 1833." The following extract from the Montreal Daily Advertiser of the 4th of September, 1833, gives the prices of the principal articles of Canadian produce as under L. 8. d. L. s. d. L. 3. d. L. 8. d. Ashes, pot, 1st sort, per cwt. 1 3 6to1 4 6 Grain and seed- pearl - - - 150-156 Wheat, W. Canada, per 60 lbs. 0 6 0 6 6 Flour and meal- mixed - 0 6 0 0 6 2 Superfine, per 196 lbs. (Canada) 1 10 9- 1 11 3 red - 0 5 10 - 0 6 0 Fine ditto ditto 1 9 10 0 Barley, per bushel - - 0 3 0 3 6 Middling ditto ditto 1 7 1 8 0 Indian corn - - - 0 4 0 4 6 Pollards ditto ditto 1 2 1 2 6 Oats - - - - 0 1 0 1 8 Indian meal, per 168 lbs. - 126 Peas (boiling) - - - 0 4 0 5 0 Oatmeal, per cwt. - - 0 13 14 0 Flax seed, per bushel - - 050-053 (2.) West India Colonies.-In the West Indies we possess Jamaica, Barbadoes, St. Lucia, Antigua, Grenada, Trinidad, and some other islands, exclusive of Demerara and Berbice in South America. Jamaica, by far the largest and most valuable of our insular possessions, is about 120 miles in length and 40 in mean breadth, containing about 2,800,000 acres, of which from 1,100,000 to 1,200,000 are supposed to be in cultivation. Being situated within the tropic of Cancer, the heat in the West Indies is intense, but is moderated by the sea breeze which blows regularly during the greater part of the day. The rains make the only distinction of seasons. They sometimes fall with prodigious impetuosity, giving birth to innumerable torrents, and laying all the low country under water: the trees are green the whole year round: they have no snow, no frost, and but rarely some hail. The climate is very humid; iron rusts and corrodes in a very short time; and it is this, perhaps, that renders the West Indies so unfriendly to European constitutions, and produces those malignant fevers that are so very fatal. The vegetable productions are numerous and valu- able; but the sugar cane and the coffee plant are incomparably more important than the others, and constitute the natural riches of the islands. The West Indies are occasionally assailed by the most dreadful hurricanes, which destroy in a moment the hopes and labours of the planters, and devastate entire islands. Whole fields of sugar canes are sometimes torn up by the roots, houses are either thrown down or Digitized by Google 420 COLONIES AND unroofed, and even the heavy copper boilers and stills in the works have, in numerous instances, been wrenched from the ground and battered to pieces. The rain pours down in torrents, sweeping before it every thing that comes in its way. The destruction caused by such dreadful scourges seldom fails to produce a very great scarcity, and not unfrequently famine and we are ashamed to have to add, that the severity of the distress has on several occasions been materially aggravated by a refusal on the part of the authorities to allow importation direct from the United States This was the case at Dominica so late as 1817. Jamaica was discovered by Columbus in 1494, and continued in possession of the Spa- niards till 1655, when it was wrested from them by the English. Although it had thus been for more than a century and a half under the power of Spain, such was the deadening influence of her colonial system, that it did not, when we conquered it, contain 1,500 white in- habitants, and these were immersed in sloth and poverty. Of the many valuable articles which Jamaica soon afterwards produced in such profusion, many were then altogether unknown; and of those that were known, such a supply only was cultivated as was required for the consumption of the inhabitants. " The Spanish settlers," it is said by Mr. Bryan Edwards, possessed none of the elegancies of life; nor were they acquainted even with many of those gratifications which, in civilised states, are considered necessary to its comfort and convenience. They were neither polished by social intercourse, nor improved by education; but passed their days in gloomy languor, enfeebled by sloth, and depressed by poverty. They had been for many years in a state of progressive degeneracy, and would probably in a short time have expiated the guilt of their ancestors, by falling victims themselves to the vengeance of their slaves."-(Hist. West Indies, vol. i. p. 297. 8vo ed.) For a considerable number of years after we obtained possession of Jamaica, the chief exports were cacao, hides, and indigo. Even so late as 1772, the exports of sugar amounted to only 11,000 hogsheads. In 1774, they had increased to 78,000 hogsheads of sugar, 26,000 puncheons of rum, and 6,547 bags of coffee. The American war was very injurious to the West India settlements; and they may, indeed, be said to be still suffering from its effects, as the independence of America led to the enactment of those restrictions on the importation of food, lumber, &c. that have been so very hurtful to the planters. In 1780, Jamaica was visited by a most destructive hurricane, the devastation occasioned by which produced a dreadful famine; and other hurricanes followed in the immediately succeeding years. But in 1787, a new era of improvement began. The devastation of St. Domingo by the negro insurrection, which broke out in 1792, first diminished, and in a few years almost entirely annihilated, the annual supply of 115,000 hogsheads of sugar, which France and the Continent had previously been accustomed to receive from that island, This dimi- nution of supply, by causing a greatly increased demand for, and a consequent rise in the price of, the sugar raised in the other islands, occasioned an extraordinary extension of cul- tivation. So powerful in this respect was its influence, that Jamaica, which, at an average of the 6 years preceding 1799, had produced only 83,000 hogsheads, exported, in 1801 and 1802, upwards of 286,000 hogsheads, or 143,000 a year ! The same rise of price, which had operated so powerfully in Jamaica, occasioned a similar though less rapid extension of cultivation in our other islands, and in Cuba, Porto Rico, and the foreign colonies generally. The vacuum caused by the cessation of the supplies from St. Domingo being thus more than filled up, a reaction commenced. The price of sugar rapidly declined; and notwithstanding a forced market was for a while opened to it, by substituting it for malt in the distillery, prices did not attain to their former elevation. On the opening of the Continental ports, in 1813 and 1814, they, indeed, rose, for a short time, to an extravagant height; but they very soon fell again, involving in ruin many of the speculators upon an advance. And notwithstanding a recent rally, they are, and have been for the last 10 years, comparatively low. The fall seems to be entirely owing to the vast extension of the sugar cultivation in Cuba, Brazil, Java, Louisiana, &c., and in Demerara, Berbice, and the Mauritius. From the facility, too, with which sugar may be raised in most of these countries, and their vast extent, there seems little prospect of prices ever again attain- ing to their old level. It is to no purpose, therefore, to attempt to relieve the distresses of the planters of Jamaica and our other islands by temporary expedients. The present low prices have not been brought about by accidental or contingent circumstances. And to enable the planters to contend successfully with the active competitors that surround them on all sides, we must place them, at least in so far as we have the means, in a similar situation, by allow- ing them to resort for supplies to the cheapest markets, and to send their produce into Eu- rope in such a shape as they may think best. The devastation of St. Domingo gave the same powerful stimulus to the growth of coffee It is stated in a report by a committee of the Assembly of Jamaica, that 15,000 negroes perished between the latter end of 1780 and the beginning of 1787, through famine occasioned by hurricanes and the prohibition of importation from the United States (Edwards's West Indies, vol. ii. p. 515.) Those who are so very fond of vituperating "hard-hearted economists," as they are pleased to term those who advocate the repeal of oppressive restrictions, must, we presume, look upon occurrences of this sort as merciful dispensations. Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 421 in the other West Indian colonies, that it did to the growth of sugar; and owing to the extraordinary increase in the demand for coffee in this and other European countries during the last 10 years, the impulse has been, in a great measure, kept up.-(See COFFEE.) In 1752, the export of coffee from Jamaica amounted to only 60,000 lbs.; in 1775, it amounted to 440,000 lbs. ; in 1797, it had increased to 7,931,621 lbs. in 1832, the exports to Eng- land amounted to 19,811,000 lbs.; and they have been stationary at about this quantity for some time. We have already seen, that when Jamaica was taken from the Spaniards, it only con- tained 1,500 white inhabitants. In 1673, the population amounted to 7,768 whites and 9,504 slaves. It would have been well for the island had the races continued to preserve this relation to each other; but, unfortunately, the black population has increased more than five times as rapidly as the white; the latter having increased only from 7,768 to about 30,000, while the former has increased from 9,504 to 322,421, exclusive of persons of colour. The immense preponderance of the slave population has rendered the question of emancipation so very difficult. The correspondence of the slaves in Jamaica with their emancipated brethren in Hayti or St. Domingo has been prohibited by a provision in the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 59. § 55.- (see post.) The real value of the exports to Jamaica amounts to about 1,600,000Z. a year, being more than half the amount of the exports to the West Indian colonies. It should, how- ever, be observed, that a considerable portion of the articles sent to Jamaica, and some of the other colonies, are only sent there as to an entrepôt, being subsequently exported to the Spanish main. During the ascendancy of the Spanish dominion in Mexico and South America, this trade, which was then contraband, was carried on to a very great extent. It is now much fallen off; but the central situation of Jamaica will always secure to her a considerable share of this sort of transit trade. Barbadoes was the earliest of our possessions in the West Indies. It is the most easterly of the Caribbee islands; Bridge Town, the capital, being in lon. 59° 41' W. Barbadoes is by far the best cultivated of all the West India islands. It contains about 105,000 acres, having a population of about 16,000 whites, 2,700 free people of colour, and 68,000 slaves. It exports about 21,000 hogeheads of sugar, of 16 cwt. each. Barbadoes had attained the acmé of its prosperity in the latter part of the seventeenth century, when the white popula- tion is said to have amounted to about 50,000, though this is probably an exaggeration. But it is only as compared with itself that it can be considered as having fallen off for compared with the other West India islands, its superiority is manifest. It raises nearly as much food as is adequate for its supply. The islands next in importance are St. Vincent, Grenada, Trinidad, Antigua, &c. It is unnecessary to enter into any special details with respect to them; their population and trade being exhibited in the Tables annexed to this section. During the late war, we took from the Dutch the settlements of Demerara, Berbice, and Essequibo, in Guiana, which were definitively ceded to us in 1814. The soil of these settlements is naturally very rich; and they have, in this respect, a decided advantage over most of the West India islands. Their advance, since they came into our possession, was for a while very great; but recently their progress seems to have been checked, and their exports, particularly those of rum and coffee, have declined considerably. The imports of sugar from them amount to about a third of the imports from Jamaica. The rum of Deme- rara enjoys a high reputation; and of the total quantity imported from the British colonies and plantations in 1832, amounting to 4,741,649 gallons, Demerara and Berbice furnished 1,415,449 gallons. The best samples of Berbice coffee are of very superior quality but the planters finding the cultivation of sugar more profitable, the imports have materially declined of late years. In 1832, they amounted, from both colonies, to 3,449,400 lbs. Con- siderable quantities of cotton were formerly exported from Guiana; but the Americans having superior facilities for its production, the planters have in a great measure ceased to cultivate it. Cacao, annotto, &c. are produced, but not abundantly. These statements are sufficient to shew the importance of Demarara and Berbice. Con- sidering, indeed, their great natural fertility, and the indefinite extent to which every sort of tropical culture may be carried in them, they certainly rank among the most valuable of the colonial possessions we have acquired for many years. Exclusive of the above, we possess the settlement of Balize on the Bay of Honduras. This is of importance, as affording a means of obtaining abundant supplies of mahogany but it is of more importance as an entrepôt for the supply of Guatemala with English ma- nufactured goods.-(For accounts of the colonies in Australasia, &c., see COLUMBO, CAPE OF Good HOPE, PORT LOUIS, SYDNEY, &c.) VOL. I.-2 N Digitized by Google 422 COLONIES AND Account of the Quantities of Sugar, Rum, Molasses, and Coffee, imported into the United Kingdom from the West Indies and the Mauritius, and of the Portions of those Quantities entered for Re- exportation in 1834 and 1835.-(Perl. Paper, No. 208., Sess. 1836.) Sugar (unrefined.) Run. Molamen. Coffee. Colonies whence imported. 1834. 1835. 1834. 1835. 1834. 1835. 1834. 1536. West Indies. Cuts. Custs. Gallons. Gallons. Cuts. Crote Lbs. Lbs. Antigua 257,177 174,818 71,445 67,051 87,882 75,986 224 580 Barbadoes 394,527 344,689 2,170 1,798 65,553 68,126 77,968 67,825 Dominica 54,876 25,014 27,764 7,308 2,560 2,700 893,492 112,567 Grenada 194,542 170,280 247,049 248,524 23,219 8,747 10,332 6,236 Jamaica 1,256,253 1,148,760 2,984,067 2,450,272 2,809 982 18,268,883 11,154,307 Montserrat 26,631 16,261 20,480 26,492 4,779 1,848 - - Nevis 59,748 39,637 23,286 39,366 5,468 161 - - St. Kitty 106,355 87,614 79,080 107,101 17,397 7,526 185 $ St. Lucia 63,306 54,744 4,707 10,972 2,811 6,057 96,004 63,582 St. Vincent 213,017 195,057 96,397 189,154 23,094 26,455 197 118 Tobago 79,018 77,260 272,787 299,705 11,646 5,986 - - Tortola 21,926 13,821 3,478 5,220 1,408 - 28 Trinidad 339,615 269,383 7,714 9,586 90,494 84,640 160,915 38,000 Bahamas 4 - - 59 - - 45,579 280,156 Bermudas - - 2 35 - - - - Demerara 687,282 760.376 1,273,693 1,875,245 282,967 221,782 1,481,980 1,139,054 Berbice 90,699 126,485 61,277 115,411 20,699 5,225 1,045,688 2,027,037 Honduras 4 18 - - 163 MAURITIUS 553,890 558,712 1 201 206 - 701 243,296 Total Importations 4,897,866 4,082,921 5,112,401 5,453,518 650,572 507,627 22,082,191 15,108,876 Proportion re- W.I. 12,313 11,455? exported(unref.) M. 4,850 1,750 1,613,163 1,668,205 2,078 4,753 768,819 613,058 The duties on West India produce entered for home consumption during the year 1835, yielded about 6,700,000L nett. The exports from this country to our West India colonies consist of coarse cottons, linens, checks, hats, and other articles of negro clothing hardware and earthenware; staves, hoops, coal, lime, paint, lead Irish provisions, herrings and other salt fish ; along with fur- niture, wine, beer, medicines, and, indeed, almost every article which a great manufacturing country can supply to one situated in a tropical climate, which has very few mechanics, and hardly any manufactures. Since the depression of West Indian property, and the open- ing of the ports on the Spanish main to ships from England, the exports to the West Indies have decreased both in quantity and value. Their declared or real value amounted, as appears from the following account, in 1834, to 2,680,022L Statement of the Total amount of Trade between the United Kingdom and the British West India Colonies, in each year, from 1814 to 1834, both inclusive. Official Value. Declared Value Exports to the British West Indies. of Years. British and Frish Imports from Products the British British and Irish Foreign and Total West Indies. Produce and Colonial of exported to the Merchandise. British West Indies. Manufactures. Exports. £ £ £ £ £ 1814 9,022,309 6,282,226 339,912 6,222,138 7,019,938 1815 9,903,260 6,742,451 453,630 7,196,081 7,218,057 1816 7,847,895 4,584,509 268,719 4,853,228 4,537,056 1817 8,326,926 6,632,708 382,883 7,015,591 5,890,199 1818 8,608,790 5,717,216 272,491 5,989,707 6,021,627 1819 8,188,539 4,395,215 297,199 4,692,414 4,841,253 1820 8,353,706 4,246,783 314,567 4,561,350 4,197,761 1821 8,367,477 4,940,609 370,738 5,311,347 4,320,581 1822 8,019,765 4,127,052 243,126 4,370,178 3,439,818 1823 8,425,276 4,621,589 285,247 5,906,836 3,676,780 1824 9,065,546 4,843,556 324,375 5,167,931 3,827,489 1825 7,932,829 4,702,249 295,021 4,997,270 3,866,834 1826 8,420,454 3,792,453 255,241 4,047,694 3,199,265 1827 8,380,833 4,685,789 331,586 5,017,375 3,683,222 1828 9,496,950 4,134,744 326,298 4,451,042 3,289,704 1829 9,087,923 5,162,197 359,059 5,521,256 3,612,085 1820 8,599,100 3,749,799 290,878 4,040,677 2,838,448 1831 8,448,839 3,729,522 258,764 3,988,286 2,581,949 1832 8,138,668 3,813,821 286,605 4,100,426 2,439,807 1833 8,008,248 4,401,990 302,189 4,704,180 2,597,591 1834 5,410,113 4,494,659 323,986 4,818,046 2,680,022 The following are the quantities of some of the principal articles exported to the West Indian colonies in 1831 :-Cottons, 21,975,459 yards; linens, 11,029,191 yards; woollens, 149,952 yards; hats, 26,694 dozens; leather, wrought and unwrought, 349,842 lbs. earthenware, 1,331,799 pieces glass, 23,544 cwt.; hardware and cutlery, 13,535 cwt. coals and culm, 48,536 tons; beef and pork, 24,472 barrels; soap and candles, 4,389,968 lbs., &c.-(Parl. Paper, No. 550. Sess. 1833.) The articles exported from Canada and the British possessions in North America princi- pally consist of timber and lumber of all sorts; grain, flour, and biscuit; furs, dried fish, fish oil, turpentine, &c. The imports principally consist of woollens, cottons, and linens, earthenware, hardware, leather, salt, haberdashery of all sorts; tea, sugar, and coffee; spices, wine, brandy, and rum, furniture, stationery, &c. Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 423 The following are the quantities of some of the principal articles exported from Great Britain to Canada, Nova Scotia, &c., in 1831 :-Cottons, 15,618,106 yards; woollens, 900,124 yards; linens, 3,309,165 yards; earthenware, 2,253,851 pieces; iron and steel, wrought and unwrought, 12,400 tons; hardware and cutlery, 29,482 cwt.; coals and culm, 31,134 tons; salt, 1,559,684 bushels; beef and pork, 8,534 barrels, &c.-(Parl. Paper, No. 550. Sess. 1833.) We are indebted to Mr. Mayer, of the Colonial Office, for much valuable information, and in particular for the Tables given in the next two pages, the most complete that have ever been published, of the population and trade of our colonial possessions. Money.-What is called West India currency is an imaginary money, and has a different value in different colonies. The value it bears, as compared with sterling money, was supposed to represent the corresponding value of the coins in circulation in the different islands at the time the proportion was fixed: these coins being for the most part mutHated, and otherwise worn and defaced, currency is in all cases less valuable than sterling. The following are the values of 1001. sterling, and of a dollar, in the currencies of the different islands:- Sterling. Currency. Dollar. Currency. Jamaica - - - - - - 100% - 1401. 1 - 6s. 8d. Barbadoes - - - - - 100% - 1351. 1 - 6s. 3d. Windward Islands (except Barbadoes) - 1001. - 1751. 1 = 8s. 3d. Leeward Islands - - - - 1001. = 2001. 1 = 9s. Od. But these proportions are seldom acted upon; the exchange being generally from 10 to 20 per cent. above the fixed par. By an order in council of the 23d of March, 1825, British silver money is made legal tender through- out all British colonial possessions, at the nominal value as in England; and bills for the same are given on the Treasury of London, of 100/. each bill for 1031. such silver money. By this order, also, the value of the Spanish dollar is fixed at 4s. 4d. British silver money throughout all the colonies where it is current. The following are the gold coins circulating at Jamaica, with their legal weight and fineness:- Value in Currency. Dute. gre. Ty. L. & d. Spanish doubloon - - - - 17 8 - - - - 5 0 0 Two pistole piece - - - 8 10 - - - - 2 10 0 Pistole - - - - 4 8 - - - - 1 5 0 Half pistole - - - - 2 4 - - - - 0 12 6 Portuguese Johannes (called Joe) - - 18 12 - - - - 5 10 0 Half Joe - - - - 9 6 - - - - 2 15 0 Quarter Joe - - - 4 15 - - - - 7 6 Moidore - - - - 6 22 - - - - 2 0 0 Half moidore - - , 3 11 - - - - 1 0 0 English guinea - - - - 5 8 - - - - 1 12 6 Half guinea - - - - 2 16 - - - - 0 16 3 Sovereign - - - - 5 2 - - - - 1 12 0 IV. REGULATIONS UNDER WHICH COLONY TRADE IS CONDUCTED.-DISPOSAL OF LAND IN THE COLONIES, &c. These are embodied in the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 59., which came into operation on the 1st of September, 1833. It is as follows: :- Importation and Exportation of Goods confined to free Ports.-No goods shall be imported into, nor shall any goods, except the produce of the fisheries in British ships, be exported from, any of the British possessions in America by sea, from or to any place other than the United Kingdom, or some other of such possessions, except into or from the several ports in such possessions, called 'Free Ports," enumerated or described in the table following; (that is to say,) Table of free Ports.Kingston, Savannah Le Mar, Montego Bay, Santa Lucia, Antonio, Saint Ann, Falmouth, Maria, Morant Bay, Annotto Bay, Black River, Rio Bueno, Port Morant, Jamaica Saint George, Grenada; Roseau, Dominica; Saint John's, Antigua; San Josef, Trinidad; Scarborough, Tobago; Road Harbour, Tortola; Nassau, New Providence; Pitt's Town, Crooked Island; Kings- ton, Saint Vincent; Port Saint George and Port Hamilton, Bermuda; any port where there is a Custom-house, Bahamas; Bridgetown, Barbadoes; Saint John's, Saint Andrew's, New Brunswick; Halifax, Pictou, Nova Scotia; Quebec, Canada; Saint John's, Newfoundland; George Town, Deme- vara; New Amsterdam, Berbice; Castries, Saint Lucia; Basseterre, Saint Kitt's; Charles Town, Nevis; Plymouth, Montserrat; Sydney, Cape Breton; Charlotte Town, Prince Edward's Island Anguilla, Anguilla; and if any goods shall be imported into any port or place in any of the said pos- sessions contrary thereto, such goods shall be forfeited.- 2. His Majesty may appoint other Ports to be free Ports.-Provided always, that if his Majesty shall deem it expedient to extend the provisions of this act to any port or ports not enumerated in the said table. it shall be lawful for his Majesty, by order in council, to do 80; and from the day mentioned in such order in council, all the privileges and advantages of this act, and all the provisions, penalties, and forfeitures therein contained, shall extend, and be deemed and construed to extend, to any such port or ports, as fully as if the same had been inserted and enumerated in the above table provided also, that nothing herein-before contained shall extend to prohibit the importation or exportation of goods into or from any ports or places in Newfoundland or Labrador in British ships.-d 3. His Majesty may appoint Ports for limited Purposes.-And whereas there are in the said possessions many places situated in rivers and in bays at which it may be necessary to establish ports for par- ticular and limited purposes only; be it therefore enacted, that it shall be lawful for his Majesty, on any order in council made for the appointment of any free port, 10 limit and confine such appointments respectively to any and such purposes only as shall be expressed in such order.- 4. Privileges granted to Foreign Ships limited to the Ships of those Countries granting the like Privileges to British Ships, &e.-And whereas by the law of navigation foreign ships are permitted to import into any of the British possessions abroad, from the countries to which they belong, goods the produce of those countries, and to export goods from such possessions to be carried to any foreign country what- ever; be it therefore enacted, that the privileges thereby granted to foreign ships shall be limited to the ships of those countries which, having colonial possessions, shall grant the like privileges of trading with those possessions to British ships, or which, not having colonial possessions, shall place the commerce and navigation of this country, and of its possessions abroad, upon the footing of the Digitized by Google 424 COLONIES AND Extent, Population, &c. of the British North American and West Indian Colonies. British North American Colonies. Area in British Square Miles. 1806. 1825. 1834, or latest Census. Lower Canada 250,000 200,000 423,630 549,005 Upper Canada 105,000 70,718 157,541 336,461 New Brunswick 27,700 35,000 72,932 119,457 Nova Scotia 15,600 65,000 104,000 Cape Breton 3,100 2,513 16,000 } 142,548 Prince Edward's Island 2,100 9,676 20,000 32,292 Newfoundland 36,000 26,505 52,497 60,088 Totals 439,500 409,412 846,600 1,239,851 1824. 1834, or Intest Census. Imports of Sugar Area British from Free Whites. Free Coloured. Slaves. Total. Whites. Apprent. in West Coloured. Labour. Total. West Indian British Colonies. India Square Colonies Miles. into U. K. in 1835. Male. Female. Male. Female. Male. Female. Male and Female. Male and Female. Male and Female. Male and Female. Male and Female. Cut. Antigua 108 158,503 1,140 840 1,549 2,346 14,454 16,531 36,860 1,980 33,432 - 35,412 Barbadoes 150 323,705 6,827 7,803 2,258 2,266 36,159 42,657 97,970 14,959 5,146 82,807 102,912 Dominica 275 25,014 487 417 1,406 1,758 7,919 8,635 20,622 840 3,606 14,384 18,830 Grenada 125 170,280 628 219 1,387 2,104 12,258 13,052 29,648 801 3,786 23,538 28,123 Jamaica ? s 37,152 , 1,145,377 no census taken. S 166,595 169,658 373,405 No census taken. 311,692* 311,692 Montserrat 47 16,262 175 213 234 320 3,032 3,473 7,447 330 974 6,355 7,659 Nevis 20 39,637 1,140 4,583 4,678 10,401 700 2,000 8,722 1,422 St. Kitt's 68 87,614 1,612 1,996 9,505 10,312 23,425 1,612 3,000 20,660 26,972 St. Lucia 58 34,133 676 518 1,576 2,083 6,297 7,497 18,647 881 3,919 13,348 18,148 St. Vincent 130 195,056 1,053 1,482 12,007 12,245 26,787 1,301 2,824 22,997 27,122 Tobago 187 77,260 200 44 225 360 6,558 7,098 14,485 280 3,000 11,621 4,901 Tortola and Virgin Islands. - 13,821 207 201 283 328 2,975 3,485 7,479 477 1,296 5,192 6,965 Anguilla - 162 203 150 177 1,279 1,695 3,666 365 327 2,388 3,080 Trinidad 2,400 221,342 2,243 1,853 6,681 7,314 13,052 10,336 41,479 4,201 18,724 22,359 45,2843 Bahamas - - 2,282 2,278 867 1,332 5,529 5,279 17,567 4,657 4,211 9,705 18,573 Bermudas - - 1,897 2,751 312 410 2,620 2,622 10,612 4,264 4,456 - 8,720 British Guiana, De- marara and Es- sequibo - 685,284 2,609 250 1,336 1,773 41,224 33,753 80,945 3,006 6,360 65,556 74,922 Berbice - 126,143 453 108 325 510 r3,007 10,349 24,762 570 1,661 19,359 21,580 Honduras 63,000 - 156 61 685 737 1,654 811 4,107 250 1,788 1,920 3,958 Total 850,304 Total 784,575 Population and Trade of Asiatic, African, and European Colonies in 1834. Declared or Number and Tonnage of Vessels Population. Imports Exports real Value to and from the United into the from the of British Kingdom and the Colonies. British African and European United United and Irish Colonica. Free Kingdom, Kingdom, Produce Coloured Official Official and Manu- Whites. Value. Value. factures ex- and Ap- Inwards. Outwards. ported from prentices. the U.K. L. L L Ships. Tons. Shipe, Tone. Mauritius 8,844 84,464 782,148 307,848 149,318 75 20,909 # 9,193 Ceylon 6,786 1,150,259 289,917 95,937 50,181 10 2,774 13 4,318 New South Wales 60,794 - 152,040 736,825 482,313 Van Diemen's Land 37,688 - 96,349 336,539 220,145 42 12,400 so 99,587 Swan River - - 69 6,089 3,555 min Cape of Good Hope 56,675 76,279 248,760 649,153 304,381 27 5,566 47 9,145 Sierra Leone, and settlements on the coast of Africa- 86 33,438 River Gambia, Sierra Leone, and coast to Mesurada Windward Coast from Mesu- rada to Cape Apollonia Cape Coast Castle and Gold 456,016 794,979 325,687 136 22,213 150 35,358 Coast from Cape Apollonia to Rio Volta Coast from Rio Volta to Cape of Good Hope (including 1 Fernando Po) Heligoland 2,221 - 11 903 31 I 56 I R Gibraltar 14,998 10 47,355 1,493,166 460,719 83 3,790 100 12,865 Malta 123,195 - 14,956 589,425 242,696 9 1,219 86 13,005 United States of the Jonian Islands 194,395 - 207,393 214,229 - 62 8,469 42 5 . The white population of Jamaica is supposed to amount to about 36,000. Digitized by Google Returns as to the Acquisition, Government, and Trade of the American and West Indian Colonies in 1823, 1825, and 1834. Google Declared Value of British and Irish Number and Tonnage of Vessels to and from the United Colonies. Imports into the Exports from the Produce and Manufac- Kingdom and the Colonies. Date of Capture, Cession, or Whether having Legislative Assemblies, or U. K. Official U.K. Official tures exported Settlement. governed by Orders in Council. British Value. Value. from the U. K. to North American British Colonies and Dependencies. Inwards. Outwards. Colonies. Digitized by 1825. 1834. 1825. 1834. 1825. 1834. 1825, 1834. 1825. 1834. L. L. L. L. L. L. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Lower Canada Capitulation, 18th Sept. 1759 Governor, Council, and Assembly Ditto, 8th Sept. 1760, and ces- Ditto Ditto Ditto 731,855 613,598 1,145,461 1,339,624 866,258 799,912 782 203,886 989 290,881 662 178,785 186 288,180 Upper Canada sion by treaty, 1763 New Brunswick Ditto Ditto Ditto 319,559 220,418 474,044 519,061 458,604 350,992 842 235,097 613 177,129 705 210,071 456 134,870 Nova Scotia Ditto Ditto Ditto Fisheries and settlements es- 44,548 258,696 234,226 109 25,570 101 24,092 Cape Breton Ditto Ditto Ditto 6,864 12,199 tablished soon after their 88,014 285,244 10,622 189,565 15 3,201 161 15 37,925 3,266 143 Prince Edward's 35,739 Island discovery in 1497 Ditto Ditto Ditto 9,244 38,638 38,626 32 6,897 16 3,351 COLONY TRADE. Newfoundland Ditto Ditto Ditto 200,841 181,566 317,265 353,981 351,964 273,125 126 14,447 137 17,120 316 43,590 292 43,726 Totals 1,312,911 1,103,596 2,246,303 2,497,910 1,960,300 1,613,594 1,856 489,098 1,900 523,055 1,815 463,156 1,577 502,515 Settlements of the Hudson's Bay Settlement, 1668 Hudson's Bay Company. 35,902 64,225 13,711 54,268 20,153 - 2 746 5 1,551 2 751 3 878 54 Company. British West India 1823. 1834. 1823. 1834. 1823. 1834. 1823. 1834. 1823. 1834. Colonies. Antigua Settlement, 1632 Governor, Council, and Assembly 243,921 446,746 138,533 159,288 114,650 99,258 33 7,395 67 15,202 40 8,949 60 14,108 Barbadoes Ditto, 1605 Ditto Ditto Ditto 558,410 648,446 322,322 394,764 301,482 267,713 72 19,048 79 21,387 82 21,268 113 30,299 Dominica Ceded by France, 1763 Ditto Ditto Ditto 175,269 135,396 44,277 35,700 42,207 24,897 11 2,603 12 2,880 11 2,623 9 2,566 Grenada Ditto, 1763 Ditto Ditto Ditto 387,546 315,611 69,559 90,712 67,792 68,908 36 11,206 40 10,876 33 10,189 36 9,809 Jamaica Capitulation. 1655 Ditto Ditto Ditto 3,736,935 3,346,359 2,739,554 2,193,346 1,906,670 1,153,130 279 86,823 259 78,602 284 88,055 238 72,040 Montserrat Settlement, 1632 Ditto Ditto Ditto 37,588 42,080 9,310 7,212 10,648 6,721 4 1,039 5 1,281 6 1,441 4 1,056 Nevis Ditto, 1628 Ditto Ditto Ditte 63,358 90,454 12,924 12,169 14,225 9.390 8 2,069 10 2,639 10 2,324 14 3,739 St. Kitt's Ditto, 1623 Ditto Ditto Ditto 118,100 166,709 59 972 77,432 54,923 52,013 15 4,314 22 5,958 13 3,644 10 3,002 St. Lucia Capitulation, 22d June, 1803 Gov. and Counc., and Orders of the King in Counc. 117,063 110,816 41,146 33,034 31,539 16,560 17 3,491 14 3,003 18 2,670 12 2,747 St. Vincent Ceded by France, 1763 Governor, Council, and Assembly 358,992 331,467 105,578 110,509 97,372 81,167 45 11,640 36 10,509 39 10,425 40 11,523 Tobago Ditto, 1763 Ditto Ditto Ditto 187,874 139,668 42,691 49,122 44,007 37,663 27 6,278 20 4,814 22 5,816 22 5,289 Tortola Settlement, 1606 Ditto Ditto Ditto 36,550 31,719 665 2,077 775 1,534 6 1,258 5 1,011 2 504 4 920 Anguilla Ditto, 1666 Ditto Ditto Ditto Trinidad Capitulation, 18th Feb, 1797 Gov. and Counc., and Orders of the King in Counc. 463,365 625,897 323,077 328,435 230,557 176,108 65 14,411 87 20,012 57 12,938 80 18,845 Bahamas Settlement, 1629 Governor, Council, and Assembly 23,520 67,736 107,891 81,577 70,670 44,744 13 2,203 27 4,515 10 1,985 15 2,608 Bermudas Ditto, 1609 Ditto Ditto Ditto 12,945 6,710 30,652 83,909 32,182 27,165 3 529 I 59 6 1,647 8 1,802 at British Guiana- AT Demerara 169 48,169 Essequibo Capitulation, 18th Sept. 1803 Gov. and Counc., and Orders of the King in Coune. 1,492,250 1,416,936 389,108 481,324 395,418 356,251 153 41,749 169 46,904 145 41,137 2 Berbice Ditto, 23d Sept. 1803 Ditto Ditto Ditto 68,060 223,925 90,920 55,766 81,583 42,993 28 6,053 22 5,788 25 5,413 22 6,074 Honduras Treaty, 1670 Superintendent and Magistrates 143,622 263,432 357,833 672,959 191,420 213,800 46 11,731 43 11,165 44 11.689 44 12,013 Totals 8,425,277 8,410,107 4,835,912 4,818,635 3,678,120 2,680,015 861 233,840 918 246,605 842 232,717 900 246,609 426 COLONIES AND most favoured nation, unless his Majesty by order in council shall in any case deem k expedient to grant the whole or any of such privileges to the ships of any foreign country, although these condi- tions be not in all respects fulfilled by such foreign country: provided, that no foreign country shall be deemed to have fulfilled the before-mentioned conditions, or to be entitled to these privileges, unless his Majesty shall, by his order or orders, have declared that such foreign country hath 80 ful- filled the said conditions, and is entitled to the said privileges: provided also, that every order in council in force at the time of the commencement of this act, whereby declaration is made of the countries entitled in whole or in part to the privileges of the law of navigation, shall continue in force as effectually as if the same had been made under the authority of this act.- 5. This Act not to affect certain Acts.-Nothing contained in this act, or any other act passed in the pre- sent session of parliament, shall extend to repeal or in any other way alter or affect an act (4 Geo. 4. c. 77.), intituled "An Act to authorize his Majesty, under certain Circumstances, to regulate the Duties and Drawbacks on Goods imported or exported in foreign Vessels, and to exempt certain foreign Vessels from Pilotage," nor to repeal or in any way alter or affect an act (5 Geo. 4. c. 50.) to amend the last-mentioned act; and that all trade and intercourse between the British possessions and all foreign countries shall be subject to the powers granted to his Majesty by those acts.-d Goods prohibited or restricted to be imported into Colonies-The several sorts of goods enumerated or described in the table following, denominated "A Table of Prohibitions and Restrictions," are hereby prohibited to be imported or brought, either by sea or by inland carriage or navigation, into the British possessions in America, or shall be so imported or brought only under the restrictions men- tioned in such table, according as the several sorts of such goods are set forth therein; (that is to say,) A Table of Prohibitions and Restrictions. Gunpowder, arms, ammunitions or utensils of war, prohibited to be cept herrings from the Isle of Man, taken and cured by the inko imported, except from the United Kingdom, or from some other bitants thereof. British possession. Coffee, sugar, metasses, and rum, being of foreign production, or the Tea, prohibited to be imported except from the United Kingdom, or production of any place within the limits of the East India Com- from some other British possession in America, unless by the East pany's charter, prohibited to be imported into any of the British India Company, or with their licence during the continuance of possessions on the continent of South America or is the West their exclusive right of trade. Indies (the Bahama and Bermuda islands not included), except to Fish, dried or salted, oil, blubber, fins, or skins, the produce of crea- be warehoused for exportation only and may also be prohibited to tures living in the sea, prohibited to be imported, except from the be imported into the Bahama or the Bermuda islands by bis Ma- United Kingdom, or from some other British possession, or unless jesty's order in council. taken by British ships fitted out from the United Kingdom or from Base or counterfeit coin, and books, such = are prohibited to be in- some British possession, and brought in from the fishery, and ex. ported into the United Kingdom, prohibited to be imported. And if any goods shall be imported or brought into any of the British possessions in America contrary to any of the prohibitions or restrictions mentioned in such table in respect of such goods, the same shall be forfeited; and if the ship or vessel in which such goods shall be imported be of less burden than 70 tons, such ship or vessel shall also be forfeited.-d 7. Coffee, &c., though British, deemed Foreign in certain Cases.-All coffee, sugar, melasses, and rum (although the same may be of the British plantations), exported from any of the British possessions in America, into which the like goods of foreign production can be legally imported, shall, upon subse- quent importation from thence into any of the British possessions in America, into which such goods, being of foreign production, cannot be legally imported, or into the United Kingdom, be deemed to be of foreign production, and shall be liable, on such importation respectively, to the same duties or the same forfeitures as articles of the like description, being of foreign production, would be liable to, unless the same shall have been warehoused under the provisions of this act, and exported from the warehouse direct to such other British possession, or to the United Kingdom, as the case may be. -08. Duties of Importation in America.-There shall be raised, levied, collected, and paid unto his Majesty the several duties of customs, as the same are respectively set forth in figures in the table of duties herein-after contained, upon goods, wares, and merchandise, imported or brought into any of his Majesty's possessions in America (that is to say,) Table of Duties. Duties payable upon spirits, being of the growth, production, or ma- L.ad nufacture of the United Kingdom, or of any of the British pos- Red oak staves and headings; viz. sessions in America or the West Indies, imported into Newfound- until the 1st of January, 1834, the 1,000 163 land or Canada. on and from the 1st of January, 1834, until the Spirits imported into Newfoundland viz 8. 1st of January, 1836, the 1,000 183 the produce of any of the British possessions in South on and from the 1st of January, 1836, the 1,000 0150 America or the West Indies; viz. imported from any British possession in North imported from any British possession in America, America, or from the warehouse in the United or from the United Kingdom, the gallon 006 Kingdom Free. Imported from any other place, to be deemed fo- White oak staves and headings viz. reign, and to be charged with duty as such. until the 1st of January, 1834, the 1,000 139 the produce of any British possession in North Ame- on and from the 1st of January, 1834, until the rica, or of the United Kingdom, and imported from 1st of January, 1836, the 1,000 0199 the United Kingdom, or from any British possession on and from the 1st of January, 1836, the 1,000 0126 in America, the gallon 016 imported from any British possession in North Imported from any other place, to be deemed America, or from the warehouse in the United foreign, and to be charged with duty as such. Kingdom Free. Spirits imported into Canada via. Pitch pine lumber, 1 inch thick, the 1,000 0 the produce of any British possession in South Ame- imported from any British possession is North rica or the West Indies, and imported from any America. or from the warehouse in the United British possession in America, or from the United Kingdom Free. Kingdom, the gallon 006 White and yellow pine lumber, I inch thick, the 1,000 Imported from any other place, to be deemed feet; viz foreign, and to be charged with duty as such. until the 1st of January, 1834 180 Note-When imported from the United Kingdom, this duty is on and from the 1st of January, 1834, until the not to be abated upon the ground of any duty under any colonial 1st of January, 1836 160 law. on and from the 1st of January, 1836 110 imported from any British possemion in North Duties payable upon goods, wares, and merchandise, not being of America, or from the warehouse in the United the growth, production, or manufacture of the United Kingdom, Kingdom Free. or of any of the British possessions in America, imported or Dye wood and cabinet-maker's wood Free. brought into any of the British possessions in America, by son or Other kinds of wood and lumber, 1 inch thick, the by Inland carriage or navigation. 1,000 feet 180 Imported into the British possessions in the West Indies or Wood hoops, the 1,000 053 on the continent of South America, or into the Bahama imported from any British possemion in North or Bermuda islands; vis. America, or from the warehouse in the United Wheat flour, the barrel 0 5 0 Kingdom Free imported from any British possession in North Beef and pork, salted, of all snrts, the cwt. 12 0 America, or from the warehouse in the United imported from any British possession is North Kingdom Free. America Free. thingles, not more than 12 inches in length. the 1,000 070 Imported into New Brunswick. Nova Scotia, or Prince more than 18 inches in length, the 1,000 0140 Edward's Island viz. imported from any British possession in North Wheat flour, the barrel 0 America, or from the warehouse in the United Beef and pork, salted, of all sorts, the cwt. 1019 Kingdom . Free. fresh, brought by land or inland navigation Free. Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 427 Lad. L a Imported into any of the British possessions in America; of lavender, of rosemary emery stone; fruit, preserved VIZ in sugar or brandy figs; honey; iron in bars, un- Spirits viz. wrought, and pig iron; juniper berries, incense of frank- Brandy, genera, or cordials, and otherspirits, ex- incense, lava and Malta stone for building, lentils; mar- cept run, the gallon 010 ble, rough and worked mosaic work, medals, musk, and further, the amount of any duty payable maccaroni, outs of all kinds; oil of olives, oil of al- for the time being on spirits the manufac- monds; orris root, ostrich feathers, ochres, orange buds ture of the United Kingdom. and peel, olives, pitch, pickles in jars and bottles, paint- Rum, the gallon 006 ings, pozzolana, pumice stone, punk, Parmesan cheese, and further, the amount of any duty payable pickles, prints, pearls, precious stones (except diamonds), for the time being on rum of the British quicksilver, raisins, sausages, sponges, tar, turpentine, possessions in South America or the West vermilion, vermicelli, whetstones; for every 1002. of the Indies. value 7 10 0 N. B.-Rum, although British, if imported Goods, wares, and merchandise, not otherwise charged from any British possession in which foreign with duty, and not herein declared to be free of duty, rum is not prohibited, is treated as foreign, un- for every 1001. of the value 1500 less it had been wareboused, and exported from Coin, bullion, and diamonds; horses, mules, asses, neat the warehouse. cattle, and all other live stock; tallow and raw hides; Wine in bottles. the tun 770 rice corn and grain, unground: biscuit or bread meal and further, for every 100% of the value 7100 or flour (except wheat flour) fresh meat, fresh fish, and on the bottles, the dozen 010 carriages of travellers Free. bottled in and imported from the United King- Wheat flour, beef and pork, hams and bacon, wood and dom, for every 100L of the value 710 lumber, imported into Canada; wood and lumber, im- the bottles Free. ported into New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, or Prince Wine not in bottles, for every 100% of the value 710 Edward's Island; hay and straw, fruit and vegetables, imported into the British possessions in North fresh; salt, cotton wool goods, the produce of places America from Gibraltar or Malta, rubject to no within the limits of the East India Company's charter, higher duty than if imported from the United imported from those places, or from the United King- Kingdom; via 1-10th of the duty remitted. dom, or from some place in the British dominions her- Coffee, the cwt. 0 5 0 rings taken and cured by the inhabitants of the Isle of Cocoa, the cwt. 0 5 0 Man, and imported from thence; lumber, the produce Sugar, the cwt. 0 5 0 of and imported from any British possession on the west Melasses, the cwt. 030 coast of Africa; any sort of craft food and victuals, ex- and further, the amount of any duty payable for cept spirits and any sort of clothing, and implements the time being on coffee, cocoa, sugar, and me- and materials, fit and necessary for the British fisheries lasses respectively, being the produce of the in America, imported into the place at or from whence British possessions in South America or the such fishery is carried on; drugs, gums or resins, dye West Indies. wood and hard wood, cabinet-maker's wood, tortoise- Clocks and watches, leather manufactures, linen, musical shell, hemp, flax, and tow Free. instruments, wires of all sorts, books and papers, silk Seeds, wheat flour, fruits, pickles, woods of all sorts, manufactures, for every 100L of the value 3000 oakum, pitch, tar, turpentine, ochres, brimstone, sul- Class manufactures, soap, refined sugar, sugar candy, to phur, vegetable oils, burr stones, dog stones, hops, cork, bacco manufactured, cotton manufactures, for every 100/. sago, tapioca, sponge, sausages, cheese, cider, wax, spices, of the value 2000 tallow, imported direct from the warehouse in the Alabaster, anchovies, argol, aniseed, amber, almonds, United Kingdom. Free. brimstone, botargo, box wood, currants, capers, casca- All goods imported from the United Kingdom, after having coo, cummin seed, coral, cork, cinnabar, dates; essence there paid the dutiesof consumption, and being exported of bergamot, of lemon, of roses, of citron, of oranges, from thence without drawback Free. And if any of the goods herein-before mentioned shall be imported through the United Kingdom (hav- ing been warehoused therein, and exported from the warehouse, or the duties thereon, if there paid, having been drawn back), one tenth part of the duties herein imposed shall be remitted in respect of such goods.-? 9. Acts not repeuled.-Nothing in this act or in any other passed in the present session of parliament shall extend to repeal or abrogate, or in any way to alter or affect an act (18 Geo. 3. c. 12.), intituled "An Act for removing all Doubts and Apprehensions concerning Taxation by the Parliament of Great Britain in any of the Colonies, Provinces, and Plantations of North America and the West Indies, and for repealing so much of an Act made in the 7th Year of the Reign of his present Majesty as imposes a Duty on Tea imported from Great Britain into any Colony or Plantation in America, as relates thereto;' nor to repeal or in any way alter or affect any act now in force which was passed prior to the last-mentioned act, and by which any duties in any of the British possessions in America were granted and still continue payable to the Crown nor to repeal or in any way alter or affect an act (31 Geo. 3. c. 31.) intituled "An Act to repeal certain Parts of an Act passed in the 14th Year of his Majesty's Reign, intituled 'An Act for making more effectual Provisions for the Government of the Province of Quebec in North America, and to make further Provisions for the Government of the said Province. 10. Duties imposed by prior Acts to be applied to Purposes of those Acts.-The duties imposed by any of the acts herein-before mentioned or referred to, passed prior to the said act (18 Geo. 3. c. 12) shall be received, accounted for, and applied for the purposes of those acts: provided always, that no greater proportion of the duties imposed by this act, except as herein-before excepted, shall be charged upon any article which is subject also to duty under any of the said acts, or subject also to duty under any colonial law, than the amount, if any, by which the duty charged by this act shall exceed such other duty or duties: provided, that the full amount of the duties mentioned in this act, whether on account of such former acts, or on account of such colonial law, or on account of this act, shall be levied and received under the regulations and powers of this act.- 11. Currency, Weights, and Measures.-All sums of money granted or imposed by this act, either as duties, penalties, or forfeitures, in the British possessions in America, are hereby declared to he ster- ling money of Great Britain, and shall be collected, and paid to the amount of the value which such nominal sums bear in Great Britain; and that such monies may be received and taken at the rate of 5a. 6d. the ounce in silver; and all duties shall be paid and received in overy part of the British pos- sessions in America according to British weights and measures in use on the 6th day of July, 1825 and in all cases where such duties are imposed according to any specific quantity or any specific value, the same shall be deemed to apply in the same proportion to any greater or less quantity or value; and all such duties shall be under the management of the commissioners of the customs. 12. Duties paid by Collector to Treasurer of Colony in which levied.-The produce of the duties so re- ceived under this act, except such duties as are payable under any act passed prior to the 18 Geo. 3. as aforesaid, shall be paid by the collector of the customs into the hands of the treasurer or receiver- general of the colony, or other proper officer authorized to receive the same, to be applied to such uses as shall be directed by the local legislatures of such colonies; and that the produce of such duties so received in colonies which have no local legislature may be applied in such manner as shall be directed by the commissioners of his Majesty's treasury.- 13. All British Vessels shall be subject to equal Duties, except coasting Fessels.-Whereas in some of his Majesty's possessions abroad, certain duties of tonnage are. by acts of the local legislatures of such possessions, levied upon British vessels, to which duties the like vessels built within such posses- sions, or owned by persons resident there, are not subject; be 11 further enacted, that there shall be levied and paid at the several British possessions abroad, upon all vessels built in any such posses- sions, or owned by any person or persons there resident, other than coasting or drogueing vessels employed in coasting or drogueing, all such and the like duties of tonnage and shipping dues as are or Digitized by Google 428 COLONIES AND shall be payable in any such possessions upon the like British vessels built in other parts of his Ma. jesty's dominions, or owned by persons not resident in such possessions. 14. Drawback on Rum, &c.-There shall be allowed upon the exportation from Newfoundland to Canada of rum or other spirits, the produce of the British possessions in South America or the West Indies, a drawback of the full duties of customs paid upon the importation thereof from any of the said places into Newfoundland, provided proof on oath be made to the satisfaction of the collector and comptrol- ler of the customs at the port whence such rum or other spirits is exported, that the full duties on the importation of such rum or other spirits at the said port had been paid, and that a certificate be produced under the hands and seals of the collector and comptroller of the customs at Quebec, that such rum or other spirits had been duly landed in Canada provided that no drawback shall be al- lowed upon any such rum or other spirite unless the same shall be shipped within 1 year from the day of the importation of the same, nor unless such drawback shall be duly claimed within 1 year from the day of such shipment.- Ship and Cargo to be reported on Arrival.-The master of every ship arriving in any of the British possessions in America, or the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, or Sark, whether laden or in ballast, shall come directly, and before bulk be broken, to the Custom-house for the port or district where he arrives, and there make a report in writing to the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, of the arrival and voyage of such ship, stating her name, country, and tonnage, and if British the port of registry, the name and country of the master, the country of the owners, the number of the crew, and how many are of the country of such ship, and whether she be laden or in ballast, and if laden the marks, numbers, and contents of every package and parcel of goods on board, and where the same was laden, and where and to whom consigned, and where'any and what goods, if any, had been unladen during the voyage, as far as any of such particulars can be known to him; and the mas- ter shall further answer all such questions concerning the ship, and the cargo, and the crew, and the voyage, as shall be demanded of him by such officer; and If any goods be unladen from any ship be- fore such report be made, or if the master fail to make such report, or make an untrue report, or do not truly answer the questions demanded of him, he shall forfeit the sum of 1001. ; and if any goods be not reported, they shall be forfeited.- 16. Entry outwards of Ship for Cargo.-The master of every ship bound from any British pessession in America, or the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, or Sark, shall, before any goods be laden therein, deliver to the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, an entry outwards under his hand of the destination of such ship, stating her name, country, and tonnage, and if British the port of registry, the name and country of the master, the country of the owners, the number of the crew, and how many are of the country of such ship; and if any goods be laden on board any ship before such entry be made, the master of such ship shall forfeit the sum of 50/. and before such ship depart the master shall bring and deliver to the collector or comptroller, OF other officer, a content in writing under his hand of the goods laden, and the names of the respective shippers and consigners of the goods, with the marks and numbers of the packages or parcels of the same, and shall make and subscribe a declaration to the truth of such content as far as any of such particulars can be known to him; and the master of every ship bound from any British possession in America, or from the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, or Sark, whether in ballast OF laden, shall before departure come before the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, and answer upon oath all such questions concerning the ship, and the cargo, if any, and the crew and the voyage, as shall be demanded of him by such officer and thereupon the collector and comptroller, or other proper officer, if such ship be laden, shall make out and give to the master a certificate of the clearance of such ship for her intended voyage, containing an ac- count of the total quantities of the several sorts of goods laden therein, or a certificate of her clearance in ballast, as the case may be; and if the ship depart without such clearance, or if the master deliver a false content, or shall not truly answer the questions demanded of him, he shall forfeit the sum of 100l.- 17. Guods not stated in Certificate to be Produce of British Pessessions to be deemed of Foreign Production. -No goods shall be stated in such certificate of clearance to be the produce of British possessions is America, unless such goods have been expressly stated 80 to be in the entry outwards of the same; and all goods not expressly stated in such certificate of clearance to be the produce of the British pos- sessions in America shall, at the place of importation in any other such possessions, or in the United Kingdom, be deemed to be of foreign production.- 18. Newfoundland Fishing Certificates in lieu of Clearance.-Whenever any ship shall be cleared out from Newfoundland, or any other part of his Majesty's dominions, for the fisheries on the banks or coasts of Newfoundland or Labrador, or their dependencies, without having on board any article of traffic, (except only the provisions, nets, tackle, and other things usually employed in and about the said fishery,) the master of such ship shall be entitled to demand from the collector or other principal officer of the customs at such port a certificate under his hand that such ship hath been specially cleared out for the Newfoundland fishery; and such certificate shall be in force for the fishing season for the year in which the same may be granted, and no longer and upon the first arrival in any port in Newfoundland, &c. of any ship having on board such certificate, a report thereof shall be made by the master of such ship to the principal officer of the customs and all ships having such certificate so reported, and being actually engaged in the said fishery, or in carrying coastwise to be landed or put on board any other ships engaged in the said fishery any fish, oil, salt, provisions, or other necessaries for the use and purposes thereof, shall be exempt from all obligation to make an entry at or obtain any clearance from any Custom-house at Newfoundland upon arrival at or departure from any of the ports or harbours of the said colony, &c. during the fishing season for which such certificate may be granted; and previously to obtaining a clearance at the end of such season for any other voyage at any of such ports, the master of such ship shall deliver up the before-mentioned certificate to the officer of the customs: provided always, that in case any such ship shall have on board, during the time the same may be engaged in the said fishery, any goods or merchandises whatsoever other than fish, seals, oil made of fish or seals, salt, provisions, and other things, being the produce of or usually employed in the said fishery, such ship shall forfeit the said fishing certificate, and shall thenceforth be subject and liable to the same rules, regulations, &c. as ships in general are subject or liable 10.-1 19. Entry of Goods to be laden or unladen.-No goods shall be laden, or water-borne to be laden, on board any ship, or unladen from any ship, in any of the British possessions in America, or the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, or Sark, until due entry be made of such goods, and warrant granted for the lading or unlading of the same and no goods shall be SO laden or water-borne, or 80 unladen, except at some place at which an officer of the customs is appointed to attend the lading and unlading of goods, or at some place for which a sufferance shall be granted by the collector and comptroller and no goods shall be so laden or unladen except in the presence or with the permission in writing of the proper officer: provided always, that it shall be lawful for the commissioners of customs to make and appoint such other regulations for the carrying constwise, or for the removing of any goods for shipment, as shall appear expedient and that all goods laden, water-borne, or unladen contrary to the regulations of this act, or contrary to any regulations 10 made, be forfeited.- 20. Particulars of Entry of Goods, inwards and outwards.-The person entering any such goods shall deliver to tipe collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, a biM of the entry thereof, fairly written Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 429 in words at length, containing the name of the exporter or importer, and of the ship, and of the master, and of the place to or from which bound, and of the place within the port where the goods are to be laden or unladen, and the particulars of the quality and quantity of the goods, and the packages con- taining the same, and the marks and numbers on the packages, and setting forth whether such goods be the produce of the British possessions in America or not; and such person shall at the same time pay down all duties due upon the goods and the collector and comptroller, or other proper officer, shall thereupon grant their warrant for the lading or unlading of such goods.-₹ 21. Entry Inwards by Bill of Sight.-If the importer of any goods make and subscribe a declaration before the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, that he cannot, for want of full information, make perfect entry thereof, it shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller to receive an entry by bill of sight for the packages or parcels of such goods by the best description which can be given, and to grant a warrant thereupon, in order that the same may be landed and secured to the satisfaction of the officer of the customs, and at the expense of the importer, and may be seen and examined by such importer in the presence of the proper officers; and within 3 days after the goods shall have been so landed, the importer shall make a perfect entry thereof, and pay down all duties due thereon and in default of such entry such goods shall be taken to the King's warehouse, and if the importer shall not, within 1 month after such landing, make perfect entry of such goods and pay the duties due thereon, together with charges of removal and warehouse rent, such goods shall be sold for the pay- ment thereof, and the overplus, if any, shall be paid to the proprietor of the goods.-Φ 22. Goods subject to ad Valorem Duty.-In all cases where the duties imposed by this act upon the im- portation of articles into his Majesty's possessions in America are charged, not according to the weight, tale, gauge, or measure, but according to the value thereof, such value shall be ascertained by the declaration of the importer of such articles, or his known agent, in manner and form following; (that is to say,) A. B. do hereby declare, that the articles mentioned in the entry, and contained in the packages . [here specifying the several packages, and describing the several marks and numbers, as the case may 'be,] are of the value of Witness my hand the day of A. B. The above declaration, signed the day of in the presence of C. D. collector 4 [or other principal officer].' Which declaration shall be written on the bill of entry of such articles, and shall be subscribed by the importer thereof, or his known agent, in the presence of the collector or other principal officer of the customs at the port of importation provided, that if upon view and examination of such articles by the proper officer of the customs it shall appear to him that the said articles are not valued according to the true price or value thereof, and according to the true intent and meaning of this act, in such case the importer or his known agent shall be required to declare on oath before the collector or comptroller what is the invoice price of such articles, and that he verily believes such invoice price is the current value of the articles at the place from whence the said articles were imported; and such invoice price with the addition of 10% per centum thereon, shall be deemed to be the value of the articles in lieu of the value so declared by the importer or his known agent, and upon which the duties imposed by this act shall be charged and paid: provided also, that if it shall appear to the collector and comptroller, or other proper officer, that such articles have been invoiced below the real and true value thereof, at the place from whence the same were imported, or if the invoice price is not known, the articles shall in such case be examined by two competent persons, to be nominated and appointed by the governor or commander-in-chief of the colony, plantation, or island into which the said articles are imported, and such persons shall declare on oath before the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, what is the true and real value of such articles in such colony, plantation, or island and the value so declared on the oaths of such persons shall be deemed to be the true and real value of such articles, and upon which the duties imposed by this act shall be charged and paid.-Φ 23. If Importer refuse to pay such Duty, the Goods may be sold.-If the importer of such articles shall refuse to pay the duties hereby imposed thereon, it shall be lawful for the collector or other chief of- ficer of the customs where such articles shall be imported, to take and secure the same, with the casks or other package thereof, and to cause the same to be publicly sold within the space of 20 days at the most after such refusal made, and at such time and place as such officer shall, by 4 or more days' pub- lic notice, appoint for that purpose which articles shall be sold to the best bidder ; and the money arising from the sale thereof shall be applied in the first place in payment of the said duties, together with the charges that shall have been occasioned by the said sale, and the overplus, if any, shall be paid to such importer or proprietor, or any other person authorised to receive the same.- Φ 21. If Goods be not entered in 20 Days, the Officer may land and secure them.-Every importer of any goods shall, within 20 days after the arrival of the importing ship, make due entry inwards of such goods, and land the same and in default of such entry and landing it shall be lawful for the officers of the customs to convey such goods to the king's warehouse; and if the duties due upon such goods be not paid within 3 months after such 20 days shall have expired, together with all charges of removal and warehouse rent, the same shall be sold, and the produce thereof applied first to the payment of freight and charges, next of duties, and the overplus, if any, shall be paid to the proprietor of the goods.- 0 25. Goods imported from United Kingdom or British Possessions must appear in Cocket, &c.-No goods shall De imported into any British possession as being imported from the United Kingdom, or from any other British possession (if any advantage attach to such distinction), unless such goods appear upon the cockets or other proper documents for the same to have been duly cleared outwards at the port of exportation in the United Kingdom, or in such other British possession, nor unless the ground upon which such advantage be claimed be stated in such cocket or document.- Goods imported from, to be deemed of the Growth of, United Kingdom.-No goods shall, upon importa- tion into any of the British possessions in America, be deemed to be of the growth, production, or manufacture of the United Kingdom, or of any British possession in America, unless imported from the United Kingdom, or from some British possession in America.- 27. Entry not to be valid, if Goods be not properly described in it.-Noentry, nor any warrant for the land- ing of any goods, or for the taking of any goods out of any warehouse, shall be deemed valid, unless the particulars of the goods and packages in such entry correspond with the particulars of the goods and packages in the report of the ship, or in the certificate or other document, where any is required, by which the importation or entry of such goods is authorised, nor unless the goods shall have been properly described in such entry by the denominations and with the characters and circumstances according to which such goods are charged with duty or may be imported and any goods taken or delivered out of any ship or out of any warehouse by virtue of any entry or warrant not correspond- ing or agreeing in all such respects, or not properly describing the same, shall be deemed to be goods landed or taken without due entry thereof, and shall be forfeited.- 28. Certificate of Production for Sugar, Coffee, Cocoa, or Spirits.-Before any sugar, coffee, cocoa, or spirits shall be shipped for exportation in any British possession in America or in the island of Mauri- tius, as being the produce of such possession or of such island, the proprietor of the estate on which such goods were produced, or his known agent, shall make and sign an affidavit in writing before the col- lector or comptroller at the port of exportation, or before a justice of the peace, or other officer duly Digitized by Google 430 COLONIES AND authorised to administer such oath, declaring that such goods are the produce of such estate; and such affidavit shall set forth the name of the estate, and the description and quantity of the goods, and the packages containing the same, with the marks and numbers thereon, and the name of the person to whose charge at the place of shipment they are to be sent; and if any justice or other officer shall sub- scribe his name to any writing purporting to be such affidavit, unless the person making it shall actu- ally appear before him and be sworn to the truth of the same, such justice of the peace or officer shall forfeit and pay for any such offence the sum of 50Z.; and the person entering and shipping such goods shall deliver such affidavit to the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, and shall make and subscribe a declaration before him that the goods which are to be shipped by virtue of such entry are those mentioned in such affidavit and the master of the ship in which such goods shall be laden shall before clearance, make and subscribe a declaration before the collector or comptroller that the goods shipped by virtue of such entry are the same as are mentioned and intended in such affidavit, to the best of his knowledge and belief; and thereupon the collector or comptroller, or other proper officer, shall sign and give to the master a certificate of production, stating that proof has been made, in man- ner required by law, that such goods (describing the same) are the produce of such British possession or of such island, and setting forth in such certificate the name of the exporter and of the exporting ship, and of the master thereof, and the destination of the goods; and if any sugar, coffee, cocoa, or spirits be imported into any British possession in America, as being the produce of some other such possession or of such island, without such certificate of production, the same shall be forfeited.- Certificate of Production on Re-exportation from another Colony.-Before any sugar, coffee, cocoa, or spirits shall be shipped for exportation in any British possession in America, as being the produce of some other such possession, the person exporting the same shall in the entry outwards state the place of the production, and refer to the entry inwards and landing of such goods, and shall make and sub- scribe a declaration before the collector or comptroller to the identity of the same; and thereupon, if such goods shall have been duly imported with a certificate of production within 12 months prior to the shipping for exportation, the collector and comptroller shall sign and give to the master a certifi- cate of production, referring to the certificate of production under which such goods had been so im- ported, and containing the like particulars, with the date of such importation.-d 30. Goods brought over Land, or by Inland Navigation.-It shall be lawful to bring or import by land or by inland navigation into any of the British possessions in America from any adjoining foreign coun- try any goods which might be lawfully imported by sea into such possession from such country, and SO to bring or import such goods in the vessels, boats, or carriages of such country, as well as in Bri- tish vessels, boats, or carriages.-d 31. What Vessels shall be deemed British on the Lakes in America.-No vessel or boat shall be admitted to be a British vessel or boat on any of the inland waters or lakes in America, except such as have been built within the British dominions, and shall be wholly owned by British subjects, and shall not have been repaired at any foreign place to a greater extent than in the proportion of 10s. for every ton of such vessel or boat at any one time provided always, that nothing herein-before contained shall extend to prevent the employment of any vessel or boat as a British vessel or boat on such inland waters or lakes, which shall have wholly belonged to British subjects before the 5th day of July, 1825, and which shall not have been since that day repaired as aforesaid in any foreign place.- 32. Goods must be brought to a Place where there is a Custom-house.-It shall not be lawful so to bring or import any goods except into some port or place of entry at which a Custom-house-now is or here- after may be lawfully established : provided also, that it shall be lawful for the governor, lieutenant- governor, or person administering the government of any of the said possessions respectively, by and with the advice of the executive council thereof, from time to time to diminish or increase, by pro- clamation, the number of ports or places of entry.- ₹ 33. Duties to be collected in same Manner as on Goods imported by Sea.-The duties imposed by this act shall be ascertained, levied, and recovered upon all goods so brought or imported in the same man- ner, and by the same means, rules, regulations, penalties, &c. as the duties on the like goods imported by sea and if any goods shall be brought or imported contrary hereto, or if any goods so brought or imported shall be removed from the station or place appointed for the examination of such goods before all duties payable thereon shall have been paid or satisfied, such goods shall be forfeited, together with the vessel, boat, or carriage, and the horses or other cattle, in or by which such goods shall have been so imported or brought, or SO removed.-α 34. Duties in Canada on American Boats, as in America on British Boats.-The same tonnage duties shall be paid upon all vessels or boats of the United States of America importing any goods into Canada as are or may be payable in the United States of America on British vessels or boats entering the harbours whence such goods have been imported.- 35. CONDITIONS WITH RESPECT TO WAREHOUSING IN THE COLONIES. Ports herein mentioned to be free warehousing Ports.-The several ports herein-after mentioned, (that is to say,) Bridgetown in Barbadoes, Quebec in Canada, Sydney in Cape Breton, Roseau in Do- minica, St. George in Grenada, Kingston and Montego Bay in Jamaica, Charlestown in Nevis, St. John's and St. Andrew's in New Brunswick, St. John's in Newfoundland, Nassan in New Provi- dence, Halifax and Pictou in Nova Scotia, Basseterre in St. Kitt's, Kingston in St. Vincent, Road Harbour in Tortola, San Josef in Trinidad, shall be free warehousing ports for all the purposes of this act; and Kingston and Montreal in the Canadas, and Liverpool and Yarmouth in Nova Scotia. shall be warehousing ports for the warehousing of goods brought by land or by inland navigation, or imported in British ships; and it shall be lawful for the several collectors and comptrollers of the said ports respectively, by notice in writing under their hands, to appoint from time to time such ware- houses at such ports as shall be approved of by them for the free warehousing and securing of goods, and also in such notice to declare what sort of goods may be 80 warehoused, and also by like notice to revoke or alter any such appointment or declaration: provided always, that every such notice shall be transmitted to the governor of the place, and shall be published in such manner as he shall direct.-d 36. Goods may be warehoused without Payment of Duty.-It shall be lawful for the importer of any such goods into the said ports to warehouse them in the warehouses NO appointed, without payment of any duty on the first entry thereof, subject nevertheless to the rules, regulations, &c. herein-after con- tained.-> 37. Regulation as to warehousing of Goods on Arrival in Canada.-Upon the arrival of any goods at any frontier port in the Canadas, such goods may be entered with the proper officer of the customs at such port, to be warehoused at some warebousing port in the Canadas, and may be delivered by such officer to be passed on to such warehousing port, under bond, to the satisfaction of such officer, for the due arrival and warehousing of such goods at such port.-d 38. Stowage of Goods in Warehouse.- goods so warehoused shall be stowed in such parts or divisions of the warehouse and in such manner as the collector and comptroller shall direct; and the ware- house shall be locked and secured in such manner, and shall be opened and visited only at such times, and in the presence of such officers, and under such rules and regulations, as the collector and Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 431 comptroller shall direct and all such goods shall, after being landed upon importation, be carried to the warehouse, or shall, after being taken out of the warehouse for exportation, be carried to be shipped, under such rules and regulations as the collector and comptroller shall direct.- Φ 39. Bond upon Entry of Goods to be warchoused.-Upon the entry of any goods to be warehoused, the importer of such goods, instead of paying down the duties due thereon, shall give bond with two suf- ficient sureties, to be approved of by the collector or comptroller, in treble the duties payable on such goods, with condition for the safe depositing of such goods in the warehouse mentioned in such entry, and for the payment of all duties due upon such goods, or for the exportation thereof, according to the first account taken of such goods upon the landing of the same; and with further condition, that no part thereof shall be taken out of such warehouse until cleared from thence upon due entry and pay- ment of duty, or upon due entry for exportation; and with further condition, that the whole of such goods shall be so cleared from such warehouse, and the duties, upon any deficiency of the quantity according to such first account, shall be paid, within 2 years from the date of the first entry thereof; and if after such bond shall have been given, the goods or any part thereof shall be sold or disposed of, so that the original bonder shall be interested in or have any control over the same, it shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller to admit fresh security to be given by the bond of the new proprietor or other person having control over such goods, with his sufficient sureties, and to cancel the bond given by the original bonder of such goods, or to exonerate him to the extent of the fresh security so given.-d Goods not duly warehoused, &c. to be forfeited.-If any goods which have been entered to be ware- housed shall not be duly carried and deposited in the warehouse, or shall afterwards be taken out of it without due entry and clearance, or having been entered and cleared for exportation shall not be duly carried and shipped, or shall afterwards be relanded except with permission of the customs, such goods shall be forfeited.- ≥ 41. Account of Goods to be taken on landing.-Upon the entry and landing of any goods to be ware- housed, the proper officer shall take a particular account of the same, and shall mark the contents on each package, and shall enter the same in a book to be kept for that purpose and no goods which have been so warehoused shall be taken or delivered from the warehouse except upon due entry, and under care of the proper officers for exportation, or upon due entry and payment of duty for home use and whenever the whole of the goods warehoused under any entry shall be cleared from the ware- house, or whenever further time shall be granted for any such goods to remain warehoused, an account shall be made out of the quantity upon which the duties have been paid, and of the quantity exported, and of the quantity (to be then ascertained) of the goods still remaining in the warehouse, as the case may be, deducting from the whole the quantity contained in any whole packages (if any) which may have been abandoned for the duties ; and if upon such account there shall in either case appear to be any deficiency of the original quantity, the duty payable upon the amount of such defi- ciency shall then be paid.-Φ 42. Samples may be taken.-It shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller, under such regulations as they shall see fit, to permit moderate samples to be taken of any goods so warehoused, without entry, and without payment of duty, except as the same shall eventually become payable, as on a deficiency of the original quantity.- 43. Goods may be sorted and repacked.-It shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller, under such regulations as they shall see fit, to permit the proprietor or other person having control over any warehoused goods to sort, separate, and pack and repack any such goods, and to make such lawful alterations therein, or arrangements and assortments thereof, as may be necessary for the preserva- tion of such goods, or in order to the sale, shipment, or legal disposal of the same; and also to permit any parts of such goods so separated to be destroyed, but without prejudice to the claim for duty upon the whole original quantity of such goods provided always, that it shall be lawful for any person to abandon any whole packages to the officers of the customs for the duties, without being liable to any duty upon the same.-? 44. Goods warehoused may be delivered for Removal without Payment of Duty.-Goods warehoused at any warehousing port in any of the British possessions in America, being first duly entered, may be deli- vered, under the authority of the proper officer of the customs, without payment of duty, except for any deficiency thereof, for the purpose of removal to another warehousing port in the same possession, under bond, to the satisfaction of such officer, for the due arrival and rewarehousing of such goods at such other port.-d 45. All Goods to be cleared within 2 Years, or sold.-All goods which have been so warehoused or reware- housed shall be duly cleared, either for exportation or for home consumption, within two years from the day of first entry for warehousing and if any such goods be not so cleared, it shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller to cause the same to be sold, and the produce shall be applied, first to the payment of the duties, next of warehouse rent and other charges, and the overplus (if any) shall be paid to the proprietor: provided always, that it shall be lawful for the collector and comptroller to grant further time for any such goods to remain warehoused, if they shall see fit.-d 46. Bond on Entry for Exportation.-Upon the entry outwards of any goods to be exported from the warehouse, the person entering the same shall give security by bond in treble the duties of importa- tion on such goods, with two sufficient sureties, to be approved by the collector or comptroller, that the same shall be landed at the place for which they be entered outwards, or be otherwise accounted for.-) 47. Power to appoint other Ports.-It shall be lawful for his Majesty, by order in council, from time to time to appoint any port in his Majesty's possessions in America to be a free warehousing port for all or any of the purposes of this act and every such port so appointed by his Majesty shall be, for all the purposes expressed in such order, a free warehousing port under this act, as if appointed by the same.- 48. Goods from Mauritius liable to same Duties and Regulations as West India Goods.-α 49.-(See PORT LOUIS.) Cape of Good Hope within Limit of the Company's Charter.-In all trade with the British possessions in America, the Cape of Good Hope, and the territories and dependencies thereof, shall be deemed to be within the limits of the East India Company's charter.- Φ 50. DUTCH PROPRIETORS, &c. Dutch Proprietors in Demerara, Essequibo, and Berbice, may supply their Estates from Holland.-It shall be lawful for any of the subjects of the King of the Netherlands, being Dutch proprietors in the colonies of Demerara, Essequibo, and Berbice, to import in Dutch ships from the Netherlands into the said colonies all the usual articles of supply for their estates therein, and also wine imported for the purposes of medicine only, and which shall be liable to a duty of 10s. per ton, and no more and in case seizure be made of any articles so imported, upon the ground that they are not such supplies, or are for the purpose of trade, the proof to the contrary shall lie on the Dutch proprietor importing the same, and not on the seizing officer: provided always, that if sufficient security by bond be given in court to abide the decision of the commissioners of customs upon such seizure, the goods so seized shall be admitted to entry and released.- 51. Digitized by Google 432 COLONIES AND Dutch Proprietors may not export to United Kingdom.-It shall not be lawful for such Dutch pro- prietors to export the produce of their estates to the United Kingdom, or to any of his Majesty's sugar colonies in America, except under the conditions herein-after provided.- 52. What Persons shall be deemed Dutch Proprietors.-All subjects of his Majesty the King of the Nether- lands resident in bis said Majesty's European dominions, who were at the date of the convention between his Majesty George III. and the King of the Netherlands, dated the 12th day of August, 1815, proprietors of estates in the said colonies, and all subjects of his said Majesty who may hereafter become possessed of estates then belonging to Dutch proprietors therein, and all such proprietors as being then resident in the said colonies, and being natives of his said Majesty's dominions in the Netherlands, may have declared, within 3 months after the publication of the aforesaid convention in the said colonies, that they wish to continue to be considered as such, and all subjects of his said Majesty the King of the Netherlands who may be the holders of mortgages of estates in the said colonies made prior to the date of the convention, and who may under their mortgage deeds have the right of exporting from the said colonies to the Netherlands the produce of such estates, shall be deemed Dutch proprietors under the provisions of this act: provided, that where both Dutch and British subjects have mortgages upon the same property in the said colonies, the produce to be coh- signed to the different mortgagees shall be in proportion to the debts respectively due to them. 53. Persons not wishing to be considered Dutch Propristors to sign a Declaration to that Effect-Whereas it is expedient to permit any of such persons, at their option, to relinquish such character of Dutch pro- prietor; be it therefore enacted, that if any such person shall make and sign a declaration in writing, attested by two credible witnesses, setting forth that he is desirous and has elected not to be deemed to be a Dutch proprietor within the meaning of the said act in respect of any such estate or mortgage to be mentioned and named in such declaration, and shall cause such declaration to be delivered to the commissioners of his Majesty's customs, such person shall thenceforth be no longer deemed a Dutch proprietor within the meaning of the said act in respect of the estate or mortgage so mentioned in such declaration as aforesaid, and such declaration shall have effect in respect of any goods the produce of any such estate of which such person so far as relates to those goods was a Dutch pro- prietor, although such goods may have been exported from the colony before the delivering of such declaration as aforesaid.- 54. No Ship to sail from Jamaica to St. Domingo, or from St. Domingo to Jamaica.-No British merchant ship or vessel shall sail from Jamaica to St. Domingo, nor from St. Domingo to Jamaica, under the penalty of forfeiture of such ship or vessel, together with her cargo; and no foreign ship or vessel which shall have come from, or shall in the course of her voyage have touched at St. Domingo, shall come into any port or harbour in the island of Jamaica; and if any such ship or vessel, having come into any such port or harbour, shall continue there for 48 hours after notice shall have been given by the officers of the customs to depart, such ship or vessel shall be forfeited and if any person shall be landed in Jamaica from any ship or vessel which shall have come from or touched at St, Domingo, except in case of urgent necessity, or unless licence shall have been given by the governor of Jamaica to land such person, such ship shall be forfeited, together with her cargo.- 55. Colonial Laws repugnant to any Act of Parliament to be null and void.-All laws, by-laws, usages, or customs at this time or which hereafter shall be in practice, or pretended to be in practice, in any of the British possessions in America, in anywise repugnant to this act, or to any other act of parlia- ment, so far as such act relates to the said possessions, shall be null and void to all intents and pur- poses.-d 56. Exemption from Dutics to extend only to Duties by Act of Parliament.-Provided always, that no exemption from duty in any of the British possessions abroad, contained in any act of parliament, extends any duty not imposed by act of parliament, unless and so far only as any duty not so imposed is expressly mentioned in such exemption.- 57. Officers may board Ships hovering on the Coasts.-It shall be lawful for the officers of customs to go on board any ship in any British possession in America, and to rummage and search all parts of such ship for prohibited and uncustomed goods, and also to go on board any ship hovering within 1 league of the coasts thereof, and in either case freely to stay on board such ship so long as she shall remain in such port or within such distance; and if any such ship be bound elsewhere, and shall continue so hovering for the space of 24 hours after the master shall have been required to depart, it shall be law- ful for the officers of the customs to bring such ship into port, and to examine her cargo, and to examine the master upon oath touching the cargo and voyage; and if there be any goods on board prohibited to be imported, such ship and cargo shall be forfeited; and if the master shall not truly answer the questions demanded of him, he shall forfeit 100l-d 58. Forfeiture of Vessels, Carriages, &c. removing Goods liable to Forfeiture.-All vessels, boats, car- riages, and cattle made use of in the removal of any goods liable to forfeiture under this act shall be forfeited, and every person who shall assist or be otherwise concerned in the unshipping, landing, or removal, harbouring, &c. of such goods, or into whose possession the same shall knowingly come, shall forfeit the treble value thereof, or the penalty of 1002., at the election of the officers of the cus- toms.- 59. Goods, Vessels, &c. liable to Forfeiture, may be seized by Officers.-All goods, ships, vessels, boats, carriages, and cattle, liable to forfeiture under this act, may be seized and secured by any officer of the customs or navy, or by any person employed for that purpose with the concurrence of the com- missioners of his Majesty's customs; and every person who shall in any way hinder or obstruct such officers or persons employed as aforesaid, or any person aiding him, shall for every such offence forfeit the sum of 2001.-$ 60. Writ of Assistance to search for and seize Goods liable to Forfeiture.-Under authority of a writ of assistance granted by the supreme court of justice or court of vice admiralty having jurisdiction in the place. it shall be lawful for any officer of the customs, taking with him a peace officer, to enter any building or other place in the daytime, and to search for, seize, and secure any goods liable to forfeiture under this act, and, in case of necessity, to break open any doors and any chests or other packages for that purpose and such writ of assistance, when issued, shall be deemed to be in force during the whole of the reign in which the same shall have been granted, and for 12 months from the conclusion of such reign.-d 61. Obstruction of Officers by Force.-If any person shall by force or violence assault, molest, hinder, or obstruct any officer of the customs or navy, or other person employed as aforesaid, or any person acting in his aid, such person upon conviction shall be adjudged a felon, and punished at the discre- tion of the court.- 62. Goods seized to be secured at the next Cristom-house, and sold by Auction.-All things seized as liable to forfeiture under this act, or under any act made for the prevention of smuggling, or relating to the customs, or to trade or navigation, shall be delivered to the collector and comptroller of the customs next 40 the place where the same were seized; and after condemnation they shall cause the same to be sold by public auction to the best bidder provided always, that it shall be lawful for the commissioners of the customs to direct in what manner the produce of such sale shall be applied. or, in lieu of such sale, to direct what things shall be destroyed, or be reserved for the public service. -100. Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 433 The next 17 clauses relate to the mode of proceeding in actions as to seizures before the courts, the application and recovery of penalties, &c. It seems unnecessary to insert these in this place. The King may regulate the Trude of certain Colonies.-It shall be lawful for his Majesty, by any order or orders in council to be issued from time to time, to give such directions and make such regu- lations touching the trade and commerce to and from any British possessions on or near the continent of Europe, or within the Mediterranean Sea, or in Africa, or within the limits of the East India Com- pany's charter (excepting the possessions of the said Company), as to his Majesty in council shall appear expedient; and if any goods shall be imported or exported in any manner contrary to any such order, the same shall be forfeited, together with the ship importing or exporting the same. -0 81. East India Company may carry Goods from India to Colonies.-It shall be lawful for the East India Company, during the continuance of their exclusive privileges of trade, to export from one place within the limits of their charter any goods for the purpose of being carried to some of his Majesty's possessions in America, and so to carry and to import the same into any of such possessions, and also to carry return cargoes from such possessions to any place within the limits of their charter, or to the United Kingdom; and it shall be lawful for any of his Majesty's subjects, with the licence or under the authority of the said Company, to lade in and export from any of the dominions of the Em- peror of China any goods, and to lade in and export from any place within the limits of the said Company's charter any tea, for the purpose of being carried to some of his Majesty's possessions in America, and also so to carry and to import the same into any of such possessions.- 82. Certificate of Production of East India Sugar.-It shall be lawful for any shipper of sugar the pro- duce of some British possession within the limits of the East India Company's charter, to be exported from such possession, to go before the collector, comptroller, &c. of the customs at such place, or, if there be none such, to go before the principal officer of such place, or the judge or commercial resi- dent, and make an affidavit that such sugar was really and bond fide the produce of such British pos- session, to the best of his knowledge and belief; and such officer, &c. is to grant a certificate thereof, setting forth the name of the ship in which the sugar is to be exported, and her destination.- 83. Ships built prior to the 1st of January, 1816, deemed British Ships within certain Limits.-All ships built within the limits of the East India Company's charter prior to the 1st day of January, 1816, and which were then, and have continued since, to be solely the property of his Majesty's subjects, shall be deemed to be British ships for all the purposes of trade within the said limits, including the Cape of Good Hope.-Φ 84. Certificate of Production of Cape Wine.-It shall be lawful for the shipper of wine the produce of the Cape of Good Hope, or of its dependencies, which is to be exported from thence, to go before the chief officer of the customs, and make an amdavit that such wine was really and bonâ fide the produce of the Cape or its dependencies; and such officer is required to administer such affidavit, and to grant a certificate thereof, stating the name of the ship in which the wine is exported, and her desti- nation.-> 85. Certificate of Production of Goods in Guernsey, &c.-It shall be lawful for any person who is about to export from Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, or Sark, to the United Kingdom or any British possession in America, any goods the growth or produce of any of those islands, or any goods manufactured from materials the growth or produce thereof, or of the United Kingdom, to go before a magistrate of the island from which the goods are to be exported, and sign a declaration that such goods are of such growth, produce, or manufacture, and such magistrate shall administer and sign such declara- tion; and thereupon the governor, lieutenant-governor, &c. of the island shall, upon the delivery to him of such declaration, grant a certificate under his hand of the proof contained in such declaration, stating the ship by, and the port in the United Kingdom, or in such possession, to, which the goods are to be exported and such certificate shall be produced at such ports, in proof that the goods men- tioned therein are of the growth, produce, &c. of such islands.-> 86. The next section relates to the importation of tea into Guernsey, &c. during the exclusive trading privileges enjoyed by the East India Company. Guernsey, &c. Tonnage of Ships and Size of Packages for Spirits.-No brandy, geneva, or other spirits (except rum of the British plantations), shall be imported into, or exported from, the islands of Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, or Sark, or removed from any one to any other of the said islands, or coastwise from any one part to any other part of either of the said islands, or be shipped to be so removed or carried, or be water-borne for the purpose of being so shipped in any ship, vessel, or boat of less bur- den than 100 tons (except when imported from the United Kingdom in ships of the burden of 70 tons at least), nor in any cask or package of less size or content than 40 gallons, (except when in bottles, and carried in a square-rigged ship.) nor any tobacco or snuff in any ship, vessel, or boat of less burden than 100 tons (except when imported from the United Kingdom in ships of the burden of 70 tons at least), nor in any cask or package containing less than 450 lbs. weight, (save and except any such spirits or loose tobacco as shall be for the use of the seamen belonging to and on board any such ship, vessel. or boat, not exceeding 2 gallons of the former, and 5 lbs. weight of the latter, for each sea- man, and also except such manufactured tobacco or snuff as shall have been duly exported as mer- chandise from Great Britain or Ireland,) on pain of forfeiture of all such foreign brandy, geneva, or other spirits, tobacco or snuff respectively, together with the casks or packages containing the same, and also of every such ship, vessel, or boat, together with all her guns, furniture, &c.-d 88. Not to extend to Vessels of 10 Tons supplying Island of Sark, having Licence 30 to do.-Nothing herein contained shall extend, or be construed to extend, to any boat not exceeding the burden of 10 tons, for having on board at any one time any foreign spirits of the quantity of 10 gallons or under, in casks or packages of less size or content than 40 gallons, or any tobacco, snuff, or tea, not exceeding 50 lbs. weight of each, for the supply of the said island of Sark, such boat having a licence from the officer of customs at either of the islands of Guernsey or Jersey, for the purpose of being employed in carrying commodities for the supply of the said island of Sark: provided that every such boat having on board at any one time any greater quantity of spirits than 10 gallons, or any greater quantity of tobacco or snuff than 50 lbs. weight of each of the said articles, unless such greater quantity of spirits, tobacco. or snuff shall be in casks or packages of the size, content, or weight herein-before required, or having on board at any one time any greater quantity of tea than 50 lbs. weight, shall be forfeited.- 89. Penalty on Persons found on board Vessels liable to Forfeiture within 1 League of Guernsey, &e- Every person found or discovered to have been on board any vessel or boat liable to forfeiture, for being found within 1 league of the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, or Sark, having on board or in any manner attached or affixed thereto, or conveying or having conveyed, in any manner, such goods or other things as subject such vessel or boat to forfeiture, or who shall be found or dis- covered to have been on board any vessel or boat from which any part of the cargo shall have been thrown overboard during chace, or staved or destroyed, shall forfeit the sum of 1001.- § British Coals not to be re-exported from British Possessions without Duty.-It shall not be lawful to re-export from any of his Majesty's possessions abroad to any foreign place any coals the produce of the United Kingdom, except upon payment of the duty to which such coals would be liable upon ex- portation from the United Kingdom to such foreign place; and no such coals shall be shipped at any of such possessions, to be exported to any British place, until the exporter or the master of the export- VoL. I.-2 o 55 Digitized by Google 434 COLONIES AND ing vessel shall have given bond, with one sufficient surety, in double the value of the coals, that such coals shall not be landed at any foreign place.- 91. Penalty for using Documents counterfeited or falsified.-If any person shall, in any of his Majesty's possessions abroad, counterfeit or falsify, or wilfully use when counterfeited or falsified, any entry, warrant, cocket, &c. for the unlading, lading, entering, reporting, or clearing any ship or vessel, or for the landing, shipping, or removing of any goods, stores, baggage, or article whatever, or shall by any false statement procure any writing or document to be made for any such purposes, or shall falsely make any oath or affirmation required by any act for regulating the trade of the British poesessions abroad, or shall forge or counterfeit a certificate of the said oath or affirmation, or shall knowingly publish such certificate, he shall for every such offence forfeit the sum of 2001.-2 92. The American government having declined complying with those conditions of recipro- city under which the trade between the United States and the British colonies was to be opened by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 114., it was directed by an order in council, dated the 27th of July, 1826, that a duty of 4s. 3d. per ton should be charged upon all American vessels entering his Majesty's possessions in the West Indies, as well as an addition of 10 per cent. upon the duties imposed by the above-mentioned act on all and each of the articles named in it, when imported into the West Indies in American ships. In the course of 1830, however, the negotiations that had been entered into with the United States relative to this subject were happily terminated by the Americans agreeing to the conditions of reciprocity above mentioned 80 that the discriminating duties imposed upon the ships and goods under authority of the above-mentioned order in council are wholly repealed. Subjoined is the circular letter of the American government, and an extract from the British order in council, dated the 5th of November, 1830, relative to this new arrange- ment. Circular to the Collectors of Customs. Treasury Department, Oct. 6, 1830. SIE,-You will perceive by the proclamation of the president herewith transmitted, that from and after the date thereof, the act entituled "An Act concerning Navigation," passed on the 13th of April, 1818; an act supplementary therein, passed the 15th of May, 1820; and an act entituled "An Act to regulate the commercial Intercourse between the United States and certain Bsitish Ports," passed on the 1st of March, 1823, are absolutely repealed; and the ports of the United States are open to British vessels and their cargoes, soming from the British colonial posocasions in the West Indies, on the conti- nont of South America, the Bahama Islands, the Caicos, and the Bermuda or Somer Islands; also from the islands, provinces, or colonies of Great Britain on or near the North American continent, and north or east of the United States. By virtue of the authority of this preclamation, and in conformity with the arrangement made between the United States and Great Britain, and under the sanction of the president, you are instructed to admit to entry such vessels being laden with the productions of Great Britain or her said colonies, subject to the same duties of tonmage and impost, and other charges, as are levied on the vessels of the United States, or their cargoes arriving from the said British colo- nies: you will also grant clearances to British vessels for the several ports of the aforesaid colonial possessions of Great Britain, such vessels being laden with such articles as may be exported from the United States in vessels of the United States; and British vessels coming from the said cetonial pos- sessions may also be cleared for foreign ports and places other than those in the said British colonial possessions, being laden with such articles as may be exported from the United States in vessels of the United States. I am, &c. (Signed) S. D. INGHAM, Secretary to the Treasury. Extract from the British Order in Council, dated the 5th of November, 1830, relative to the Trade between the United States and the British West Indies. " Whereas it hath been made to appear to his Majesty in council, that the restrictions heretofore imposed by the laws of the United States upon British vessels navigated between the said States and his Majesty's possessions in the West Indies and America, have been repealed; and that the dis- criminating duties of tonnage and of customs heretofore imposed by the laws of the said United States upon British vessels and their cargoes entering the ports of the said States from his Majesty's said possessions, have also been repealed, and that the ports of the United States are now open to British vessels and their cargoes coming from his Majesty's possessions aforesaid. His Majesty doth, there- fore, with the advice of his privy council, and in pursuance and exercise of the powers so vested in him by the act passed in the sixth year of the reign of his said late Majesty, or by any other act er acts of parliament, declare that the said recited orders in council of the 21st of July, 1823, and of the 27th of July, 1826, and the said order in council of the 16th of July, 1827 (so far as such last-mentioned order relates to the said United States), shall be, and the same are hereby respectively revoked. "And his Majesty doth further, by the advice aforesaid, and in pursuance of the powers aforesaid, declare that the ships of and belonging to the said United States of America may import from the United States aforesaid into the British possessions abroad, goods the produce of those States, and may export goods from the British possessions abroad, to be carried to any country whatever." Connection of the Planter and Home Merchant. Mode of transacting Business in England.-The mode of transacting West India business is as follows :-A sugar planter forms a connection with a mercantile house in London, Bristol, Liverpool, or Glasgow stipulates for an advance of money on their part; grants them a mortgage on his estate; and binds himself to send them annually his crop, allowing them the full rate of mercantile commissions. These commissions are 21 per cent. on the amount of sugar sold, and of plantation stores sent out; along with to per cent. on all insurances effected. During the war, when prices were high, the amount of those commissions was large; but, like other high charges, the result has, in nine cases in ten, been to the injury of those who received them they led the merchants to undertake too much, and to make too large advances to the planters, for the sake of obtaining their business. At that time it was usual to allow a permanent loan at the rate of 3,000L for the assured consignment of 100 hogsheads of Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 435 sugar; but that ratio was very often exceeded by the planter, the 3,000L becoming 4,000l., 5,000l., 6,000L, and, in very many cases, still more, in consequence of unforeseen wants and too sanguine calculations on his part. Persons resident in the West Indies are almost always bare of capital, and for obvious reasons. A climate of such extreme heat, and a state of society possessing 80 few attrac- tions to persons of education, offer no inducements to men of substance in Europe to go thither. Those who do go, must trust to their personal exertion and the support of others; and when, after a continued residence in the West Indies, they have made some progress in acquiring a competency, and have become accustomed to the climate, they hardly ever con- sider themselves as settled there for life; their wish and hope is to carry their acquisitions so far as to be enabled to pass the remainder of their days comfortably at home. The readiest means, in the view of the planter, of accomplishing this, is the extension of his undertakings; which he can do only by borrowing money. Hence a continued demand on his mercantile correspondents at home for fresh advances: the consuming effect of heavy commissions, and of the interest on borrowed money, is, or rather was, overlooked in his ardent speculations. But when prices unfortunately fall, he finds himself 10,000/. or 20,000L in debt, with a reduced income. The merchants at home become equally embarrassed, be- cause the case of one is the case of three fourths of their correspondents; and the capital of the merchants, large as it may be, is absorbed and placed beyond their control. The mortgages they hold are of value only in an ultimate sense to foreclose them, and to take possession of the estates, is, in general, a very hazardous course. Such has been for a mumber of years the state of our West India trade. Perhaps it is impossible to point out any means of effectual relief: our planters must not build expecta- tions on such doubtful, or rather improbable, events as the stoppage of distillation from malt, or an insurrection of the negroes in rival countries, such as Cuba or Brazil. Of a bounty on exportation it is idle to speak: so that their only rational and substantial ground of hope seems to be in a further reduction of the duties on sugar, coffee, and rum; and an abolition of the duties on imports, and of the restrictions laid on their trade with America and other countries. The sale of West India articles takes place through the medium of produce brokers, who in London reside chiefly in Mincing Lane and Tower Street. Samples of sugar and rum are on show in their respective sale rooms during four days of the week, viz. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, from 11 to 1 o'clock; during which time the sugar refiners, wholesale grocers, and other dealers in produce, call in, observe the state of the market, and buy what they require. The term of credit is short; only 1 month for coffee and rum, and 2 months for sugar. Coffee is generally sold by public auction, sugar and rum by private contract. The broker's commission is usually t per cent. on the amount but in the case of coffee, as they guarantee the buyers, their charge amounts to 1 per cent. The brokers have no correspondence or connection with the planters; they are em- ployed by the merchants; and their sales, though for large amounts, being very simple, a brokerage house of consequence generally does the business of a number of merchants. Neither merchants nor brokers see, or are in the least under the necessity of seeing, the bulky packages containing the different articles of produce of which they effect the sales all is done by sample the packages remaining in the bonded warehouse from the time of landing till they are sold after which they pass to the premises of the refiner, wholesale grocer, or whoever may be the purchaser. The allowances made to the buyer in respect of weight, consist, first, of the tare, which is the exact weight of the cask and, in the second place, of a fixed allowance of 5 lbs. per cask in the case of coffee, called trett, and of 2 lbs. per cask on sugar, under the name of draft-(See Account Sales of both, in p. 208.) The shipping of stores from England to the plantations is also a very simple transaction. West India merchants in London, Liverpool, or Bristol, receive from the planters, in the autumn of each year, a list of the articles required for the respective estates: these lists they divide, arrange, and distribute among different wholesale dealers in the course of Sep- tember and October, with instructions to get them ready to ship in a few weeks. November and December are the chief months for the despatch of outward-bound West Indiamen, as the plantation stores ought, by rights, to arrive about the end of December, or in the course of January. That is a season of activity, and generally of health, in the West Indies the comparatively cool months of November and December having cleared the air, and the pro- duce of the fields having become ripe and ready to carry. Crop time lasts from January to the end of July, after which the heavy rains put a stop to field work in the islands. Demerara, being so near the line, experiences less difference in the seasons, and it is cus- tomary there to continue making sugar all the year round. The arrivals of West Indiamen in England with homeward cargoes begin in April and continue till October ; after which, with the exception of occasional vessels from Demerara and Berbice, they cease till the succeeding April. This corresponds with the time of car- rying and leading the crops: for it would be quite unadvisable, on the score of health, as Digitized by Google 436 COLONIES AND well as of the interruptions to work from the heavy rains, to attempt loading vessels in the sugar islands during the autumnal months. The unloading of West Indiamen in London usually takes place at the West India docks; and did 80 uniformly from the autumn of 1802, when the docks were first opened, till Au- gust, 1823, when the dock monopoly expired. The delays in discharging, occasionally complained of during the war, arose from two causes from the vessels arriving in fleets (in consequence of sailing with convoy,) and from the imperfections inseparable from a new establishment. The latter have been long remedied and as to the former, though at parti- cular seasons, and after a change of wind, the vessels still come close on each other, the crowd- ing in the docks is by no means to be compared to that arising from the arrival of a convoy. Cargoes are discharged very speedily, the time seldom exceeding 3 days. The dock dues have also been materially reduced since the peace and the whole exhibits a striking ex- ample of the advantage attendant on transacting a mass of business on one spot an ad- vantage which can be enjoyed only in great sea-ports, such as London, Liverpool, or Amster- dam.-(See Docks.) The rates of freight during the war were, on sugar from 7s. to 8s. per cwt., and on coffee from 10s. to 11s. whereas they now amount, the former to 4s. and 4s. 6d., and the latter to 6s. The ship owners complain that these freights leave them very little profit; but in con- sequence of the speed with which vessels may now be unloaded and cleared at London, it is probable that the practice of making two voyages in the season will become general. Disposal of Land in the Colonies.-The chief cause of the rapid advancement of all colonies placed in rude and thinly peopled countries, has been the facility with which they have obtained supplies of fertile and unoccupied land. Were the inhabitants of a colony SO situated, that instead of resorting to new land to obtain increased supplies of food, they were obliged to improve the land already in cultivation, their progress would be compara- tively slow, and they would approach to the condition of an old country and the greater the concentration of the inhabitants, the nearer, of course, would be their approach to that state. On the other hand, several inconveniences result from allowing the colonists to spread themselves at pleasure over unoccupied districts. The inhabitants become too much dispersed to be able to lend sufficient assistance to each other; a large extent of roads is necessary, and their construction is a task too great for so thin a population. But the greatest injury that can be done to a colony is the making of gratuitous grants of large tracts of land to corporations or individuals, without laying upon them any obligations as to their occupation, or obliging them to contribute their share of the expenses necessary on account of public improvements. Wherever such an unwise policy has been pursued, as in Lower Canada for example, the consequences have been most injurious. The occur- rence of the unoccupied districts obliges the settlers to establish themselves at inconvenient distances from each other ; it prevents, by the want of roads, their easy communication and retards, in a degree not easy to be imagined, the advancement of the district. The in- conveniences resulting from these grants are, indeed, obvious. They have been loudly complained of by the colonists, and are now almost universally admitted. It is not difficult to discover the principle of the measures that ought to be adopted with respect to the disposal of unoccupied colonial land. They should be so contrived as to prevent too great a diffusion of the colonists, without, however, occasioning their too great concentration. And it is plain, that these advantages may be realised by selling all lands at a moderate price, or by imposing upon them a moderate quit-rent. If the price or quit- rent were very high, it would, of course, occasion too great a concentration, and be an insu- perable obstacle to the rapid progress of the colony ; while, if it were too low, it would not obviate the inconvenience of too great dispersion. The fixing of the price at which land should be sold is, therefore, the only really difficult point to be decided upon. The Ameri- cans sell their public lands at 2 dollars an acre; and this is, perhaps, all things considered, as proper a sum as could be selected. Until very recently we did not follow any fixed plan in the disposal of colonial lands, which have in many instances been bestowed in the most improvident manner. But a dif- ferent system has been adopted, and lands in the colonies are no longer obtainable except by purchase. We, however, are not without apprehensions that considerable inconvenience will result from the proposed plan of selling land by auction. It is easy, no doubt, to fix a minimum upset price; but the market price must entirely depend on the quantity put up for sale, compared with the number and means of the buyers. And, as the regulation of this quantity must necessarily be left to the local authorities, they will, in fact, have the power of fixing the price. A system of this sort can hardly fail of leading to very great abuses and will give rise to perpetual complaints, even when they are not deserved, of partiality and preference. The best way, as it appears to us, would be to order competent persons to fix certain prices upon all the lands to be located, according to the various cir- cumstances for and against them and to grant specified portions of such lands to all who claim them, according to the amount of capital they proposed to employ in their cultivation. We do not, however, think that the maximum price ought in any case to exceed 12s. or 15a. Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 499 an acre: a price of this magnitude would secure a sufficient degree of concentration, with- out carrying the principle so far as to make it injurious." Disposal of Land in Canada-The following advertisement, dated at the office of the Commissioner of Crown Lands, York, Upper Canada, 27th of May, 1833, explains the terms on which lands are in future to be granted in that province:- In conformity to instructions recently received from his Majesty's secretary of state for the colonies, the following arrangements for disposing of the waste lands of the crown in Upper Canada, are made known for the information of emigrants and others. Except in the case of U. E. Loyalists, and other persons entitled by the existing regulations of the government to free grants, no person can obtain any of the waste lands of the crown otherwise than by purchasing at the public sales, made from time to time under the direction of the commissioner of crown lands. These sales will be made on the 1st and 3d Tuesday of each month, and will either be continued through the following day, or not, as circumstances may appear to the agent to require. Besides these general periodical sales, there may be occasional sales by auction in other districts, of such town lots, or other lots of land, as may remain to be disposed of; and of these sales ample notice will be given. The conditions of every sale by public auction will be as follows:-One fourth of the purchase mo- mey to be paid down; and the remainder in 3 equal annual instalments, with interest at per cent. on each instalment, payable with the instalment. The lands will be put up at an upset price, of which notice will be given at the time of sale, and in the previous advertisements which will be published of the lands intended to be put up at each sale: and in case no offer shall be made at the upset price, the land will be reserved for future sale, in a similar manner, by auction. A patent for the lands will be issued free of charge, upon the payment in full of the purchase money and interest. The commissioner for crown lands, acting also as agent for the sale of clergy reserves, requests it to be noticed, that such clergy reserves as have not been hitherto occupied by authority, or leased by the government, will be disposed of, by public auction only, either at the periodical sales of crown lands, or at occasional sales, to be duly advertised, and that the terms of payment for clergy reserves will continue to be as follows :-10 per cent. to be paid at the time of sale, and the remainder in 9 an- nual instalments of 10 per cent. each, with interest on each instalment, to be paid with the instal- ment. Such clergy reserves as have been leased, or occupied by the authority of the government, must be applied for by letter to the commissioner of crown lands, and when disposed of, will be sold by private sale on the same terms of payment as those disposed of by public auction. Terms upon which the Crown Lands will be disposed of in New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land. It has been determined by his Majesty's government that no land shall, in future, be disposed of in New South Wales or Van Diemen's Land otherwise than by public sale, and it has therefore been deemed expedient to prepare for the information of settlers the following summary of the rules which it has been thought fit to lay down for regulating the sales of land in those colonies 1. A division of the whole territory into counties, hundreds, and parishes, is in progress. When that division shall be completed, each parish will comprise an area of about 25 square miles. 2. All the lands in the colony, not hitherto granted, and not appropriated for public purposes, will be put up to sale. The price will of course depend upon the quality of the land, and its local situation but no land will be sold below the rate of 5a. per acre. 3. An persons proposing to purchase lands not advertised for sale, must transmit a written applica- tion to the governor, in a certain prescribed form, which will be delivered at the Surveyor General's Office to all persons applying, on payment of the requisite fee of 2s. 6d. 4. Those persons who are desirous of purchasing, will be allowed to select, with certain defined limits, such portions of land as they may wish to acquire in that manner. These portions of land will be advertised for sale for 3 calendar months, and will then be sold to the highest bidder, provided that such bidding shall at least amount to the price fixed by Article 2. 5. A deposit of 10 per cent. upon the whole value of the purchase must be paid down at the time of sale, and the remainder must be paid within 1 calendar month from the day of sale, previous to which the purchaser will not be put in possession of the land: and in case of payment not being made within the prescribed period, the sale will be considered void, and the deposit forfeited. 6. On payment of the money, a grant will be made in fee-simple to the purchaser at the nominal quit-rent of a pepper-corn. Previous to the delivery of such grant, a fee of 40s. will be payable to the colonial secretary, for preparing the grant, and another fee of 5a. to the registrar of the Supreme Court, for enrolling it. 7. The land will generally be put up to sale in lots of 1 square mile, or 640 acres but smaller lots than 640 acres may, under particular circumstances, be purchased, on making application to the governor in writing, with full explanations of the reasons for which the parties wish to purchase a smaller quantity. 8. The crown reserves to itself the right of making and constructing such roads and bridges as may be necessary for public purposes in all land purchased as above and also to such indigenous timber, stone, and other materials, the produce of the land, as may be required for making and keeping the said roads and bridges in repair, and for any other public works. The crown further reserves to itself all mines of precious metals. Colonial Office, 20th of January, 1831. Selection of Sites for Colonial Establishments.-Nothing can be more unwise than the plan, if so we may call it, hitherto followed in the selection of places at which to found colonies. The captain of a ship, without any knowledge whatever of the nature of soils, or the capacities of a country in an agricultural point of view, falls in after a long cruise with a river or bay, abounding with fish and fresh water, and surrounded with land that * The injurious consequences resulting from the late system of granting lands in the colonies have been very forcibly pointed out by Mr. Gouger, Mr. Tennant, and others ; but the degree of concentration they recommend would be ten times more injurious. 2 0 2 Digitized by Google 438 COLONIES AND looks fertile, and is covered with herbage. He forthwith reports all these circumstances, duly embellished, to the Admiralty, strongly recommending the situation as an admirable one at which to found a colony ; and in nine cases out of ten this is all the information that is required in taking a step of such infinite importance! No wonder, therefore, that, many fine schemes of colonisation should have ended only in loss and disappointment; and that situations which the colonists were taught to look upon as a species of paradise, have proved to be any thing but what they were represented. Botany Bay, though described by Captain Cook as one of the finest places in the world, had to be abandoned by the colonists that were sent out to it; as the country round it, instead of being favourable for cultivation, is a mere sandy swamp. Is it possible to suppose, had the proper inquiries been entered into, that any attempt would have been made to establish a colony in 50 pestilential a climate as that of Sierra Leone ? The colony in the district of Albany, in the Cape of Good Hope, was founded upon the representations of an individual, who, whatever might be his informa- tion in other respects, had not the slightest knowledge of agriculture; and the distresses the settlers have had to encounter were the natural consequences of their relying on such au- thority. The late establishment at Swan River may be adduced as another instance of mis- placed or premature confidence in the reports of those who were really without the means of forming a correct estimate of the various circumstances necessary to be attended to in forming a colony. We do, therefore, hope that an end will be put to this system,-a system which is in no common degree injurious to the public interests, and is highly criminal towards those who embark as colonists. The founding of a colony ought to be looked upon in its true point of view-as a great national enterprise. It is not an adventure to be intrusted to presump- tuous ignorance but should be maturely weighed, and every circumstance connected with it carefully investigated. Above all, the situation in which it is proposed to found the colony should be minutely surveyed: and its climate, soil, and capacities of production, deliberately inquired into by competent persons employed for the purpose. Were this done, govern- ment and the public would have the best attainable grounds upon which to proceed; and neither party would have much reason to fear those disappointments, which have hitherto so often followed the exaggerated representations of those to whom the important and difficult task of selecting situations for colonies has been delegated. V. FOREIGN COLONIES. 1. Spanish Colonies.-Spain, whose colonial possessions extended a few years ago from the frontiers of the United States to the Straits of Magellan, is not, at present, possessed of a foot of ground in the whole American continent. Still, however, her colonial posses- sions are of great value and importance. In the West Indies, she is mistress of Cuba and Porto Rico;-the former by far the largest and finest of the West India islands; and the latter also a very valuable possession. In the East, Spain is mistress of the Philippine Islands, which, were they in the hands of an enterprising people, would speedily become of very great commercial importance.-(See the articles HAVANNA, MANILLA, PoBTo Rico.) 2. Dutch Colonies.-Java forms the most important and valuable of the Dutch colonial possessions.-(See BATAVIA.) In the East they also possess the Moluccas, Bencoolen on the coast of Sumatra, Macassar, and the eastern coast of Celebes, Banda, &c. They have several forts on the Gold Coast in Africa; and.in the West Indies they possess the islands of Curaçoa and St. Eustatius, Saba, and part of St. Martin; and on the continent of South America, they are masters of Dutch Surinam. Curaçoa and St. Eustatius are naturally barren, but they have been both highly improved. From its being very conveniently situated for maintaining a contraband traffic with the Caraccas and other districts in South America, Curaçoa was formerly a place of great trade, particularly during war. But since the independence of South America, Curaçoa has ceased in a great measure to be an entre- pôt; the goods destined for the Continent being now, for the most part, forwarded direct to the places of their destination. That district of Surinam ceded to the British in 1814, comprising the settlements of Demerara, Berbice, and Essequibo (see antè, p. 421.), formed the most valuable portion of Surinam, or Dutch Guiana. The district which still belongs to the Dutch lies to the south of Berbice. It contains about 25,000 square miles, and a population of about 60,000. It is daily becoming of more value and importance. 3. French Colonies.Previously to the negro insurrection that broke out in 1792, St. Domingo was by far the most valuable colony in the West Indies. But this disastrous event, having first devastated the island, terminated in the establishment of the independent black republic of Hayti-(See PORT AU PRINCE.) Having also sold Louisiana to the Americans, and ceded the Mauritius to the English, without making any new acquisitions, the colonial dominions of France are, at this moment, of very limited extent. They consist of Guadeloupe and Martinique, and the small islands of Marie-Galante and Deseada, in the West Indies; Cayenne, in South America; Senegal and Goree, in Africa; the Isle de Digitized by Google COLONY TRADE. 439 Bourbon, in the Eastern Ocean St. Marie, in Madagascar; and Pondicherry and Chander- nagor, with a very small surrounding territory, in the East Indies. The tabular statements annexed show the population, trade, &c. of the French colonies. Table of the Population of the French Colonies, and of their Commerce with France.-(Montoéran, Essai de Statistique sur les Colonies, Pièces Justificatives, No. 5.) Commerce with Population in 1829, or according France. Navigation. Cod of the French to the last Census. Fisheries. Colonies. Real Value, 1831. Entered. Cleared out. People ofColour Imports Exports Ton- Total. into from Ships. Ships. Ton- Imported Official Whites. Free. Slaves. France. France. nage. nage. in 1831. Value. North America. No. No. No. No. Francs. Francs. No. No. No. No. Kilogr. Francs. Saint Pierre and Miquelon, 1831 861 - - 861 6,700,916 476,117 3 353 The Antilles. Martinique (Jan. 1. 1832) min 9,410 18,832 80,753 109,995 20,123,584 12,633,530 154 40,996 136 35,037 1,744,618 436,155 Guadeloupe (Jan. 1. 1831) 10,596 10,772 90,743 112,111 26,642,222 12,146,853 195 47,623 194 47,772 2,820,075 705,019 South America. Cayenne, (Jan. 1. 1832) } 1,291 2,220 19,173 22,684 2,442,158 1,736,792 29 4,458 23 4,056 131,157 32,789 Africa. Bourbon (Jan. 1. } 1830) 20,000 11,500 66,000 97,500 15,057,276 5,732,908 50 15,122 62 18,315 210,345 58,584 Senegal (1825) 240 3,573 12,297 16,110 3,445,087 3,095,818 29 3,058 25 2,706 Asia. French factories in India (1825) 1,021 107,986 1,194 110,201 3,723,270 753,235 4 1,145 5 1,241 Total 43,419 156,073 270,160 469,615 79,133,603 33,888,240 464 110,755 445 109,127 4,906,193 1,226,549 Able-bodied blacks of both sexes 194,141 individuals. Colonies for colonial produce :-Importations 64,265,250 francs. Old men, caildren, and sick 75,989 - Ditto Exportations 30,250,083 - Statement of the Products of the French Colonies imported into France, and entered for Consump- tion, and of the Duties charged on their Introduction, in 1831.-(Montotran, No. 6.) Colonies and Sugars of Cloves Wood of Custom Establishments. all Coffee. Cacao. Cotton. and Annotto. Indigo. Gum. Wax. Qualities. Spices. all Kinds. Duties. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Kilogr. Francs. Guadeloupe 36,579,836 968,480 9,042 28,892 61 - - - - 241,042 18,813,357 Martinique 27,049,000 379,044 157,110 5,117 24,318 - - - - 949,840 13,845,765 Bourbon 16,229,003 761,814 191 3,174 729 - 282 - - 31,995 7,092,305 Cayenne 1,432,075 42,426 22 169,520 18,112 82,122 - - - 68,729 851,408 Senegal - - - - 12,754 677,040 12,898 93,285 114,752 Factories in India 43,023 47,282 - 81,232 193,747 - - - - - 424,608 St. Pierre and Fish- - - - - - - - - - - eries of Miquelon 6,789 Total 81,332,937 2,199,646 168,345 268,935 236,967 82,122 13,036 677,040 12,898 1,384,889 41,148,984 Produce of the French colonies imported, but not entered for con- sumption, in 1831. 6,582,833 - - - - - - - - - 938,317 Total 87,915,770 2,199,646 168,345 268,935 236,967 82,122 13,036 677,040 12,898 1,384,889 42,087,301 Value in francs 52,749,462 1,649,286 116,442 175,148 2,369,670 164,244 130,360 947,856 25,796 346,222 58,674,486* N. B.-The kilogramme 22 lbs. avoirdupois. 4. Danish Colonies.-In the West Indies, these consist of the islands of St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John of these, St. Croix only is valuable. It is about 81 square miles in extent, and contains about 37,000 inhabitants, of whom 3,000 are whites, 1,200 free blacks and mulattoes, and the remainder slaves. The soil is fertile, and it is well cultivated. The principal productions are sugar, rum, and coffee. In India, the Danes possess Tran- quebar, near Madras; and Serampoor, near Calcutta. The former contained, in 1809, about 19,000 inhabitants; but it has greatly improved since the peace, both in commerce and population. Serampoor is a neat but not very considerable place. It serves as an asylum for the debtors of Calcutta, and is the capital station of the missionaries. The Danes have a few forts on the coast of Guinea. 5. Swedish Colonies-The Swedes only possess one colony-the small island of St. Bartholomew, in the West Indies. It is only about 25 square miles in extent, but is very fertile. It has no springs, nor fresh water of any sort, except such as is supplied by the rain. Population between 8,000 and 9,000. 4 Allowing for bounty on exports. Digitized by Google 440 COLONIES AND COLONY TRADE. (Statement of the Nett Expenditure incurred by Great Britain, on account of her several Military and Maritime Stations, Colonies, and Plantations, during 1883-34.- (Parl. Paper, No. 408. Bess. 1835.) Repayments Total Expenditure from Colonial Colonies, ac. Military Civil Naval Ex- for Military, Civil, Revenues, and Total Expenditure Expenditure. Expenditure. penditure. and Naval Surples Coo- incurred by Establishments. tome, and Post Great Britain. Office Collec- tions. Military and Maritime L 8. d. L a d. L & d. L. & d. L a d. L. a. d Stations. - Gibraltar 153,868 3 9 - 659 5 9 154,517 9 6 127 6 9 164,390 2 9 Malta 100,805 17 10 - 6,120 9 7 106,926 7 5 211 13 534 108,714 B 11 1-4 Cape of Good Hope 92,657 18 5 1,904 4 0 3,360 14 3 97,222 16 8 - 97,292 16 R Mauritius 116,389 12 2 685 6 0 117,074 18 2 - 117,074 18 2 Bermuda 69,338 10 29,464 15 = 1-4 13,296 19 6 112,099 17 1-4 - 112,009 17 3 Fernando Po 983 19 0 7,542 5 9 - 8,526 4 9 - 8,528 4 9 Ascension 1,417 11 10 - 9,754 2 9 11,171 14 7 - 11,171 14 7 Heligoland 500 0 0 362 19 5 - 862 19 6 - 862 19 6 Ionian Islands 97,690 17 4 - - 97,690 17 4 - 97,690 17 4 Plantations and Set- tiements. Jamaica Command Jamaica Bahamas 210,753 14 5 5,654 16 9 2,679 11 219,087 12 1 - 219,087 18 1 Honduras Windward and Leeward Islands Command Barbadoes Grenada St. Vincent Tobago Antigua Montservat St. Christopher's Nevis 409,612 0 5 5,980 19 8 458 0 0 416,000 19 7 - 423,725 0 10 Anguilla Virgin Islands a Dominica St. Lucia a Trinidad British Guiana a Lower Canada Upper Canada 254,778 14 0 5,898 10 114 2,577.10 0 268,249 14 114 - 265,249 14 114 Nova Scotla Command Nova Scotia New Brunswick Prince Edward's Is. 128,326 2 5 20,435 10 51-4 7,802 18 0 156,564 10 10 - 102,312 6 414 Newfoundland Sierra Leone Gambia 28,199 16 7 11,061 16 1 1,500 0 0 40,761 19 8 - 40,761 18 $ Cape Coast - 3,500 0 0 - 3,500 0 0 - 3,500 0 0 Ceylon 128,167 17 3 1,006 0 0 1,964 13 8 131,137 10 11 17,797 10 418 113,340 0 612 Western Australia 5,371 18 1 19,082 3 4 - 24,454 1 5 - 24,454 1 5 Penal Sattlements. New South Wales Van Dieman's Land } 98,321 3 2 311,418 7 5 3-4 406,739 10 734 $ 26,676 18 71-4 - 6,068 6 814 } 371,010 91-4 General charges 29,114 8 1 8,000 0 0 - 37,114 8 1 - 37,114 s 1 Totals 1,920,287 16 7 431,841 14 51.2 50,178 14 512,401,703 5 61-2 50,865 15 534 2,364,309 6 9 Note-In the above totals are comprehended, in addition to the specified expenditures, the following advances in aid of Colminal TEMP FILMS, to wit, L.848 6e. 8d. for Barbadoes, L.6875 14a. 7d. for British Guiana, and L.5,747 15a. 6d, for Nova Scotia, &c.-Sup.) [The only colonies which have been hitherto planted by the people of the United States are those classed together under the general name of Liberia, on the western coast of Africa. They present a remarkable, and indeed singular instance, of establishments of the kind hav- ing been formed, and conducted from their origin, with views of a purely disinterested and philanthropic character, viz. the facilitating of the gradual emancipation of the slaves in the United States, and the spreading of Christianity and civilization among the surrounding tribes of savage men. We extract the following account of " Liberia as it is" from the report of the Pennsylva- nia Colonization Society for 1838, 17 years after the first settlement was made under the auspices of the American Colonization Society. This account is given by Mr. Buchanan, who resided about a year in Africa, and who made himself familiar with the condition of all the settlements. Liberia extends from the St. Paul's river on the north-west to the Cavally river on the south-east, a distance of 300 miles along the coast. Its extent inland is from 10 to 40 miles. Four separate colonies are now included within its limits, viz. " Monrovia, established by the American Colonization Society, including the towns of Mon- rovia, New Georgia, Caldwell, Millsburgh, and Marshall. " Bassa Cove, established by the United Colonization Societies of New York and Pennsyl- vania. This colony includes Bassa Cove and Edina. The latter village was founded by the American Colonization Society, and lately ceded to the United Societies. " Greenville, established by the Mississippi Colonization Society at Sinou. " Maryland, established by the Maryland Colonization Society at Cape Palmas. " In the nine villages enumerated above, there is a population of about 5,000-all of course coloured persons, of which 3,500 are emigrants from this country, and the remainder natives of Africa. " The commerce of the colonies, though in its infancy, is already extensive. From $80,000 Digitized by Google COLUMBO. 441 to $125,000 is exported annually, in camwood, ivory, palm oil, and hides and an equal or greater amount of the manufactures and productions of Europe and America are brought into the colonies in return. Monrovia, which is the largest town and principal seaport, car- ries on a considerable coasting trade by means of small vessels built and owned by her own citizens. Not less than 12 or 15 of these, averaging from 10 to 30 tons burden, manned and navigated by the colonists, are constantly engaged in a profitable trade along 700 miles of the coast. " The harbour of Monrovia is seldom clear of foreign vessels; more than 70 of which, from the United States, England, France, Sweden, Portugal, and Denmark, touch there annually. " Bassa Cove and Cape Palmas have both good harbours, and possess great advantages for commerce. Already their waters are gladdened by the frequent presence of traders from other countries, and in a few years, when the hand of enterprise shall have developed the rich mines of wealth which nature has so abundantly provided there, these growing towns will become the centres of an extensive and important business. 'Sinou, too, possesses an excellent harbour, and is the natural outlet of a vast tract of rich and productive country. Under the fostering hand of its enterprising founders it must soon become an important link in the great maritime chain of Americo-African establishments. The productions of the country, which may be raised in any quantity for exportation, are coffee, cotton, sugar, rice, indigo, palm oil, together with the gums, dye-woods, ivory, &c., which are collected from the forests." The fact may be mentioned that a regular packet has commenced plying between Liberia and the port of Philadelphia.-Am. Ed.] COLUMBO, the modern capital of Ceylon, situated on the southwest coast of the island, lat. 6° 55' N., lon. 79° 45' E.* It is defended by a very strong fort, nearly surrounded by the sea, in which is a light-house 97 feet high. In 1816, the population of the town and fort was 24,664; and in 1831, 26,357.-( Columbo Journal, 17th of October, 1832.) The houses are generally only one story high; they are of stone, clay, and lime; and the town has more of a European appearance than any other in India. The inhabitants are principally Cingalese. In 1821, there were only 32 Europeans in the place qualified to serve on juries. The temperature of the air is remarkable for its equality; and though very humid, the climate may, on the whole, be esteemed salubrious and temperate. There is no harbour at Columbo for large vessels, but only an open roadstead. A projecting rock, on which two batteries are erected, affords shelter to a small semicircular bay on the north side of the fort, having a wooden quay to facilitate the loading and unloading of boats. The depth of water is not sufficient to allow sloops or large dhonies to come alongside the quay those exceeding 100 tons burden lying at about a cable's length from it. A bar of sand, on some parts of which the water is not more than 7 feet deep, extends from the projecting rock across this bay. The channel where it may be crossed by the larger class of ships is liable to shift; and it is only in the fine weather of the safe season that they venture to go within the bar. The outer road affords secure anchorage for half the year, from the beginning of October to the end of March, during the prevalence of the N. E. monsoon, when the wind blows off the land: during the other, or S. W. monsoon, when the wind blows from the sea on shore, the road is very far from safe; and the ships that frequent it are sometimes obliged to slip their cables and stand out to sea.-(Milburn's Orient. Comm.; Hamilton's Gazet., &c.) As respects its harbour, Columbo is, therefore, very inferior to Trincomalee, the harbour of which is accessible at all times, and is one of the best in India but the country in the vicinity of Columbo is more fertile; and it has the command of an internal navigation, stretching in a lateral direction along the coast, from Putlam, to the north of the city, to Caltura on the south, a distance of about 100 miles, partly obtained by rivers, and partly by canals. Many flat-bottomed boats are employed in this navigation, the families dependent on which reside mostly on board. Nearly all the foreign trade of Ceylon is carried on from Columbo; and it has also a large proportion of the coasting traffic. Moneys.-The rixdollar - 1s. 6d.; but accounts are kept in pounds, shillings, and pence, as in Eng- land. Weights, Measures, &c.-The weights are divided into ounces, pounds, &c., and are the same as in Great Britain. The candy or bahar = 500 lbs. avoirdupois, or 461 lbs. Dutch Troy weight. The prin- cipal dry measures are scers or parrahs. The former is a perfect cylinder, of the depth and diameter undermentioned :- Depth. Diameter. Seer - - - - 4.35 inches. 4.35 inches. The parrah is a perfect cube, its internal dimensions being every way 11.57 inches. The liquid measure consists of gallons, and their multiples and sub-multiples. 150 gallons - 1 leaguer or legger. The bale of cinnamon consists of 924 lbs. very nearly. * This is the position as given by Hamilton. According to Mr. Steuart, master attendant of the port, it is in lat. 6° 57' N., lon. 79° 52' E. 56 Digitized by Google 442 COLUMBO. Rates of pilotage payable by all Square-rigged Vemole, Sloops, or Fore on Port Clearances payable by Merchant Ships and Venells, Schooners. at the Ports of Columbo, Trincomalee, and Galle. from the 1st Day of October, 1826. Square-riezed vemels, sloops, or schooners via. Lid Led Of 600 tons or upwards 800 Columbo 0150 400 and under 600 10 0 200 - 400 -400 For Back For the Inner 100 - 200 15 0 Bay. Harbour. under 100 10 Trincomalee- L.i.d. Led Dhonies; vis. Vessels of 600 tone and upwards 200 400 or 30 garee and upwards 400 and under 600 10 0 300 25 garce and under 30 !!!! 200 - 400 0 2 8 0 20 - 25 is 6 100 - 200 10 6 110 15 - 99 0 under 100 060 0150 10 - 15 17 6 5 - 10 170 Galle- under 5 15 0 Vessels of 600 toas 300 Exceptions-Manar and Jaffna dhonies, when passing from part 400 and under 600 250 to port within the districts they belong to, or from Manar to Jaffan 900 - 400 10 0 Kaits or Point Pedro, or vice versa, to pay half of the above rates. 100 - 200 126 Boats, vessels, or dhonies, certified to belong to any port of Coyica, under 100 15 0 being under the 5 garce or 1,000 parrabs burden, are to pay as fai- lows L.ad The above rates of pilotage will be charged to all vessels going in- Under 50 parrahs, 000 to the inner harbour of Trincomales and the harbour of Galle, who 50 and under 200 parrabs, or I garee 030 ther they make a signal for pilot or not. In Columbo and Back 1 garce and under 2 garee -060 Bay, at Trincomalee, the charge will only be made, if the vemel 2 - 3 070 make signal, and a pilot actually repair on beard. 3 - 4 10 0 4 - 5 0120 Sailing Directions and Remarks on the Port of Columbo, by James Steuart, Esq. Master Attendant. The land about Columbo is low near the sea, with some bills to ward of the anchorage in Columbo mad, as scareely to form any the castward at a distance in the country. The high mountain impediment to ships bound to or from Columbo. having on it a sharp cone, called Adam's Peak, bears from Columbo The currents off Columbo are subject to considerable variation E. 7 S., distant 12 1-2 leagues; its beight above the level of the sea but they are never so strong as to cause inconvenience to ships, which is estimated at about 7,000 feet, according to a rough trigonometrical may have to communicate with the shore in either mossosa with measurement by Colonel Willerman. When the atmosphere is out coming to anchor. clear, it may be seen 30 leagues. During the prevalence of the N.E. Columbo road affords good anchorage, free from foal ground and monsoon, Adam's Peak is generally visible in the morning, and fre- is frequented at all seasons of the year. quently the whole of the day; but it is rarely seen in the S. W. The best anchorage during the prevalence of S. W. winds from monsoon, dense vapours generally prevailing over the island at this April to October, is in from 7 to 8 fathoms, with the light-house season. bearing S. by E 1-8 B., Dutch charch E. by 3. In the N.E. mon- Ships approaching Columbo in the night have a brilliant light to soon from November to April, it is more convenient to anchor - direct them, which is exhibited every night from a light-house in the 6 1-2 fathoms, with the light-house bearing S. or S. 1-2E, and the fort; the height of the light above the level of the sea is 97 feet, and Dutch church R S. B. may be seen in clear weather as far as the light appears above the Ships requiring pilots to conduct them to the anchorage should horizon. make the usual signal the charge for pilotage is 16a. A steep bank of coral, about half a mile broad, with 15 fathoms The bar is a bank of sand with 7 feet water on its shallowest part, water on It, lies 7 miles W. from Columbo, extending northward to- the morthern extremity being about 400 yards N. W. of the Custom- wards Negombo (where its surface is sand), and a few miles to the house Point small vemels that draw less than 10 feet water, ride southward of Columbo outside the bank the water deepens at once within the bar protected from the S. W. wind and sea. to 23 fathoms, and in 2 miles to 28 fathoms, greenish sand, which is When the sea is high, it breaks with great force on the bar, and not far from the edge of soundings. Within the bank there are 25 renders the passage from the shipping in the outer road dangurous fathoms gradually shoaling towards the abore. for small boats: the native boats generally pass out and in to the A bed of sunken rocks, called the Drunken Sailor, lies S. W. by southward of the bar, close to the breakers on the rocky point of the W. 1-2 W. from Columbo Light-house, distant 1,000 yards. The Custom-house but as the passage is narrow, it should not be at- length of the ledge may be estimated at 100 yards, and the breadth tempted by strangers when the son breaks on the bar, it is better to 20 yards; on its N. end a small spot, about the size of the bull of a proceed round to the northward of the bar, which may be easily - 90 ton boat, is raid to have only 3 feet water on it at low water; but tinguished by the breakers. during several recent visits, when some of the coral from its sur- What is strictly understood by a gale of wind, is a rare occurrence face was brought up, there did not appear to be less than 7 feet at Columbo: this may be owing to the vicinity of the equator. The 6 inches water on the shallowest part: on the other parts of the strong gales which blow on the Malabar coast are falt in small ledge there is 4, 5, and 6 fathoms. The sea breaks on the shallow equalls, and a high sea, but there is scarcely wind to endanger versels part of these rocks almost constantly during the S. W. monsoon, but properly found in ground tackling it is true, ships have sometimes this is very seldom the case during the N. E. monsoon. required the aid of a second anchor, but in most cases the cause has There appears to be no doubt, that the Drunken Sailor is granite, been attributable to some defect in the first anchor or cable, a Light or stone of the same description as the rocks on the shore, with its anchor, an anchor breaking. a short chain, or the chain coming - surface incrustated with coral if there ever was so little water M shackled: as instance occurred in Columbo road, of two ships 3 feet on it, it may be supposed to be sinking. receiving cargo during the & W. monsoon, whose chain cables came The Drunken Sailor should not be approached under 9 fathoms unshackled twice; twice did it occur to each ship. during the night, as there are 8 fathoms very near to it, and in its On the 2d of June, 1831, the Hector drove in a equall; having stream to the southward. about 80 fathoms of chain ahead, they let go the second anchor; but In the N. E. mossoon 1896, the E. I. Company's brig of war finding the ship did not immediately bring up, they made will and Thetis touched on the Drunken Sailor, having stood too close to the shipped their cables: this ship stood out of the roads under double- land in beating up to the anchorage from the southward; but with rected fore and mixen top-sails, and from its size, a single received common attention to the depth of water approaching the rock, it may main top-sail, foresail, fore and main trynsilsand driver, and returned be easily avoided. to anchorage on the 4th. Instances of ships putting to sea are rare, and The passage within the Drunken Sailor is clear, and some ships when it is considered that although the is high, the wind is not have sailed through but no advantage can be gained by approach- violent and as at these times the rain having fallen in the interior, ing the shore 80 very near at this point. strong freshes escape to the 3. W., from the Kalany Ganga; it is by The Drunken Sailor lies so near the land, and so far to the south- no means surprising that Columbo road proves a safe auchorage. Trade and Vavigation of Ceylon.-The quantity and estimated value of the principal articles exported from Ceylon in 1830, beginning with cinnamon, the most important of all, were as follow: viz. Cinnamon 380,000 lbs., value 142,500l.; arrack 739,472 gallons, value 24,6001. coir, and coir ropes and cables, 1,499,453 lbs., value 5,4331.; cocoa nuts 2,842,495, value 2,5281.; cocoa nut oil 118,511 gal- lons, value 8,9921.; chanks and chank rings 822,833 pieces, value 3,0891.; plumbago 50,629 lbe., value 1801.; jaggery 292,283 lbs., value 3,6001. coffee 1,669,490 lbs., value 12,2321.; areca nuts 3,348,972 lbs., value 12,0641.; tobaeco and sherroots 1,095,673 lbs., value 4,8961 The destination and total value of the exports from Ceylon in 1830, were, to Great Britain, 168,576 lbs. to British colonies, Including India, 80,6751.; to foreign states, 1,5361.; being, in all, 250,7871.; but to this has to be added, for the value of the pearl fishery in 1830, 24,0231.; making an aggregate sum of 274,8101. Of the imports, the principal are rice and other grain, the estimated value of the quantity imported in 1830 being 141,7612.; the next article of importance is cotton cloth, mostly brought from India, esti- mated at 123,759. The imports from Great Britain are very trifling their entire value in 1830 being only estimated at 40,7771. The total imports during that year amounted to 349,5811.; of which 274,576L. were from British colonies, including India and China.* The number and tonnage of the ships entering Ceylon inwards in 1830 were as follow From Great Britain. From British Colonies and From Foreign States. Total. India. Ships, Tona. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tone. Ships. Tome. 11 3,911 878 60,157 ₹ 169 12,962 1,058 77,030+ * Dr. Colquhoun (2d ed. p. 412.) estimated the exports of Ceylon at 1,500,000Γ. a year, and the imports at 1,000,000/.1 Perhaps a third of the Doctor's estimates are about equally near the mark. t No accurate returns of the trade of Ceylon for 1831 have as yet (10th of October, 1833) been Digitized by Google COLUMBO ROOT, COMBS. 443 Extent, Population, Revenue, &c. of Ceylon-The area of Ceylon has been computed at 24,664 square miles. Its population has been much exaggerated; having frequently been estimated as high as 2,000,000, and even Mr. Bertolacci reckoned it at 1,500,000.-(View of Ceylon, p. 65.) But it was found by an actual enumeration taken in 1831, that the total population did not exceed 950,000, of which about 6,600 were whites. It appears from the official accounts laid before the Finance Committee in 1825, that during the 14 years ending with 1824, the excess of expenditure over revenue in the island amounted to 1,365,452L, at the same time that various heavy items of expense are not included in this account. But according to a statement in the Ceylon Almanac for 1833, which seems to proceed from authority, there was, during the 3 years ending with 1831, an aggregate surplus of revenue over expenditure of 174,828/. We may, however, observe that the accounts laid before the Finance Committee differ very widely for the period to which they apply, from those in the Ceylon Almanac; so much so, that while, according to the former, there was, in 1822, an excess of expenditure over revenue of 55,396l., there was, according to the latter, an excess of revenue over expenditure of 15,323!.! Of course, we do not pre- sume to say which of these accounts is most to be relied upon. Probably our readers will be inclined to think that neither is entitled to implicit credit. A part, at least, of the former excess of expenditure may fairly be ascribed to the nature of the establishment kept up in the island; which, in point of magnitude and éxpensiveness, seems to have been a good deal beyond what was really required. We are, however, dis- posed to believe that the greater part of the excess is to be ascribed to the poverty and back- ward state of the colony, arising from the perpetual interference of government with every branch of industry. All the restrictive regulations enacted by the Dutch more than a century ago were kept up till 1832. The cultivation of cinnamon, the fishery of pearls and chanks, the digging for chaya root, the felling of timber, &c.-(see these articles)-have been all monopolised by government, and were carried on exclusively either by its servants or by those whom it had licensed. A country where most of the principal branches of industry were subjected to such restrictions, could not be otherwise than languishing. We believe, too, that most of these monopolies have not been worth the expense attending them. In fact, the whole revenue of the island, including land rent, customs, cinnamon monopoly, &c., very seldom exceeds 360,000L a year; but looking at its extent, its fertility, its faveurable situation for commerce, and the advantage it enjoys in the possession of cinnamon, can any one doubt that, were it rightly governed, its trade and revenue would be far greater than they are? Nothing is wanted but the adoption of measures calculated to give freedom and security to industry, and the imposition of moderate duties on imports and exports, to increase them both in a very high degree. We are glad to have to state that government seems, in part at least, to have at length come round to this way of thinking; and that, under the auspices of the present governor (Sir R. W. Horton), the system of compulsory labour has been relinquished, and most monopolies, including that of cinnamon, been thrown up. This wise and liberal conduct will, no doubt, be productive of the most beneficial effects. These, however, will be mate- rially lessened by the exorbitant duty of 3s. per lb. laid on the exportation of cinnamon. It is difficult, indeed, to imagine for what other purpose so oppressive a duty could be imposed, except it were to countervail the advantages that would otherwise have resulted from the abolition of the monopoly. It is not, however, possible that 80 mischievous an impost should be maintained.-(See CINNAMON.) Among other improvements recently introduced into the island, may be mentioned the establishment of a mail coach from Columbo to Candy. COLUMBO ROOT (Du. Columbo wortel; Fr. Racine de Colombo; Ger. Columbo- wurzel; It. Radice di Columbo; Port. Raiz de Columba; Sp. Raiz de Columbo; Mosamb. Kalumb), the root of the plant of that name. It is a staple export of the Portuguese from Mosambique. It is not cultivated, but grows naturally in great abundance. It is imported in circular pieces, from the an inch to 3 inches in diameter, generally from 1 to & of an inch thick; the bark is wrinkled and thick, of a brownish colour without, and a brightish yellow within; the pith is spongy, yellowish, and slightly striped: when fresh, its smell is rather arematic; it is disagreeably bitter, and slightly pungent to the taste, somewhat resembling mustard that has been too long kept. Choose the largest pieces, fresh, and of a good colour, as free from worms as possible, rejecting that which is small and broken. The freight is calculated at 16 cwt. to a ton.-(Milburn's Orient. Com.) COMBS (Ger. Kamme; Du. Kammen; Fr. Peignes; It. Peltini; Sp. Peines; Rus. Grebnü; Lat. Pectines), instruments for combing the hair, sometimes made of horns of bullocks, or of elephants' and sea-horses' teeth; sometimes also of tortoiseshell, and some- times of box or holly wood. received in England. Those given in the papers printed by the Board of Trade for 1831, are really for 1830. Digitized by Google 444 COMMERCE. COMMERCE, from commutatio mercium, is simply, as its name imports, the exchange of commodities for commodities. I. ORIGIN OF COMMERCE.-MERCANTIEE CLASSES. II. Home TRADE. III. FOREIGN TRADE. IV. RESTRICTIONS ON COMMERCE. I. ORIGIN OF COMMERCE.-MERCANTILE CLASSES. (1.) The Origin of Commerce is coeval with the first dawn of civilization. The mo- ment that individuals ceased to supply themselves directly with the various articles and accommodations they made use of, that moment must a commercial intercourse have begun to grow up amongst them. For it is only by exchanging that portion of the produce raised by ourselves that exceeds our own consumption, for portions of the surplus produce raised by others, that the division of employments can be introduced, or that different individuals can apply themselves in preference to different pursuits. Not only, however, does commerce enable the inhabitants of the same village or parish to combine their separate efforts to accomplish some common object, but it also enables those of different provinces and kingdoms to apply themselves in an especial manner to those callings, for the successful prosecution of which the district or country which they occupy gives them some peculiar advantage. This territorial division of labour has contributed more, perhaps, than any thing else to increase the wealth and accelerate the civilisation of mankind. Were it not for it, we should be destitute of a vast number of the necessaries, comforts, and enjoyments, which we now possess; while the price of the few that would remain would, in most instances, be very greatly increased. But whatever advantages may be derived,-and it is hardly possible to exaggerate either their magnitude or importance,- from availing ourselves of the peculiar capacities of production enjoyed by others, are wholly to be ascribed to commerce as their real source and origin. We do not mean to say any thing in this article with respect to the practical details con- nected with the different departments of commerce. These will be found under the various titles to which they refer. Our object, at present, is merely to show the nature and influence of commerce in general, and of the restrictions that have sometimes been imposed upon it. We shall begin by endeavouring, first of all, to give some account of the nature of the services performed by those individuals by whom commercial undertakings are usually carried on. In the second place, we shall consider the influence of the home trade, or of the intercourse subsisting amongst individuals of the same country. In the third place, we shall consider the influence of foreign trade, or of that intercourse which subsists amongst individuals be- longing to different countries. After these topics have been discussed, we shall offer a few remarks on what has been termed the restrictive system ; or on the principles involved in the regulations enacted at different times, in this and other countries, for the government and direction of commerce. (2.) Mercantile Classes.-While the exchange of different products is carried on by the producers themselves, they must unavoidably lose a great deal of time, and experience many inconveniences. Were there no merchants, a farmer wishing to sell his crop would be obliged, in the first place, to seek for customers, and to dispose of his corn as nearly as possible in such quantities as might suit the demands of the various individuals inclined to buy it; and after getting its price, he would next be obliged to send to 10 or 20 different and, per- haps, remote places, for the commodities he wanted to get in its stead. So that besides being exposed to a world of trouble and inconvenience, his attention would be continually diverted from the labours of his farm. Under such a state of things, the work of production, in every different employment, would be meeting with perpetual interruptions, and many branches of industry that are successfully carried on in a commercial country would not be undertaken. The establishment of a distinct mercantile class effectually obviates these inconveniences. When a set of dealers erect warehouses and shops for the purchase and sale of all descrip- tions of commodities, every producer, relieved from the necessity of seeking customers, and knowing beforehand where he may at all times be supplied with such products as he requires, devotes his whole time and energies to his proper business. The intervention of merchants gives a continuous and uninterrupted motion to the plough and the loom. Were the class of traders annihilated, all the springs of industry would be paralysed. The numberless diffi- culties that would then occur in effecting exchanges would lead each particular family to endeavour to produce all the articles they had occasion for society would thus be thrown back into primæval barbarism and ignorance; the divisions of labour would be relinquished; and the desire to rise in the world and improve our condition would decline, according as it became more difficult to gratify it. What sort of agricultural management could be expected from farmers who had to manufacture their own wool, and make their own shoes ! And Digitized by Google COMMERCE. 445 what sort of manufacturers would those be, who were every now and then obliged to leave the shuttle for the plough, or the needle for the anvil? A society, without that distinction of employments and professions resulting from the division of labour, that is, without commerce, would be totally-destitute of arts or sciences of any sort. It is by the assistance each indi- vidual renders to and receives from his neighbours, by every one applying himself in prefer- ence to some particular task, and combining, though probably without intending it, his ef- forts with those of others, that civilised man becomes equal to the most gigantic efforts, and appears endowed with almost omnipotent power. The mercantile class has generally been divided into two subordinate classes—the whole- sale dealers, and the retail dealers. The former purchase the various products of art and in- dustry in the places where they are produced, or are least valuable, and carry them to those where they are more valuable, or where they are more in demand; and the latter, having purchased the commodities of the wholesale dealers, or the producers, collect them in shops, and sell them in such quantities and at such times as may best suit the public demand. These classes of dealers are alike useful; and the separation that has been effected between their employments is one of the most advantageous divisions of labour. The operations of the wholesale merchant are analogous to those of the miner. Neither the one nor the other makes any change on the bodies which he carries from place to place. All the difference between them consists in this,-that the miner carries them from below ground to the sur- face of the earth, while the merchant carries them from one point to another on its surface. Hence it follows that the value given to commodities by the operations of the wholesale mer- chant may frequently exceed that given to them by the producers. The labour or expense required to dig a quantity of coal from the mine, does not exceed what is required for its con- veyance from Newcastle to London; and it is a far more difficult and costly affair to fetch a piece of timber from Canada to England, than to cut down the tree. In this respect there is no difference between commerce and agriculture and manufactures. The latter give utility to matter, by bestowing on it such a shape as may best fit it for ministering to our wants and comforts; and the former gives additional utility to the products of the agriculturist and manufacturer, by bringing them from where they are of comparatively little use, or are in ex- cess, to where they are of comparatively great use, or are deficient. If the wholesale merchant were himself to retail the goods he has brought from different places, he would require a proportional increase of capital; and it would be impossible for him to give that exclusive attention to any department of his business, which is indispensa- ble to its being carried on in the best manner. It is for the interest of each dealer, as of each workulan, to confine himself to some one business. By this means each trade is better un- derstood, better cultivated, and carried on in the cheapest possible manner. But whether carried on by a separate class of individuals or not, it is obvious that the retailing of com- modities is indispensable. It is not enough that a cargo of tea should be imported from China, or a cargo of sugar from Jamaica. Most individuals have some demand for these articles; but there is not, perhaps, a single private person, even in London, requiring so large a supply of them for his own consumption. It is clear, therefore, that they must be retailed; that is, they must be sold in such quantities and at such times as may be most suitable for all classes of consumers. And since it is admitted on all hands, that this necessary business will be best conducted by a class of traders distinct from the wholesale dealers, it is impossi- ble to doubt that their employment is equally conducive as that of the others to the public interest, or that it tends equally to augment national wealth and comfort. II. HOME TRADE. The observations already made serve to show the influence of the home trade in allowing individuals to confine their attention to some one employment, and to prosecute it without interruption. But it is not in this respect only that the establishment of the home trade is advantageous. It is so in a still greater degree, by its allowing the inhabitants of the differ- ent districts of the empire to turn their labour into those channels in which it will be most productive. The different soils, different minerals, and different climates of different districts, fit them for being appropriated, in preference, to certain species of industry. A district, like Lancashire, where coal is abundant, which has an easy access to the ocean, and a considera- ble command of internal navigation, is the natural seat of manufactures. Wheat and other species of grain are the natural products of rich arable soils; and cattle, after being reared in mountainous districts, are most advantageously fattened in- meadows and low grounds. Hence it follows, that the inhabitants of different districts, by confining themselves to those branches of industry for the successful prosecution of which they have some peculiar capa- bility, and exchanging their surplus produce for that of others, will obtain an incomparably larger supply of all sorts of useful and desirable products, than they could do, were they to apply themselves indiscriminately to every different business. The territorial division of la- bour is, if possible, even more advantageous than its division among individuals. A person may be what is commonly termed Jack of all trades; and though it is next to certain that VoL. I.-2 P Digitized by Google 446 COMMERCE. he will not be well acquainted with any one of them, he may nevertheless make some sost of rude efforts in them all. But it is not possible to apply the same soil or the same minerals to every different purpose. Hence it is, that the inhabitants of the richest and most exten- sive country, provided it were divided into small districts without any intercourse with each other, or with foreigners, could not, how well soever labour might be divided among them- selves, be otherwise than poor and miserable. Some of them might have a superabundance of corn, at the same time that they were wholly destitute of wine, coal, and iron; while others might have the largest supplies of the latter articles, with but very little grain. But in commercial countries no such anomalies can exist. Opulence and comfort are there uni- versally diffused. The labours of the mercantile classes enable the inhabitants of each dis- trict to apply themselves principally to those employments that are naturally best suited to them. This superadding of the division of labour among different provinces to its division among different individuals, renders the productive powers of industry immeasurably greater; and augments the mass of necessaries, conveniences, and enjoyments, in a degree that could not previously have been conceived possible, and which cannot be exceeded except by the in- troduction of foreign commerce. " With the benefit of commerce," says an eloquent and philosophical writer, or a ready exchange of commodities, every individual is enabled to avail himself, to the utmost, of the peculiar advantages of his place; to work on the peculiar materials with which nature has furnished him; to humour his genius or disposition, and betake himself to the task in which he is peculiarly qualified to succeed. The inhabitant of the mountain may betake himself to the culture of his woods and the manufacture of his timber; the owner of pasture lands may betake himself to the care of his herds; the owner of the clay-pit to the manufacture of his pottery and the husbandman to the culture of his fields, or the rearing of his cattle. And any one commodity, however it may form but a small part in the accommodations of human life, may, under the facility of commerce, find a market in which it may be exchanged for what will procure any other part, or the whole so that the owner of the clay-pit, or the industrious potter, without producing any one article immediately fit to supply his own ne- cessities, may obtain possession of all that he wants. And commerce, in which it appears that commodities are merely exchanged, and nothing produced, is, nevertheless, in its effects, very productive, because it ministers a facility and an encouragement to every artist in multi- plying the productions of his own art; thus adding greatly to the mass of wealth in the world, in being the occasion that much is produced."-(Ferguson's Principles of Moral Science, vol. ii. p. 424.) The roads and canals that intersect a country, and open an easy communication between its remotest extremities, render the greatest service to internal commerce, and also to agricul- ture and manufactures. A diminution of the expense of carriage has, in fact, the same effect as a diminution of the direct cost of production. If the coals brought into a city sell at 20s. a ton, of which the carriage amounts to a half, or 10s., it is plain that in the event of an im- proved communication, such as a more level or direct road, a railway, or a canal, being opened for the conveyance of the coals, and that they can, by its means, be imported for half the pre- vious expense, their price will immediately fall to 15s. a ton; just as it would have done, had the expense of extracting them from the mine been reduced a half. Every one acquainted with the merest elements of political science is aware that employ- ments are more and more subdivided, that more powerful machinery is introduced, and the productive powers of labour increased, according as larger masses of the population congre- gate together. In a great town like London, Glasgow, or Manchester, the same number of hands will perform much more work than in a small village, where each individual has to per- form several operations, and where the scale of employment is not sufficiently large to admit of the introduction of extensive and complicated machinery. But the great towns with which England is studded, could not exist without our improved means of communication. These, however, enable their inhabitants to supply themselves with the bulky products of the soil and of the mines almost as cheap as if they lived in country villages; securing to them all the advantages of concentration, with but few of its inconveniences. Roads and canals are thus productive of a double benefit; for while, by affording comparatively cheap raw materials to the manufacturers, they give them the means of perfecting the divisions of la- bour, and of supplying proportionally cheap manufactured goods; the latter are conveyed by their means, and at an extremely small expense, to the remotest parts of the country. The direct advantages which they confer on agriculture are not less important. Without them it would not be possible to carry to a distance sufficient supplies of lime, marl, shells, and other bulky and heavy articles necessary to give luxuriance to the crops of rich soils, and to render those that are poor productive. Good roads and canals, therefore, by furnishing the agriculturists with cheap and abundant supplies of manure, reduce, at one and the same time, the cost of producing the necessaries of life, and the cost of bringing them to market. In other respects, the advantages resulting from improved communications are probably even more striking. They give the same common interest to every different part of the most widely extended empire; and put down, or rather prevent, any attempt at monopoly on the Digitized by Google COMMERCE. 447 part of the dealers of particular districts, by bringing them into competition with those of all the others. Nothing in a state enjoying great facilities of communication is separate and unconnected. All is mutual, reciprocal, and dependent. Every man naturally gets into the precise situation that he is best fitted to fill and each, co-operating with every one else, con- tributes to the utmost of his power to extend the limits of production and civilisation.-(See ROADS.) Such being the nature and vast extent of the advantages derived from the home trade, it is obviously the duty of the legislature to give it every proper encouragement and protection. It will be found, however, on a little consideration, that this duty is rather negative than posi- tive-that it consists less in the framing of regulations, than in the removal of obstacles. The error of governments in matters of trade has not been that they have done too little, but that they have attempted too much. It will be afterwards shown that the encouragement which has been afforded to the producers of certain species of articles in preference to others, has uniformly been productive of disadvantage. In the mean time it is sufficient to observe that the encouragement which a prudent and enlightened government bestows on industry, will equally extend to all its branches; and will be especially directed to the removal of every thing that may in any respect fetter the freedom of commerce, and the power of individuals to engage in different employments. All regulations, whatever be their object, that operate either to prevent thercirculation of commodities from one part of the empire to another, or the free circulation of labour, necessarily tend to check the division of employments and the spirit of competition and emulation, and must, in consequence, lessen the amount of produce. The same principle that prompts to open roads, to construct bridges and canals, ought to lead every people to erase from the statute book every regulation which either prevents or fetters the operations of the merchant, and the free disposal of capital and labour. Whether the freedom of internal commerce and industry be interrupted by impassable mountains and swamps, or by oppressive tolls or restrictive regulations, the effect is equally pernicious. The common law and the ancient statute law of England are decidedly hostile to monopo- lies, or to the granting of powers to any particular class of individuals to furnish the market with commodities. Lord Coke distinctly states, that all monopolies concerning trade and traffic are against the liberty and freedom granted by the great charter, and divers other acts of parliament which are good commentaries upon that charter."-(2 Inst. 63.) And he af- firms, in another place, that "Commercium jure gentium commune esse debet, et non in monopolium et privatum paululorum questum convertendum. Iniquum est aliis permit- tere, aliis inhibere mercaturam." But, notwithstanding this concurrence of the common and statute law of the country in favour of the freedom of industry, during the arbitrary reigns of the princes of the house of Tudor, the notion that the crown was by its prerogative entitled to dispense with any law to the contrary, and to establish monopolies, became fashionable among the court lawyers, and was acted upon to a very great extent. Few things, indeed, occasioned so much dis- satisfaction in the reign of Elizabeth as the multiplication of monopolies; and notwithstand- ing the opposition made by the crown, and the court party in parliament, the grievance be- came at length so intolerable as to give rise to the famous statute of 1624 (21 James 1. c. 3.), by which all monopolies, grants, letters patent, and licences, for the sole buying, selling, and making of goods and manufactures, not given by an act of the legislature, are declared to be altogether contrary to the laws of this realm, void, and of none effect." This statute has been productive of the greatest advantage and has, perhaps, contributed more than any other to the development of industry, and the accumulation of wealth. With the exception of the monopoly of printing Bibles, and the restraints imposed by the charters of bodies le- gally incorporated, the freedom of internal industry has ever since been vigilantly protected full scope has been given to the principle of competition; the whole kingdom has been sub- jected to the same equal law no obstacles have been thrown in the way of the freest trans- fer of commodities from one county or place to another the home trade has been perfectly unfettered; and though the public have not been supplied with commodities at so low a price as they might have obtained them for, had there been no restrictions on foreign commerce, they have obtained them at the lowest price that would suffice to pay the home producers the cost of producing and bringing them to market. It is to this freedom that the comparatively flourishing state of industry in Great Britain is mainly to be ascribed. III. FOREIGN TRADE. What the home trade is to the different provinces of the same country, foreign trade is to all the countries of the world. Particular countries produce only particular commodities, and, were it not for foreign commerce, would be entirely destitute of all but such as are indigenous to their own soil. It is difficult for those who have not reflected on the subject, to imagine what a vast deduction would be made, not only from the comforts but even from the neces- saries, of every commercial people, were its intercourse with strangers put an end to. It is not, perhaps, too much to say that in Great Britain we owe to our intercourse with others a Digitized by Google 448 COMMERCE. full half or more of all that we enjoy. We are not only indebted to it for the cotton and silk manufactures, and for supplies of wine, tea, coffee, sugar, the precious metals, &c.; but we are also indebted to it for most of the fruits and vegetables that we now cultivate. At the same time, too, that foreign commerce supplies us with an immense variety of most important articles, of which we must otherwise have been wholly ignorant, it enables us to employ our industry in the mode in which it is sure to be most productive, and reduces the price of almost every article. We do not misemploy our labour in raising sugar from the beet-root, in culti- vating tobacco, or in forcing vines; but we employ ourselves in those departments of manu- facturing industry in which our command of coal, of capital, and of improved machinery, give us an advantage and obtain the articles produced more cheaply by foreigners, in ex- change for the surplus produce of those branches in which we have a superiority over them. A commercial nation like England avails herself of all the peculiar faculties of production given by Providence to different countries. To produce claret here is perhaps impossible; and at all events it could not be accomplished, unless at more than 100 times the expense re- quired for its production in France. We do not, however, deny ourselves the gratification derivable from its use and to obtain it, we have only to send to France, or to some country indebted to France, some article in the production of which we have the advantage, and we get claret in exchange at the price which it takes to raise it under the most favourable circum- stances. One country has peculiar capacities for raising corn, but is at the same time desti- tute of wine, silk, and tea; another, again, has peculiar facilities for raising the latter, but is destitute of the former; and it is impossible to point out a single country which is abundantly supplied with any considerable variety of commodities of domestic growth. Non omnis fert omnia tellus. Providence, by giving to each particular nation something which the others want, has evidently intended that they should be mutually dependent upon one another. And it is not difficult to see that, cxteris paribus, those must be the richest and most abund- antly supplied with every sort of useful and desirable accommodation, who cultivate the arts of peace with the greatest success, and deal with all the world on fair and liberal principles. " The commerce of one country with another is, in fact," to use the words of an able and profound writer, " merely an extension of that division of labour by which so many benefits are conferred upon the human race. As the same country is rendered the richer by the trade of one province with another ; as its labour becomes thus infinitely more divided and more productive than it could otherwise have been and as the mutual supply to each other of all the accommodations which one province has, and another wants, multiplies the ac- commodations of the whole, and the country becomes thus in a wonderful degree more opu- lent and happy; the same beautiful train of consequences is observable in the world at large, -that great empire of which the different kingdoms and tribes of men may be regarded as the provinces. In this magnificent empire, too, one province is favourable to the production of one species of accommodation, and another province to another by their mutual inter- course they are enabled to sort and distribute their labour as most peculiarly suits the genius of each particular spot. The labour of the human race thus becomes much more productive, and every species of accommodation is afforded in much greater abundance. The same number of labourers, whose efforts might have been expended in producing a very insigni- ficant quantity of home-made luxuries, may thus in Great Britain, produce a quantity of articles for exportation, accommodated to the wants of other places, and peculiarly suited to the genius of Britain to furnish, which will purchase for her an accumulation of the luxu- ries of every quarter of the globe. There is not a greater proportion of her population em- ployed in administering to her luxuries, in consequence of her commerce there is probably a good deal less but their labour is infinitely more productive the portion of commodities which the people of Great Britain acquire by means of the same labour, is vastly greater." -(Mill's Commerce defended, p. 38.) What has been already stated is sufficient to expose the utter fallacy of the opinion that has sometimes been maintained, that whatever one nation may gain by her foreign com- merce, must be lost by some one else. It is singular, indeed, how such a notion should ever have originated. Commerce is not directly productive, nor is the good derived from it to be estimated by its immediate effects. What commercial nations give is uniformly the fair equivalent of what they get. In their dealings they do not prey upon each other, but are benefited alike. The advantage of commerce consists in its enabling labour to be divided, and giving each people the power of supplying themselves with the various articles for which they have a demand, at the lowest price required for their production in those countries and places where they are raised with the greatest facility. We import wine from Portugal, and cotton from America, sending in exchange cloth and other species of manufactured goods. By this means we obtain two very important articles, which it would be all but impossible to produce at home, and which we could not, certainly, produce, except at an infinitely greater cost. But our gain is no loss to the foreigners. They derive precisely the same sort of advantage from the transaction that we do. We have very superior facilities for manufacturing, and they get from us cloth, hardware, and other important articles, at the price at which they can be produced in this country, and consequently for far less than their Digitized by Google COMMERCE. 449 direct production would have cost them. The benefits resulting from an intercourse of this sort are plainly mutual and reciprocal. Commerce gives no advantage to any one people over any other people; but it increases the wealth and enjoyments of all in a degree that could not previously have been conceived possible. But the influence of foreign commerce in multiplying and cheapening conveniences and enjoyments, vast as it most certainly is, is perhaps inferior to its indirect influence-that is, to its influence on industry, by adding immeasurably to the mass of desirable articles, by inspiring new tastes, and stimulating enterprise and invention by bringing each people into competition with foreigners, and making them acquainted with their arts and institutions. The apathy and languor that exist in a rude state of society have been universally re- marked. But these uniformly give place to activity and enterprise, according as man is rendered familiar with new objects, and is inspired with a desire to obtain them. An indi- vidual might, with comparatively little exertion, furnish himself with an abundant supply of the commodities essential to his subsistence; and if he had no desire to obtain others, or if that desire, however strong, could not be gratified, it would be folly to suppose that he should be laborious, inventive, or enterprising. But, when once excited, the wants and desires of man become altogether illimitable; and to excite them, no more is necessary than to bring new products and new modes of enjoyment within his reach. Now, the sure way to do this is to give every facility to the most extensive intercourse with foreigners. The markets of a commercial nation being filled with the various commodities of every country and every climate, the motives and gratifications which stimulate and reward the efforts of the indus- trious are proportionally augmented. The husbandman and manufacturer exert themselves to increase their supplies of raw and manufactured produce, that they may exchange the surplus for the products imported from abroad. And the merchant, finding a ready demand for such products, is prompted to import a greater variety, to find out cheaper markets, and thus constantly to afford new incentives to the vanity and ambition, and consequently to the enterprise and industry, of his customers. The whole powers of the mind and the body are thus called into action and the passion for foreign commodities-a passion which has sometimes been ignorantly censured-becomes one of the most efficient causes of wealth and civilisation. Not only, however, does foreign commerce excite industry, distribute the gifts of nature, and enable them to be turned to the best account, but it also distributes the gifts of science and of art, and gives to each particular country the means of profiting by the inventions and discoveries of others as much as by those of her own citizens. The ingenious machine in- vented by Mr. Whitney of the United States, for separating cotton wool from the pod, by reducing the cost of the raw material of one of our principal manufactures, has been quite as advantageous to us as to his own countrymen. And the discoveries and inventions of Watt, Arkwright, and Wedgwood, by reducing the cost of articles we send abroad, have been as advantageous to our foreign customers as to ourselves. Commerce has caused the blessings of civilisation to be universally diffused, and the treasures of knowledge and science to be conveyed to the remotest corners. Its humanising influence is, in this respect, most important while, by making each country depend for the means of supplying a considera- ble portion of its wants on the assistance of others, it has done more than any thing else to remove a host of the most baleful prejudices, and to make mankind regard each other as friends and brothers, and not as enemies. The dread, once so prevalent, of the progress of other nations in wealth and civilisation, is now universally admitted to be as absurd as it is illiberal. While every people ought always to be prepared to resist and avenge any attack upon their independence or their honour, it is not to be doubted that their real prosperity will be best secured by their endeavouring to live at peace. "A commercial war, whether crowned with victory or branded with defeat, can never prevent another nation from becom- ing more industrious than you are; and if they are more industrious they will sell cheaper and consequently your customers will forsake your shop and go to theirs. This will happen, though you covered the ocean with fleets, and the land with armies. The soldier may lay waste the privateer, whether successful or unsuccessful, will make poor; but it is the eternal law of Providence that the hand of the diligent can alone make rich."-(Tucker's Four Tracts, p. 41. 3d ed.) Mr. Hume has beautifully illustrated the powerful and salutary influence of that spirit of industry and enterprise resulting from the eager prosecution of commerce and the arts. " Men," says he, are then kept in perpetual occupation, and enjoy, as their reward, the occupation itself, as well as those pleasures which are the fruits of their labour. The mind acquires new vigour ; enlarges its powers and faculties and, by an assiduity in honest in- dustry, both satisfies its natural appetites, and prevents the growth of unnatural ones, which commonly spring up when nourished with ease and idleness. Banish those arts from socie- ty, you deprive men both of action and of pleasure; and, leaving nothing but indolence in their place, you even destroy the relish of indolence, which never is agreeable but when it succeeds to labour, and recruits the spirits, exhausted by too much application and fatigue. "Another advantage of industry and of refinements in the mechanical arts is, that they 2 P 2 57 Digitized by Google 450 COMMERCE. commonly produce some refinements in the liberal ; nor can the one be carried to perfection, without being accompanied in some degree with the other. The same age which produces great philosophers and politicians, renowned generals and poets, usually abounds with skil- ful weavers and ship-carpenters. We cannot reasonably expect that a piece of woollen cleth will be wrought to perfection in a nation which is ignorant of astronomy, or where ethics are neglocted. The spirit of the age affects all the arts ; and the minds of men, being once roused from their lethargy, and put into a fermentation, turn themselves on all sides, and carry improvements into every art and science. Profound ignorance is totally banished; and men enjoy the privilege of rational creatures, to think as well as to act, to cultivate the pleasures of the mind as well as those of the body. " The more these refined arts advance, the more sociable do men become nor is it possi- ble that, when enriched with science, and possessed of a fund of conversation, they should be contented to remain in solitude, or live with their fellow citizens in that distant manner which is peculiar to ignorant and barbarous nations. They flock into cities love to receive and communicate knowledge; to show their wit or their breeding their taste in conversa- tion or living, in clothes or furniture. Curiosity allures the wise, vanity the foolish, and pleasure both. Particular clubs and societies are every where formed both sexes meet in an easy and sociable manner; and the tempers of men, as well as their behaviour, refine apace. So that beside the improvements they receive from knowledge and the liberal arts, it is impossible but they must feel an increase of humanity from the very habit of conversing together, and contributing to each other's pleasure and entertainment. Thus industry, knowledge, and humanity are linked together by an indissoluble chain and are found, from experience as well as reason, to be peculiar to the more polished, and, what are commonly denominated, the more luxurious ages."-(Essay of Refinement in the Arts.) Most commercial treatises, and most books on political economy, contain lengthened state- ments as to the comparative advantages derived from the home and foreign trade. But these statements are almost always bottomed on the most erroneous principles. The quantity and value of the commodities which the inhabitants of an extensive country exchange with each other, is far greater than the quantity and value of those they exchange with foreigners but this is not, as is commonly supposed, enough to show that the home trade is propor- tionally more advantageous. Commerce, it must be borne in mind, is not a direct but an indi- rect source of wealth. The mere exchange of commodities adds nothing to the riches of society. The influence of commerce on wealth consists in its allowing employments to be separated and prosecuted without interruption. It gives the means of pushing the divisions of labour to the furthest extent; and supplies mankind with an infinitely greater quantity of necessaries and accommodations of all sorts, than could have been produced, had individuals and nations been forced to depend upon their own comparatively feeble efforts for the sup- ply of their wants. And hence, in estimating the comparative advantageousness of the home and foreign trades, the real questions to be decided are, which of them contributes most to the division of labour and which of them gives the greatest stimulus to invention and industry ? These questions do not, perhaps, admit of any very satisfactory answer. The truth is, that both home trade and foreign trade are most prolific sources of wealth. Without the former, no division of labour could be established, and man would for ever remain in a barbarous state. Hence, perhaps, we may say that it is the most indispensable; but the length to which it could carry any particular country in the career of civilisation, would be limited indeed. Had Great Britain been cut off from all intercourse with strangers, there is no reason for thinking that we should have been at this day advanced beyond the point to which our ancestors had attained during the Heptarchy ! It is to the products and the arts derived from others, and to the emulation inspired by their competition and example, that we are mainly indebted for the extraordinary progress we have already made, as well as for that we are yet destined to make. Dr. Smith, though he has satisfactorily demonstrated the impolicy of all restrictions on the freedom of commerce, has, notwithstanding, endeavoured to show that it is more for the public advantage that capital should be employed in the home trade than in foreign trade, on the ground that the capitals employed in the former are more frequently returned, and that they set a greater quantity of labour in motion than those employed in the latter. But we have else- where endeavoured to show that the rate of profit which different businesses yield is the only test of their respective advantageousness.-(Principles of Political Economy, 2d ed. pp. 160-180.) Now, it is quite evident that capital will not be employed in foreign trade, unless it yield as much profit as could be made by employing it at home. No merchant sends a ship to China, if it be in his power to realise a larger profit by sending her to Dub- lin or Newcastle; nor would any one build a ship, unless he expected that the capital so laid out would be as productive as if it were employed in agriculture or manufactures. The more or less rapid return of capital is a matter of very little importance. If the average rate of profit be 10 per cent., an individual who turns over his capital 10 times a year, will make one per cent. of profit each time; whereas if he turns it only once a year, he will get the whole 10 per cent. at once. Competition reduces the rate of nett profit to about the Digitized by Google COMMERCE. 451 same level in all businesses and we may be quite certain that those who employ themselves in the departments in which capital is most rapidly returned, do not, at an average, gain more than those who employ themselves in the departments in which the returns are most distant. No one is a foreign merchant because he would rather deal with foreigners than with his own countrymen, but because he believes he will be able to employ his capital more advan- tageously in foreign trade than in any other business: and while he does this, he is follow- ing that employment which is most beneficial for the public as well as for himself. IV. RESTRICTIONS ON COMMERCE. The statements already made, by explaining the nature and principles of commercial trans- actions, are sufficient to evince the inexpediency of subjecting them to any species of restraint. It is obvious, indeed, that restrictions are founded on false principles. When individuals are left to pursue their own interest in their own way, they naturally resort to those branches of industry which they reckon most advantageous for themselves; and, as we have just seen, these are the very branches in which it is most for the public interest that they should be employed. Unless, therefore, it could be shown that a government can judge better as to what sort of transactions are profitable or otherwise than private individuals, its regulations cannot be of the smallest use, and may be exceedingly injurious. But any such pretension on the part of government would be universally scouted. It is undeniably certain that a regard to our own interest is, if not an unerring guide to direct us in such matters, at least incomparably better than any other. If the trade with a particular country or in a par- ticular commodity be a losing one, or merely a less profitable one than others, it is quite as unnecessary to pass an act to prevent it from being carried on, as it would be to interfere to prevent individuals from selling their labour or their commodities below the market price. It appears, therefore, that all regulations affecting the freedom of commerce, or of any branch of industry, are either useless or pernicious. They are useless, when they are intended to protect the interest of individuals by preventing them from engaging in disadvantageous businesses and pernicious, when they prevent them from engaging in those that are advan- tageous. The self interest of the parties concerned is the only safe principle to go by in such matters. When the acts of the legislature are in unison with it, there is nothing to object to in them, save only that they might as well not exist; but whenever they are incon- sistent with it-that is, whenever they tend to divert capital and industry into channels, into which individuals, if left to their own discretion, would not have carried them-they are decidedly injurious. No one denies that it is possible to confer, by means of a restrictive regulation, an advan- tage on a greater or less number of individuals. This, however, is no proof that it is advan- tageous in a public point of view ; and it is by its influence in this respect that we are to decide concerning it. If the exclusion of an article imported from abroad, in order to encou- rage its manufacture at home, raise its price in the home market, that circumstance will, for a while at least, be advantageous to those engaged in its production. But is it not clear that all that is thus gained by them, is lost by those who purchase the article ? To suppose, in- deed, that the exclusion of commodities that are comparatively cheap, to make room for those that are comparatively dear, can be a means of enriching a country, is equivalent to supposing that a people's wealth might be increased by destroying their most powerful machines, and throwing their best soils out of cultivation. But it is contended, that though this might be the case in the instance of commodities pro- duced at home, it is materially different when the commodity excluded came to us from abroad. It is said, that in this case the exclusion of foreign produce increases the demand for that produced at home, and consequently contributes to increase the demand for labour; so that the rise of price it occasions is, in this way, more than balanced by the other advan- tages which it brings along with it. But the fact is, that though the demand for one spe- cies of produce may be increased by a prohibition of importation, the demand for some other species is sure to be at the same time equally diminished. There is no jugglery in commerce. Whether it be carried on between individuals of the same country or of different countries, it is all in cases bottomed on a fair principle of reciprocity. Those who will not buy need not expect to sell, and conversely. It is impossible to export without making a corresponding importation. We get nothing from the foreigne: gratuitously and hence, when we prevent the importation of produce from abroad, we prevent, by the very same act, the exportation of an equal amount of British produce. All that the exclusion of foreign commodities ever effects, is the substitution of one sort of demand for another. It has been said, that " when we drink beer and porter we consume the produce of English industry, whereas when we drink port or claret we consume the produce of the industry of the Por- tuguese and French, to the obvious advantage of the latter, and the prejudice of our coun- trymen But, how paradoxical soever the assertion may at first sight appear, there is not at bottom any real distinction between the two caser, What is it that induces foreigners to supply us with port and claret ? The answer is obvious -We either send directly to Por- tugal and France an equivalent in British produce, or we send such equivalent, in the first Digitized by Google 452 COMMERCE. place to South America for bullion, and then send that bullion to the Continent to pay for the wine. And hence it is as clear as the sun at noon-day, that the Englishman who drinks only French wine, who eats only bread made of Polish wheat, and who wears only Saxon cloth, gives, by occasioning the exportation of a corresponding amount of British cotton, hardware, leather, or other produce, the same encouragement to the industry of his country- men, that he would give were he to consume nothing not immediately produced at home. A quantity of port wine and a quantity of Birmingham goods are respectively of the same value; so that whether we directly consume the hardware, or, having exchanged it for the wine, consume the latter, must plainly, in so far as the employment of British labour is con- cerned, be altogether indifferent. It is absolutely nugatory, therefore, to attempt to encourage industry at home by restrain- ing importation from abroad. We might as well try to promote it by interdicting the ex- change of shoes for hats. We only resort to foreign markets, that we may supply ourselves with articles that cannot be produced at home, or that require more labour to produce them here, than is required to produce the equivalent exported to pay for them. It is, if any thing can be, an obvious contradiction and absurdity to attempt to promote wealth or industry by prohibiting an intercourse of this sort. Such prohibition, even when least injurious, is sure to force capital and labour into less productive channels; and cannot fail to diminish the foreign demand for one species of produce, quite as much as it extends the home demand for another. It is but seldom, however, that a restriction on importation from abroad does no more than substitute one sort of employment for another. Its usual effect is both to alter the distribu- tion of capital, and to increase the price of commodities. A country rarely imports any com- modity from abroad that may be as cheaply produced at home. In the vast majority of in- stances, the articles bought of the foreigner could not be directly produced at home, without a much greater outlay of capital. Suppose that we import 1,000,000L worth of any com- modity, that its importation is prohibited, and that the same quantity of produce cannot be raised in this country for less than 1,200,000L or 1,500,000L: in a case of this sort,-and this is actually the case in 99 out of every 100 instances in which prohibitions are enacted,- the prohibition has the same effect on the consumers of the commodity, as if, supposing it not to have existed, they had been burdened with a peculiar tax of 200,000L or 500,000L a year. But, had such been the case, what the consumers lost would have gone into the coffers of the treasury, and would have afforded the means of repealing an equal amount of other taxes; whereas, under the prohibitory system, the high price, being occasioned by an in- creased difficulty of production, is of no advantage to any one. So that, instead of gaining any thing by such a measure, the public incurs a dead loss of 200,000L or 500,000/. a year. We have said that a prohibition of importation may be productive of immediate advantage to the home producers of the prohibited article. It is essential, however, to remark that this advantage cannot continue for any considerable time, and that it must be followed by a period of distress. Were the importation of foreign silks put an end to, that circumstance, by nar- rowing the supply of silk goods, and raising their prices, would, no doubt, be in the first in- stance, advantageous to the manufacturers, by elevating their profits above the common level. But the consequence would be, that those already engaged in the trade would immediately set about extending their concerns; at the same time that not a few of those engaged in other employments would enter a business which presented such a favourable prospect: nor would this transference of capital to the silk manufacture be stopped, till such an increased supply of silks had been brought to market as to occasion a glut. This reasoning is not founded upon hypothesis, but upon the widest experience. When a business is carried on under the protection of a restriction on importation, it is limited by the extent of the home market, and is incapable of further extension. It is, in consequence, particularly subject to that fluctua- tion which is the bane of industry. If, owing to a change of fashion, or any other cause, the demand be increased, then, as no supplies can be brought from abroad, prices suddenly rise, and the manufacture is rapidly extended, until a reaction takes place, and prices sink below their usual level and if the demand decline, then, as there is no outlet abroad for the superfluous goods, their price is ruinously depressed, and the producers are involved in inex- tricable difficulties. The businesses deepest entrenched behind ramparts of prohibitions and restrictions, such as the silk trade previously to 1825, the West India trade, and agriculture since 1815, have undergone the most extraordinary vicissitudes; and have been at once more hazardous and less profitable than the businesses carried on under a system of fair and free competition. A prohibition against buying in the cheapest markets is really, also, a prohibition against selling in the dearest markets. There is no test of high or low price, except the quantity of other produce for which an article exchanges. Suppose that, by sending a certain quantity of cottons or hardware to Brazil, we might get in exchange 150 hhds. of sugar, and that the same quantity, if sent to Jamaica, would only fetch 100 hhds. is it not obvious, that by pre- venting the importation of the former, we force our goods to be sold for two thirds of the price they would otherwise have brought? To suppose that a system productive of such Digitized by Google COMMERCE. 453 results can be a means of increasing wealth, is to suppose what is evidently absurd. It is certainly true that a restrictive regulation, which has been long acted upon, and under which a considerable quantity of capital is employed, ought not to be rashly or capriciously repealed. Every change in the public economy of a great nation ought to be gone about cautiously and gradually. Adequate time should be given to those who carry on businesses that have been protected, either to withdraw from them altogether, or to prepare to withstand the fair com- petition of foreigners. But this is all that such persons can justly claim. To persevere in an erroneous and oppressive system, merely because its abandonment might be productive of inconvenience to individuals, would be a proceeding inconsistent with every object for which society is formed, and subversive of all improvement. It may, perhaps, be supposed that in the event of commodities being imported from abroad, after the abolition of a protecting regulation, that were previously produced at home, the workmen and those engaged in their production would be thrown upon the parish. Such, however, is not the case. We may, by giving freedom to commerce, change the species of labour in demand, but it is not possible that we should thereby change its quantity. If, in consequence of the abolition of restrictions, our imports were increased to the amount of 4,000,000L or 5,000,000/., our exports, it is certain, must be augmented to the same extent so that whatever diminution of the demand for labour might be experienced in certain de- partments would be balanced by a corresponding increase in others. The pressure of taxation has often been alleged as an excuse for restrictions on commerce, but it is not more valid than the rest. Taxation may be heavy, and even oppressive; but so long as it is impartially and fairly assessed, it equally affects all branches of industry carried on at home, and consequently affords no ground whatever for the enactment of regulations intended to protect any particular business. And to propose to protect all branches of in- dustry from foreign competition, is, in effect, to propose to put a total stop to commerce for if nothing is to be imported, nothing can be exported. The imposition of moderate duties on foreign commodities, for the sake of revenue, is quite another thing. Many of these form among the very best subjects of taxation and when the duties on them are confined within proper bounds,-that is, when they are not so high as to exert any injurious influence upon trade, or to occasion smuggling and fraud,-they cannot fairly be objected to. It is sometimes contended, by those who assert, on general grounds, that restrictions are inexpedient, that it would be unwise, on the part of any country, to abolish them until she had obtained a security that those imposed by her neighbours would also be abolished. But the reasons that have been alleged in favour of this statement are not entitled to the least weight. It is our business to buy in the cheapest and sell in the dearest markets, without being, in any degree, influenced by the conduct of others. If they consent to repeal the re- strictions they have laid on commerce, 80 much the better. But whatever others may do, the line of policy we ought to follow is clear and well defined. To refuse, for example, to buy claret, brandy, &c. from the French, because they lay absurd restrictions on the importation of British hardware, cottons, &c., would not be to retaliate upon them, but upon ourselves. The fact that we do import French wine and brandy shows that we do export to France, or to some other country to which France is indebted, an equivalent, in some sort, of British produce. The fear of being glutted with foreign products, unless we secure beforehand a certain outlet for our own, is the most unfounded that can be imagined. The foreigner who will take nothing of ours, can send us nothing of his. Though our ports were open to the merchants of all the countries of the world, the exports of British produce must always be equal to the imports of foreign produce and none but those who receive our commodities, either at first or second hand, could continue to send any thing to us. " Les étrangers ne peuvent demander ni désirer rien mieux, que la liberté de vous acheter et de vous vendre chez vous et dans vos colonies. Il faut la leur accorder, non par foiblesse . et par impuissance, mais parcequ'elle est juste en elle-même, et qu'elle vous est utile. Ils ont tort sans doute de la refuser chez eux mais cette faute d'ignorance dont, sans le savoir, ils sont punis les premiers, n'est pas un raison qui doive vous porter à vous nuire à vous- même en suivant cet exemple, et à vous exposer aux suites et aux dépenses d'une guerre pour avoir la vaine satisfaction d'user des représailles, dont l'effet ne peut manquer de retom- ber sur vous, et de rendre votre commerce plus désavantageux."-(Le Trosne de l'Ordre Social, p. 416.) There are some, however, who contend, that though restrictions on importation from abroad be unfavourable to opulence, and the advancement of individuals and nations in arts and civilisation, they may, notwithstanding, be vindicated on other grounds, as contributing essentially to independence and security. The short and decisive answer to this is to be found in the reciprocity of commerce. It does not enrich one individual or nation at the expense of others, but confers its favours equally on all. We are under no obligations to the Portu- guese, the Russians, or any other people with whom we carry on trade. It is not our ad- vantage, but their own, that they have in view in dealing with us. We give them the full value of all that we import and they would suffer quite as much inconvenience as we should do were this intercourse put an end to. The independence at which those aspire who would Digitized by Google 454 COMMERCE. promote it by laying restrictions on commerce, is the independence of the solitary and un- social savage it is not an independence productive of strength, but of weakness. The most flourishing states, at the moment of their highest elevation, when they were closely con- nected with every part of the civilised world by the golden chains of successful commercial enterprise, were, according to this doctrine, in the most perfect state of absolute dependence. It was not till all these connections were dissolved, and they had sunk in the scale of nations, that their true independence commenced! Such statements carry with them their own refu- tation. There is a natural dependence of nations upon each other, as there is a natural de- pendence of individuals upon each other. Heaven has so ordered it. Some soils, some cli- mates, some situations, are productive exclusively of some peculiar fruits, which cannot elsewhere be profitably procured. Let nations follow this as their guide. In a rich and rising community, the opulent capitalists may be as dependent upon the poor labourers, as the poor labourers upon the opulent capitalists. So it is with nations. The mutual depend- ence of individuals upon each other knits and binds society together, and leads to the most rapid advancement in wealth, in intelligence, and in every kind of improvement. It is the same, but on a far larger scale, with the mutual dependence of nations. To this alone do we owe all the mighty efforts of commerce; and what lights, what generous feelings, and multiplied means of human happiness, has it not every where !"-(North American Review, No. 57.) The principles of commercial freedom, and the injurious influence of restrictive regula- tions, were set in a very striking point of view by Dr. Smith, in his great work and they have been since repeatedly explained and elucidated. Perhaps, however, the true doctrines upon this subject have no where been better stated than in the petition presented by the mer- chants of London to the House of Commons on the 8th of May, 1820. This document is one of the most gratifying proofs of the progress of liberal and enlarged views. It was sub- scribed by all the principal merchants of the metropolis, who have not scrupled to express their conviction, that the repeal of every protective regulation would be for the public ad- vantage. Such an address, confirming, as it did, the conclusions of science, by the approval of the best informed and most extensive merchants of the world, had a powerful influence on the legislature. During the last 10 years several most important reforms have been made in our commercial system; so that besides being the first to promulgate the true theory of commerce, we are now entitled to the praise of being the first to carry it into effect. No doubt our trade is still fettered by many vexatious restraints; but these will gradually disep- pear, according as experience serves to disclose the benefits resulting from the changes already made, and the pernicious operation of the restrictions that are still allowed to continue. The petition now referred to, is too important to be omitted in a work of this sort. It is as follows :- To the Honourable the Commons, &c., the Petition of the Merchants of the City of London. Sheweth, That foreign commerce is eminently conducive to the wealth and prosperity of a country, by ena- bling it to import the commodities for the production of which the soil, climate, capital, and industry of other countries are best calculated, and to export, in payment, those articles for which its OWN situation is better adapted. That freedom from restraint is calculated to give the utmost extension to foreign trade, and the best direction to the capital and industry of the country. That the maxim of buying in the cheapest market, and selling in the dearest, which regulates every merchant in his individual dealings, 18 strictly applicable, as the best rule for the trade of the whole nation. " That a policy founded OR these principles would render the commerce of the world an interchange of mutual advantages, and diffuse an increase of wealth and enjoyments among the inhabitants of each state. That, unfortunately, a policy the very reverse of this has been and is more or less adopted and acted upon by the government of this and every other country; each trying to exclude the produe- tions of other countries, with the specious and well-meant design of encouraging its own productions: thus inflicting on the bulk of its subjects, who are consumers, the necessity of submitting to privations in the quantity or quality of commodities ; and thus rendering what ought to be the source of mutual benefit and of harmony among states, a constantly recurring occasion of jealousy and hostility. That the prevailing prejudices in favour of the protective or restrictive system may be traced to the erroneous supposition that every importation of foreign commodities occasions a diminution or discouragement of our own productions to the same extent: whereas it may be clearly shown, that although the particular description of production which could not stand against unrestrained foreign competition would be discouraged, yet, as no importation could be continued for any leagth of time without a corresponding exportation, direct or indirect, there would be an encouragement, for the purpose of that exportation, of some other production to which our situation might be better suited; thus affording at least an equal, and probably a greater, and certainly a more beneficial, employment to our own capital and labour. That of the numerous protective and prohibitory duties of our commercial code, it may be proved that, while all operate as a very heavy tax on the community at large, very few are of any ultimate benefit to the classes in whose favour they were originally instituted, and none to the extent of the loss occasioned by them to other classes. That among the other evils of the restrictive or protective system, not the least is, that the arti- ficial protection of one branch of industry or source of production against foreign competition, is set up as a ground of claim by other branches for similar protection 80 that if the reasoning upon which these restrictive or prohibitory regulations are founded were followed out consistently, it would not stop short of excluding us from all foreign commerce whatsoever. And the same train of argument, which, with corresponding prohibitions and protective duties, should exclude us from foreign trade, might Digitized by Google COMPANIES. 455 be brought forward to justify the re-enactment of restrictions upon the interchange of productions (unconnected with public revenue) among the kingdoms composing the union, or among the counties of the same kingdom. "That an investigation of the effects of the restrictive system at this time is peculiarly called for, as it may, in the opinion of your petitioners, lead to a strong presumption, that the distress, which now so generally prevails, is considerably aggravated by that system; and that some relief may be obtained by the earliest practicable removal of such of the restraints as may be shown to be most injurious to the capital and industry of the community, and to be attended with no compensating benefit to the public revenue. That a declaration against the anti-commercial principles of our restrictive system is of the more Importance at the present juncture; inasmuch as, in several instances of recent occurrence, the mer- chants and manufacturers of foreign countries have assailed their respective governments with appli- cations for further protective or prohibitory duties and regulations, urging the example and authority of this country, against which they are almost exclusively directed, as a sanction for the policy of such measures. And certainly, if the reasoning upon which our restrictions have been defended is worth any thing, it will apply in behalf of the regulations of foreign states against us. They insist upon our superiority in capital and machinery, as we do upon their comparative exemption from tax- ation, and with equal foundation. " That nothing would tend more to counteract the commercial hostility of foreign states, than the adoption of a more enlightened and more concillatory policy on the part of this country. "That although, as a matter of mere diplomacy, it may sometimes answer to hold the removal of particular prohibitions, or high dutles, as depending upon corresponding concessions by other states in our favour, it does not follow that we should maintain our restrictions in cases where the desired concessions on their part cannot be obtained. Our restrictions would not be the less prejudicial to our own capital and industry, because other governments persisted in preserving impolitic regu- lations. That, upon the whole, the most liberal would prove to be the most politic course on such occasions. 'That independent of the direct benefit to be derived by this country, on every occasion of such concession or relaxation, a great incidental object would be gained, by the recognition of a sound principle or standard, to which all subsequent arrangements might be referred; and by the salutary influence which a promulgation of such just views, by the legislature and by the nation at large, could not fail to have on the policy of other states. That in thus declaring, as your petitioners do, their conviction of the impolicy and injustice of the restrictive system, and in desiring every practicable relaxation of it, they have in view only such parts of it as are not connected, or are only subordinately so, with the public revenue. As long as the necessity for the present amount of revenue subsists, your petitioners cannot expect 80 important a branch of it as the customs to be given up, nor to be materially diminished, unless some substitute less objectionable be suggested. But it is against every restrictive regulation of trade, not essential to the revenue, against all duties merely protective from foreign competition, and against the excess of such duties as are partly for the purpose of revenue, and partly for that of protection, that the prayer of the present petition is respectfully submitted to the wisdom of parliament. May it therefore," &c. For examples of the practical working and injurious operation of restrictions, see the arti- cles BORDEAUX, CADIZ, CAGLIARI, Colony TRADE, Corn LAWS AND Corn TRADE, NAPLES, TIMBER, &c., in this Dictionary the articles on the American Tariff and the French Commercial System in Nos. 96. and 99. of the Edinburgh Review; the Report of the Committee of Commerce and Navigation to the House of Representatives of the United States, 8th of February, 1830; and the Petition and Memoire à l'Appui, addressed, in 1828, by the landowners and merchants of the Gironde to the Chamber of Deputies. For an account of the doctrines with respect to the balance of trade, and the importation and exportation of the precious metals, see the articles BALANCE OF TRADE, and Ex- CHANGE. For an account of the articles exported from and imported into Great Britain, see IM- PORTS AND EXPORTS. COMPANIES. In commerce or the arts, a company is a number of persons associated together for the purpose of carrying on some commercial or industrious undertaking. When there are only a few individuals associated, it is most commonly called a copartnery the term company being usually applied to large associations, like the East India Company, the Bank of England, &e., who conduct their operations by means of agents acting under the orders of a Board of directors. Companies have generally been divided into two great classes-exclusive or joint stock companies, and open or regulated companies. 1. Exclusive or Joint Stock Companies.-By an institution of this sort is meant a com- pany having a certain ambunt of capital, divided into a greater or smaller number of trans- ferable shares, managed for the common advantage of the shareholders by a body of directors chosen by and responsible to them. After the stock of a company of this sort has been sub- scribed, no one can enter it without previously purchasing one or more shares belonging to some of the existing members. The partners do nothing individually all their resolutions are taken in common, and are carried into effect by the directors and those whom they em- ploy. According to the common law of England, all the partners in a joint stock company are jointly and individually liable, to the whole extent of their fortunes, for the debts of the company. They may make arrangements amongst themselves, limiting their obligations with respect to each other; but unless established by an authority competent to set aside the general rule, they are all indefinitely responsible to the public. Parliament sometimes limits the responsibility of the shareholders in joint stock companies established by statute, to the Digitized by Google 456 COMPANIES. amount of the shares they respectively hold. Charters of incorporation granted by the Crown were also, until lately, supposed necessarily to have this effect; but by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 96. the Crown is empowered to grant charters of incorporation by which the members of corporate bodies may be made individually liable, to such extent, and subject to such regu- lations and restrictions, as may be deemed expedient. Hence charters are now frequently granted for the purpose merely of enabling companies to sue and be sued in courts of law, under the names of some of their office-bearers, without in any respect limiting the responsi- bility of the shareholders to the public. This limitation cannot be implied in a charter any more than in an act of parliament, and will be held not to exist unless it be distinctly set forth. In a private copartnery, no partner, without the consent of the company, can transfer his share to another person, or introduce a new member into the company. Each member, however, may, upon proper warning, withdraw from the copartnery, and demand payment from them of his share of the common stock. In a joint stock company, on the contrary, no member can demand payment of his share from the company; but each member may, without their consent, transfer his share to another person, and thereby introduce a new member. The value of a share in a joint stock is always the price which it will bring in the market; and this may be either greater or less, in any proportion, than the sum which its owner stands credited for in the stock of the company."-( Wealth of Nations, vol. iii. p. 238.) 2. Utility of Joint Stock Companies.-Whenever the capital required to carry on any undertaking exceeds what may be furnished by an individual, it is indispensable, in order to the prosecution of the undertaking, that an association should be formed. In all those cases, too, in which the chances of success are doubtful, or where a lengthened period must neces- sarily elapse before an undertaking can be completed, an individual, though ready enough to contribute a small sum in connection with others, would, generally speaking, be very little inclined, even if he had the means, to encounter the whole responsibility of such enterprises. Hence the necessity and advantage of companies or associations. It is to them that we are indebted for those canals by which every part of the country is intersected, for the formation of so many noble docks and warehouses, for the institution of our principal banks and insur- ance offices, and for many other establishments of great public utility carried on by the com- bined capital and energies of large bodies of individuals. 3. Branches of Industry, for the Prosecution of which Joint Stock Companies may be advantageously established.-In order to ensure a rational prospect of success to a company, the undertaking should admit of being carried on according to a regular systematic plan. The reason of this is sufficiently obvious. The business of a great association must be con- ducted by factors or agents; and unless it be of such a nature as to admit of their duties being clearly pointed out and defined, the association would cease to have any effectual con- trol over them, and would be, in a great measure, at their mercy. An individual who ma- nages his own affairs reaps all the advantage derivable from superior skill, industry, and economy; but the agents, and even directors, of joint stock companies labour, in most cases, entirely or principally for the advantage of others; and cannot therefore, however conscien- tious, have the same powerful motives to act with energy, prudence, and economy. Like," says Dr. Smith, " the stewards of a rich man, they are apt to consider attention to small matters as not for their master's honour, and very easily give themselves a dispensation from having it. Negligence and profusion, therefore, must always prevail more or less in the management of the affairs of such a company." It also not unfrequently happens that they suffer from the bad faith, as well às the carelessness and extravagance of their servants; the latter having, in many instances, endeavoured to advance their own interests at the expense of their employers. Hence the different success of companies whose business may be con- ducted according to a nearly uniform system,-such as dock, canal, and insurance compa- nies, rail-road companies, &c.-and those whose business does not admit of being reduced to any regular plan, and where much must always be left to the sagacity and enterprise of those employed. All purely commercial companies, trading upon a joint stock, belong to the latter class. Not one of them has ever been able to withstand the competition of private ad- venturers they cannot subject the agents they employ to buy and sell commodities in die- tant countries to any effectual responsibility and from this circumstance, and the abuses that usually insinuate themselves into every department of their management, no such com- pany has ever succeeded, unless when it has obtained some exclusive privilege, or been pro- tected from competition. The circumstances now mentioned would seem to oppose the most formidable obstacles to the success of the companies established in this country for the prosecution of mining in America. This business does not admit of being reduced to a regular routine system. Much must always depend on the skill and probity of the agents employed at the mines and it must plainly be very difficult, if not quite impossible, for directors resident in London to exercise any effectual surveillance over the proceedings of those who are at so great 8 Digitized by Google COMPANIES. 457 distance. Hence it is not at all likely that these establishments will ever be so productive to the undertakers, as if they had been managed by the parties themselves. The Abbé Morellet has given, in a tract published in 1769 (Examen de la Réponse de M. N., pp. 35-38.), a list of 55 joint stock companies, for the prosecution of various branches of foreign trade, established in different parts of Europe since 1600, every one of which had failed, though most of them had exclusive privileges. Most of those that have been established since the publication of the Abbé Morellet's tract have had a similar fate. But notwithstanding both principle and experience concur in showing how very ill fitted a large association is for the purpose of prosecuting commercial undertakings, there are cases in which they cannot be prosecuted except by associations of this sort, and when it may be expedient to grant them certain peculiar privileges. When, owing either to the disinclina- tion or inability of government to afford protection to those engaged in any particular depart- ment of trade, they are obliged to provide for their own defence and security, it is obviously necessary that they should have the power to exclude such individuals as may refuse to sub- mit to the measures, or to bear their due share of the expense. required for the common pro- tection of all. The Russian Company, the East India Company, the Levant or Turkey Company, and most of the other great trading companies which have existed in this country, seem principally to have grown out of a real or supposed necessity of this sort. It was not believed that any safe or advantageous intercourse could be carried on with barbarous coun- tries without the aid of ships of war, factories, interpreters, &c. And as government was not always able or willing to afford this assistance, the traders were formed into companies or associations, and vested with such peculiar privileges as appeared to be necessary for en- abling them to prosecute the trade without any extrinsic support. " When," says Dr. Smith " a company of merchants undertake, at their own risk and expense, to establish a new trade with some remote and barbarous nation, it may not be unreasonable to incorporate them into a joint stock company, and to grant them, in case of success, a monopoly of the trade for a certain number of years. It is the easiest and most natural way in which the state can re- compense them for hazarding a dangerous and expensive experiment, of which the public is afterwards to reap the benefit. A temporary monopoly of this kind may be vindicated upon the same principles upon which a like monopoly of a new machine is granted to its inventor, and that of a new book to its author. But upon the expiration of the term, the monopoly ought certainly to determine; the forts and garrisons, if it was found necessary to establish any, to be taken into the hands of government, their value to be paid to the company, and the trade to be laid open to all the subjects of the Wealth of Nations, vol. iii. p. 258.) It may be doubted, however, whether it be really necessary, even in such a case as that now mentioned, to establish a joint stock company with peculiar privileges, and whether the same thing might not be more advantageously effected by the establishment of an open or regulated company. 4. Open or Regulated Companies-The affairs of such companies or associations are managed by directors appointed by the members. They do not, however, possess a common or joint stock. Each individual pays a fine upon entering into the company, and most com- monly an annual contribution a duty applicable to the business of the company is also sometimes charged upon the goods imported and exported from and to the countries with which they trade. The sums 80 collected are applied by the directors to fit out ambassa- dors, consuls, and such public functionaries as may be required to facilitate commercial deal- ings, or to build factories, maintain cruisers, &c. The members of such companies trade upon their own stock, and at their own risk. So that when the fine, or the sum payable on admission into a regulated company, is moderate, it is impossible for its members to form any combination that would have the effect of raising their profits above the common level and there is the same keen and close competition amongst them that there is amongst other classes of traders. A regulated company is, in fact, a device for making those engaged in a particular branch of trade bear the public or political expenses incident to it, at the same time that it leaves them to conduct their own business with their own capital, and in their own way. Should, therefore, government at any time refuse, or be unable to afford, that protection to those engaged in any branch of trade which is necessary to enable them to carry it on, their formation into a regulated company would seem to be the most judicious measure that could be adopted inasmuch as it would obtain for them that protection which is indispensa- ble, without encroaching on the freedom of individual enterprise. The African, the Levant, and some other branches of trade, were for a long time conducted by open or regulated companies. These, however, have been recently abolished the African Company, by the act 1 & 2 Geo. 4. c. 28.; and the Levant Company, by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 33. The Russia Company still exista.-(See RUSSIA COMPANY.) In so far as relates to protection, it may perhaps be thought, for the reasons given by Dr. Smith, that a joint stock company is better calculated to afford it than a regulated company. The directors of the latter having, Dr. Smith alleges, no particular interest in the prosperity VoL. L-2 58 Digitized by Google 458 COMPANIES. of the general trade of the company, for behoof of which, ships of war, factories, or forts, have to be maintained, are apt to neglect them, and to apply their whole energies to the care of their own private concerns. But the interest of the directors of a joint stock company are, he contends, in a great measure identified with those of the association. They have no private capital employed in the trade; their profits must depend upon the prudent and pro- fitable management of the common stock; and it may, therefore, it is argued, be fairly pre- sumed that they will be more disposed to attend carefully to all the means by which the prosperity of the association may be best secured. On the other hand, however, it is seldom that the directors of joint stock companies stop at the proper point; having almost invariably attempted to extend their commercial dealings by force, and to become not only merchants but sovereigns. Nor is this any thing but what might have been expected, seeing that the consideration and extensive patronage accruing from such measures to the directors is gene- rally of far more importance to them than a moderate increase of the dividends on their stock. Whenever they have been able, they have seldom scrupled to employ arms to ad- vance their projects; and instead of contenting themselves with shops and factories, have constructed fortifications, embodied armies, and engaged in war. But such has not been the case with regulated companies. The businesses under their control have uniformly been con- ducted in a comparatively frugal and parsimonious manner; their establishments have been, for the most part, confined to factories and they have rarely, if ever, allowed themselves to be seduced by schemes of conquest and dominion. And hence, considering them as commercial machines, it does not really seem that there can be any doubt as to the superiority of a regulated over a joint stock company. The latter has the defect, for which nothing almost can compensate, of entirely excluding individual enterprise and competition. When such a company enjoys any peculiar privilege, it natu- rally, in pursuing its own interest, endeavours to profit by it, how injurious soever it may be to the public. If it have a monopoly of the trade with any particular country, or of any particular commodity, it rarely fails, by understocking the home and foreign markets, to sell the goods which it imports and exports at an artificially enhanced price. It is not its object to employ a comparatively large capital, but to make a large profit on a comparatively small capital. The conduct of the Dutch East India Company in burning spices, that their price might not be lowered by larger importations, is an example of the mode in which such asso- ciations uniformly and, indeed, almost necessarily act. All individuals are desirous of obtain- ing the highest possible price for what they have to sell and if they are protected by means of a monopoly, or an exclusive privilege, from the risk of being undersold by others, they never hesitate about raising the price of their products to the highest elevation that the competition of the buyers will allow them; and thus frequently realise the most exorbitant profits. And yet, notwithstanding these advantages, such is the negligence, profusion, and pecula- tion, inseparable from the management of great commercial companies, that even those that have had the monopoly of the most advantageous branches of commerce have rarely been able to keep out of debt. It will be shown in the article EAST INDIA COMPANY, that that association has lost by its trade; and that, had it not been for the aid derived from the reve- nues of India, it must long since have ceased to exist. To buy in one market; to sell with profit in another; to watch over the perpetually occurring variations in the prices, and in the supply and demand of commodities; to suit with dexterity and judgment the quantity and quality of goods to the wants of each market; and to conduct each operation in the best and cheapest manner; requires a degree of unremitting vigilance and attention, which would be visionary to expect from the directors or servants of a great joint stock association. Hence it has happened, over and over again, that branches of commerce which proved ruinous to companies, have become exceedingly profitable when carried on by individuals. 5. Constitution of Companies.-Whe application is made to parliament for an act to incorporate a number of individuals into a joint stock company for the prosecution of any useful undertaking, care ought to be taken not to concede to them any privileges that may be rendered injurious to the public. If a company be formed for the construction of a dock, a road, or a canal, it may be necessary, in order to stimulate individuals to engage in the un- dertaking, to give them some peculiar privileges for a certain number of years. But if other persons were to be permanently hindered from constructing new docks, or opening new lines of communication, a lasting injury might be done to the public. It may be highly expe- dient to incorporate a company for the purpose of bringing water into a city ; but supposing there were no springs in the vicinity, other than those to which this company has acquired a right, they might, unless restrained by the act incorporating them, raise the price of water to an exorbitant height; and make large profits for themselves at the expense and to the injury of the public. In all cases of this sort; and in the case, indeed, of all joint stock companies established for the formation of canals, railroads, &c. it would be sound policy to limit the rates charged for their services, or on account of the water, ships, goods, &c. conveyed by their means, and also to limit the dividends, or to fix a maximum beyond which they should not be augmented enacting, that if the rates charged by the company produce more than sufficient to pay the maximum rate of dividend, and to defray the wear and tear of the aque- Digitized by Google COMPANIES. 459 duct, canal, &c., they shall be allowed to reduce them till they only yield this much; and, in the event of their declining to do so, that the whole surplus above paying the dividend shall be applied to purchase up the stock of the association, so that ultimately the charges on account of dividends may be entirely abolished. Had this principle been acted upon when canals first began to be formed in England, the carriage of goods conveyed by some of the most important lines of communication would now have cost almost nothing and this de- sirable result might have been accomplished in the way now suggested, without, we believe, diminishing in any degree the number of those undertakings. There are few who, at the time they engage in such enterprises, suppose that they will yield more than 10 or 12 per cent.; and vast numbers will always be disposed to engage in them, if there be any reasona- ble prospect of their yielding this much. Now, when such is the case, is it not the duty of government to provide, in the event of the undertaking becoming in an unexpected and un- usual degree profitable, that the public should derive some advantage from it? This is not a case in which competition can reduce profits to the common level. The best, perhaps the only practicable, line for a canal or railroad between any two places will be appropriated by those who are first in the field; who thus, in fact, obtain a natural monopoly of which they cannot be deprived: and hence the advantage of limiting the charges and dividends with- out discouraging enterprise, it affords a security that private individuals shall not reap an unusual and unlooked for profit at the expense of the public. In all those cases in which companies are formed for the prosecution of undertakings that may be carried on, with equal advantage to the public, by individuals; or where there are no very considerable difficulties to overcome, or risks to encounter; they ought to enjoy no privilege whatever, but should be regarded, in every point of view, as if they were mere in- dividuals. For accounts of the principal joint stock and regulated companies established in this country, see the articles BANK OF ENGLAND, Docks, EAST INDIA COMPANY, INSURANCE, RUSSIA COMPANY, &c. &c. 6. Companies en Commandite.-In France there is a sort of companies denominated sociétés en commandite. A society of this description consists of one or more partners, liable, without limitation, for the debts of the company; and one or more partners, or com- manditaires, liable only to the extent of the funds they have subscribed. A commanditaire must not, however, take any part in the business of the company ; if he do this, he loses his inviolability, and makes himself responsible for the debts of the association. The names of the partners in such societies must be published, and the amount of the sums contributed by the commanditaires. It has been proposed to introduce partnerships of this sort into this country but it seems very doubtful whether any thing would be gained by such a measure. Partnerships en commandite may be very easily abused or rendered a means of defrauding the public. It is quite visionary to imagine that the commanditaires can be prevented from indirectly influ- encing the other partners: and supposing 9 collusion to exist amongst them, it might be possible for them to divide large sums as profit, when, perhaps, they had really sustained a loss and to have the books of the association 80 contrived, that it might be very difficult to detect the fraud. This, it is alleged, is by no means a rare occurrence in France. 7. Civic Companies, or Corporations.-Exclusive of the companies previously mentioned, a number of ancient companies or corporations exist in this and most other European coun- tries, the members of which enjoy certain political as well as commercial privileges. When the feudal system began to be subverted by the establishment of good order and regular go- vernment in the towns, the inhabitants were divided into certain trades or corporations, by which the magistrates and other functionaries were chosen. The members of these trades, or corporations, partly to enhance the value of their privileges, and partly to provide a re- source, in case of adversity, for themselves, acquired or usurped the power of enacting by- laws regulating the admission of new members, and at the same time set about providing a fund for the support of such as accident or misfortune might reduce to a state of indigence. Hence the origin of apprenticeships, the refusal to allow any one not a member of a corpora- tion to carry on any business within the precincts of any town corporate, and the various regulations that had to be submitted to, and the fees that had to be paid by the claimants for inrolment in corporations. For a lengthened period these privileges and regulations were very oppressive. Within the last century, however, their influence has been progressively diminishing. In France, where the abuses inseparable from the system had attained to a very great height, it was entirely swept off by the Revolution and though corporations still exist in this country, they have been stripped of their peculiar franchises; and should now, for the most part, be regarded more, perhaps, in the light of charitable than of political insti- tutions. It would be well, however, were they reduced entirely to the former character and were the few political and commercial privileges, which they still enjoy, communicated to the rest of the citizens. At their first institution, and for some time after, corporations, considered as political bodies, were probably useful: but such is no longer the case; and in Digitized by Google 460 COMPASS. so far as they now possess any special immunities, they tend to obstruct that free competition that is so advantageous. The following extract from a Report on the Commerce and Manufactures of the United States, drawn up by Albert Gallatin, Esq., then secretary of the Treasury, and laid before Congress in 1816, sets the superior advantages resulting from the unrestricted freedom of in- dustry in a very striking point of view. "No cause," says he, has, perhaps, more pro- moted in every respect the general improvement of the United States, than the absence of those systems of internal restriction and monopoly which continue to disfigure the state of society in other countries. No laws exist here, directly or indirectly, confining men to a particular occupation or place, or excluding any citizen from any branch he may, at any time, think proper to pursue. Industry is, in every respect, free and unfettered every species of trade, commerce, and profession, and manufacture, being equally open to all, without requir- ing any regular apprenticeship, admission, or licence. Hence the improvement of America has not been confined to the improvement of her agriculture, and to the rapid formation and settlement of new states in the wilderness; but her citizens have extended their commerce to every part of the globe, and carry on with complete success even those branches for which a monopoly had heretofore been considered essentially necessary." There is in Rees's Cyclopadia, article Company, a list of the different Civic Companies belonging to the City of London, in which the periods of their incorporation, and various other important particulars with respect to several of them, are specified. COMPASS (Ger. Ein Kompass; Du. Zeekompas; Da. Söekompass; Sp. Sjöcompass Fr. Boussole, Compas de mer; It. Bussola; Sp. Aguja de marear; Port. Compasso de marear; Rus. Kampass korabelnüi), or matiner's compass, an instrument composed of a needle and card, by which the ship's course is directed. The needle, with little variation, always points towards the north, and hence the mode of steering by the compass. The common opinion is that the compass was invented by Flavio Gioia, a citizen of the once famous republic of Amalphi, very near the beginning of the fourteenth century. Dr. Robertson has adopted this opinion, and regrets that contemporary historians furnish no de- tails as to the life of a man to whose genius society is 80 deeply indebted.-( of America, vol. i. p. 47. 8vo ed.) But though Gioia may have made improvements on the compass, it has been shown that he has no claim to be considered as its discoverer. Passages have been produced from writers who flourished more than a century before Gioia, in which the po- larity of the needle, when touched by the magnet, is distinctly pointed out. Not only, how- ever, had this singular property been discovered, but also its application to the purposes of navigation, long previously to the fourteenth century. Old French writers have been quoted (Macpherson's Annals of Commerce, anno 1200; Rees's Cyclopsedia), that seem fully to establish this fact. But whatever doubts may exist with respect to them, cannot affect the passages which the learned Spanish antiquary, Don Antonio de Capmany (Questiones Critis cas, pp. 73-132), has given from a work of the famous Raymond Lully (De Contempla- tione) published in 1272. In one place Lully says, "as the needle, when touched by the magnet, naturally turns to the north" (sicut acus per naturam virtitur ad septentrionem dum sit tacta à magnete). This is conclusive as to the author's acquaintance with the po- larity of the needle and the following passage from the same work-" as the nautical needle directs mariners in their navigation," (sicut acus nautica dirigit marinarios in sua naviga- tione, drc.) is no less conclusive as to its being used by sailors in regulating their course. There are no means of ascertaining the mode in which the needle Raymond Lully had in view was made use of. It has been sufficiently established-(see the authorities already referred to, and Azuni, Dissertation sur Origine de la Boussole,)-that it was usual to float the needle, by means of a straw, on the surface of a basin of water; and Capmany contends that we are indebted to Gioia for the card, and the method now followed of sus- pending the needle improvements which have given to the compass all its convenience, and a very large portion of its utility. But this part of his Dissertation, though equally learned and ingenious, is by no means so satisfactory as the other. It is difficult to conceive how mariners at sea could have availed themselves of a floating needle but, however this may be, it seems most probable that Gioia had considerably improved the construction of the compass; and that, the Amalphitans having been the first to introduce it to general use, he was, with excusable partiality, represented by them, and subsequently regarded by others, as its inventor. The reader will not consider these details out of place in a work on commerce, which the compass has done so much to extend. " Its discovery," to borrow the language of Mr. Mac- pherson, " has given birth to a new era in the history of commerce and navigation. The former it has extended to every shore of the globe, and increased and multiplied its opera- tions and beneficial effects in a degree which was not conceivable by those who lived in the earlier ages. The latter it has rendered expeditious, and comparatively safe, by enabling the navigator to launch out upon the ocean free-from the danger of rocks and shoals. By the use of this noble instrument, the whole world has become one vast commercial common- Digitized by Google COMPOSITION-CONSTANTINOPLE. 461 wealth, the most distant inhabitants of the earth are brought together for their mutual advan- tage, ancient prejudices are obliterated, and mankind are civilised and enlightened."-(Vol. i. P. 366.) COMPOSITION, in commerce, commonly implies the dividend or sum paid by an insol- vent debtor to his creditors, and accepted by them in payment for their debts. CONEY WOOL (Ger. Kaninchenwolle; Du. Konynhair; Fr. Poil de lapin It. Pelo di Coniglio ; Sp. Conejuna), the fur of rabbits. This article is extensively used in the hat manufacture; and besides the large supplies raised at home, a great deal is imported. The imports usually range from about 300,000 to about 500,000 skins a year but, in 1831, they exceeded 900,000, while, in 1827, they were only 197,000. CONSTANTINOPLE, formerly the metropolis of the Eastern, as it still is of the Turk- ish Empire, is situated on a triangular point of land, on the European side of the Sea of Marmara (Propontis), at the point where it unites with the Bosphorus, or channel leading to the Black Sea, in lat. 41° o 12" N., lon. 28° 59' 2" E. Population variously estimated at from 300,000 to 600,000, but believed, by the best authorities, to be about 400,000. The situation of this renowned city is, in a commercial point of view, one of the finest imaginable. Standing on the narrow straits uniting the Mediterranean and Euxine Seas, she at once commands, and is the entrepôt for, the commerce between them. The harbour, whence the Turkish court has taken the appellation of the Sublime Porte, is most excellent. It consists of an extensive inlet, or arm of the sea, stretching along the north-east side of the city, which it divides from the suburbs of Galata and Pera. It has sufficient depth of water to float the largest ships, and can accommodate more than 1,000 sail. The strong current that sets through the Bosphorus into the Sea of Marmara strikes against Seraglio Point-(see Plan) a part of the water, being in consequence forced into the harbour, runs along its south-western side in the direction marked by the arrows-(see Plan),-till, arriving at its extremity, it escapes by the opposite side. In the middle the water is still. On leaving the port, it is necessary to keep well over to the northern side; for otherwise the ship might be taken by the current, and driven on Seraglio Point. It may be worth while, however, to remark, that notwithstanding this inconvenience, the current has been of signal service to the city, by scouring the harbour, and carrying away the filth and ballast by which it must otherwise have been long since choked up. The distance across from Seraglio Point to the opposite suburb of Scutari, on the Asiatic coast, is rather more than an English mile. Within less than t of a mile of the latter is a rocky islet, upon which is a tower and light-house, known by the name of the Tower of Leander. Foreigners reside in Galata, Pera, and the suburbs on the eastern side of the harbour; and it is there, consequently, that the principal trade of the place is carried on. The quays are good, and ships lie close alongside. The Bosphorus, or channel of Constantinople, runs in a N. E. by N. direction about 15 miles, varying in breadth from 14 to & mile. It is swept by a rapid current, which it requires a brisk gale to stem, and has throughout a great depth of water. The Hellespont, or strait of the Dardanelles, leading from the Archipelago to the Sea of Marmara, is about 13 leagues in length. Its direction is nearly N.E. Where narrowest, it is little more than a mile across. It also is swept by a strong current, and has deep water throughout. The subjoined plan of part of Constantinople and its port is copied, without reduction, from the beautiful plan of the city and Bosphorus, drawn and engraved by M. Merzoff Robert of Munich, and published by Mr. Wilde, of this city. Nothing can be more imposing than the appearance of the city when seen from the sea, but on landing the illusion vanishes. The streets are narrow, dark, ill-paved and irregular. Owing to the want of any effective system of police, and of the most ordinary attention to cleanliness, they are extremely filthy ; and are infested with herds of dogs, and also with rats, which perform the functions of scavengers. The houses are mostly built of wood, and fires are very frequent. Most of these happen designedly ; the burning of a few hundred houses being deemed the readiest and most effectual means of making the government aware of the public dissatisfaction, and of procuring a redress of grievances Money.-Accounts are kept in piastres of 40 paras, or 120 aspers. The Turkish coin has been so much degraded, that the piastre, which a few years ago was worth 2s. sterling, is now worth little more than 4d. A bag of silver (kefer) = 500 piastres, and a bag of gold (kitze) = 30,000 plastres. Weights and Measures.-The commercial weights are-176 drams - 1 rottolo 2.272 rottoli = 1 oke 6 okes - 1 batman 7t batmans = 1 quintal or cantaro = 124:457 (124) very nearly) lbs. avoirdupois = 56-437 kilogrammes = 116:527 lbs. of Hamburgh. The quintal of cotton is 45 okes = 127.2 lbs. avoir- dupois. The pik, or pike, is of two sorts, the greater and the less. The greater, called halebi or arschim used in the measurement of silks and woollens, is very near 28 inches (27.9). The lesser called endese, used in the measuring of cottons, carpets, &c. = 27 inches. Hence 100 long piks = 77:498 English yards, and 100 short pike = 75-154 do. But in ordinary commercial affairs, the pik is estimated at + of an English yard. Corn is measured by the kislor or killow = 0.941 of a Winchester bushel; 81 kisloz = 1 quarter. The fortin = 4 kisloz. Oil and other liquids are sold by the alma or meter = 1 gallon 3 pints English wine measure. The alma of oil should weigh 8 okes.-(Nelkenbrecher and r.Kelly.) The Port Charges on account of English vessels in the harbours of the Ottoman empire are fixed by treaty at 300 aspers, neither more nor less. 2 Q 2 Digitized by Google 462 CONSTANTINOPLE. 16 24 9 16 11 $ V* R H 22 22 1 11 a 27 9 ONE 17g 15 2 D R S 16 7 24 24 16 11 II 16 A I E 27 3 S 2 3 16 of 41 20b 9 10 41 9 6% It 11 If 12 3 15th 11 16 41 24 174 33 38 33 27 SEA OF MARMARA of 12 I Scale Toises 41 0 500 1000 or References to Plan.-A, Seraglio Point ; B, Galata ; c, Scutari ; D, Tower and lighthouse of Lean- der. The arrow shows the direction of the currents. The soundings are in fathoms. Trade, &c.-Owing to the vicious institutions of the Turks and the disorganised state of the empire, the trade of Constantinople is very far from being 80 extensive as might be sup- posed from its situation and population. The imports consist of corn, iron, timber, tallow, and furs, principally from the Black Sea; and of cotton stuffs and yarn, tin, tin plates, wool- lens, silks, cutlery, watches and jewellery, paper, glass, furniture, indigo, cochineal, &c. from England and other European countries. Corn and coffee are imported from Alexandria; but a good deal of Brazil and West India coffee is also imported, particularly in American bottoms. Sugar is partly imported from the East, but principally from the West Indies. The exports are very trifling, consisting of silk, carpets, hides, wool, goats' hair, potashes, wax, galls, bullion and diamonds, and a few other articles. Ships carrying goods to Con- Digitized by Google CONSTANTINOPLE. 463 stantinople, either return in ballast, or get return cargoes at Smyrna, Odessa, Salonica, &c., on which places they frequently procure bills at Constantinople. Trade is chiefly in the hands of English, French, and other European merchants (denominated Franks) and of Armenians and Greeks. Bargains are negotiated on their account by Jew brokers, some of whom are rich. Commercial Policy of the Turks.-It is singular that as respects commerce, the policy of the Turkish government, whether originating in design or carelessness, is entitled to the highest praise. No restrictions," says Mr. Thornton, are laid on commerce, except in the instance of a general prohibition of exporting the articles necessary for the support of human life to foreign countries, especially from the capital, where alone it is rigorously enforced; and this impolitic restraint will no doubt be removed when the Turkish go- vernment shall become sensible, that what is intended as the means of securing abundance, is, in fact, the sole cause of that scarcity which is sometimes experienced. With this one exception, commerce is perfectly free and unfettered. Every article of foreign or domestic growth or manufacture is conveyed into every port, and over every province, without any interference on the part of the magistrates, after payment of the duties. On this subject I speak from actual experience, and may appeal to every foreign or native merchant in Tur- key for its general State of Turkey, vol. i. p. 82.) The duties, too, are extremely moderate, being only three per cent. on imports, and as much on exports; so that in almost all that relates to her commercial regulations, Turkey is entitled to read a lesson to the most civilized European powers and this she has done in a very able manner, in an official paper published in the Moniteur Ottoman, in September, 1832. We extract a few paragraphs from this very interesting document. It is recognised throughout Europe that it would be useful to the great majority to substitute, for the system of prohibitions, that of liberty, which theoretical men advocate; the difficulty is, to find means to separate the future from the past without a violent rupture. Hence the difficulties of govern- ment in satisfying all the exigencies of agriculture, industry, and commerce, driven in a circle where every measure in favour of one, acts immediately in an inverse sense on the other. The endeavour is vain to establish, between so many crossing interests, a factitious equilibrium which absolute liberty of exchange alone can give. Thus, one of the most important questions which occupies the meditation of statesmen in Europe, is, to discover how the palings which pen commerce up in narrow spaces may be thrown down with- out shocks that might endanger public order. Good sense, tolerance, and hospitality, have long ago done for the Ottoman empire, what the other states of Europe are endeavouring to effect by more or less happy political combinations. Since the throne of the sultans has been elevated at Constantinople, commercial prohibitions have been unknown they opened all the ports of their empire to the commerce, to the manufactures, to the ter- ritorial produce of the Occident, or, to say better, of the whole world. Liberty of commerce has reigned here without limits, as large, as extended as it was possible to be. Never has the divan dreamed, under any pretext of national interest, or even of reciprocity, of restricting that faculty which has been exercised, and is to this day, in the most unlimited sense, by all the nations who wish to furnish a portion of the consumption of this vast empire, and to share in the produce of its territory. " Here every object of exchange is admitted, and circulates without meeting any obstacle other than the payment of an infinitely small portion of the value to the Custom-house. The chimera of a balance of trade never entered into heads sensible enough not to dream of calculating whether there was most profit in buying or selling. Thus the markets of Turkey, supplied from all countries, refus- ing no objects which mercantile spirit puts in circulation, and imposing no charge on the vessels that transport them, are seldom or never the scenes of those disordered movements occasioned by the sud- den deficiency of such or such merchandise, which, exorbitantly raising prices, are the scourges of the lower orders, by unsettling their habits, and by inflicting privations. From the system of restrictions and prohibitions arise those devouring tides and ebbs which sweep away in a day the labour of years, and convert commerce into a career of alarms and perpetual dangers. In Turkey, where this system does not exist, these disastrous effects are unknown. The extreme moderation of the duties is the complement of this régime of commercial liberty and in no portion of the globe are the officers charged with the collection, of more confiding facility for the valuations, and of so decidedly conciliatory a spirit in every transaction regarding commerce. Away with the supposition that these facilities granted to strangers are concessions extorted from weakness! The dates of the contracts termed capitulations, which establish the rights actually en- joyed by foreign merchants, recall periods at which the Mussulman power was altogether predomi- nant in Europe. The first capitulation which France obtained was in 1535, from Soliman the Canonist (the Magnificent). The dispositions of these contracts have become antiquated, the fundamental principles remain. Thus 300 years ago, the sultans, by an act of munificence and of reason, antici- pated the most ardent desires of civilised Europe, and proclaimed unlimited freedom of commerce." Did the policy of Turkey in other respects harmonise with this, she would be one of the most civilised and powerful of nations, instead of being one of the most abject and degraded. Unfortunately, however, this is very far from being the case. Tyranny, corruption, and insecurity universally prevail. The cultivator of the soil is ever a helpless prey to injus- tice and oppression. The government agents have to suffer in their turn from the cruelty and rapacity of which they themselves have been guilty and the manufacturer has to bear his full share of the common insecurity he is fixed to the spot and cannot escape the grasp of the local governor. The raw material monopolised by a bey or ayan, may be forced upon him at a higher price than he could purchase it himself, and perhaps of inferior quality fines may be imposed upon him, he may be taken for forced labour, or troops may be quar- tered on his (Urquhart on Turkey and its Resources, p. 139.) This miserable system has overspread some of the fairest provinces of Europe and Asia with barbarism-turned their cities into villages, and their palaces into cottages but the Digitized by Google 464 CONSTANTINOPLE. degradation in which they are involved, would have been still more complete, but for the freedom of commerce they have always enjoyed. This has tended to keep alive the seeds of industry, and to counteract the destructive influence of oppression and insecurity. Had their intercourse with foreigners been either prohibited, or placed under oppressive restric- tions, the barbarism of Turkey would have been completed, and it is difficult to suppose that there could have been either wealth or industry in the empire. Trade of Turkey with England. - The trade between this country and Turkey is of much greater value and importance than is generally supposed; and appears to be susceptible of an almost indefinite increase. Cotton stuffs and twist are the great articles of export from Great Britain to Turkey and notwithstanding the convulsed and distracted state of the latter during the last 5 years, she has continued to take off a rapidly increasing amount of these staple articles. In 1825, for example, we exported direct for Turkey, (including what is now the kingdom of Greece), 13,674,000 yards of cotton cloth, and 446,462 lbs. of cotton twist; whereas, in 1831, we exported to Turkey (exclusive of the Morea), 24,565,000 yards of cloth, and 1,735,760 lbs. of twist, being an increase of nearly 100 per cent. in the exports of stuffs, and of 400 per cent. in those of yarn ! The Turkish manu- factures of muslins, ginghams, handkerchiefs, &c. have suffered severely from this extraor- dinary importation of British goods; so much so, that of 600 looms for muslins busily employed in Scutari in 1812, only 40 remained in 1831 and of 2,000 weaving establish- ments in Tournovo, at the former epoch, there were only 200 at the latter ! - (Urquhart on Turkey, &c. p. 150.) But the great consumption of Turkey consists of coarse home- made fabrics; and we are assured by the very intelligent author now referred to, that this great branch has not been sensibly affected by our imports. Hitherto, indeed, they have been principally intended for the wealthier part of the community; but as cottons are universally worn by the mass of the people, the trade will not attain to any thing like the extent to which it may be carried, till we supply the peasantry with the stuffs suitable for their use. It is creditable to the discernment of the Americans, that they were the first to perceive the superior importance of this class of customers, and to set about supplying them with coarse unbleached stuffs. The Manchester manufacturers immediately followed in the same track, and with signal success. Plain goods now form the half of our investments for Turkey and it is impossible, seeing the extent to which articles of this sort are made use of in all parts of the empire, and, indeed, of the East, to form any clear idea of what may be the future magnitude of this trade. Of the European states, Austria and Switzerland have been our most formidable rivals in the supply of Turkey with cottons. The stuffs were, in several respects, well fitted for the Eastern markets; but owing to the difficulty they lay under of getting returns, and the con- tinued and rapid reduction in the price of English cottons, we seem to have gained a decided advantage over them, and are now nearly in the exclusive possession of the market. Cheapness is every where the grand desideratum. Though our muslins and chintzes be still very inferior in fineness to those of the East, and our red dye (a colour in great esteem in Turkey, Persia, &c.) be inferior in brilliancy, these defects are more than balanced by the greater cheapness of our goods; and from Smyrna to Canton, from Madras to Samarcand, we are every where supplanting the native fabrics; and laying the foundations of a com- merce that will be eminently beneficial to all parties. Exclusive of cottons, we exported to Constantinopie, Smyma, and other Turkish ports, in 1831, arms and ammunition of the value of 21,7851.; earthenware, 6,4341.; hardware and cutlery, 11,067L. iron and steel, 50,0951. ; refined sugar, 41,0201. woollens, to above 18,000/. ; and some lesser articles; making, with cotton stuffs and yarn, the declared or real value of the direct exports of British pro- duce and manufactures to the whole empire 888,6541., besides those exported to it at second hand from Malta, the Ionian Islands, &c. We also supplied her with a considerable quantity of colonial produce. Our imports from Turkey during the same year, were, wheat 7,383 quarters, currants 8,702 cwt., figs 26,243 cwt., hides 4,685, indigo 4,181 lbs., madder root 23,833 cwt., olive oil 108,193 gallons, opium 8,184 lbs., raisins 100,458 cwt., silk 452,266 lbs., valonia 102,255 cwt., cotton wool 366,550 lbs., with car- pets, bullion, galls, sponges, &c.-(Parl. Paper, No. 55. Sess. 1833.) Our commerce with Turkey would be considerably facilitated by a reduction of the duties on figs, currants, oil, and carpets. Nothing, however, would contribute so much to its extension, as the establishment of order and tranquillity throughout the country. But this, we fear, is beyond the ability of the Ottoman government. The abuses which have reduced the empire to its present state of degradation seem to be inherent in the structure of Turkish society, and to be in harmony with the habits and prejudices of the people. If such be the case, reform must come from without, and not from within. But of whatever other advan- tages a revolution might be productive, it is difficult to believe that it would bring along with it a more liberal system of commercial policy than that which at present exists.* The treatise of Mr. Urquhart, entitled Turkey and its Resources, to which we are principally in- debted for these details, is a work of distinguished talent, discovering throughout an intimate ac- quaintance with the subjects treated of. At the same time we cannot help differing wholly from Mr. Urquhart in his views as to direct and indirect taxation. We believe that no inconsiderable part of the poverty and degradation of Turkey is to be ascribed to the prevalence of the former, which has every where, and at all periods, been a fruitful source of oppression and misery. The most super- ficial reader of this work will see that we are no friends to excessive customs duties; but it is to their Digitized by Google CONSUL. 465 CONSUL, in commerce, an officer appointed by competent authority to reside in foreign countries, in the view of facilitating and extending the commerce carried on between the subjects of the country which appoints him, and those of the country or place in which he is to reside. Origin and Appointment of Consuls.-Th office of consul appears to have originated in Italy, about the middle of the twelfth century. Soon after this, the French and other Christian nations trading to the Levant began to stipulate for liberty to appoint consuls to reside in the ports frequented by their ships, that they might watch over the interests of their subjects, and judge and determine such differences with respect to commercial affairs as arose amongst them. The practice was gradually extended to other countries and in the sixteenth century was generally established all over Europe. - (Martens, Précis du Droit des Gens, § 147.) British consuls were formerly appointed by the Crown, upon the recommendation of great trading companies, or of the merchants engaged in the trade with a particular country or place; but they are now directly appointed by government, without requiring any such recommendation, though it, of course, is always attended to when made. The right of sending consuls to reside in foreign countries depends either upon a tacit or express convention. Hence their powers differ very widely in different states. In some they exercise a very extensive jurisdiction over the subjects of the state which appoints them; but the extent of this jurisdiction is not discretionary, and must, in all cases, be regulated either by an express convention between the state appointing and the state receiving the consul, or by custom. Consuls established in England have no judicial power; and the British government has rarely stipulated with other powers for much judicial authority for its consuls. Turkey, however, is an exception to this remark. English consuls enjoy in that country several peculiar privileges conferred by ancient treaties, and confirmed by that signed at the Dardanelles in 1809. It is there stipulated and agreed upon- That if there happen any suit, or other difference or dispute, among the English themselves, the decision thereof shall be left to their own ambassador or consul, according to their custom, without the judge or other governors, our slaves, intermeddling therein. That if an Englishman, or other subject of that nation, shall be involved in any lawsuit, or other affair connected with law, (with a Turk,) the judge shall not hear nor decide thereon, until the ambas- sador, consul, or interpreter shall be present; and all suits exceeding the value of 4,000 aspers, shall be heard at the Sublime Porte, and no where else. That the consuls appointed by the English ambassadors in our sacred dominions, for the protection of their merchants, shall never, under any pretence, be imprisoned, nor their houses sealed up, nor themselves sent away ; but all'suits or differences in which they may be involved, shall be represented to our Sublime Porte, where their ambassador will answer for them. That in case any Englishman, or other person subject to that nation, or navigating under its flag, should happen to die in our sacred dominions, our fiscal and other officers shall not, upon pretence of its not being known to whom the property belongs, interpose any opposition or violence, by taking or seizing the effects that may be found at his death, but they shall be delivered up to such Englishman, whoever he may be, to whom the deceased may have left them by his will; and should he have died intestate, then the property to be delivered up to the English consul, or his representative who may be then present; and in case there be no consul, or consular representative, they shall be registered by the judge, in order to his delivering up the whole thereof, whenever any ship shall be sent by the ambassador to receive the same." Conformably to these capitulations, and the by-laws of the Levant Company, Nos. 39, 40, and 41., the consuls were authorised to administer justice in all cases of contention amongst British subjects within the Turkish dominions; and they were further authorised to send to England, in safe custody, any British subject resident in Turkey, who should decline their jurisdiction, or appeal from them to the courts of the Grand Signior, or of any other potentate. And the acts 6 Geo. 4. c. 33. § 4., for the abolition of the Levant Company, expressly provides for the continuance to the consuls appointed by his Majesty, of the same rights and duties of jurisdiction over British subjects in Turkey, that were enjoyed by the consuls appointed by the Company. At present, therefore, consuls in Turkey enjoy extensive judicial powers, but owing to the freedom of Turkish commerce, and the simplicity of the regulations under which it is carried on, their other functions, with the exception of furnishing statistical details, none of which they have hitherto communicated, are extremely unimportant.* Mr. Urquhart, whose opinion as to all that respects Turkey is deservedly of very great weight, seems to think that the judicial powers enjoyed by the European consuls in that country, have abuse, and not to the duties themselves, that we object. The duties we impose on brandy, for exam- ple, have been carried to such a height as to defeat their object, and to be productive of an immense amount of smuggling and demoralisation. And yet there can be no more proper subject of taxation nor, provided the duties were reduced to 8s. or 10s. a gallon, is it possible to imagine any less unex- ceptionable tax. The defects inherent in our system of customs duties might easily be removed, not only without any diminution, but with a large accession, of revenue; but though it were otherwise, we are satisfied that the imposition of direct taxes on property or income would occasion more injury in the course of 4 or 5 years, than the present customs duties, with all their defects, would occasion in half a century. No answer has hitherto (15th of October, 1833) been received to the Circular Queries from any one of the Turkish consuls. 59 Digitized by Google 466 CONSUL. been productive of much mischief. Still, however, we doubt whether they could be entirely dispensed with in a country so peculiarly situated. But there can be no doubt that it is highly necessary that the greatest care should be taken in the selection of the individuals to whom such powers are intrusted. Other states have occasionally given to consuls similar powers to those conceded to them in Turkey. Thus, in the treaty between Sweden and the United States of America, ratified on the 24th of July, 1818, it is stipulated that the consuls appointed by either government to reside within the dominions of the other, or their subetitutes, "shall, as such, have the right of acting as judges or arbiters in all cases of differences which may arise between the captains and crews of the vessels of the nation whose affairs are intrusted to their care. The respective governments shall have no right to interfere in these sort of affairs, except in the case of the conduct of the crews disturbing public order and tranquillity in the country in which the vessel may happen to be, or in which the consul of the place may be obliged to call for the intervention and support of the executive power, in order to cause his decision to be respected; it being, however, well understood, that this sort of judgment or arbitration cannot deprive the contending parties of their rights of appealing on their return to the judicial authorities of their country." Duties of Consuls. - The duties of a consul, even in the confined sense in which they are commonly understood, are important and multifarious. It is his business to be always on the spot, to watch over the commercial interests of the subjects of the state whose servant he is; to be ready to assist them with advice on all doubtful occasions; to see that the conditions in commercial treaties are properly observed; that those be is appointed to protect are subjected to no unnecessary or unjustifiable demands in con- ducting their business; to represent their grievances to the authorities at the place where they reside, or to the ambassador of the sovereign appointing him at the court on which the consulship depends, or to the government at home; in a word, to exert himself to render the condition of the subjects of the country employing him, within the limits of his consulship, as comfortable, and their transactions as advantageous and secure, as possible. The following more detailed exposition of the general duties of a British consul, is taken from Mr. Chitty's work on Commercial Law - " A British consul, in order to be properly qualified for his employment, should take care to make himself master of the language used by the court and the magistracy of the country where he resides, so as to converse with ease upon subjects relating to his duties. If the common people of the port use another, he must acquire that also, that he may be able to settle little differences without troubling the magistracy of the place for the interposition of their authority; such as accidents happening in the harbour, by the ships of one nation running foul of and doing damage to each other. " He is to make himself acquainted, if he be not already, with the law of nations and treaties, with the tariff or specification of duties on articles imported or exported, and with all the municipal ordinances and laws. " He must take especial notice of all prohibitions to prevent the export or import of any articles, as well on the part of the state wherein he resides, as of the government employing him ; so that he may admonish all British subjects against carrying on an illicit commerce, to the detriment of the revenues, and in violation of the laws of either. And it is his duty to attend diligently to this part of his office, in order to prevent smuggling, and consequent hazard of confiscation or detention of ships, and imprisonment of the masters and mariners.-(Beawes, Lex Merc. vol. ii. p. 42.) It is also his duty to protect from insult or imposition British subjects of every description within his jurisdiction. If redress for injury suffered is not obtained, he is to carry his complaint by memorial to the British minister residing at the court on which the consulship depends. If there be none, he is to address himself directly to the court and if, in an important case, his complaint be not answered, he is to transmit the memorial to his Majesty's secretary of state.-(Beawes, Warden, &c.) " When insult or outrage is offered by a British subject to a native of the place, and the magistrate thercof complains to the consul, he should summon, and in case of disobedience may by armed force bring before him the offender, and order him to give immediate satis- faction; and if he refuse, he resigns him to the civil jurisdiction of the magistrate, or to the military law of the garrison; nevertheless always acting as counsellor or advocate at his trial, when there is question of life or property. " But if a British subject be accused of an offence alleged to have been committed at sea, within the dominion or jurisdiction of his sovereign, it is then the duty of the consul to claim cognizance of the cause for his sovereign, and to require the release of the parties, if detained in prison by the magistracy of the place on any such accusation brought before them, and that all judicial proceedings against them do instantly cease; and he may demand the aid of the power of the country, civil and military, to enable him to secure and put the accused parties on board such British ship as he shall think fit, that they may be conveyed Digitized by Google CONSUL. 467 to Great Britain, to be tried by their proper judges. If, contrary to this requisition, the magistrates of the country persist in proceeding to try the offence, the consul should then draw up and transmit a memorial to the British minister at the court of that country and if that court give an evasive answer, the consul should, if it be a sea offence, apply to the Board of Admiralty at London, stating the case; and upon their representation, the secretary for the proper department will lay the matter before the king, who will cause the ambassador of the foreign state, resident in England, to write to his court abroad, desiring that orders may immediately be given by that government, that all judicial proceedings against the prisoner be stayed, and that he be released.- (See Case of Horseman and his Crew, Beawes, vol. ii. p. 422.) " It is the duty also of a British consul to relieve all distressed British mariners, to allow them 6d. daily for their support, to send them home in the first British vessels that sail for England, and to keep a regular account of his disbursements, which he is to transmit yearly, or oftener if required, to the Navy Office, attested by two British merchants of the place this is provided for by positive enactment.-(1 Geo. 2. S. 2. c. 14. § 12.) He is also to give free passes to all poor British subjects wishing to return home, directed to the captains of the king's packet boats, or ships of war, requiring them to take them on SEAMEN.) The consul is not to permit a British merchant ship to leave the port where he resides without his passport, which he is not to grant until the master and crew thereof have satisfied all just demands upon them; and for this purpose he ought to see the governor's pass of a garrisoned town, or the burgomaster's; unless the merchant or factor to whom the ship was consigned will make himself responsible.-(Beawes, Lex Merc. vol. ii. p. 423.) " It is also his duty to claim and recover all wreeks, cables, and anchors, belonging to British ships, found at sea by fishermen or other persons, to pay the usual salvage, and to communicate a report thereof to the Navy Board. " The consuls and vice-consuls of his Majesty are, by express enactment (46 Geo. 3. c. 98. § 9.), empowered to administer oaths in all cases respecting quarantine, in like manner as if they were magistrates of the several towns or places where they respectively reside. It is also laid down, that a consul is to attend, if requested, all arbitrations where property is concerned between masters of British ships and the freighters, being inhabitants of the place where he on Commercial Law, vol. i. pp. 58-61., and the numerous authorities there quoted.) Any individual, whether he be a subject of the state by which he is appointed, or of another, may be selected to fill the office of consul, provided he be approved and admitted by the government in whose territory he is to reside. In most instances, however, but not always, consuls are the subjects of the state appointing them. Much, however, of the peculiar duties of a consul must always depend on the nature of the intercourse with the country to which he is sent, and of the instructions given him. British consuls are regularly supplied with copies of all acts relating to trade and navigation, quarantine, slave trade suppression, emigration, &c., and with the treaties between this and other countries, and must, of course, shape their conduct accordingly. They are strictly forbidden from corresponding with private parties on public matters. We subjoin an extract from the General Instructions for British Consuls. He will bear in mind that it is his principal duty to protect and promote the lawful trade and trading interests of Great Britain by every fair and proper means, taking care to conform to the laws and regulations in question; and whilst he is supporting the lawful trade of Great Britain, he will take special notice of all prohibitions with respect to the export or import of specified articles, as well on the part of the state in which he resides, as of the government of Great Britain, so that he may caution all British subjects against carrying on an illicit commerce to the detriment of the revenue, and in violation of the laws and regulations of either country; and be will not fail to give to this department immediate notice of any attempt to contravene those laws and regulations. The consul will give his best advice and assistance, when called upon, to his Majesty's trading subjects, quieting their differences, promoting peace, harmony, and good-will amongst them, and conciliating as much as possible the subjects of the two countries, upon all points of difference which may fall under his cognizance. In the event of any attempt being made to injure British subjects either in their persons or property, he will uphold their rightful interests, and the privileges secured to them by treaty, by due representation in the proper official quarter. He will, at the same time, be careful to conduct himself with mildness and moderation in all his transactions with the public authorities, and he will not upon any account urge claims, on behalf of his Majesty's subjects, to which they are not justly and fairly entitled. If redress cannot be obtained from the local adminis- tration, or if the matter of complaint be not within their jurisdiction, the consul will apply to his Majesty's consul-general, or to his Majesty's minister, if there be no consul-general in the country wherein he resides, in order that he may make a representation to the higher authorities, or take such other steps in the case as he may think proper; and the consul will pay strict attention to the instructions which he may receive from the minister or consul-general." Emoluments of Consuls. Prohibition of Trading, &c.-The emoluments of our consule were, until these few years, principally derived from certain fees, depending on the tonnage, length of the voyages, &c. of the British ships entering and clearing out of the limits of their consulships. But this mode of remunerating them was materially changed by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 87. The fees payable under this act-(see post)-are but inconsiderable but the deficiency has been, partly at least, compensated by salaries allowed by government. Digitized by Google 468 CONSUL. At present, British consuls are, in some instances, permitted to carry on trade, while in others they are interdicted from having any thing to do with it. The principle on which the distinction is made does not seem very obvious. We observe, for example, that the consul at Petersburgh, who must have a great deal to do, is allowed to trade while the consul at Odessa, whose duties must be much lighter, is denied this privilege. There is the same dis- tinction between the consuls at Venice and Trieste; the latter, whose duties must be the heavier of the two, being allowed to act as a merchant, while the other is not. If this dis- tinction must be kept up, the preferable plan would seem to be to interdict all consuls resi- dent at the great ports, and those resident at other ports principally in the character of poli- tical agents, from trading; and to permit it to others. The public duties of the former are either quite sufficient wholly to engross their attention, or they are of such a kind as would make it very inexpedient for those employed in them to be occupied in mercantile pursuits in the case of the smaller class of ports, but little frequented by British ships, and where the consuls have no peculiar political functions to discharge, there is a less urgent necessity for prohibiting them from carrying on business on their own account. At the same time, how- ever, we are clearly of opinion that it would in all cases be better not to allow consuls to engage, either directly or indirectly, in any sort of industrious undertaking. The main end and purpose of their institution is the facilitating of commerce with the nation in which they reside; and in furtherance of such object they ought, on all occasions, to communicate the fullest and earliest information in their power touching commercial matters, not only to the government that appoints them, but to such of its subjects as may apply for their advice and assistance. But, however advantageous publicity may be to others, it may in various ways be extremely hostile to the interests of the consul considered in his capacity of merchant; and, when his own advantage and his public duty are set in-opposition, it requires little saga- city to discover which will have the ascendancy. Hence the fair presumption is, that a trading consul will rather endeavour to profit by the peculiar information his situation may enable him to obtain, than to communicate it to others, His interests as a merchant must frequently, also, even when such is not really the case, appear to be in opposition to those of the parties for whose behoof he is said to be appointed and. under such circumstances, his proceedings, however fair, will always be liable to the suspicion of partiality. It is material, also, to observe that mercantile consuls labour under peculiar disadvantages in the obtaining of information. If a consul, not engaged in business, make a proper application to a public functionary, or merchant, for information as to any subject with which they may be acquainted, he will, in most instances, learn all that they know. But it is obvious, on gene- ral principles, and we have been assured of the fact by some of the most intelligent officers of the class, that if a trading consul make the same application, the chances are 10 to 1 he will either learn nothing, or nothing that is not false or misleading. The inquiries of the former excite no jealousy, those of the latter invariably do. The former is known to be ac- tuated only by a feeling of liberal curiosity, or by a wish properly to discharge his public duties; but, the latter, being engaged in business, gets credit only for selfish and interested motives, and is believed to be seeking the information merely that he may turn it to his own account. A mercantile consul is, therefore, uniformly the object of the suspicions of all par- ties, both of his countrymen, and of the foreigners amongst whom he resides. Instead of being, as he ought to be, an independent public functionary, he necessarily gets entangled in the cabals and intrigues of those whose differences it is his province to conciliate. He is tempted, also, to engage in smuggling adventures, contrary to his duty, and highly injurious to the character of his nation. And though he should be proof against temptations of this sort, he is, like all other individuals, subject to misfortune and bankruptcy ; and may, in this way, bring discredit and embarrassment on the government that appoints him. These rea- sons seem to be far more than sufficient to vindicate the policy of interdicting consuls from trading. But were it otherwise, it is enough to decide the question to state, that if they be made properly to perform the functions of their office, it will occupy every moment of their time. To the argument in favour of the existing system derived from economical con- siderations we do not attach the smallest weight. To attempt to save a few thousand pounds by allowing an important class of public functionaries to engage in avocations inconsistent with their duty, and destructive of their utility, would be something the very reverse of economy. Cost of the Establishment. Improvements made in it.-We had occasion, in the former edition of this work, to complain of the cost and inadequacy of our consular establishment. But its expense has since been very much, and, in some instances perhaps, too much re- duced; at the same time that measures have been taken for increasing the duties of the consuls, by making them furnish details as to the trade, manufactures, duties, prices, &c. of the districts in which their consulships are situated. Hitherto this important department of what ought to be the peculiar duty of a consul has been most strangely neglected but if it be properly attended to, it will occupy a large portion of the consul's time, and will be 8 field for the display of superior talents. Some of the answers made by the consuls to the Circular Queries prepared by the author of this work, have been drawn up with great care Digitized by Google CONSUL. 469 and intelligence, and reflect much credit on their authors. There are a good many certainly of a very inferior description; but this is not to be wondered at-it being hardly possible for those who have not given a good deal of their time to such subjects, to make a proper reply to queries relating to them. And if the system is to be perfected to the degree of which it is susceptible, the salaries allowed to the consuls ought to be such as to afford a sufficient remuneration for the services of gentlemen of character, familiar with the principles of public law, commerce, and statistics and such only ought to be nominated to consular situations. We subjoin that part of the General Instructions for the Consuls that has reference to sta- tistical inquiries. " The consul will forward to the secretary of state, in duplicate, so soon as the information be can collect will enable him so to do, but at any rate within a period of 6 months from the date of his arrival at his residence, a general Report on the trade of the place and district, specifying the commodities, as well of the export as import trade, and the countries which supply the latter, together with the increase or decline in late years, and the probable increase and decline to be expected, and the causes in both cases. He will state the general regulations with respect to trade at the place where he is resident, and their effects. He will give the average market prices within the year of the several articles of export and import; he will particularise what articles, if any, are absolutely prohibited to be imported into the country wherein he resides; what articles are prohibited to be imported from any other places than from the place of their growth or production; whether there be any privileges of importation, and what those privileges are, in favour of ships that are of the build of, or belonging to, the country wherein he resides; whether there be any difference in the duty on goods when imported into that country in a foreign ship, and if so, whether it be general, or applicable only to particular articles; what are the rates of duty payable on goods imported into the said country whether there be any tonnage duty or other port dues, and what. payable on shipping entering at, or clearing from, the ports of that country; whether there be any (and, if so, what) ports in that country wherein goods may be warehoused on importation, and afterwards exported with or without payment of any duties, and under what regulations." He is also to transmit an annual statement of the trade with the principal ports of his consulships and quarterly returns of the prices of corn, &c. This is a good beginning, and, if it be properly followed up, may lead to very advantageous results. The following are the provisions of the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 87. with respect to the salaries and charges of consuls Salaries to Consuls.- Whereas the provision which hath hitherto been made for the maintenance and support of the consuls general and consuls appointed by his Majesty to reside within the domi- nions of sovereigns and foreign states in amity with his Majesty, is inadequate to the maintenance and support of such consuls general and consuls, and it is expedient to make further and due provi- sions for that purpose;" it is therefore enacted, that it shall be lawful for his Majesty, by any orders 10 be issued by the advice of his privy council, to grant to all or any of the consuls general or consuls appointed by his Majesty to reside within any of the dominions of any sovereign or foreign state or power in amity with his Majesty, such reasonable salaries as to his Majesty shall seem meet, and by such advice from time to time to alter, increase, or diminish any such salaries or salary as occasion may require.- Geo. 4. c. 87. 1 1.) Terms on which Salaries shall be granted. Leave of Absence.-Such salaries shall be issued and paid to such consuls general and consuls without fee or deduction provided that all such salaries be granted during his Majesty's pleasure, and not otherwise, and be held and enjoyed by such consuls general and consuls, 80 long only as they shall be actually resident at the places at which they may be so appointed to reside, and discharging the duties of such their offices: provided nevertheless, that in case his Majesty shall, by any order to be for that purpose issued through one of his principal secretaries of state, grant to any such consul general or consul leave of absence from the place to which he may be 80 appointed, such consul general or consul shall be entitled to receive the whole, or such part as to his Majesty shall seem meet, of the salary accruing during such period of absence. of Salaries in lieu of Fees formerly paid. Censuls not to take other than the Fees hereinafter mentioned.- The salaries so to be granted shall be taken by the consuls general and consuls as a compensation for all salaries heretofore granted, and all fees of office and gratuities heretofore taken by them from the masters or commanders of British vessels, or from any other person, for any duties or services by such consuls general or consuls done or performed for any such persons; and no such consuls general or consuls shall, from the 1st of January, 1826, be entitled, on account of any thing by him done in the execution of such his office, or for any service by him rendered to any masters or commanders of British vessels, or to any other person in the execution of such his office, to ask or take any fees, recompence, gratuity, compensation, or reward, or any sum of money, save as herein-after is excepted. -0 3. Certain Fees still allowed to be taken-It shall be lawful for all consuls general and consuls appointed by his Majesty, and resident within the dominions of any sovereign, or any foreign state or power in amity with his Majesty, to accept the several fees particularly mentioned in the tables to this present act annexed, marked with the letters A. and B. for the several things and official acts and deeds par- ticularly mentioned in the said schedules; and it shall be lawful for his Majesty, by any orders to be by him made, by the advice of his privy council, from time to time, as occasion may require, to diminish, or wholly to abolish, all or any of the fees aforesaid, and to establish and authorise the pay- ment of any greater or smaller or new or additional fees for the several things mentioned in the said schedules, or for any other thing to be by any such consul general or consul done in the execution of such his office.- 4. Penalty on Consuls demanding more Fees than specified in the Schedule.-In case any consul general or consul appointed by his Majesty as aforesaid shall, by himself or deputy, or by any person authorised thereto in his behalf, ask or accept for any thing by him done in the execution of such his office, or for any service, or duty by him rendered or performed in such his office, for any person whomsoever, any other or greater fee or remuneration than is specified in the schedule, or than shall be sanctioned and specified in or by any such order in council, the person so offending shall forfeit and become liable to pay to his Majesty any sum of sterling British money, not exceeding the amount of the salary of such person for 1 year, nor less than the 12th part of such annual salary, at the discretion of the court in which such penalty may be recovered; and shall moreover upon a second conviction for any such offence forfeit such his office, and for ever after become incapable of serving his Majesty in the same or the like capacity.-d 5. Table of Fees to be exhibited at Custom-houses.-A printed copy of the tables of fees allowed by this VoL. I.-2 R Digitized by Google 470 CONSUL. act, or which may be sanctioned or allowed by any order to be made in pursuance of this act by his Majesty in council, shall be exhibited in a conspicuous manner, for the inspection of all persons, in the Custom-house in the port of London, and in all other Custom-houses in the several ports and har- bours of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland; and printed copies thereof shall, by the collector or other chief officer of customs in all such ports and harbours, be delivered gratuitously, and without fee or reward, to every master of any vessel clearing out of any such port or harbour, and demanding a copy thereof.-6. Table of Fees to be exhibited at Consuls' Offices.-A copy of the schedule or table of fees to this present act annexed, or which may be established and authorised by any such order in council, shall be bung up and exhibited in a conspicuous place in the public offices of all consuls general or consuls appointed by his Majesty, in the foreign places to which they may be so appointed, for the inspection of all per- sons interested therein; and any consul general or consul omitting or neglecting to exhibit any such copy of the schedules in such his public office, or refusing to permit the same to be inspected by any person interested therein, shall for every such offence forfeit and pay a sum of British sterling money not exceeding one half the amount of the salary of such person for 1 year, nor less than the 12th part of such annual salary, at the discretion of the court in which such penalty may be recovered.-} Superannuation.-" And whereas it is expedient that his Majesty should be enabled to grant to the said consuls general and consuls, appointed as aforesaid, allowances in the nature of superannuation or reward for meritorious public services;" it is further enacted, that all the regulations contained in 50 Gen. 3. c. 117., 3 Geo. 4. c. 113., 5 Geo. 4. c. 104., respecting superannuation allowances, are hereby extended to the said consuls general and consuls, so far as such regulations can be applied to the cases of such several persons respectively, as fully to all intents and purposes as if the same were repeated and re-enacted in this present act.-d 8. Allowances during War.-If it shall at any time happen that by reason of any war which may hereafter arise between his Majesty and any sovereign, or foreign state or power, within the domi- nions of whom any such consul general or consul shall be appointed to reside, he shall be prevented from residing, and shall in fact cease to reside, at the place to which he may be so appointed, it shall be lawful for his Majesty, by any order to be issued by the advice of his privy council, to grant to any such consul general or consul, who may have served his Majesty in that capacity for any period not less than 3 years, nor more than 10 years next preceding the commencement of any such war, a spe- cial allowance not exceeding the proportion of their respective salaries to which such consuls general and consuls would be entitled under the provisions of the said act of 3 Geo. 4., in case the period of their respective service had exceeded 10 years and had not exceeded 15 years: provided that in case any such consul general or consul shall have served in such his office for the space of 10 years and more, it shall be lawful for his Majesty, by any such order in council as aforesaid, to grant to him such a proportion of his salary, which, by the said act is authorised to be granted, as a superannua- tion allowance, according to the several periods of service exceeding 10 years, in the said act. 9. Commencement.-This act shall take effect from the 1st of January, 1826, except where any other commencement is particularly directed.- 22. Tables of Fees allowed to be taken by Consuls General and Consuls, by the preceding Act of 6 Geo. 4. c. 87. Tuble A.-Certificate of due landing of goods exported from the United Kingdom - - 2 dollars. Signature of ship's manifest - - - - 2 do. Certificate of origin, when required - - - - - - - 2 do. Bill of health, when required - - - - - - - - 2 do. Signature of muster roll, when required - - - - - - - 2 do. Attestation of a signature, when required - - - - - - - 1 do. Administering an oath, when required - - - - - - - t do. Seal of office, and signature of any other document not specified herein, when required - I do. Table B.-Bottomry or arbitration bond - - - - - - - % do. Noting a protest - - - - - - - - 1 do. Order of survey - - - - - - - - - - 2 do. Extending a protest or survey - - - - - - - - 1 do. Registrations - - - - - - - - - 1 do. Visa of passport - - - - - - - - - - t do. Valuation of goods - - - - - - - - - I per cent. Attending sales, t per cent. where there has been a charge for valuing; otherwise, 1 per cent. Attendance out of consular office at a shipwreck, 5 dollars per diem for his personal expenses, over and above his travelling expenses. Ditto on opening a will I - - - - - - - 5 dollars. Management of property of British subjects dying intestate - - - 21 per cent. The dollars mentioned in the preceding tables are in all cases to be paid by the delivery of dollars, each of which is to be of the value of 4s. 6d. sterling, and no more, according to the rate of exchange prevailing at the place where such payment is made. [The following enactments of Congress are at present in force concerning consuls. Act of April 14th, 1792. 2. That they shall have right in the ports or places to which they are, or may be, severally appointed, of receiving the protests or declarations, which such captains, masters, crews, passengers, and merchants, as are citizens of the United States, may respectively choose to make there and also such as any foreigner may choose to make before them, relative to the personal interest of any citizen of the United States; and the copies of the said acts, duly authenticated by the said consuls or vice consuls, under the seal of their consulates, respectively, shall receive faith in law, equally as their originals would in all courts in the United States. It shall be their duty, where the laws of the country permit, to take possession of the personal estate left by any citizen of the United States, other than seamen belonging to any ship or vessel, who shall die within their consulates, leaving there no legal representative, partner in trade, or trustee by him appointed. to take care of his effects; they shall inventory the same, with the assistance of two merchants of the United States. or, for want of them, of any others, at their choice; shall collect the debts due to the deceased in the country where he died, and pay the debts due from his estate which he shall have there contracted shall sell at auction, after reasonable public notice, such part of the estate as shall be of a perishable nature, and such further part, if any, as shall be necessary for the payment of his debts, and, at the expiration of one year from his decease, the residue; and the balance of the estate they shall transmit to the treasury of the United States, to be holden in trust for the legal claimants. But if, at any time before such transmission, the legal representative of the deceased shall appear and demand his effects in their hands, they shall deliver them up, being paid their fees, and shall cease their proceedings. For the information of the representative of the deceased, it shall be the duty of the consul or vice Digitized by Google CONSUL. 471 consul, authorized to proceed as aforesaid in the settlement of his estate, immediately to notify his death in one of the gazettes published in the consulate, and also to the secretary of state, that the same may be notified in the state to which the deceased shall belong: and he shall also, as soon as may be, transmit to the secretary of state an inventory of the effects of the deceased taken as before directed. 1 3. That the said consuls and vice consuls, in cases where ships or vessels of the United States shall be stranded on the coasts of their consulates, respectively, shall, as far as the laws of the country will permit, take proper measures, as well for the purpose of saving the said ships or vessels, their cargoes and appurtenances, as for storing and securing the effects and merchandise saved, and for taking an inventory or inventories thereof; and the merchandise and effects saved, with the inventory or inventories thereof, taken as aforesaid, shall, after deducting therefrom the expense, be delivered to the owner or owners. Provided, That no consul OF vice consul shall have authority to take pos- session of any such goods, wares, merchandise, or other property, when the master, owner, or con- signee thereof is present, or capable of taking possession of the same. . 4. That it shall and may be lawful for every consul and vice consul of the United States to take and receive the following fees of office, for the services which he shall have performed :-For authen- ticating, under the consular seal, every protest, declaration, deposition, or other act, which such cap- tains, masters, mariners, seamen, passengers, merchants, or others, as are citizens of the United States, may respectively choose to make, the sum of two dollars. For the taking into possession, inventorying, selling, and finally settling and paying, or transmitting, as aforesaid, the balance due on the personal estate left by any citizen of the United States who shall die within the limit of his con- sulate, five per centum on the gross amount of such estate. For taking into possession, and otherwise proceeding on, any such estate which shall be delivered over to the legal representative before a final settlement of the same, as is hereinbefore directed, two and a half per centum on such part delivered over as shall not be in money, and five per centum on the gross amount of the residue. And it shall be the duty of the consuls and vice consuls of the United States to give receipts for all fees which they shall receive by virtue of this act, expressing the particular services for which they are paid. 1 5. That in case it be found necessary for the interest of the United States, that a consul or consuls be appointed to reside on the coast of Barbary, the president be authorized to allow an annual salary, not exceeding-two thousand dollars, to each person 80 to be appointed: Provided, That such salary be not allowed to more than one consul for any one of the states of the said coast. e 6. That every consul and vicc consul shall, before they enter on the execution of their trusts, or if already in the execution of the same, within one year from the passing of this act, or, if resident in Asia, within two years, give bond, with such sureties as shall be approved by the secretary of state, in a sum of not less than two thousand, nor more than ten thousand dollars, conditioned for the true and faithful discharge of the duties of his office, according to law, and also for truly accounting for all moneys, goods, and effects which may come into his possession by virtue of this act: and the said bond shall be lodged in the office of the secretary of the treasury. Act of February 28th, 1803. è 1. Be it enacted, &e. That before a clearance be granted to any vessel bound on a foreign voyage, the master thereof shall deliver to the collector of the customs a list, containing the names, places of birth, and residence, and a description of the persons who compose his ship's company, to which list the oath or affirmation of the captain shall be annexed, that the said list contains the names of his cre w, together with the places of their birth and residence, so far as he can ascertain them, and the said collector shall deliver him a certified copy thereof, for which the collector shall be entitled to receive the sum of twenty-five cents; and the said master shall, moreover, enter into bond with suf- ficient security, in the sum of four hundred dollars, that he shall exhibit the aforesaid certified copy or the list to the first boarding officer, at the first port in the United States at which he shall arrive, on his return thereto, and then and there also produce the persons named therein, to the said boarding officer, whose duty it shall be to examine the men with such list, and to report the same to the col- lector and it shall be the duty of the collector at the said port of arrival, (where the same is different from the port from which the vessel originally sailed,) to transmit a copy of the list so reported to him, to the collector of the port from which said vessel originally sailed Prorided, That the said bond shall not be forfeited on account of the said master not producing to the first boarding officer, as aforesaid, any of the persons contained in the said list, who may be discharged in a foreign country, with the consent of the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, there residing, signified In writing, under his hand and official seal, to be produced to the collector with the other persons com- posing the crew, as aforesaid; nor on account of any such person dying or absconding, or being forcibly impressed into other service, of which satisfactory proof shall be then also exhibited to the collector. 02. That it shall be the duty of every master or commander of a ship or vessel, belonging to citizens of the United States, who shall sail from any port of the United States, after the first day of May next, on his arrival at a foreign port, to deposite his register, sealetter, and Mediterranean passport, with the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, (if any there be at such port ;) that in case of refusal or neglect of the said master or commander, to deposite the said papers as aforesaid, he shall forfeit and pay five hundred dollars, to be recovered by the said consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, in his own name, for the benefit of the United States, in any court of competent jurisdiction; and it shall be the duty of such consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, on such master or commander producing to him a clear- ance from the proper officer of the port where his ship or vessel may be, to deliver to the said master or commander all of his said papers: Provided, such master or commander shall have complied with the provisions contained in this act, and those of the act to which this is a supplement. . 3. That whenever a ship or vessel, belonging to a citizen of the United States, shall be sold in a foreign country, and her company discharged, or when a seaman or mariner, a citizen of the United States, shall, with his own consent, be discharged in a foreign country, it shall be the duty of the master or commander to produce to the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, the list of his ship's company, certified as aforesaid, and to pay to such consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, for every seaman or mariner so discharged, being desig- nated on such list as a citizen of the United States, three months' pay, over and above the wages which may then be due to such mariner or seaman, two thirds thereof to be paid by such consul or commercial agent, to each seaman or mariner so discharged, upon his engagement on board of any vessel to return to the United States, and the other remaining third to be retained for the purpose of creating a fund for the payment of the passages of seamen or mariners, citizens of the United States, who may be desirous of returning to the United States, and for the maintenance of American seamen who may be destitute, and may be in such foreign port and the several sums retained for such fund shall be accounted for with the treasury every six months, by the persons receiving the same. 4. That it shall be the duty of the consuls, vice consuls, commercial agents, vice commercial agents of the United States, from time to time, to provide for the mariners and seamen of the United States, who may be found destitute within their districts, respectively, sufficient subsistence and passages to some port in the United States, in the most reasonable manner, at the expense of the United States, subject to such instructions as the secretary of state shall give; and that all masters Digitized by Google 472 CONSUL. and commanders of vessels belonging to citizens of the United States, and bound to some post of the same, are hereby required and enjoined to take such mariners or seamen on board of their ships or vessels, at the request of the said consuls, vice consuls, commercial agents, or vice commercial agents respectively, and to transport them to the port in the United States to which such ships or vessels may be bound, on such terms, not exceeding ten dollars for each person, as may be agreed between the said master and consul, or commercial agent. And the said mariners or seamen shall, if able, be bound to do duty on board such ships or vessels, according to their several abilities: Provided, That no master or captain of any ship or vessel shall be obliged to take a greater number than two men to every one hundred tons burden of the said ship or vessel, on any one voyage and if any such cap- tain or master shall refuse the same, on the request or order of the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, such captain or master shall forfeit and pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each mariner or seaman so refused, to be recovered, for the benefit of the United States, in any court of competent jurisdiction. And the certificate of any such consul or commercial agent, given under his hand and official seal, shall be prima facie evidence of such refusal, in any court of law having jurisdiction for the recovery of the penalty aforesaid. By the fifth section of this act, the secretary of state is authorized to reimburse the consuls, vice consuls, commercial agents, or vice commercial agents, such reasonable sums as they may heretofore have advanced for the relief of seamen, though the same should exceed the rate of twelve cents a man per diem." è 6. That it shall and may be lewful for every consul, vice consul, commercial agent, and vice com- mercial agent, of the United States, to take and receive, for every certificate of discharge of any sea- man or mariner in a foreign port, fifty cents; and for commission on paying and receiving the amount of wages payable on the discharge of seamen in foreign ports, two and a half per centum. ₽7. That if any consul, vice consul, commercial agent, OF vice commercial agent, shall, falsely and knowingly, certify that property belonging to foreigners is property belonging to citizens of the United States, he shall, on conviction thereof, in any court of competent jurisdiction, forfeit and pay a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars, at the discretion of the court, and be imprisoned for any term not exceeding three years. 8. That if any consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, shall grant a pass- port, or other paper, certifying that any alien, knowing him or her to be such, is a citizen of the United States, be shall, on conviction thereof, in any court of competent jurisdiction, forfeit and pay a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars. 1 9. That all powers of attorney, executed after the thirtieth day of June next, in a foreign country, for the transfer of any stock of the United States, or for the receipt of interest thereon, shall be veri- fied by the certificate and seal of a consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, if any there be, at the place where the same shall be executed, for which the person giving the certifi- cate shall receive fifty cents. Act of May 1st, 1810. 04. That it shall not be lawful for the consuls of the United States, residing on the Barbary coast, or either of them, to expend, or to disburse, or pay, or cause to be paid, for any purpose, or on any pretence whatever, not authorized by law, to any one of the Barbary powers, or to the officers or sub- jects thereof, a greater sum than three thousand dollars in any one year, with intent to charge the United States with the same, without first obtaining a special approbation, in writing, from the presi- dent of the United States, for that purpose. And every such consul who shall, after notice of this act, expend or disburse, or pay, or cause to be paid, for any purpose, or on any pretence whatever, not authorized by law, to any one of the Barbary powers, or to the officers or subjects thereof, a greater sum than three thousand dollars in any one year, or shall be aiding OF assisting therein, without first obtaining the approbation of the president as aforesaid, shall forfeit and pay to the treasury of the United States a sum equal to one half his yearly compensation; and shall, moreover, stand charged with, and be accountable for, all moneys so disbursed or paid, contrary to the previsions of this act. 25. That, from and after the first day of November next, no consul of the United States residing on the Barbary coast shall own, in whole or in part, any ship OF vessel, to be concerned, directly 01 indirectly, in the exportation from, or importation to, any of the states on the coast of Barbary, of any goods, wares, or merchandise, on penalty that every consul 80 offending, and being thereof con- victed, shall, for every offence, forfeit a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars. 06. That it shall be the duty of the consuls residing on the Barbary coast to transmit to the secre- tary of the treasury, annually, an account of all moneys received, and of all disbursements or expendi- tures made, by them, respectively, for or on account of the United States, and the particular purpose to which the moneys have been applied, and the vouchers to support the same and the secretary of the treasury shall transmit to congress, within two months after the commencement of the first session thereof, in every year, a statement of all the moneys disbursed from the treasury of the United States, for expenses of intercourse with the Barbary powers during the preceding year, therein noting. as far as can be ascertained at the treasury, the sums received by the respective agents or consuls, and the purposes to which the same have been applied. Act of March 13th, 1813. $ 6. That, from and after the time when this act shall take effect, the consuls or commercial agents of any nation at peace with the United States shall be admitted (under such regulations as may be prescribed by the president of the United States,) to state their objections to the proper commander or collector as aforesaid, against the employment of any seaman or seafaring man on board of any public or private vessel of the United States, on account of his being a native subject or citizen of such nation, and not embraced within the description of persons who may be lawfully employed, according to the provisions of this act; and the said consuls OF commercial agents shall also be admitted, under the said regulations, to be present at the time when the proofs of citizenship, of the persons against whom such objections may have been made, shall be investigated by such commander or collector. Act of March 3d, 1817. a 1. Be it onacted, &c. That the register or other documents in lieu thereof, together with the clear- ance and other papers granted by the officers of the customs to any foreign ship or vessel, at her de- parture from the port or place from which she may have arrived, shall, previous to entry in any port of the United States, be produced to the collector with whom such entry is to be made. And it shall be the duty of the master or commander, within forty-eight hours after such entry, to deposite the said papers with the consul or vice consul of the nation to which the vessel belongs, and to deliver to the collector the certificate of such consul or vice consul that the said papers have been so deposited; and any master or commander, as aforesaid, who shall fail to comply with this regulation, shall, upon conviction thereof in any court of competent jurisdiction, be fined in a sum not less than five bun- dred dollars nor exceeding two thousand dollars: Provided, That this act shall not extend to the vessels of foreign nations in whose ports American consuls are not permitted to have the custody and possession of the register and other papers of vessels entering the ports of such nation, according to the provisions of the second section of the act, supplementary to the act concerning consule and Digitized by Google CONTRABAND. 473 vice consuls, and for the further protection of American seamen," passed the twenty-eighth of Feb- ruary, one thousand eight hundred and three. 1 2. That it shall not be lawful for any foreign consul to deliver to the master or commander of any foreign vessel the register and other papers deposited with him pursuant to the provisions of this act, until such master or commander shall produce to him a clearance, in due form, from the collector of the port where such vessel has been entered; and any consul offending against the provisions of this act, shall upon conviction thereof before the supreme court of the United States, be fined, at the dis- cretion of the court, in a sum not less than five hundred dollars nor exceeding five thousand dollars. Act of March 1st, 1823. 1 7. That no goods, wares, or merchandise, subject to ad valorem duty, imported as aforesaid, and belonging to a person or persons not residing at the time in the United States, and who shall have actually purchased the same, shall be admitted to entry, unless the invoice be verified by the oath of the owner, or one of the owners, certifying that the said goods, wares, or merchandise, were actually purchased for his account, or for account of himself and partners in the said purchase; that the in- voice annexed thereto contains a true and faithful account of the actual cost thereof, and of all charges thereon; and that no discounts, bounties, or drawbacks, are contained in the said invoice, but such as have been actually allowed on the same which said oath shall be administered by a consul or com- mercial agent of the United States: or by some public officer duly authorized to administer oaths in the country where the said goods, wares, or merchandise, shall have been purchased, and the same duly certified by the said consul, commercial agent, or public officer; in which latter case, such official certificate shall be authenticated by a consul or commercial agent of the United States: Provided, That if there be no consul or commercial agent of the United States in the country from which the said goods, wares, or merchandise, shall have been imported, the authentication hereby required, shall be executed by a consul of a nation at the time in amity with the United States, if there be any such residing there and if there be no such consul in the country, the said authentication shall be made by two respectable merchants, if any such there be, residing in the port from which the said goods, wares, or merchandise, shall have been imported. e 8. That no goods, wares, or merchandise, subject to ad valorem duty, imported as aforesaid, and belonging to a person or persons not residing at the time in the United States, who may not have ac- quired the same in the ordinary mode of bargain and sale, or belonging to a person or persons who may be the manufacturer or manufacturers, in whole or in part, of the same, shall be admitted to entry, unless the invoice thereof be verified by the oath of the owner, or of one of the owners, certi- fying that the invoice contains a true and faithful account of the said goods, wares, or merchandise, at their fair market value at the time and place when and where the same were procured or manu- factured, as the case may be, and of all charges thereon; and that the said invoice contains no dis- counts, bounties, or drawbacks, but such as have been actually allowed; which said oath shall have been duly administered and authenticated in the mode prescribed in the seventh section of this act. @ 22. That, for every verification and certificate, made under this act. before a consul or commercial agent of the United States, such consul or commercial agent shall be entitled to demand and receive, from the person making the same, a fee of two dollars Provided, Each shipper shall have the right to Include all articles shipped by him in the same invoice. Act of March 3d, 1835. 1 1. Be it enacted, &c. That if any consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, shall knowingly and falsely certify to any invoice, or other paper to which his certificate is by law authorised or required, he shall, on conviction thereof, in any court of competent jurisdiction, forfeit and pay a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars, at the discretion of the court, and be imprisoned for a term not exceeding three years, at the like discretion. See Kent's Commentaries on American Law, Lecture 2d.-Am. Ed.] CONTRABAND, in commerce, a commodity prohibited to be exported or imported, bought or sold. CONTRABAND is also a term applied to designate that class of commodities which neu- trals are not allowed to carry during war to a belligerent power. It is a recognised general principle of the law of nations, that ships may sail to and trade with all kingdoms, countries, and states in peace with the princes or authorities whose flags they bear; and that they are not to be molested by the ships of any other power at war with the country with which they are trading, unless they engage in the conveyance of contra- band goods. But great difficulty has arisen in deciding as to the goods comprised under this term. The reason of the limitation suggests, however, the species of articles to which it principally applies. It is indispensable that those who profess to act upon a principle of neutrality should carefully abstain from doing any thing that may discover a bias in favour of either party. But a nation who should furnish one of the belligerents with supplies of warlike stores, or with supplies of any article, without which that belligerent might not be able to carry on the contest, would obviously forfeit her neutral character and the other belligerent would be warranted in preventing such succours from being sent, and in confis- cating them as lawful prize. All the best writers on international law admit this principle which, besides being enforced during every contest, has been sanctioned by repeated treaties. In order to obviate all disputes as to what commodities should be deemed contraband. they have sometimes been specified in treaties or conventions-(See the references in Lampredi del Commercio de' Popoli Neutrali, § 9.) But this classification is not always respected during hostilities; and it is sufficiently evident that an article which might not be contra- band at one time, or under certain circumstances, may become contraband at another time, or under different circumstances. It is admitted on all hands, even by M. Hubner, the great advocate for the freedom of neutral commerce-(De la Saisie des Bâtimens Neutres, tom. i. p. 193.)-that every thing that may directly available for hostile purposes is contraband, as arms, ammunition, horses, timber for ship-building, and all sorts of naval stores. The greatest difficulty has occurred in deciding as to provisions, which are sometimes held to be 60 Digitized by Google 474 CONTRABAND. contraband, and sometimes not. Lord Stowell has shown that the character of the port to which the provisions are destined, is the principal circumstance to be attended to in decid- ing whether they are to be looked upon as contraband. A cargo of provisions intended for an enemy's port, in which it was known that a warlike armament was in preparation, would be liable to arrest and confiscation; while, if the same cargo were intended for a port where none but merchantmen were fitted out, the most that could be done would be to detain it, paying the neutral the same price for it he would have got from the enemy. By the ancient law of Europe, a ship conveying any contraband article was liable to con- fiscation as well as the article. But in the modern practice of the courts of admiralty of this and other countries, a milder rule has been adopted, and the carriage of contraband articles is attended only with the loss of freight and expenses, unless when the ship belongs to the owner of the contraband cargo, or when the simple misconduct of conveying such a cargo has been connected with other malignant and aggravating circumstances. Of these a false destination and false papers are justly held to be the worst.-(5 Rob. Adm. Rep. 275.) The right of visitation and search is a right inherent in all belligerents: for it would be absurd to allege that they had a right to prevent the conveyance of contraband geods to an enemy, and to deny them the use of the only means by which they can give effect to such right.-( Vattel, book iii. c. 7. § 114.) The object of the search is twofold first, to ascer- tain whether the ship is neutral or an enemy, for the circumstance of its hoisting a neutral flag affords no security that it is really such; and, secondly, to ascertain whether it has con- traband articles, or enemies' property, on board. All neutral ships that would navigate securely during war must, consequently, be provided with passports from their government, and with all the papers or documents necessary to prove the property of the ship and cargo -(see Ship's Papers) ; and they must carefully avoid taking any contraband articles OF belligerent property on board. And hence, as Lampredi has observed, a merchant ship which seeks to avoid a search by crowding sail, or by open force, may justly be captured and subjected to confiscation.-(§ 12.) It has, indeed, been often contended that free ships make free goods (que le parillon couvre la marchandise) and that a belligerent is not warranted in seizing the property of an enemy in a neutral ship, unless it be contraband. The discussion of this important ques- tion would lead us into details which do not properly come within the scope of this work. We may, however, shortly observe, that no such privilege could be conceded to neutrals, without taking from belligerents the right, inseparable from a state of war, of seizing an enemy's property if found in places where hostilities may be lawfully carried on, as on the high seas. In fact, were the principle in question admitted, the commerce of a belligerent power with its colonies, or other countries beyond sea, might be prosecuted in neutral ships, with as much security during war as in peace; so that neutrals would, in this way, be au- thorised to render a belligerent more important assistance than, perhaps, they could have done had they supplied him with troops and ammunition But it is surely unnecessary to say, that to act in this way is a proceeding altogether at variance with the idea of neutrality. Neutrals are bound to conduct themselves in the spirit of impartiality; and must not afford such aid or assistance to one party, as may the better enable him to make head against the other. It is their duty " non interponere se bello, non hoste imminente hostem eripere." And yet it is manifest that the lending of neutral bottoms to carry on a belligerent's trade is in direct contradiction to this rule. The ships or cruisers of a particular power may have swept those of its enemy from the sea, and reduced him to a state of great difficulty, by put- ting a stop to his commerce with foreigners, or with his own colonies; but of what conse- quence would this be, if neutrals might step in to rescue him from such difficulties, by carry- ing on that intercourse for him which he can no longer carry on for himself! It is natural enough that such a privilege should be coveted by neutrals: but, however advantageous to them, it is wholly subversive of the universally admitted rights of belligerent powers, as well as of the principles of neutrality and cannot, therefore, be truly said to be bottomed on any sound principle. In the war of 1756, the rule was laid down by Great Britain, that neutrals are not to be allowed to carry on a trade during war, that they were excluded from during peace ; so that, supposing a nation at war with Great Britain had, while at peace, prohibited foreigners from engaging in her colonial or coasting trade, we should not have permitted neutrals to engage in it during war. This rule has been much complained of; but the principle on which it is founded seems a sound one, and it may in most cases be safely adopted. The claims of neutrals cannot surely be carried further than that they should be allowed to carry on their trade during war, as they had been accustomed to carry it on during peace, except with places under blockade but it is quite a different thing when they claim to be allowed to employ themselves, during war, in a trade in which they had not previously any right to en- gage. To grant them this, would not be to preserve to them their former rights, but to give them new ones, which may be fairly withheld. Supposing, however, that either of the belli- gerent powers has force sufficient to prevent any intercourse between the other and its colo- Digitized by Google CONVOY. 475 nics, or any intercourse between different ports of the other, she might, in the exercise of the legitimate rights of a belligerent, exclude neutrals from such trade, even though it had for- merly been open to them; because otherwise she would be deprived of the advantage of her superior force; and the neutrals would, in fact, when employed in this way, be acting as the most efficient allies of her enemy. For a full discussion of this important and difficult question, and of the various distinctions to which it gives rise, see the work of Hubner (De la Saisie des Bâtimens Neutres, 2 tomes, 12mo. 1757), in which the different arguments in favour of the principle that " the flag covers the cargo" are stated with perspicuity and talent. The opposite principle has been advocated by Lampredi, in his very able treatise Del Commercio de' Popoli Neutrali, § 10. by Lord Liverpool, in his Discourse on the Conduct of Great Britain in respect to Neutrals, written in 1757; and, above all, by Lord Stowell, in his justly celebrated decisions in the Admiralty Court. Martens inclines to Hubner's opinion.-(See Précis du Droit des Gens, liv. 8. c. 7.) [See Kent's Commentaries on American Law, Lecture 7th.-Am. Ed.] CONVOY, in navigation, the term applied to designate a ship or ships of war, appointed by government, or by the commander in chief on a particular station, to escort or protect the merchant ships proceeding to certain ports. Convoys are mostly appointed during war; but they are sometimes, also, appointed during peace, for the security of ships navigating seas infested with pirates. Individuals have not always been left to themselves to judge as to the expediency of sail- ing with or without convoy. The governments of most maritime states have thought pro- per, when they were engaged in hostilities, to oblige their subjects to place themselves under an escort of this sort, that the enemy might not be enriched by their capture. Acts to this effect were passed in this country during the American war and the late French war. The last of these acts (43 Geo. 3. c. 57.) enacted, that it should not be lawful for any ship be- longing to any of his Majesty's subjects (except as therein provided) to depart from any port or place whatever, unless under such convoy as should be appointed for that pur- pose. The master was required to use his utmost endeavours to continue with the convoy during the whole voyage, or such part thereof as it should be directed to accompany his ship; and not to separate therefrom without leave of the commander, under very heavy pecuniary penalties. And in case of any ship departing without convoy contrary to the act, or wil- fully separating therefrom, all insurances on the ship, cargo, or freight, belonging to the mas- ter, or to any other person directing or privy to such departure or separation, were rendered null and void. The customs officers were directed not to allow any ship that ought to sail with convoy to clear out from any place in the United Kingdom for foreign parts, without requiring from the master, bond with one surety, with condition that the ship should not de- part without convoy, nor afterwards desert or wilfully separate from it. The regulations of this act did not extend to ships not requiring to be registered, nor to those licensed to sail without convoy, nor to those engaged in the coasting trade, nor to those belonging to the East India Company, &c. It is very common, during periods of war, to make sailing or departing with convoy a condition in policies of insurance. This, like other warranties in a policy, must be strictly performed. And if a ship warranted to sail with convoy, sail without it, the policy becomes void, whether this be imputable to any negligence on the part of the insured, or the refusal of government to appoint a convoy. There are five things essential to sailing with convoy viz. first, it must be with a regular convoy under an officer appointed by government; secondly, it must be from the place of rendezvous appointed by government; thirdly, it must be a convoy for the voyage; fourthly, the master of the ship must have sailing instructions from the commanding officer of the convoy and fifthly, the ship must depart and continue with the convoy till the end of the voyage, unless separated by necessity. With respect to the third of these conditions we may observe, that a warranty to sail with convoy generally means a convoy for the voyage; and it is not necessary to add the words " for the voyage" to make it so. Neither will the adding of these words in some instances, make the omission of them, in any case, the ground of a different construction. A warranty to sail with convoy does not, however, uniformly mean a convoy that is to accompany the ship insured the entire way from the port of departure to her port of destination; but such convoy as government may think fit to appoint as a sufficient protection for ships going the voyage insured, whether it be for the whole or only a part of the voyage. Sailing instructions, referred to in the fourth condition, are written or printed directions delivered by the commanding officer of the convoy to the several masters of the ships under his care, that they may understand and answer signals, and know the place of rendezvous appointed for the fleet in case of dispersion by storm, or by an enemy, &c. These sailing instructions are so very indispensable, that no vessel can have the full protection and benefit of convoy without them: hence, when, through the negligence of the master, they are not obtained, the ship is not agid to have sailed with convoy and a warranty in a policy of in- Digitized by Google 476 COPAIVA-COPENHAGEN. surance to that effect is held not to be complied with. If, however, the master do all in his power to obtain sailing instructions, but is prevented from obtaining them by any insuperable obstacle, as the badness of the weather; or if they be refused by the commander of the con- voy the warranty in the policy is held to be complied with. For further information as to convoy, see Abbott on the Law of Shipping, part iii. c. 3.; Marshall on Insurance, book i. c. 9. G 5., and the Act 43 Geo. 3. c. 57, &c. COPAIVA. See BALSAM. COPAL, improperly called gum copal, is a valuable and singular kind of resin, that na- turally exudes from different large trees, and is imported partly from America, and partly from the East Indies. The best copal is hard and brittle, in rounded lumps of a moderate size, easily reducible to a fine powder, of a light lemon yellow colour, beautifully transpa- rent, but often, like amber, containing parts of insects and other small extraneous bodies in its substance. Its specific gravity varies from 1045 to 1·139. It has neither the solubility in water common to gums, nor the solubility in alcohol common to resins, at least in any considerable degree. It may be dissolved by digestion in drying linseed oil, and other volatile menstrus. This solution forms a beautiful transparent varnish, which, when, properly ap- plied, and slowly dried, is very hard and very durable. Copal varnish was first discovered in France, and was long known by the name of vernis martin. It is applied to snuff-boxes, tea-boards, and other utensils. It preserves and gives lustre to paintings; and contributes to restore the decayed colours of old pictures, by filling up cracks, and rendering the surface capable of reflecting light more uniformly. Copal is liable to be confounded with gum animé, when the latter is very clear and good. But it is of importance to distinguish between them, as the animé, though valuable as a varnish, is much less so than the finest copal; the varnish with the former being darker coloured, and not so hard. Besides the external appearance of each, which is pretty distinct to a practised eye, the solubility in alcohol furnishes a useful test,-the animé being readily soluble in this fluid, while the co- pal is hardly affected by it; copal is also brittle between the teeth, whereas animé softens in the mouth.-(Rees's Cycloprdia; Ure's Dictionary, &c.) The imports of gum animé and copal are not distinguished in the custom-house accounts. The entries of both for home consumption amounted, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, to 123,723 lbs. a year. The duty has been judiciously reduced from 56s. to 6s. a cwt. Copal fetches in the London market from 6d. to 1s. 7d. per lb., duty paid. COPENHAGEN, the capital of Denmark, situated on the east coast of the island of Zea- land, in the channel of the Baltic called the Sound in lat. 55° 41' N., lon. 12° 35' 46" E. Population about 105,000. It is a well-built, handsome city. In going into Copenhagen, the course is between the buoy on the Stubben Bank to the left, and the buoy on the Middle- grounds, and those in advance of the three Crown batteries on the right, W. W. by com- pass. From the three crowns to the roads the course is S. S. W. The water in the channel is from 6 to 4 fathoms deep; but it is narrow, and the navigation rather difficult. There is no obligation to take a pilot on board; but if a vessel wish for one, she may heave to abreast of the battery, when he will come to her. Vessels not intending to come into harbour bring up in the roads, at from t to 1 a mile from shore, in about 4 fathoms, the town bearing S. W. In the harbour, within the boom, the water is from 17 to 18 feet deep. Vessels in harbour load and unload alongside the quay. The anchorage in the roads is good and safe. Money - Accounts are kept in rixdollars of 6 marcs, or 96 skillings; the rixdollar being formerly worth about 4s. 1d. sterling. But in 1813, a new monetary system was adopted, according to which the new or Rigsbank dollar is worth 2s. 34d.., being half the value of the old specie dollar, and 1 of the old current dollar. But the money generally used in commercial transactions is bank money, which is commonly at a heavy discount. The par of exchange, estimated by the Rigsbank dollar, would be 8 dollars 76 skillings per pound sterling. Weights and Measures.-The commercial weights are, 16 pounds 1 lispound 20 lispound = 1 ship- pound; 100 lb. - 1104 lbs. avoirdupois - 134 lbs. Troy = 101 lbs. of Amsterdam = 103lbs. of Hamburgh. The liquid measures are, 4 ankers - 1 ahm or ohm; If ahm = 1 hogshead; 2 hogsheads = 1 pipe; 2 pipes = 1 quarter. The anker = 10 (very nearly) English wine gallons. A fuder of wine = 930 pots and 100 pots = 251 wine gallons. The dry measures are, 4 viertels = 1 scheffel 8 scheffels - 1 toende or ton 12 tons = 1 last = 471 Winchester bushels. The last of oil, butter, herrings, and other oily substances, should weigh 234 lbs. nett. The measure of length is the Rhineland foot - 121 inches very nearly. The Danish ell - 2 feet 100 ells = 68f English yards. Trade of Copenhagen.-This is not very considerable, and has latterly declined. Anchors, pitch, and tar, are chiefly imported from Sweden and Norway flax, hemp, masts, sail-cloth, and cordage, from Russia; West India produce from the Danish West India islands; to- bacco from America; wines and brandy from France: coal, earthen-ware, and salt are the principal articles of direct import from England. Of coal, we sent to Denmark (principally to Copenhagen), in 1830, 100,127 tons, and of salt 1,272,487 bushels. Owing to the erro- neous policy of the Danish government, which is attempting, at a great public loss, to raise and bolster up manufactures, the direct imports of woollens and cottons are quite inconsi- derable. These articles are not, however, absolutely prohibited but are admitted on condi- tion of their being stamped, and put up to auction by the Custom-house, which, after retain- ing 30 per cent. of the gross produce of the sale, pays over the residue to the importer, who Digitized by Google COPENHAGEN. 477 is generally the purchaser. This oppressive regulation reduces the legitimate importation of these articles to next to nothing; but the illicit importation is very considerable, princi- pally by the Elbe and the Holstein frontier. The exports consist, for the most part, of the produce of the soil, as grain, rapeseed, butter and cheese, beef and pork, hides, horses and cattle, corn, brandy, bones, &c. In 1830, the imports of grain into this country from Den- mark were as follows, viz. wheat 88,033 quarters, barley 75,532 do., oats 118,203 do., rye 1,151 do., peas and beans 5,182 do., the importation of rapeseed during the same year was 286,569 bushels.-(See Corn Laws.) We subjoin An Account, extracted from the Returns published by the Danish Custom-house of the principal Arti- cles of Agricultural Produce exported from Denmark in 1831. Quantities exported. Real or declared Articles exported. Danish Weights British Weights Value in Rigs- Value in Sterling. bank Dollars. and Measures. and Measures. Wheat and wheat flour - 113,696 ton. 54,952 qrs. £ 8. d. Rye and rye flour - - 78,460 - 37,921 Barley, flour and groats - 584,384 - 282,408 malt - - - 19,092 - 9,228 169,815 3,964,772 446,036 17 O Oats, meal and groats - - 351,340 - Buckwheat do. - - - 6,988 - 3,377 Peas - - - 15,995 - 7,730 Beans and tares - - 31,133 - 15,047 Rapeseed - - - 143,154 - 71,608 1,390,487 156,429 15 9 Butter - - 47,658 bar. - - - - 2,382,900 268,076 5 0 Cheese - - - 872,000 lbs. 8,590 cwt. 54,500 6,131 5 0 - Brandy (corn) - - - 2,319 hhd. 115,775 galls. Pork, salted - - - 1,449,787 lbs. 14,331 cwt. smoked - - - 365,789 - 3,603 Beef, salted - - - 691,104 - 6,808 smoked - - - 15,773 - 156 - Hides and skins- calf, sheep, and lamb - 1,112,582 lbs. 10,960 cwt. - - 16,169 2,885,316 324,598 1 0 ox, cow, and horse 1,744,007 Wool, sheep - - - 779,488 - 857,436 Cattle- Horses - - - 12,350 head - - Oxen - - 23,013 - - - - Cows - - - 8,461 - - - Calves - - - 5,056 - - - - Rbd. 10,077,975 £1,201,272 3 9 We have no means of ascertaining the proportion shipped from Copenhagen, but it was very con- siderable. Thres.-Statement of the Tares allowed by the Custom-house at Copenhagen, on the principal Arti- cles of Importation. Tares. Articles. Description of Packages. Tares. Articles. Description of Packages. Almonds Linen bags 4 per ct. Pepper Bags of 150 lbs. and under 2 lbs. Cassia lignea All sorts of packages 16 - exceeding 150 lbs. 4 Cinnamon do. do. Linen bags do. Cocoa In linen bags 4 per ct. Pimento do. do. Casks of 400lbs. and under 16 - 1-2 barrel 18 lbs. Coffee Raisins exceeding 400 lbs. 12 1-4 do. 12 Matted bags of 150 lbs. and under 2 lbs. Casks exceeding 1-2 barrel 10 per exceeding 150 lbs. 4 do. under 1-2 barrel 12 - Casks 10 East India bags, double do. Rice do. single Barrels 24 lbs. 2 lbs. Colours, painters' Unmixed and not enumerated 10 per ct. 1-2 do. 18 do. and enumerated, and not 1-4 do. 12 being ochre, white lead, or brown 1-8 do. 8- red Prepared : 12 - Bags of 100 lbs. and not exceed. ing 150 lbs. 4 - do. 150 lbs. and under 2 Cotton Bags or bales 4 lbs. Currants All sorts of packages 16 per ct. Saltpetre All kinds of packages 10 per ct. Delft ware do 12 Soap, white do. 14. 17 1-4 casks 12 lbs. Figs Sugar, raw In casks 1-2 do. 18 - Brazil boxes do. Casks Havannah do. 12 - 10 per ct. Baskets, or frails 8 refined Casks (transit) do. Glass ware Boxes 32 - Tobacco do. do. Bottles in crates and in straw Baskets packed in mats 3 - 20 - do. in boxes and in sawdust 40 - Turpentine Casks (thick) 17 - Hardware In casks and boxes 12 - oil do. 20 - Packed in mats, per piece 4 lbs. do. cased 34 - Glass bottles or flasks in baskets 20 - Hops Bags and pockets 4 per ct. Vitriol Indigo All sorts of packages 20 do. in boxes Glasses, in boxes and casks 12 - do. packed in sawdust 40 - Mustard Ochre All sorts of packages 10 - Stone bottles 30 - In single and double casks 18 - White lead All kinds of packages 10 Olive oil Bottled, in baskets and straw 20 - do. in boxes and sawdust 40 - Credit-Goods imported into Copenhagen are commonly sold on credit 3 months is the term gene- rally allowed on most sorts of goods, and in a few instances 6 months. The discount for ready money is 4 per cent. Bankruptcy is of rare occurrence. den, 305 from Prussin, 208 from Norway, 160 from Great Britain, 137 from Russia, 90 from Finland, Shipping.-In 1831, there entered the port of Copenhagen 1,505 ships ; of which 309 were from Swe- 29 from France, &c. The tonnage of these ships is not stated; but many were of very small burden. Subjoined is an Digitized by Google 478 COPENHAGEN. Account of the Danish Shipping employed in the Foreign and in the Carrying Trade of Denmark in the Year 1830. Whence Destim- arrived. tion. Countries and No. Nature of Cargoes exported Places. of From Dan. Nature of Cargose imported Tonnage. from Denmark. Ships. Ports. From For. Porta. into Demmark. For Das. Porte. For For. Ports. Russia 255 24,198 Ballast, fruit, bricks, 194 61 mn Hemp, flax, ashes, - - 161 94 and piece goods - tallow, seeds, timber Ballast, herrings, Prussia - - train oil, and colo- 135 an Linen, flax, wood, 579 29,836 444 staves, and timber 421 158 nial produce - Herrings, train oil, Ballast, corn, and Mecklenburgh 114 2,547 colonial produce, 102 12 seeds, wool, and 101 13 and provisions piece goods Corn,and provisions, Piece goods, iron, Lubeck - - 383 7,472 piece goods, her- 362 21 deals, and timber, 342 41 rings, &c. salt, &c. - Sweden and Corn and provisions, Iron, tar, deals, tim- 710 Norway 25,696 wool, piece goods, 592 118 ber, fish, herrings, 559 151 and colonial produce train oil - Hamburgh Corn and seeds, but- Ballast, piece goods, } - 555 31,154 ter, provisions, and 160 395 tobacco, colonial 306 247 and Bremen piece goods produce Netherlands - 269 15,150 Corn, and seeds, 96 173 Ballast, piece goods, and colonial produce 92 177 piece goods. &c. Corn, seeds, olicakes, Ballast, coals, salt Great Britain 837 43,420 bones, wool, hides, 587 250 piece goods, and 635 202 &c. colonial produce Corn and provisions, France - - 122 15,858 piece goods, fish, 31 91 an Wine, salt, piece goods and ballast 37 85 and hides Spain - - 76 8,451 Ballast, piece goods, 3 Oil and fruit, wine 73 fish, butter, &c. and salt 30 46 Portugal 67 Ballast, corn, piece 2 65 Wine, piece goods, - 9,500 $ goods, fish, flax, &c salt, fruit, &c. 15 - Fish, pitch, and tar, 66 9,637 13 Ballast, fruit, wine, Mediterranean timber, train oil, 53 and piece goods 8 58 piece goods Brazil - - 11 2,416 Ballast, wheat, and 11 Colonial produce - - 2 9 piece goods 4044 225,354 2586 1458 2711.1333 This return does not, however, include vessels engaged in the fisheries, or in the coasting trade, the latter of which is very considerable. About 200 Danish ships are engaged in the carrying trade of the Mediterranean. Latterly, how- ever, the Swedes and Norwegians have obtained an ascendancy in this department. Excluding vessels under 20 tons, there belonged, in 1830 to Ships. Tonnage. Denmark - - - 1,563 - - 65,375 Sleswick - - - 1,022 33,926 Hoistein - - - 1,106 - 27,683 Total - - - 3,696 124,984 Colonial Trade.-In the West Indies, the Danes possess the island of St. Croix, which, though small, is fertile, and well cultivated. All the ports of Denmark may send vessels thither, but the return cargoes must be discharged at places having sugar refineries. The principal part of the trade is in the hands of Copenhagen merchants. St. Croix produces about 25,000,000 lbs. of sugar, and 1,400,000 gal- lons of rum. In 1831, 23 ships, of the aggregate burden of 5,772 tons, arrived at Copenhagen from St. Croix. A good deal of the colonial produce brought into Denmark is again exported. The trade to the settlement of Tranquebar and Serampore, in India, is in the hands of an exclusive company. Whether it be owing to the deadening influence of monopoly, or to the real superiority of the Americans, who supply the Continental markets with tea, &c. at a cheaper rate, only one ship a year has latterly sailed from Copenhagen for India! The trade to the Danish settlements on the African coast is, if possible, of still less importance.-(N. B. For an account of the trade on the Kiel Canal, see CANALS.) Port Charges vary according as the vessel has come from this or the further side of Cape Finisterre, or from the Indian seas; as she is wholly, or only part loaded; and as she clears out with goods that have been in transitu, and are for the most part free of duty, or has on board a cargo of native produce subject to duty. On a ship of 300 tons belonging to a privileged nation from this side Cape Finisterre, unloading and loading mixed cargoes in Copenhagen, the different public charges, including Sound dues, brokerage, &c., would be about 671. 10s.; and from the further side of Cape Finisterre, the charges would be about 991. 10s. When a ship is not fully loaded, lastage money and light dues are only charged in proportion to the cargo on board. Lastage money is not charged on ships outward bound, laden with transit goods, as tar, pitch, iron, &c. But notwithstanding these deductions, it is obvious that port charges at Copenhagen are very heavy, and there can be no doubt that they are a material obstacle to the extension of trade. Commission on purchases is generally 2 per cent., and on sales, 3 per cent., including 1 per cent. del credere. Citizenship.-To enable a foreigner to trade as a merchant in Denmark, he must become a burgher, which costs about 100l., and it will require about 60l. more to free him from the obligation of serving in the militia. The obstacles in the way of a foreigner establishing himself in Denmark as a mans- facturer are much greater, on account of the exclusive privileges enjoyed by the guilds or corporations into which the principal crafts or trades are divided. Digitized by Google COPPER. 479 Inewrance.-Marine insurance is effected on liberal terms, by a company established in 1746. A good many risks are, however, insured at Amsterdam and Hamburgh. Careening, Ships' Stores, &c.-Copenhagen has good building-yards, and is in all respects an eligible place for the repair of ships, and for supplying them with provisions. Subjoined is an Account of the Average Prices of Ships' Provision at Copenhagen in 1831, in Imperial Weights and Measures, and Sterling Money. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. Biscuits, ships', let quality - - - - . 0 15 0 per cwt. Ditto 2d ditto - - - - - 0 12 0 ditto. Butter, 1st quality - - - - - - 2 8 0 to 2 10 0 ditto. Ditto, 2d ditto - - - - - - 2 4 0 ditto.' Cheese - - - - - - - 0 13 5 to 0 17 0 ditto. Peas - - - - - - - 1 8 9 - 1 12 0 per Imp. qr. Beef, salted - - - - - - - 1 18 0 - 1 19 0 per 200 lbs. Pork, ditto - - - - - - - 2 16 0 2 18 0 ditto. Bacon - - - - - - - 0 0 & O 0 31 per lb. Spirits.-Rum, 2s. to 2s. 6d. French Brandy, 2s. 4d. to 3s. per gallon. General Remarks.-On the whole, the commerce of Denmark may be pronounced to be in a stationary state. But from her advantageous situation between the Baltic and North Sea, and the industrious, persevering character of the inhabitants, there can be little doubt that it may be materially extended. It is needless, however, to expect any considerable im- provement till the present system of domestic policy be, in many respects, altogether changed. The Danish government has long been exerting itself to bolster up a manufacturing interest, by laying oppressive duties on most species of manufactured articles. Even under the most favourable circumstances, such conduct, though it may benefit a few individuals, is sure to be productive of great national loss. But in the case of Denmark, the circumstances are such as to render the restrictive system peculiarly injurious. All, or nearly all, the branches of industry carried on in the kingdom are subjected to the government of guilds or corpora- tions; no person can engage in any line of business until he has been authorised by its peculiar guild; and as the sanction of this body is rarely obtained without a considerable sacrifice, the real effect of the system is to fetter competition and improvement, and to per- petuate monopoly and routine. Even the Danish writers acknowledge that such is the in- fluence of the present regulations. "Nos ouvriers," say they, " sont chers, travaillent lente- ment, et souvent mal et sans goût; leur education est negligée. On ne les forme point à penser, et l'apprentif suit machinalement ce qu'il voit faire au maître."- Catteau, Tableau des Etats Danois, tome ii. p. 260.) It would be idle to imagine that a country which has to import coal, should, however favourably situated in other respects, be able to manufacture cottons, woollens, &c. at so cheap a rate as they may be imported from others enjoying greater natural facilities for their production. But when to the physical obstacles in the way of manufactures, we add others, not less formidable, of a political nature, the attempt to force them into existence by dint of customs duties and regulations becomes absolutely ludicrous. The port charges and transit duties are also exceedingly heavy; and the Sound duties, being charged on native as well as foreign ships, operate as an inland duty on the trade be- tween different parts of the country. We are glad, however, to be able to state, that the more intelligent portion of the Danish people are quite aware of the mistaken policy on which they are now proceeding; and there is reason to believe that it will, at no distant pe- riod, be rendered more in accordance with the spirit of the age, and more conducive to the improvement of the people. In 1832, a petition, signed by almost all the merchants of Copenhagen, was addressed to the king, containing an able and distinct exposition of the circumstances which depress Danish commerce. The petitioners pray for the emancipation of commercial pursuits from all the restrictions laid upon them by guilds and corporations, or, in other words, for the freedom of industry; for a revision and reduction of the transit duties, and a change in the mode of charging the Sound duties; for a reduction of the ton- nage duties, and a remission of the charge on account of light money on ships arriving at Copenhagen that have already paid for the lights at Elsineur; they further pray for the abolition of the East India Company's monopoly, and the freedom of trade to the East Indies and China; and for a reduction of the duties on several articles of domestic produce when exported, and of foreign produce when imported. What is here asked is so reasonable, and, if granted, would add so much to the real prosperity of the country, that we trust the government will earn for itself a new title to the public esteem by honestly endeavouring to meet the wishes of the petitioners. In compiling this article, we have consulted Oddy's European Commerce, pp. 330-369; Dictionnaire du Commerce (Ency. Methodique, tome II. pp. 3-16.), Catteau, Tableau des Etats Danois, tome 11. pp. 292-371.; the Consul's Answers to Circular Queries, which do that functionary great credit and communications from merchants at Copenhagen. COPPER (Ger. Kupfer; Du. Koper; Da. Kobber; Sw. Kopper ; Fr. Cuivre; It. Rame; Sp. Cobre; Port. Cobre; Rus. Mjed, Krasnoi mjed; Pol. Miedz; Lat. Cuprum; Arab. Nehass; Sans. Tamra), a well-known metal, so called from its having been first dis- covered, or at least wrought to any extent, in the island of Cyprus. It is of a fine red Digitized by Google 480 COPPER. colour, and has a great deal of brilliancy. Its taste is styptic and nauseous and the hands, when rubbed for some time on it, acquire a peculiar and disagreeable odour. It is harder than silver its specific gravity varies according to its state, being, when quite pure, near 9.000. Its malleability is great it may be hammered out into leaves so thin as to be blown about by the slightest breeze. Its ductility is also considerable. Its tenacity is so great, that a copper wire 0.078 of an inch in diameter is capable of supporting 302.26 lbs. avoirdupois without breaking. Its liability to oxidation from exposure to air or damp is its greatest de- fect. The rust with which it is then covered is known by the name of verdigris, and is one of the most active poisons.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) If we except gold and silver, copper seems to have been more early known than any other metal. In the first ages of the world, before the method of working iron was discovered, cop- per was the principal ingredient in all domestic utensils and instruments of war. Even now it is applied to so many purposes, as to rank next, in point of utility, to iron. Alloys of Copper are numerous and of great value. Those of tin are of most importance. Tin add- ed to copper makes it more fusible, less liable to rust, or to be corroded by the air and other common substances, harder, denser, and more sonorous. In these respects the alloy has a real advantage over unmixed copper but this is in many cases more than counterbalanced by the great brittleness which even a moderate portion of tin imparts; and which is a singular circumstance, considering that both metals are separately very malleable. Copper alloyed with from 1 to 5 per cent. of tin is rendered harder than before; its colour is yellow, with a cast of red, and its fracture granular it has considerable malleability. This appears to have been the usual composition of many of the ancient edged tools and weapons, before the method of working iron was brought to perfection. The халкос of the Greeks, and, perhaps, the as of the Ro. mans, was nothing else. Even their copper coins contain a mixture of tin. The ancients did not, in fact, possess (as has been often contended) any peculiar process for hardening copper, except by adding to it a small quantity of tin. An alloy in which the tin is from 0.1 to t of the whole is hard, brittle, but still a little malleable, close grained, and yellowish white. When the tin is as much as 1-6 of the mass it is entirely brittle; and continues so in every higher proportion. The yellowness of the alloy is not entirely lost till the tin amounts to 0.3 of the whole. Copper (or sometimes copper with a little zinc), alloyed with as much tin as will make from about 0.1 to 1-6 of the whole, forms an alloy, which is principally employed for bells, brass cannon, bronze statues, and various other purposes. Hence it is called bronze, or bell metal; and is excellently fitted for the uses to which it is applied, by its hardness, density, sonorousness, and fusibility. For cannon, a lower proportion of tin is commonly used. According to Dr. Watson, the metal employed at Wool- wich consists of 100 parts of copper and from 8 to 12 of tin; hence it retains some little malleability, and, therefore, is tougher than it would be with a larger portion of tin. This alloy being more sono- rous than iron, brass guns give a louder report than iron guns. A common alloy for bell metal is 80 parts of copper and 20 of tin some artists add to these ingredients zinc, antimony, and silver, in small proportions all of which add to the sonorousness of the compound.-(See BELL METAL.) When, in an alloy of copper and tin, the latter metal amounts to about 1 of the mass, the result is a beautiful compound, very hard, of the colour of steel, and susceptible of a very fine polish. It is well adapted for the reflection of light for optical purposes; and is therefore called speculum metal. Besides the above ingredients, it usually contains a little arsenic, zinc, or silver. The application of an alloy similar to the above, to the construction of mirrors, is of great antiquity, being mentioned by Pliny; who says, that formerly the best mirrors were reckoned those of Brundusium, of tin and copper mixed (stanno et are mistis) Nat. lib. xxxiii. 9.) For the alloys of copper with zinc, see the articles BRASS, PINCHBECK, see, also, Thomson's Che- mistry ; Rees's Cyclopadia; Dr. Watson's Chemical Essays, vol. iv., &c. British Copper Trade.Great Britain has various copper mines, in Cornwall, Devonshire, Wales, &c., but particularly in the first. Though known long before, the Cornish copper mines were not wrought with much spirit till Inst century. From 1726 to 1735, they produced at an average about 700 tons a year of pure copper. During the ten years from 1766 to 1775, they produced. at an average, 2,650 tons. In 1798 the produce exceeded 5,000 tons ; and it now amounts to about 12,000 tons, worth, at 1001. a ton, no less than 1,200,0001. sterling! In 1768, the famous mines in the Parys mountain, near Amiwch, in Anglesea, were discovered. The supplies of ore furnished by them were for a long time abundant beyond all precedent; but for many years past the productiveness of the mine has been de- clining, and it now yields comparatively little copper. At present the mines in Anglesea, and other parts of Wales, yield from 1,750 to 2,000 tons of copper; those of Devonshire yield about 500 tons; the quantity produced in the other parts of England being quite inconsiderable. The Irish mines produce about 500 tons. Those of Scotland never were productive, and have been almost entirely abandoned. The entire produce of the copper mines of the empire may, therefore, be estimated at present at from 14,500 to 15,000 tons. In consequence of the greatly increased supplies of copper that were thus obtained, England, in- stead of being, as formerly, dependent on foreigners for the greater part of her supplies of this value- ble metal, became, previously to 1793, one of the principal markets for the supply of others. And notwithstanding the vastly increased demand for copper during the war for the sheathing of ships and other purposes, the exports continued to increase and the imports to diminish: the greater productive- ness of the Cornish mines having sufficed not only to balance the increased demand, but also to make up for the falling off in the supplies from Anglesea. Owing to the want of coal in Cornwall, the ores are not smelted on the spot, but are, for the most part, sent to Swansea it being found cheaper to carry the ores to the coal than the contrary. For the following details with respect to the state of the British copper trade in 1830, we are indebted to Mr. Pascoe Grenfell, who is largely engaged in it, and on whose accuracy every reliance may be placed:- The quantity of copper produced during last year (1830) in Cornwall, from ores raised in that county, exceeded ten thousand tons of pure metal and if to this be added what has been produced in Wales, in other parts of England, and in Ireland, the whole quantity of fine or pure metal produced in the United Kingdom, in 1829, may be fairly stated at twelve thousand tons. The quantity of British copper exported in 1829 amounts, according to an account recently laid be- fore the House of Commons, to 7,976 tons of fine metal; to which adding the exports of foreign copper, the total export was 8,817 tons. The copper imported is altogether intended for re-exportation. I cannot state its precise quantity in fine metal, because the greater part of it arrives in a state of are, and I have no means of knowing the produce in pure metal of that ore, beyond such part of it as may come into my own possession. "The value of the 12,000 tons of copper produced in the United Kingdom, as above stated, at 90% per ton, is 1,080,000L." Digitized by Google COPPER. 481 Account of the Copper produced from the Mines in Cornwall since 1800; showing the Quantity of Ore, of Metal or Fine Copper, the Value of the Ores in Money, the average Percentage or Produce, and the average Standard or Miner's Price of Fine Copper, made up to the end of June in each Year. Produce Years. Quantity of Ores. Metal or Fine Copper. Value of the Ores. of Oree Average Standard per cent. Price per Ton. Tons. Tons. cwt. qrs. lbs. £ s. d. £ 8. d. 1800 55,981 5,187 0 3 7 550,925 1 0 of 133 3 6 1801 56,611 5,267 18 3 10 476,313 1 0 It 117 5 0 1802 53,937 5,228 15 3 5 445,094 4 0 of 110 18 0 1803 60,566 5,616 16 0 21 533,910 16 0 91 122 0 0 1804 64,637 5,374 18 I 20 507,840 11 0 87 138 5 0 1805 78,452 6,234 5 0 6 862,410 16 0 7f 169 16 0 1806 79,269 6,863 10 2 13 730,845 6 6 84 138 5 0 1807 71,694 6,716 12 1 26 609,002 13 0 of 120 0 0 1808 67,867 6,795 13 2 25 495,303 1 6 10 100 7 0 1809 76,245 6,821 13 1 19 770,028 15 6 87 143 12 0 1810 66,048 6,682 19 1 27 570,035 8 0 81 132 5 0 1811 66,786 6,141 13 3 7 556,723 19 0 91 120 12 0 1812 71,547 5,720 7 2 4 549,665 6 6 of 111 0 0 1813 74,047 6,918 3 0 6 594,345 10 0 91 115 7 0 1814 74,322 6,369 13 3 7 627,501 10 0 81 130 12 0 1815 78,483 6,525 6 3 25 552,813 8 6 81 117 16 0 1816 77,334 6,697 4 0 17 447,959 17 0 87 98 13 0 1817 76,701 6,498 2 0 16 494,010 12 0 81 108 10 0 1818 86,174 6,849 7 1 1 686,005 4 6 71 134 15 0 1819 88,736 6,804 2 2 7 623,595 4 6 71 127 10 0 1820 91,473 7,588 0 3 26 602,441 12 01 81 113 15 0 1821 98,426 8,514 19 2 12 605,968 19 6 84 103 0 0 1822 104,523 9,140 8 3 20 663,085 13 6 84 104 0 0 1823 95,750 7,927 17 2 7 606,033 1 0 84 109 18 0 1824 99,700 7,823 15 1 10 587,178 3 6 77 110 0 0 1825 107,454 8,226 3 0 21 726,353 12 0 74 124 4 0 1826 117,308 9,026 12 3 15 788,971 15 6 74 123 3 0 1827 126,710 10,311 14 3 15 745,178 1 0 84 106 1 0 1828 130,366 9,921 1 2 11 756,174 16 0 74 112 7 0 1829 194,502 9,656 10 3 4 717,334 0 0 74 109 14 0 1830 133,964 10,748 773,846 8 106 5 0 1831 144,402 12,044 606,090 84 100 0 0 Exports of British Copper since 1820. Years. Unwrought. Coin. Sheets, Nails, &c. Wire. Wrought Copper of Total of British other Sorts. Copper exported. Cwt. Cwt. Cwt. Cwt. Cwt. Cwt. 1820 41,155 10 58,121 8 22,663 121,958 1821 34,543 155 66,676 21 24,035 125,431 1822 25,829 - 65,070 40 22,731 113,671 1823 24,082 802 56,146 98 25,387 106,516 1824 19,209 95 62,920 292 23,580 106,096 1825 10 2,134 51,437 40 25,002 78,624 1826 2,604 1,807 65,264 11 26,307 95,994 1827 26,583 1,450 74,943 8 40,439 143,494 1828 21,591 1,150 52,412 71 48,897 124,121 1829 52,978 15 59,871 18 46,643 159,521 1830 56,722 640 66,331 16 56,443 183,154 1831 67,200 96 70,477 149 32,690 170,613 1832 77,497 2 79,944 13 37,156 194,612 N. B.-The foreign copper imported is altogether intended for re-exportation. In 1832, 13,894 cwt. of copper were smelted from foreign ore. The East Indies and China, France and the United States, are the great markets for British copper. The exports to these countries, in 1832, were respectively 82,880, 35,984, and 31,235 cwt. Foreign Copper.-Copper oresare abundant in Sweden, Saxony, Russia, Persia, Japan, China, Chili, &c. Near Fahlun, in the province of Dalecarlia, in Sweden, is the celebrated copper mine of the same name, supposed to have been wrought nearly 1,000 years. For a long time it was one of the most pro- ductive mines in the world. Towards the beginning of the seventeenth century It yielded an annual produce of about 8,000,000 lbs. of pure metal: but it has since greatly declined; and it is most probable that at no distant period it will be wholly abandoned.-(Thomson's Travels in Sweden, p. 221.) There are still. however, several productive copper mines in other parts of Sweden. The exports of copper from Stockholm in 1832 amounted to 4,336 skippounds, or 723 tons English, besides the exports from Gottenburgh and other ports. The product of the copper mines in the government of Olonetz, in Rus- sia, is estimated at 210,000 poods, or 3,375 tons (Eng.) a year.-(Schnitzler, Essai d'une Statistique Géné- rale, &c. p. 41.) The copper mines of Chili are also very rich, and their produce is at present imported into Canton and Calcutta direct from Valparaiso. The copper mines of Japan are said to be among the richest in the world. The Dutch annually import about 700 tons of their produce into Batavia and the Chinese from 800 to 1,000 tons into Canton and other ports. In fact, Japan copper is spread over all the East, and is regularly quoted in the price currents of Canton, Calcutta, and Singapore.- (See p. 308.) It is purer, and brings a higher price, than any other species of bar or slab copper. It to uniformly met with in the shape of bare or ingots, very much resembling large sticks of red sealing wax. When the copper of South America is worth in the Canton market from 15 to 16 dollars per picul, that of Japan fetches from 18 to 20. Pretty considerable quantities of copper are imported into Calcutta from Bushire and Bussorah. This is mostly the produce of the Persian mines; but a little is understood to come from the Russian mines in Georgia. VOL. I.-2 8 61 Digitized by Google 482 COPPERAS-CORAL. Customs Regulations.-Old copper sheathing, old copper utensils, and old copper and pewter utensils of British manufacture, imported from British plantations, and also old copper stripped off vessels in ports in the United Kingdom, may be admitted to entry, duty free, under the following regula- tions: viz.- 1st. Old copper sheathing stripped off British vessels in ports in the British possessions, upon proof to the satisfaction of the Commissioners of Customs, that such sheathing was stripped off in such ports, and also that the said sheathing is the property of the owner of the ship from which it was so stripped, to be delivered to such owner. 2d. Old copper sheathing stripped off any ship in any port in the United Kingdom, upon the fact be- ing certified by the landing-waiter superintending the process the old copper to be delivered only to the copper-smith who may re-copper the vessel from which the copper was stripped, he making proof to that fact. 3d. Old worn-out British copper and pewter utensils to be in all cases delivered when brought from British possessions abroad in British ships, upon the consignee submitting proof that they had been used on a particular estate, and are consigned on account of the owner of that estate, and that he (the consignee) verily believes them to have been of British manufacture.-(Mis. Com. Cus., 15th of Feb. 1833.) Copper ore may be taken out of warehouses to be smelted, on proper notice being given to the cus- toms officers, and giving sufficient security, by bond, for returning the computed quantity of fine copper in it.-(7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 58. Q 23.) Copper is in extensive demand all over India being largely used in the dock-yards, in the manu- facture of cooking utensils, in alloying spelter and tin, &c. The funeral of every Hindoo brings as accession to the demand, according to his station; the relatives of the deceased giving a brass cup to every Brahmin present at the ceremony 80 that 5, 10, 50, 100, 1,000, and sometimes more than 10 times this last number, are dispensed upon such occasions.-(Bell's Commerce of Bengal.) [The value of the copper imported into the United States is very considerable. It is chiefly imported in pigs and bars from Chili, Peru, and England; and in plates, suited to the sheathing of ships, from the last mentioned country. The value annually imported from Chili, of the former description of copper, amounted, on an average of the 5 years ending on the 30th of September, 1838, to $258,876 ; from Peru, to $180,119; from England, to $142,012. Of the latter description of copper, the average value imported from England was $715,240. See article IMPORTS AND Exports.-Am. Ed.] COPPERAS, a term employed by the older chemists, and popularly, as synonymous with vitriol. There are three sorts of copperas: the green, or sulphate of iron; the blue, or sulphate of copper; and the white, or sulphate of zinc. Of these, the first is the most important. Sulphate of iron is distinguished in common by a variety of names, as Martial vitriol, English vitriol, &c. When pure, it is considerably transparent, of a fine bright, though not very deep, grass green colour; and of a nauseous astringent taste, accompanied with a kind of sweetness. Its specific gravity is 1-834. It uniformly reddens the vegetable blues. This salt was well known to the ancients; and is mentioned by Pliny, (Hist. Not. lib. xxxiv. s 12.), under the names of misy, sory, and calchantum. It is not made in the direct way, because it can be obtained at less charge from the decomposition of pyrites on a large scale in the neighbourhood of collieries. It exists in two states; one containing oxide of iron, with 0-22 of oxygen, which is of a pale green, not altered by gallic acid, and giving a white precipitate with prussiate of potass. The other, in which the iron is combined with 0.30 of oxygen, is red, not crystallisable, and gives a black precipitate with gallic acid, and a blue with prussiate of potass. In the common sulphate, these two are often mixed in various proportions. Sulphate of iron is of great importance in the arts. It is a principal ingredient in dyeing; in the manufacture of ink, and of Prussian blue: it is also used in tanning, painting, medicine, &c. Sulphuric acid, or oil of vitriol, was formerly manufactured from sulphate of iron.-(See Acids.) Sulphate of copper, or blue vitriol, commonly called Roman or Cyprian vitriol, is of an elegant sapphire blue colour, hard, compact, and semi-transparent; when perfectly crystal- lised, of a flattish, rhomboidal, decahedral figure; its taste is extremely nauseous, styptic, and acrid its specific gravity is 2.1943. It is used for various purposes in the arts, and also in medicine. Sulphate of zinc, or white vitriol, is found native in the mines of Goslar and other places. Sometimes it is met with in transparent pieces, but more commonly in white efflorescences. These are dissolved in water, and crystallised into large irregular masses, somewhat resembling fine sugar, having a sweetish, nauseous, styptic taste. Its specific gravity, when crystallised, is 1.912 when in the state in which it commonly occurs in commerce, it is 1-3275. Sulphate of zinc is prepared in the large way from some varieties of the native sulphuret. The ore is roasted, wetted with water, and exposed to the air. The sulphur attracts oxygen, and is converted into sulphuric acid; and the metal, being at the same time oxidized, combines with the acid. After some time the sulphate is extracted by solution in water, and the solution being evaporated to dryness, the mass is run into moulds. Thus, the white vitriol of the shops generally contains a small portion of iron, and often of copper and lead.— (Lewis's Mat. Medica; Ure's Dictionary ; Rees's Cyclo- paedia; Thomson's Chemistry, &c.) COPYRIGHT. See Books. CORAL (Ger. Korallen; Du. Koraalen; Fr. Corail; It. Corale; Sp. and Port. Coral; Rus. Korallů; Lat. Corallium; Arab. Besed; Pers. Merjan, Hind. Moonga), a marine Digitized by Google CORDAGE, CORK. 483 production, of which there are several varieties. It was well known to the ancients, but it was reserved for the moderns to discover its real nature. It is, in fact, the nidus or nest of a certain species of vermes, which has the same relation to coral, that a snail has to its shell. As an ornament, black coral is most esteemed; but the red is also very highly prized. Coral is found in very great abundance in the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, in various places in the Mediterranean, on the coast of Sumatra, &c. It grows on rocks, and on any solid submarine body; and it is necessary to its production, that it should remain fixed to its place. It has generally a shrub-like appearance. In the Straits of Messina, where a great deal is fished up, it usually grows to nearly a foot in length, and its thickness is about that of the little finger. It requires 8 or 10 years to arrive at its greatest size. The depth at which it is obtained is various-from 10 to 100 fathoms or more; but it seems to be necessary to its production that the rays of the sun should readily penetrate to the place of its habitation. Its value depends upon its size, solidity, and the depth and brilliancy of its colour; and is so very various, that while some of the Sicilian coral sells for 8 or 10 guineas an ounce, other descriptions of it will not fetch 1s. a pound. It is highly prized by opulent natives in India, as well as by the fair sex throughout Europe. The inferior or worm-eaten coral is used in some parts of the Madras coast, in the celebration of funeral rites. It is also used medicinally. Besides the fishery in the Straits of Messina already alluded to, there are valuable fisheries on the shores of Majorca and Minorca, and on the coast of Provence. A good deal of Mediterranean coral is exported to India, which, however, draws the largest portion of its supplies from the Persian Gulf. The produce of the fishery at Messina is stated by Spallanzani, (Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 308, &c.) to amount to 12 quintals of 250 lbs. each. The manner of fishing coral is nearly the same every where. That which is most commonly prac- tised in the Mediterranean is as follows:-Seven or eight men go in a boat, commanded by the proprietor; the caster throws his net, if we may so call the machine which be uses to tear up the coral from the bottom of the sea; and the rest work the boat, and help to draw in the net. This is composed of two beams of wood tied crosswise, with leads fixed to them to sink them to these beams is fastened a quantity of hemp, twisted loosely round, and intermingled with some loose netting. In this condition the machine is let down into the sea; and when the coral is pretty strongly entwined in the hemp and nets, they draw it up with a rope, which they unwind according to the depth, and which it sometimes requires half a dozen boats to draw. If this rope happen to break, the fishermen run the hazard of being lost. Before the fishers go to sea, they agree for the price of the coral; and the produce of the fishery is divided, at the end of the season, into 13 parts; of which the proprietor has 4, the caster 2, and the other 6 men 1 each: the thirteenth belongs to the company, for payment of boat-hire, &c.-(See dinslic's Mat. Indica; Rees's Cyclopedia; ,Ency. Metrop. Bell's Com. of Bengal, &c.) CORDAGE (Ger. Tauwerk; Du. Touwwerk; Fr. Manœuvres, Cordage; It. Caolame; Sp. Jarcia, Cordaje), a term used in general for all sorts of cord, whether small, middling, or great, made use of in the rigging of ships. The manufacture of cordage is regulated by the act 25 Geo. 4. c. 56., which specifies the sort of materials that are to be employed in the manufacture of cables, hawsers, and other ropes, the marks that are to be affixed to them, and the penalties for non-compliance with the respective enactments.- (See CABLE.) Masters of British ships are obliged, on coming into any port in Great Britain or the colonies, to report, under a penalty of 100/., the foreign cordage, not being standing or running rigging, in use on board such ship. (3 & 4 Will. 4. cap. 52. § 8.) The following table shows how many fathoms, feet, and inches, of a rope of any size, not exceeding 14 inches, make 1 cwt. At the top of the table, marked inches, fathoms, feet, inches, the first column is the cir- cumference of a rope in inches and quarters; the second, the fathoms, feet, and inches, that make up 1 cwt. of such a rope. One example will make it plain. Suppose it is required how much of a 7-inch rope will make 1 cwt.: find 7, in the 3d column, under inches, or circumference of the rope, and immediately opposite to it you will find 9, 5, 6; which shows that in a rope of 7 inches, there will be 9 fathoms 5 feet 6 inches required to make 1 cwt. Inches. Fathom. Feet. Inches. Inches- Fathom. Feet. Inches. Inches. Fathom Feet. Inches. Inches. Fathom. Fest. Inches. Inches. Fathom. Feet. Inches. 1 486 0 0 34 34 3 9 64 11 3 0 91 5 4 0 111 3 3 3 11 313 3 0 4 30 1 6 of 10 4 0 91 5 2 U 12 3 2 3 11 216 3 0 41 26 5 3 7 9 5 6 91 5 0 6 124 3 2 1 14 159 3 0 41 24 0 0 71 9 1 6 10 4 5 0 124 3 2 0 2 124 3 0 41 21 3 0 it 8 4 0 10+ 4 4 1 121 2 7 8 21 96 2 0 5 19 3 0 71 8 3 6 101 4 2 2 13 2 5 3 21 77 3 0 51 17 4 0 8 7 3 6 104 4 1 8 134 2 4 9 21 65 4 0 5f 16 I 0 81 7 0 8 11 4 0 3 13+ 2 4 0 3 54 0 0 54 14 4 6 84 6 4 3 111 3 5 7 131 2 3 6 31 45 5 2 6 13 3 0 84 6 2 1 111 341 14 2 2 1 3t 39 3 0 64 12 2 9 9 6 0 0 [Cordage is imported into the United States almost entirely from Russia; and is for the most part again exported to South America, and the East and West Indies. See article IMPORTS AND Exports.-Am. Ed.] Digitized by Google 484 CORN-CORN LAWS. CORK (Ger. Kork; Du. Kork, Kurk, Vlothout; Fr. Liège; It. Sughero, Suvero: Sp. Corcho; Port. Cortica (de Socreiro), Rus. Korkowoe derewo; Lat. Suber), the thick and spongy bark of a species of oak (Quercus Suber Lin.), abundant in dry mountainous districts in the south of France, and in Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Barbary. The tree grows to the height of 30 feet or more, has a striking resemblance to the Quercus Ilex, or evergreen oak, and attains to a great age. After arriving at a certain state of maturity, it periodically sheds its bark; but this valuable product is found to be of a much better quality when it is artificially removed from the tree, which may be effected without any injury to the latter. After a tree has attained to the age of from 26 to 30 years, it may be barked; and the operation may be subsequently repeated once every 8 or 10 years*, the quality of the cork improving with the increasing age of the tree. The bark is taken off in July and August; and trees that are regularly stripped are said to live for 150 years, or more.-(Poiret, Hist. Philosophique des Plantes, tom. vii. 419.) Cork is light, porous, readily compressible, and wonderfully elastic. It may be cut into any sort of figure, and, notwithstanding its porosity, is nearly impervious to any common liquor. These qualities make it superior to all other substances for stoppers for bottles, in the manufacture of which it is principally made use of. It is also employed as buoys to float nets, in the construction of life-boats, the making of waterproof shoes, and in various other ways. Before being manufactured into stoppers, the cork is charred on each side; this makes it contract, lessens its porosity, and consequently fits it the better for cutting off all communication between the external air and the liquid in the bottle. Spanish black is made of calcined cork. The Greeks and Romans were both well acquainted with cork. They seem also to have occasionally used it as stoppers for vessels (Cadorum obturamentis, Plin. Hist. Nat. lib. xvi. cap. 8.) but it was not extensively employed for this purpose till the 17th century, when glass bottles, of which no mention is made before the 15th century, began to be generally introduced.-(Beckmamn's Hist. Invent. vol. ii. pp. 114-127. Eng. ed.) The duty on manufactured cork is prohibitory; and on the rude article it is very heavy, being no less than 8s. a cwt. or 81. a ton. The quantity entered for home consumption amounts, at an average, to from 40,000 to 45,000 cwt. Its price, including duty, varies with the variations in its quality, from about 201. to about 701. a ton. The Spanish is the best, and fetches the highest price. CORN (Ger. Corn, Getreide; Du. Graanen, Koren; Da. Korn; Sw. Säd, Spanmal; Fr. Bleds, Grains; It. Biade, Grani; Sp. Granos; Rus. Chljeb; Pol. Zboze; Lat. Frumentum), the grain or seed of plants separated from the spica or ear, and used for making bread, &c. Such are wheat, rye, barley, oats, maize, peas, &c.; which see. CORNELIAN. See CARNELIAN. CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. - From the circumstance of forming, in this and most other countries, the principal part of the food of the people, the trade in it, and the laws by which that trade is regulated, are justly looked upon as of the highest importance. But this is not the only circumstance that renders it necessary to enter at some length into the discussion of this subject. Its difficulty is at least equal to its interest. The enactments made at different periods with respect to the corn trade, and the opinions advanced as to their policy, have been so very various and contradictory, that it is indispen- sable to submit them to some examination, and, if possible, to ascertain the principles which ought to pervade this department of commercial legislation. I. HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE Coan LAWS. II. PRINCIPLES OF THE Coan LAWS. III. BRITISH CoRN TRADE. IV. FOREIGN Coan TRADE. I. HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE CORN LAWS. For a long time the regulations with respect to the corn trade were principally intended to promote abundance and low prices. But, though the purpose was laudable, the means adopted for accomplishing it had, for the most part, a directly opposite effect. When a country exports corn, it seems, at first sight, as if nothing could do so much to increase her supplies as the prevention of exportation and even in countries that do not export, its prohibition seems to be a prudent measure, and calculated to prevent the supply from being diminished, upon any emergency, below its natural level. These are the conclusions that immediately suggest themselves upon this subject; and it requires a pretty extensive experience, an attention to facts, and a habit of reasoning upon such topics, to perceive their fallacy. These, however, were altogether wanting when the regulations affecting the corn trade began to be introduced into Great Britain and other countries. They were framed in accordance with what were supposed to be the dictates of common sense; and their * Beckmann (vol. ii. p. 115. Eng. ed.) says, that when the tree is 15 years old, it may be barked, and this can be done successively for eight years." This erroneous statement having been copied into the article CORK in Rees's Cyclopedia, has thence been transplanted to a multitude of other works. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 485 object being to procure as large a supply of the prime necessary of life as possible, its exportation was either totally forbidden, or forbidden when the home price was above certain limits. The principle of absolute prohibition seems to have been steadily acted upon, as far as the turbulence of the period would admit, from the Conquest to the year 1436, in the reign of Henry VI. But at the last mentioned period an act was passed, authorising the exportation of wheat whenever the home price did not exceed 6s. 8d. (equal in amount of pure silver to 12s. 10±d. present money) per quarter, and barley when the home price did not exceed 3s. 4d. In 1463, an additional benefit was intended to be conferred on agriculture by prohibiting importation until the home price exceeded that at which expor- tation ceased. But the fluctuating policy of the times prevented these regulations from being carried into full effect; and, indeed, rendered them in a great measure inoperative. In addition to the restraints laid on exportation, it has been common in most countries to attempt to increase the supply of corn, not only by admitting its unrestrained import- ation from abroad, but by holding out extraordinary encouragement to the importers. This policy has not, however, been much followed in England. During the 500 years immediately posterior to the Conquest, importation was substantially free; but it was seldom or never promoted by artificial means: and during the last century and a half it has, for the most part, been subjected to severe restrictions. Besides attempting to lower prices by prohibiting exportation, our ancestors attempted to lower them by proscribing the trade carried on by corn dealers. This most useful class of persons were looked upon with suspicion by every one. The agriculturists concluded that they would be able to sell their produce at higher prices to the consumers, were the corn dealers out of the way: while the consumers concluded that the profits of the dealers were made at their expense; and ascribed the dearths that were then very prevalent entirely to the practices of the dealers, or to their buying up corn and withholding it from market. These notions, which have still a considerable degree of influence, led to various enactments, particularly in the reign of Edward VI., by which the freedom of the internal corn trade was entirely suppressed. The engrossing of corn, or the buying of it in one market with intent to sell it again in another, was made an offence punishable by imprisonment and the pillory; and no one was allowed to carry corn from one part to another without a licence, the privilege of granting which was confined, by a statute of Elizabeth, to the quarter sessions. But as the principles of commerce came to be better understood, the impolicy of these restraints gradually grew more and more obvious. They were considerably modified in 1624; and, in 1663, the engrossing of corn was declared to be legal so long as the price did not exceed 48s. a quarter-(1 Chas. 2. c. 7.) an act which, as Dr. Smith has justly observed, has, with all its imperfections, done more to promote plenty than any other law in the statute book. In 1773, the last remnant of the legislative enactments restraining the freedom of the internal corn dealers was entirely repealed. But the engrossing of corn has, notwithstanding, been since held to be an offence at common law; and, so late as 1800, a corn dealer was convicted of this imaginary crime. He was not, however, brought up for judgment; and it is not very likely that any similar case will ever again occupy the attention of the courts. The acts of 1436 and 1463, regulating the prices when exportation was allowed and when importation was to cease, continued, nominally at least, in force till 1562, when the prices at which exportation might take place were extended to 10s. for wheat, and 6s. 8d. for barley. But a new principle-that of imposing duties on exportation-was soon after introduced; and, in 1571, it was enacted that wheat might be exported, paying a duty of 2s. a quarter, and barley and other grain a duty of 1s. 4d., whenever the home price of wheat did not exceed 20s. a quarter, and barley and malt 12s. At the Restoration, the limit at which exportation might take place was very much extended; but as the duty on exportation was, at the same time, so very high as to be almost prohibitory, the extension was of little or no service to the agriculturists. This view of the matter seems to have been speedily taken by the legislature; for, in 1663, the high duties on exportation were taken off, and an ad valorem duty imposed in their stead, at the same time that the limit of exportation was extended. In 1670, a still more decided step was taken in favour of agriculture; an act being then passed which extended the exportation price to 53s. 4d. a quarter for wheat, and other grain in proportion, imposing, at the same time, prohibitory duties on the importation of wheat till the price rose to 53s. 4d., and a duty of 8s. between that price and 80s. But the real effects of this act were not 80 great as might have been anticipated. The extension of the limit of exportation was rendered comparatively nugatory, in consequènce of the continuance of the duties on exportation caused by the necessities of the Crown; while the want of any proper method for the determination of prices went far to nullify the prohibition of importation. At the accession of William III. a new system was adopted. The interests of agriculture were then looked upon as of paramount importance: and to promote them, not only were the duties on exportation totally abolished, but it was encouraged by the grant of a bounty 2 8 2 Digitized by Google 486 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. of 5s. on every quarter of wheat exported while the price continued at or below A8c.; of 2s. 6d. on every quarter of barley or malt, while their respective prices did not exceed 24s.; and of 3s. 6d. on every quarter of rye, when its price did not exceed 32s.-(1 Will. & Mary, c. 12.) A bounty of 2s. 6d. a quarter was subsequently given upon the exportation of oats and oatmeal, when the price of the former did not exceed 15s. a quarter. Importation continued to be regulated by the act of 1670. Much diversity of opinion has been entertained with respect to the policy of the bounty. That it was intended to raise the price of corn is clear, from the words of the statute, which states, " that the exportation of corn and grain into foreign parts, when the price thereof is at a low rate in this kingdom, hath been a great advantage not only to the owners of land, but to the trade of the kingdom in general: therefore," &c. But admitting this to have been its object, it has been contended that the low prices which prevailed during the first half of last century show that its real effect had been precisely the reverse; and that it had, by extending tillage, contributed to reduce prices. It will be afterwards shown that this could not really be the case; and the fall of prices may be sufficiently accounted for by the improved state of agriculture, the gradual consolidation of farms, the diminution of sheep hus- bandry, &c., combined with the slow increase of the population. In point of fact, too, prices had begun to give way 30 years before the bounty was granted; and the fall was equally great in France, where, instead of exportation being encouraged by a bounty, it was almost entirely prohibited; and in most other Continental states.-(For proofs of what is now stated, see the article Corn Laws, in the new edition of the Eney. Brit.) The Tables annexed to this article show that, with some few exceptions, there was, during the first 66 years of last century, a large export of corn from England. In 1750, the wheet exported amounted to 947,000 quarters; and the total bounties paid during the 10 years from 1740 to 1751 reached the sum of 1,515,000l. But the rapid increase of population subsequently to 1760, and particularly after the peace of Paris, in 1763, when the com- merce and manufactures of the country were extended in an unprecedented degree, gradually reduced this excess of exportation, and occasionally, indeed, inclined the balance the other way. This led to several suspensions of the restrictions on importation; and, at length, in 1773, a new act was framed, by which foreign wheat was allowed to be imported on paying a nominal duty of 6d. whenever the home price was at or above 48s. a quarter, and the bounty* and exportation were together to cease when the price was at or above 44s. This statute also permitted the importation of corn at any price, duty free, in order to be again exported, provided it were in the mean time lodged under the joint locks of the king and the importer. The prices when exportation was to cease by this act seem to have been fixed too low and, as Dr. Smith has observed, there appears a good deal of impropriety in prohibiting exportation altogether the moment it attained the limit, when the bounty given to force it was withdrawn; yet, with all these defects, the act of 1773 was a material improvement on the former system, and ought not to have been altered unless to give greater freedom to the trade. The idea that this law must, when enacted, have been injurious to the agriculturists, seems altogether illusory: the permission to import foreign grain, when the home price rose to a moderate height, certainly prevented their realising exorbitant profits, in dear years, at the expense of the other classes; and prevented an unnatural proportion of the capital of the country from being turned towards agriculture. But as the limit at which importation at a nominal duty was allowed, was fixed a good deal above the average price of the reign of George II., it cannot be maintained that it had any tendency to reduce previous prices, which is the only thing that could have discouraged agriculture and, in fact, no such reduction took place. It is, indeed, true, that, but for this act, we should not have imported so much foreign grain in the interval between 1773 and 1791. This importation, however, was not a consequence of the decline of agriculture; for it is admitted that every branch of rural economy was more improved in that period than in the whole of the preceding century but arose entirely from a still more rapid increase of the manufacturing population, and hence, of the effective de- mand for corn. By referring to the Tables annexed to this article, it will be seen that, in 1772, the be- lance on the side of wheat imported amounted to 18,515 quarters; and in 1773, 1774 and 1775, all years of great prosperity, the balance was very much increased. But the loss of a great part of our colonial possessions, the stagnation of commerce, and difficulty of obtaining employment, occasioned by the American war, diminished the consumption and this, com- bined with unusually productive harvests, rendered the balance high on the side of exports- tion, in 1778, 1779, and 1789. In 1783 and 1784, the crop was unusually deficient, and considerable importations took place; but in 1785, 1786, and 1787 the exports again ex- ceeded the imports; and it was not till 1788, when the country had fully recovered from The bounty amounted to 5a. on every quarter of wheat 2s. 6d. on every quarter of barley; 3a. on every quarter of rye; and 2. 6d. on every quarter of oats. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 487 the effects of the American war, and when manufacturing improvements were carried on with extraordinary spirit, that the imports permanently overbalanced the exports. The growing wealth and commercial prosperity of the country had thus, by increasing the population and enabling individuals to consume additional quantities of food, caused the home supply of corn to fall somewhat short of the demand but it must not, therefore, be concluded that agriculture had not at the same time been very greatly meliorated. " The average annual produce of wheat," says Mr. Comber, " at the beginning of the reign of George III. (1760), was about 3,800,000 quarters, of which about 300,000 had been sent out of the kingdom, leaving about 3,500,000 for home consumption. In 1773, the produce of wheat was stated in the House of Commons to be 4,000,000 quarters, of which the whole, and above 100,000 imported, were consumed in the kingdom. In 1796, the consumption was stated by Lord Hawkesbury to be 500,000 quarters per month, or 6,000,000 quarters annually, of which about 180,000 were imported; showing an increased produce in about 20 years of 1,820,000 quarters. It is evident, therefore, not only that no defalcation of pro- duce had taken place in consequence of the cessation of exportation, as has been teo lightly assumed from the occasional necessity of importation, but that it had increased with the augmentation of our commerce and manufactures."-(Comber on National Subsistence, p. 180.) These estimates are, no doubt, very loose and unsatisfactory; but the fact of a great in- crease of produce having taken place is unquestionable. In a report by a committee of the House of Commons on the state of the waste lands, drawn up in 1797, the number of acts passed for enclosing, and the number of acres enclosed, in the following reigns, are thus stated :- Number of Acts. Number of Acres. In the reign of Queen Anne - - 2 1,439 George I. - - 16 17,960 George II. - - 226 318,778 George III. to 1797 - 1,532 2,804,197 It deserves particular notice, that from 1771 to 1791, both inclusive, the period during which the greater number of these improvements were effected, there was no rise of prices. The landholders, however, could not but consider the liberty of importation granted by the act of 1773 as injurious to their interests, inasmuch as it prevented prices from rising with the increased demand. A clamour, therefore, was raised against that law ; and in addi- tion to this interested feeling, a dread of becoming habitually dependent on foreign supplies of corn, operated on many, and produced a pretty general acquiescence in the act of 1791. By this act, the price when importation could take place from abroad at the low duty of 6d., was raised to 54s.; under 54s. and above 50s. a middle duty of 2s. 6d. and under 50s. a prohibiting duty of 24s. 3d. was exigible. The bounty continued as before, and exporta- tion without bounty was allowed to 46s. It was also enacted, that foreign wheat might be imported, stored under the king's lock, and again exported free of duty but, if sold for home consumption, it became liable to a warehouse duty of 2s. 6d. in addition to the ordinary duties payable at the time of sale. In 1797, the Bank of England obtained an exemption from paying in specie; and the consequent facility of obtaining discounts and getting a command of capital, which this measure occasioned, gave a fresh stimulus to agriculture the efficacy of which was most powerfully assisted by the scarcity and high prices of 1800 and 1801. An agricultural mania now seized the nation and as the prices of 1804 would not allow the cultivation of the poor soils, which had been broken up in the dear years, to be continued, a new corn law, being loudly called for by the farmers, was passed in 1804. The law imposed a prohibitory duty of 24s. 3d. per quarter on all wheat imported when the home price was at or below 63s.; between 63s. and 66s. a middle duty of 2s. 6d. was paid, and above 66s. a nominal duty of 6d. The price at which the bounty was allowed on exportation was extended to 50s., and exportation without bounty to 54s. By the act of 1791, the maritime counties of England were divided into 12 districts, importation and exportation being regulated by the particular prices of each; but by the act of 1804 they were regulated, in England, by the aggregute average of the maritime districts; and in Scotland by the aggregate average of the 4 maritime districts into which it was divided. The averages were taken 4 times a year, BO that the ports could not be open or shut for less than 3 months. This manner of ascer- taining prices was, however, modified in the following session it being then fixed, that im- portation, both in England and Scotland, should be regulated by the average price of the 12 maritime districts of England. In 1805, the crop was very considerably deficient, and the average price of that year was about 22s. a quarter above the price at which importation was allowed by the act of 1804. As the depreciation of paper, compared with bullion, was at that time only four per cent., the high price of that year must have been principally owing to the new law preventing importation from abroad till the home price was high, and then fettering mercantile opera- tions; and to the formidable obstacles which the war threw in the way of importation. In Digitized by Google 488 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 1806*, 1807, and 1808, the depreciation of paper was nearly 3 per cent. and the price of wheat in those years being generally from 66s. to 75s., the importations were but small. From autumn 1808, to spring 1814 the depreciation of the currency was unusually great; and several crops in that interval being likewise deficient, the price of corn, influenced by both causes, rose to a surprising height. At that time no vessel could be laden in any Continen- tal port for England without purchasing a license, and the freight and insurance were at least 5 times as high as during peace. But the destruction of Napoleon's anti-commercial system, in the autumn of 1813, having increased the facilities of importation, a large quan- tity of corn was poured into the kingdom; and, in 1814, its bullion price fell below the price at which importation was allowed. Before this fall of price, a committee of the House of Commons had been appointed to inquire into the state of the laws affecting the corn trade: and recommended in their Report (dated 11th of May, 1813) a very great increase of the prices at which exportation was allowable, and when importation free of duty might take place. This recommendation was not, yever, adopted by the House; but the fact of its having been made when the home price was at least 112s. a quarter, displayed a surprising solicitude to exclude foreigners from all competition with the home growers. The wish to lessen the dependence of the country on foreign supplies formed the sole ostensible motive by which the committee of 1813 had been actuated, in proposing an alte- ration in the act of 1804. But after the fall of price in autumn 1813, and in the early part of 1814, it became obvious, on comparing our previous prices with those of the Continent, that without an alteration of the law in question this dependence would be a good deal in- creased that a considerable extent of such poor lands as had been brought into cultivation during the high prices would be again thrown into pasturage; and that rents would be considerably reduced. These consequences alarmed the landlords and occupiers and in the early part of the session of 1814, a series of resolutions were voted by the House of Com- mons, declaring that it was expedient to repeal the bounty, to permit the free exportation of corn whatever might be the home price, and to impose a graduated scale of duties on the importation of foreign corn. Thus, foreign wheat imported when the home price was at or under 64s. was to pay a duty of 24s. when at or under 65s. a duty of 23s. ; and so on, till the home price should reach 86s., when the duty was reduced to 1s., at which sum it became stationary. Corn imported from Canada, or from the other British colonies in North Ame- rica, was to pay half the duties on other corn. As soon as these resolutions had been agreed to, two bills founded on them-one for regulating the importation of foreign corn, and another for the repeal of the bounty, and for permitting unrestricted exportation-were in- troduced. Very little attention was paid to the last of these bills; but the one imposing fresh duties on importation encountered a very keen opposition. The manufacturers, and every class not directly supported by agriculture, stigmatised it as an unjustifiable attempt artificially to keep up the price of food, and to secure excessive rents and large profits to the landholders and farmers at the expense of the consumers. Meetings were very generally held, and resolutions entered into strongly expressive of this sentiment, and dwelling on the fatal consequences which, it was affirmed, a continuance of the high prices would have on our manufactures and commerce. This determined opposition, coupled with the indecision of ministers, and perhaps, too, with an expectation on the part of some of the landholders that prices would rise without any legislative interference, caused the miscarriage of this bill. The other bill, repealing the bounty and allowing an unlimited freedom of exportation, was passed into a law. Committees had been appointed in 1814, by both Houses of Parliament, to examine evi- dence and report on the state of the corn trade; and, in consequence, a number of the most eminent agriculturists were examined. The witnesses were unanimous in this only,-that the protecting prices in the act of 1804 were insufficient to enable the farmers to make good the engagements into which they had subsequently entered, and to continue the cultivation of the inferior lands lately brought under tillage. Some of them thought that 120s. ought to be fixed as the lowest limit at which the importation of wheat free of duty should be allowed others varied from 90s. to 100s.-from 80s. to 90s.-and a few from 70s. to 80s. The gene- ral opinion, however, seemed to be that 80s. would suffice; and as prices continued to decline, a set of resolutions founded on this assumption were submitted to the House of Commons by Mr. Robinson, of the Board of Trade (now Lord Goderich) ; and having been agreed to, a bill founded on them was, after a very violent opposition, carried in both Houses by im- mense majorities, and finally passed into a law (55 Geo. 3. c. 26.). According to this act, all sorts of foreign corn, meal, or flour, might be imported at all times free of duty into any port of the United Kingdom, in order to be warehoused but foreign corn was not permitted to be imported for home consumption, except when the average prices of the several sorts * Several impolitic restraints had been for a long time imposed on the free importation and exporta- tion of corn between Great Britain and Ireland, but they were wholly abolished in 1806; and the act of that year (46 Geo. 3. c. 97.), establishing a free trade in corn between the 2 great divisions of the empire, was not only a wise and proper measure in itself, but has powerfully contributed to promote the general advantage. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 489 of British corn were as follows: viz. wheat, 80s. per quarter; rye, peas, and beans, 53s. ; barley, bear, or bigg, 40s. and oats, 26s.: and all importation of corn from any of the British plantations in North America was forbidden, except when the average home prices were at or under, wheat, 67s. per quarter rye, peas, and beans, 41s.; barley, bear or bigg, 33s.; and oats, 22s. The agriculturists confidently expected that this act would immediately effect a rise of prices, and render them steady at about 80s. But, for reasons which will be afterwards stated, these expectations were entirely disappointed and there has been a more ruinous fluc- tuation of prices during the 18 years that have elapsed since it was passed, than in any pre- vious period of our recent history. In 1821, when prices had sunk very low, a committee of the House of Commons was appointed to inquire into the causes of the depressed state of agriculture, and to report their observations thereupon. This committee, after examining a number of witnesses, drew up a report, which, though not free from error, is a very valuable document. It contains a forcible exposition of the pernicious effects arising from the law of 1815, of which it suggested several important modifications. These, however, were not adopted and as the low prices, and consequent distress of the agriculturists, continued, the subject was brought under the consideration of parliament in the following year. After a good deal of discussion a new act was then passed (3 Geo. 4. c. 60.), which enacted, that after prices had risen to the limit of free importation fixed by the act of 1815, that act was to cease and the new statute to come into operation. This statute lowered the prices fixed by the act of 1815, at which importation could take place for home consumption, to the fol- lowing sums, viz- For Corn not of the British For Cora of the British Possessions in North America. Possessions in North America. Wheat - - - - - 70s. per quarter. 59s. per quarter. Rye, peas, and beans - - - 46s. - 39s. - Barley, bear, or bigg - - - 35s. - 30s. - Oats - - - - 25s. - 20s. - But, in order to prevent any violent oscillation of prices from a large supply of grain being suddenly thrown into the market, it was enacted, that a duty of 17s. a quarter should be laid on all wheat imported from foreign countries, during the first 3 months after the open- ing of the ports, if the price was between 70s. and 80s. a quarter, and of 12s. afterwards; that if the price was between 80s. and 85s., the duty should be 10s. for the first 3 months, and 5s. afterwards; and that if the price should exceed 85s., the duty should be constant at 1s. ; and proportionally for other sorts of grain. This act, by preventing importation until the home price rose to 70s., and then loading the quantities imported between that limit and the limit of 85s. with heavy duties, was cer- tainly more favourable to the views of the agriculturists than the act of 1815. But, un- luckily for them, the prices of no species of corn, except barley, were sufficiently high, while this act existed, to bring it into operation. In 1825, the first approach was made to a better system, by permitting the importation of wheat from British North America, without reference to the price at home, on payment of a duty of 5s. a quarter. But this act was passed with difficulty, and was limited to one year's duration. Owing to the drought that prevailed during the summer of 1826, there was every prospect that there would be a great deficiency in the crops of that year; and, in order to prevent the disastrous consequences that might have taken place, had importation been prevented until the season was too far advanced for bringing supplies from the great corn markets in the north of Europe, his Majesty was authorised to admit 500,000 quarters of foreign wheat, on payment of such duties as the order in council for its importation should declare. And when it was ascertained that the crops of oats, peas, &c. were greatly below an average, ministers issued an order in council, on their own responsibility, on the 1st of September, authorising the immediate importation of oats on payment of a duty of 2s. 2d. a boll and of rye, peas, and beans, on payment of a duty of 3s. 6d. a quarter. A considerable quantity of oats was imported under this order, the timely appearance of which had undoubtedly a very considerable effect in mitigating the pernicious consequences arising from the defi- ciency of that species of grain. Ministers obtained an indemnity for this order on the sub- sequent meeting of parliament. Nothing could more strikingly evince the impolicy of the acts of 1815 and 1822, than the necessity, under which the legislature and government had been placed, of passing the temporary acts and issuing the orders alluded to. The more intelligent portion of the agri- culturists began, at length, to perceive that the corn laws were not really calculated to pro- duce the advantages that they had anticipated and a conviction that increased facilities should be given to importation became general throughout the country. The same convic- tion made considerable progress in the House of Commons so much so, that several mem- bers who supported the measures adopted in 1815 and 1822, expressed themselves satisfied that the principle of exclusion had been carried too far, and that a more liberal system should be adopted. Ministers having participated in these sentiments, Mr. Canning moved a series 62 Digitized by Google 490 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. of resolutions, as the foundation of a new corn law, on the 1st of March, 1827. These resolutions were to the effect that foreign corn might always be imported, free of duty, in order to be warehoused and that it should always be admissible for home consumption on payment of certain duties. Thus in the instance of wheat, it was resolved that, when the home price was at or above 70s. a quarter, the duty should be a fixed one of 1s. and that for every shilling that the price fell below 70s. a duty of 2s. should be imposed so that when the price was at 69s. the duty on importation was to be 2s., when at 68s. the duty was to be 4s. and so on. The limit at which the constant duty of 1s. a quarter was to take place in the case of barley, was originally fixed at 37s., but it was subsequently raised to 40s. ; the duty increasing by 18. 6d. for every 1s. which the price fell below that limit. The limit at which the constant duty of 1s. a quarter was to take place in the case of oats was originally fixed at 28s. but it was subsequently raised to 33s. the duty increasing at the rate of 18. a quarter for every shilling that the price fell below that limit. The duty on co- lonial wheat was fixed at 6d. the quarter when the home price was above 65s. and when the price was under that sum, the duty was constant at 5a. ; the duties on other descriptions of colonial grain were similar. These resolutions were agreed to by a large majority and a bill founded on them was subsequently carried through the House of Commons. Owing, however, to the change of ministers, which took place in the interim, several peers, ori- ginally favourable to the bill, and some, even, who assisted in its preparation, saw reason to become amongst its most violent opponents; and a clause moved by the Duke of Welling- ton, interdicting all importation of foreign corn until the home price exceeded 66s., having been carried in the Lords, ministers gave up the bill, justly considering that such a clause was entirely subversive of its principle. A new set of resolutions with respect to the corn trade were brought forward in 1828, by Mr. Charles Grant. They were founded on the same principles as those which had been rejected during the previous session. But the duty was not made to vary equally, as in Mr. Canning's resolutions, with every equal variation of price; it being 23s. 8d. when the home price was 64s. the Imperial quarter; 16s. 8d. when it was 69s. and 1s. only when it was at or above 73s. After a good deal of debate, Mr. Grant's resolutions were carried in both Houses; and the act embodying them (9 Geo. 4. c. 60.) is that by which the corn trade is now regulated. An abstract of this act will be found in a subsequent part of this article. II. PRINCIPLES OF THE CoRN LAWS. 1. Internal Corn Trade.-It is needless to take up the reader's time by endeavouring to prove by argument the advantage of allowing the free conveyance of corn from one province to another. Every one sees that this is indispensable, not only to the equal distribution of the supplies of food over the country, but to enable the inhabitants of those districts that are best fitted for the raising and fattening of cattle, sheep, &c. to addict themselves to these or other necessary occupations not directly connected with the production of corn. We shall, therefore, confine the few remarks we have to make, on this subject, to the consideration of the influence of the speculations of the corn merchants in buying up corn in anticipation of an advance. Their proceedings in this respect, though of the greatest public utility, have been the principal cause of that odium to which they have been so long exposed. Were the harvests always equally productive, nothing would be gained by storing up supplies of corn ; and all that would be necessary would be to distribute the crop equally throughout the country, and throughout the year. But such is not the order of nature. The variations in the aggregate produce of a country in different seasons, though not perhaps so great as are commonly supposed, are still very considerable; and experience has shown that two or three unusually luxuriant harvests seldom take place in succession or that when they do, they are invariably followed by those that are deficient. The speculators in corn anticipate this result. Whenever prices begin to give way in consequence of an unusually luxuriant harvest, speculation is at work. The more opulent farmers withhold either the whole or a part of their produce from market; and the more opulent dealers purchase largely of the corn brought to market, and store it up in expectation of a future advance. And thus, without intending to promote any one's interest but their own, the speculators in corn become the great benefactors of the public. They provide a relief stock against those years of scarcity which are sure at no distant period to recur while, by withdrawing a portion of the redundant supply from immediate consumption, prices are prevented from falling so low as to be injurious to the farmers, or at least are maintained at a higher level than they would otherwise have reached; provident habits are maintained amongst the people; and that waste and extravagance are checked, which always take place in plentiful years, but which would be carried to a much greater extent if the whole produce of an abundant crop were to be consumed within the season. It is, however, in scarce years that the speculations of the corn merchants are principally advantageous. Even in the richest countries, a very large proportion of the individuals engaged in the business of agriculture are comparatively poor, and are totally without the Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 491 1 means of withholding their produce from market, in order to speculate upon any future advance. In consequence, the markets are always most abundantly supplied with produce immediately after harvest; and in countries where the merchants engaged in the corn trade are not possessed of large capitals, or where their proceedings are fettered and restricted, there is then, almost invariably, a heavy fall of prices. But as the vast majority of the people buy their food in small quantities, or from day to day as they want it, their consump- tion is necessarily extended or contracted according to its price at the time. Their views do not extend to the future they have no means of judging whether the crop is or is not deficient. They live, as the phrase is, from hand to mouth and are satisfied if, in the mean time, they obtain abundant supplies at a cheap rate. But it is obvious, that were there nothing to control or counteract this improvidence, the consequence would very often be fatal in the extreme. The crops of one harvest must support the population till the crop of the other harvest has been gathered in ; and if that crop should be deficient-if, for instance, it should only be adequate to afford, at the usual rate of consumption, a supply of 9 or 10 months' provisions instead of 12-it is plain that, unless the price were so raised immediately after harvest, as to enforce economy, and put, as it were, the whole nation on short allowance, the most dreadful famine would be experienced previously to the ensuing harvest. Those who examine the accounts of the prices of wheat and other grain in England, collected by Bishop Fleetwood and Sir F. M. Eden, will meet with abundant proofs of the accuracy of what has now been stated. In those remote periods when the farmers were generally without the means of withholding their crops from market, and when the trade of a corn dealer was proscribed, the utmost improvidence was exhibited in the consumption of grain. There were then, indeed, very few years in which a considerable scarcity was not experienced immediately before harvest, and many in which there was an absolute famine. The fluctuations of price exceeded every thing of which we can now form an idea ; the price of wheat and other grain being 4 or 5 times as high in June and July, as in September and October. Thanks, however, to the increase of capital in the hands of the large farmers and dealers, and to the freedom given to the operations of the corn merchants, we are no longer exposed to such ruinous vicissitudes. Whenever the dealers, who, in consequence of their superior means of information, are better acquainted with the real state of the crops than any other class of persons, find the harvest likely to be deficient, they raise the price of the corn they have warehoused, and bid against each other for the corn which the farmers are bringing to market. In consequence of this rise of prices, all ranks and orders, but especially the lower, who are the great consumers of corn, find it indispensable to use greater economy, and to check all improvident and wasteful con- sumption. Every class being thus immediately put upon short allowance, the pressure of the scarcity is distributed equally throughout the year and instead of indulging, as was formerly the case, in the same scale of consumption as in seasons of plenty, until the supply became altogether deficient, and then being exposed without resource to the attacks of famine and pestilence, the speculations of the corn merchants warn us of our danger, and compel us to provide against it. It is not easy to suppose that these proceedings of the corn merchants should ever be injurious to the public. It has been said that in scarce years they are not disposed to bring the corn they have purchased to market until it has attained an exorbitant price, and that the pressure of the scarcity is thus often very much aggravated; but there is no real ground for any such statement. The immense amount of capital required to store up any consider- able quantity of corn, and the waste to which it is liable, render most holders disposed to sell as soon as they can realise a fair profit. In every extensive country in which the corn trade is free, there are infinitely too many persons engaged in it to enable any sort of com- bination or concert to be formed amongst them; and though it were formed, it could not be maintained for an instant. A large proportion of the farmers and other small holders of corn are always in straitened circumstances, more particularly if a scarce year has not occurred so soon as they expected; and they are consequently anxious to relieve themselves, as soon as prices rise, of a portion of the stock on their hands. Occasionally, indeed, individuals are found, who retain their stocks for too long a period, or until a reaction takes place, and prices begin to decline. But instead of joining in the popular cry against such persons, every one who takes a dispassionate view of the matter will perceive that, inasmuch as their miscalculation must, under the circumstances supposed, be exceedingly injurious to them- selves, we have the best security against its being carried to such an extent as to be productive of any material injury or even inconvenience to the public. It ought also to be borne in mind, that it is rarely, if ever, possible to determine beforehand, when a scarcity is to abate in consequence of new supplies being brought to market; and had it continued a little longer, there would have been no miscalculation on the part of the holders. At all events, it is plain that, by declining to bring their corn to market, they preserved a resource on which, in the event of the harvest being longer delayed than usual, or of any unfavour- able contingency taking place, the public could have fallen back so that, instead of deserving abuse, these speculators are most justly entitled to every fair encouragement and protection. Digitized by Google 492 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. A country in which there is no considerable stock of grain in the barnyards of the farmers, or in the warehouses of the merchants, is in the most perilous situation that can easily be imagined, and may be exposed to the severest privations, or even famine. But so long as the sagacity, the miscalculation, or the avarice of merchants and dealers retain a stock of grain in the warehouses, this last extremity cannot take place. By refusing to sell it till it has reached a very high price, they put an effectual stop to all sorts of waste, and husband for the public those supplies which they could not have so frugally husbanded for themselves. We have already remarked that the last remnant of the shackles imposed by statute on the freedom of the internal corn dealer was abolished in 1773. It is true that engrossing, forestalling, and regrating-(see ENGROSSING, &c.)-are still held to be offences at com- mon law ; but there is very little probability of any one being in future made to answer for such ideal offences. 2. Exportation to Foreign Countries.-The fallacy of the notion so long entertained, that the prevention of exportation was the surest method of increasing plenty at home, is obvious to every one who has reflected upon such subjects. The markets of no country can ever be steadily and plentifully supplied with corn, unless her merchants have power to export the surplus supplies with which they may be occasionally furnished. When a country without the means of exporting grows nearly her own average supplies of corn, an abundant crop, by causing a great overloading of the market, and a heavy fall of price, in as injurious to the farmer as a scarcity. It may be thought, perhaps, that the greater quantity of produce in abundant seasons will compensate for its lower price; but this is not the case. It is uniformly found that variations in the quantity of corn exert a much greater influence over prices, than equal variations in the quantity of almost any thing else offered for sale. Being the principal necessary of life, when the supply of corn happens to be less than ordi- nary, the mass of the people make very great, though unavailing, exertions, by diminishing their consumption of other and less indispensable articles, to obtain their accustomed supplies of this prime necessary so that its price rises much more than in proportion to the deficiency. On the other hand, when the supply is unusually large, the consumption is not proportionally extended. In ordinary years, the bulk of the population is about adequately fed; and though the consumption of all classes be somewhat greater in unusually plentiful years, the extension is considerable only among the lowest classes, and in the feeding of horses. Hence it is, that the increased supply at market, in such years, goes principally to cause a glut, and, consequently, a ruinous decline of prices. These statements are corroborated by the widest experience. Whenever there is an inability to export, from whatever cause it may arise, an unusually luxuriant crop is uniformly accompanied by a very heavy fall of price, and severe agricultural distress; and when two or three such crops happen to follow in succession, the ruin of a large proportion of the farmers is completed. If the mischiefs resulting from the want of power to export stopped here, they might, though very great, be borne; but they do not stop here. It is idle to suppose that a system ruinous to the producers can be otherwise to the consumers. A glut of the market, occa- sioned by luxuriant harvests, and the want of power to export, cannot be of long continuance: for, while it continues, it can hardly fail, by distressing all classes of farmers, and causing the ruin of many, to give a check to every species of agricultural improvement, and to lessen the extent of land in tillage. When, therefore, an unfavourable season recurs, the reaction is, for the most part, appalling. The supply, being lessened not only by the badness of the season, but also by a diminution of the quantity of land in crop, falls very far below an average and a severe scarcity, if not an absolute famine, is most commonly experienced. It is, therefore, clear, that if a country would render herself secure against famine, and injurious fluctuations of price, she must give every possible facility to exportation in years of unusual plenty. If she act upon a different system,- if her policy make exportation in such year impracticable, or very difficult,-she will infallibly render the bounty of Providence an injury to her agriculturists; and two or three abundant harvests in succession will be the forerunners of scarcity and famine. 3. Bounty on the Exportation of Corn.-In Great Britain, as already observed, we have not only been allowed to export for a long series of years, but from the Revolution down to 1815 a bounty was given on exportation, whenever the home prices were depressed below certain limits. This policy, however, erred as much on the one hand as a restriction on exportation errs on the other. It causes, it is true, an extension of the demand for corn: but this greater demand is not caused by natural, but by artificial means; it is not a con- sequence of any really increased demand on the part of the foreigner, but of our furnishing the exporters of corn with a bonus, in order that they may sell it abroad below its natural price To suppose that a proceeding of this sort can be a public advantage, is equivalent to supposing that a shopkeeper may get rich by selling his goods below what they cost- (See BOUNTY.) 4. Importation from Foreign Countries.- If a country were, like Poland or Russia, uniformly in the habit of exporting corn to other countries, a restriction on importation would be of no material consequence; because though such restriction did not exist, no Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 493 foreign corn would be imported, unless its ports were so situated as to serve for an entrepôt. A restriction on importation is sensibly felt only when it is enforced in a country which, owing to the greater density of its population, the limited extent of its fertile land, or any other cause, would, either occasionally or uniformly, import. It is familiar to the observa- tion of every one, that a total failure of the crops is a calamity that but rarely occurs in an extensive kingdom; that the weather which is unfavourable to one description of soil, is generally favourable to some other description; and that, except in anomalous cases, the total produce is not very different. But what is thus generally true of single countries, is always true of the world at large. History furnishes no single instance of a universal scarcity but it is uniformly found, that when the crops in a particular country are unusually deficient, they are proportionally abundant in some other quarter. It is clear, however, that a restriction on importation excludes the country which enacts it from profiting by this beneficent arrangement. She is thrown entirely on her own resources. Under the circum- stances supposed, she has nothing to trust to for relief but reserves in her warehouses; and should these be inadequate to meet the exigency of the crisis, there are apparently no means by which she can escape experiencing all the evils of scarcity, or, it may be, of famine. A country deprived of the power to import is unable to supply the deficiencies of her harvests by the surplus produce of other countries; so that her inhabitants may starve amidst surrounding plenty, and suffer the extreme of scarcity, when, but for the restrictions on importation, they might enjoy the greatest abundance. If the restriction be not abso- lute, but conditional if, instead of absolutely excluding foreign com from the home markets, it merely loads it with a duty; the degree in which it will operate to increase the scarcity and dearth will depend on the magnitude of that duty. If the duty be constant and mode- rate, it may not have any very considerable effect in discouraging importation; but if it be fluctuating and heavy, it will, by falsifying the speculations of the merchants, and making a corresponding addition to the price of the corn imported, be proportionally injurious. In whatever degree foreign corn may be excluded in years of deficient crops, to the same ex- tent must prices be artificially raised, and the pressure of scarcity rendered so much the more severe. Such would be the disastrous influence of a restriction on importation in a country which, were there no such obstruction in the way, would sometimes import and sometimes export. But its operation would be infinitely more injurious in a country which, under a free system, would uniformly import a portion of her supplies. The restriction, in this case, has a twofold operation. By preventing importation from abroad, and forcing the population to depend for subsistence on corn raised at home, it compels recourse to be had to compara- tively inferior soils and thus, by increasing the cost of producing corn above its cost in other countries, adds proportionally to its average price. The causes of fluctuation are, in this way, increased in a geometrical proportion for while the prevention of importation exposes the population to the pressure of want whenever the harvest happens to be less productive than usual, it is sure, at the same time, by raising average prices, to hinder exportation in a year of unusual plenty, until the home prices fall ruinously low. It is obvious, therefore, that a restriction of this sort must be alternately destructive of the interests of the consumers and producers. It injures the former by making them pay, at an average, an artificially increased price for their food, and by exposing them to scarcity and famine whenever the home crop proves deficient; and it injures the latter, by depriving them of the power to export in years of unusual plenty, and by overloading the market with produce, which, under a free system, would have met with an advantageous sale abroad. The principle thus briefly explained, shows the impossibility of permanently keeping up the home prices by means of restrictions on importation, at the same time that it affords a clue by which we may trace the causes of most of that agricultural distress which has been experienced in this country since the peace. The real object of the Corn Law of 1815 was to keep up the price of corn to 80s. a quarter; but to succeed in this, it was indispensable not only that foreign corn should be excluded when prices were under this limit, but that the markets should never be overloaded with corn produced at home : for it is clear, according to the principle already explained, that if the supply should in ordinary years be sufficient to feed the population, it must, in an unusually abundant year, be more than sufficient for that purpose; and when, in such a case, the surplus is thrown upon the market, it cannot fail, in the event of our average prices being considerably above the level of those of the surrounding countries, to cause a ruinous depression. Now, this was the precise situation of this country at the end of the war. Owing partly to the act of 1804, but far more to the difficulties in the way of importation, and the depreciation of the currency, prices attained to an extraordinary elevation from 1809 to 1814, and gave such a stimulus to agriculture, that we grew, in 1812 and 1818, sufficient corn for our own supply. And, such being the case, it is clear, though our ports had been hermetically sealed against importation from abroad, that the first luxuriant crop must have occasioned a ruinous decline of prices. It is the exclusion, not the introduction, of foreign corn that has caused the distress of the agri- culturists; for it is this exclusion that had forced up the price of corn in this country, in VoL. L-2 T Digitized by Google 494 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. scarce and average years, to an unnatural level, and that, consequently, renders exportation in favourable seasons impossible, without such a fall of prices as is most disastrous to the farmer. It may be mentioned in proof of what is now stated, that the average price of wheat in England and Wales in 1814, was 74s. a quarter, and in 1815 it had fallen to 64s. But as these prices would not indemnify the occupiers of the poor lands brought under tillage during the previous high prices, they were gradually relinquishing their cultivation. A considerable portion of them was converted into pasture; rents were generally reduced and wages had begun to decline: but the legislature having prohibited the importation of foreign corn, the operation of this natural principle of adjustment was unfortunately counter- acted, and the price of 1816 rose to 75s. 10d. This rise was, however, insufficient to occa- sion any new improvement; and as foreign corn was now excluded, and large tracts of bad land had been thrown out of cultivation, the supply was 80 much diminished, that, notwith- standing the increase in the value of money, prices rose in 1817, partly, no doubt, in consequence of the bad harvest of the previous year, to 94s. 9d. and in 1818, to 84s. Id. These high prices had their natural effect. They revived the drooping spirits of the farmers, who imagined that the Corn Law was, at length, beginning to produce the effects anticipated from it, and that the golden days of 1812, when wheat sold for 125s. a quarter, were about to return But this prosperity carried in its bosom the seeds of future mischief. The in- creased prices necessarily occasioned a fresh extension of tillage; capital was again applied to the improvement of the soil; and this increase of tillage, conspiring with favourable seasons, and the impossibility of exportation, sunk prices to such a degree, that they fell, in October, 1822, so low as 38s. 1d., the average price of that year being only 43s. 3d. It is thus demonstrably certain, that the recurrence of periods of distress, similar to those that have been experienced by the agriculturists of this country since the peace, cannot be warded off by restricting or prohibiting importation. A free corn trade is the only system that can give them that security against fluctuations that is so indispensable. The increased importation that would take place, were the ports always open, as soon as any considerable deficiency in the crops was apprehended, would prevent prices from rising to an oppressive height; while on the other hand, when the crops were unusually luxuriant, a ready outlet would be found for the surplus in foreign countries, without its occasioning any very heavy fall. To expect to combine steadiness of prices with restrictions on importation, is to expect to reconcile what is contradictory and absurd. The higher the limit at which the importation of foreign corn into a country like England is fixed, the greater will be the oscillation of prices. If we would secure for ourselves abundance, and avoid fluctuation, we must renounce all attempts at exclusion, and be ready to deal in corn, as we ought to be in every thing else, on fair and liberal principles. That the restrictions imposed on the foreign corn trade during the last 10 years should not have been productive of more disastrous consequences than those that have actually resulted from them, is, we believe, principally to be ascribed to the very great increase that has taken place in the imports from Ireland. Previously to 1806, when a perfectly free corn trade between Great Britain and Ireland was for the first time established, the yearly imports did not amount to 400,000 quarters, whereas they now amount to 2,600,000; and any one who has ever been in Ireland, or is aware of the wretched state of agriculture in it, and of the amazing fertility of the soil, must be satisfied that a very slight improvement would occasion an extraordinary increase in the imports from that country ; and it is be- lieved by those best qualified to form an opinion on such a subject, that the settlement of the Catholic question, and the disfranchisement of the 40s. freeholders, by promoting the public tranquillity, and taking away one of the principal inducements to the pernicious practice of splitting farms, has, in this respect, already had great influence, and that it will eventually lead to the most material improvements. Hence it is by no means improbable, that the growing imports from Ireland may, at no distant period, reduce our prices to the level of those of the Continent, and even render us an occasionally exporting country. These, however, are contingent and uncertain results; and supposing them to be ultimately realised, the Corn Laws must in the mean time be productive of great hardship, and must, in all time to come, aggravate to a frightful extent the misery inseparable from bad harvests. Nothing but the great importance of the subject could excuse us for dwelling so long on what is so very plain. To facilitate production, and to make commodities cheaper and more easily obtained, are the grand motives which stimulate the inventive powers, and which lead to the discovery and improvement of machines and processes for saving labour and diminishing cost; and it is plain that no system of commercial legislation deserves to be supported, which does not conspire to promote the same objects: but a restriction on the importation of corn into a country like England, which has made a great comparative ad- vance in population and manufacturing industry, is diametrically opposed to these principles. The density of our population is such, that the exclusion of foreign corn forces us to resort to soils of a decidedly less degree of fertility than those that are under cultivation in the surrounding countries; and, in consequence, our average prices are comparatively high. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 495 We have resolved that our people should not employ their capital and labour in those branches of manufacturing and commercial industry in which they have a decided advan- tage over every other country but that they should be made to force comparatively barren soils to yield them a scanty return for their outlay. If we could, by laying out 1000l. on the manufacture of cottons or hardware, produce a quantity of these articles that would ex- change for 400 quarters of American or Polish wheat; and if the same sum, were it ex- pended in cultivation in this country, would not produce more than 300 quarters the pre- vention of importation occasions an obvious sacrifice of 100 out of every 400 quarters con- sumed in the empire; or, which is the same thing, it occasions an artificial advance of 25 per cent. in the price of corn. In a public point of view, the impolicy of such a system is obvious; but it seems, at first sight, as if it were advantageous to the landlords. The ad- vantage is, however, merely apparent at bottom there is no real difference between the interests of the landlords and those of the rest of the community. It would be ridiculous, indeed, to imagine for a moment that the landlords can be benefited by a system in which those tremendous fluctuations of prices, so subversive of all agricultural prosperity, are in- herent; but though these could be got rid of, the result would be the same. The prosperity of agriculture must always depend upon, and be determined by, the prosperity of other branches of industry and any system which, like the corn laws, is most injurious to the latter, cannot but be injurious to the former. Instead of being publicly advantageous, high prices are in every case distinctly and completely the reverse. The smaller the sacrifice for which any commodity can be obtained, so much the better. When the labour required to produce, or the money required to purchase, a sufficient supply of corn is diminished, it is as clear as the sun at noon-day that more labour or money must remain to produce or pur- chase the other necessaries, conveniencies, and amusements of human life, and that the sum of national wealth and comforts must be proportionally augmented. Those who suppose that a rise of prices can ever be a means of improving the condition of a country might, with equal reason, suppose that it would be improved by throwing its best soils out of cultivation, and destroying its most powerful machines. The opinions of such persons are not only op- posed to the plainest and most obvious scientific principles, but they are opposed to the ob- vious conclusions of common sense, and the universal experience of mankind. Experience of the injurious effects resulting from the Corn Laws has induced many that were formerly their zealous advocates to come round to a more liberal way of thinking. It would, however, be unjust not to mention that there has always been a large and respectable party amongst the landlords, opposed to all restrictions on the trade in corn; and who have uniformly thought that their interests, being identified with those of the public, would be best promoted by the abolition of restrictions on importation. A protest expressive of this opinion, subscribed by 10 peers, was entered on the Journals of the House of Lords, against the corn law of 1815. This document is said to have been drawn up by Lord Grenville, who has always been the enlightened advocate of sound commercial principles. Its reason- ing is so clear and satisfactory, that we are sure we shall gratify our readers, as well as strengthen the statements previously made, by laying it before them. Dissentient.-I. Because we are adverse in principle to all new restraints on commerce. We think it certain that public prosperity is best promoted by leaving uncontrolled the free current of national industry and we wish rather, by well considered steps, to bring back our commercial legis- lation to the straight and simple line of wisdom, than to increase the deviation by subjecting addi- tional and extensive branches of the public interest to fresh systems of artificial and injurious restrictions. II. Because we think that the great practical rule, of leaving all commerce unfettered, applies more peculiarly, and on still stronger grounds of justice as well as policy, to the corn trade than to any other. Irresistible, indeed, must be that necessity which could, in our judgment, authorise the legislature to tamper with the sustenance of the people, and to impede the free purchase of that article on which depends the existence of 80 large a portion of the community. 'III. Because we think that the expectations of ultimate benefit from this measure are founded on a delusive theory. We cannot persuade ourselves that this law will ever contribute to produce plenty, cheapness, or steadiness of price. So long as it operates at all, its effects must be the opposite of these. Monopoly is the parent of scarcity, of dcarness, and of uncertainty. To cut off any of the sources of supply, can only tend to lessen its abundance to close against ourselves the cheapest market for any commodity, must enhance the price at which we purchase it; and to confine the con- sumer of corn to the produce of his own country, is to refuse to ourselves the benefit of that provision which Providence itself has made for equalising to man the variations of climate and of seasons. IV. But whatever may be the future consequences of this law at some distant and uncertain period, we see with pain that these hopes must be purchased at the expense of a great and present evil. To compel the consumer to purchase corn dearer at home than it might be imported from abroad, is the immediate practical effect of this law. In this way alone can it operate. Its present protection, its promised extension of agriculture, must result (if at all) from the profits which it creates by keeping up the price of corn to an artificial level. These future benefits are the conse- quences expected, but, as we confidently believe, erroneously expected, from giving a bounty to the grower of corn, by a tax levied on its consumer. V. Because we think the adoption of any permanent law for such a purpose, required the fullest and most laborious investigation. Nor would it have been sufficient for our satisfaction, could we have been convinced of the general policy of a hazardous experiment. A still further inquiry would have been necessary to persuade us that the present moment is fit for its adoption. In such an inquiry, we must have had the means of satisfying ourselves what its immediate operation will be, as connected with the various and pressing circumstances of public difficulty and distress with which Digitized by Google 496 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. the country is surrounded with the state of our circulation and currency, of our agriculture and manufactures, of our internal and external commerce, and, above an, with the condition and reward of the industrious and labouring classes of our community. On all these particulars, as they respect this question, we think that parliament is almost wholly uninformed ; OR all we see reason for the utmost anxiety and alarm from the operation of this law. "Lastly, Because, if we could approve of the principle and purpose of this law, we think that no sufficient foundation has been laid for its details. The evidence before us, unsatisfactory and imper- fect as it is, seems to us rather to disprove than to support the propriety of the high price adopted as the standard of importation, and the fallacious mode by which that price is to be ascertained. And on all these grounds we are anxious to record our dissent from a measure so precipitate in its course, and, as we fear, so injurious in its consequences." Attempts have sometimes been made to estimate the pecuniary burden which the restric- tions on importation entail in ordinary years upon the country. This, however, is a subject with respect to which it is not possible to obtain any very accurate data. But supposing the total quantity of corn annually produced in Great Britain and Ireland to amount to 52,000,000 quarters, every shilling that is added to its price by the Corn Laws is equivalent to a tax on corn of 2,600,000L; and estimating the average rise on all sorts of grain at 7s. a quarter, the total sum will be 18,200,000L So great a quantity of corn is, however, con- sumed by the agriculturists themselves as food, in seed, the keep of horses, &c. that not more than a half, perhaps, of the whole quantity produced is brought to market. If we are nearly right in this hypothesis, and in the previous estimates, it will follow that the restrictions cost the classes not engaged in agriculture no less than 9,100,000/. exclusive of their own per- nicious consequences. Of this sum a fifth, probably, or 1,800,000Z may go to the land- lords as rent and this is all that the agriculturists can be said to gain by the system, for the additional price received by the farmer on that portion of the produce exclusive of rent is no more than the ordinary return for his capital and labour. His profits, indeed, instead of being increased by this system, are really diminished by it (for proofs of this, see the note on Corn Laws, in my edition of the Wealth of Nations, vol. iv. pp. 358-361. and though the rents of the landlords be, nominally at least, somewhat increased by it, it is, not- withstanding, abundantly certain that it is any thing but advantageous to them. It would require a far larger sum to balance the injury which fluctuations of price occasion to their tenants, and the damage done to their estates by over-cropping when prices are high, than all that is derived from the restrictions. 5. Duties on Importation.-A duty may be equitably imposed on imported corn, for two objects; that is, either for the sake of revenue, or to balance any excess of taxes laid on the agriculturists over those laid on the other classes.—(See my edition of Wealth of Nations, vol. iv. pp. 363-369.) With respect, however, to a duty imposed for the sake of revenue, it may be doubted whether corn be a proper subject for taxation. But at all events such a duty should be exceedingly moderate. It would be most inexpedient to attempt to add largely to the revenue by laying heavy duties on the prime necessary of life. If it be really true that agriculture is more heavily taxed than any other branch of indus- try, the agriculturists are entitled to demand that a duty be laid on foreign corn when im- ported, corresponding to the excess of burdens affecting them. It has been doubted, how- ever, whether they are in this predicament. But though the question be by no means free from difficulty, we should be disposed to decide it in the affirmative, being pretty well satis- fied that, owing to the local and other burdens laid on the land, those occupying it are really subjected to heavier taxes than any other class. It is difficult, or rather, perhaps, impossible, to estimate with any degree of precision what the excess of taxes laid on the agriculturists beyond those laid on manufacturers' and merchants may amount to but we have elsewhere shown, that if we estimate it as making an addition of 5s. or 6s. to the quarter of wheat, we shall certainly be beyond the mark.-(See my edition of the Wealth of Nations, vol. iv. p. 369.) However, we should, in a case of this sort, reckon it safer to err on the side of too much protection than of too little ; and would not, therefore, object to a fixed duty of 6s. or 7s. a quarter being laid on wheat, and a proportional duty being laid on other species of grain. Under such a system the ports would be always open. The duty would not be so great as to interpose any very formidable obstacle to importation. Every one would know beforehand the extent to which it would operate; at the same time that the just rights and interests of the agriculturists, and of every other class, would be maintained unimpaired. When a duty is laid on the importation of foreign corn, for the equitable purpose of coun- tervailing the peculiar duties laid on the corn raised at home, an equivalent drawback ought to be allowed on its exportation. " In allowing this drawback, we are merely returning to the farmer a tax which he has already paid, and which he must have to place him in a fair state of competition in the foreign market, not only with the foreign producer, but with his own countrymen who are producing other commodities. It is essentially different from a bounty on exportation, in the sense in which the word bounty is usually understood; for, by a bounty, is generally meant a tax levied on the people for the purpose of rendering corn unnaturally cheap to the foreign consumer; whereas what I propose is to sell our com at Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 497 the price at which we can really afford to produce it, and not to add to its price a tax which shall induce the foreigner rather to purchase it from some other country, and deprive us of a trade which, under a system of free competition, we might have (Ricardo on Protection to Agriculture, p. 53.) A duty accompanied with a drawback, as now stated, would not only be an equitable arrangement, but it would be highly for the advantage of farmers, without being injurious to any one else. The radical defect, as already shown, of the system followed from 1815 down to the present moment, in so far, at least, as respects agriculture, is, that it forces up prices in years when the harvest is deficient, while it leaves the market to be glutted when it is abundant. But while a constant duty of 6s. would secure to the home growers all the increase of price which the regard due to the interests of others should allow them to realise in a bad year, the drawback of 6s., by enabling them to export in an unusually plentiful year, would prevent the markets from being overloaded, and prices from falling to the ruin- ous extent that they now occasionally do. Such a plan would render the business of a corn dealer, and of agriculture, comparatively secure and would, therefore, provide for the continued prosperity of them both. We are astonished that the agriculturists have not taken this view of the matter. If they be really entitled to a duty on foreign corn, on ac- count of their being heavier taxed than the other classes of their fellow citizens, they must also be entitled to a corresponding drawback. And it admits of demonstration, that their interests, as well as those of the community, would be far better promoted by such a duty and drawback as we have suggested, than they can ever be by any system of mere duties, how high soever they may be carried. The principal objection to this plan is, that it would not be possible to levy the duty when the home price became very high, and that, consequently, it would be every now and then necessary to suspend it. But this objection does not seem to be by any means 80 formidable as it has sometimes been represented. It may, we think, be concluded on unassailable grounds, that were the ports constantly open under a moderate fixed duty and an equivalent drawback, extreme fluctuations of price would be very rare. Supposing it were enacted, that when the home price rises above a certain high level, as 80s., the duty should cease, we believe the clause would very seldom come into operation and those who object that it is not fair to the farmers to deprive them of the full advantage to be derived from the highest prices, should recollect that in matters of this sort it is not always either possible, or, if pos- sible, prudent, to carry the soundest principles to an extreme; and that, generally speaking, the public interests will be better consulted by guarding against scarcity and dearth, than by securing, at all hazards, a trifling though just advantage to a particular class. III. BRITISH CORN TRADE. 1. Quantity of Corn consumed in Great Britain.-Attempts have sometimes been made to compute the quantity of corn raised in a country, from calculations founded on the num- ber of acres in tillage. and on the average produce per acre but it is plain that no accurate estimate can ever be framed of the extent of land under cultivation. It is perpetually chang- ing from year to year; and the amount of produce varies not only with the differences of seasons, but also with every improvement of agriculture. This method, therefore, is now rarely resorted to; and the growth of corn is generally estimated from the consumption. The conclusion deduced from this criterion must indeed be subject to error, as well from variations in the consumption, occasioned by variations in the price of corn, as from the varying extent to which other food is used. But supposing the prices of corn to be reduced to an average, if the consumption of a considerable number of persons, of all ranks and orders, and of all ages and sexes, were accurately determined, we should be able, supposing the cen- sus of the population to be nearly correct, to make a very close approximation to the total consumption of the country. Mr. Charles Smith, the well-informed and intelligent author of the Tracts on the Corn Trade, made many curious investigations, with a view to discover the mean annual consumption of corn and reducing it to the standard of wheat, he found it to be at the rate of about a quarter for each individual, young and old. This estimate has been confirmed by a variety of subsequent researches and, among others, by inquiries made during the scarcity of 1795 and 1796, by the magistrates of Suffolk, in 42 different parishes, in the view of ascertaining the average consumption of each family, which they found to correspond very closely with Mr. Smith's estimate. It is also worthy of remark, that M. Paucton, the intelligent author of the Métrologie, estimates the mean annual average consumption in France, when reduced to the standard of wheat, at about 10 bushels for each individual and as the French consume considerably more bread, and less animal food, than the English, this estimate affords a strong proof of the correctness of that of Mr. Smith. Having taken the population of England and Wales in 1765, at 6,000,000, Mr. Smith reckoned the consumers of each kind of grain, the quantity consumed by each individual, and hence, the whole consumed by man, to be as follows :- 64 Digitized by Google 498 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. Estimated Pope- Average Con- Consumed lation of England sumption of by Man. and Wales. each Person. on 3,750,000 consumers of wheat, at 1 quarter each - - - - - 3,750,000 739,000 do. of barley, at If do. - - - - - - 1,016,195 888,000 do. of rye, at It do. - . - - . - - - 999,000 623,000 do. of oats, at 21 do. - - - - - - - - 1,791,295 Consumed by man - - - - - - - - 7,566,350 In addition to this, Mr. Smith estimated the wheat distilled, made into starch, &c. - 90,000 Barley used in malting, &c. - - - - - - - - - 3,417,000 Rye for hogs, &c. - - - - - - - - - - 31,000 Oats for horses, &c. - - - , - - - - - - 2,461,500 Total of home consumption - - - - - - - 13,555,850 Add excess of exports over imports - - - - - - 396,624 13,954,474 Add seed (one tenth) - - . - - - - 1,395,447 Total growth of all kinds of grain in England and Wales in 1765 - - - - 15,349,921 This estimate, it will be observed, does not include either Scotland or Ireland and later inquiries have rendered it probable that Mr. Smith underrated the population of England and Wales by nearly 1,000,000. The most eminent agriculturists seem also to be of opinion that the allowance for seed ought to be stated as high as a seventh. Mr. Chalmers, availing himself of the information respecting the numbers of the people furnished under the population act of 1800, estimated the total consumption of all the dif- ferent kinds of grain in Great Britain at that epoch at 27,185,300 quarters, whereof wheat constituted 7,676,100 quarters. The crops of 1800 and 1801 being unusually deficient, the importation in these years was proportionally great; but excluding these scarcities, the total average excess of all sorts of grain imported from Ireland and foreign countries into Great Britain over the exports had previously amounted to about 1,000,000 quarters, which deducted from 27,185,300, leaves 26,185,300, to which if we add one seventh as seed, we shall have 29,925,057 quarters as the average growth of Great Britain in 1800. The population of Ireland, as ascertained by the census of 1821, amounted to very near 7,000,000, and probably at present exceeds 8,000,000. The greatest portion of its inhabit- ants are, it is true, supported by the potato, and seldom or never taste bread but we shall perhaps be within the mark, if we estimate the number of those fed on the various kinds of corn at 3,000,000, and the average quantity of the different sorts of grain consumed by each individual at 2 quarters. This would give 6,000,000 quarters as the total consumption of Ireland. But the population of Great Britain increased, from 10,942,000 in 1800, to 16,537,000 in 1831 ; and both Mr. Western and Dr. Colquhoun concurred in estimating the average consumption of the whole empire, in 1812 and 1814, at about 35,000,000 quarters. The following is Dr. Colquhoun's estimate :- Estimated Average of the Each Species of Grain. Population of Person Consumed by Consumed by Used in Beer Used is va- Great Britain Man. averaged. Animals. and Spirits. rious Manu- Total of factures. Quartees. and Ireland. Quarters. Quarters. Quarters. Quarters. Quarters. Wheat - - 9,000,000 1 9,000,000 - - - - 170,000 9,170,000 Barley - - 1,500,000 It 1,875,000 210,000 4,250,000 - - 6,335,000 Oats - - 4,500,000 It 6,750,000 10,200,000 - - - - 16,950,000 Rye - - - 500,000 It 625,000 59,000 - - 1,000 685,000 Beans and peas 500,000 1 500,000 1,360,000 - - - - 1,880,000 Totals - 16,000,000 18,750,000 11,829,000 4,250,000 171,000 35,000,000 Dr. Colquhoun has made no allowance for seed in this estimate; and there can be no doubt that he has underrated the consumption of oats by at least one half quarter in the consumption of each of the 4,500,000 individuals he supposes fed on them, or by 2,250,000 quarters. Adding, therefore, to Dr. Colquhoun's estimate 5,500,000 quarters for seed, and 2,250,000 quarters for the deficiency of oats, it will bring it to 42,750,000 quarters; and taking the increase of population since 1813 into account, it does not appear to us that the annual average consumption of the different kinds of grain in the United Kingdom can now be estimated at less than FORTY-FOUR millions of quarters, exclusive of seed, and at FIFTY- TWO millions when it is included. Assuming this estimate to be correct, and the proportion of wheat to amount to twelve millions of quarters, the progressive consumption will be as follows :- Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 499 Consumption of Wheat and other Grain, in the United Kingdom, in a Year, Six Months, a Month, a Week, &c. Wheat. Other Grain. Total. Qre. Qrs. One A year - - - - 12,000,000 40,000,000 52,000,000 Six months - - - 6,000,000 20,000,000 26,000,000 Three months - - - 3,000,000 10,000,000 13,000,000 Six weeks - - - 1,500,000 5,000,000 6,500,000 One month - - - 1,000,000 3,333,333 4,333,333 Two weeks - - - 500,000 1,666,666 2,166,666 One week - - - 250,000 833,333 1,083,333 One day - - - 35,714 119,048 154,762 The total imports of foreign corn in 1831 amounted to 3,541,809 quarters, being the largest quantity ever brought into Great Britain in any 1 year. Now, as this quantity does not amount to one fourteenth part of the entire produce, it would seem as if the greatest importation could have but a very slight influence on prices; but it has been already shown that a very large proportion, perhaps a half, of the entire corn produced in the empire is never brought to market, but is partly consumed by the agriculturist, and partly used as seed and in the feeding of farm horses, &c. Hence, if we are nearly right in this estimate, it follows that an importation of 3,500,000 quarters is really equivalent to about one seventh part of the entire produce brought to market in an average year, and must consequently have a very material influence in alleviating the pressure of scarcity in a bad year, and in checking the rise of prices. 2. Regulations under which the Corn Trade of Great Britain is at present conducted- These regulations are embodied in act 9 Geo. 4. c. 60., an abstract of which is sub- joined:- Sections 1. and 2. repeal the acts 55 Geo. 3. c. 26., 3 Geo. 4. c. 60., and 7 and 8 Geo. 4. c. 58., and so much of the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 111. as imposes duties on the importation of buck-wheat and Indian corn. Foreign Corn may be imported on Payment of the Duties specified.-And whereas it is expedient that corn, grain, meal, and flour, the growth, produce, and manufacture of any foreign country, or of any British possession out of Europe, should be allowed to be imported into the United Kingdom for con- sumption, upon the payment of duties to be regulated from time to time according to the average price of British corn made up and published in manner herein-after required be it therefore enacted, that there shall be levied and paid to his Majesty, upon all corn, grain, meal, or flour entered for home consumption in the United Kingdom from parts beyond the seas, the several duties specified and set forth in the table annexed to this act; and that the said duties shall be raised, levied, collected, and paid in such and the same manner in all respects as the several duties of customs mentioned and enumerated in the table of duties of customs inwards annexed to the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 111.- 3. The following is the table referred :- L. d. L 8. d. If imported from any foreign Country. Wheat According to the average price of wheat, And in respect of every integral shilling by which made up and published in manner required by law; such price shall be above 25e., such duty shall be de- videlicet, creased by 1s. 6d., until such price shall be 31a. Whenever such price shall be 62a. and under 63a. the Whenever such price shall be at or above 31a., the du- quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 1 4 8 ty shall be for every quarter 0 0 Whenever such price shall be 63s. and under 64a. the Whenever such price shall be under 25e. and not under quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 1 3 8 24. the duty shall be for every quarter 010 9 Whenever such price shall be 64s. and under 65a. the And in respect of each integral shilling, or any part of quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter I 2 8 each integral shilling, by which such price shall be Vhenever such price shall be 65a. and under 66e. the under 24s., such duty shall be increased by Is. 6d. quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 1 8 Rye, Pens, and Beans -Whenever the average price Whenever such price shall be 66a. and under 67s. the of rye, or of peas, or of beans, made up and pub. quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 1 0 8 lished in manner required by law, shall be 36a. and henever such price shall be 67a. and under 68s. the under 37s. the quarter, the duty shall be for every . quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 0 18 8 quarter 015.6 /henever such price shall be 68. and under 69a. the And in respect of every integral shilling by which quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 0 16 8 such price shall be above 36s., such duty shall be de- Whenever such price shall be 69. and under 70s. the creased by 1a. 6d., until such price shall be 46s. quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 0 13 8 Whenever such price shall be at or above 46a., the Whenever such price shall be 70s. and under 71s. the duty shall be for every quarter 0 0 quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 0 10 8 Whenever such price shall be under 36a. and not under Whenever such price shall be 71s. and under 72a. the 35e., the duty shall be for every quarter 0 16 9 quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 0 6 8 And in respect of each integral shilling. or any part of - Whenever such price shall be 72a. and under 73a. the each integral shilling, by which such price shall be quarter, the duty shall be for every quar'er 0 2 8 under 36a., such duty shall be increased by 1s. 6d. Whenever such price shall be at or above 73a. the du- Wheat Meal and Flour :-For every barrel, being ty shall be for every quarter 0 1 0 196 lbs., a duty equal in amount to the duty payable Whenever such price shall be under 62. and not under on 38 1-2 gallons of wheat. 61s. the duty shall be for every quarter 1 5 8 Obtmeal:-For every quantity of 181 1-2 lbs., a duty And in respect of each integral shilling, or any part equal in amount to the duty payable on a quarter of of each integral shilling by which such price shall oats. be under 61s, such duty shall be increased by Is. Maize or Indian Corn, Buck-Wheat, Bear or Bigg :- Barley:-Whenever the average price of barley, made For every quarter, a duty equal in amount to the up and published in manner required by law, shall duty payable on a quarter of barley. be 33r. and under 34s. the quarter, the duty shall be for every quarter 0 12 4 If the Produce of and imported from any British And in respect of every integral shilling by which Possession in North America, or elsewhere out of such price shall be above 33a, such duty shall be de- Europe. creased by 1s. Bd., until such price shall be 41a. Wheat:-For every quarter 0 5 0 Whenever such price shall be at or above 41a. the du- Until the price of British wheat, made up and pub. ty shall be for every quarter 010 lished in the manner required by law, shall be 67s. Whenever such price shall be under 33a. and not under per quarter. 32., the duty shall be for every quarter 0 13 10 Whenever such price shall be at or above 618-, the And in respect of each integral shilling, or any part of duty shall be for every quarter 0 0 6 each integral shilling, by which such price shall be Barley:- every quarter 020 under 32., such duty shall be increased by Is. 6d. Until the price of British barley, made up and pat- Outs:-Whenever the average price of nats, made up lished in manner required by law, shall be 84a. per and published in manner required by law, shall be 25e. and under 26a. the quarter, the duty shall be for Whenever quarter. such price shall be at or above 34s., the every quarter 093 duty shall be for every quarter 0 0 6 Digitized by Google 500 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. Table of Duties-continued. L & d. L & Oats :-For every quarter 0 2 6 Whenever such price shall be at or above 41a., the Until the price of British cats, made up and pub- duty shall be for every quarter 0 6 lished in manner required by law, shall be 25a. per Wheat Meal and Flour :-For every barrel, being 196 quarter. lbs., a duty equal in amount to the duty payable on Whenever such price shall be at or above 25e., the 381 gallons of wheat. duty shall be for every quarter 0 0 6 Ontmeal:-For every quantity of 1911 lbs., a duty Rye, Pass, and Beans For every quarter 030 equal in amount to the duty payable on a quarter Until the price of British rye, or of peas, or of beans, of oats. made up and published in manner required by law, Maize or Indian Corn, Buck-Wheat, Bear, or Bags shall be 41a. For every quarter, a duty equal in amount to the duty payable on a quarter of barley. Regulations to be observed upon shipping Corn from any British possession out of Europe, &c-No corn, grain, meal, or flour shall be shipped from any port in any British possession out of Europe, as being the produce of any such possession, until the owner or proprietor or shipper thereof shall have made and subscribed, before the collector or other chief officer of customs at the port of shipment, a declaration in writing, specifying the quantity of each sort of such corn, grain, or flour, and that the same was the produce of some British possession out of Europe to be named in such declaration, nor until such owner or proprietor or shipper shall have obtained from the collector or other chief officer of the customs at the said port a certificate, under his signature, of the quantity of corn, grain. meal, or flour so declared to be shipped; and before any corn, grain, meal, or flour shall be entered at any port or place in the United Kingdom, as being the produce of any British possession out of Europe, the master of the ship importing the same shall produce and deliver to the collector or other chief officer of customs of the port or place of importation a copy of such declaration, certified to be a true and accurate copy thereof, under the hand of the collector or other chief officer of customs at the port of shipment before whom the same was made, together with the certificate, signed by the said collector or other chief officer of customs, of the quantity of corn so declared to be shipped; and such master shall also make and subscribe, before the collector or other chief officer of customs at the port or place of importation, a declaration in writing, that the several quantities of corn, grain, meal, or flour on board such ship, and proposed to be entered under the authority of such declaration, are the same that were mentioned and referred to in the declaration and certificate produced by him, without any admix- ture or addition; and if any person shall, in any such declaration, wilfully and corruptly make any false statement respecting the place of which any such corn, grain, meal, or flour was the produce, or respecting the identity of any such corn, grain, meal, or flour, such person shall forfeit and become liable to pay to his Majesty the sum of 1001., and the corn, grain, meal, or flour to such person belonging, on board any such ship, shall also be forfeited and such forfeitures shall and may be sued for, prose- cuted, recovered, and applied in such and the same manner in all respects as any forfeiture incurred under and by virtue of the said act 6 Geo. 4. c. 111.: Provided always, that the declarations aforesaid shall not be required in respect of any corn, grain, meal, or flour which shall have been shipped within 3 months next after the passing of this act.d 4. Penalty for importing Malt or ground Corn.-It shall not be lawful to import, from parts beyond the seas into the United Kingdom, for consumption there, any malt, or to import, for consumption into Great Britain, any corn ground, except wheat meal, wheat flour, and oatmeal; or to import, for con- sumption, any corn ground into Ireland; and that if any such article as aforesaid shall be imported contrary to the provisions aforesaid, the same shall be forfeited.-d 5. Account of Corn and Flour imported, &e. to be published in the Gazette monthly.-The commissioners of his Majesty's customs shall, once in each calendar month, cause to be published in the London Ga- zette an account of the total quantity of each sort of corn, grain, meal, and flour respectively, which shall have been imported into the United Kingdom; and also an account of the total quantity of each sort of the corn, grain, meal, and flour respectively, upon which the duties of importation shall have been paid in the United Kingdom during the calendar month next preceding together with an account of the total quantity of each sort of the said corn, grain, meal, and flour respectively remaining is warehouse at the end of such next preceding calendar month.-δ. Section 7. enacts, that if any foreign state shall subject British vessels, goods, &c., to any higher duties or charges than are levied on the vessels, &c. of other countries, his Majesty may prohibit the importation of corn from such state. Weekly Returns of Purchases and Sales of Corn to be made in the Places herein mentioned.-And whereas it is necessary, for regulating the amount of such duties, that effectual provision should be made for ascertaining from time to time the average prices of British corn be it therefore enacted, that weekly returns of the purchases and sales of British corn shall be made in the manner herein-after directed, in the following cities and towns; (that is to say,) London, Uxbridge, Hertford, Royston, Chelmsford, Colchester, Rumford, Maidstone, Canterbury, Dartford, Chichester, Guildford, Lewes, Rye, Bedford, Windsor, Aylesbury, Ipswich, Woodbridge, Sudbury, Huntingdon, Hadleigh, Stowmarket, Bury Saint Edmunds, Beccles, Bungay, Lowestoft, Cambridge, Ely, Wisbeach, Norwich, Yarmouth, Lynn. Thet- ford, Watton, Diss, East Dereham, Harleston, Holt, Aylesham, Fakenham, North Walsham, Lincoln, Gainsborough, Glanford Bridge, Lowth, Boston, Sleaford, Stamford, Spalding, Derby, Northampton, Leicester, Nottingham, Worcester, Coventry, Reading, Oxford, Wakefield. Warminster, Birmingham, Leeds, Newark, York, Bridlington, Beverley, Howden, Sheffield, Hull, Whitby, New Malton, Durham, Stockton, Darlington, Sunderland, Barnard Castle, Walsingham, Belford, Hexham, Newcastle-upon- Tyne, Morpeth, Alnwick, Berwick-upon-Tweed. Carlisle, Whitehaven, Cockermouth, Penrith, Egre- mont, Appleby, Kirkby-in-Kendal, Liverpool, Ulverston, Lancaster, Preston, Wigan, Warrington, Manchester, Bolton, Chester, Nantwich, Middlewich, Four Lane Ends, Denbigh, Wrexham, Carnar- von, Haverford West. Carmarthen, Cardiff, Gloucester, Cirencester, Tedbury, Stow-on-the-Wold, Tewkesbury, Bristol, Taunton, Wells, Bridgewater, Frome. Chard, Monmouth, Abergavenny. Chep- stow, Pont-y-pool, Exeter, Barnstaple, Plymouth, Totness, Tavistock, Kingsbridge, Truro, Bodmin, Launceston, Redruth, Helstone, Saint Austel, Blandford, Bridport, Dorchester, Sherbourne, Shaston, Wareham, Winchester, Andover, Basingstoke, Fareham, Havant, Newport. Ringwood, Southampton, and Portsmouth; and for the purpose of duly collecting and transmitting such weekly returns as aforesaid, there shall be appointed in each of the said cities and towns, in manner herein-after directed, a fit and proper person to be inspector of corn returns.-> 8. Appointing Comptroller of Corn Returns.-It shall be lawful for his Majesty to appoint a fit and proper person to be comptroller of corn returns, for the purposes herein-after mentioned, and to grant to such comptroller of corn returns such salary and allowances as to his Majesty shall seem meet Provided always, that such persons shall be appointed to and shall hold such his office during his Majesty's pleasure, and not otherwise; and shall at all times conform to and obey such lawful instruc- tions, touching the execution of the duties of such his office, as shall from time to time be given to him by the Lords of the committee of privy council appointed for the consideration of all matters relating to trade and foreign plantations.— 9. Sections 10, 11, 12. embody the comptroller's oath, enact that he shall execute his office in person Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 501 and not by deputy, provide for supplying his place during illness or absence, and authorise him to send and receive letters relating exclusively to the duties of his office free of postage. Sections 13. and 14. authorise the Lord Mayor and aldermen to appoint an inspector for the city of London, who is to do the duty in person, &c. Sections 15, 16. and 17. declare that no person shall be eligible to the office of corn inspector in the city of London, who shall be engaged in trade as a miller, maltster, or corn factor, or be anywise con- cerned in the buying of corn for sale, or in the sale of bread made thereof; they also embody the oath the inspector is to take, and provide for the enrolment of his appointment. Dealers in Corn in London to deliver in a Declaration to the Lord Mayor, &c.-Every person who shall carry on trade or business in the city of London, or within 5 miles from the Royal Exchange in the said city, as a corn factor, or as an agent employed in the sale of British corn, and every person who shall sell any British corn within the present Corn Exchange in Mark Lane in the said city, or within any other building or place which now is or may hereafter be used within the city of London, or within 5 miles from the Royal Exchange in the said city, for such and the like purposes for which the said Corn Exchange in Mark Lane hath been and is used, shall, before he or they shall carry on trade or business, or sell any corn in manner aforesaid, make and deliver to the Lord Mayor, or one of the aldermen of the city of London, a declaration in the following words (that is to say,) A. B. do declare, that the returns to be by me made, conformably to an act passed in the ninth year of the reign of King George the Fourth, intituled [here set forth the title of this act], of the quan- tities and prices of British corn which henceforth shall be by or for me sold or delivered, shall, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contain the whole quantity, and no more, of the corn bona fide sold and delivered by or for me within the periods to which such returns respectively shall refer, with the prices of such corn, and the names of the buyers respectively, and of the persons for whom such corn shall have been sold by me respectively; and to the best of my judgment the said returns shall in all respects be conformable to the provisions of the said act." Which declaration shall be in writing, and shall be subscribed with the hand of the person so making the same; and the Lord Mayor or such aldermen as aforesaid of the city of London for the time being shall and he is hereby required to deliver a certificate thereof, under his hand, to the inspector of corn returns for the city of London, to be by him registered in a book to be by him provided and kept for that purpose.-d 18. Dealers in Corn to make Returns to Corn Inspector.-Every such corn factor and other person as aforesaid, who is herein-before required to make and who shall have made such declaration as afore- said, shall and he or she is hereby required to return or cause to be returned, on Wednesday, in each and every week, to the inspector of corn returns for the city of London, an account in writing, signed with his or her own name, or the name of bis or her agent duly authorised in that behalf, of the quan- tities of each respective sort of British corn by him or her sold during the week ending on and including the next preceding Tuesday, with the prices thereof, and the amount of every parcel, with the total quantity and value of each sort of corn, and by what measure or weight the same was sold, and the names of the buyers thereof, and of the persons for and on behalf of whom such corn was sold; and it shall and may be lawful for any such inspector of corn returns to deliver to any person making or tendering any such returns a notice in writing, requiring him or her to declare and set forth therein here and by whom and in what manner any such British corn was delivered to the purchaser or purchasers thereof; and every person to whom any such notice shall be so delivered shall and he or she is hereby required to comply therewith, and to declare and set forth in such his or her return the several particulars aforesaid.- 19. Sections 20, 21, 22, 23, and 24. authorise the appointment of corn inspectors in the places before- mentioned, forbid those being employed as such who have within the preceding 12 months been engaged in any department of the corn trade, or as a miller, or maltster, forbid those who are appointed from engaging in such occupations, prescribe the oath they are to take, and provide for the enrolment of their appointments, &c. Dealers in Corn in Cities and Towns to make Declaration.-Every person who shall deal in British corn at or within any such city or town as aforesaid, or who shall at or within any such city or town engage in or carry on the trade or business of a corn factor, miller, maltster, brewer, or distiller, or who shall be the owner or proprietor, or part owner or proprietor, of any stage coaches, wagons, carts, or other carriages carrying goods or passengers for hire to and from any such city or town, and each and every person who, as a merchant, clerk, agent, or otherwise, shall purchase at any such city or town any British corn for sale, or for the sale of meal, flour, malt, or bread made or to be made thereof, shall, before he or she shall 80 deal in British corn at any such city or town, or shall engage in or carry on any such trade or business as aforesaid, or shall purchase any British corn for any such purpose as aforesaid, at or within any such city or town, make and deliver, in manner herein-after mentioned, a declaration in the following words; (that is to say,) "I A. B. do declare, that the returns to be by me made conformably to the act passed in the ninth year of the reign of King George the Fourth, intituled [here set forth the title of this act], of the quanti- ties and prices of British corn which henceforward shall by or for me be bought, shall, to the best of my knowledge and belief, contain the whole quantity, and no more, of the British corn bond fide bought for or by me within the periods to which such returns respectively shall refer, with the prices of such corn. and the names of the sellers respectively; and to the best of my judgment the said returns shall in all respects be conformable to the provisions of the said act." Which declaration shall be in writing, and shall be subscribed with the hand of the person so making the same, and shall by him or her, or by his or her agent, be delivered to the mayor or chief magis- trate, or to some justice of the peace for such city or town, or for the county, riding, or division in which the same is situate, who are hereby required to deliver a certificate thereof to the inspector of corn returns for any such city or town as aforesaid, to be by him registered in a book to be by him provided and kept for that purpose.-> 25. Inspectors empowered to require such Declaration from Corn Dealers.-It shall and may be lawful for any inspector of corn returns for the city of London, or for any such other city or town as aforesaid, to serve upon and deliver to any person buying or selling corn in any such city or town, and who is not within the terms and meaning of this present act specially required to make any such declaration as aforesaid, a notice in writing under the hand of such inspector, requiring him to make such declaration as aforesaid; and any person upon whom such notice shall be served as aforesaid shall and he is hereby required to comply with such notice, and to make such declaration in such and the same man- ner in all respects as if he or she had been specially required to make the same by the express provi- sions of this present act.- 26. Corn Dealers to make Returns in Writing to Corn Inspectors.-All persons who are herein-before required to make and who shall have made such declaration as aforesaid, shall and they are hereby required, on the first market day which shall be holden in each and every week within each and every such city or town as aforesaid at or within which they shall respectively deal in corn, or engage in or carry on any such trade or business as aforesaid, or purchase any corn for any such purpose as afore- said, to return or cause to be returned, to the inspector of corn returns for such city or town, an Digitized by Google 502 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. account in writing, signed with their names respectively, of the amount of each and every parcel of each respective sort of British corn so by them respectively bought during the week ending on and including the day next preceding such first market day as aforesaid, with the price thereof, and by what weight or measure the same was so bought by them, with the names of the sellers of each of the said parcels respectively, with the names of the person or persons, if any other than the person making such return, for or on account of whom the same was so bought and sold and it shall and may be lawful for any such inspector of corn returns to deliver to any person making or tendering any such return a notice in writing, requiring him or her to declare and set forth therein where and by whom and in what manner any such British corn was delivered to him or her and every person to whom any such notice shall be delivered shall and he or she is hereby required to comply therewith, and to declare and set forth in such his or her return, or in a separate statement in writing, the several particulars aforessid.-d 27. Inspector not to include Returns until he has ascertained that the Persons making them have taken the Declaration required.-No inspector of corn returns shall include, in the return 80 to be made by them as aforesaid to the comptroller of corn returns, any account of sales or purchases of corn, unless such inspector shall have received satisfactory proof that the person or persons tendering such accounts bath made the declaration herein-before required, and hath delivered the same to the mayor or chief magistrate or to some justice of the peace of the city or town for which such inspector shall be 50 appointed to act, or to some justice of the peace for the county, riding, or division in which such city or town is situate. 28. Inspector to enter Returns made to him in a Book, &c.-Every inspector of corn returns shall duly and regularly enter, in a book to be by him provided and kept for that purpose, the several accounts of the quantities and prices of corn returned to him by such persons respectively as aforesaid; and every such inspector of corn returns for the city of London, and for the several other cities and towns afore- said, shall in each and every week return to the comptroller of corn returns an account of the weekly quantities and prices of the several sorts of British corn sold in the city or town for which he is appointed inspector, according to the returns 80 made to him as aforesaid, and in such form as shall be from time to time prescribed and directed by the said comptroller of corn returns; and the said returns shall be so made to the said comptroller by the inspector of corn returns for the city of London on Friday in each week, and by the inspector of corn returns for the several other cities and towns as aforesaid within 3 days next after the first market day holden in each and every week in any such city or town.-d 29. Average Prices to be made up and published every Week.-The average prices of all British corn, by which the rate and amount of the said duties shall be regulated, shall be made up and computed on Thursday in each and every week in manner following; (that is to say,) the said comptroller of corn returns shall on such Thursday in each week, from the returns received by him during the week next preceding, ending on and including the Saturday in such preceding week, add together the total quantities of each sort of British corn respectively appearing by such returns to have been sold. and the total prices for which the same shall thereby appear to have been sold, and shall divide the amount of such total prices respectively by the amount of such total quantities of each sort of British corn respectively, and the sum produced thereby shall be added to the sums in like manner produced in the 5 weeks immediately preceding the same, and the amount of such sums SO added shall be divided by 6, and the sum thereby given shall be deemed and taken to be the aggregate average price of each such sort of British corn respectively, for the purpose of regulating and ascertaining the rate and amount of the said duties: and the said comptroller of corn returns shall cause such aggregate weekly averages to be published in the next succeeding Gazette, and shall on Thursday in each week trans- mit a certificate of such aggregate average prices of each sort of British corn to the collector or other chief officer of the customs at each of the several ports of the United Kingdom; and the rate and amount of the duties to be paid under the provisions of this act shall from time to time be regulated and governed at each of the ports of the United Kingdom respectively by the aggregate average prices of British corn at the time of the entry for home consumption of any corn, grain, meal, or flour charge- able with any such duty, as such aggregate average prices shall appear and be stated in the last of such certificates as aforesaid which shall have been received as aforesaid by the collector or other chief officer of customs at such port.-d 30. How Quantities of Corn are to be computed.-In the returns 80 to be made as aforesaid to the comp- troller of corn returns, and in the publications so to be made from time to time in the London Gazette, and in the certificate 80 to be transmitted by the said comptroller of corn returns to such collectors or other chief officers of the customs as aforesaid, the quantities of each sort of British corn respectively shall be computed and set forth by, according, and with reference to the imperial standard gal- lon.-d 31. Comptroller may use the present Averages.-Until a sufficient number of weekly returns shall have been received by the said comptroller of corn returns under this act, to afford such aggregate average prices of British corn as aforesaid, the weekly average prices of British corn published by him imme- diately before the passing of this act shall by him be used and referred to in making such calculations as aforesaid, in such and the same manner as if the same had been made up and taken under and in pursuance of this act.-d 32. What shall be deemed British Corn.-All corn or grain, the produce of the United Kingdom, shall be deemed and taken to be British corn for the purposes of this act.-d 33. Provisions of this Act may be applied to any Town in the United Kingdom.-For the purpose of ascer- taining the average price of corn and grain sold within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ire- land, it shall and may be lawful for his Majesty, by any order or orders to be by him made, by and with the advice of his privy council, to direct that the provisions of this act, so far as regards the appointment of inspectors and the making of weekly returns, shall be applicable to any cities or towns within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland which shall be named in any such order or orders in council Provided always, that the returns so received from such towns shall not be admitted into the averages made up for the purpose of regulating the duties payable upon foreign corn, grain, meal, or flour.-d 34. Section 35, provides for the continuance in office of the present comptrollers and inspectors. If returns are untrue, Comptroller to lay a Statement thereof before the Committee of Pricy Council- If the said comptroller of corn returns shall at any time see cause to believe that any return so to be made as aforesaid to any such inspector of corn returns for the city of London, or for any other such city or town as aforesaid, is fraudulent or untrue, the said comptroller shall and he is hereby required, with all convenient expedition, to lay before the Lords of the said committee of privy council a state- ment of the grounds of such his belief; and if, upon consideration of any such statement, the said Lords of the said committee shall direct the said comptroller to omit any such return in the computs- tion of such aggregate weekly average price as aforesaid, then and in that case, but not otherwise, the said comptroller of corn returns shall and he is hereby authorised to omit any such return in the computation of such aggregate weekly average price.-Φ 36. Section 37, enacts, that corn dealers having made the declaration previous to this act shall transmit returns and comply with the rules hereby required. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 503 Comptroller to issue Directions respecting Inspection of Books of Inspectors.-The comptroller of corn returns shall and he is hereby authorised from time to time, in pursuance of any instructions which he shall receive in that behalf from the Lords of the said committee of privy council to issue to the several inspectors of corn returns any general or special directions respecting the inspection by any person or persons of the books so directed as aforesaid to be kept by every such inspector of corn re- turns; and no such inspector as aforesaid shall permit or suffer any person to inspect any such book, or to peruse or transcribe any entry therein, except in compliance with some such general or special directions from the said comptroller of corn returns as aforesaid.-d 38. Copy of the last Return to be affixed on Market Place on each Market Day.-Each and every inspector of corn returns shall and he is hereby required on each and every market day to put up or cause to be put up in the market place of the city or town for which he shall be appointed inspector. or if there shall be no market place in such city or town, then in some other conspicuous place therein, a copy of the last return made by him to the comptroller of corn returns, omitting the names of the parties who may have sold and bought the said corn; and every such inspector shall also again put up such account on the market day immediately following that on which it shall first have been put up, in case the same shall from accident or any other cause have been removed, and shall take due care that the same shall remain up for public inspection until a new account for the ensuing week shall have been prepared and set up.-d 39. Sections 40, and 41, relate to the payment of comptrollers and inspectors. Penalty on Corn Dealers for not making Declarations or Returns.-If any person who is hereby re- quired to make and deliver the declaration or declarations herein-before particularly mentioned and met forth, or either of them, shall not make and deliver such declaration or declarations the time, and in the form and manner, and to the person or persons, herein-before directed and prescribed in that behalf, every person 80 offending shall forfeit and pay the sum of 201. for each and every calender month during which he shall neglect or delay to make and deliver any such declaration and if any person who is herein-before required to make any return to any such inspector of corn returns as aforesaid shall not make such returns to such inspector, at the time and in the form and manner herein-before directed and prescribed, every such offender shall for such his offence forfeit and pay the sum of 201.-d 42. Sections 43, 44, and 45, regard the recovery and application of penalties, and impose a fine, not ex- ceeding 10t., on any person, lawfully summoned as a witness touching any matter of fact under this act, who refuses to attend without reasonable excuse. Punishment for making fulse Returns.-If any person shall make any false and fraudulent statement in any such return as he is herein-before directed and required to make, or shall falsely and wilfully include, or procure or cause to be included, in any such return, any British corn which was not truly and bona fide sold or bought to, by, or on behalf of the person or persons in any such return mentioned in that behalf, in the quantity and for the price therein stated and set forth, every such offender shall be and be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.— 46. Act not to affect the Practice of measuring or Privileges of the City of London.-Nothing in this act contained shall extend to alter the present practice of measuring corn, or any of the articles afore- said, to be shipped from or to be landed in the port of London, but that the same shall be measured by the sworn meters appointed for that purpose, by whose certificate the searchers or other proper offi- cers of his Majesty's customs are hereby empowered and required to certify the quantity of corn or other articles as aforesaid 80 shipped or landed and that nothing in this act contained shall extend to lessen or take away the rights and privileges of, or the tolls or duties due and payable to, the mayor and commonalty and citizens of the city of London, or to the mayor of the said city for the time being, or to take away the privileges of any persons lawfully deriving title from or under them.- 47. Limitation of Actions.-Actions brought or commenced under this act must be within three months after the matter or thing done. Defendants may plead the general issue; and if judgment be given against the plaintiff, defendants shall have treble costs.-d 48. We have, in the previous parts of this article, sufficiently illustrated the impolicy, generally speaking, of imposing duties on the importation of corn; but besides the objections that may be made to all duties of this sort, from their tendency to force up average prices, and to render exportation in abundant years impossible, the duty now existing in this country is liable to some which may be looked upon as peculiar to itself. From the way in which it is graduated, it introduces a new element of uncertainty into every transaction connected, with the corn trade; producing a disinclination on the part of the merchant to import, and of the foreigner to raise corn for our markets. Suppose a merchant commissions a cargo of wheat when the price is at 71s. a quarter; in the event of the price declining only 3s., or to 68s., the duty will rise from 6s. 8d. to 16s. 8d.; so that if the merchant brings the grain to market, he will realise 13s. 8d. a quarter less than he expected, and 10s. less than he would have done had there been no duty, or the duty been constant It may, perhaps, be said that if, on the one hand, the present scale of duties is injurious to the merchant when prices are falling, and when importation is consequently either unnecessary or of less advantage, it is, on the other hand, equally advantageous to him when prices are rising, and when the public interests require that importation should be encouraged but the prices in the view of the merchant when he gives an order, are usually such as he supposes will yield a fair profit; and if they rise, this rise would, supposing the duty to be constant, yield such an extra profit as would of itself induce him to increase his importation to the utmost. If it were possible to devise a system that would diminish the losses of the merchants engaged in unfavourable speculations, by making a proportional deduction from the extraordinary gains of those whose speculations turn out to be unusually successful, something, perhaps, might be found to say in its favour. But the system we have been considering proceeds on quite opposite principles its effect is not to diminish risks, but to increase them; it adds to the loss resulting from an unsuccessful, and to the profit resulting from a successful, speculation It would, therefore, seem, that if a duty is to be imposed, one that is constant is preferable to one that fluctuates. When the duty is constant, all classes, farmers as well as merchants, are aware of its amount, and can previously calculate the extent of its influence. But the Digitized by Google 504 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. effect of a duty that fluctuates with the fluctuations of price, can never be appreciated beforehand. Its magnitude depends on contingent and accidental circumstances ; and it must, therefore, of necessity, prejudice the interests of the farmer as well as of the corn dealer.- [See page 508.] 3. TABLES SHOWING THE PRICES OF THE DIFFERENT SORTS OF GRAIN IN GREAT BRI- TAIN, THE QUANTITIES IMPORTED AND EXPORTED, &c. I. Account of the Prices of Middling or Mealing Wheat per Quarter at Windsor Market, as ascer- tained by the Audit-Books of Eton College. Average Average Average Prices of Prices of of Ten Prices of Prices of of Ten Prices of Prices of of Ten Wheat at Wheat re- Years ac- Wheat at Wheat re- Years ac- Wheat at Wheat re- Years ac- Windsor, duced to the cording to Windsor, duced to the cording to Windsor, duced to the cording to Years. 9 Gallons Winchester the Win- Years. 9 Gallons Winchester the Win- Years. 9 Gallons Winchester the Win- to the Bushel of chester to the Bushel of chester to the Bushel of chester Bushel. 8 Gallons. Bushel of Bushel. 8 Gallons. Bushel of Bushel. 8 Gallons. Busbel of 8 Gallons. 8 Gallons. 8 Gallons. £ s. d. £ s.d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 1646 280 2 2 8 1707 1 8 6 1 5 4 1767 346 2 17 4 1647 3 13 8 3 5 5% 1708 2 1 6 1 16 10% 1768 306 2 13 91 1648 45 0 3 15 67 1709 3 18 6 3 9 94 1769 258 2 0 7 1649 4 0 0 3 11 11 1710 3 18 0 3 9 4 1770 2 9 0 2 3 64 1650 3 16 8 3 8 14 1711 2 14 0 2 8 0 1771 2 17 0 2 10 8 1651 3 13 4 3 5 21 1712 2 6 4 2 1 21 1772 360 2 18 8 1652 296 2 4 0 1713 2 11 0 2 5 4 1773 366 2 19 11 1653 1 15 6 1 11 6% 1714 2 10 4 2 4 9 1774 320 2 15 11 1654 1 6 0 1 3 11 1715 2 3 0 1 18 21 2424 1775 2 17 8 2 11 3½ 2 11 31 1655 1 13 4 1 9 71 2 11 74 1716 2 8 0 2 2 8 1776 280 2 2 8 1656 230 1 18 21 1717 258 2 0 74 1777 2150 2 8 103 1657 268 2 1 51 1718 1 18 10 1 14 61 1778 296 2 4 0 1658 350 2 17 91/4 1719 1 15 0 1 11 11 1779 208 1 16 11 1659 360 2 18 8 1720 1 17 0 1 12 10 1780 286 2 3 1½ 1660 2 16 6 2 10 24 1721 1 17 6 1 13 4 1781 2 19 0 2 12 51 1661 3 10 0 3 2 21 1722 1 16 0 1 12 0 1782 3 0 6 2 13 91 1662 3 14 0 3 5 9+ 1723 1 14 8 1 10 10% 1783 3 1 0 2 14 21 1663 2 17 0 2 10 8 1724 1 17 0 1 12 10% 1784 3 0 6 2 13 91/4 1664 2 0 6 1 16 0 1725 2 8 6 2 3 14 1 15 44 1785 2 14 0 2 8 0 2781 1665 2 9 4 2 3 10 2 10 51 1726 2 6 0 2010 1786 2 7 6 2 2 21 1666 1 15 0 1 12 0 1727 220 I 17 4 1787 2 11 6 2 5 92 1667 1 16 0 1 12 0 1728 214 6 2 8 51 1788 2 15 6 2 9 4 1668 2 0 0 1 15 61 1729 2 6 10 2 1 71 1789 332 2 16 11 1669 244 1 19 5 1730 116 6 1 12 51/4 1790 332 2 16 11 1670 218 1 17 01 1731 1 12 10 1 9 2½ 1791 2 15 6 2 9 4 1671 220 1 17 4 1732 168 1 3 81 1792* - 2 13 0 1672 2 1 0 1 16 51/4 1733 184 1 5 21/4 1793 - 2 15 8 1673 2 6 8 2 1 57 1734 1 18 10 1 14 61 1794 - 2140 1674 388 3 1 of 1735 230 ] 18 24 1 15 2 1795 - 4 1 6 2 14 38 1675 348 2 17 57 2 0 112 1736 2 0 4 1 15 101/- 1796 - 4 0 2 1676 1 18 0 1 13 91 1737 1 18 0 1 13 91/4 1797 - 3 2 0 1677 2 2 0 1 17 4 1738 1 15 6 1 11 64 1798 - 2 14 0 1678 2 19 0 2 12 51 1739 1 18 6 1 14 27 1799 - 3 15 8 1679 3 0 0 2 13 4 1740 2 10 8 2 5 1 t 1800 - 6 7 0 1680 2 5 0 2 0 0 1741 26 8 2 1 5% 1801 - 6 8 6 1681 268 2 1 57 1742 1 14 0 1 10 21 1802 - 3 7 2 1682 240 1 19 1½ 1743 1 4 10 121 1803 - 3 0 0 1683 200 1 15 67 1744 1 4 10 1 2 1 1804 - 3 9 6 1684 240 1 19 11 1745 1 7 6 1 4 51/4 1121 1805 - 4 8 0 412 1685 2 6 8 2 1 5% 2141 1746 1 19 0 1148 1806 - 4 3 0 1686 1 14 0 1 10 21 1747 1 14 10 1 10 111 1807 - 3180 1687 1 5 2 1 2 41 1748 1 17 0 1 12 101 1808 - 3 19 2 1688 260 2 0 101 1749 1 17 0 1 12 101 1809 - 5 6 0 1689 1 10 0 1 6 8 1750 1 12 6 1 8 10% 1810 - 5 12 0 1690 1 14 8 1 10 97 1751 1 18 6 1 14 21 1811 - 5 8 0 1691 1 14 0 I 10 24 1752 2 1 10 1 17 21 1812 - 6 8 0 1692 268 2 1 54 1753 2 y 8 1 19 81 1813 - 6 0 0 1693 3 7 8 3 0 11 1754 1 14 8 1 10 91 1814 - 4.5 0 1694 340 2 16 104 1755 1 13 10 1 10 1 1121 1815 - 3 16 0 4 17 6 1695 2 13 0 2 7 11 1 19 61 1756 2 5 2 2 0 11 1816 I 42 0 1696 3 11 0 3 3 11 1757 3 0 0 2 13 4 1817 - 5 16 0 1697 3 0 0 2 13 4 1758 2 10 0 2 4 51/4 1818 - 4 18 0 1698 3 8 4 3 0 9 1759 1 19 8 1 15 3 1819 - 3 18 0 1699 340 2 16 101 1760 I 16 6 1 12 51 1820 - 3 16 0 1700 200 1 15 6% 1761 1 10 2 1 6 91 1821 - 3 11 0 1701 1 17 8 1 13 51 1762 1 19 0 1 14 8 1822 I 2 13 0 1702 1 9 6 1 6 24 1763 2 0 8 1 16 11 1823 - 2 17 0 1703 1 16 0 1 12 0 1764 2 6 8 2 1 51 1824 - 3 12 0 1704 266 2 1 4 1765 2 14 0 2 8 0 1 19 34 1825 - 4 4 0 3 18 81 1705 1 10 0 1 6 8 2 2 11 1766 2 8 6 2 3 11. 1826 - 3 13 0 1706 1 6 0 1 3 11 The Eton Account of Prices commenced in 1595; the accuracy of the returns in the first years can- not, however, be so implicitly relied on, as those quoted above.-Bishop Fleetwood and Sir F. M. Eden have collected, with great industry, almost all the existing information respecting the state of prices in England during the last six hundred years. * From this year, inclusive, the account at Eton College has been kept according to the bushel of 8 gallons under the provision of the act 31 Geo. 3. c. 30. e 82. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 505 N. Account of the Average Prices of British Corn per Winchester Quarter, in England and Wales, since 1771, as ascertained by the Receiver of Corn Returns. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. Beans. Peas. £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 1771 2 7 2 1 14 4 1 5 8 o 16 8 1 8 6 1772 2 10 8 168 154 0162 1 10 0 1773 2110 134 1 8 4 017 2 1 13 0 1774 2128 1 14 4 I 8 6 0 17 10 1 11 2 1775 2 8 4 1 12 10 1 6 0 0 16 6 1 8 8 1776 1 18 2 1610 1 0 2 0 15 0 I 6 6 1777 2 5 6 180 1 0 6 0 15 8 1 8 6 1778 $ 2 0 1 8 4 1 $ 8 0 15 2 1 7 8 1779 1 13 8 1 3 4 0196 0140 1 4 2 1780 1 15 8 1 2 $ 0 17 0 0 12 10 1 2 $ 1781 2 4 8 1 6 10 0 17 % 0 13 8 1 3 0 1782 2 7 10 1 8 10 186 0152 1 6 0 till 1792. 1783 $ 12 8 1 15 8 1 10 4 0 19 10 I 14 10 1784 2 8 10 122 1 7 10 0 18 4 1 12 2 1785 $ 11 10 1 8 o 1 4 0 0 17 $ 1 10 8 1786 1 18 10 1 7 2 144 0180 1 13 2 No account kept of the price of peas 1787 2 1 2 1 7 8 128 0168 1 11 10 1788 $ 5 0 1 7 8 1 20 0 15 8 1 7 2 1789 $ 11 2 1 9 10 1 8 10 0 16 0 1 7 $ 1790 2 13 2 1 14 0 156 0 18 10 1 11 0 1791 $ 7 2 1 11 4 1 5 10 0 18 % 1 10 6 1792 2 2 11 1 10 8 169 0 17 10 1 11 7 1 12 8 1793 $ 8 11 1 15 11 1 11 9 1 1 3 1 17 8 1 18 4 1794 $ 11 8 1 17 9 1 12 10 1 $ 0 $ $ 6 2 6 8 1795 3 14 2 2 8 5 1 17 8 1 4 9 268 2 13 4 1796 3 17 1 2 7 0 1 15 7 1 1 9 1 18 10 2 3 6 1797 2 13 1 1 11 11 1 7 9 0 16 9 1 7 6 1 13 5 1798 2 10 3 1 10 11 1 9 1 0 19 10 1 10 1 1 13 11 1799 3 7 6 2 3 9 160 1 7 7 247 2 5 $ 1800 5 13 7 3 16 11 3 0 0 1 19 10 3 9 3 3 7 5 1801 5 18 3 3 19 9 3 7 9 1 16 6 328 3 7 8 1802 3 7 5 2 3 3 1 13 1 1 0 7 1 16 4 1 19 6 1803 2 16 6 1 16 11 1 4 10 1 1 3 1 14 8 1 18 6 1804 3 0 1 1 17 1 1 10 4 139 1 18 7 2 0 10 1805 4 7 10 2 14 4 248 1 8 0 275 2 8 4 1806 3 19 0 2 7 4 186 1 5 8 2 3 9 2 3 6 1807 3 13 3 $ 7 6 1 18 4 1 8 1 $ 7 3 2 15 11 1808 3 19 0 2 12 4 2 2 1 1 13 8 3 0 8 3 6 7 1809 4 15 7 3 0 9 $ 7 3 1 12 8 3 0 9 3 0 2 1810 5 6 2 2 19 0 $ 7 11 1 9 4 2 13 7 2 15 9 1811 4 14 6 2 9 11 2 1 10 1 7 11 2 7 10 2 11 6 1812 6 5 5 3 15 11 366 $ 4 0 3 12 8 3 13 7 1813 5 8 9 3 10 7 2 18 4 1 19 5 3 16 5 3 18 6 1814 8 14 0 246 1 17 4 1 6 6 26 7 2 10 0 1815 3 4 4 1 17 10 1 10 3 1 3 10 1 16 1 1 18 10 1816 3 15 10 $ 3 $ 1 13 5 1 3 6 1 18 4 1 18 4 1817 4 14 9 2 16 6 2 8 3 1 12 1 2120 $ 11 5 1818 4 4 1 2 14 10 2 13 6 1 12 11 3 3 1 2 19 11 1819 3 13 0 2 9 0 2 6 8 1 9 4 2 15 5 2160 III. Account of the Average Prices of British Corn per Imperial Quarter, in England and Wales, since 1820, as ascertained by the Receiver of Corn Returns. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. Beans. Peas. £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ 8. d. £ #. d. £ s. d. £ 8. d. 1820 3 7 11 2 2 0 1 13 10 1 4 9 2 3 4 2 5 11 1821 2 16 2 1 12 1 1 6 0 0 19 6 1 10 11 I 12 9 1822 2 4 7 1 0 11 1 1 11 0 18 2 1 4 6 1 6 5 1823 2 13 5 1 11 11 1 11 7 1 2 11 1 13 1 1 15 0 1824 3 4 0 2 1 5 1 16 5 1 4 10 2 0 1 2 0 8 1825 3 8 7 $ 2 4 201 1 5 8 2 10 $ 5 5 1826 2 18 9 212 1 14 5 1 6 9 243 2 7 8 1827 2 16 9 19 0 166 1 7 4 2 7 7 $ 7 7 1828 3 0 5 1 14 2 1 12 10 1 2 6 1 18 4 2 0 6 1829 3 6 3 1 14 10 126 1 $ 9 1 16 8 1 16 8 1830 3 4 3 1 15 10 1 12 7 1 4 5 1 16 1 1 19 2 1831 3 6 4 2 0 0 180 154 1 19 10 2 1 11 1832 2 18 8 1 14 7 1 13 1 1 0 5 1 15 4 1 17 0 1833 2 12 11 1 12 11 1 7 6 0 18 5 1 13 2 1 16 5 1834 2 6 2 1 12 9 1 9 0 1011 153 1 19 4 1835 1 19 4 1 10 4 1 9 11 1 2 0 1 16 11 1 16 6 N. B.-The Winchester bushel contains 2150.42 cubic inches, while the Imperial bushel contains 2218 192 cubic inches, being about one thirty-secondth part larger than the former.-(See BUSHEL, and WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) The following account of the current prices of all sorts of corn in the London market, 7th of October, 1833, is interesting, from its showing their comparative values, and the estimation in which they are held:- VoL. L-2 U 64 Digitized by Google 506 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. IV.-Current Prices of Grain, Seeds, &c. per Imperial Quarter. London, 7th of October, 1833. British. Per Quar Free In Bond. ter. Foreign. Per Qr. Per Qr. 8. a. 8. 8. a & Wheat, Emex, Kent, and Suffibik, old red 54 to 56 Wheat, Dantzic and Konigsberg, finest do. do. white 60 62 high mixed 66 to 68 48 to do. do. new red 51 - 53 do. good mixed 56 - 58 45 48 do. do. white 65 59 do. red mixed 52 - 56 35 40 Norfolk and Lincolnshire, old 47 - 54 Stettin 0 - 0 0 - 0 Northumberland, Berwick, and Scotch, do. 50 - 54 Danish 0 - 0 27 32 Galway and Limerick, white and red 46 - 48 Hamburgh and Pomeranian 52 56 0 - 0 Cork and Youghal do. 46 - 48 Zealand and Brabant 0 - 0 0-6 Dublin, Waterford, and Clonmel, do. 46 48 Odessa, soft 46 - 49 22 Rye, New 34 36 Riga, Petersburgh, and Liebas, Barley, Kent, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, new 32 35 soft 45 - 48 0 Lincolnshire, and Yorkshire do. 0 - 0 Archangel 38 - 40 0 stained and grinding do. 27 30 Tuscan, red 58 - 60 - 0 Scotch 0 0 Canada 58 - 61 55 Malt, Basex, Norfolk, and Suffolk 50 60 Spenish, soft 56 - 62 - 0 Kingston and Ware 63 65 Buck or brank 32 - 34 0 0 Oats, Nortolk. Cambridgeshire, Lincolishire, ? feed Indian corn 32 - 35 and Yorkshire 19 21 0 Rye, Baltic, dried 30 - 32 0 do. Poland 20 22 do. undried 31 - 32 22 24 Northemberland, Berwick, and Scotch potato 24 25 Barley, Hamburgh, Dantric, Konigaberg, do. feed 23 24 and Riga, malting 0 - 0 0 Devonshire, and West Country feed, or black 18 20 do. grinding 0 - 0 0-0 Dundalk, Newry, and Belfast, potato, 21s. to Danish do. 0 - 0 0 - 0 22s. 6d. feed 19 - 21 Oats, Dutch brew and thick 21 - 22 14 16 Limerick, Sligo, and Westport, feed 18 20 Danish 16 - 19 11 - 12 do. potato 20 28 Friesland brew and thick 20 - 21 - 0 Cork, Waterford, Dublin, ? black 17 19 Russian 20 - 21 - 0 Youghal, and Clonmel s white 19 21 Beans, tick 32 - 34 - 0 Galway 18 20 amall 0 - 0 23 - 24 Beans, tick, new 29 32 Mediterranean 0 - 0 0 - 0 old 34 36 Peas, white, boiling 42 - 45 32 36 harrow and small, new 33 35 grey or hog 0 - 0 - 0 do old 37 - 39 Tares, (duty 10s.) 0 - 0 0-0 Peas, boiling 44 - 46 Flour, Dantxic, per barrel 0 - 0 - 0 hog, grey, and maple 38 42 American, sour do. 0 - 0 21 - Tares 40 44 do. sweet, do. 0 - 0 25 - 28 Flour, English, per sack of 2S0 lbs. 42 45 do. fine do. 46 50 Scotch and North Country 41 43 L a L & Irish 41 44 Linseed, Russian, creshing (duty 1a. per quarter), Linseed, crushing, per quarter 0 0 per quarter 20688 sowing, do. do. 0 0 sowing, per barrel 0 0 00 cake, per 1,000 of 3 lbs. each, 11L to 111. 10s. Mediterranean, per quarter 2 8 - 8 12 Cloversed, old English white, per cwt. 58 62 Rapeseed (duty 1s. per qr.), crushing, new, per do. red do. 46 56 quarter 22 0 - 24 0 foreign white do. 56 66 Linseed cake (duty 2d. per cwt ), per for 7 0 - 80 do. red do. 52 64 Rape cake (duty 2d. per cwt.), do. 410 - 415 new English white, do. 56 66 Cloverseed, red (duty 20. per cwt.), per ton 810 36 do. red do. 40 56 white (duty 20s. per cwt.) do. 2 12 - 3 10 Trefoil, new do. 24 30 Rapeseed, crushing, new, per last, 221. to 251. cake, per ton, 4a. 10s. to 51. V.-Account of the Quantity of Wheat and Wheat Flour exported, and of Foreign Wheat and Wheat Flour imported, in the following Years (Winchester Measure). Wheat and Foreign Wheat and Foreign Years. Wheat and Wheat and Foreign Years. Flour Wheat and Flour Flour Flour Years. Flour Wheat and exported. exported. Flour imported. imported. exported. imported. England. Qrs. Qrs. England. Qrs. Qrs. Gt. Britain. Qrs. Qrs. 1697 14,699 400 1732 202,058 1766 164,939 11,020 1698 6,857 845 1733 427,199 7 1767 5,071 497,905 1699 557 486 1734 498,196 6 1768 7,433 349,268 1700 49,056 5 1735 153,343 9 1769 49,892 4,378 1701 98,324 1 1736 118,170 16 1770 75,449 34 1702 90,230 1737 461,602 32 1771 10,089 2,510 1703 166,615 50 1738 580,596 2 1772 6,959 25,474 1704 90,313 2 1739 279,542 5,423 1773 7,637 56,857 1705 96,185 1740 54,390 7,568 1774 15,928 289,149 1706 188,332 77 1741 45,417 40 1775 91,037 560,988 1707 74,155 1742 293,260 1 1776 210,664 20,578 1708 83,406 86 1743 371,431 2 1777 87,686 233,323 1709 169,680 1,552 1744 231,984 2 1778 141,070 106,394 1710 13,924 400 1745 324,839 6 1779 222,261 5,039 1711 76,949 1746 130,646 1780 224,059 3,915 1712 145,191 1747 266,907 1781 103,021 159,866 1713 176,227 1748 543,387 385 1782 145,152 80,695 1714 174,821 16 1749 629,049 382 1783 51,943 584,183 1715 166,490 1750 947,602 279 1784 89,288 216,947 1716 74,926 1751 661,416 3 1785 132,685 110,863 1717 22,954 1752 429,279 1786 205,466 51,463 1718 71,800 1753 299,609 1787 120,536 59,339 1719 127,762 20 1754 356,270 201 1788 82,971 148,710 1720 83,084 Gt. Britain. 1789 140,014 112,656 1721 81,633 1755 237,466 1790 30,892 222,557 1722 178,880 1756 102,752 5 1791 70,626 469,056 1723 157,720 1757 11,545 141,562 1792 300,278 622,417 1724 245,865 148 1758 9,234 20,353 1793 76,629 490,398 1725 204,413 12 1759 227,641 162 1794 155,048 327,902 1726 142,183 1760 393,614 3 1795 18,839 313,793 1727 30,315 1761 441,956 1796 24,679 879,200 1728 3,817 74,574 1762 295,385 56 1797 54,525 461,767 1729 18,993 40,315 1763 429,538 72 1798 59,782 396,721 1730 93,971 76 1764 396,857 1 1799 39,362 463,185 1731 130,025 4 1765 167,126 104,547 1800 22,013 1,264,520 Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 507 VI.-Account specifying the Total Quantities of all Sorts of Grain imported into Great Britain, from different Countries, in each Year, from 1801 to 1825, both inclusive ; the Average Quantity of all Sorts of Grain, and the Average Quantity of each particular Species of Grain, as Wheat, Rye, Bar- ley, &c., imported in each of the above Years, from each different Country, in Winchester Quarters. Other France British Sweden Den- Ger- The United Foreign and North Years. Russia. and mark. Prussis. Nether- South of States of Countries, many. American 1. of Man Ireland. Norway lands. Europe. America. Colonies. and Prise Corn. 1801 204,656 26,375 7,088 663,584 699,340 351,330 3,223 372,151 67,724 10,074 900 1802 12,870 10,961 3,882 377,984 151,363 103,194 2,032 80,820 75,172 856 467,067 1803 16,448 540 8,619 171,001 161,147 81,758 1,565 109,832 43,245 1,782 343,548 1804 8,215 19,931 31,029 531,364 138,810 170,977 168 4,351 21,214 4,576 316,958 1805 173,874 25,859 52,837 702,605 126,146 72,516 2,794 13,475 2,250 8,511 306,923 1806 57,416 - 10,284 90,040 108,581 29,949 3,790 79,906 9,801 5,613 466,947 1807 6,183 110 74,049 22,890 141,537 237,523 32,113 250,866 27,693 18,996 463.406 1808 3,664 195 1,800 - 29,998 18,137 11,736 13,206 21,506 12,236 656,770 1809 14,089 2,348 9,027 2,015 169,655 328,582 30,848 172,878 23,737 20,848 933,658 1810 66,869 87,961 132,287 316,224 255,475 436,286 241,345 98,361 25,938 28,465 632,849 1811 49,597 40,391 45,127 97,886 2,429 - 5,167 18,097 440 15,934 430,189 1812 128,437 14,919 52,302 9,063 619 2 454 11,524 23,774 17,970 600,268 1813 64,938 71,629 58,872 133,907 125,156 - - 1,093 1 10,112 977,164 1814 9,760 30,926 18,356 186,241 116,861 420,009 170,596 2 3 7,476 812,805 1815 1,443 626 9,250 19,428 35,279 135,778 79,051 45,586 25 6,600 821,192 1816 24,198 660 14,874 94,791 54,157 118,048 1,189 7,209 3 4,077 873,865 1817 405,933 1,166 149,012 414,947 253,403 191,141 35,372 316,364 25,876 8,016 699,809 1818 676,793 2,455 342,213 829,646 571,864 761,874 92,891 187,576 56,617 8,740 1,207,851 1819 543,554 2,255 123,638 323,350 235,076 193,029 218,215 47,654 14,257 6,484 967,861 1820 372,169 13,492 147,595 356,288 218,711 78,813 12,917 91,098 40,898 9,869 1,417,120 1821 28,445 - 26,778 39,258 51,540 19,964 102 38,488 40,916 12,163 1,822,816 1822 22,040 - 15,045 28,745 21,528 3,024 741 6,242 23,439 5,000 1,063,089 1823 14,568 - 6,948 8,743 4,635 3,896 102 4,237 209 10,303 1,528,153 1824 14,500 2,858 106,998 76,780 231,430 132,160 1,395 33,872 891 9,154 1,634,024 1825 26,895 4,284 248,282 217,836 372,839 63,954 499 12,903 95,059 15,227 2,203,962 Annual average of the above 117,902 14,397 67,847 228,584 171,103 158,078 37,932 80,712 25,627 10,363 865,968 25 years Annual average of ditto for 53,377 9,576 16,324 157,359 58,103 56,817 24,649 74,024 24,863 4,836 187,438 wheat Do. rye 9,968 960 1,123 5,689 5,189 1,690 293 2,341 - 1,438 253 Do. barley 7,112 987 18,808 18,718 24,839 9,500 1,097 31 51 2,194 33,331 Do. oats 46,652 2,446 30,672 39,209 75,828 84,269 1,953 3 1 1,703 639,857 Do. peas 785 428 823 7,609 7,144 5,802 9,124 201 697 151 4,922 and beans Do.Indian 8 - 97 - - - 816 4,022 15 41 167 corn VII-Account of the Imports into Great Britain of all Descriptions of Foreign Corn in 1831 specify- ing the Countries whence they were imported, and the Quantities brought from each.-Parl. Paper, No. 426. Sess. 1832.) Barley and Indian Rye and Wheat and Countries from which Oats and Buck Barley Beans. Corn and Peas. Rye Wheat Total. imported. Oatmeal. Wheat. Meal. -Meal. Meal. Flour. Qrs. bu. Qra. bu. Qrs. bu. Qrs. tal. Qrs. tre. Qrs. bu. Qrs. hu. Qrs. he QTS. bu Russia 42,5682 - 3166 369,608 1 6,3727 53,9115 464,584 1 20 937,363 € - - - Sweden 1,7187 - - - - 20,6635 343 . 606 71 2 - 22,5487 Denmark - 115,6581 1,299 4 - - 96,9965 2,667 2 5,832 2 55,967 6 - 278,421 4 Prussia - - 60,7786 1,157 5 - 70,1154 35,2110 18,4473 296,2865 - 481,9967 Germany - - 116,9283 7,664 4 - 31,450 1 13,9627 7,1035 218,507 4 01 395,617 1 The Netherlands - 12,2840 7,0703 - 15,2260 4710 4,2052 30,249 4 - 69,506 France - - - 18,7377 1,4540 17,8932 7,9360 1225 137 4 103,700 5 6,691 4 156,673 3 The Azores - - - 04 2,6493 - - - 22 2 I 2,672 1 Spain 2,3183 04 1,5985 300 44 - 154,671 1 - 158,623 1 - - - the Canary Isl. 4186 - - - - - 1,082 4 I 1,501 2 Italy - - - 3,0031 3,691 4 476 10 - - 253,295 5 - 260,039 0 Malta - - 1,031 3 - - - I I 13,3397 | - 14,371 2 Ionian Islands - 249 3 I 249 3 I - - - - - Turkey - 6240 01 - - 02 - 6,215 4 - 6,8397 Cape of Good Hope 10 - - 10 - - 2,183 4 - 2,185 4 Mauritius - - - - - - - 06 - 06 East India Compa- ny's territories 151 - - - 1360 - 5,490 4 - 5,641 5 Van Dieman's Land - - - - - I 45 5 I 45 5 British North Ameri- can colonies - 2403 - 04 6,9026 4616 2366 218,327 2 - 226,166 3 British West Indies - - 04 - 01 - 34 - 41 U. States of America 01 22,1953 599 4 - 1,887 3 463,4187 - - 488,101 2 Chili and Peru - - - - - - 1407 1 1407 - Isles of Guern- 1,128 2 - - I 925 I 9,242 1 - 10,463 0 ey,Jersey,Al- foreign produce derney & Man 5,4986 185 - 2,8312 220 - 14,265 5 - 22,6362 Total - 381,9220 23,3886 44,702 622,361 4 59,5592 91,8194 2,311,362 2 6,6935 3,541,809 0 Digitized by Google 508 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. VIII. Annual imports of Corn, Flour, and Meal, from Ireland into Great Britain, since 1897. Wheat and Barley and Oats and Indian Years. Wheat Flour Barley Meal. Rye. Oatmeal. Corn. Beans. Peas. Total. 1807 45,111 qrs. 23,048 qrs. 431 qrs. 389,649 qrs. - 5,167 qrs. 463,406qrs. 1808 43,497 30,586 573 579,974 - 2,140 656,770 1809 68,124 16,619 425 845,782 - 2,708 933,658 1810 127,510 8,321 20 493,231 I0 qrs. 3,757 632,849 1811 147,567 2,713 21 275,757 - 4,131 430,189 1812 160,843 43,262 178 390,926 - 5,059 600,268 1813 217,454 63,560 420 691,498 - 4,532 977,164 1814 225,821 16,779 4 564,010 - 6,191 812,805 1815 189,544 27,108 207 597,537 - 6,796 821,192 1816 121,631 62,254 43 683,714 - 6,223 873,865 1817 59,025 26,766 614 611,117 - 2,287 699,809 1818 108,230 25,387 4 1,069,385 - 4,845 1,207,851 1819 154,031 20,311 2 789,613 - 3,904 967,861 1820 404,747 87,095 134 916,250 1 8,893 1,417,120 1821 569,700 82,884 550 1,162,249 - 7,433 1,822,816 1822 463,004 22,532 353 569,237 - 7,963 1,063,089 1823 400,068 19,274 198 1,102,487 - 6,126 1,528,153 1824 356,408 45,872 112 1,225,085 - 6,547 1,634,024 1825 396,018 165,082 220 1,629,856 - 12,786 2,203,962 1826 314,851 64,885 77 1,303,734 - 7,190 qrs. 1,452 1,692,189 1827 405,255 67,791 256 1,343,267 1,795 10,037 1,372 1,829,743 1828 652,584 84,204 1,424 2,075,631 280 7,068 4,944 2,826,135 1829 519,493 97,140 568 1,673,628 30 10,444 4,503 2,305,806 1830 529,717 189,745 414 1,471,252 28 19,053 2,520 2,212,729 1831 557,520 185,409 515 1,655,934 563 15,039 4,663 2,419,643 1832 572,586 123,068 294 1,890,321 3,037 14,512 1,916 2,605,734 1833 844,201 107,519 167 1,762,519 117 19,103 2,645 2,736,281 1834 779,504 217,568 982 1,747,910 75 18,770 2,176 2,766,985 1835 661,776 156,176 614 1,822,766 - 24,234 3,447 2,669,013 IX. Account of the Foreign and Colonial Corn, Flour, and Meal, entered for Home Consumption in the United Kingdom since 1815; specifying the total Amount of Duty received thereon, and the Rates of Duty; in Imperial Quarters.-(Appendiz to second Agricultural Report of 1836, p. 282.) Corn, &c. entered for Home Consumption, Imperial Quarters. Duty re- Average rates of Duty per Imp. Quarter. ceived. Years Wheat Barley Rye Indian Beans and and Wheat. Barley. Oats. Indian Beans and Oats and and Total. Rye. and Oatmeal. Flour. Meal. Meal. Corn. Total. Corn. Peas. Peas. L. 8. d, s. d. s. d. &. d. #. d. s. d. 1815 - 160 148 214 - 1 523 1816 225,263 14,918 10,259 76,294 - - 326,734 1817 1,020,949 133,438 132,227 473,813 157 17,122 1,777,706 1818 1,593,518 695,621 79,221 990,947 1,411 177,850 3,538,568 1819 122,133 364,012 17,293 523,515 26,738 199,716 1,253,407 1820 34,274 - - 726,848 - 3 761,125 1821 2 - - - - - 2 1822 1823 12,137 - - - - - 12,137 10,310 16 11 3-4 1924 15,777 39,263 - 619,340 1,249 - 675,629 176,383 11 11 1-2 8 6 3-4 - 4934 91 1825 525,231 270,679 3,442 15 91 30,767 830,225 296,121 63-4 4 434 66 40 410 6 534 1826 316,892 332,641 67,241 1,185,214 6,222 189,894 2,097,104 442,595 11 334 5214 2 1-4 23 311 35 1827 672,733 236,991 21,887 1,851,248 145,842 157,854 2,986,655 792,934 21 41-4 10 62 1 33-4 2912 262 1828 842,050 217,545 489 14,374 22,747 119,782 1,216,987 188,412 1 91-4 61 36 8 01-2 2414 8 214 1829 1,364,220 202,406 65,331 192,890 22,688 96,514 1,944,049 900,208 9 23-4 9 0 3-4 2 11-2 11 134 9 71-4 10 8 1830 1,701,885 52,107 19,121 900,319 4,100 63,644 2,741,176 798,000 6 41-2 9 5 3-4 12 6 4234 12 712 7834 1831 1,491,631 522,709 56,868 355,120 65,428 83,444 2,568,983 655,158 48 17 2734 7 314 I 234 5101-2 1832 325,435 72,665 61 2,863 1,024 21,181 423,229 309,676 16 2 961-2 17 01-2 2614 9 41-2 10 4 1833 82,346 1,208 1 976 6 24,077 108,614 36,419 56 1311 20 0 610 16 8 10 41-2 1834 64,653 11,032 21 55,623 207 102,080 233,412 99,370 57 13 7 2011 10 1 28 91 1835 28,413 137,374 3 176,142 1,430 94,540 437,902 236,692 56 13 5 26 8 10 2 12 4 99 It appears, from No. IX. of the preceding accounts, that in 1828, 842,000 quarters of wheat were entered for home consumption, at an average duty of only 1s. 94d. per quarter! In 1829 the imports were 1,364,000 quarters, and the duty 9s. 23d. In 1830 the imports rose to 1,702,000 quarters, and the duty fell to 6s. 44d. and in 1831 the imports were 1,491,000 quarters, and the duty 4s. 8d. Had the duty been a constant one of 6s. or 7s., the interests of all parties would have been materially promoted. But there are obviously very slender grounds for thinking that the quantity imported would have been considerably increased for though the present system of duties frequently checks importa- tion for a lengthened period, yet, on the other hand, when prices rise, and the duties are reduced, every bushel in the warehouses is immediately entered for home consumption and the chance, which is every now and then occurring, of getting grain entered under the nominal duty of 1s., probably tempts the merchants to speculate more largely, though at a greater risk to themselves, than they would do under a different system. A moderate duty, accompanied by an equal drawback, besides giving a greater degree of security to the corn trade, would, in this respect, be particularly beneficial to the farmer. Under the present system it is not possible to foretell, with any thing approaching to accuracy, what may be the range of prices during any future period, however near : so that the trade of a farmer, which is naturally one of the most stable, has been rendered almost a species of gambling. But were the ports always open under the plan previously suggested, every one would be aware that variations of price would be confined within comparatively narrow limits and Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 509 the business of farming would acquire that security, of which it is, at present, 80 completely destitute, and which is so indispensable to its success. IV. FOREIGN CORN TRADE. Polish Corn Trade.- Dantzic is the port whence we have always been accustomed to import the largest supplies of corn and it would seem fully established by the data collected by Mr. Jacob, in his tours, that 28s. or 30s. a quarter is the lowest price for which any con- siderable quantity of wheat for exportation can be permanently raised in the corn-growing provinces in the vicinity of Warsaw : its minimum cost price, when brought to London, according to the data furnished by Mr. Jacob, would be as under:- 8. d. Cost of wheat at Warsaw, per quarter - - - - - - - - 28 0 Conveyance to the boats, and charges for loading and stowing, and securing it by mats - 0 6 Freight to Dantzic - - - - - - 5 0 Loss on the passage by pilfering, and rain causing it to grow - - - - 3 0 Expenses at Danzic in turning, drying, screening, and warehousing, and loss of measure - 2 0 Profit or commission, as the case may be, to the merchant at Dantzic - - 1 6 Freight, primage, insurance, and shipping charges, at Dantzic and in London - - 8 0 Cost of the wheat to the English merchant - - - - - - - 48 0 It ought, however, to be observed that the premium paid the underwriters does not cover the risk attending damage from heating or otherwise on the voyage; and it ought further to be observed, that the freight from Warsaw to Dantzic, and from Dantzic home, is here charged at the lowest rate. Mr. Jacob supposes that an extraordinary demand for as much wheat as would be equal to six days' consumption of that grain in England, or for 216,000 quarters, would raise the cost of freight on the Vistula from 20 to 40 per cent. and as such a demand could hardly be supplied without resorting to the markets in the provinces to the south of Warsaw, its minimum cost to the London merchants could not, under such cir- cumstances, amount, even supposing some of these statements to be a little exaggerated, to less than from 50s. to 53s. or 55s. a quarter. Mr. Grade, of Dantzic, furnished the committee of 1831 with the following Table of the average prices of corn at that city, free on board, in decennial periods, from 1770 to 1820. Average price, from Ten to Ten Years, of the different Species of Corn, free on board, per Quarter, in Sterling Money, at Dantzic. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. S. d. S. d. s. d. 3. d. From 1770 to 1779 - - - 33 9 21 8 16 1 11 1 1780 1789 - - - 33 10 22 1 17 11 12 4 1790- 1799 - - - 43 8 26 3 19 3 12 6 1800 - 1809 - - - 60 0 34 10 25 1 13 1 1810- 1819 - - - 55 4 31 1 26 0 20 4 Aggregate Average Price of 49 Years 45 4 27 2 20 10 13 10 In 1823, 1824, 1825, and 1826, prices, owing to the cessation of the demand from England, were very much depressed; but they have since attained to near their former elevation. We subjoin a statement, furnished by the British consul, of the Average Prices of Grain, bought from Granary, in sterling Money, at Dantzic, per Imperial Quarter. White and White and Years. Wheat Rye. Barley. Yellow Oats. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. Yellow Peas. Peas. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. S. d. S. d. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d 8. d. 1822 30 3 18 41 12 5f 10 111 15 7 1828 37 ] 19 5 14 3 11 3 28 4 1823 27 9 18 6f 14 101 11 01 18 2t 1829 47 1 17 4 13 8 10 11 IS 8 1824 23 8 11 21 8111 7 7 11 111 1830 42 2 20 3 15 0 11 2 20 8 1825 24 2 11 4 10 5 8 1 14 7 1831 50 2 28 6 21 3 15 8 27 7 1826 25 1 15 31 13 51 12 51 23 If 1827 26 11 18 2 16 9 13 10 31 11 Average - 33 5 17 10 14 1 11 31 21 01 The shipping charges may, we believe, be taken at 8d. or 9d. a quarter; and this, added to the above, gives 34s. 1d. or 34s. 2d. for the average price of wheat, free on board, at Dantzic, during the 10 years ending with 1831. The charges on importation into England, ware- housing here, and then delivering to the consumer, exclusive of duty and profit, would amount to about 10s. a quarter: This appears from the following 2 U 2 Digitized by Google 510 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. Account of the Ordinary Charges on 100 Quarters of Wheat, shipped from Dantzic OR Consignment, and landed under Bond in London.-(Parl. Paper, No. 333. Sess. 1827. p. 28.) £ 8. d. £ 8. d. One hundred quarters, supposed cost at Dantzie, free on board, 30s. 150 0 0 Freight at 5s. per quarter, and 10 per cent. - - - 27 10 0 Metage ex ship, &c., 6s. 6d. per last - - - - 3 5 0 Lighterage and landing, 9d. per quarter - - - - 3 15 0 Insurance on 180/., including 10 per cent. imaginary profit, at 80s. 7 14 0 per cent. I olicy 5s. per cent. - - - s Granary rent and insurance for one week - - - - 0 5 0 Turning and trimming, about - - - - - 0 2 0 Delivering from granary, 3d. per quarter - - - - 1 5 0 Metage, &c. ex granary, 2s. per last - - - - - 1 0 0 Commission on sale, is. per quarter - - - - - 5 0 0 Del credere, 1 per cent. on, suppose, 40s. - - - - 2 0 0 51 16 0 Total cost to importer if sold in bond 201 16 0 Imaginary profit 10 per cent. - 20 3 6 221 19 6 Would produce, at 44s. 4d. per quarter £221 13 4 N. B.-Loss on remeasuring not considered. Freight and insurance are taken in this statement at an average, being sometimes higher and some- times lower. Nothing, therefore, can be more perfectly unfounded, than the notions so prevalent in this country as to the extreme cheapness of corn at Dantzic. When there is little or no foreign demand, and all that is brought to the city is thrown upon the home market, prices are, of course, very much depressed but when there is a moderate demand for exportation, they immediately rise to something like the average level of the European market. During the greater number of the years embraced in the consular return, the Polish corn trade was very much depressed and in some seasons the exports were extremely limited. But notwith- standing these unfavourable circumstances, the price of wheat, free on board, at an average of the whole period, was 34s. 1d. a quarter. Now, if we add to this 10s. a quarter for freight and other charges attending its importation into England, and delivery to the con- sumer, it could not, in the event of its being charged with a duty of 6s. or 7s. a quarter on importation, be sold so as to indemnify the importer for his outlay, without yielding him any profit, for less than 50s. or 51s. a quarters And there are really no very satisfactory reasons for supposing that it could be disposed of for so little; for whenever it has been admitted into the British ports under any thing like reasonable duties, prices at Dantzic have uni- formly been above 40s. a quarter. Supposing, however, that, in the event of our ports being always open, the growth of corn in Poland would be so much increased as to admit of wheat being shipped in ordinary seasons for 34s., still it is quite plain it could not be sold in London under a duty of 6s. or 7s., for less than 53s. or 54s. a quarter. It is difficult to draw any conclusions on which it would be safe to place much reliance as to the supplies of corn that might be obtained from Dantzic, were our ports constantly open under a reasonable duty. Mr. Jacob gives the following Account of the Total annual Average Quantity of Wheat and Rye exported from Dantzic, in Periods of 25 Years each, for the 166 Years ending with 1825. Years. Wheat. Quarters. Rye. Quarters. Total. Quarters. 1651 to 1675 81,775 225,312 307,087 1676 - 1700 124,897 227,482 352,379 1701 1725 59,795 170,100 229,895 1726 1750 80,624 119,771 200,395 1751 - 1775 141,080 208,140 349,220 1776 - 1800 150,299 103,045 253,344 1801 - 1825 200,330 67,511 267,841 " The average of the whole period," Mr. Jacob observes, " gives an annual quantity of wheat and rye, of 279,794 quarters; and this surplus may be fairly considered as the nearest approach that can be made, with existing materials, to what is the usual excess of the produce of bread corn above the consumption of the inhabitants, when no extraordinary circumstances occur to excite or check cultivation."- (Report, p. 49.) We have, however, been assured by gentlemen intimately acquainted with the countries traversed by the Vistula, the Bug, &c., that Mr. Jacob has very much underrated their capabilities of improvement; and that were our ports opened under a fixed duty of 6s. or 7s. a quarter on wheat, and other grain in proportion, we might reckon upon getting from Dantzic an annual supply of from 350,000 to 450,000 quarters. We incline to think that this is a very moderate estimate. Hitherto, owing to the fluctuating and capricious nature of our demand, it has proved of little advantage to the cultivators; and but little corn has been raised in the expectation of its finding its way to England. But it would be quite another thing were our ports always open. The supply of the English markets would then Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 511 be an object of the utmost importance to the Polish agriculturists, who, there can be no doubt, would both extend and improve their tillage. We subjoin an Account of the exports of Corn from Dantzic during the Three Years ending with 1831, specifying the Quantities sent to different Countries, reckoned in Quarters of 10} to the Last. 1829. 1830. 1831. Britain Other Britain Britain Specise of Corn. and her Posses- France. and her Other Holland. Coun- France. Holland. Posses- Coun- and her Hol- Other Posses- France. land. Coun- sions. tries. sions. tries. sions. tries. Qra. Qre. Qre. Qrs. QTS. Qrs. Qre. Qre. Qrs. Qrs. Qra. Wheat 214,983 24,169 64,594 3,070 328,982 21,473 43,970 4,163 125,330 - 7,903 562 Rye 8,980 9,456 30,866 28,974 8,453 62 28,753 47,816 2,510 - 4,560 5,456 Barley 3,648 237 2,118 678 4,128 - 788 2,452 11,390 - - 800 Oats 8,923 274 20,997 - - 465 2,220 - Peas 2,444 - 217 181 14,312 - 1,768 836 14,780 - 560 510 Total of Corn 239,123 34,135 97,795 32,897 376,872 21,525 75,279 65,732 156,220 - 13,032 6,828 Flour, barrels of 196 lbs. 2,016 8,926 - 2,776 108 10 - - 2 Biscuits, bags of 1 cwt. 3,224 10,287 - - 72 6,732 - - 200 Quality of Dantzic Wheat.-It will be seen from the subjoined accounts, that the price of wheat at Dantzic, during the 10 years ending with 1831, was very near 7s. a quarter above its average price at Hamburgh during the same period, and about 2s. above the average of Amsterdam. This difference is entirely owing to the superior quality of the Dantzic wheat. Though small grained, and not so heavy as several other sorts, it is remarkably thin-skinned, and yields the finest flour. Some of the best white, or, as it is technically termed, " high mixed" Dantzic wheat, is superior to the very best English but the quantity of this sort is but limited, and the average quality of all that is exported from Dantzic is believed to approach very nearly to the average quality of English wheat. Allowing for its superior quality, it will be found that wheat is, speaking generally, always cheaper in Dantzic than in any of the Continental ports nearer to London. There are but few seasons, indeed, in which Dantzic wheat is not largely imported into Amsterdam; and it frequently, also, finds it way into Hamburgh. But it is quite impossible that such should be the case, unless, taking quality and other modifying circumstances into account, it were really cheaper than the native and other wheats met with in these markets. When there is any considerable importation into England, it is of every day occurrence for merchants to order Dantzic wheat in preference to that of Holstein, or of the Lower Elbe, though the latter might frequently be put into warehouse here for 20s. a quarter less than the former ! It is, therefore, quite indispensable, in attempting to draw any inferences as to the comparative prices of corn in different countries, to make the requisite allowances for differences of quality. Unless this be done, whatever conclusions may be come to can hardly fail of being false and misleading; and when they happen to be right, they can only be so through the merest accident. Dantzic being by far the greatest port for the exportation of corn in the north of Europe, its price may be assumed as the general measure of the price in other shipping ports. At all events, it is certain that then Dantzic is exporting, wheat cannot be shipped, taking quality into account, at a cheaper rate from any other place. The importer invariably resorts to what he believes to be, all things considered, the cheapest market and it is a con- tradiction and an absurdity to suppose that he should burden himself with a comparatively high freight, and pay 34s. 1d. for wheat at Dantzic, provided he could buy an equally good article in so convenient a port as Hamburgh for 26s. 6}d. If, therefore, we are right in estimating the price at which wheat could be imported from Dantzic under a duty of 6s. or 7s., at from 53s. to 54s., we may be assured that this is the lowest importation price. The greater cheapness of the imports from other places is apparent only ; and is uniformly countervailed by a corresponding inferiority of quality.-(For further details as to the Polish corn trade, see DANTZIC, KÖNIGSBERG, &c.) Russian Corn Trade.-Russia exports large quantities of wheat, rye, oats, and meal. The wheat is of various qualities; but the greater portion of it is small grained, coarse, brown, and very badly dressed. The hard, or Kubanka, is the best; it keeps well, and is in considerable demand for mixing with other wheats that are old or stale. Russian oats are very thin ; but, being dried in the straw, they weigh better than could be expected from their appearance, and are reckoned wholesome food. Our imports from Russia, in 1831, were extraordinarily large, she having supplied us with no fewer than 464,000 quarters of wheat and wheat flour, 369,000 quarters of oats and oatmeal, 54,000 quarters of rye and rye meal, 42,000 quarters of barley and barley meal, &c., making a grand total of 937,000 quarters Generally, however, our imports do not exceed a fifth part of this quantity. The quarter of hard wheat was worth, free on board, at Petersburgh, in November, 1832, when there was no demand for exportation, from 28s. to 28s. 6d.-(The reader will find notices of the Russian corn trade under the articles ARCHANGEL, PETERSBURGH, and RIGA. For an account of the corn trade by the Black Sea, see post, and the article ODESSA.) Digitized by Google 512 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. Danish Corn Trade-The export of wheat from Denmark Proper, that is, from Jutland and the islands, is but inconsiderable. There is, however, a pretty large exportation of wheat and other grain, as well as of butter, cheese, beef, &c., from Sleswick and Holstein. As already stated, the quality of the wheat is inferior; for, though it looks plump, it is coarse and damp. The chief shipping port for Danish corn is Kiel; but owing to the superior facilities enjoyed by Hamburgh, the greater portion of it is consigned to that city. In 1831 we imported from Denmark 55,960 quarters of wheat, 115,658 do. of barley, 96,996 do. of oats, with some small quantities of rye and beans.-(For an account of the exports of raw produce from Denmark in 1831, see COPENHAGEN.) Corn Trade of the Elbe, &c.-Next to Dantzic, Hamburgh is, perhaps, the greatest corn market in the north of Europe, being a depôt for large quantities of Baltic corn, and for the produce of the extensive countries traversed by the Elbe. But the excess of the exports of wheat from Hamburgh over the imports, is less than might have been expected, and amounted, at an average of the 10 years ending with 1825, to only 48,263 quarters a year. It appears from the subjoined table that the average price of wheat at Hamburgh, during the 10 years ending with 1831, was only 26s. 6ld. a quarter, being about 7s. a quarter under the level of Dantzic; but this extreme lowness of price is altogether ascribable to the info- riority of the Holstein and Hanover wheats, which are generally met with in great abundance at Hamburgh. Wheat from the Upper Elbe is of a better quality. Bohemian wheat is occasionally forwarded by the river to Hamburgh; but the charges attending its conveyance from Prague amount, according to Mr. Jacob, to full 17s. a quarter, and prevent its being sent down, except when the price is comparatively high. In 1830, there was shipped from Hamburgh for British ports, 217,700 quarters of wheat, 1,900 of rye, 18,200 of barley, and 2,800 of oats. Perhaps we might be able, did our prices average about 55s., to import in ordinary years from 250,000 to 300,000 quarters of wheat from Denmark and the countries intersected by the Weser and the Elbe. Average Prices of Corn at Hamburgh, during the Ten Years ending with 1831, in Sterling Money, per Imperial Quarter. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. 8. d. 8. d. S. d. S. d. 8. d. 8. d. s. d. s. d. 1822 27 6 15 5 13 0 9 4 1828 27 10 20 8 13 4 10 2 1823 27 6 18 4 14 6 11 0 1829 34 5 18 8 13 3 9 4 1824 24 0 13 0 12 6 8 6 1830 25 10 21 3 14 9 10 3 1825 20 6 12 9 13 10 8 6 1831 33 4 26 8 19 9 10 0 1826 18 4 17 1 13 3 12 4 1827 26 3 23 10 17 7 16 9 Average 26 61 18 9 14 61 10 it Amsterdam is an important depôt for foreign corn, every variety of which may be found there. Only a small part of its own consumption is supplied by corn of native growth; so that the prices in it are for the most part dependent on the prices at which corn can be brought from Dantzic, Kiel, Hamburgh, and other shipping ports. Rotterdam is a very advantageous port for warehousing foreign corn; being conveniently situated, and the ware- house rent low, not exceeding 2d. or 21d. per quarter per month. We subjoin an account of the Average Prices, per Imperial Quarter, of Wheat, Rye, Barley, and grown within the Consulship of Amsterdam, during the Ten Years ending with 1831. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. 3. d. 3. d. 3. d. 8. d. 1822 25 0 16 8 13 0 9 4 1828 34 6 24 0 19 0 12 10 1823 21 1 20 6 16 1 8 0 1829 46 10 25 7 19 5 13 10 1824 20 3 17 4 14 2 9 8 1830 41 9 27 4 20 0 18 1 1825 23 4 16 5 15 9 12 0 1831 42 8 30 0 22 4 18 6 1826 25 0 19 3 17 7 16 4 1827 33 2 29 0 21 0 21 8 Average 31 41 23 it 17 91 14 04 Previously to the late revolution in the Netherlands, there used to be a considerable trade in corn from Antwerp to England. Wheats, both white and red, are among the finest we receive from the Continent, and are, of course, pretty high priced. Beans and peas are also fine. Antwerp buck-wheat is the best in Europe. According to Mr. Jacob, the cost of storing and turning wheat per month at Antwerp does not exceed 1fd. a quarter, or about half what it costs in London. French Corn Trade.-It appears, from the accounts given by the Marquis Garnier in the last edition of his translation of the Wealth of Nations, that the price of the hectolitre of wheat at the market of Paris amounted, at an average of the 19 years beginning with 1801 and ending with 1819, to 20 fr. 53 cent; which is equal to 30 fr. 80 cent. the septier; or, taking the exchange at 25 fr., to 45s. 6d. the quarter. Count Chaptal, in his valuable work, Sur l'Industrie Française (tom. i. p. 226.), published in 1819, estimates the ordinary average price of wheat throughout France at 18 fr. the hectolitre, or 42s. 10d. the quarter. The various expenses attending the importation of a quarter of French wheat into London may be taken, at a medium, at about 6s. a quarter. France, however, has very little surplus Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE., 513 produce to dispose of; so that it would be impossible for us to import any considerable quantity of French corn without occasioning a great advance of price; and in point of fact, our imports from France have been at all times quite inconsiderable. The mean of the different estimates framed by Vauban, Quesnay, Expilly, Lavoisier, and Arthur Young, gives 61,519,672 septiers, or 32,810,000 quarters, as the total average growth of the different kinds of grain in France.-(Peuchet, Statistique Elémentaire, p. 290.) We, however, took occasion formerly to observe (Supp. to Encyc. Brit. art. Corn Laws) that there could not be a doubt that this estimate was a great deal too low ; and the more careful investigations of late French statisticians fully confirm this remark. It is said that the mean annual produce of the harvests of France, at an average of the 4 years ending with 1828, amounted to 60,533,000 hectolitres of wheat, and 114,738,000 ditto of other sorts of grain; making in all 175,271,000 hectolitres, or 62,221,205 Winch. quarters. Of this quantity it is supposed that 16 per cent. is consumed as seed, 19 per cent. in the feeding of different species of animals, and 2 per cent. in distilleries and brew- eries.-(Bulletin des Sciences Géographiques, tom. XXV. p. 34.) This estimate is believed to be pretty nearly accurate perhaps, however, it is still rather under the mark. The foreign corn trade of France was regulated down to a very late period by a law which forbade exportation, except when the home prices were below certain limits; and which restrained and absolutely forbade importation except when they were above certain other limits. The prices regulating importation and exportation differed in the different districts into which the kingdom was divided; and it has not unfrequently happened that corn warehoused in a particular port, where it was either not admissible at all, or not admissible except under payment of a high duty, has been carried to another port in another district, and admitted duty free But during the last 2 years importation has been at all times allowed under graduated duties, which, however, like those of this country, become prohibi- tory when the prices sink to a certain level. The division of the kingdom into separate districts is still kept up and in June, 1833, while the duties on wheat imported into some of the departments were only 4 fr. 75 cent., they were, in others, as high as 12 fr. 25 cent. An official announcement is issued on the last day of each month, of what the duties are to be in that district during the succeeding month. These depend, with certain modifications, on the average prices of the districts. Spanish Corn Trade.-The exportation of corn from Spain was formerly prohibited under the severest penalties. But in 1820, grain and flour were both allowed to be freely exported and in 1823, this privilege was extended to all productions (frutos) the growth of the soil. There is now, in fact, no obstacle whatever, except the expense of carriage, to the conveyance of corn to the sea-ports, and thence to the foreigner. Owing, however, to the corn growing provinces being principally situated in the interior, and to the extreme badness of the roads, which renders carriage to the coast both expensive and difficult, the exports are reduced within comparatively narrow limits; the same difficulty of carriage frequently gives rise to very great differences in the prices of places, in all parts of the country, only a few leagues distant. Were the means of communication improved, and any thing like security given to the husbandman, Spain would, in no long time, become one of the prin- cipal exporting countries of Europe. Old Castile, Leon, Estremadura, and that part of Anda- lusia to the south and east of Seville, are amongst the finest corn countries of Europe; and might be made to yield immense supplies. But owing to the disturbed state of the country, and the want of a market for their produce, they can hardly be said to be at all cultivated. And yet such is their natural fertility, that in good seasons the peasants only reap those fields nearest to the villages Latterly we have began to import corn from Bilbao, Santander, and other ports in the north of Spain; and in 1831, she supplied us with no fewer than 158,000 quarters.-(See BILBAO.) Corn Trade of Odessa.-Odessa, on the Black Sea, is the only port in Southern Europe from which any considerable quantity of grain is exported. We believe, indeed, that the fertility of the soil in its vicinity has been much exaggerated but the wheat shipped at Odessa is principally brought from Volhynia and the Polish provinces to the south of Cracow, the supplies from which are susceptible of an indefinite increase. Owing to the cataracts in the Dnieper, and the Dniester having a great number of shallows, most part of the corn brought to Odessa comes by land carriage. The expense of this mode of conveyance is not, however, nearly so great as might be supposed. The carts with corn are often in parties of 150 ; the oxen are pastured during the night, and they take advantage of the period when the peasantry are not occupied with the harvest, so that the charge on account of conveyance is comparatively trifling. Both soft and hard wheat is exported from Odessa; but the former, which is by far the most abundant, is only brought to England. Supposing British wheat to sell at about 60s., Odessa wheat, in good order, would not be worth more than 52s. in the London market but it is a curious fact, that in the Mediterranean the estimation in which they are held is quite the reverse; at Malta, Marseilles, Leghorn, &c., Odessa wheat fetches a decidedly higher price than British wheat. 65 Digitized by Google 514 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. The hard wheat brought from the Black Sea comes principally from Taganrog. It is a very fine species of grain it is full 10 per cent. heavier than British wheat, and has less than half the bran. It is used in Italy for making macaroni and vermicelli, and things of that sort ; very little of it has found its way to England. The voyage from Odessa to Britain is of uncertain duration, but generally very long. It is essential to the importation of the wheat in a good condition, that it should be made during the winter months. When the voyage is made in summer, unless the wheat be very superior, and be shipped in exceedingly good order, it is almost sure to heat; and has some- times, indeed, been injured to such a degree as to require to be dug from the hold with pickaxes. Unless, therefore, means be devised for lessening the risk of damage during the voyage, there is little reason to think that Odessa wheat will ever be largely imported into Britain.-(See the evidence of J. H. Lander, Esq. and J. Schneider, Esq. before the Lords' Committee of 1827, on the price of foreign corn.) It appears from the report of the British consul, dated Odessa, 31st of December, 1830, that the prices of wheat during the quarter then terminated varied from 22s. 4d. to 34s. 6d. a quarter. During the summer quarter, 149,029 quarters of wheat were exported. We copy the following account from the evidence of J. H. Lander, Esq. referred to above Account of the average Prices of Wheat at Odessa, with the Shipping Charges, reduced into British Measure and Currency; the Rate of Exchange (the whole taken Quarterly for the Years 1814 to 1824, inclusive); and the Quantities annually exported. Price per Chet- Charges Price on Quarter ending wert in Russian on Exchange. board per Quantity Observations. Money. Shipping. Quarter. exported. R. R. R. s. d. Quarters. 1814. March 31. 20:75 2.75 18:60 33 8 June 30. 21.50 2.65 18:90 34 1 Sept. 30. 17:50 2:50 19:55 27 3 187,685 Dec. 31. 18: 2:50 20:50 26 8 1815. March 31. 24:30 3:55 20:30 36 6 June 30. 21: 2.75 20:10 31 6 Sept. 30. 24.80 2.95 20:60 35 11 372,309 Dec. 31. 23:50 3.75 21:20 34 3 1816. March 31. 32. 5:50 22:10 45 3 June 30. 35.35 3:60 22:60 46 0 Sept. 30. 35:80 3-65 23:10 45 7 801,591 Dec. 31. 36:90 3:65 23. 47 0 1817. March 31. 44.75 4:40 22:40 58 6 June 30. 34.60 3-60 22. 46 4 Sept. 30. 30: 3:30 21:55 41 2 870,893 Dec. 31. 33.60 3.75 22.80 47 11 1818. March 31. 29.80 3:80 20:55 43 7 June 30. 22-70 2.85 20:85 32 8 Sept. 30. 23.80 2.90 20:40 34 11 538,513 Dec. 31. 21:30 2.80 19:20 33 6 1819. March 31. 17:20 2.60 1980 26 8 June 30. 17:30 2-60 20.85 25 5 Sept. 30. 16:30 2.55 21.85 23 1 627,926 Dec. 31. 14. 2.45 23.70 18 6 1820. March 31. 15:30 2.50 24:30 19 7 June 30. 17. 2-60 24:20 21 7 Sept. 30. 19:30 2.65 24:40 24 0 534,199 Dec. 31. 23:30 2.75 23:40 28 8 1821. March 31. 24:50 2.80 23.70 30 9 June 30. 23.50 2.75 24.15 29 0 Sept. 30. 20:15 2-65 25.25 24 3 435,305 Dec. 31. 1980 2.65 24:90 24 2 1822. March 31. 17.25 2.60 2480 20 8 June 30. 17.75 2-60 25' 21 8 Sept. 30. 17:45 2.60 24:65 21 7 342,752 Dec. 31. 15.25 2:50 23.90 19 10 The present price 1823. March 31. 15.20 2:50 24' 19 S of wheat is less than June 30. 15. 2:50 24:50 19 2 the cost of cultiva- Sept. 30. 12-25 2:35 24.75 15 7 443,035 tion. The charge on Dec. 31. 12.70 2:30 24.95 16 0 warehousing wheat 1824. March 31. 12:90 2:30 25:40 16 1 at Odessa does not June 30. 13* 2:30 25.10 16 3 exceed 2d. per quar- Sept. 30. 13* 2:30 25:10 16 3 427,767 ter per month. Dec. 31. 13* 2:30 24.50 16 7 The entire expense of importing a quarter of wheat from Odessa to London may be esti- mated at from 16s. to 19s. We borrow, from the valuable evidence of J. Schneider, Eeq. already referred to, the following account, which states in detail the various items of expense. -(See Table, next page.) The price free on board is estimated, in this Table, at under 16s., being no less than 12s. below the average price of October and December, 1830, as returned by the consul ; but not- withstanding, if we add to the cost of the wheat in London, as given in this statement, 6s. of duty, and allow 10s. for its supposed inferiority to English wheat, its price here, when thus reduced to the standard of the latter, would be about 50s. 6d. At present (7th of Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 515 October, 1833), Odessa wheat, entered for home consumption, is worth in the London mar- ket from 43s. to 46s. ; being about 10s. below the average of English wheat. PRO FORMA INVOICE of 2,000 Chetwerts of Wheat shipped at Odessa for London. 2,000 chetwerts wheat, at 12 rs. per chet. - - - - - Rs. 24,000 Charges. Measuring when received, at 5 cops. per chet. - - - - Rs. 100 Ditto when shipped 9 - - - - - 180 Duty 77 - - - - - 1,540 Carriage to the mole 18 - - - - - 360 Lighterage 15 - - - - - 300 Use of bags 10 - - - - - 200 Brokerage, 1 per cent. - - - . - - - 120 2,800 Rs. 26,800 Commission, 3 per cent. - - - - - - 804 Rs. 27,600 Exchange at 24 rs. per £ sterling £1,150 3 4 £ 8. d. Would produce 1,450 Imperial quarters, to cost per quarter - - - 0 15 10 Charges in London. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. Policy duty on 1,2001. at t per cent: - - 3 0 0 Insurance on 1,150L. at 21. 2s. per cent. - - 24 3 0 27 3 0 Commission do. 1 - - - - - - 5 15 0 Freight on 1,453 quarters wheat, at 12s. per quarter 871 10 0 Primage, 10 per cent. - - - - 87 3 7 Gratification - - - - - 10 10 0 969 9 7 Charterparty, 11.; Custom-house entries, 10s. - - - 1 10 0 Metage on ship, at 4s. 3jd. per last - - - - 31 3 7 Lastage - - - - 1 4 2 Lighterage of 1,453 quarters at 4d. - - - 24 4 4 Landing, wharfage, housing, and delivering, at 9d. - - 54 9 8 Rent, 4 weeks, at 5s. per 100 quarters per week - - 14 10 7 Metage, &c. ex granary - - - 7 5 0 £1,136 15 0 Or per quarter 0 15 8 1 11 6 Estimated charge for probable damage on the voyage - - - - 0 2 0 Factorage in London - - - - - 0 1 0 Del credere, 1 per cent. £1 14 6 American Corn Trade-The prices of wheat at New York and Philadelphia may be taken, on an average, at from 37s. to 40s. a quarter; and as the cost of importing a quarter of wheat from the United States into England amounts to from 10s. to 12s., it is seen that no considerable supply could be obtained from that quarter, were our prices under 50s. or 52s. It ought also to be remarked, that the prices in America are usually higher than in the Baltic; so that but little can be brought from the former, except when the demand is sufficient previously to take off the cheaper wheats of the northern ports. The exports of wheat from the United States are, however, comparatively trifling it be- ing in the shape of flour that almost all their exports of corn are made. The shipments of this important article from Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, New Orleans, and other ports, are usually very large. The British West Indies, Cuba, Mexico, Brazil, England, and France, are the principal markets to which it is sent. All sorts of flour, whether made of wheat, rye, Indian corn, &c. exported from the United States, must previously be submit- ted to the inspection of officers appointed for that purpose. The law further directs, that the barrels, in which it is shipped, shall be of certain dimensions, and that each barrel shall contain 196 lbs. of flour, and each half barrel 98 lbs. The inspector having ascertained that the barrels correspond with the regulations as to size, weight, &c., decides as to the quality of the flour; the first, or best sort, being branded Superfine; the second, Fine; the third, Fine Middlings; and the fourth, or lowest quality, Middlings. Such barrels as are not merchantable are marked Bad; and their exportation as well as the exportation of those deficient in weight, is probibited. Rye flour is divided into 2 sorts, being either branded Superfine Rye Flour, or Fine Rye Flour. Maize flour is branded Indian Meal; flour made from buck-wheat is branded B. Meal. Indian meal may be exported in hbds. or 800 lbs. Flour for home consumption is not subjected to inspection. The inspection must take place at the time and place of exportation, under a penalty of 5 dollars per barrel. Persons altering or counterfeiting marks or brands forfeit 100 dollars; and persons putting fresh Digitized by Google 516 CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. flour into barrels already marked or branded, or offering adulterated wheaten flour for sale, forfeit in either case 5 dollars for each barrel. The fees of branding were reduced in 1832. They amount, in New York, to 3 cents for each hogshead, and 1 cent for each barrel and half barrel of full weight. A fine of 30 cents is levied on every barrel or half barrel below the standard weight, exclusive of 20 cents for every pound that it is deficient. The act 9 Geo. 4. c. 60. enacts, that every barrel of wheaten flour imported, shall be deemed equivalent to 381 gallons of wheat, and shall be charged with a corresponding duty (antè, p. 500). Hence, when the price of British wheat per quarter is between 52s. and 53s., the duty on the barrel of flour is 20s. 10±d.; when wheat is between 60s. and 61s., the duty on flour is 16s. old; and when wheat is between 69s. and 70s., the duty on flour is 8s. 2td* The following Tables, derived principally from private but authentic sources, give a very complete view of the foreign corn trade of the United States during the last 10 years. I.-Account of the Quantities of Flour and Grain exported from the United States, from October 1st, 1821, to September 30th, 1831, with the Prices of Flour at Philadelphia, and of Wheat and Indian Corn at New York. Price of Wheat Price of Wheat Price of Indian Years. Wheat Flour. Rye Flour. Corn Meal. Wheat. Indian Corn. Flour per Barrel at Phi- per Bushel at Corn per Bushel at ladelphia. New York. New York. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Bushels. Bushels. Dolla. cents. Dolls. cents. Dolls. cents. 1831 1,805,205 19,049 204,206 405,384 566,761 - - 1 19 0 70 1830 1,225,881 26,298 145,301 45,289 444,107 4 98 0 98 0 57 1829 837,385 34,191 173,775 4,007 897,656 6 35 1 38 9 58 1828 860,809 22,214 174,639 8,906 704,902 5 60 1 8 0 53 1827 865,491 13,345 131,041 22,182 978,664 5 23 0 97 0 65 1826 857,820 14,472 158,625 45,166 505,381 4 65 0 90 0 79 1825 813,906 29,545 187,285 17,960 869,644 5 10 1 4 0 56 1824 996,792 31,879 152,723 20,373 779,297 5 62 1 15 0 47 1823 756,702 25,665 141,501 4,272 749,034 6 82 1 5 0 53 1822 827,865 19,971 148,288 4,418 509,098 6 58 0 90 0 49 1821 1,056,119 23,523 131,669 25,812 607,277 4 78 0 89 0 53 II.-Account of the Quantity and Destination of Wheat Flour exported from the United States, com- mencing 1st of October, 1821, and ending 30th of September, 1831. America. Europe. Africa. Asia. Years. British Gr. Britain West South Spain Other Total N. Amer. and France. and Por- Madeira. Parts of All All Prov. Indies. Amer. Ireland. tugal. Europe. Parts. Parts. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barrets. Barrels. 1831 150,645 371,876 319,616 879,430 23,991 364 12,811 35,416 2,751 8,305 1,805,205 1830 149,966 281,256 347,290 326,182 56,590 10,222 9,628 36,924 2,609 5,214 1,225,881 1829 91,088 248,236 235,591 221,176 17,464 509 3,779 14,959 221 4,362 837,385 1828 86,680 370,371 308,110 23,258 6,266 294 4,061 54,371 1,737 5,662 860,809 1827 107,420 362,674 271,524 53,129 19 4,293 5,171 52,114 4,909 7,238 865,491 1826 72,901 433,094 285,563 18,357 275 504 6,119 27,716 5,403 7,885 857,820 1825 30,780 429,760 252,786 27,272 102 730 3,597 55,818 7,623 15,438 813,906 1824 39,191 424,359 357,372 70,873 426 939 25,851 47,449 3,883 6,439 996,792 1823 29,681 442,468 198,256 4,252 51 62,387 4,752 2,088 903 11,864 756,702 1822 89,840 436,849 211,039 12,096 228 25,104 21,375 976 3,929 26,429 827,865 1821 131,035 551,396 156,888 94,541 1,175 71,958 26,572 9,074 3,123 10,357 1,056,119 Owing to the diminished demand in England, the exports in the year ending 30th of September, 1832, fell considerably under the level of the 2 preceding years, being only 864,919 barrels, valued at 4,880,623 dollars. There were exported, during the same year, 88,304 bushels of wheat, and 451,230 bushels of Indian -(Papers laid before Congress, 15th of February, 1833.) Mr. Reuse gives (p. 120.) the following pro forma account of the expenses attending the importation of a cargo of 5,000 bushels of wheat from New York, supposing it to cost 1 doll. 12 cents a bushel, which is about its average price. Dollars. L 3. d. L 8. d. 6,000 bushels, at 1 dol. 12 cents per bushel 5,600-00 Brought forward 117 7 I Winnowing, measuring, and delivery on Petty charges, at Is. per last of 10 qra. 2 12 0 board 150-00 Lighterage and porterage to granary, 9d. Brokerage, 1-8 per cent. 28:00 per quarter 19 10 0 Insurance, 6,000 dols. at 1 1-2 per cent. 90-00 Granary rent and fire insurance, my 4 968-00 weeks, at 2s. per 100 qra. per week 220 Turning, at 2s. per 100 quarters 0106 5,860.00 Metage and porterage to the granary, at Commission, 5 per cent. 293.40 4s. per 100 quarters 10 8 0 Do. do. from the do. at 6s. per qr. 11 16 8 6,161.40 Postage and stamps 7 0 Factorage, Is. per quarter 26 0 0 Exchange, 110 per cent. L. 1,260 1 8 Commission, 2 1.2 per cent. L. 8. d. L. & d. Guarantee, 1 - 41-2 per 63 0 11 Freight, 125 tons at 15e. per Interest, 1 - 244 4 2 ton 93 15 0 Primage, 5 per cent. 4 13 9 1,504 5 10 98 8 9 In London. Entry, officer's fees, and city dues 10 0 103-06 quarters Winchester measure, equal to 100 Metage from the ship at 2a. 8d. per last of quarters Imperial. 10 qra. 6184 5,000 bushels Winchester measure, equal to 604 quarters Imperial measure, costing 49a. 9 1-2d. 117 7 1 per quarter in bond 1,503 14 $ * There is a Table of the duties on flour, according to the variations in the price of British wheat, in the valuable work of Mr. Reuss (p. 117.) relating to the trade between Great Britain and America. Digitized by Google CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE. 517 The usual price of wheat in Canada, when there is a demand for the English market, is about 40s. a quarter; but taking it as low as 35s., if we add to this 12s. a quarter as the expenses of carriage and warehousing, it will make its price in Liverpool, when delivered to the consumer, 47s.; and being spring wheat, it is not se valuable, by about 6s. a quarter, as English wheat. The duty on corn im- ported from a British colony being, when the home price is under 67s., only 5s., it is suspected that a good deal of the flour brought from Canada has been really furnished by the United States. It is cer- tain, too, that in the present year (1833) wheat has been sent from Archangel to Canada, in the view (as is alleged) of its being re-shipped, under the low duty, to British ports; the saving of duty being supposed sufficient to countervail the cost of a double voyage across the Atlantic! But grain from the colonies is not admitted into England at the low duty, without the exporters subscribing a declara- tion that it is the produce of such colonies; any wilful inaccuracy in such document being punished by the forfeiture of the corn 80 imported, and of 1001. of penalty; and in addition to this, the corn, flour, &c. must also be accompanied by a certificate of origin subscribed by the collector or comptroller at the port of abipment. It is, therefore, difficult to see how the importers of Russian corn into Canada are to succeed in getting it shipped for England as colonial corn; and we believe that most of it will go to the West Indies. Account of all Corn and Flour imported into Great Britain from Canada, during the Five Years ending with 1832; specifying the Quantities in each Year.-(Parl. Paper, No. 206. Sess. 1832.) Corn and Flour. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. Qre. bus. Qrs. bus. Qrs. bus. Qre. bus. Qrs. bus. Wheat - - - 14,415 4 4,055 5 58,963 6 189,885 1 88,686 6 Barley - - - - - - 209 5 Oats - - - 580 0 61 4 1,223 1 3,750 2 0 2 Peas - - - 1,868 3 1,616 2 1,424 6 461 6 8 0 Indian corn - - 50 7 0 . Total of corn - 16,868 7 5,740 3 61,611 5 194,306 6 88,695 0 Cut. qre. lbs. Cut. qrs. lbs. Cut. qre. lbs. Crot. qrs. lbs. Crot. qre. lbs. Wheat meal or flour - 16,571 0 27 5,579 1 0 61,904 3 13 96,039 1 14 48,809 2 27 Oatmeal - - - - - 519 1 13 142 0 24 1 2 13 Indian meal - - - 1 3 6 Rye meal - - - - - 885 0 15 Total of meal and flour 16,571 0 27 5,581 0 6 62,424 0 26 97,066 2 25 48,811 1 12 Inferences from the above Review of Prices.-We may, we think, satisfactorily conclude, from this pretty lengthened review of the state of the foreign corn trade, that in the event of all restrictions on the importation of corn into our markets being abolished, it could not, in ordinary years, be imported for less than 46s. or 47s. a quarter. But taking it 80 low as 44s., it is plain it could not, in the event of its being charged with a duty of 6s. or 7s., be sold for less than 50s. or 51s. Now, it appears, from the account No. III. page 506., that the average price of wheat in England and Wales for the ten years ending with 1832, amounted to 61s. 83d. a quarter and it will be observed that the crops from 1826 to 1831 were very deficient, and that the importations in those years were unusually large. But without taking this circumstance into account, it is clear, from the previous statements, that the opening of the ports under a fixed duty of 6s. or 7s. could not occasion a reduction of more than 9s. or 10s. a quarter in the prices of the last 10 years; and not more than 7s. or 8s. on the prices of last year (1832). We feel pretty confident that these statements cannot be controverted; and they show, conclusively, how erroneous it is to suppose that the repeal of the existing corn laws, and the opening of the ports for importation, under a duty of 6s. or 7s. would throw a large pro- portion of our cultivated lands into pasture, and cause a ruinous decline in the price of corn. The average price of wheat in England and Wales, in 1802, 1803, and 1804,-years of decided agricultural improvement,-was exactly 61s. a quarter, being almost identical with its price during the last 10 years; while the reduction of taxation, the greater cheapness of labour, and the various improvements that have been made in agriculture since 1804, must enable corn to be raised from the same soils at a less expense now than in that year. It cannot be justly said that 1823 was by any means an unfavourable year for the farmers; and yet the average price of wheat was then only 51s. 9d., being rather less than its probable average price under the system we have ventured to propose. The landlords and farmers may, therefore, take courage. Their prosperity does not depend on restrictive regulations; but is the effect of the fertility of the soil which belongs to them, of the absence of all oppres- sive feudal privileges, and of the number and wealth of the consumers of their produce. The unbounded freedom of the corn trade would not render it necessary to abandon any but the most worthless soils, which ought never to have been broken up; and would, consequently, have but a very slight effect on rent; while it would be in other respects supremely ad- vantageous to the landlords, whose interests are closely identified with those of the other classes. (Corn (PRICE or).-The average prices of British corn during the six years ending with 1838 have been VoL. L-2 X Digitized by Google 518 COTTON. Years. Wheat. Rye. Barley. Oats. Peas. Beans. & d. a. d. s. d 8. d. & d. 8. d 1833 52 11 32 11 27 6 18 5 36 5 33 2 1834 46 2 32 9 29 0 20 11 39 4 35 3 1835 39 4 30 4 29 11 22 0 36 6 36 11 1836 48 6 33 4 32 10 23 1 39 1 38 4 1837 55 10 34 9 30 4 23 1 38 7 37 6 1838 64 7 35 1 31 5 22 5 36 8 37 2 The average prices of wheat, barley, and oats, in England and Wales, during the seven years ending the 31st of December, 1835, were, wheat, 56s. 3d.; barley, 31s. 9d.; and oats, 22s. These prices are important, being those by which the tithe-commutations under the late act are to be determined. Corn (ISLE OF MAN).-All foreign corn imported into the Isle of Man is now subject to the same duties as in the United Kingdom.-(5 & 6 Will. 4. c. 13.) CoRN (PRICE OF IN FRANCE).-We copy from the Times the following Table of the average Prices of Wheat in France at the End of October of each Year, from 1819 to 1836, both inclusive, according to the official Returns, with their Equivalents in English Measure and Money:- Years. Per hect. Per qr. Years. Per bect. Per qr. fr. c. a. d. r. c. d 1819 15 29 35 0 1828 21 69 49 8 1820 19 56 44 9 1829 21 60 40 5 1821 15 99 36 8 1830 23 29 53 4 1822 15 55 35 7 1831 22 88 52 5 1823 15 72 35 11 1832 18 07 42 9 1824 14 46 33 0 1833 15 42 35 4 1825 15 24 34 11 1834 14 56 33 4 1826 15 55 35 7 1835 13 95 32 0 1827 18 77 43 8 1836 17 3 39 0 The average of the whole period is 17fr. 51c. per hectolitre, equal to 40s. Id. per quarter; and it will be remarked that the average of last year is the lowest of the whole period. The average price of British wheat during the second week of October, 1835, was 37s. a quarter, being lower than it has been at any time since 1780.Sup.) [For farther information concerning the American corn trade, see articles FLOUR, and IMPORTS AND Exports.-Am. Ed.] COTTON (Ger. Baumwolle; Du. Katoen, Boomwol; Da. Bomuld; Sw. Bomull; Fr. Coton; It. Colone, Bambagia; Sp. Algodon; Port. Algodao; Rus. Chlobtsehataja buma- ga; Pol. Bawelna; Lat. Gossypium, Bombax; Arab. Kutun; Sans. Kapasa; Hind. Rûhi; Malay, Kapas), a species of vegetable wool, the produce of the Gossypium herbaceum, or cotton shrub, of which there are many varieties. It is found growing naturally in all the tropical regions of Asia, Africa, and America, whence it has been transplanted, and has become an important object of cultivation, in the southern parts of the United States, and to some extent also in Europe. Cotton is distinguished in commerce by its colour, and the length, strength, and fineness of its fibre. White is usually considered as characteristic of secondary quality. Yellow, or a yellowish tinge, when not the effect of accidental wetting or inclement seasons, is con- sidered as indicating greater fineness. There are many varieties of raw cótton in the market, their names being principally de- rived from the places whence they are brought. They are usually classed under the denomi- nations of long and short stapled. The best of the first is the sea-island cotton, or that brought from the shores of Georgia; but its qualities differ so much, that the price of the finest specimens is often four times as great as that of the inferior. The superior samples of Brazil cotton are reckoned among the long stapled. The upland or bowed Georgia cotton forms the largest and best portion of the short stapled class. All the cottons of India are short stapled. The estimation in which the different kinds of cotton wool are held may be learned from the following statement of their prices in Liverpool, on the 1st of November, 1833. Prices of Cotton in Liverpool, lat November, 1833. d. d. d. d Sea-island, stained and saw-ginn'd 8 to 12 Alabama and Mobile, good fair - 87 - If inferior - - 12f 13 good - of 10f middling - - 13 - 131 Upland, inferior - - - 71 8 fair, clean, not fine - 131 14 middling - - - 84 - 8t good,clean,& rather fine 141 15} fair - - - 84 - of fine and clean - - 16 - 20 good fair - - - 9 - of New Orleans, inferior - - 77 81 good - - at of 10} middling - - 81 - 84 Egyptian - - - - 13 - 12t fair - - 81 91 Pernambuco - - - 94 114 good fair - - 91 - 97 Bahia - - - - 9 - 10+ good - - 9's 101 Maranham - - - - of - II very choice gin marks 11 - 12 Demerara - - - - 8+ - 114 Alabama and Mobile, inferior - 71 71 West India - 1 - 8 - of middling - 8 - 84 Carthagena - - - 7 - 8 fair - 87 84 Surat - - - - # it Digitized by Google COTTON. 519 The inferiority of Bengal and Surat cotton is sometimes ascribed to the defective mode in which it is prepared but Mr. Horace H. Wilson doubts whether it can be grown in India of a better kind. The raw cotton of the Indian islands has hitherto been almost entirely con- sumed on the spot. A small quantity of very superior cotton has been imported from New South Wales. The manufacture of cotton has been carried on in Hindostan from the remotest antiquity. Herodotus mentions (lib. iii. c. 106.) that in India there are wild trees that produce a sort of wool superior to that of sheep, and that the natives dress themselves in cloth made of it. -(See, to the same effect, Arrian Indic. c. 16. p. 582.) The manufacture obtained no foot- ing worth mentioning in Europe till last century. 1. Rise and Progress of the British Cotton Manufacture.-The rapid growth and pro- digious magnitude of the cotton manufacture of Great Britain are beyond all question the most extraordinary phenomena in the history of industry. Our command of the finest wool. naturally attracted our attention to the woollen manufacture, and paved the way for that superiority in it to which we have long since attained but when we undertook the cotton manufacture, we had comparatively few facilities for its prosecution, and had to struggle with the greatest difficulties. The raw material was produced at an immense distance from our shores; and in Hindostan and China the inhabitants had arrived at such perfection in the arts of spinning and weaving, that the lightness and delicacy of their finest cloths emu- lated the web of the gossamer, and seemed to set competition at defiance. Such, however, has been the influence of the stupendous discoveries and inventions of Hargraves, Arkwright, Crompton, Cartwright, and others, that we have overcome all these difficulties-that neither the extreme cheapness of labour in Hindostan, nor the excellence to which the natives had attained, has enabled them to withstand the competition of those who buy their cotton and who, after carrying it 5,000 miles to be manufactured, carry back the goods to them. This is the greatest triumph of mechanical genius and what perhaps is most extraordinary, our superiority is not the late result of a long series of successive discoveries and inventions on the contrary, it has been accomplished in a very few years. Little more than half a century has elapsed since the British cotton manufactory was in its infancy and it now forms the principal business carried on in the country,-affording an advantageous field for the accu- mulation and employment of millions upon millions of capital, and of thousands upon thou- sands of workmen The skill and genius by which these astonishing results have been achieved, have been one of the main sources of our power they have contributed in no common degree to raise the British nation to the high and conspicuous place she now occu- pies. Nor is it too much to say that it was the wealth and energy derived from the cotton manufacture that bore us triumphantly through the late dreadful contest, at the same time that it gives us strength to sustain burdens that would have crushed our fathers, and could not be supported by any other people. The precise period when the manufacture was introduced into England is not known; but it is most probable that it was some time in the early part of the 17th century. The first authentic mention is made of it by Lewis Roberts, in hisTreasure of Traffic, published in 1641, where it is stated, " The town of Manchester, in Lancashire, must be also herein remembered, and worthily for their encouragement commended, who buy the yarne of the Irish in great quantity, and weaving it, returne the same again into Ireland to sell. Neither doth their industry rest here; for they buy cotton wool in London that comes first from Cyprus and Smyrna, and at home worke the same, and perfect it into fustians, vermillions, dimities, and other such stuffes, and then return it to London, where the same is vented and sold, and not seldom sent into forrain parts, who have means, at far easier termes, to provide themselves of the said first materials.-(Orig. ed. p. 32.) It is true, indeed, that mention is frequently made by previous writers, and in acts of the legislature passed at a much earlier period,* of " Manchester cottons," " cotton velvets," " fustians," &c. but it is certain that these articles were wholly composed of wool, and had most probably been denominated cot- tons from their having been prepared in imitation of some of the cotton fabrics imported from India and Italy. From the first introduction of the cotton manufacture into Great Britain down to the com- paratively late period of 1773, the weft or transverse threads of the web, only, were of cot- ton; the warp, or longitudinal threads, consisting wholly of linen yarn, principally im- ported from Germany and Ireland. In the first stage of the manufacture, the weavers dispersed in cottages throughout the country, furnished themselves, as well as they could with the warp and weft for their webs, and carried them to market when they were finished but about 1760, a new system was introduced. The Manchester merchants began about that time to send agents into the country, who employed weavers, whom they supplied with foreign or Irish linen yarn for warp, and with raw cotton, which being carded and spun, by In an act of 5 & 6 Edw. 6. (1552), entitled, for the true making of WOOLLEN cloth, it is ordered, " That all cottons called Manchester, Lancaskire, and Cheshire cottons, full wrought for sale, shall be in length," &c. This proves incontestably, that what were then called cottons were made wholly of wool. Digitized by Google 520 COTTON. means of a common spindle or distaff, in the weaver's own family, was then used for welt. A system of domestic manufacture was thus established; the junior branches of the family being employed in the carding and spinning of the cotton, while its head was employed in weaving, or in converting the linen and cotton yarn into cloth. This system, by relieving the weaver from the necessity of providing himself with linen yam for warp and raw cotton for weft, and of seeking customers for his cloth when finished, and enabling him to prosecute his employment with greater regularity, was an obvious improvement on the system that had been previously followed; but it is at the same time clear that the impossibility of mak- ing any considerable division among the different branches of a manufacture so conducted, or of prosecuting them on a large scale, added to the interruption given to the proper business of the weavers, by the necessity of attending to the cultivation of the patches of ground which they generally occupied, opposed invincible obstacles to its progress, se long as it was conducted in this mode. It appears from the Custom-house returns, that the total quantity of cotton wool annually imported into Great Britain, at an average of the five years ending with 1705, amounted to only 1,170,881 lbs. The accounts of the imports of cotton from 1720 to 1770 have not been preserved; but until the last 2 or 3 years of that period the manufacture increased very slowly, and was of very trifling amount. Dr. Percival, of Manchester, who had the best means of being accurately informed on the subject, states that the entire value of all the cot- ton goods manufactured in Great Britain, at the accession of George III. in 1760, was esti- mated to amount to only 200,000/. a year, and the number of persons employed was quite inconsiderable but in 1767, a most ingenious person, James Hargraves, a carpenter at Blackburn in Lancashire, invented the spinning jenny. At its first invention, this admira- ble machine enabled eight threads to he spun with the same facility as one; and it was subsequently brought to such perfection, that a little girl was able to work no fewer than from eighty to one hundred and twenty spindles. The jenny was applicable only to the spinning of cotton for weft, being unable to give to the yarn that degree of firmness and hardness which is required in the longitudinal threads or warp but this deficiency was soon after supplied by the introduction of the spinning- frame,-that wonderful piece of machinery which spins a vast number of threads of any degree of fineness and hardness, leaving to man merely to feed the machine with cotton, and to join the threads when they happen to break. It is not difficult to understand the princi- ple on which this machine is constructed, and the mode of its operation. It consists of two pairs of rollers, turned by means of machinery. The lower roller of each pair is furrowed or fluted longitudinally, and the upper one is covered with leather, to make them take a hold of the cotton. If there were only one pair of rollers, it is clear that a carding of cotton passed between them would be drawn forward by the revolution of the rollers, but it would merely undergo a certain degree of compression from their action. No sooner, however, has the carding, or roving, as it is technically termed, begun to pass through the first pair of rollers, than it is received by the second pair, which are made to revolve with (as the case may be) 3, 4, or 5 times the velocity of the first pair. By this admirable contrivance, the roving is drawn out into a thread of the desired degree of tenuity a twist being given to it by the adaptation of the spindle and fly of the common flax-wheel to the machinery. Such is the principle on which Sir Richard Arkwright constructed his famous spinning frame. It is obvious that it is radically and completely different from the previous methods of spinning, either by the common hand-wheel or distaff, or by the jenny, which is only a modification of the common wheel. Spinning by rollers was an entirely original idea and it is difficult which to admire most-the profound and fortunate sagacity which led to so great a discovery, or the consummate skill and address by which it was 80 speedily perfected, and reduced to practice.* Since the dissolution of Sir Richard Arkwright's patent, in 1785, the progress of discovery and improvement in every department of the manufacture has been most rapid. The mule- jenny-so called from its being a compound of the jenny and the spinning frame-invented by Mr. Crompton, and the power-loom, invented by the Rev. Mr. Cartwright, are machines that have had the most powerful influence on the manufacture and in consequence of their introduction, and of innumerable other inventions and improvements, the prices of cotton There is, in the new edition of the Encyclopadia Britannica, a pretty full account of the life of Sir Richard Arkwright. The question as to his merit as an original discoverer is still undecided. Re- cently, however, it has been ascertained that a patent for spinning by rollers, revolving with different degrees of velocity, was taken out by Messrs. Wyatt and Paul, 80 early as 1738.-(See the excellent Account of the Cotton Manufacture, by Edward Baines, jun,, Esq.) But it does not appear that the inventors had been able to give effect to their happy idea, and all traces of the invention seem to have been lost. The statements in the case printed by Sir Richard Arkwright and his partners in 1782, show, that he was aware of the attempts made in the reign of George II. to spin by machinery but there is no evidence to prove that he was acquainted with the principle on which these attempts had been made, or that he had seen the patent referred to. Undoubtedly, however, the probability seems to be that he had. But admitting this to be the case, it detracts but bittle from the substantial merits of Sir Richard Arkwright If the idea of spinning by rollers did not spring up spontaneously in his mind, he was, at all events, the first who made it available in practice; and showed how it might be rendered a most prolific source of wealth. Digitized by Google COTTON. 521 cloth and yarn have gone on progressively diminishing. But as the demand for cottons has been, owing to their extraordinary cheapness, extended in a still greater degree, the value of the goods produced, and the number of persons employed in the manufacture, are now de- cidedly greater than at any previous period. 2. Imports of Cotton Wool. Countries whence it is imported. Prices, Duties, &c. The following Tables have been partly taken from official documents, and partly from the accounts of merchants of great experience. We believe they may be relied on as approach- ing as near to accuracy as it is possible to attain to in such matters. Account of the Imports and Exports of Cotton Wool to and from Great Britain, from 1781 to 1812, both inclusive. Years. Imported. Exported. Years. Imported. Exported. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. 1781 5,198,778 96,788 1797 23,354,371 609,058 1782 11,828,039 421,229 1798 31,880,641 601,139 1783 9,735,663 177,626 1799 43,379,278 844,671 1784 11,482,083 201,845 1800 56,010,732 4,416,610 1785 18,400,384 407,496 1801 56,004,305 1,860,872 1786 19,475,020 323,153 1802 60,345,600 3,730,480 1787 23,250,268 1,073,381 1803 53,812,284 1,561,053 1788 20,467,436 853,146 1804 61,867,329 503,171 1789 32,576,023 297,837 1805 59,682,406 804,243 1790 31,447,605 844,154 1806 58,176,283 651,867 1791 28,706,675 363,442 1807 74,925,306 2,176,943 1792 34,907,497 1,485,465 1808 43,605,982 1,644,867 1793 19,040,929 1,171,566 1809 92,812,282 4,351,105 1794 24,358,567 1,349,950 1810 132,488,935 8,787,109 1795 26,401,340 1,193,737 1811 91,576,535 1,266,867 1796 32,126,357 694,962 1812 63,025,936 1,740,912 Account of the Imports of Cotton Wool into Great Britain, of the Stocks on hand on the 31st of December, of the Annual and Weekly Delivery for Consumption, the Amount of the Crops of Cotton in North America, and the Average price of Uplands, each Year from 1814 to 1832, both in- lusive.-(Furnished by Mr. Cook, of Mincing Lane.) Total Imports Stock in the Total Deliveries Estimated Amount of Average Years. into Great Ports, for Consump- weekly Crop in Price of Britain. 31st of December. tion. Consumption. North America. Uplands. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. Per lb. 1814 73,728,000 22,272,000 80,640,000 1,664,000 28d. 1815 96,200,000 22,360,000 85,800,000 1,612,000 20fd. 1816 97,310,000 22,355,000 88,631,000 1,709,500 1817 126,210,000 31,034,000 No correct 184d. 108,356,000 2,051,400 20d. 1818 173,940,000 85,800,000 111,800,000 2,132,000 returns. 20d. 1819 137,592,000 88,452,000 108,864,000 2,116,800 13&d. 1820 147,576,000 103,458,000 125,646,000 2,322,000 114d. 1821 126,420,000 106,800,000 126,420,000 2,476,800 110,940,000 9jd. 1822 141,510,000 76,362,000 144,180,000 2,750,100 121,485,000 81d. 1823 183,700,000 105,875,000 147,125,000 3,025,000 136,125,000 84d. 1824 147,420,000 64,428,000 174,174,000 3,166,800 152,880,000 8ld. 1825 244,360,000 123,968,000 169,264,000 3,456,000 169,860,000 11td. 1826 170,520,000 100,548,000 164,640,000 3,410,400 211,680 000 62d. 1827 264,330,000 134,244,000 211,167,000 3,801,600 285,120,000 6ld. 1828 222,750,000 120,582,000 217,701,000 4,158,000 213,840,000 64d. 1829 218,324,000 84,966,000 221,676,000 4,263,000 255,780,000 57d. 1830 259,856,000 95,360,000 242,000,000 4,768,000 292,040,000 6rd. 1831 280,080,000 84,090,000 257,500,000 5,017,700 311,655,000 5}d. 1832 270,690,000 73,560,000 259,950,000 5,330,500 296,245,000 6rd. In 1786, the supplies of cotton wool were derived from the following sources :- lbs. From the British West Indies - - - - 5,800,000 French and Spanish colonies - - - 5,500,000 Dutch colonies - - - - - 1,600,000 Portuguese colonies - - - - 2,000,000 Smyrna and Turkey - - - - 5,000,000 19,900,000 lbs. Previously to 1790, North America did not supply us with a single pound weight of raw cotton. A little had, indeed, been raised in some of the Southern States, for domestic use, before the revolutionary war, but the quantity was quite inconsiderable. In 1791, it began, for the first time, to be exported ; the trifling quantity of 189,316 lbs. having been shipped in the course of that year, and 138,328 lbs. in 1792. Such was the late and feeble begin- ning of the American cotton trade. There is nothing in the history of industry to compare with its subsequent increase, unless it be the growth of the manufacture in this country. American cotton is generally known by the names of sea-island and upland. The first, which is the finest cotton imported into Britain, grows on the small sandy islands, and along the low sandy shores of Carolina and Georgia. It is long in the staple, of an even silky texture, and is easily separated from the seed. Unluckily, however, it can be raised only in certain situations so that its quantity is limited, and has not, in fact, been increased since 1805. The upland, of which the supply may be considered as unlimited, though of vary- ing qualities, is all short stapled and its separation from the seed is so very difficult, that if 2 X 2 66 Digitized by Google 522 COTTON. it be done by the hand, the cotton is hardly worth the labour. This, however, was the only way in which it could be made available for home use, or exportation, previously to 1793 = and had any one then ventured to predict that 10,000,000 lbs. of upland cotton would,ever be exported, he would have been looked upon as a visionary dreamer. But the genius of Mr. Eli Whitney did for the planters of the Southern States what the genius of Arkwright and Watt did for the manufacturers of England. He invented a machine by which the wool of the upland cotton is separated from the seed with the greatest facility and expedi- tion, and by 80 doing laid the foundations of a new and most important branch of industry, and doubled the wealth and means of employment of his countrymen !-(Pitkin's Statis- tics of the United States, p. 109. ed. 1835.) Whitney's invention came into operation in 1793, and in 1794, 1,601,760 lbs., and, in 1795, 5,276,300 lbs. of cotton were exported. And SO astonishing has been the growth of cotton in the interval, that the exports from the United States in 1837 amounted to the prodigious quantity of 444,211,537 lbs. of which 438,924,566 lbs. were upland ! ACCOUNT of the Quantities of Cotton Wool imported into the United Kingdom during the Six Years ending with 1837, specifying the Quantities brought from different Countries, the Total Quantities exported, and the Quantities left for Consumption.-(Compiled from Parl. Papers.) Countries. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1835. 1838. 1837. Cotton wool from foreign countries, viz.- lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. United States of America 219,756,753 937,506,758 269,203,073 284,455,812 289,615,692 320,651,716 Brazil 20,109,560 28,463,821 19,291,396 24,9-6,409 27,501,272 20,940,145 Turkey and Egypt 9,113,890 967,282 855,167 5,73x,966 5,426,721 7,851,540 Other foreign countries 598,048 1,696,108 2,260,852 5,207,389 6,734,413 4,616,329 Cotton wool from British possessions, viz- East Indies and Mauritius 35,178,625 32,755,164 32,920,865 41,474,909 75,957,887 51,577,197 British West Indies, the growth of 1,708,764 1,663,166 1,672,211 1,496,517 1,312,806 1,199,163 Di:to, ditto, imported from 331,664 431,696 624,314 319,753 401,531 396,540 Other British possessions 35,221 162,862 47,546 24,208 8,735 23,654 Total quantities imported 286,832,525 303,656,837 326,875,425 363,702,968 406,959,067 407,256,7-3 Quantities exported 18,027,940 17,363,882 24,461.983 32,779,734 31,739,763 39,722,031 Left for consumption 268,804,585 296,292,955 302,414,462 330,923,229 375,219,294 367,564,752 It has been the practice for many years past to levy a duty on cotton wool, when import- ed. The policy of such a duty is very questionable; and it would be quite intolerable, were it not kept at a low rate. For a number of years previously to 1831, it amounted (on foreign cotton) to 6 per cent. ad valorem; but, in order to make up, in part, at least, for the loss of revenue caused by the repeal of the duty on printed cottons-(see CALICO), it was raised in that year to 5s. 10d. a cwt. Such a duty would have materially affected the im- ports of the inferior species of cotton, and the price of coarse goods; and being, in conse- quence, justly objected to, it was reduced in 1833 to 2s. 11d. a cwt. The duty on cotton from a British possession is little more than nominal, being only 4d. a cwt. At an average of 1836 and 1837, the duties on cotton produced 440,3321. a year. The subjoined statement is taken from the circular of George Holt and Co., eminent cot- ton brokers at Liverpool, dated 31st of December, 1838. It contains some additional and in- structive details. Its near agreement with the previous statements affords a strong proof of their and its accuracy. Statement of the Consumption, Exportation, &c. of the different Sorts of Cotton Wool, in and from Great Britain, in different Years, from 1816 to 1838, both inclusive. Average weekly consump- 1816. 1820. 1825. 1830. 1834. 1835. 1836. 1837. 1838. tion. Upland - 2,918 3,713 5,452 5,742 5,896 4,737 4,438 5,506 Orleans and Tennessee 990 1,192 2,442 4,756 7,352 7,823 9 204 10,223 11,742 Sea-island - 409 360 460 498 354 379 310 317 Total United States 4,036 4,519 6,515 10,668 13,592 14,073 14,370 14,971 17,564 Brazil 1,599 2,408 2,502 3,602 2,665 2,339 2,508 2,493 2,460 Egypt - - 891 508 131 446 644 779 ! East India 207 1,518 1,096 940 1,033 1,069 1,492 1,639 1,760 Demerara, West India, &c. 656 634 527 284 246 421 433 461 639 Total 6,488 8,979 11,531 16,002 17,667 18,348 19,452 20,333 23,204 Packages annually con- sumed 337,400 466,900 599,600 832,100 918,700 954,100 1,011,500 1,057,300 1,206,600 Average wt. of packages consumed, in lbs. 263 258 278 298 380 333 343 346 346 Weekly consumption in packages, average 346 5,122 6,945 9,634 14,320 17,508 18,348 19,283 20,333 23,204 lbs. Average wt. of packages 256 249 270 300 337 331 342 347 350 imported, in lbs. Packages exported 29,300 28,400 72,800 33,400 86,800 102,800 105,900 123,400 103,300 Lbs. weight annually im- ported in millions and tenths } 93-9 143.9 922-4 261.2 320-6 361-7 410-8 408-2 501-0 Lbs. WI. consumed, do. 88-7 120-3 166.8 247-6 303-4 3181 347.4 365-7 416-7 Lbs. weight in ports, 31st of Dec. do. 19-2 110-5 107.0 91-4 63-2 73.3 92.0 82.1 110-1 Lbs. weight in Great Bri- inmin - 187-0 115.5 118.8 82.3 89 6 116-3 115-6 160-9 tain do. Average price per lb. of 18 1-4d. 1.2d. 11-6d. 6-9d. 8-6d. 10 1-4d. 9-85d. 7d. 7d. uplands in Liverpool Do. do. Pernams 26d. 15 1.2d. 15-1d. 8 1-4d. 11.9d. 14.1d. 12-85d. 9 3-4d. 9375d Do. do. Surats 15 1-4d. 8 1-2d. 8-9d. 5d. 6-6d. 7 1-2d. 6 3-4d. 4.85d. N.B. Messrs. Holt and Co. estimate the average weight of the packages imported in 1838 at 332 lbs. per bag Upland; 406 lbs. Orleans and Alabama ; 320 lbs. Sea-island; 174 lbs. Brazil; 220 lbs. Egyp- tian; 350 lbs. East Indian; and 146 lbs. West Indian. Digitized by Google COTTON. 523 We subjoin, from Burns' Glance, a tabular statement, annually published at Manchester, and admitted to be drawn up with great care, an account of the cotton spun in Great Britain and Ireland in 1838, and how that spun in England was disposed of, with several other interesting particulars. Statement of Cotton spun in England, Scotland, and Ireland, in 1838, showing the Quantity of Yarn produced, and how that spun in England was disposed of. Number of Average Weekly Consumption Bags Weight of Bags Total Weight in lbs. of describing consumed. in lbs. each sort. Great Britain. American cotton 938,168 373 349,936,664 18,041.36 Brazil ditto 147,392 171 25,204,032 2,834.24 Egyptian ditto 40,273 284 11,437,532 774.25 East India ditto 94,468 363 34,291,884 1,816.36 West India ditto 16,519 316 5,220,004 317-35 Total number of bags consumed 1,236,820 346 426,090,116 23,785 Allowed for loss in spinning 1 3-4 oz. per lb. 46,603,606 Total quantity spun in England and Scotland - 379,486,510 Deduct quantity spun in Scotland - 34,823,466 Total quantity spun in England in 1838 - 344,663,044 How disposed of. Exported in yarn during the year 113,753,197 Ditto in thread 2,362,983 Ditto in manufactured goods 120,784,629 Estimated quantity of yarn sent to Scotland and Ireland 6,875,952 Exported in mixed manufactures, not stated In the above-named articles, consumed in cotton banding, healds, candle and lamp wick, waddings, flocks, calender bowls, paper, umbrellas, hats, and loss in manufacturing goods 16,753,000 Balance left for home consumption and stock, 1st January, 1339 84,133,283 344,663,044 Ditto ditto ditto 1838 63,657,902 Ditto ditto ditto 1837 43,486,686 Ditto ditto ditto 1836 49,932,800 Ireland. Gross weight of cotton spun in Ireland in 1838 4,412,860 Allowed for loss in spinning 1 3-4 oz. per lb. 482,656 Total quantity of yarn spun in Ireland in 1838 3,930,204 In 1832 the quantity spun was 222,596,907 lbs, giving a weekly supply of 4,280,709 lbs. Mr. Burns estimates the quantity spun per spindle, per week, at 84 oz., making the total number of spindles employed in England and Wales, in 1832, 7,949,208. Those employed in Scotland, during the same year, are estimated, in the same way, at 881,020. Mr. Burns further calculates the number of looms employed in England and Wales, in 1832, at 203,703. The consumption of flour in the manufacture is much greater than any one not pretty well acquainted with it would readily suppose. The average quantity required for each loom is estimated at 4 lbs. per week; making the total annual consumption in England and Wales, in 1832, 42,301,584 lbs., or 215,824 barrels of 196 lbs. each! Account of the Consumption of the various Descriptions of Cotton in the undermentioned Countries in 1837, and of the Stocks on hand on the 1st of January, 1838, in Bales.-(From the Circular of Messrs. Colman and Stolterhoft, Liverpool.) U. States. Brazil. W. Indies. E. Indies. Egypt. Total. Consumption in Great Britain 805,648 129,605 29,228 85,923 39,079 1,089,493 Ditto France 255,805 22,638 22,437 - 56,809 357,689 Ditto Holland 18,709 409 3,705 17,006 1,063 40,891 Ditto Belgium 22,739 1,119 2,637 17.016 40 43,550 Ditto Germany 27,892 3,610 10,971 19,943 315 62,731 Ditto Trieste 18,332 917 - 1,056 75,228 95,533 Shipped from Great Britain to places not mentioned 11,400 2,700 500 11,250 - 25,850 Total Consumption, 1837 1,160,524 160,998 69,478 152,193 172,534 1,715,727 Stock 1st Jan. 1838. Great Britain 88,160 28,460 14,520 109,210 18,990 259,340 France 28,938 2,217 11,863 - 20,504 63,542 Holland 4,515 653 3,132 8,510 575 17,685 Belgium 1,260 113 1,151 2,008 200 4,722 Germany 6,265 3,101 6,087 4,700 IS 20,166 Trieste 5,165 712 - 112 14,250 20,239 Total 134,613 35,256 36,753 124,540 54,532 385,694 3. Value of the British Cotton Manufacture in 1833. Amount of Capital, and Number of Persons employed in it.-It would be very desirable to be able to form a tolerably accu- rate estimate of the present value of the cotton manufacture, and of the number of persons employed in its different departments; but the data on which such estimates are founded being necessarily very loose, it is impossible to arrive at any thing like precision. Perhaps, however, the following calculations are not very wide of the mark. In 1817, Mr. Kennedy, one of the best informed cotton manufacturers in the empire, in a paper published in the Manchester Transactions, estimated the number of persons employed in the spinning of cotton in Great Britain at 110,763; the aid they derived from steam engines as equal to the power of 20,768 horses; and the number of spindles in motion at 6,645,833. M. Kennedy further estimated the number of hanks of yarn annually produced at 3,987,500,000; and the quantity of coal consumed in their production at 500,479 tons. We subjoin Mr. Kennedy's statement for the year 1817:- Digitized by Google 524 COTTON. Raw cotton converted into yara in the United Kingdom 110,000,000 lbs. Loss in spinning estimated at 1 1-2 OK, per lb. 10,312,500 Quantity of yarn produced 99,687,500 the Number of banks, taking the average at 40 per lb. 3,987,500,000 Number of spindles employed, each spindle being supposed to produce 2 banks per day, at 300 working days in the year 6,645,933 Number of persons employed in spiming, supposing each to produce 120 banks per day 110,783 Horse power employed, equal in number to 20,763 Four ounces and a half of coal estimated to produce one bank of No. 40; and 130 lbs. of coal per day equal to one horse power. But the cotton manufacture has increased rapidly since 1817. Mr. Huskisson stated, in his place in the House of Commons, in March, 1824, that he believed the total value of the cotton goods then annually manufactured in Great Britain amounted to the prodigious sam of thirty-three and a half millions; and we believe we shall be about the mark, if we estimate their present value at thirty-four millions! If, indeed, we took the increase in the imports of the raw material as a test of the increase in the value of the manufacture, we should estimate it a great deal higher. But it will be afterwards seen that the improvements that have been made in the different processes, and the fall in the price of raw cotton, have had so powerful an influence in reducing the price of the goods brought to market, that, not- withstanding the increase of their quantity, their total value must have remained nearly constant. The average annual quantity of cotton wool imported, after deducting the exports, may be taken at about 260,000,000 lbs. weight. It is supposed, that of this quantity about 20,000,000 lbs. are used in a raw or half manufactured state, leaving a balance of 240,000,000 for the purposes of manufacturing, the cost of which may be taken, on an average, at 7d. per lb. Deducting, therefore, from the total value of the manufactured goods, or 34,000,000L, the value of the raw material, amounting to 7,000,000L, there remains 27,000,000L which, of course, forms the fund whence the wages of the persons employed in the various depart- ments of the manufacture, the profits of the capitalists, the sums required to repair the wear and tear of buildings, machinery, &c., the expense of coals, &c. &c., must all be derived. If, then, we had any means of ascertaining how this fund is distributed, we should be able, by taking the average of wages and profits, to form a pretty accurate estimate of the number of labourers, and the quantity of capital employed. But here, unfortunately, we have only probabilities and analogies to guide us. It may, however, be confidently assumed, in the first place, that in consequence of the extensive employment of highly valuable machinery in all the departments of the cotton manufacture, the proportion which the profits of capital, and the sum to be set aside to replace its wear and tear, bears to the whole value of the manufacture, must be much larger than in any other department of industry. We have heard this proportion variously estimated, at from a fourth to a half of the total value of the manufactured goods, exclusive of the raw material; and as the weight of authority seems to be pretty much divided on the subject, we shall take an intermediate proportion. Assuming, therefore, that the profits of the capital employed in the cotton manufacture, the wages of superintendence, &c., the sum required to replace the wear and tear of machinery, buildings, &c., and to furnish coals, &c., amount together to one third of the value of the manufactured goods, exclusive of the raw material, or to 9,000,000/., a sum of 18,000,000/. will remain as the wages of the spinners, weavers, bleachers, &c. engaged in the manufacture and taking, inasmuch as a large proportion of children under 16 years of age are employed, the average rate of wages at only 22/. 10s. a year, we shall have (dividing 18,000,000 by 22.5), 800,000 as the total number of persons directly employed in the different departments of the manufacture. We should mistake, however, if we supposed that this number, great as it certainly is, comprised the whole number of persons to whom the cotton manufacture furnishes sub- sistence, exclusive of the capitalists. Of the sum of 9,000,000L set apart as the profit of the capitalists, and the sum required to furnish coal, and to defray the wear and tear of machinery, &c., a large proportion must annually be laid out in paying the wages of en- gineers, machine-makers, iron-founders, smiths, joiners, masons, bricklayers, &c. It is not easy to say what this proportion may amount to; but taking it at a third, or 3,000,000L, and supposing the rate of wages of each individual to average 30/. a year, the total number employed in the various capacities alluded to will be (3,000,000 divided by 30) 100,000 and a sum of 6,000,000L will remain to cover the profits of the capital employed in the various branches of the manufacture, to repair the different parts of the machinery and buildings as they wear out, and to buy coal, flour, &c. The account will, therefore, stand as under - Total value of every description of cotton goods annually manufactured in Great Britain £34,000,000* Raw material, 240,000,000 lbs. at 7d. per lb. - - £ 7,000,000 Wages of 870,000 weavers, spinners, bleachers, &c. at 221. 20s. a year each - 18,000,000 Wages of 100,000 engineers, machine-makers, smiths, masons, joiners, &c. at 30/. a year each 1 3,000,000 Profits of the manufacturers, wages of superintendence, sums to purchase the materials of machinery, coals, &c. - - 6,000,000 34,000,000 * Mr. Kennedy, to whose opinion, on a matter of this sort, the greatest deference is due, considers this estimate as a great deal too high. We cannot, however, bring ourselves to believe that such is Digitized by Google COTTON. 525 , The capital employed may be estimated as follows :- Capital employed in the purchase of the raw material - - - - - 4,000,000 Capital employed in payment of wages - - - - - - 10,000,000 Capital vested in spinning-mills, power and hand looms, workshops, warehouses, stocks on hand, &c. - - 20,000,000 £34,000,000 Now, this sum of 34,000,000L, supposing the interest of capital, inclusive of the wages of superintendence, &c., to amount to 10 per cent., will yield a sum of 3,400,000/.; which being deducted from the 6,000,000L profits, &c., leaves 2,600,000L to purchase materials to repair the waste of capital, the flour required for dressing, the coals necessary in the employ- ment of the steam engines, to effect insurances, and to meet all other outgoings. The aggregate amount of wages, according to the above estimate, is 21,000,000l, but there are not many departments of the business in which wages have to be advanced more than 6 months before the article is sold. We, therefore, incline to think that 10,000,000/. is a sufficient (perhaps too great) allowance for the capital employed in the payment of wages. If we are nearly right in these estimates, it will follow-allowance being made for old and infirm persons, children, &c. dependent on those actually employed in the various depart- ments of the cotton manufacture, and in the construction, repair, &c. of the machinery and buildings required to carry it on-that it must furnish, on the most moderate computation, subsistence for from 1,200,000 to 1,400,000 persons And for this new and most prolific source of wealth we are indebted partly and principally, as already shown, to the extraordi- nary genius and talent of a few individuals; but, in a great degree, also, to that security of property and freedom of industry which give confidence and energy to all who embark in industrious undertakings, and to that universal diffusion of intelligence which enables those who carry on any work to press every power of nature into their service, and to avail them- selves of productive capacities of which a less instructed people would be wholly ignorant. The effect that the sudden opening of so vast and profitable a field for the employment of capital and labour has had on the population of the different towns of Lancashire and Lanarkshire, the districts where the cotton manufacture is principally carried on-has been most striking. In 1774, for example, the parish of Manchester is estimated to have con- tained 41,032 inhabitants-a number which was swelled, in 1831, to 187,019, having more than quadrupled in the space of 57 years The population of Preston, in 1780, is said not to have exceeded 6,000; whereas it amounts, at present, to 33,112. In like manner, the population of Blackburn has increased from 11,980 in 1801, to 27,091, in 1831 that of Bolton has increased in the same period, from 17,416 to 41,195; that of Wigan, from 10,989 to 20,774, &c. But the progress of Liverpool is most extraordinary, and can be matched only by the progress of one or two cities in the United States. Liverpool is not properly one of the seats of the cotton manufacture ; but it is, notwithstanding, mainly in- debted to it for the unparallelled rapidity of its growth. It is the grand emporium of the cotton district-the port where almost all the raw cotton, and the various foreign articles required for the employment and subsistence of the persons engaged in the manufacture, are imported, and whence the finished goods are exported to other countries. It has, therefore, become a place of vast trade, and is now, in that respect, second only to London. In 1700, according to the best accounts that can be obtained, the population of Liverpool amounted to only 5,145 in 1750, it had increased to 18,450 in 1770, it amounted to 34,050. The cotton manufacture now began rapidly to extend, and, in consequence, the population of Liverpool increased, in 1801, to 77,653 in 1821, to 118,972; and, in 1831, it amounted to 165,175. The progress of population in Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire has been equally striking. In 1780, the city of Glasgow contained only 42,832 inhabitants; in 1801, that number had increased to 83,769; and, in 1831, it amounted to nearly 203,000. The growth of Paisley is similar. In 1782, it contained, inclusive of the Abbey Parish, only 17,700 in- habitants; in 1801, it contained 36,722 in 1821, it contained about 47,000 and, in 1831, 57,466. Since the repeal of the absurd system of Irish protecting duties, in 1823, the cotton ma- nufacture has begun to make considerable progress in Ireland. This is proved by a state- really the case. It appears from the official accounts, that the real or declared value of the cotton fabrics exported in 1832 amounted to 12,622,8801., and that of the twist to 4,726,7961. Now it appears from the statements in Burns' Glance, and other good authorities, that the weight of the cotton yarn retained at home to be wrought up into fabrics for domestic use is about 10 or 12 per cent. greater than the weight of the yarn exported in the shape of manufactured goods. But without taking this greater weight into account, if we suppose that the fabrics retained at home are nearly equal in point of quality to those exported, the value of the manufacture must be at least 30,000,000L., viz. fabrics exported 12,622,000!., twist exported 4,721,000/., and fabrics consumed at home 12,622,0001. But a very large proportion of our exports consist of comparatively coarse fabrics destined for the West Indies, Brazil, &c.; and we have been assured by those well acquainted with the trade, that the value of the fabrics made use of at home cannot be less, at an average, than from 30 to 40 per cent. above the value of those exported; but taking it at only 30 per cent., it will make the total value of the manufacture 34,000,000L. We do not well see how this statement can be shaken. The exporters have no motive to exaggerate the real value of the goods and yarn sent abroad; but unless they have done so to a very great extent, it will be difficult to impeach the above conclusions. Digitized by Google 526 COTTON. ment laid before the House of Commons, which shows that the number of yards of cotton goods, manufactured chiefly from yarn sent from England, exported from Ireland to Great Britain, in 1822, amounted to 406,687 ; in 1823, to 556,646 in 1824, to 3,840,699 and in 1825, it amounted to no less than 6,418,645 -having increased in nearly a twelvefold proportion in 2 years, by the abolition of duties that were intended to protect the industry of Ireland But the unsettled state of the country and the want of coal are insuperable obstacles to the continued increase of the manufacture. Exports of Cotton Goods and Yarn. Fall of Prices, &c.-For a very long period the woollen manufacture was the great staple of the country. But the progress of improvement in the spinning and manufacturing of cotton, since 1770, being so much more rapid than any that has taken place in the woollen manufacture, the value of the former is now vastly greater than that of the latter. It appears, from the accounts of the declared or real values of the different sorts of exported commodities given by the Custom-house, that the exports of cotton goods, including yarn, amount at an average, to about 17,000,000Z. sterling, being about half the value of the whole manufacture; and form of themselves about two thirds of the total value of all the wove fabrics exported from the empire. We subjoin a statement, compiled from the Annual Finance Accounts, of the official and the declared or real values of the cotton manufactured goods, cotton yarn, woollen and silk manufactures, and the totals of all other articles of British produce and manufacture, exported from Great Britain to all parts of the world (except Ireland) annually since 1816. Manufactures. Cotton Total of Wove Total of all other Years. Manufactures. Cotton Yarn. Fabrica. Articles. Woollen. Linen. Silk. £ £ £ £ £ £ £ 1816 16,335,194 1,380,486 5,586,364 1,559,367 161,874 25,023,215 9,751,305 1817 20,357,147 1,125,257 5,676,920 1,943,194 152,734 29,255,253 9,980,144 1818 21,627,936 1,296,776 6,344,100 2,153,309 167,559 31,589,683 10,373,814 1819 16,876,206 1,585,753 4,602,270 1,547,352 126,809 24,738,390 8,185,185 1820 20,704,600 2,022,153 4,363,973 1,935,186 118,370 29,144,283 8,673,753 1821 21,630,493 1,898,695 5,500,922 2,303,443 136,402 31,478,955 8,715,938 Official Values. 1822 24,566,920 2,353,217 5,943,612 2,594,783 141,007 35,599,539 7,958,950 1823 24,117,549 2,425,419 5,539,789 2,654,098 141,320 34,878,175 8,266,291 1824 27,170,107 2,984,329 6,136,092 3,283,403 159,648 39,733,579 8,296,457 1825 26,597,574 2,897,706 5,929,342 2,709,772 150,815 38,285,209 8,167,812 1826 21,445,565 3,748,526 5,041,585 2,056,760 106,738 32,399,174 7,932,830 1827 29,203,138 3,979,759 5,979,701 2,808,081 173,334 42,144,013 9,132,435 1828 28,989,976 4,485,841 5,720,079 3,118,270 178,871 42,493,037 9,536,113 1829 31,810,436 5,458,985 5,361,997 3,003,394 220,436 45,855,248 9,610,475 1830 35,395,400 5,655,569 5,551,644 3,101,031 435,045 50,148,689 10,343,948 1831 33,682,475 5,674,600 6,187,979 3,662,945 469,076 49,704,075 9,366,048 1832 37,060,750 6,725,505 6,666,700 2,649,343 474,509 53,576,807 11,005,230 1816 13,072,757 2,628,448 7,844,855 1,452,667 480,522 25,479,252 14,849,690 1817 14,178,022 2,014,182 7,163,472 1,703,632 408,523 25,467,827 14,869,292 1818 16,643,579 2,385,305 8,143,193 1,949,815 499,175 29,621,067 15,567,188 1819 12,388,833 2,516,783 5,986,807 1,391,245 376,798 22,660,467 11,588,029 1820 13,843,569 2,826,643 5,583,430 1,653,804 374,114 24,278,570 11,290,109 1821 13,786,957 2,307,830 6,461,567 1,981,465 373,938 24,911,759 10,914,223 Declared Values. 1822 14,534,253 2,700,437 6,488,523 2,192,772 381,455 26,297,429 9,879,468 1823 13,751,415 2,625,947 5,634,137 2,095,574 350,880 24,457,952 10,233,172 1824 15,240,006 3,135,496 6,011,534 2,442,440 442,582 27,272,059 10,301,359 1825 15,034,138 3,206,729 6,193,775 2,130,705 296,677 26,862,024 11,221,749 1826 10,522,357 3,491,268 4,982,898 1,489,647 168,453 20,652,623 10,195,015 1827 13,956,825 3,545,568 5,277,861 1,895,186 236,092 24,911,532 11,484,807 1828 13,545,638 3,594,945 5,120,226 2,000,033 255,755 24,516,647 11,636,151 1829 13,420,544 3,974,039 4,656,809 1,885,831 267,192 24,204,415 11,008,458 1830 15,203,713 4,132,258 4,847,398 1,926,256 519,919 26,629,544 11,061,758 1831 13,207,947 3,974,989 5,385,811 2,301,803 578,260 25,448,810 11,203,884 1832 12,622,880 4,721,796 5,475,298 1,655,478 529,808 25,005,260 11,040,767 It will be observed from the above Table, that while the official value of the cotton goods exported has been rapidly increasing, their declared or real value has been about stationary, or has rather diminished. This circumstance has given rise to a great deal of irrelevant die- cussion ; and has even been referred to as proving that the manufacture is in a declining state ! But it proves precisely the contrary. It shows that the decline in the price of the raw material, and the improvements in the machinery and processes used in the manufac- ture have been so great, that we are now able to export and sell with a profit, (for, unless such were the case, the exportation would very speedily cease,) nearly double the quantity of cotton goods we exported in 1816, for about the same price. Had the Table been car- ried further back, the result would have been still more striking. In illustration of this view of the matter, we beg to subjoin the following statement of the production and cost of the different species of cotton yarn in England, in 1812 and 1830. It was furnished by Mr. Kennedy, of Manchester, to the committee on the East India Com- pany's affairs, so that no doubt can be entertained of its accuracy. Digitized by Google COTTON. 527 Hanks per Day, per Spindle. Price of Cotton, and Waste Labour per lb." Cost per lb. per lb. Description of Yarn. 1812 1830. 1812. 1830. 1812. 1880. 1812. 1880. No. 8. d. 8. d. a. d. s. d. 2. d. 8. d. 40 de 2.75 1 6 0 7 1 0 0 71 2 6 1 21 60 15 2.5 2 0 0 10 1 6 1 of 3 6 . 1 10+ 80 1.5 2. 2 2 0 111 2 2 1 71 4 4 2 64 100 1.4 18 2 4 1 11 2 10 2 It 5 2 3 41 120 1.25 1.65 2 6 1 4 3 6 2 8 6 0 4 0 150 1. 1:33 2 10 1 8 6 6 4 11 9 4 6 7 200 0.75 0.90 3 4 3 0 16 8 11 6 20 0 14 6 250 0.05 0-06 4 0 3 8 31 0 24 6 35 0 28 2 The following Table is interesting, from its exhibiting the state of our trade in wrought cottons with the different countries of the world. It sets the importance of the markets of Brazil, Chili, and the other states of South America, as outlets for our cottons, in a very striking point of view. Account of the Exports of Cotton Goods and Yarn from the United Kingdom in 1837 specifying the Quantity and declared Value of those shipped for each Country. White or Plain Printed or Dyed Hosiery and Small Twist and Yarn. Cottons. Cottons. Wares. Total Countries to which exported. Declared Value. Yards. Declared Yards. Declared Declared Declared Value. Pounds. Value. Value. Value. L. L. L. L. L. Russia 980,779 40,203 145,760 7,590 9,106 24,108,593 1,612,956 1,669,855 Sweden 62,939 1,717 48,552 1,850 708 734,336 55,060 59,335 Norway 164,634 4,081 347,809 9,964 1,682 197,700 10,474 26,201 Denmark 45,992 1,033 71,569 1,369 88 57,470 2,870 5,357 Prussia - - 4,924 502 502 Germany 14,203,855 294,378 28,967,374 713,771 162,263 34,272,607 2,177,823 3,348,235 Holland 16,382,581 341,448 11,588,241 322,400 50,205 15,993,072 1,386,388 2,100,441 Belgium 865,339 32,271 1,998,160 72,528 102,233 67,397 8,752 215,784 France 1,169,753 23,683 1,269,924 35,529 93,768 94,707 31,361 184,344 Portugal, Proper 15,966,118 268,189 15,748,216 369,712 21,084 323,262 23,612 682,597 Azores 541,605 11,789 731,946 18,740 838 17,840 786 32,153 Madeira 519,315 8,255 649,954 12,767 1,068 1,358 78 25,168 Spain and the Balearic Islands 151,380 4,047 205,986 5,694 221 687 45 10,007 Canaries 471,917 10,763 435,599 12,234 924 1,071 63 23,984 Gibraltar 13,956,830 310,777 12,681,183 375,367 17,271 225,939 14,729 718,144 Italy and the Italian Islands 24,976,414 526,881 17,631,057 481,915 40,910 8,775,028 477,882 1,527,588 Malta 1,108,032 21,638 562,773 17,364 2,208 176,260 9,729 50,939 Ionian Islands 1,497,260 26,314 841,686 19,955 790 297,980 14,303 61,362 Morea and Greek Islands 9,054 256 67,794 2,664 33 1,800 100 3,053 Turkey 23,727,096 482,438 9,423,139 288,230 2,297 3,527,538 180,225 953,190 Syria and Palestine 5,140 330 330 Egypt 5,559,900 107,125 693,240 23,207 349 660,700 41,372 172,053 Tripoli, Tunis, Algiers, and Morocco 2,928,580 41,552 253,009 4,892 407 46,851 Western Coast of Africa 607,843 15,783 4,365,569 119,540 391 2,982 395 136,109 Cape of Good Hope 2,293,943 54,567 3,136,936 80,483 9,389 9,314 899 145,338 St. Helena 18,816 519 5,326 141 19 679 Mauritius 3,053,808 78,395 2,237,689 73,556 7,749 10,400 468 160,108 East India Company's territories and Ceylon 46,366,175 1,040,018 17,847,458 488,231 30,444 8,478,021 602,293 2,160,986 Sumatra, Java, and other Islands of the Indian Sea 5,952,848 144,962 2,620,300 97,620 5,931 127,620 7,858 256,371 Philippine Islands 473,370 10,075 613,421 17,695 1,115 28,885 China 8,519,245 193,075 2,445,178 79,300 1,012 1,873,965 103,908 377,295 New South Wales, Van Diemen's Land, and other Australian Settlements 1,275,348 36,561 1,335,325 44,889 15,809 13,625 781 98,040 British North American Colonies 6,319,864 161,392 7,950,884 222,001 39,068 260,732 14,307 436,768 British West Indies 19,695,492 417,580 17,998,452 465,449 43,812 55,549 4,487 931,328 Hayti 1,246,463 28,421 1,612,897 53,270 2,751 - - 84,442 Cuba and other foreign West Indian Colonies 6,798,703 148,024 11,966,502 293,865 11,608 6,250 309 453,806 United States of America 5,471,788 187,585 12,010,067 407,237 117,572 219,712 13,359 725,753 States of Central and South America Mexico 2,713,901 55,651 4,227,065 143,805 13,339 2,654,867 144,489 357,284 Columbia 1,436,553 32,630 2,675,164 58,136 4,085 188,283 12,488 107,339 Brazil 25,387,191 436,192 23,380,427 551,258 26,987 560 48 1,014,485 States of the Rio de la Plata 10,923,196 207,714 9,260,258 237,557 18,818 5,734 364 464,473 Chili 7,825,718 150,492 9,356,806 240,267 18,217 - - 408,970 Peru 3,655,774 88,013 5,641,351 165,804 14,300 - - 268,117 Isles of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Man, &c. 833,704 38,975 159,360 4,334 21,323 7,255 376 65,008 Totals 286,164,256 6,085,789 245,209,407 6,642,200 912,192 103,455,138 6,955,942 20,596,123 Such being the vast extent and importance of the cotton manufacture, the probability of our preserving our ascendancy in it becomes a very interesting topic of inquiry. But it is obvious, that a great deal of conjecture must always insinuate itself into our reasonings with respect to the future state of any branch of manufacturing industry. They are all liable to be affected by so many contingent and unforeseen circumstances, that it is impossible to predicate, with any thing like certainty, what may be their condition a few years hence. But abstracting from the effect of national struggles and commotions, which can neither be foreseen nor calculated, we do not think that there is any thing in our state, or in that of the different commercial and manufacturing countries of the world, that should lead us to antici- pate that the gloomy forebodings of those who contend that the cotton manufacture of Eng- land has reached its zenith, and that it must now begin to decline, will be realised. The natural capabilities we possess for carrying on the business of manufacturing are, all things * Wages are estimated at the same rate, or at 20d. a day, for every person employed, men, women, and children, in 1812 and 1830; the saving being entirely in the better application of the labour. Digitized by Google 528 COTTON. considered, decidedly superior to those of any other people. But the superiority to which we have already arrived is, perhaps, the greatest advantage in our favour. Our master manufacturers, engineers, and artisans, are more intelligent, skilful, and enterprising, than those of any other country and the extraordinary inventions they have already made, and their familiarity with all the principles and details of the business, will not only enable them to perfect the processes already in use, but can hardly fail to lead to the discovery of others. Our establishments for spinning, weaving, printing, bleaching, &c. are infinitely more com- plete and perfect than any that exist elsewhere, the division of labour in them is carried to an incomparably greater extent ; the workmen are trained from infancy to industrious ha- bits and have attained that peculiar dexterity and sleight of hand in the performance of their separate tasks, that can only be acquired by long and unremitting application to the same employment. Why, then, having all these advantages on our side, should we not keep the start we have already gained ! Every other people that attempt to set up manufactures must obviously labour under the greatest difficulties as compared with us. Their establishments cannot, at first, be sufficiently large to enable the division of employments to be carried to any considerable extent, at the same time that expertness in manipulation, and in the details of the various' processes, can only be attained by slow degrees. It appears, therefore, reason- able to conclude that such new beginners, having to withstand the competition of those who have already arrived at a very high degree of perfection in the art, must be immediately driven out of every market equally accessible to both parties; and that nothing but the aid derived from restrictive regulations and prohibitions will be effectual to prevent the total de- struction of their establishments in the countries where they are set up. 4. Progress of the Manufacture in other Countries.-But notwithstanding what has now been stated, a notion seems to be spreading abroad, that we shall have no little difficulty in maintaining our ground against the competition of the Americans, Swiss, Austrians, French, &c., and a good deal of evidence upon this subject was taken before the committee of the House of Commons appointed in 1833 to inquire into the state of manufactures, commerce, and shipping. Such apprehensions appear to us to be quite destitute of any real foundation. Provided we have no agitation, that public tranquillity and security in fact and opinion be maintained unimpaired, we need be under no sort of uneasiness as to any competition to which we can be exposed. The tariff forced cotton, woollen, iron, and other manufactures, into a premature existence in the United States; but we have little doubt that, except in the coarser fabrics, and those where it is necessary to use large quantities of the raw material, the late modifications of the tariff have given a death-blow to the American manufacturing system. Independent, however, of this, there was nothing whatever to fear from that quar- ter. During the year ended the 30th of September, 1829, the exports of all sorts of cotton goods from America amounted to 1,259,457 dollars while during the year ended the 30th of September, 1832, they amounted to 1,229,574 laid before Congress, 5th of February, 1830, and 15th of February, 1833.) It is plain, therefore, notwithstanding the protection of the tariff, that the exports of manufactured cottons from America have not increased any thing during the last 3 years and it is very unlikely that even the trifling quantity now exported will be maintained. They have been exported only because the fabrics contained a great deal of the best cotton, which made them more durable and heavy than those manufactured here. But goods of this sort are in very limited demand ; and the Manchester manufacturers have already produced an article similar to and cheaper than the American " domestics," which will go far to expel them from the market. Among the singular statements that have been put forth as to the cotton manufactures of America, one is, that the wages of labour are lower there than here ! To dwell on the ab- surdity of such a statement would be an insult to our readers. But though it were true that wages are as low in Massachusetts as in England, that would afford no real ground for anti- cipating any formidable competition from America in this department. The price of cottons depends more on the profits of stock than on the wages of labour and, 80 far as we know, it has not yet been alleged that they are lower in America than here. Suppose an English and an American manufacturer have each 100,000L vested in cotton mills and in the float- ing stock required to carry on the business if profits in England be 1 per cent. less than in America, the English manufacturer can afford, cæteris paribus, to sell his goods for 1,000L less than the American. We are very far from insinuating or believing that this lowness of profit is an advantage; but whatever may be its influence in other respects, 80 long as it continues, it gives our manufacturers a decided superiority over those of every other coun- try where profits are higher, in the manufacture and sale of all articles, such as cotton yam and stuffs, principally produced by machinery. It is ludicrous, indeed, to suppose that a half-peopled country like America, possessed of boundless tracts of unoccupied land of the highest degree of fertility, should be able successfully to contend in manufacturing industry, with an old settled, fully peopled, and very rich country like Great Britain. The govern- ment which encourages such a misdirection of the public capital and industry, and those who suppose it can end in any thing else than ruin to the parties, are ignorant of the merest elements of the science of wealth. Digitized by Google COTTON. 529 The following results as to the state of the American cotton manufacture in 1831 have been deduced from the Report of a Committee of Congress in 1833:- In 12 states they had, mills - - - - - 795 spindles - - - - - 1,246,503 looms - - - - 33,506 The weight of cotton consumed - - - - - 77,557,316 lbs. Allowing 2 OZ. per lb. for loss - - - - - 9,094,664 Total weight of yarn produced - - - - - 67,862,652 Weekly amount - - - - - 1,305,051 Averaging 164 OZ. per spindle weekly. If the 33,506 looms were employed, and the whole 1,305,051 lbs. of yarn manufactured, each loom must have consumed at an average 39 lbs. weekly, showing that the goods manufactured were of a very heavy description. It also appears from statements made by the same committee, that The number of males employed were - 18,539 - females - - - - - 38,927 Total number employed in spinning and manufacturing - - 57,466 The amount paid for wages in the year was 10,294,444 dollars, or 2,144,780L., being 42,8951. per week; averaging 14c. 11d. for each person employed. They state that the consumption of flour in their manufacture was 1,641,258 lbs., or 8,374 barrels (196 lbs. each), averaging weekly 31,562 lbs., or nearly 1 lb. for each loom. Note.-By the new American tariff, plain calicoes, &c. imported, not exceeding in value 1s. 3d. the equare yard, to pay 3jd. per yard duty. Printed or coloured calicoes, &c., not exceeding 1s. 5jd. the square yard, to pay 44d. per yard duty. Cotton yarn, unbleached and uncoloured, not exceeding in value 2s. 6d. per lb. to pay 7jd. per lb. duty. If bleached or coloured, not exceeding 3a. ltd. per lb. to pay 94d. per lb. duty. Little as we have to fear from American, we have still less to fear from Swiss or Austrian competition. America has some advantage over England in the greater cheapness of the raw material; but Switzerland and Austria, situated almost in the very centre of Europe, can only draw their supplies of raw cotton by a distant land carriage by way of Marseilles, Genoa, and Trieste ; or by a lengthened navigation up the Rhine or the Elbe; and we have the best authority for affirming, that a bale of cotton may be conveyed at a less expense from Charleston to Manchester, than from Genoa or Trieste, Amsterdam or Hamburgh, to Switzerland or Austria. Switzerland is altogether destitute of coal; all that she does is done by water power, and that is already pretty well exhausted. It is not, however, to be won- dered at that the Swiss and Austrians should have succeeded in supplying their own markets, and some of those immediately contiguous, with certain species of yarn but it seems to us quite visionary to suppose that they will ever do much more than this. It was stated before the committee of 1833, that the French cotton manufacture had in- creased, between 1812 and 1826, in the ratio of 310 per cent., while in England its increase was only 270 per cent. This statement is, we believe, accurate as far as it goes; and yet it is eminently calculated, although, no doubt, without being so intended, to mislead. In 1812, and for some years previously, it was hardly possible to import cotton wool into France, and its price was quite excessive. When, therefore, the manufacturers got wool after the return of peace at an ordinary price, it was impossible, seeing that foreign cottons are excluded from France, but that the manufacture should increase with extraordinary rapidity, until the home demand was pretty well supplied. An advance of this sort is assuredly no proof of the capacity of France to prosecute the manufacture with advantage, or to export cottons without the aid of a bounty. Had the manufacture gone on increasing in the above, or even in a very inferior ratio, down to the present time, the circumstance might have justly excited attention but such has not been the case; on the contrary, it has been nearly stationary from 1822 down to the present time. In proof of this, we beg to refer to the following ac- count, published by the merchants of Havre, of the imports of cotton into France, the deli- veries from the warehouses, and the stocks on hand, in each year from 1822 :- Years. Imports. Deliveries. Stocks, Sist. Dec. Years. Imports. Deliveries. Stocks, Sist Dec. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. 1822 205,861 215,199 42,545 1829 242,230 264,750 29,292 1823 169,845 172,312 40,078 1830 282,752 250,784 61,260 1824 251,074 243,958 47,194 1831 218,393 243,843 35,810 1825 204,572 216,460 35,306 1832 259,159 272,463 22,506 1826 320,174 281,001 74,479 1833 305,633 76,387 51,753 1827 290,617 279,693 85,403 1834 274,307 301,652 24,407 1828 206,132 239,723 54,812 1835 324,425 308,736 40,096 It is supposed by some, that the competition we have to fear from the Continent does not consist so much in the spinning as in the weaving of cottons; and that the probability is, that our exports of yarn will increase, and our exports of manufactured goods diminish. We do not, however, imagine there is much in this. Our power looms are superior to those of any other country and it is unhappily true, that the wages of handloom weavers here are sunk below the general level of Europe." There is not, in fact, with the exception of * For an account of the circumstances which have occasioned this depression, we beg to refer the reader to an article on manufactures, commerce, &c. in the 117th No. of the Edinburgh Review. Some of the above statements are taken from that article. VoL. L-2 Y 67 Digitized by Google 530 COTTON. the dyes, a single particular connected with the cotton manufacture in which we have not a manifest superiority over the Swiss, Austrians, French, Prussians, and every Continental nation. Certainly, however, we are inferior to some of them in the brilliancy and durability of their dyes; and this circumstance occasioned a considerable demand for German and Swiss printed cottons in many parts of the East, where vivid colours are held in the highest estimation. But even there, the greater cheapness of our goods is proving an overmatch for the greater brilliancy of those of our rivals. On the whole, therefore, we see no reason to think that the British cotton manufacture has reached, much less passed, its zenith. At the same time, however, it can hardly be necessary to observe, considering the vast importance of the trade, that while, on the one hand, nothing should be left undone that may serve to widen its foundations, and to promote its prosperity, on the other, nothing should be attempted that may, by possibility, have an opposite effect. The subsistence of 1,400,000 people is not to be endangered on slight grounds. The abuses even of such a business must be cautiously dealt with, lest, in eradi- cating them, we shake or disorder the whole fabric. We admit, however, that the case of children employed in the cotton factories is one of those that call fairly for legislative regu- lation. But it may be questioned whether the plan for having relays of children is the best that might be devised. The general opinion seems to be, that it will, in most instances, be impossible to carry it into effect. The whole subject, as to the limitation of hours, is con- fessedly one of great difficulty and it would perhaps be better, before taking any very decisive steps in the matter, to try the effect of the system of inspection, and of the publication of the inspectors' reports as to the condition of the children employed. 5. STATUTORY REGULATIONS AS TO THE EMPLOYMENT OF CHILDREN IN FACTORIES. No statutory restrictions respecting the employment of children in the mills and factories of the United Kingdom existed until the year 1802, when an act of parliament was passed (42 Geo. 3.) for the preservation of the health and morals of apprentices and others employed in cotton and other factories, and directing the local magistrates to report whether the factories were conducted according to law, and to adopt such sanitary regulations as they might think fit. This act was followed, in 1816, by an act, generally called Sir Robert Peel's Act, imposing various regulations on the employment of children in cotton mills. Both of these acts were repealed in 1831, by an act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 39., commonly called Sir John Hobhouse's Act, which provided, that in cotton factories, to which alone it related, no child could legally be employed till it had attained the age of 9 years; and that no person under 18 years of age could be suffered to remain in the factories more than 12 hours in one day; and that on Saturdays they should only be employed in the factories for 9 hours. Sir John Hobhouse's Act was repealed in 1833, by the act act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 103., which contains the following provisions, comprehending the whole statutory regulations at present applicable to cotton and other factories in the United Kingdom:- 1. That after the 1st of January, 1834, no person under 18 years of age shall be allowed to work in the night, that is, between t past 8 P. M. and 1 past 5 A. M., in any cotton or other factory in which steam or water, or any other mechanical power, is or shall be used to propel the machinery, excepting in lace factories. 2. That no person under 18 shall be employed more than 12 hours in one day, nor more than 69 hours in one week. 3. That there shall be allowed, in the course of every day, not less than If hour for meals to every person restricted to the performance of 12 hours' work. 4. That after the 1st of January, 1834, no child, except in silk mills, shall be employed, who shall not be 9 years old. 5. That after the 1st of March, 1834, no child, except in silk mills, shall be employed in any factory more than 48 hours in any one week, nor more than 9 hours in any day, who shall not be 11 years old; nor after the 1st of March, 1835, who shall not be 12 years old nor after the 1st of March, 1836, who shall not be 13 years old; and that these hours of work shall not be exceeded, even if the child has worked during the day in more factories than one. 6. That children and young persons, whose hours of work are regulated, shall be entitled to 2 boll- days and 8 half holidays in every year. 7. That children, whose hours of work are restricted to 9 hours a day, are not to be employed without obtaining a certificate from a physician or surgeon, certifying that they are of the ordinary strength and appearance of children of the age before mentioned, which certificate is to be coun- tersigned by some inspector or justice. 8. That it shall be lawful for his Majesty to appoint, during pleasure, 4 persons to be inspectors of factories, with extensive powers as magistrates, to examine the children employed in the factories, and to inquire respecting their condition, employment, and education and that one of the secretaries of state shall have power, on the application of an inspector, to appoint superintendents to super- intend the execution of the act. 9. That those inspectors are to make all rules necessary for the execution of the act, and to enforce the attendance at school, for at least 2 hours daily out of 6 days in the week, of children employed in factories, from whose weekly wages a deduction, not exceeding 1 penny in every shilling, for schooling shall be made. 10. That no child shartibe employed, who shall not, on Monday of every week, give to the factory master a certificate of or her attendance at school for the previous week. 11. That the interior walls of every mill shall be whitewashed every year. 12. That a copy or abstract of the act shall be hung up in a conspicuous part of every mill. 13. That the inspectors shall regularly, once a year, report their proceedings to one of the secretaries of state. The act also contains regulations extending the hours of work where time shall be lost by the wast of, or an excess of, water, in mills situated upon a stream of water; respecting the steps to be taken in order to obtain regular certificates of age for the children requiring them; respecting the erection of schools, where necessary; and respecting the proceedings to be had before inspectors and magn- trates for enforcing the act, and the right to appeal from their decisions. [The following tables, relating to the cultivation, manufacture, and foreign trade of cotton, were communicated to Congress by the Secretary of the Treasury, in the session of 1835-36. Digitized by Google COTTON. 531 1. Raw Cotton.-Quantity grown in Mexico and The U. States. West Rest Rest Years. Brazil. S. America World. Indica. Egypt. of India. of Africa. Asia. except Elsewhere. Brazil. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1789 - 1 1790 - 1 1-2 1791 490 2 23 12 - 46 130 190 68 1792 - 3 1793 - 5 1794 - 8 1795 - 8 1796 - 10 1797 - 11 1798 - 15 1799 - 20 1800 - 35 1801 520 48 30 10 - 45 160 160 56 15 1802 - 55 1803 - 60 1804 - 65 1805 - 70 1806 - 80 1807 - 80 1808 - 75 1809 - 82 1810 - 85 1811 555 80 35 12 1-12 44 170 146 57 11 1812 - 75 1813 - 75 1814 - 70 1815 - 100 1816 - 124 1817 - 130 1818 - 125 1819 - 107 1820 - 160 1821 630 180 32 10 6 i 40 175 135 44 8 1822 - 210 1823 - 185 1824 - 215 1825 - 255 1826 - 350 1827 - 270 1828 - 325 1829 - 365 1830 - 350 1831 820 385 38 9 , 18 36 180 115 35 4 1832 - 390 1833 - 445 1834 900 460 30 8 25 1-3 34 185 110 35 13 1835 II. Raw Cotton.-Quantity grown in Years. Virg. N.C. 8.C. Georgia. Florida. Alabama. Tennessee. Mississippi Louisiana. Arkansas. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1789 1790 1791 - - 1 1-2 1-2 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 5 4 20 10 1 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 8 7 40 20 - - 3 2 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 Digitized by Google 532 COTTON. I1.-continued.-Qnantity grown in Years. Virg. N.C. S.C. Georgia. Florida. Alabama. Tennessee. Mississippi. Louisiana. Arkansas. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. libe. 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821 12 10 50 45 - 20 20 10 10 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 25 18 70 75 2 45 45 30 38 1-4 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 13 10 73 88 15 65 50 70 55 3-4 1834 10 91-2 65 1-2 75 20 85 45 85 62 1-2 1835 The Secretary of the Treasury states that he has "not been able to find any official returns, of either the general or the state governments, which give the crops of cotton in each state;" and that "the present table has therefore been compiled from the best data in his power." III. Raw Cotton. Prices per lb. Capital employed in connexion Persons employed in Value of whole crop with growing. growing, and dependent in Years. United United United United States. England. States. Egypt. Brazil. States. Elsewhere. States. Elsewhere Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Cents. Pence. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Millions. Millions. Dollars. Dollars. 1789 - 12 to 22 1790 14 1-2 12 - 21 1791 26 13 - 30 31-2 - 33 1-20 1 1-3 401-2 1792 29 20 - 30 1793 32 13 - 22 1794 33 12 - 18 1795 36 1-2 15 - 27 1796 36 1-2 12 29 1797 34 12 - 37 1798 39 22 - 45 1799 44 17 60 1800 28 16 - 36 1801 44 17 - 38 80 - 50 1-10 7-8 8. 39 1-3 1802 19 12 - 38 1803 19 8 - 15 1804 20 10 - 18 1805 23 14 - 19 1806 22 12 - 15 1807 21 1-2 10 - 14 1808 19 9 - 30 1809 16 10 - 18 1810 16 10 - 19 1811 15 1-2 7- 14 134 1-10 58 1-7 7-8 12 1-2 37 1812 10 1-2 11 - 14 1813 12 16 - 26 1814 15 28 average 1815 21 20 1-2 - 1816 29 1-2 18 1-4 - 1817 26 1-2 20 - 1818 34 20 - 1819 24 13 1-2 - 1820 17 11 1-2 - 1821 16 9 1-2 - 300 31-3 83 1-3 7-8 293-4 37 1822 16 1-2 8 1-4 - 1823 10 & 12 81-4 - 1824 15 81-2 - 1825 21 11 1-2 - 1826 11 63-4 - 1827 9 1-2 61-2 - 1828 10 1-4 6 3-4 - 1829 10 5 3-4 - 1830 10 6 7-8 - 1831 9 1-4 5 5-8 - 659 30 58 3-4 4-5 381-2 291-4 1832 10 65-8 - 1833 11 7 3-8 - 1834 13 8 1-2 - - - - - - 76 361-3 1835 16 1-2 I-2 - 800 31 50 1 4-5 to l "The prices, given for the United States, are those at the places of exportation, and are the average during the year, and including all kinds of cotton: but the sea-island cotton is worth usually two hundred and fifty per cent. more than the other kinds; and formerly the difference was still greater, when the amount grown elsewhere was not SO large." Digitized by Google COTTON. 533 IV.-Raw Cotton.-Exports from Egypt and Years. United States. Turkey. Brazil. India. West Indica. Spanish America. Elsewhere. 1770 2,000 lbs. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. Millions 1789 lbs. 1790 4-16 1791 1-5 - 20 - 12 - 5 1792 1-7 1-2 1794 1 2-3 - - - - 1 1795 6 1-4 - - 20 1796 6 1-10 1797 3 4-5 1798 9 1-3 1799 9 1-2 1800 17 4-5 1801 20 9-10 - 24 30 17 7 1802 27 1-2 - - - - 22 1-8 1803 41 1-10 1804 38 1-10 1805 40 1-3 - - 41,1-2 1806 37 I-2 1807 66 1-5 1808 12 1809 53 1-5 1810 93 9-10 1811 62 1-5 - 31 - 7 - 13 1812 29 1813 , 19 2-5 1814 ) 17 4-5 1815 83 1816 81 4-5 1817 95 2-3 1818 92 1-2 1819 88 1820 127 4-5 1821 124 9-10 5 1-2 28 50 9 - 6 1822 144 7-10 4 1-2 1823 173 7-10 11 1824 142 2-5 14 1825 176 1-2 - - 75 1826 204 1-2 1827 294 1828 210 1829 264 3-4 1830 298 1-2 19 3 68 10 4 1831 277 20 1-2 37 70 12 4 1832 322 1-4 1833 324 1-2 1834 384 3-4 23 30 80 8 7 3 1835 386 1-2 The exports of cotton, or, in other words, the foreign trade in raw cotton, in the whole world, is small compared with the whole growth, manufacture, and consumption of that article. It probably does not exceed 535 millions of pounds, and of that the United States export about 384 millions of pounds, or almost three fourths. Our exports each year have not always corresponded with that part of the crop of the previous year not consumed at home, as in 1808, 1812, &c. commercial restric- tions and war caused the stocks on hand to accumulate, and the high prices in some other years have left much less on hand here than usual." V.-Raw Cotton.-Exports from N. Carolina Rest of the Years. Louisiana. S. Carolina. Alabama. Georgia. New York. and Virginia. United States. Whole value. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Dollars. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1789 1790 1 - - - - - 48,285 - - - - - - 52,000 1791 - - - - - - 51,470 1792 - - - : - - 160,000 1793 - - - - - - Millions. - - - - 1-2 1794 - - - 1795 - - - - - - - 2 1-4 1796 - - - - 2 2-10 - - - - 1 1-4 1797 - - - - - - 3 1-2 1798 - - - - - - 4 1-10 1799 - - - - - 5 1800 10 3 - 5 - - - - 9 1-10 1801 - - - - 5 1-4 1802 - - - - - 7 3-4 1803 - - - - 7 3-4 1804 - 9 1-2 1805 - 8 1-4 1806 - 14 1-4 1807 - 2 Y 2 Digitized by Google 534 COTTON. V. Raw Cotton-continued-Exports from N. Carolina Rest of the Years. Louisiana. S. Carolina. Alabama. Georgia. New York. and Virginia. United States. Whole value. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions. Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. dollars, 1808 - - - - - - - 2 1-4 1809 - - - - - - - 8 1-2 1810 5 40 - 20 10 15 4 15 1-4 1811 - - - - - - - 9 1-2 1812 - - - - - - - 3 1813 - - - - - - - 2 1-4 1814 - - - - - - - 2 1-2 1815 - - - - - - - 17 1-2 1816 - - - - - - - 24 1-4 1817 - - - - - - - 22 1-2 1818 - - - - - - - 31 1-4 1819 - - - - - - - 21 1820 30 37 8 25 28 6 3 22 1-4 1821 - - - - - - - 20 1-4 1822 - - - - - - - 24 1823 - - - - - - 23 1-2 1824 - - - - - - - 21 3-4 1825 - - - - - - - 38 3-4 1826 - - - - - - - 25 1827 - - - - - - - 29 1-3 1828 - - - - - - - 22 1-2 1829 - - : - - - - - 26 1-2 1830 120 1-3 55 1-2 24 49 37 3-10 111-3 3 29 2-3 1831 - - - - - - - 25 1-4 1832 - - - - - - - 31 3-4 1833 - - - - - - - 36 1834 164 67 3-4 51 1-2 56 1-3 30 2-8 11 1-2 3 49 1-2 1835 - - - - - - - 61 1-2 "The exports from each State are the foreign ones, and for 1830 and 1834, from official data; but prior to that they are estimates from the crop, consumption at home, &c. The portion exported of sea island cotton, was, in 1834, 8,085,935 pounds, and in 1835, was 7,752,736; and was chiefly from South Carolina and Georgia." " The value has been computed from the quantity and average price through each year, so far as obtainable from official data." VI. Raw Cotton.-Exports. U. States to other places Braziland Egypt All other Years. U. States to U. States to than Great West In- West In- Egypt and and Tur- India to India to Brazil to places to England. France. Britain and dies to dies to Turkey to key to England. China. England. France. England. France. England. England. France. lbs. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1770 2,000 1787 - - - - 2 1-2 6 2-3 - 52-3 - 7 3-4 - 1789 Ratio of Ratio of her Ratio. 1790 her imports # imports from U.S. fromBrazil. 1791 1-1000 - - - - 1-2 1-3 1792 1-126 - - - - 1-2 1-3 1793 1-225 - - - - 1-4 1-2 1794 1-110 - - 1-3 - 2-5 1-2 1795 1-25 - - 1-3 - 2-5 1-2 1796 1-11 - - 3-4 - 1-2 2-5 1797 1-11 - - 71 1-3 - 1-2 1-3 1798 1-6 - - 2 - 2-5 1-3 1799 1-9 - - 7 - 3-7 3-7 1800 16 - - 6 1-3 - 1-5 1-3 1801 19 3-4 - 4 1-4 - 1-4 2-7 1802 23 1-2 2 - 3 - 1-3 1-6 1803 27 3-4 4 - 1 3-4 - 1-3 1-10 1804 25 3-4 6 - 2 1-2 - 2-9 1-12 1805 32 1-2 4 1-2 - 1-4 - 2-9 1-10 1806 24 1-4 7 - 2 2-3 - 2-9 1-9 1807 53 1-4 6 - 3 1-2 - 1-18 1-11 1808 8 2 - 5 1-2 - 1-11 2-9 1809 13 1-3 - - 6 I-2 - 1-3 1-11 1810 36 - - - - 1-4 1-18 1811 46 3-4 - - - - 2-7 1-29 1812 26 - - - - 2-5 1-23 1813 - 10 1-4 - - - 3-5 1-12 1814 - 1 3-4 - - - 3-5 1-11 1815 45 2-3 20 - - - 1-4 1-24 1816 57 3-4 18 - - - 1-3 1-35 1817 51 - - 36 - 1-3 1-26 1818 58 1-3 - - - 1-3 1-52 1819 51 3-4 - - - - 1-3 1-52 1820 90 - - 23 - 29 6 8-10 - 1-4 - 21-4 1821 93 1-2 27 1-3 9 3-4 9 - 19 1-2 7 - 3-4 - 23-4 1822 101 21 1-2 8 2-3 41-2 - 24 3-4 10 1-4 - 4-10 - 2 1823 142 1-2 25 8 1-2 15 - 23 1-2 7 - 11-3 - 2 1824 92 40 1-2 1 1-2 16 1-2 - 25 6 1-4 - 7 7-10 - 2 Digitized by Google COTTON. 535 VI. Raw Cotton-continuad-Exports U. States to other places Brazil and Egypt Years. U. States to U. States to than Great India to India to West In- Brazil to West In- Egypt and and Tur- AH other England. France. Britain and England. dies to dies to Turkey to Chima. key to places to England. France. England. France. England. France. England. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. Ratio. Ratio. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1825 140 30 2 3-4 20 1-4 - 33 8 - 19 - 7 1-3 1826 131 62 1-3 8 1-2 21 - 9 4-5 4 3-4 - 10 - 1 1827 217 70 1-2 11 1-4 20 - 20 3-4 7 - 5 - 1 1-2 1828 151 3-4 53 1-2 10 1-4 32 1-4 25 29 6 - 7 - 1 3-4 1829 157 67 1-2 23 25 (1) 29 4 1-2 - 6 - 1 1-10 1830 211 75 13 1-2 12 1-2 - 33 3 1-2 7 3 4-10 6 3-4 1831 205 1-2 46 or 50 9 26 66 1-2 31 1-2 2 1-3 3 1-2 8 7 1-2 1 1-4 1832 217 1-4 73 or 77+ 16 35 58 20 2 3 2-8 9 8 1-2 2 3-4 1833 227 3-4 76 3-4 9 1-2 32 1-4 - 28 1-2 2 - 1 - 1 3-4 1834 266 2-3 79 9-15 20 32 40 18 4 4 1 1-2 7 1835 253 100 1-3 16 3-4 42 1-2 (?) 25 5 1-4 - 9 1-3 Statement of the quantity of Cotton Exported from the United States to other places than Great Britain and France, in the year ending September 30, 1821, to 1835, inclusive. Holland and Years. To Russia. Belgium. Spain. Triests. Hanse towns. Italy and Malta. All other places. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1821 304,680 4,186,096 284,832 34,976 748,110 897,804 2,506,777 1822 713,789 1,970,258 - 210,138 2,955,581 1,956,253 450,762 1823 309,678 4,650,548 - 177,789 2,356,594 217,663 833,332 1824 501,645 432,976 - - 292,852 - 227,529 1825 133,934 1,420,225 - - 577,109 980 509,031 1826 15,262 4,592,439 - 33,311 2,012,679 - 1,820,116 1827 147,101 5,861,400 7,990 183,204 3,389,514 148,170 1,440,547 1828 649,791 3,780,988 - 980,354 3,386,108 407,068 1,072,448 1829 227,883 9,595,337 - 4,071,247 6,857,796 1,056,387 1,261,925 1830 111,376 8,561,193 32,210 2,814,477 4,123,047 235,265 638,877 1831 761,735 972,659 555,098 2,778,858 2,416,765 305,695 2,243,741 1832 838,951 3,920,016 2,283,875 1,654,775 4,075,122 580,974 2,250,190 1833 1,447,405 2,673,253 758,216 1,107,600 1,870,620 - 1,759,615 1834 1,260,494 6,096,462 892,967 3,805,312 6,612,895 190,842 1,153,382 / 1835 974,801 5,694,358 878,219 4,943,061 2,788,147 12,952 1,493,760 VII.-Raw Cotton. Imports of Where from. Demerara and Egypt and Years. Into England. United States. Brazil. India. Berbice. West Indies. Turkey. Other places. Millions. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1701 1 1-10 or 9-10 1710 7-10 1720 2 1730 1 1-2 1741 1 6-10 1751 3 1764 3 8-10 1766 3 1780 5 1784 11 1787 22 - 21 1-2 1 3-4 6 2-3 5 2-3 6 1789 32 1-2 1790 31 1-2 Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. 1791 28 3-4 1-1000 1-2 - 1-3 - - 1-8 1792 35 1-126 1-2 - 1-3 - I 1-10 1793 19 1-225 1-4 - 1-2 - 1-25 1-8 1794 24 1-3 1-110 2-5 - 1-2 - 1-100 1-13 1795 26 1-3 1-25 2-5 - 1-2 - 1-100 1-42 1796 32 1-11 1-2 1-37 2-5 - 1-44 1-50 1797 23 1-3 1-11 1-2 1-19 1-3 - 1-17 1-28 1798 31 3-4 1-6 2-5 1-14 1-3 - I-15 1-285 1799 43 1-3 1-9 2-7 1-11 3-7 - 1-6 1-50 1800 56 1-4 1-5 1-9 1-3 - 1-9 1-18 1801 56 1-3 1-4 1-12 2-7 - 1-13 1-33 1802 60 1-3 3-7 1-3 1-17 1-6 - 1-20 1-135 1803 53 3-4 1-2 1-3 1-70 1-10 - 1-30 1-70 1804 61 3-4 1-2 2-9 1-6 1-12 - 1-26 1-167 1805 59 2-3 3-5 2-9 1-11 1-10 - 1-210 1-38 1806 58 1-4 3-5 2-9 1-10 1-9 - 1-22 1-87 1807 75 3-4 1-18 1-9 1-11 - 1-20 1-116 1808 43 1-2 2-5 1-11 1-14 2-9 - 1-8 1-24 1809 92 3-4 1-2 1-3 1-18 1-11 - 1-15 1-38 1810 132 1-2 2-3 1-4 1-15 1-18 - 1-46 1811 91 1-2 5-9 2-7 1-9 1-29 - 1-76 1812 63 4-9 2-5 1-9 1-22 - 1-25 Digitized by Google 536 COTTON. VII-continued. Imports of Where from. * Demerara and West Years. Into England. United States. Brazil. Egyptand Berbice. Indies. Turkey. India. Other plates. Millions lbs. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio. Ratio, Ratio. Ratio. 1813 51 1-8 3-5 1-10 1-12 - - 1-20 1814 73 2-3 2-9 3-5 1-12 1-11 - - 1-30 1815 96 1-4 4-7 1-4 1-15 1-24 - - 1-24 1816 97 1-3 1-2 1-3 1-14 1-35 - - 1-24 1817 126 1-4 1-2 1-3 1-24 1-26 - - 1-14 1818 174 3-7 1-3 1-40 1-52 - - 1-5 1819 137 1-2 1-2 1-3 1-40 1-52 : - 1-5 1820 147 1-2 4-7 1-5 1-45 1-76 1-530 1-7 1-65 1821 126 1-2 5-7 1-6 1-46 1-32 1-175 1-14 1-138 1822 141 1-2 4-7 1-5 1-32 1-45 1-350 1-35 1-226 1823 183 1-3 3-5 1-8 1-72 1-52 1-143 1-13 1-72 1824 147 1-2 3-5 1-6 1-24 1-19 1-11 1-12 1825 244 1-3 3-5 1-7 1-29 1-17 I-10 1-7 1826 170 1-2 2-3 1-17 1-40 1-18 1-9 1-9 1827 264 1-3 3-4 1-11 1-38 1-56 1-13 1-22 1828 222 3-4 2-3 1-7 1-48 1-27 1-8 1-17 1829 218 1-3 2-3 1-7 1-39 1-30 I-9 1830 259 3-4 2-3 to 3-4 1-7 to 1-8 1-60 1-60 1-25 1831 280 2-3 to 3-4 1-9 - 1-35 1-13 1832 270 2-3 3-4 1-13 - 1-30 1-8 1833 288 7-8 1-10 - 1-300 1-9 1834 320 1-2 6-7 1-17 1-200 1-200 1-9 1835 361 1-2 3-4 1-12 - - 1-8 VIII. Raw Cotton. Imports. Where from. Imports. Brazil and Into Sazony, Into the Years. Into France. United States. Egypt and Prussia, Into Swit. Turkey. the West Into Spain. Into Chima. United Trieste, and aeriand. Indies. States. Russia. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. libs. 1790 - - - - - - - - 97,357 Mill lbs. 1791 - - - - - - - 1-4 - 1792 - - - - - - - 1-2 - 1793 - - - - - - - 223 - 1794 - - - - - - - 2 1-2 - 1795 - - - - - - - 4 - 1796 - - - - - - - 41-4 - 1797 - - - - - - - 3 1-2 - 1798 - - - - - - - 323 - 1799 - - - - - - - 31-2 1800 - - - - - - - 4 1-4 1801 - 3-4 - - - - - 41-4 1802 - 2 - - - - - 31-2 1803 - 4 - - - - 2 1-2 - 3 1804 - 6 - - - - - - 3 1-4 1805 4 1-2 - - - - - - 21-4 1806 21 7-10 7 - - - - 25 21-4 1807 - 6 - - - - - - 3 1-3 1808 - 2 - - - - - - 41-2 1809 8 - - - - - - - 1-2 1810 25 - - - - - - - 1-3 1811 - - - - - - - 1-3 1812 - - - - - - - 1-2 1813 - 10 1-4 - - - - - - 123 1814 - 1 3-4 - - - - - - 1-6 1815 i - 20 - - - - - - 1-6 1816 - 18 - - - - - - 1-3 1817 - . - - - - - - 3 1818 - - - - - - - - 111-2 1819 - 1 - . - - - - 15 1820 441-2 - - - - 6 - - 1 1821 47 1-2 27 1-8 - - - - - 2-3 - 1822 61 21 1-2 - - - - - - 1-4 1823 51 25 - - - - 1-8 - - 1824 75 1-2 40 1-2 - - - - - : - 1825 61 1-3 30 - - - - - - 1-2 1896 96 62 1-3 - - - - - 301 1-4 1827 87 70 1-2 - - - - - - 1-6 1828 61 2-3 53 1-2 - - - - - - 1-2 1829 72 1-2 67 1-2 - - - - - 1-2 1830 84 2-3 to 91 75 6 7 38 17 1-2 - - 1-2 1831 65 1-2 to 61 46 to 50 7 1-2 31-2 39 18 4-5 - 38 to 68 1-3 1832 77 to 85 73 to 77 1-3 8 1-2 3 2-3 48 191-2 60 1-2 - 1833 ?1 76 3-4 - - 36 19 - - 1-2 1834 83 to 94 1-2 78 to 81 3-4 7 4 - 19 1-3 2 451 1-2 1835 94 1-4 91 - - - - - - 123 Digitized by Google COTTON. 587 The imports into the United States are taken from official returns, and have been very fluctuating in amount; they have come chiefly from India." Other countries of Europe than those enumerated, import considerable quantities of raw cotton : e.g. Holland and Belgium, about 10 or 12 millions of pounds, of which a part passes into Germany, and 5 or 6 millions of pounds are from the United States. So into Germany direct are imported at Trieste alone, from the United States, about 4 to 5 millions, and some from Egypt and Turkey; in all, making in 1830, 124 millions of pounds; 1831, 194 millions; and 1832, 254 millions of pounds. Into the Hanse towns are imported from here 2 to 6 millions of pounds more yearly, and about 1 million of pounds to Russia, &c. &c. Russia imported into Petersburg, in all, 1830, 21 millions of pounds; 1831, 7-10 million of pounds: 1832, 1 8-10 million of pounds. In 1834, Belgium is said, by Mr. Alexander, to have imported 121 millions of pounds of raw cotton. It is said, in the Westminster Review, for April, 1835, that Lombardy alone consumes 4 millions of pounds of raw cotton yearly.' IX. Raw Cotton.-Quantity manufactured in & America Years. England. France. United States. China and & Mexico, Turkey India. including Germany. and Spain. Prumis. Elsewhere. Brazil. Africa. - Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. 1780 131-2 in the 3 countries. 1784 11 1-4 1789 1790 30 1-2 - 5 1791 28 10 5 1-2 285 50 15 52 2 2 60 1792 33 1-2 1798 17 3-4 1794 23 1795 25 1796 31 1797 22 1-4 1798 31 18 1799 4% 10 1-4 1800 51 6 3-4 8 [1-10] 1801 53 3-4 11 9 280 & # 50 3 5 50 1802 56 1-2 15 1-10 1803 51 3-4 15 3-4 - - - - - 3 1804 66 3-4 17 1-4 1805 58 3-4 18 1-2 11 [1-8] 1806 57 1-4 21 3-4 1807 72 1-2 1808 41 1-2 1809 87 1-3 1810 126 25 16 [3 1-2] 1811 89 2-3 23 17 270 48 25 48 5 6 50 1812 59 3-4 21 1813 1814 52 1-2 1815 92 - 31 1-2 1816 86 1-2 1817 116 1-2 30 or 26 1818 172 1819 132 3-4 1820 142 44 1821 114 47 50 260 42 30 45 8 7 45 1822 120 1-2 61 1823 177 50 1-2 1824 131 75 - - - - - - 7 7-10 1825 206 60 1826 150 1-4 96 1827 250 I-2 87 1828 208 1-4 61 60 1829 190 3-4 71 1-2 1830 255 87 1-3 1831 257 65 1-2 77 1-2 1832 260 78 1833 284 I-2 87 80 to 85 242 35 36 42 10 20 40 1834 297 80 1835 320 1-4 - 100 X. Manufactures of Cotton. Whole value of, yearly, in Capital employed in Manufacturing by Machinery in Years. England. France. United States. England. France. United States. Millions Millions Millions Millions Milions Millions Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. dollars. Dollars, 1815 951 - 24 - - $ 1816 1817 - 36 1818 1819 1820 1821 1822 72 1823 155 1824 148 to 190 1825 1826 68 Digitized by Google 538 COTTON. X. Manufactures of Cotton-continued. Whole value of, yearly, in Capital employed in Manufacturing by Machinery in Years. England. France. United States. England. France. United States. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1827 171 - - 3001 1828 - 40 1829 1830 26 1 - - 3251 - 40 3-4 or 62 ( (40) S 1831 - - 216 1832 144 54 - 160 - 44 1-8 1833 { (149) 178 5360} - - 115 {168} 1834 160 1-2 62 - 250 1835 - - 45 to 50 185 - 80 The value of manufactured cottons, when the quantity of raw cotton in them is the same, differs greatly according to different periods of time in the same country, and according to the quality of the raw material, and the machinery used, and the skill employed. Thus, in England, in 20 years after Arkwright's invention in spinning, manufactured cottons fell nearly eight ninths of their former price. Every ten years since, some have computed their fall in price as equal to 50 per cent. In the American Encyclopedia, article Cotton, it is said that, from 1815 to 1829, the coarse cloths fell two thirds." The best cotton goods are supposed to be made in Switzerland, where the skill and machinery are good, and the climate congenial. But the raw material, being carried so far by land, is expensive, and the manufacturer cannot compete with England, though 20 per cent. cheaper than in France." "In France many fine goods are made by skill and experience; but the machinery is poorer, and costs more. Hence the prices in those two countries, of the cloth made from a pound of raw cotton, exceed on an average 50 cents, while in England they are about 50 cents, and in the United States are now somewhat less. In 1806 the cotton was made chiefly into velveteens, nankeens, crapes, muslins, &c." In 1810 our cotton cloths made in houses and manufactories, on an average, were estimated at 33 cents per yard in Coxe's tables, page 10. The prices are now lower, notwithstanding the introduction so extensively of finer cloths and of printing calicoes." We make more coarse and substantial cloths of cotton now than England, and they can be afforded cheaper by 2 or 3 cents per yard. They are in greater demand abroad. We put more staple into them, the raw material being cheaper here. But the English laces, being made chiefly of sea-island cotton, with a very little silk, enhance the value of each pound to over $5; and the whole manufac- ture of it equals 9 millions of dollars per annum, and 303 millions of yards." 'The coarse India cottons are made of the worst materials and less smooth, being chiefly spun by hand, and the raw material poorer. But the thread so spun is softer and the cloth more durable." XI. Manufactures of Cotton. Persons employed, connected with factories, chiefly, number of Spindles employed in factories, number of Years. In England. United States. France. In England. United States. France. Switzerland. 1750 20,0001 1760 16,000? 1770 30,0001 1784 80,0001 1787 } 162,000 to 260,000? 1789 - - - 49,500 1790 - - - - 70 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 - - - - 4,500 1806 - - 120,000 - - 81,000 1807 - - - - 8,000 1808 1809 800,000? - - - 31,000 1810 - - - - 87,000 Millions. 1811 - - - 5 80,000 Millions. 1812 - - - 41-21 - 1 1813 1814 1 - - - 122,646 1815 - 100,000 - - 130,000 1816 - - - 68-3 1817 - I - 62-3 1818 - - - - - 18-10 1819 1820 - - - - 290,000 Digitized by Google COTTON. 539 XI. Manufactures of Cotton.-continued. Persons employed, connected with factories, chiefly, number of Spindles employed in factories, number of Years. In England. United States. France. In England. United States. France. Switzerland. 1821 - - - - 230,000 1822 427,000 1823 1824 - - - 61 - - 259,200 1825 - - - 1 800,000 1826 1827 on 705,000 to 1,000,000 Millions. 1828 - - - - 11 to 1 1829 - - - 7 1830 - 179,000 } - - 175,146 11 1831 - 200,000 200,000 71 to 81 1832 1,200,000 - - - - 3t 1833 1,500,000 1834 - - 600,000 91 1835 - - - - 17 There was very little spinning by machinery in France till after 1785.-And the cotton cloths were chiefly made from thread or yarn imported from England, Switzerland, and the Levant. There were large numbers of cotton pocket handkerchiefs made at Rouen, Montpélier, &c. as early as 1789. The change of late years in some places in England, from the hand to the power loom, has caused some distress, and the employment of a larger portion of females and children; now about one fifth there are men, one third women, and the rest children. The number of hand looms in England, in 1820 and 1830, was about the same, viz.: 240,000, but that of power looms had increased from 14,000 to 55,000. Each of the latter performs as much as three of the former. In 1834, the power looms had become 100,000." XII-Manufactures of Cotton.-Values of Exports of their own, from Years. England. France. Germany. Spain. Turkey and India. United States. China. Africa. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Official Value. 1789 6 1790 8 1791 9 1792 194 1793 81 1794 111 1795 114 1796 15+ 1797 17 1798 17 1799 28 1800 26f 1801 33 1802 37 - - - - 20 1803 34 - - 5 1804 41 1805 45 1806 50 - - - - - - 4 1807 48 1808 61 1809 92 1810 90 1811 68 1812 78 1813 - - - - - 18 Real or declared - value. 1814 84 95 1815 106 98 1816 86 74 1817 101 76 1818 98 891 1819 881 70 - 3 1820 1071 79 - - - - - 1821 113 77 1822 128 82 1823 137 821 41 1824 143 86 6f 1825 135 86 - 1 1-10 11 1826 119 711 - - - - - - - - - 1 1-10 1827 157 83} - - 1 1-10 1828 1591 81 - - - 1829 197 831 41 - - - 1 1-4 - 1830 188 81 10 - - 1 1-3 - I 83 10t - - - 1 1-10 1831 208 - 1832 209 831 10+ - - - - 1 2-10 1833 222 884 11 - - - - 2 1-2 1834 981 10 - - - 2 2-10 - 1835 881 Digitized by Google 540 COTTON. "The exports of English (cotton) manufactures, in 1833 and 4, were about one third in value is yarn. Some years yarn constitutes one-half in weight." 'From 1814 to 1823 inclusive, the value of yarn exported compared with the value of other cotton goods, increased slowly from being about one seventh and one sixth, to be about one fifth. The pro- portional increase of yarn has been even greater since. The yarn exported is understood to be ge- nerally coarse." The declared, or what is sometimes called the real value, in the 2d column (of the above table) is still usually from 21 to 5 per cent. under the actual market value. The official value is founded on the quantity, computing the price as it was at the close of the 17th century, or A. D. 1689." " The exports of cotton manufactures from England are now, and for some years have been, nearly equal to one half of her exports of every kind." XIII. Manufactures of Cotton.-Value of exports from England to Various Various England to England to England to England to England to In- SouthAmerica Years. United States. France. Netherlands. dia and China. and Mexico, places to places to England to Germany. Spain. Russia. 1 except Brazil. Millions Dollars. Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Millions Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Real on or dec. Whole sum. 1820 8,700 20 5 4 . 4 8-10 1821 6 6-10 8,500 18 5 5 1-4 1822 8.2-10 18,000 19 5 1-2 5 1-2 1823 7 22,000 14 1-2 7 6 1824 7 6-10 55,000 13 1-2 6 1-2 5 3-4 - - 7-10 1825 11 57,000 15 1-2 7 5 1-2 1826 6 1-2 119,000 14 6 5 3-4 1827 8 122,000 14 3-4 6 3-4 9 1-2 5 1-2 1828 8 3-4 110,000 13 3-4 6 3-4 - 5 3-4 1829 6 1-2 122,000 14 1-2 6 34 - 7 1-4 1830 6 2-10 50,000 14 6 - 8 1-4 1831 13 240,000 11 1-4 6 1-2 9 1-4 7t[7]] - - 3 1-3 1832 8 1-10 318,000 15 3-4 8 1-3 8 2-3 6 1-3 - 6 6 1-3 1833 { 6 3-10 or 8 3-10 450,000 14 1-2 9 1-10 8 6 I-2 - 6 1-2 8" 1834 8 2-10 730,000 15 3-4 10 7 1-3 8 6 7 1-4 XIV. Manufactures of Cotton.-Value of exports from U. States to Years. France to the France to France to her Germany to SouthAmerica U. States to In- United States to United States to United States. England. Colonies. the U. States. and Mexico. dia and Africa. China. the West Indies. Millions [Millions Millions Millions Millions Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. Dollars. 1821 1-25 - - 1-30 1822 1-7 - - 1-20 1823 1-7 - - 1-20 1824 1-3 - - 1-18 1825 1-6 - - 4-10 Whole sum stated. 1826 1-2 - - 1-3 9-10 10,000 14,000 99,000 1827 1-3 - - 3-10 9-10 13,000 9,000 66,000 1828 1-2 - - 1-2 8-10 22,000 14,900 46,000 1829 1-2 - - 4-10 1 8-10 37,000 26,000 49,000 1830 2-3 - - 1-3 1 75,000 56,000 47,000 1831 1 1-2 1-20 - 9-10 9-10 66,000 49,000 41,000 1832 1 1-4 9-10 - 1-2 9-10 83,000 88,000 53,000 1833 3-4 - 1 1-4 1-6 1 9-10 120,000 215,000 86,000 1834 1 1-10 - 1 to 3 3-10 1 5-10 186,000 152,000 127,000 1835 The raw cotton exported from the United States amounted, in 1836, to 423,631,307 lbs., valued at $71,284,925; in 1837, to 444,211,537 lbs., valued at $63,240,102; in 1838, to 595,952,297 lbs., valued at $61,556,811. In 1836, there were exported to Great Britain (including Ireland) 292,518,707 lbs., and to France 101,363,189 lbs.; in 1837, to Great Britain 321,579,368 lbs., and to France 99,308,197 lbs.; in 1838, to Great Britain 441,857,943 lbs., and to France 120,324,425 lbs. Export of Cotton to Foreign Ports, from 1st October, 1837, to 30th September, 1838. To Great To North of To France. Other Foreign Britain. Europe. Ports. Total FROM Bales. Bales. Bales Bales. Bales. New Orleans - - - - 481,501 127,828 7,580 14,528 631,437 Mississippi, (Natchez) - - - 15,246 - - - 15,246 Alabama - - - - - 158,029 61,123 3,988 1,910 225,060 Florida - - - - - 31,902 2,240 - 12 34,154 Georgia (Savannah and Darien) - - 201,582 27,024 560 632 $29,798 South Carolina - - - - 158,212 55,685 28,853 3,717 246,467 North Carolina - - - - 4,279 - - - 4,279 Virginia - - - - - 12,205 4,136 2,446 651 19,438 Baltimore - - - - - 2,240 - 78 - 2,318 Philadelphia - - - - - 2,954 465 905 282 4,606 New York - - - - - 97,005 42,929 18,196 3,820 161,950 Boston - - - - - - 50 483 483 676 Grand total - - - - 1,165,155 321,480 63,099 25,890 1,575,629 Total last year - - - 850,786 260,722 26,437 30,480 1,168,495 Increase - - - - 314,369 60,758 36,662 407,904 Decrease - - - - 4,585 Digitized by Google COTTON. 541 The imports of raw cotton from abroad, in the three years of which we speak, amounted respectively to 1,617, 390-1,998,385-and 1,529,566 lbs. These were chiefly from Texas, and were for the most part re-exported. Of cotton manufactures generally there were imported into the country in 1836, to the value of $17,876,087-$14,092,477 of which were imported from Great Britain, and $2,321,008 from France ;-in 1837, to the value of $11,150,841,-$8,118,175 of which were from Great Britain, and $1,791,650 from France ;-in 1838, to the value of $6,599,330,-$4,866,995 of which were from Great Britain, and $914,084 from France. $2,765,676, $2,683,418, and $1,153,506 of the cotton manufactures imported, in the several years 1836, 1837, and 1838, were re-exported, chiefly to Mexico, Cuba, and South America. The exports of domestic cotton goods were, in these years, $2,255,734, $2,831,473, and $3,758,755 re- spectively and chiefly to Cuba, South America, and Africa. The imports into the country of cotton bagging, during the same period, amounted to $1,701,451, $429,251, and $173,235,-almost exclusively from Great Britain and the Hanse towns. A very incon- siderable quantity only of the article was re-exported. See articles IMPORTS AND EXPORTS, and TARIFF.-Am. Ed.] COWHAGE, OR COWITCH (Hind. Kiwach), the fruit or bean of a perennial climb- ing plant (Dolichos pruriens Lin.). It is a native of India, as well as of several other eastern countries, and of America. The pod is about 4 or 5 inches long, a little curved, and con- tains from 3 to 5 oval and flattish seeds; the outside is thickly covered with short, bristly, brown hairs, which, if incautiously touched, stick to the skin, and occasion intolerable itch- ing. Syrup thickened with the hairs is prescribed in certain complaints-(Ainslie's Materia Indica.) COWRIES (Ger. Kauris; Du. Kauris; Fr. Coris, Cauris, Bouges; It. Cori, Porcel- lane; Sp. Bucios Zimbos) are small shells brought from the Maldives, which pass current as coin in smaller payments in Hindostan, and throughout extensive districts in Africa. They used to be imported into England previous to the abolition of the slave trade, in which they were subsequently employed. They are an article of trade at Bombay. The best are small, clean, and white, having a beautiful gloss; those that are yellow, large, and without lustre, should be rejected. The freight is calculated at 20 cwt. to the ton.-(Milburn's Orient. Com.) CRANBERRIES, OR RED WHORTLEBERRIES, the fruit of a moss plant, the Vaccinium oxycoceus. of Linneus. The berries are globular, about the size of currants; are found in mossy bogs in different parts of Scotland, but not in great numbers they were once common in Lincolnshire, and the northern parts of Norfolk but since the bogs have been drained and cultivated, they are rarely met with. Cranberries have a peculiar flavour, and a sharp, acid, agreeable taste; they are easily preserved, and are extensively used in making tarts. They are very abundant in North America, and in the northern parts of Russia; the latter being of a superior quality. We import from 30,000 to 35,000 gallons annually. It is said that some very fine ones have recently been brought from New South Wales. CRAPE (Fr. Crêpe; Ger. Flohr, Krausflohr; It. Espumilla, Soplillo; Rus. Flior; Sp. Crespon), a light transparent stuff, in manner of gauze, made of raw silk, gummed and twisted on the mill and woven without crossing. It is principally used in mourning. Crape was originally manufactured in Bologna; but that made in this country is now deemed superior to any made in Italy. CREAM OF TARTAR. See ARGAL. CREDIT, the term used to express the trust or confidence placed by one individual in another, when he assigns him money, or other property in loan, or without stipulating for its immediate payment. The party who lends is said to give credit, and the party who bor- rows to obtain credit. Origin and Nature of Credit.-In the earlier stages of society, credit is in a great measure unknown. This arises partly from the circumstance of very little capital being then accumulated, and partly from government not having the means, or not being suffi- ciently careful, to enforce that punctual attention to engagements so indispensable to the existence of confidence or credit. But as society advances, capital is gradually accumulated, and the observance of contracts is enforced by public authority. Credit then begins to grow up. On the one hand, those individuals who have more capital than they can conveniently employ, or who are desirous of withdrawing from business, are disposed to lend, or to trans- fer, a part or the whole of their capital to others, on condition of their obtaining a certain stipulated premium or interest for its use, and what they consider sufficient security for its repayment; and, on the other hand, there are always individuals to be met with, disposed to borrow, partly (and among merchants principally) in order to extend their business beyond the limits to which they can carry it by means of their own capital, or to purchase commo- dities on speculation, and partly to defray debts already contracted. These different classes of individuals mutually accommodate each other. Those desirous of being relieved from the fatigues of business, find it very convenient to lend their capital to others; while such as are anxious to enlarge their businesses, obtain the means of prosecuting them to a greater extent. It is plain, that to whatever extent the power of the borrower of a quantity of produce, or VoL. L-2 Z Digitized by Google 542 CREDIT. a sum of money, to extend his business may be increased, that of the lender must be equally diminished. The same portion of capital cannot be employed by two individuals at the same time. If A. transfer his capital to B., he necessarily, by so doing, deprives himself of a power or capacity of production which B. acquires. It is most probable, indeed, that this capital will be more productively employed in the hands of B. than of A; for the fact of A. having lent it shows that he either had no means of employing it advantageously, or was disinclined to take the trouble; while the fact of B. having borrowed it shows that he conceives he can advantageously employ it, or that he can invest it so as to make it yield an interest to the lender, and a profit to himself. It is obvious, however, that except in so far as credit contri- butes in the way now mentioned, to bring capital into the possession of those who, it may be fairly presumed, will employ it most beneficially, it conduces nothing to the increase of wealth. The most common method of making a loan is by selling commodities on credit, or on condition that they shall be paid at some future period. The price is increased proportion- ally to the length of credit given; and if any doubt be entertained with respect to the puno- tuality or solvency of the buyer, a further sum is added to the price, in order to cover the risk that the seller or lender runs of not receiving payment, or of not receiving it at the stipulated period. This is the usual method of transacting where capital is abundant, and confidence general; and there can be no manner of doubt that the amount of property lent in Great Britain, the Netherlands, and most other commercial countries, in this way, is infinitely greater than all that is lent in every other way. When produce is sold in the way now described, it is usual for the buyers to give their bills to the sellers for the price, payable at the period when the credit is to expire; and it is in the effects consequent to the negociation of such bills that much of that magical influence that has sometimes been ascribed to credit is believed to consist. Suppose, to illustrate this, that a paper-maker, A., sells to a printer, B., a quantity of paper, and that he gets his bill for the sum, payable at 12 months after date: B. could not have entered into the transaction had he been obliged to pay ready money but A., notwithstanding he has occasion for the money, is enabled, by the facility of negociating or discounting bills, to give the requisite credit, without disabling himself from prosecuting his business. In a case like this, both parties are said to be supported by credit; and as cases of this sort are exceedingly common, it is contended that half of the business of the country is carried on by its means. All, how- ever, that such statements really amount to is, that a large proportion of those engaged in industrious undertakings do not employ their own capital, but that of others. In the case in question, the printer employs the capital of the paper-maker, and the latter employs that of the banker or broker who discounted the bill. This person had most likely the amount in spare cash lying beside him, which he might not well know what to make of; but the indi- vidual into whose hands it has now come, will immediately apply it to useful purposes, or to the purchase of the materials, or the payment of the wages of the workmen employed in his establishment. It is next to certain, therefore, that the transaction will have been advantageous. But still it is essential to bear in mind that it will have been so, not because credit is of itself a means of production, or because it can give birth to capital not already in existence; but because, through its agency, capital finds its way into those chan- nels in which it has the best chance of being profitably employed. The real advantage derived from the use of bills and bank notes as money consists, as has been already shown, in their substituting so cheap a medium of exchange as paper, in the place of one 80 expensive as gold, and in the facilities which they give to the transacting of commercial affairs. If a banker lend A. a note for 100L or 1,000L,, the latter will be able to obtain an equivalent portion of the land or produce of the country in exchange for it; but that land or produce was already in existence. The issue of the note did not give it birth. It was previously in some one's possession and it will depend wholly on the circumstance of A.'s employing it more or less advantageously than it was previously employed, whether the transaction will, in a public point of view, be profitable or not. On analysing any case of this kind, we shall invariably find that all that the highest degree of credit or confidence can do, is merely to change the distribution of capital-to transfer it from one class to another. These transfers are occasionally, too, productive of injurious results, by bringing capital into the hands of spendthrifts this, however, is not, except in the case of the credit given by shopkeepers, a very common effect; and there can be no doubt that the vast majority of regular loans are decidedly beneficial. Abuses of the present Credit System in Great Britain. Means of obriating them.-The previous observations refer rather to the credit given to individuals engaged in business, who mean to employ the capital which they borrow in industrious undertakings, than to that which is given to individuals not so engaged, and who employ the advances made to them in supporting themselves and their families. In neither case is credit of advantage, unless it be granted with due discrimination, and with reference to the character, condition. and prospects of those receiving it. In this country, however, these considerations have been in a great measure lost sight of, in the granting of credit by shopkeepers and tradesman of all Digitized by Google CREDIT. 543 descriptions. Owing to the competition of such persons, their extreme eagerness to secure customers, and the general indolence of opulent persons, which disinclines them to satisfy every small debt when it is contracted, the system of selling upon credit has become almost universal. Few among us think of paying ready money for any thing; seven tenths of the community are in the constant practice of anticipating their incomes; and there is hardly one so bankrupt in character and fortune as to be unable to find grocers, bakers, butchers, tailors, &c. ready to furnish him upon credit with supplies of the articles in which they respectively deal. We look upon this facility of obtaining accommodations as a very great evil. They are not, in one case out of five, of any real advantage to the parties receiving them, while they are productive of very pernicious results. The system tempts very many, and sometimes even the most considerate individuals, to indulge in expenses beyond their means; and thus becomes the most fruitful source of bankruptcy, insolvency, and bad faith. To guarantee themselves from the extraordinary risk to which such proceedings expose them, tradesmen are obliged to advance the price of their goods to a most exorbitant height; so that those who are able, and who really mean to pay the debts they contract, are, in fact, obliged to pay those of the hosts of insolvents and swindlers maintained by the present system. Many tradesmen consider themselves as fortunate, if they recover from two thirds to three fourths of the sums standing in their books, at the distance of several years. The extraordinary extent to which the credit practice is carried may be learned from the inquiries of the Parliamentary Committee on Small Debts. It appears from them, that hat- ters, shoemakers, &c. in the metropolis, have often 4,000/. and upwards on their books in debts below 10l., and that five sixths of their book debts are below that sum ! A large pro- portion of these debts are irrecoverable; but owing to the artificial enhancement of prices, those that are good are sufficient to indemnify the traders for the loss of the bad. It is not easy, we think, to imagine any system better fitted to generate improvidence and fraud. The vast majority of those who become insolvent, or are imprisoned for debt, consist of labourers, artisans, half-pay officers, clerks in public and other offices, annuitants, &c.,- persons whom no prudent shopkeeper would ever allow to get permanently into his debt. The following table exhibits some of the effects resulting from this system :- Number of Persons committed for Debt to the several Prisons of the Metropolis in the Year 1827, and the Sums for which they were committed.-(Parl. Paper, No. 76. Sess. 1828.) For Sums For Sume For Sume between For Sume In Custody, between Total above 100% 50L and 100Z. 501. and 20L under 20L January 1, 1828. King's Bench prison - - 474 354 550 213 1,591 674 Fleet prison - - 206 141 223 113 683 253 Whitecross Street prison - 206 273 816 600 1,893 378 Marshalsea prison - - 20 30 166 414 630 102 Horsemonger Lane prison - 57 58 134 923 1,172 105 Total - 963 856 1,889 2,263 5,969 1,512 It is time, certainly, that something effectual were done to put an end to such flagrant abuses-to a system that sends 923 persons to a single prison for debts under 201. We do not mean to say or insinuate that credit may not frequently be given to the labouring classes with the best effects: but it is of its abuse that we complain,-of its being indis- criminately granted to every one; to those whom it encourages to continue in a course of idleness and profligacy, as well as to those industrious and deserving persons to whom it may occasionally be of the greatest service. To secure the advantages of credit to the public, free from the enormous evils that result from its abuse, is an object of the highest importance and few things, we believe, would do so much to secure it, as to take from creditors the power to arrest and imprison for debt.-(See BANKRUPTCY.) It was stated in the House of Commons, (19th of February, 1827,) that in the space of 21 years, 70,000 persons were arrested in and about London, at an expense to the parties, it may be estimated, of between 150,000L. and 200,000L! In 1827, in the metropolis and two adjoining counties, 23,515 warrants to arrest were granted, and 11,317 bailable processes were executed. Hence it may be concluded, that in this single year, within the above limits, no fewer than 12,000 persons were deprived of their liberty, on the mere allegation of others, without any proof that they owed them a farthing ! Well might Lord Eldon say " that the law of arrest is a permission to commit acts of greater oppression and inhuman- ity than are to be met with in slavery itself, and that the redress of such a grievance would not be attended with any fatal consequences to the country." The following Table, which shows that 1,120 persons were committed to Horsemonger Lane prison, in 1831, for debts amounting, in all, to only 2,4171. 7s. 5d., being at an average no more than 21. 3s. 2d. each, proves that the discussions which have taken place with respect to the law of arrest and imprisonment, have not, in any degree, lessened its mischievous operation. Whatever else may be dear in England, the fact that thousands of people are annually imprisoned for such miserable trifles, shows that personal liberty is, at all events, abundantly cheap. Digitized by Google 544 CREDIT. A Return of the Number of Debtors committed to Horsemonger Lane Prison, on Process out of the Court of Requests, during the Years ending 1st of January, 1832 and 1833; stating the aggregate Amount of Debts and Costs, separately, in each Year; showing, in Classes, the Number confined from One to less than Ten Days, for Ten Days and less than Thirty, Fifty, Seventy, and one Hun- dred Days; stating, also, the Amount paid out of the County or other rates for the Maintenance and Support of such Prisoners, as accurately as possible. 1831. 1832. Number committed in the year - - - - , 1,120 945 £ s. d. £ s. d. Aggregate amount of debts - - - - - 2,417 7 5 2,039 14 9 costs - - - - - 696 2 7 566 18 2 Number confined from 1 to less than 10 days - - 610 394 for 10 and - 30 - - - 336 317 30 - - 50 - - - 77 119 50 - - 70 - - - 47 65 70 - - 100 - - - 26 29 100 days and more - - - 24 30 Amount paid out of the county or other rates for the £ £ maintenance and support of such prisoners - - 208 226 We defy any one to show that the law of arrest and imprisonment has a single good con- sequence to be placed as a set-off against the intolerable evils of which it is productive. Tradesmen depend, as is clearly evinced by the above statements, upon the despotical power which it puts in their hands, to get them out of scrapes; and believe that the fear of being subjected to arrest will stimulate even the most suspicious portion of their debtors to make payment of their accounts. The records of our prisons, and of our insolvent and other courts, show how miserably these expectations are disappointed. We believe, indeed, that we are warranted in affirming that the more respectable classes of shopkeepers and trades- men are now generally satisfied that the present system requires some very material modifi- cations. The law of arrest and imprisonment is, in fact, advantageous to none but knaves and swindlers, and the lowest class of attorneys, who frequently buy up small accounts and bills, that they may bring actions upon them, and enrich themselves at the expense of the poor, by the magnitude of their charges. Such oppressive proceedings are a disgrace to a civilised country. Were the law in question repealed, credit would be granted to those only who deserved it; for, generally speaking, tradesmen, supposing they had nothing to trust to but their own discretion, would not deal, except for ready money, with those of whose cha- racter and situation they were not perfectly informed and the difficulty under which all idle and improvident persons would thus be placed of obtaining loans, would do much to wean them from their vicious courses, and to render them industrious and honest. Those," says Dr. Johnson, who have made the laws, have apparently considered that every defi- ciency of payment is the crime of the debtor. But the truth is, that the creditor always shares the act, and often more than shares the guilt of improper trust. It seldom happens that any man imprisons another but for debts which he suffered to be contracted in hope of advantage to himself, and for bargains in which he proportioned his profit to his own opinion of the hazard; and there is no reason why one should punish another for a contract in which both concurred." The power of taking goods in execution for debts is also one that requires to be materially modified. At present, the household furniture of every man, and even the implements used in his trade, should there be nothing else to lay hold of, may be seized and sold in satisfac- tion of any petty claim. It seems to us quite clear that some limits should be set to this power; and that such articles as are indispensable either to the subsistence or the business of any poor man ought to be exempted from execution, and, perhaps, distress. The present practice, by stripping its victims of the means of support and employment, drives them to, despair, and is productive only of crimès and disorders. We are glad to observe that there seems to be a growing conviction among mercantile men, of the inconveniences arising from the present practice. A petition against imprison- ment, for small debts, subscribed by many of the most eminent merchants, manufacturers, bankers, &c. of the city of Glasgow, was presented to the House of Commons in 1833. It contains so brief, and at the same time 80 forcible, an exposition of the evils resulting from the present system, that we shall take the liberty of laying it before our readers. " Your petitioners have been long and seriously impressed with the belief that very great evils have arisen and do arise from the imprisonment of debtors in Scotland, especially for small sums. The petitioners will not here question the policy of the existing laws which authorise the impri- sonment of debtors for considerable sums, nor do they intend to object to the creditor retaining the fullest power over the property and effects of his debtor; but they are humbly of opinion that, in so far as these laws give creditors the power to imprison debtors for small sums, such as 81. and under, they are not only injurious to the public, and ruinous to the debtor, but even hurtful to the creditor himself. It would be a waste of time to dwell upon the hardship of subjecting debtors to imprisonment for small debts, contracted sometimes certainly under circumstances of real distress, but more frequently from the improper use of credit, with which they are too readily supplied. The creditor takes care Digitized by Google CREDIT. 545 that his profit shall be commensurate with his risk and the debtor is induced to purchase freely, and at any price, that which he is not immediately called upon to pay; the creditor coolly and cruelly cal- culates upon the power which the law has granted him over the person of his debtor if he fail to dis- charge his debt to him, while the debtor forgets that, by the credit 80 imprudently afforded him, he is preparing the way for his own ruin, and that of all who have any dependence upon him. The total number of debtors imprisoned in the gaol of Glasgow alone, for debts of 81. and under was, in the year 1830, 353; in 1831, 419; and in 1832, 437 while the whole number of incarcerations in that gaol for sums of every description were, in the year 1830, 557; in 1831, 630; and in 1832, 696 the proportion of sums of 81. and under being nearly two thirds of the whole on the average of these 3 years. To remedy these evils, your petitioners humbly submit that means should be adopted for the repeal of the laws at present in force, in 80 far as they sanction the recovery of small debts by imprisonment, reserving their effect in every other respect; the result of which would be, that credit for small sums would be greatly limited, if not entirely extinguished, and the poorer classes rendered more provident and by purchasing with money at a cheaper rate what they now buy at an extravagant price, they would be enabled to procure for themselves additional comforts, from the more economical employ- ment of their small incomes. May it therefore please your Honourable House to take this matter into your consideration, and to adopt such means as you in your wisdom shall see proper, to prevent the incarceration of debtors for sums under 81., and thereby remove or greatly mitigate the evils of improvidence on the part of the debtor, and of oppression on the part of the creditor, which necessarily arise under the present system." So reasonable a proposal, supported by such conclusive statements, could not fail to make a deep impression and a bill was consequently introduced by the solicitor general, taking away the power to arrest and imprison for petty debts. This bill was afterwards withdrawn but there can be no doubt that it will be brought forward again, unless it be resolved to apply a still more radical cure to the abuses complained of. Propriety of placing all small Debts beyond the Pale of the Law.-The taking away the power of arrest and imprisonment, except in the case of fraudulent bankruptcy, would cer- tainly be a material improvement upon the existing system. But we are satisfied that it does not go far enough and that by far the most desirable and beneficial reform that could be effected in this department would be to take away all action for debts under a given sum, as 50L. or 100% The only exception to this rule should be in the case of claims for wages, or labour done under executory contracts. To prevent the measure from being defeated, no action should be granted on bills under 50L or 100Z. except upon those drawn by or upon regular bankers. This would be a radical change certainly but we are fully satisfied that it would be highly advantageous to every class of the community, and most of all to labourers, retail dealers, and small tradesmen. It would protect the former from oppres- sion, at the same time that it would tend powerfully to render them more provident and considerate; it would teach the latter to exercise that discretion in the granting of credit which is so very indispensable; and it would be publicly beneficial, by strengthening the moral principle, and making the contraction of debts for small sums, without the means of paying them, at once difficult and disgraceful. We agree entirely in opinion with those who think that it is to no purpose to attempt to remedy the defects now pointed out, by multiplying courts and other devices for facili- tating the speedy recovery of small debts. This is beginning at the wrong end or rather it is attempting to obviate the influence of one abuse by instituting another. No wise states- man will ever be easily persuaded to fill the country with petty local courts; for these, when not absolutely necessary, are the merest nuisances imaginable; and he would, at all events, exert himself, in the first instance to do away, in so far as possible, with the circumstances that make individuals resort to them. But it is certain that nine tenths of the cases in county courts originate in questions as to the simple contract debts under 50% and were such debts placed, as they ought to be, beyond the pale of the law, the courts would be wholly unnecessary. Our object ought not to be to provide means for enforcing payment of trifling debts, but to prevent their contraction. We believe, indeed, that, instead of les- sening, the multiplication of district courts will materially aggravate, all the evils of the pre- sent credit system. The belief that they may readily enforce their claims by resorting to them will make shopkeepers and tradesmen still more disposed than at present to give credit, while the unprincipled, the inconsiderate, and the necessitous will eagerly grasp at this in- creased facility. What there is of caution amongst our retail dealers is in no inconsiderable degree owing to the want of those petty tribunals so many are anxious to have universally established. The more they are increased, the less will caution prevail. But instead of diminishing this virtue,-for such it really is,-it cannot be too much increased. Nothing will ever deter those who ought not to obtain credit from taking it while in their power; but those who give it may be made to exercise greater discretion they may be made to know that it is a private transaction between themselves and those to whom they grant it; and that in the case of petty debts they have only their own sagacity to look to, such transac- tions not being cognizable by law. A measure of the sort here proposed would not, as some appear to imagine, annihilate credit. It would, no doubt, annihilate that spurious indiscri- minating species of credit, that is as readily granted to the spendthrift and prodigal, as to the frugal and industrious individual but to the same extent that it deprived the former of the means of obtaining accommodation, it would extend those of the latter. Nothing short of 2 z 2 69 Digitized by Google 546 CREW-CUDBEAR. this-nothing but the placing all small debts beyond the pale of the law-will ever fully impress tradesmen with a conviction of the vast advantages that would result to themselves from their withdrawing their confidence from courts and prisons, and preventing every one from getting upon their books, of whose situation and circumstances they are not fully aware; nor will any thing else be able completely to eradicate the flagrant abuses inherent in the present credit system, and which have gone far to render it a public nuisance. One of the worst consequences of the present system is the sort of thraldom in which it keeps thousands of labourers and other individuals, whom the improper facilities for obtain- ing credit originally led into debt. Such persons dare not leave the shops to which they owe accounts and they dare neither object to the quality of the goods offered to them, nor to the prices charged. Dr. Johnson has truly observed, that " he that once owes more than he can pay, is often obliged to bribe his creditor to patience by increasing his debt. Worse and worse commodities at a higher and higher price are forced upon him ; he is impover- ished by compulsive traffic; and at last overwhelmed in the common receptacles of misery by debts, which, without his own consent, were accumulated on his head." By taking away all right of action upon small debts, this system of invisible but substantial coercion would be put an end to. The tradesman would take care who got, in the first instance, upon his books; and instead of forcing articles upon him, would cease to furnish him with any unless he found he was regular in making his payments while the customer, to whom credit was of importance, would know that his only chance of obtaining it would depend upon his character and reputation for punctuality. The abuses of the sort now alluded to, that grew out of what has been denominated the truck system, justly occasioned its abolition; but these were trifling compared with those that originate in the bringing of petty debts within the pale of the law. When the former edition of this work was published, we were not aware that it had been pre- viously proposed to take away all action for debts under 501. or 1001.; but we have since met with a pamphlet, entitled Credit Pernicious, published in 1823, in which this plan is proposed and ably sup- ported. There are also some valuable remarks and observations on the topics now treated of, in the Treatise on the Police, &c. of the Metropolis, by the author of the Cabinet Lawyer," pp. 114-134. CREW, the company of sailors belonging to any ship or vessel. No ship is admitted to be a British ship, unless duly registered and navigated as such by a crew, three fourths of which are British subjects, besides the master.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 54. § 12.) The master or owners of any British ship having a foreign seaman on board not allowed by law, shall for every such seaman forfeit 10/.; unless they can show, by the certificate of the British consul, or of two British merchants, or shall satisfactorily prove, that the requisite number of British seamen could not be obtained at the place where the foreign seaman was taken on board. It is also ordered that the master of every British vessel arriving from the West Indies shall deliver, within 10 days after arrival, to the Custom-house, a list of the crew on board at the time of clearing out from the United Kingdom, and of arrival in the West Indies, and of every seaman who has deserted or died during the voyage, and the amount of wages due to each 80 dying, under a penalty of 50%-(3 & 4. Will. 4. c. 54. § 19.; 3 & 4 Will 4. c. 52. § 16.) CUBEBS (Ger. Kubeben; Fr. Cubebes; It. Cubebi; Sp. Cubebas; Rus. Kubebů; Lat. Piper Cubeba; Arab. Kebäbeh; Javan, Kumunkus; Hind. Cubab-chinie), the pro- duce of a vine or climber, the growth of which is confined exclusively to Java. It is a small dried fruit, like a pepper corn, but somewhat longer. Cubebs have a hot, pungent, aromatic, slightly bitter taste and a fragrant, agreeable odour. They should be chosen large, fresh, sound, and the heaviest that can be procured. The quantity entered for home consumption, in 1830, amounted to 18,540 lbs., producing a nett revenue of 1,854/. 6s. Their price in the London market, in bond, varies from 21. 10s. to 4L 4s. per cwt. CUCUMBER, a tropical plant, of which there are many varieties, largely cultivated in hothouses in England. CUDBEAR, a purple or violet coloured powder used in dyeing violet, purple, and crim- son, prepared from a species of lichen (Lichen tartareus Lin.), or crustaceous moss, grow- ing commonly on limestone rocks in Sweden, Scotland, the north of England, &c. About 130 tons of this lichen are annually exported from Sweden. It commonly sells in the port of London for about 20L per ton but to prepare it for use it must be washed and dried; and by these operations the weight is commonly diminished a half, and the price, in effect, doubled. Though possessing great beauty and lustre at first, the colours obtained from cud- bear are so very fugacious, that they ought never to be employed but in aid of some other more permanent dye, to which they may give body and vivacity. In this country it is chiefly used to give strength and brilliancy to the blues dyed with indigo, and to produce a saving of that article it is also used as a ground for madder reds, which commonly incline too much to yellow, and are made rosy by this addition. The name cudbear was given to this powder by Dr. Cuthbert Gordon, who, having obtained a patent for the preparation, chose in this way to connect it with his own name.-(Bancroft, Philosophy of Permanent Colours, vol. i. pp. 300-304.) Digitized by Google CUMMIN SEED, CURRANTS. 547 CUMMIN SEED (Ger. Kumin; Fr. Cumin; It. Comino, Cumino; Sp. Comino , Arab. Kemun), the seeds of an annual plant (Cuminum Cyminum Lin.), a native of Egypt, but extensively cultivated in Sicily and Malta. They have a strong, peculiar, heavy odour, and a warm, bitterish, disagreeable taste. They are long and slender. CURRANTS (Fr. Raisins de Corinthe; Ger. Korinthen; It. Uve passe di Corinto; Lat. Passulæ Corinthiacæ; Rus. Korinka, Opoek; Sp. Pasas de Corinto), a small species of grape, largely cultivated in Zante, Cephalonia, and Ithaca, of which islands they form the staple produce; and in the Morea, in the vicinity of Patras. The plant is delicate and as 6 or 7 years must elapse, after a plantation has been formed, before it begins to produce, its cultivation requires a considerable outlay of capital. The crop is particularly liable to injury from rains in harvest, and is altogether of a very precarious description. After being dried in the sun, the currants are exported packed in large butts. They are in extensive demand in this country and, when mixed with flour and suet, make a dish that is pecu- liarly acceptable to the lower classes. But, as if it were intended to put them beyond the reach of all but the richest individuals, they are burdened with the enormous duty of 44s. 4d. a'cwt. ! The fact, that in despite of this anti-consumption impost, the entries of currants for home consumption amounted, at an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, to 127,084 cwt. a year, producing an annual revenue of 281,7871., shows that the taste for them is both deeply rooted and widely diffused. With one or two exceptions, they are the most grossly over-taxed article in the British tariff. Their price in bond, in London, varies from 20s. to 27s. a cwt.; so that the duty amounts to more than 200 per cent. on the importation price ! So exorbitant a tax admits of no justification. It is highly injurious to the con- sumers in Great Britain, to the merchants engaged in the Mediterranean trade, to the produ- cers in the Ionian Islands and Greece, and, we may add, to the revenue for, considering how highly esteemed the article is by all classes, and that it might be imported in much larger quantities without any considerable rise of price, there can be no manner of doubt that were the duty reduced to 10s. or 12s. a cwt. the consumption would be so much increas- ed, that in a few years the revenue would be materially greater than at present. By referring to the article IONIAN ISLANDS, it will be seen that the duty has been pecu- liarly hostile to their interests. It has, in fact, gone far to countervail all the advantages they have, in other respects, derived from our protection and has done much to estrange the affections of the inhabitants, and to excite and keep alive a jealousy of this country. The Mediterranean merchants, in a petition presented to the House of Commons last ses- sion, prayed for the repeal of the duty imposed since 1806, being 16s. 4d. a cwt. leaving a duty of 28s. a cwt. A reduction to this extent would, no doubt, be a considerable relief to the growers and importers; but it would be quite inadequate to bring the article fairly into consumption among the mass of the people. To accomplish this most desirable object, the duty ought not to exceed 10s. or 12s.; and we are well convinced it would yield more revenue at this rate than at 28s. A duty of 50 per cent. is surely high enough upon an article fitted to enter largely into the consumption of the labouring classes. No abatement of duties is made on account of any damage received by currants. Currants, the produce of Europe, are not to be imported for home use except in British ships, or in ships of the country of which they are the produce, or of the country whence they are imported.-(3& 4 Will. 4. c. 54. 00 2. 22.) A Treasury letter of the 30th of March, 1816, directs the following tares to be allowed, with liberty to the merchant and officers to take the actual tare when either party is dissatisfied. Currants in casks from Zante - - 13 per cent. Leghorn - 10 - Trieste - 10 - (The exorbitant duty of 44s. 4d. a cwt. on currants was reduced, in 1834, to half that amount, or to 22s. 2d. a cwt-(4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 89. § 15.) But this reduction, consider- able as it is, is not enough. The duty ought not to exceed 10s., or at most 12s. The price of currants in bond usually varies from 20s. to 25s.; so that the duty, as fixed by the 4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 89., is equal to about 100 per cent. ad valorem. But such a duty is obviously oppressive the more especially as currants, if low-priced, would be largely consumed by all classes in this country; and as they form the principal equivalent the inhabitants of the Ionian Islands and of the Morea have to offer in exchange for foreign products. We are satisfied, too, that had the duty been reduced to 10s. a cwt., it would, in a few years, have yielded more revenue than it will ever yield at its present rate. Such a reduction would have brought currants within the command of a much greater number of persons; and would, in fact, have gone far to render them an article of general consumption; whereas, the duty of 22s. 2d. will still confine their use to the wealthier classes. It has been said, that a reduction of the duty from 44s. 4d. to 10s. a cwt. would not have made a corresponding reduction in the price of the article and that the measure would have redounded more to the advantage of the growers of currants than of the consumers in this country. That such might have been in some degree the case, at the outset, we admit but the greater advantages derived by the raisers of currants would have made them be produced in much larger quantities, 80 that at no dis- tant period we should have reaped the full advantage of the reduction in the rate of duty, at the same time that our trade with the Ionian Islands and the Morea would have increased proportionally to the Digitized by Google 548 CUSTOM-HOUSE, CUSTOMS. Increase in the imports of currants. However, we are grateful for what has been done; and It may be fairly presumed that the beneficial effect of the reductions already made will lead to others on a still greater scale.-Sup.) CUSTOM-HOUSE, the house or office where commodities are entered for importation or exportation; where the duties, bounties, or drawbacks payable or receivable upon such importation or exportation are paid or received and where ships are cleared out, &c. For information as to the proceedings necessary at the Custom-house on importing or ex- porting commodities, see the article IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION. The principal British Custom-house is in London; but there are Custom-houses subor- dinate to the latter in all considerable sea-port towns. CUSTOMS, are duties charged upon commodities on their being imported into or ex- ported from a country. Custom duties seem to have existed in every commercial country. The Athenians laid a tax of a fifth on the corn and other merchandise imported from foreign countries, and also on several of the commodities exported from Attica. The portaria, or customs payable on the commodities imported into, and exported from the different ports in the Roman empire, formed a very ancient and important part of the public revenue. The rates at which they were charged were fluctuating and various, and little is now known respecting them. Cicero informs us, that the duties on corn exported from the ports of Sicily were, in his time, 5 per cent. Under the Imperial government, the amount of the portaria depended as much on the caprice of the prince as on the real exigencies of the state. Though sometimes diminished, they were never entirely remitted, and were much more frequently increased. Under the Byzantine emperors, they were as high as 121 per cent-(Supp. to Encyc. Brit. art. Taxation.) Customs seems to have existed in England before the Conquest; but the king's claim to them was first established by stat. 3 Edw. 1. These duties were, at first, principally laid on wool, woolfels (sheep-skins), and leather when exported. There were also extraordinary duties paid by aliens, which were denominated parva costuma, to distinguish them from the former, or magna costuma. The duties of tonnage and poundage, of which mention is 80 frequently made in English history, were custom duties; the first being paid on wine by the tun, and the latter being an ad valorem duty of so much a pound on all other merchandise. When these duties were granted to the Crown, they were denominated subsidies; and as the duty of poundage had continued for a lengthened period at the rate of 1s. a pound, or 5 per cent., a subsidy came, in the language of the customs, to denote an ad valorem duty of 5 per cent. The new subsidy granted in the reign of William III. was an addition of 5 per cent. to the duties on most imported commodities. The various custom duties were collected, for the first time, in a book of rates published in the reign of Charles II.; a new book of rates being again published in the reign of George I. But, exclusive of the duties entered in these two books, many more have been imposed at different times; so that the accumulation of the duties, and the complicated regulations to which they gave rise, were productive of the greatest embarrassment. The evil was in- creased by the careless manner in which new duties were added to the old; a percentage being sometimes added to the original tax while at other times the commodity was esti- mated by a new standard of bulk, weight, number, or value, and charged with an additional impost, without any reference to the duties formerly imposed. The confusion arising from these sources was still further augmented by the special appropriation of each of the duties, and the consequent necessity of a separate calculation for each. The intricacy and con- fusion inseparable from such a state of things proved a serious Injury to commerce, and led to many frauds and abuses. The Customs Consolidation Act, introduced by Mr. Pitt in 1787, did much to remedy these inconveniences. The method adopted was, to abolish the existing duties on all arti- cles, and to substitute in their stead one single duty on each article, equivalent to the aggre- gate of the various duties by which it had previously been loaded. The resolutions on which the act was founded amounted to about 3,000. A more simple and uniform system was, at the same time, introduced into the business of the Custom-house. These alterations were productive of the very best effects; and several similar consolidations have since been effected particularly in 1825, when the various statutes then existing relative to the cus- toms, amounting, including parts of statutes, to about 450, were consolidated and compressed into only 11 statutes of a reasonable bulk, and drawn up with great perspicuity. Since then, a few statutes were passed, amending and changing some of the provisions in the con- solidated statutes; and these have been again embodied in consolidated acts passed last session.* The Board of Customs is not to consist of more than 13 commissioners, and they are to be reduced to 11 as vacancies occur. The Treasury may appoint 1 commissioner, and 2 assistant commissioners, to act for Scotland and Ireland. Officers of customs taking any fee or reward, whether pecuniary or of any other sort, OR & 4 Will. cap. 51, 52. 56. and 58. Digitized by Google CUSTOMS. 549 account of any thing done, or to be done, by them in the exercise of their duty, from any one, except by the order or permission of the commissioners of the customs, shall be dis- missed their office; and the person giving, offering, or promising such gratuity, fee, &c. shall forfeit 100L Any officer of customs who shall accept of any bribe, recompence, or reward, to induce him to neglect his duty, or to do, conceal, or connive at any act whereby any of the provi- sions of the customs laws shall be evaded, shall be dismissed the service, and be rendered incapable of serving his Majesty in future in any capacity whatever; and the person offering such bribe, recompence, &c. shall, whether the offer be accepted or not, forfeit 500L. Custom duties, like all duties on particular commodities, though advanced in the first instance by the merchant, are ultimately paid by those by whom they are consumed. When a government lays a duty on the foreign commodities which enter its ports, the duty falls entirely on such of its own subjects as purchase these commodities; for the foreigners would cease supplying its markets with them, if they did not get the full price of the commodities, exclusive of the tax and, for the same reason, when a government lays a duty on the com- modities which its subjects are about to export, the duty does not fall on them, but on the foreigners by whom they are bought. If, therefore, it were possible for a country to raise a sufficient revenue by laying duties on exported commodities, such revenue would be wholly derived from others, and it would be totally relieved from the burden of taxation, except in so far as duties might be imposed by foreigners on the goods it imports from them. Care, however, must be taken, in imposing duties on exportation, not to lay them on commodities that may be produced at the same, or nearly the same, cost by foreigners; for the effect of the duty would then be to cause the market to be supplied by others, and to put an entire stop to their exportation. But in the event of a country possessing any decided natural or acquired advantage the production of any sort of commodities, a duty on their exportation would seem to be the most unexceptionable of all taxes. If the Chinese chose to act on this principle, they might derive a considerable revenue from a duty on exported teas, which would fall entirely on the English and other foreigners who buy them. The coal and tin, and perhaps, also, some of the manufactured goods produced in this country, seem to be in this predicament. The revenue derived from the custom duties in 1590, in the reign of Elizabeth, amounted to no more than 50,000/. In 1613, it had increased to 148,075/.; of which no less than 109,572L were collected in London. In 1660, at the Restoration, the customs produced 421,5821. and at the Revolution, in 1688, they produced 781,987/. During the reigns of William III. and Anne, the customs revenue was considerably augmented, the nett pay- ments into the exchequer in 1712 being 1,315,423/. During the war terminated by the peace of Paris in 1763, the nett produce of the customs revenue of Great Britain amounted to nearly 2,000,000L In 1792, it amounted to 4,407,000/. In 1815, at the close of the war, it amounted to 11,360,000l. and last year (1832) it amounted to about 17,000,000L, and, including Ireland, to about 18,500,000/.! Astonishing, however, as the increase of the customs revenue has certainly been, it is not quite so great as it appears. Formerly the duties on some considerable articles, such as sugar, brandy, wine, &c. imported from abroad, were divided partly into customs duties charged on their importation, and partly into excise duties on their being taken into con- sumption. But these duties have now, with the exception of tea*, been transferred wholly to the customs; the facilities afforded, by means of the warehousing system, for paying the duties in the way most convenient for the merchant, having obviated the necessity of dividing them into different portions. It will be seen from various articles in this work-(see BRANDY, GENEVA, SMUGGLING, TEA, TOBACCO, &c.)-that the exorbitant amount of the duties laid on many articles im- ported from abroad leads to much smuggling and fraud; and requires, besides, an extraor- dinary expense in many departments of the customs service, which might be totally avoided were these duties reduced within reasonable limits. This, however, is the business of govern- ment, and not of those entrusted with the management of the customs; and it would be unjust to the latter not to mention that this department has been essentially improved, during the last few years, both as respects economy and efficiency. The following extracts from a letter to the Right Hon. H. Goulburn, ascribed to the present chairman of the Board of Cus- toms (R. B. Dean, Esq.), give a brief but satisfactory view of the improvements that have been effected:- As regards the department of customs in 1792, the principal officers engaged in the receipt of the duties in the port of London were patent officers. " The first Earl of Liverpool was collector inwards. " The late Duke of Manchester, collector outwards. " The Duke of Newcastle, and afterwards the Earl of Guilford, comptroller inwards and outwards. From the 22d of April, 1834, the collection of the tea duties by the excise is to cease; and they are to be transferred to the customs.-(See TEA.) Digitized by Google 550 CUSTOMS. " Lord Stowell, surveyor of subsidies and petty customs. " These noblemen took no part in the official duties, but merely exercised the right of appointing deputies and clerks. " Both principals and deputies were remunerated by fees. The patentees received the fees denominated patent, and the deputies retained the fees called the fees of usage for their own use. In addition to these fees, both deputies and clerks received fees for despatch. The same system prevailed throughout the whole department. The salaries of the officers were nominal and the principal proportion of all official income was derived from fees. These fees were constantly varying both in rate and amount, and formed a continual source of dispute and complaint between the merchant and the officer. " This system (after having been repeatedly objected to by various commissions of inquiry, and finally by the committee of finance in 1797) was put an end to in the year 1812, by the act 51 Geo. c. 71., by which all patent offices and fees were abolished, and compensation allowances granted to the patent officers, and fixed salaries established. " The additional salaries granted under this arrangement amounted to about 200,000L, and the temporary compensation allowances to about 40,000L per annum. " The fees abolished, and from which the public were relieved, amounted to about 160,000l. per annum. " In addition to the amount of fees from which the public were relieved, various allowances made by the Crown to officers for quarantine, coal poundage, poundage on seizures, and many other incidental allowances, which did not appear on the establishment, were also abolished, and the salaries of every officer placed at one view upon the establishment. " The effect of these salutary measures has been to give a great apparent increase to officers' salaries since 1792 and, upon a mere comparison of the establishment of 1792 with 1830, without the above explanation, it would appear that the pay of the officers had been most materially augmented, whereas, in point of fact, the difference is in the mode of pay- ment: and the incomes of the officers at the present period (as compared with 1792) are in general less; and, consequently, the public are less taxed for the performance of the same duty now than in 1792. " In the year 1792, the warehousing system had not been established. Officers were ad- mitted at all ages, and there was no system of classification or promotion. The officers at the out-ports and in London were generally appointed through local influence; and were too often persons who had failed in trade, or had been in menial service, and who regarded their situations rather as a comfortable provision for their families than as offices for which efficient services were required. The superintendence and powers of the Board were cramped and interfered with by circumstances and considerations which prevented the enforcement of wholesome regulation. The whole system was so imperfect, so far back only as 1818, that a special commission was appointed to inquire into the department; and, upon the recom- mendation of that commission, various regulations have been adopted. The age of admission has been limited a system of classification and promotion of officers, and a graduated scale of salaries, established throughout the whole department; and, by this means, local interference in the promotion of officers has been abolished the attend- ance of officers increased, regulated, and strictly enforced holidays reduced from 46 in the year to 3; viz. Good Friday, the King's birthday, and Christmas-day; useless oaths, and bonds, and forms of documents of various kinds, discontinued; increased facility and despatch afforded to the merchant's business; the accounts kept in the different offices, and returns of all kinds revised, simplified, and reduced and various minor regulations of detail esta- blished the whole machinery of the department remodelled, and adapted to the trade and commerce of the country. In Ireland, the number of officers employed at all the ports, in the year ended the 5th of January, 1830, and the salaries and charges, did not much exceed the number and expense at the port of Dublin alone in 1818 and, within the space of 11 years, nearly two thirds of the officers employed at the ports in Ireland have been discontinued; the number having been, in 1818, 1755; in 1829, 544; and an annual reduction in salaries and charges has been effected to the extent of 173,724/.; the amount having been, in 1818, 285,115L; in 1829, 111,391/. (103,813/. of that amount having been reduced between the years 1823 and 1828), upon an expenditure of 285,115/.; and the receipts were nearly equal, in 1827, to those of 1818 and 1823, notwithstanding the total repeal of the cross Channel duties, amounting to about 340,000/. per annum, subsequent to the latter period. Already has government relinquished, it may be said, any interference with promotion in the department of the customs, and the road is open to advancement to the meritorious officer. Influence is no longer allowed to prevail; and in many cases which have recently occurred, and in which the patronage of government might have been fairly exercised, it has been at once abandoned, in order to give way to arrangements by which the services of some very intelligent and highly respectable officers, whose offices had been abolished, could be again rendered available, with a material saving to the public. Digitized by Google CUSTOMS. 551 By a recent order from the Lords of the Treasury, of the 20th of February, 1830, the salaries of the commissioners, and of other officers, have been prospectively reduced, and directions given to revise the whole establishment in the spirit of that order, with a view to every possible reduction." These are very great improvements, certainly, and reflect much credit on the government, and on the Board by whom its efforts have been zealously seconded; but we are, notwith- standing, satisfied that very great reductions may still be made in the cost of the establish- ment. These, however, are not to be effected by reducing the salaries of the officers, which, if any thing, are now too low; but by lessening the demand for their services, by reducing and simplifying the duties. The coast guard and coast blockade (the latter is under the orders of the Admiralty), costing together about 400,000L a year, might be wholly dispensed with, were it not for the exorbitant duties on brandy, gin, and tobacco-duties which seem to be intended only to encourage smuggling; and which it is quite certain would be 3 times as productive as they are at this moment, were they reduced to one third of their present amount. The duties on a great variety of small articles might also be entirely repealed, without any sensible loss of revenue, and with great advantage to commerce and were these alterations effected, and the proceedings with respect to the entry and clearing out of ships and goods adequately simplified, a very great saving might be made in this depart- ment, and the services of a large number of those now employed in it might be dispensed with. In Scotland, separate Custom-houses seem to be multiplied to an absurd extent. Within these few years, indeed, a very considerable change for the better was effected in the Scotch Custom-house; but it is still susceptible of, and ought to be subjected to, great curtailment. The reader will find, in the accounts of most imported articles of any consequence given in this work, statements of the customs duty paid on their importation. It may be gratify- ing, however, to have them all brought together in one point of view, as in the following Table:- An Account of the Gross Receipt and Nett Produce of the Revenue of Customs in Great Britain in the Year ending the 5th of January, 1833; distinguishing the Amount collected on each Article usually producing 1,000l. or more per Annum. Gross Receipt. Nett Produce. List of Articles. England. Scotland. Great Britain. England. Scotland. Great Britain. Duties Inwards. L. & d. L. s. d. L. s. d. L. 8. d. L. s. d. L. s. d. Acid, boracie 4,183 0 0 - 4,183 0 0 4,183 0 0 4,183 0 0 Alkanet root 1,733 18 0 57 18 8 1,791 16 8 1,729 6 0 57 18 8 1,787 4 8 Almonds 10,973 16 7 497 11 11,470 18 6 10,775 10 8 478 5 0 11,253 15 8 Aloes 2,184 5 5 - 2,184 5 5 1,810 5 2 - 1,810 5 2 Angelica 275 2 10 - 275 2 10 275 2 10 - 275 2 10 Annotto 671 0 1 - 671 0 I 671 0 1 - 671 0 I Apples, not dried 2,996 12 8 299 15 0 3,296 7 8 2,912 19 7 298 2 0 3,211 1 7 Argol 678 18 5 801 686 18 6 670 3 6 8 0 1 678 3 7 Arrow root or powder 787 19 9 64 19 4 852 19 1 787 12 4 61 18 8 849 11 0 Ashes, pearl and pot 1,887 14 4 163 2 7 2,050 16 11 1,877 0 11 163 2 7 2,040 3 6 Bacon and hams 1,762 15 5 198 3 6 1,960 18 11 1,761 13 1 198 3 6 1,959 16 7 Balsams 2,490 14 11 57 2 7 2,547 17 6 2,383 6 4 67 2 7 2,440 8 11 Barilla and alkali 15,166 16 7 174 4 9 15,341 1 4 15,156 16 7 172 11 7 15,329 8 2 Bark for tanners' or dy- ers' use 19,001 0 0 3,340 13 10 22,341 13 10 18,970 2 8 3,280 17 9 22,251 0 5 Baskets 1,043 9 2 117 1,044 10 9 1,043 6 2 1 7 1,044 7 9 Beef, salted 300 19 4 11 12 3 312 11 7 300 19 4 11 12 3 312 11 7 Beer, spruce 5,956 6 3 892 9 10 6,848 16 1 5,950 17 0 890 6 11 6,841 3 11 Berries of all sorts 3,037 11 11 25 0 5 3,062 12 4 3,037 11 11 25 0 5 3,062 12 4 Books 8,843 4 7 86 5 4 8,929 9 11 8,824 10 85 8 5 8,909 10 3 Boots, shoes, and ca- lashes 3,748 16 0 306 3,751 16 6 3,743 4 0 3 0 6 3,746 4 6 Borax 875 6 1 790 882 15 I 875 6 1 7 9 0 882 15 1 Boxes of all sorts 3,342 1 9 36 7 0 3,378 8 9 3,321, 4 9 36 7 0 3,357 11 9 Brimstone 6,256 6 5 1,536 8 4 7,792 14 9 6,253 IS 5 1,530 11 10 7,784 10 3 Bristles 25,185 16 I 428 8 3 25,614 4 4 25,184 14 7 428 8 3 25,613 2 10 Bugles 3,075 2 0 040 3,075 6 0 3,042 16 0 0 4 0 3,043 0 0 Butter 127,773 19 10 556 9 10 128,330 9 8 127,739 16 7 553 19 10 128,293 16 5 Canes of all sorts 3,590 8 2 40 16 4 3,631 4 6 3,569 17 7 40 16 4 3,610 13 11 Cantharides 1,869 18 0 12 9 0 1,882 7 0 1,858 19 4 12 9 0 1,871 8 4 Capers 1,534 4 4 19 0 1,553 5 4 1,534 4 4 19 0 1,553 5 4 Cassia lignea 1,663 10 144 0 1,807 2 10 1,663 10 144 0 1,807 2 10 Cheese 62,367 11 6,808 13 7 69,175 16 6 62,248 19 7 6,794 13 11 69,043 13 6 China ware, porcelain, and earthenware 4,369 18 5 12 3 4,381 19 8 4,200 17 7 12 3 4,212 18 10 Cinnamon 416 16 10 - 416 16 10 416 16 10 - 416 16 10 Clocks 5,938 7 11 154 13 9 6,093 8 5,868 14 5 154 13 9 6,023 8 2 Cloves 7,643 13 9 66 2 0 7,709 15 9 7,514 16 9 66 2 0 7,580 18 9 Cochineal, granilla, and dust 4,217 18 5 - 4,217 18 5 4,195 15 1 - 4,195 15 1 Cocoa, cocoa nut husks, shells and chocolate 14,501 19 9 44 1 7 14,546 1 4 14,485 15 10 40 8 1 14,526 3 11 Coffee 548,092 8 11 28,165 1 9 576,247 10 8 547,106 13 8 28,158 5 0 575,264 18 8 Coral beads 2,140 18 1 - 2,140 18 1 2,140 18 I - 2,140 18 1 Cordage and cables 22 18 4 1 16 3 24 14 7 22 18 4 16 3 24 14 7 Cork, unmanufactured 12,990 14 3 2,876 16 1 15,867 10 4 12,988 18 7 2,869 15 9 15,858 14 4 Corks, ready made 264 19 0 990 274 8 0 264 19 0 9 9 0 274 8 0 Corn, grain, meal, and flour (including buck. wheat) 279,954 7 4 29,956 5 8 309,910 13 0 278,005 9 4 29,910 5 2 307,915 14 6 Cotton manufactures(not otherwise described) 2,930 11 9 6 13 10 2,937 5 7 2,903 1 9 6 13 10 2,909 15 7 Cream of tartar 1,374 12 2 291 10 3 1,666 2 5 1,354 18 9 291 10 3 1,646 9 0 Cubebs 1,208 18 6 35 6 0 1,244 4 6 1,208 18 6 35 6 0 1,244 4 6 Digitized by Google 552 CUSTOMS. Gross Receipts. Nett Produce. List of Articles. England. Scotland. Great Britain. England. Scotland. Great Britain. Duties Intoards-cont. L a. d L 8. d. L. 8. d. L a. d. L 8. d. L 8. d. Currents 312,749 17 2 2,392 12 4 315,132 9 6 311,948 2 6 2,376 12 4 314,324 14 10 Dye and hard woods; viz. Boxwood 1,868 15 7 - 1,863 15 7 1,869 1 7 (Excem of repay- 1,867 17 4 ments.) Cedar, under 8 in. 8,531 10 9 1898 2,549 19 11 2,531 10 9 1892 2,549 19 11 square Fustle 913 7 2 8 17 2 922 4 4 905 18 9 8 12 3 914 11 0 Logwood 2,307 15 5 137 8 10 2,445 4 3 2,302 19 0 136 0 0 2,45 19 0 Mahogany 39,543 17 1 5,923 11 6 45,467 8 7 39,501 7 5 5,903 19 6 45,406 11 Nicaragua 815 12 8 - 815 12 8 806 12 5 - 806 12 $ Rosewood 8,027 11 10 351 4 6 8,378 16 4 8,027 11 10 348 14 6 8,376 6 4 Eggs 21,565 1 2 - 21,566 1 2 21,537 2 0 - 21,537 2 0 Elcphants' teeth 2,700 12 $ 11 14 1 2,712 6 4 2,679 18 0 10 4 10 2,690 10 Embroidery and needle work 5,800 18 11 1130 5,302 5 11 5,196 19 4 1130 5,197 12 4 Essence of bergamot and lemons. (See Easen- tial oils.) Feathers for beds 4,121 13 2 580 14 0 4,702 7 2 4,116 15 1 572 7 6 4,689 2 ostrich 696 5 2 - 626 6 2 696 5 2 - 616 5 8 Fign 22,371 15 10 270 18 5 22,642 14 3 22,131 8 5 STO 18 6 22,402 6 10 Fish, anchovies 827 2 8 230 829 5 8 815 6 0 15 1 817 ecls 940 10 0 - 940 10 0 940 10 0 - 940 10 0 oysters 5,846 5 9 - 5,846 5 9 5,816 5 9 - 5,646 5 9 Flax, and tow, or codilla of hemp and flax 1,418 2 2,703 17 3 4,115 18 5 1,406 12 6 2,669 16 9 4,075 9 S Flowers, artificial (not of silk) 615 7 9 018 3 616 6 0 614 7 9 0193 615 6 0 Furs 34,331 19 2 839 34,340 2 " 34,071 6 3 $ 3 9 34,079 10 0 Ginger, dry 3,450 12 7 63 7 5 3,514 0 0 3,428 13 7 6375 3,492 0 Glass; viz bottles, green or common 9,156 19 10 693 12 3 9,790 12 1 9,145 11 2 631 2 7 9,776 13 9 of all other sorts 4,680 11 7 83 16 6 4,764 8 I 4,674 3 83 16 3 4,757 17 6 Grains, Guinea 1,633 10 0 - 1,633 10 0 1,633 10 0 - 1,633 10 0 Grapes 1,580 8 1 102 14 7 1,683 2 8 1,559 8 1 102 14 7 1,662 2 $ Gum, animi and copal 1,508 15 8 - 1,508 15 8 1,496 3 3 - 1,496 3 3 3 Arabic 2,657 12 2 114 4 9 2,771 16 11 2,636 13 6 114 4 9 2,750 IS Senegal 5,789 0 3 - 5,788 0 3 5,633 11 5 - 5,633 " 5 lac dye 1,447 4 $ - 1,447 4 8 1,447 4 8 - 1,447 4 # shellac 2,046 3 8 - 2,046 3 8 2,046 3 8 - 2,046 3 5 tragacanth 1,066 0 9 - 1,066 0 9 986 14 9 - 986 14 9 243 18 6 3 12 1 247 10 7 243 18 6 3 12 1 247 10 7 Hair, horse human 701 15 9 - 701 15 9 700 3 9 - 700 Hair or goats' wool, ma- nufactures of 2,482 15 5 31 13 0 2,514 8 5 2,474 19 5 31 IS 0 2,506 12 6 Hats of chip and straw 16,707 3 2 - 16,707 3 2 16,707 3 2 - 16,707 3 2 Hemp 28,427 19 4 4,325 2 7 32,758 11 23,381 4 7 3,181 7 10 26,562 12 5' Hides, not tanned 21,958 0 7 1,984 7 9 23,972 8 4 21,794 6 8 1,963 15 9 23,758 2 5 tanned 1,164 13 2 6 0 0 1,170 13 2 1,164 13 2 600 1,170 13 2 Horns, horn tips, and pieces 1,715 1 5 54 12 3 1,769 13 8 1,705 12 11 53 3 2 1,758 16 1 Horses 945 0 0 57 0 1,002 0 0 937 0 0 67 0 0 994 0 0 Jalap 2,536 4 3 71 5 6 2,607 9 9 2,531 1 7 7156 2,602 7 1 India rubbers 772 16 3 - 772 16 3 765 0 10 765 NO Indigo 30,597 13 10 140 9 6 30,738 3 4 30,539 17 4 130 17 6 30,6.0 Iron, in bars 20,338 17 0 1,011 12 0 21,360 9 0 20,233 9 2 1,010 19 0 21,244 5 8 of all other sorts 707 10 4 33 0 740 13 4 704 2 1 32 18 3 737 4 Isinglase 3,838 0 9 1296 3,850 10 3 3,836 5 2 12 9 6 3,843 14 6 Juice of lemons, limes, and oranges 1,041 13 4 114 10 0 1,156 3 4 1,041 IS 4 114 10 0 1,156 3 4 Juniper berries. (See Berries.) Lace thread 358 10 2 296 360 19 - 8 358 10 2 2 9 6 360 19 8 Lacquered ware 1,008 2 0 8 17 0 1,016 19 0 997 8 3 8 17 0 1,006 5 3 Lead, black 2,347 1 9 5 0 2,352 7 9 2,292 8 6 4140 2,297 8 5 Leather gloves 27,220 0 5 - 27,220 0 5 27,105 3 - 27,105 16 3 manufactures of, except boots, shoes, & gloves 1,050 11 8 IS 11 2 1,064 10 1,050 11 8 13 11 2 1,064 10 Lemons and oranges 50,255 11 9 2,315 5 4 52,570 17 I 49,852 17 9 2,305 15 4 52,158 13 Linens, foreign 17,429 11 7 43 19 10 17,473 11 5 17,190 2 I 43 19 10 17,234 111 Liquorice juice 19,924 7 4 1,888 7 0 21,812 14 4 19,924 7 4 1,886 2 4 21.812 8 Mace 2,613 8 11 - 2,613 8 11 2,613 8 11 - 2,613 Madder and madder root 18,976 8 2 2,754 5 3 21,730 13 6 18,856 8 2 2,723 15 6 21,580 3 8 Manna 505 6 6 - 505 6 6 480 8 7 480 S - Mats of Russia 4,119 2 10 700 17 9 4,620 0 7 3,987 17 2 668 3 1 4,656 0 3 other sorts 815 11 2 23 5 838 12 7 814 6 9 23 5 837 9 2 Melasses 128,216 5 8 126,439 5 11 254,655 11 7 128,089 16 3 125,841 15 3 253,931 11 6 Musical instruments 1,508 14 9 3 9 6 1,512 4 3 1,493 3 11 396 1,495 18 5 Myrrh 663 17 10 - 663 17 10 495 4 11 455 11 - Nutmegs 14,506 8 3 50 2 6 14,556 10 9 14,502 8 3 50 2 6 14,552 10 9 Nuts, chesnuts 2,333 8 10 12 18 0 2,346 6 10 2,310 14 10 10 18 0 2.321 If 10 small 12,679 19 7 57 6 12,737 I 12,610 5 7 52 17 6 12,663 3 walnuts 1,454 12 10 49 5 4 1,503 18 2 1.437 9 4 48 18 4 1,486 7 8 Oil, castor 2,422 6 10 127 7 6 2,549 14 4 2,412 1 1 127 76 2,539 8 7 chemical, essential, and perfumed of all sorts 9,061 18 5 91 6 10 9,153 5 3 9,000 13 5 91 6 10 9,092 0 3 olive 42,560 10 384 2 6 42,964 4 3 42,505 1 0 283 14 1 42.48 15 palm 27,559 2 0 050 27,559 7 0 27,541 7 3 034 87,541 10 a train, spermaceti & blubber 2,277 15 4 429 2 1 2,706 17 5 2,278 5 5 427 2 10 2,699 6 3 Oker 507 17 4 148 509 2 0 507 17 4 148 609 0 Opium 5,933 7 6 52 0 0 5,965 7 6 5,929 0 6 52 0 0 6,981 0 6 Orchal and orchella 288 10 6 0 4 9 288 15 3 283 2 11 0 4 9 25 $ Paper 801 15 7 - 801 15 7 801 8 I - sot - of the Isle of Man 969 0 0 - 969 0 0 969 0 0 969 0 - for hangings 851 10 10 - 851 10 10 851 10 10 - 851 10 10 Pepper of all sorts 91,995 14 4 8,227 8 8 100,223 3 0 91,844 7 2 8,227 8 8 100,071 16 10 Pictures 2,011 2 1 53 15 7 2,064 17 8 2,010 11 1 53 15 7 2,064 6 8 Pimento 5,769 = 4 296 14 7 6,066 11 6,767 9 8 287 10 6,064 10 $ Pitch 368 IS 3 93 17 7 462 10 10 368 13 3 89 18 7 458 11 10 Platting of chip or straw 15,209 7 9 - 15,209 7 9 15,198 6 9 - 15,198 6 9 Plums, dried 470 19 1 1 12 5 472 11 6 470 9 6 1 11 3 478 0 , Prints and drawings 1,309 15 6 9123 1,319 7 9 1,302 = 9123 1,311 14 I Prunes 5,730 14 2 36178 6,092 10 5,718 16 0 356 4 9 6,075 0 of Quicksilver 2,678 2 5 12 7 2,678 15 0 2,674 5 11 0187 2,674 IS 6 Quills, goose 3,609 14 7 598 16 7 4,202 11 2 3,609 14 7 592 16 7 4,202 11 il Radix ipecacuanhm 966 8 11 - 986 2 11 977 6 11 - 977 111 Digitized by Google CUSTOMS. 553 Gross Receipts. Nett Produce. List of Articles. England. Scotland. Great Britain. England. Scotland. Great Britain. Muties Inwards-cont. L a. d. L. & d. L. & d. L & d. L. #. d L. a. d. Rage, &c. for paper 1,401 0 7 318 15 10 1,710 16 5 1,375 4 8 318 4 1. 1,698 8 9 Raisins 141,537 IV 2 4,177 6 0 M5,716 $ & 140,286 2 M 4,057 17 9 144,348 0 7 Repeaced and other oil cakes 3,982 17 9 368 13 10 3,621 II 7 3,221 0 0 886 3 3,607 1 3 Rhubanb 4,218 17 10 - 4,213 17 10 4,207 2 10 - 4,07 2 10 Rice 6,508 12 6 237 15 8 6,746 8 1 6,417 2 11 267 18 0 6,654 15 11 in the bunk 28,187 7 11 28,187 7 11 20,095 9 8 - 20,096 9 8 Sago 913 7 4 3 9 8 916 17 0 913 7 4 8 9 8 916 17 0 Saltpetre 5,144 16 4 9 10 8 5,154 9 0 5,123 10 6 9 10 8 5138 1 I Sarsaparilla 4,275 4 8 54 4 9 4,329 9 6 4,007 B 4 64 4 9 4,061 7 1 Scammony 1,477 18 10 3145 1,481 18 $ 1,384 10 B 3145 1,388 13 11 Seeds of all sorts (includ. ing tares) 96,344 5 2 9,887 11 1 108,131 N 8 9,888 13 8 102,561 18 2 Sepna 6,631 0 11 175 16 6 6,806 17 5 6,563 15 3 175 16 6 6,679 = 9 Ships' hulls and materi- als 726 7 7 903 9 929 9 4 637 PO 6 179 9 816 12 8 Shumac 5,561 6 8 686 15 5 6,218 $ I 5,311 18 10 623 $ 6 5,938 16 4 Silk, raw 14,202 2 2 - 14,202 2 2 14,159 5 $ - 14,159 5 3 waste, knebs and busks 294 4 3 - 294 4 3 293 18 3 - 293 18 8 thrown 52,013 1 5 - 58,013 I 6 14,062 6 7 (Excess of 12,097 18 1 manufactures, East drawbacks.) Indian 19,298 15 0 - 19,296 16 8 19,262 17 10 - 19,962 17 10 not do. 149,079 11 4 9 4 5 149,088 15 9 148,667 5 10 9 4 5 148,676 10 3 Skins (not being furs) 16,289 15 = 2,104 0 6 18,393 16 5 16,047 17 7 2,045 15 11 18,093 IS 6 Smalts 5,053 S 6 512 4 6 5,565 8 0 5,051 7 ro 512 4 6 5,563 18 4 Soap, hard and soft, to- reign 1,277 10 6, 38 7 9 1,310 18 3 1,277 10 6 33 7 9 1,3ю 18 3 Spelter 5,878 17 6 125 0 5 5,03 17 11 5,573 17 6 125 0 5 5,698 17 11 Spirits, foreign, vis. rum 1,520,102 1 11 50,411 14 2 1,570,513 16 I 1,518,994 8 I 50,408 2 2 1,569.402 Ю 3 brandy 1,697,444 16 5 68,799 0 4 1,766,243 16 9 1,697,095 7 2 68,794 2 10 1,765,889 10 0 Geneva 15,577 8 1 7,956 16 9 23,534 4 10 15,567 9 8 7,946 18 9 23,514 8 5 of all other sorts 9,126 16 I 734 2 10 9,860 18 11 9,020 1 11 721 15 = 9,741 17 10 of the manufas ture of Guern sey and Jersey 21,071 IS 1 - 21,071 18 I $1,054 0 7 - 21,054 0 7 Sponge 2,147 11 7 - 2,147 11 7 2,097 4 1 - 2,097 4 1 Stones, vis. burrs for millstones 1,315 0 9 31 12 4 1,346 15 1 1,309 15 2 31 12 4 1,341 7 6 marble blocks 688 4 " 50 15 5 739 0 4 665 7 5 50 6 I 715 IS 6 Succades $99 8 8 62 14 2 962 2 10 889 4 " 62 14 2 961 19 I Sugar 4,437,812 6 2 508,660 15 4 4,946,473 1 6 3,571,449 11 I 415,069 I 7 3,986,518 12 8 Tallow 175,848 11 If 9,151 10 " 185,000 2 10 175,484 7 2 9,111 18 5 184,506 6 7 Tamarinds 679 0 11 114 8 0 793 8 11 676 12 8 118 0 2 788 12 10 Tar 5,539 6 1 1,180 11 1 6,669 17 2 5,506 5 $ 1,094 4 0 6,600 0 8 Timber; viz. Balks and afers. under 5 inches square 1,280 5 7 HS 2 0 1,343 Y 7 1,230 5 7 113 2 0 1,848 7 7 Battens and batten ends 81,366 9 11 28,362 7 4 109,728 17 3 80,140 16 5 28,347 8 10 108,488 4 3 Deals and deal ends 479,819 19 8 9,683 11 0 489,503 10 8 476,595 16 6 9,664 9 0 465,260 5 6 Firewood 4,518 3 I 89 8 5 4,537 11 6 4,475 12 9 38 4 6 4,513 17 3 Fir quarters 8,429 0 2 14 12 7 3,443 12 9 3,369 9 8 14 12 7 3,384 2 3 Knees of oak 1,356 8 9 518 18 I 1,875 6 10 1,354 13 5 515 5 8 1,869 19 I Lathwood 25,510 2 3 8,381 18 4 27,891 15 7 $4,263 H 6 2,346 6 11 26,609 18 6 Masts and spare 13,917 19 10 1,199 11 0 15,117 10 10 13.866 6 2 1,177 15 5 15,046 I 7 Oak plank 8,658 12 6 8,594 7 9 7,213 0 8 3,656 10 5 8,549 16 9 7,206 7 2 Oars 780 16 2 101 19 7 882 15 9 771 5 0 101 19 7 873 4 7 Staves 43,930 4 2 2,943 13 11 46,873 18 I 43,886 17 10 2,938 15 11 46,825 13 9 Toak 6,696 8 6 695 5 9 7,361 9 3 6,655 3 6 662 9 6 7,347 12 11 Timber, dr, 8 inches square, or upwards 362,447 I 2 61,047 11 9 423,494 12 11 $14,238 15 o 60,671 If 7 374,910 6 7 oak do. 29,999 10 7 8,174 11 3 38,174 1 10 29,966 7 10 8,0R2 4 38,048 9 2 of other sorts,do. 5,944 12 5 1,5+7 3 6 7,581 15 11 5,903 4 10 1,561 0 6 7,464 5 4 Wainscot logs, do. 7,453 4 10 853 7 I 7,806 II II 7,391 17 9 358 I 7,744 18 10 Tobacco and snuff 2,146,442 0 9 291,392 5 0 2,437,834 5 9 2,137,242 10 291,289 17 6 2,425,532 7 7 Tortoiseabcil 458 10 7 0 8 6 458 19 I 457 13 1 0 8 6 458 1 T Toys 3,456 19 6 50 6 3 3,507 4 9 8,418 16 4 60 6 3 3,469 7 Turpentise, common 73,707 Il 2 - 73.707 n 2 73,558 14 3 - 73.558 14 3 Valonia 6,908 2 10 30 0 0 6 938 2 10 6,907 7 10 30 0 0 6,437 7 10 Verdigris 2,463 4 0 38 9 0 2,506 13 0 2,457 0 0 3890 2,495 9 0 Vermicelli and macca roni 1,407 7 2 79 4 6 1,486 11 8 1,401 13 10 76 15 6 1,473 9 4 Vinegar 216 13 0 123 9 0 340 20 815 10 6 181 16 0 337 6 6 of the manufac- ture of Guern- sey & Jersey 1606 0144 16 14 10 16 0 6 0 0 14 14 4 16 14 10 Water, Cologne,in flasks 4,032 11 2 112 7 0 4.144 18 2 4,031 5 2 109 19 0 4,141 4 2 Wax, been', ac. 778 6 9 49 1 I 827 7 10 774 I 7 49 I 828 2 8 Wines of all sorts 1,331.584 16 5 104,259 8 6 1,485,844 4 11 1,277,196 15 5 99,829 2 8 1,377,025 18 I 142,613 4 7 - 142.613 4 7 142,613 4 7 142.613 4 7 Wool, cotton 591.435 17 1 37,834 13 10. 629.270 10 II 584.449 " 1 37,305 1 7 625,754 12 8 sheep's and lambs' 102,276 19 I 0 1 102,277 0 2 102,027 19 4 (Excess of 202,027 2 11 Woollen manufactures, repayments.) not otherw des- cribed, including car pets 11,907 18 9 I 9 11,909 0 6 11,879 1 10 119 11,980 3 7 Yarn. cotton 499 12 5 303 15 2 803 7 7 499 12 5 303 15 2 803 7 7 lines, raw 534 8 0 118 14 9 653 $ 9 534 8 0 118 6 7 652 14 7. Yellow berries. (See Berries.) Zaffre 416 12 10 - 416 12 10 416 12 10 - 416 12 10 All other articles 90,833 2 4 3,194 17 11 94,028 0 3 88,852 4 4 3,178 6 9 92,030 10 I Total dut es, inwards carried forward 16,419,796 6 2 1,467,803 6 6 17,887,599 12 8 15.363,788 2 9 1,364,002 15 10 16,727,790 18 7 Coalsand culm exported 51,042 8 0 5,573 14 10 56,616 2 10 48,923 0 5 5,407 14 11 64,330 15 4 British sheep and lambs wool, woollen yaru, Itc. exported 2,905 16 S 38 17 0 2,944 13 3 2,827 4 9 38 17 0 2,866 1 9 Skins, do. 15 2 7 - 15 2 7 15 2 7 - 15 2 7 Per centage duty on Bri- tish goods exported 59,697 5 2 2,553 15 3 62,251 0 5 53,513 6 6 2,523 5 9 56,036 12 3 Total duties outwards, carried forward } 118,660 12 0 8,166 7 1 121.826 19 I 105,278 14 3 7,969 17 8 113,248 11 11 VoL. I.-3 A 70 Digitized by Google 554 CUSTOMS. Gross Receipts. Nett Produce. List of Articles. England. 1 Scotland. Great Briain. England. Scotland. Great Britain. L a. d. L. a. d. L & d. L a. d. L 8.d L a. d. Duties inwards, brought forward 16,419,796 6 2 1,467,803 6 6 17,887,590 12 8 15,363,788 2 9 1,364,002 15 10 16,727,790 15 7 outwards, do. 113,660 12 0 8,166 7 ! 121,826 19 1 106,278 14 3 7,969.17 8 113,248 " II 16,533,456 18 2 1,475,969 13 7 13,009,426 11 9 15,469,066 17 2 1,371,972 13 6 16,840,458 10 8 Canal and dock duty. - Isle of Mas duties, rent . of quays, goods sold for duty, &c. 156,294 15 2 1,944 1 9 158,238 16 11 117,948 6 2 1,648 17 6 190,198 3 9 Total, Great Britain 16,689,751 13 4 1,477,913 15 4 18,167,665 8 8 15,587,015 3 4 1,373,616 " 0 16,960,631 14 4 Ireland - - - 1,516,988 16 2 - - 1,507,249 11 " Total United Kingdom - - 19,684,654 4 10 - - 13,467,981 6 $ Inspector General's Office, Custom House, WILLIAM IRVING, London, 25th of March, 1833. Inspector General of Imports and Exports. The charges of collection on the customs revenue of the United Kingdom during the same year were- Great Britain. Ireland. £ S. d. £ 8. d. Civil department - - - - - 734,793 10 111 130,014 18 7 Harbour vessels - - - - - 5,187 17 1 233 12 9 Cruisers - - - - - - 135,914 3 21 9,860 6 6 Preventive water guard - - - - 229,789 12 If 112,189 1 3t Land guard - - - - - - 18,352 0 8 £1,121,037 4 1 £252,327 19 11. Inspector General of Imports and Exports. Miserable Attempt at Economy in this Department.-The office of inspector general of imports and exports was established in 1696. The accounts of the trade and navigation of the country, annually laid before par- liament, are furnished by this office; and, owing to the ability of the officers, the improved manner in which these accounts are now made out, and the practice of giving statements of the quantities of the principal articles exported and imported, and the declared or real value of the former, they have become of great public importance. It is singular, however. that after having existed for about 135 years, and being gradually brought to a high pitch of per- fection, this office was, in 1830, rendered nearly useless by a pitiful attempt to save the salary of a couple of clerks ! Previously to that year, the accounts of the trade and revenue of the two great divisions of the empire were exhibited separately and jointly so that if any one, for example, wished to know the quantity of sugar entered for home consumption in 1829, in Great Britain and in Ireland, he would have found the results separately stated and in the same way for the produce of any article or tax. Nothing, it is plain, could be more desirable than an arrangement of this sort which, indeed, considering the entirely different situation of the two great divisions of the empire, is the only one capable of afford- ing the means of drawing any useful conclusions. But in 1830, ministers, in order to ac- complish the miserable object already alluded to, had all the accounts consolidated into one mass (rudis et indigesta moles) so that it became impossible to tell what was the con- sumption of any article, or the produce of any tax, either in Great Britain or in Ireland,-the only information communicated being the general result as to the United Kingdom ! No- thing more absurd was ever imagined. On the principle that Ireland is taken into the same average with Great Britain, we might take in Canada; for there is decidedly less difference between the condition and habits of the people of Canada and those of Britain. than there is between those of the British and Irish. But this measure was not objectionable merely from its confounding such dissimilar elements, and laying a basis for the most absurd and un- founded inferences: it rendered all the previous accounts in a great measure useless and would, had it been persevered in, have effectually deprived statesmen and statisticians of some of the very best means of instituting a comparison between the past and future state of both divisions of the empire. Happily, however, this abortive attempt at economy has been relinquished. The moment Mr. Poulett Thomson attained to office, he took measures for the restoration of that system which had been RO unwisely abandoned; and every one in any degree conversant with matters of finance, commerce, or statistics, will agree with us in thinking that the Right Hon. Gentleman could have rendered few more acceptable services. The public accounts for 1830, the only ones made out on the new system, were a disgrace to the country. We are glad, however, to have to add that they have been withdrawn, and replaced by others. Digitized by Google CUSTOMS. 555 (An Account of the Gross and Nett Amount of Duty received at each Custom-House of the U. King dom, during the Year ending 5th January, 1838, compared with similar Receipts during th preceding Year.-(Board of Trade Papers, VII. p. 22.) Nett Receipt in 1886. Nett Receipt in 1837. Ports. Gross Receipt in Gross Receipt in 1836. 1837. Exhibiting Produce, deducting Repayment of Trade Vouchers. Office Expenses, &c. ENGLAND. £ 3. d. £ s. d. £ 8. d. £ s. d. London - - 12,156,279 14 6 11,188,036 8 11 11,088,207 8 6 10,190,006 6 4 Aberystwith - 1,637 18 3 1,007 19 4 633 11 0 Aldbro' - - 155 15 2 32 7 4 Arundel - - 2,405 6 2 1,990 5 5 Barnstaple - - 12,005 18 7 10,480 2 6 10,125 10 8 8,923 18 1 Beaumaris - - 3,230 16 5 3,327 4 5 Berwick - - 7,851 6 8 10,678 8 10 - 2,357 3 4 Bideford - - 3,663 19 11 6,490 19 9 960 15 5 3,734 0 10 Blackney and Clay 1,225 2 6 1,252 12 2 Boston - - 10,535 6 2 17,265 7 8 6,171 19 7 12,929 10 8 Bridgewater - 8,389 3 9 9,904 7 8 6,627 14 9 8,134 11 3 Bridlington - 51 19 1 130 13 of Bridport - - 5,821 9 9 6,297 7 6 2,617 9 2 3,880 16 8 Bristol - - 1,112,812 9 0 1,154,817 11 0 1,073,099 11 11 1,114,591 18 7 Cardiff - - 7,650 8 11 10,843 6 5 5,927 10 7 9,101 17 11 Cardigan - - 869 17 6 2,232 3 6 - 652 13 2 Carlisle - - 31,003 15 10 27,433 1 8 29,771 0 8 26,112 18 5 Chepstow - - 517 6 9 1,003 5 6 6 9 0 514 12 8 Chester - - 68,334 9 7 82,157 13 3 67,008 3 0 80,788 17 1 Chichester - - 1,031 15 1 971 8 6 Colchester - - 16,857 3 7 17,548 8 0 12,335 1 5 12,992 4 8 Cowes - - 2,151 17 7 2,839 12 7 Dartmouth - 3,135 12 3 5,422 6 9 . Deal - - 150 19 8 621 0 5 Dover - - 47,437 11 7 39,101 17 10 18,798 2 11 11,282 15 10 Exeter - - 79,897 8 2 82,893 15 8 69,569 18 9 72,063 5 9 Falmouth - - 23,524 3 0 22,883 9 5 11,325 18 10 10,515 7 21 Feversham - 3,675 9 5 3,185 14 3 Fowey - - 25,549 2 10 8,882 0 10 5,017 8 0 Gloucester - 166,187 1 2 132,879 9 1 160,093 11 3 126,538 17 11 Goole - - 60,317 8 2 77,033 1 6 58,639 12 9 75,291 11 8 Grimsby - - 11,633 2 3 10,027 12 11 5,940 15 9 4,247 1 4 Gweek - - 25,980 16 6 2,828 4 8 7,827 11 3 Harwich - - 1,078 1 2 2,231 17 6 Hull - - 801,628 12 10 741,600 17 10 768,448 11 7 705,300 1 4 Ilfracombe - 104 7 5 376 0 2 Ipswich - - 37,881 17 6 36,871 9 2 35,936 16 10 34,837 14 6 Lancaster - - 42,313 17 3 40,031 12 11 38,226 16 1 36,169 11 9 Liannelly - - 1,834 7 2 2,844 10 4 407 17 10 1,266 5 3 Liverpool - - 4,450,426 3 6 4,351,496 6 8 4,224,798 6 2 4,136,624 3 1 Lyme a - - 1,467 19 10 1,795 15 6 Lynn - - 52,470 16 10 59,518 9 2 48,483 16 2 55,502 1 11 Maldon - - 5,152 4 11 5,131 19 1 Milford - - 4,073 4 2 4,989 9 2 Newcastle - 307,274 19 3 413,796 17 0 293,087 7 7 396,533 2 6 Newhaven - 13,250 13 9 13,806 11 2 3,707 0 5 4,027 16 1 Newport - - 11,183 4 2 13,535 2 0 10,270 8 9 12,563 19 5 Padstow - - 1,410 5 5 1,913 10 2 Penzance - - 30,558 11 11 16,848 8 10 8,291 0 8 Plymouth - 103,423 7 4 105,495 3 5 78,066 8 8 80,896 2 9 Poole - - 12,000 17 11 10,304 11 4 1,843 9 2 Portsmouth - 46,873 1 2 47,259 3 4 27,313 6 II 28,436 12 10 Ramsgate - - 10,262 17 1 9,972 16 7 Rochester - - 17,096 13 11 20,478 7 8 - 1,181 19 3 Rye - - 8,564 15 4 7,304 17 11 St. Ives - - 4,521 11 5 4,701 18 1 - 496 10 11 Scarborough - 2,139 8 10 2,117 2 0 - 195 10 6 Scilly - - 82 4 8 134 2 61 Shoreham - - 22,920 10 9 20,701 1 1 11,290 9 4 9,507 10 0 Southampton - 49,139 17 1 45,427 9 7 30,126 9 7 24,525 4 4 Southwold - 22 7 5 249 5 2 Stockton - - 54,497 17 4 61,515 13 1 49,765 8 8 56,598 13 2 Sunderland - 78,126 15 8 86,912 2 0 71,637 3 9 80,072 4 1 Swansea - - 3,448 13 10 4,879 14 4 - 1,173 19 5 Truro - - 48,552 13 7 25,469 3 0 18,381 14 2 703 0 7 Wells r - 252 13 10 877 3 9 Weymouth - 13,120 0 8 11,384 3 11 Whitby - - 1,106 11 7 1,427 13 4 Whitehaven - 88,291 9 11 100,628 16 7 83,350 9 6 95,895 0 3 Wisbeach - - 8,917 15 9 6,728 2 2 7,624 11 0 5,549 16 0 Woodbridge - 2,001 9 10 3,280 14 11 I 1,312 13 8 Yarmouth - - 63,783 7 9 66,159 10 3 50,713 15 4 52,711 18 5 Douglas - - 24,429 6 6 28,606 18 7 15,564 1 8 18,944 16 1 Total of England 20,327,657 11 9 19,321,324 15 2 18,390,550 19 5 17,471,469 10 51 SCOTLAND. Aberdeen - - 58,673 9 4 65,330 6 11 50,084 2 7 56,767 4 9 Ayr - - 1,518 2 8 1,037 18 2 385 1 8 68 3 7 Banff - - 870 15 9 1,164 1 9 Borrowstoness - 3,232 11 1 3,102 18 0 1,534 5 6 1,591 7 2 Digitized by Google 556 CUSTOMS. Custome-continued. Nett Receipt in 1896. Nett Receipt in 1837. Forts. Grom Receipt in Grow Receipt in 1836. 1837. Exhibiting Produce, deducting Repayment of Trade Vouchers, Office Expense, ac. SCOTLAND. £ 3. d. £ 8. d. £ 3. d. £ 8. d. Campbeltown - 389 17 11 602 15 4 Dumfries - - 4,218 5 2 7,928 17 11 646 10 4 4,317 8 2 Dundee - - 70,982 5 3 76,189 15 8 63,954 9 11 09,161 8 0 Glasgow - - 289,702 2 10 394,152 9 8 375,395 18 0 372,086 2 7 Grangemouth - 25,728 14 1 30,267 19 1 23,050 13 9 27,589 0 9 Greenock - - 374,467 14 0 380,703 13 1 285,296 0 1 278,485 19 I Inverness - - 1,095 17 0 3,291 1 9 Irvine - - 2,585 14 2 2,778 0 9 725 2 3 898 18 Ю Kirkaldy - - 7,561 12 4 4,191 17 91 3,289 8 11 98 13 8 Kirkwall - - 651 19 1 814 10 11 Leith , - 514,974 3 5 525,402 19 3 393,145 6 2 491,852 4 10 Lerwick - - 652 19 11 396 0 5 Montrose - - 24,575 9 2 33,917 13 1 19,904 1 11 27,796 o 4 Port Glasgow - 104,292 6 6 94,161 14 4 90,215 17 5 87,440 9 5 Stornoway - 167 9 1 434 16 4 Stranraer - - 190 2 9 426 11 1 Wick - - 957 16 1 696 18 7 Total of Scotland 1,587,489 7 7 1,626,291 19 10f 1,288,170 4 1 1,402,920 6 6 IRELAND. Baltimore - - 1,408 5 0 1,078 2 2 Belfast - - 366,718 5 4 324,869 17 1 333,414 8 0 205,770 9 1 Coleraine - - 4,689 17 3 5,784 11 7 Cork - - 230,904 2 9 221,410 15 3 196,854 11 10 186,013 14 5 Drogheda - - 13,382 13 3 13,105 11 4 9,680 0 7 9,395 6 21 Dublin - - 898,630 5 1 859,758 12 6 832,355 7 2 793,541 12 0 Dundalk - - 4,514 5 10 15,058 16 81 161 6 11 10,862 13 of Galway - - 31,769 2 5 28,641 4 6 21,554 15 10 18,583 7 5 Limerick - - 146,222 17 9 141,174 10 9 126,290 15 1 120,928 2 5 Londonderry - 99,652 3 7 100,057 4 0 85,930 18 0 86,158 2 5 Newry - - 58,806 2 6 49,292 0 10 43,867 14 6 35,191 16 3 Sligo - - 35,863 18 2 32,120 4 6 19,386 3 8 15,643 3 8 Waterford - - 137,126 7 9 145,669 19 11 194,706 13 4 133,001 19 5 Westport - - 577 8 4 1,778 11 2 Wexford - - 6,306 10 9 6,049 0 11 Total of Ireland 2,636,572 5 9 1,945,849 3 21 1,770,080 6 3 20,556,559 4 8f ABSTRACT OF THE ABOVE ACCOUNT. Nett Receipt in 1836. Nett Receipt in 1837. Countries. Gross Receipt in Gross Receipt in 1836. 1837. Exhibiting Produce, deducting Repayment of Trade Vouchers, Office Expenses, Atc. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 3. d. £ 8. d. England - - 20,327,657 11 9 19,321,324 15 2 18,390,550 19 5 17,471,409 10 5f Scotland - - 1,587,489 7 7 1,626,291 19 101 1,288,170 4 1 1,402,920 6 6 Ireland - - 2,036,572 5 9 1,945,849 3 2j 1,778,020 6 3 1,682,169 7 9 Grand totals - 23,951,719 5 1 22,893,466 18 3 21,448,741 9 9 20,556,559 4 81 [For customs in the United States, see article TABIFF.-Am. Ed.] CUTLERY, a term used to designate all manner of sharp and cutting instruments made of iron or steel, as knives, forks, scissors, razors, shears, scythes, &c. Sheffield is the prin- cipal seat of the cutlery manufacture; but the knives and other articles made in London are said to be of superior quality. The act 59 Geo. 3. c. 7. gives the manufacturers of cutlery made of wrought steel, the privilege of marking or stamping them with the figure of a hammer; and probibits the manufacturers of any articles of cutlery, edge tools, or hardware, east or formed in a mould, or manufactured otherwise than by means of a bammer, from marking or impressing upon them the figure of a hammer, OF any sym- bol or device resembling it, OR pain of forfeiting all such articles, and 51. for every dozen. A penalty of 101. per dozen, exclusive of forfeiture, is also imposed upon every person having articles of cutlery in his possession for the purpose of sale, marked with the words London, or London made, unless the articles so marked have been really manufactured within the city of London, or a distance of 20 miles from it. CYPRESS, a forest tree of which there are many varieties, the species denominated the overgreen cypress (Cupressus sempervirens) and the white cedar (Cupressus Thyoides) being the most celebrated. The cypress is indigenous to the southern parts of Europe, to several parts of Asia, and to America. It grows to a great size, and is a most valuable species of timber. It is never attacked by worms; and exceeds all other trees, even the cedar, in durability. Hence the Athenians, when desirous to preserve the remains of their heroes and other great men, had them enclosed in cypress coffins; and hence, also, the external covering of the Egyptian Digitized by Google DAMAGED GOODS-DANTZIC. 557 mummies is made of the same enduring material. The cypress is said to live to a great age and this circumstance, combined with its thick dark green foliage, has made it be regarded as the emblem of death and the grave. In his Geography and History of the Western States of America, Mr. Timothy Flint has given the following account of the cypress trees found in the southern parts of the valley of the Mississippi :-" These noble trees rear their straight columns from a large cone-shaped buttress, whose circumference at the ground is, perhaps, 3 times that of the regular shaft of the tree. This cone rises from 6 to 10 feet, with a regular and sharp taper, and from the apex of the cone towers the perpendicular column, with little taper after it has left the cone, from 60 to 80 feet clear shaft. Very near the top it begins to throw out multitudes of hori- zontal branches, which interlace with those of the adjoining trees, and, when bare of leaves, have an air of desolation and death, more easily felt than described. In the season of vege- tation the leaves are short, fine, and of a verdure so deep as almost to seem brown, giving an indescribable air of funereal solemnity to this singular tree. A cypress forest, when viewed from the adjacent hills, with its numberless interlaced arms covered with this dark brown foliage, has the aspect of a scaffolding of verdure in the air. It grows, too, in deep and sickly swamps, the haunts of fever, mosquitoes, moccassin snakes, alligators, and all loathsome and ferocious animals, that congregate far from the abode of man, and seem to make common cause with nature against him. The cypress loves the deepest, most gloomy, inaccessible swamps and, south of 33°, is generally found covered with sable festoons of long moss, hanging, like shrouds of mourning wreaths, almost to the ground. It seems to flourish best when water covers its roots for half the year. Unpromising as are the places and circum- stances of its growth, no tree of the country where it is found is so extensively useful. It is free from knots, is easily wrought, and makes excellent planks, shingles, and timber of all sorts. It is very durable, and incomparably the most valuable tree in the southern country of this valley."-(Vol.i. p. 62.) D. DAMAGED GOODS, in the language of the customs, are goods, subject to duties, that have received some injury either in the voyage home or in the bonded warehouses. It is enacted by the 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52., that if any goods rated to pay duty according to the num- ber, measure, or weight thereof (except those after mentioned), shall receive damages during the voyage, an abatement of such duties shall be allowed proportionally to the damage 80 received; pro- vided proof be made to the satisfaction of the commissioners of customs, or of officers acting under their direction, that such damage was received after the goods were shipped abroad in the ship im- porting the same, and before they were landed in the United Kingdom; and provided claim to such abatement of duties be made at the time of the first examination of such goods.-? 30. It is further enacted, that the officers of customs shall examine such goods, and may state the damage which, in their opinion, they have 80 received, and may make a proportionate abatement of duties; but if the officers of customs be incompetent to estimate such damage, or if the importer be not satis- fied with the abatement made by them, the collector and comptroller shall choose 2 indifferent mer- chants experienced in the nature and value of such goods, who shall examine the same, and shall make and subscribe a declaration, stating in what proportion, according to their judgment, the goods are lessened in value by such damage, and the officers of customs may make an abatement of the du- ties according to the proportion of damage declared by such merchants.-> 31. Provided always, that no abatement of duties shall be made on account of any damage received by any of the sorts of goods herein enumerated; viz. cocoa, coffee, oranges, pepper, currants, raisins, figs, tobacco, lemons, and wine. -ð 32. [See article ABATEMENT.-Am. Ed.] DAMAR, a kind of indurated pitch or turpentine exuding spontaneously from various trees indigenous to most of the Indian islands. Different trees produce different species of resin, which are designated according to their colour and consistence. " One is called Damar-batu in Malay, or Damar-selo in Javanese, which means hard or stony rosin and another in common use Damar-puteh, or white rosin, which is softer. The trees which produce the damar yield it in amazing quantity, and generally without the necessity of mak- ing incisions. It exudes through the bark; and is either found adhering to the trunk or branches in large lumps, or in masses on the ground under the trees. As these often grow near the sea-side, or on the banks of rivers, the damar is frequently floated away, and collected in distant places as drift. It is exported in large quantities to Bengal and China and is used for all the purposes to which we apply pitch, but principally in paying the bottoms of ships. By a previous arrangement, almost any quantity may be procured at Borneo, at the low rate of $ dollar per picul."-(Crawfurd, East. Archip. vol. i. p. 455., vol. iii. p. 420.) DAMASK (Ger. Damasten Tafelzeug; Du. Damaskwerk; Fr. Venise, Damas; It. Tela damaschina; Sp. Tela adamascada; Rus. Kamtschatnüä salftki), a species of table linen.-(See LINEN.) DANTZIC, one of the principal emporiums of the north of Europe, in West Prussia, in lat. 54° 20' 48" N., lon. 18° 38' E. Population about 56,000. It is situated on the left 3 A 2 Digitized by Google 558 DANTZIC. or western bank of the Vistula, about 4 miles from where it falls into the sea. The harbour is at the mouth of the river, and is defended on each side by pretty strong forts. The town is traversed by the small river Motlau, which has been rendered navigable for vessels draw- ing 8 or 9 feet water. Roads, Port, &c.-The road or bay of Dantzic is covered on the west side by a long, narrow, low, sandy tongue of land, extending from Reserhoft Point (on which is a light-house), in lat. 54° 501', lon. 18° 23' 15", upwards of 20 miles, in an E. by S. direction, having the small town of Heela, or Heel, near its termination. A light-house, elevated 123 feet (Eng.) above the level of the sea, has been erected within about t a mile of the extremity of the point. The flashes of the light, which is a re- volving one, succeed each other every t minute. Dantzic lies about S. t W. from the Heel; its port, denominated the Fairwater, being distant about 4 leagues. There is good anchorage in the roads for ships of any burden but they are exposed, except immediately under the Heel, to the north and north-easterly winds. There are harbour lights at the entrance to the port. All ships entering the Vistula must heave to about a mile off the port, and take a pilot on board and pilots must always be employed in moving ships in the harbour, or in going up and down the river. The usual depth of wa- ter at the mouth of the river is from 12 to 13 feet (Eng.) in the harbour, from 13 to 14 feet at the confluence of the Motlau with the Vistula, from 810 91 feet; and in town from 8 to 9 feet. Moles have been erected on both sides the entrance to the harbour: that on the eastern side, which is most exposed, is constructed of granite, but is not yet completed; the other is partly of stone and partly of timber. Trade of Dantzic.-Next to Petersburg, Dantzic is the most important commercial city in the north of Europe. It owes its distinction in this respect to its situation the Vistula, with its important tributaries the Bug, Narew, &c. giving it the command of a great inter- nal navigation, and rendering it the entrepôt where the surplus products of West Prussia, Poland as far as Hungary, and part of Lithuania, are exchanged for those imported from the foreigner. The exports of wheat from Dantzic are greater than from any port in the world. There are four sorts of wheat distinguished here; viz. white, high-mixed, mixed, and red, according as the white or red predominates. The quality of the Dantzic wheat is for the most part excellent; for, though small in the berry, and not 80 heavy as many other sorts, it is remarkably thin skinned, and yields the finest flour. The white Polish wheat exported here is the best in the Baltic. Rye is also very superior, being both clean and heavy and the exports are very large. The exports of barley and oats are comparatively inconsiders- ble, and the qualities but indifferent. Very fine white peas are exported. Next to grain, timber is the most important article of export from Dantzic. The principal supply of fir timber, masts, &c. is brought by the River Narew, which, with its branches, rise in Old Prussia and Lithuania, and falls into the Bug near the confluence of the latter with the Vistula. Oak plank, staves, &c. are brought down from the higher parts of the Vistula, and the tri- butary streams of Dunajetz, Wieprez, &c. Weed ashes, pearl-ashes, bones, zinc, wool, spruce beer, feathers, &c. are also exported. Money.-Accounts used formerly to be wholly kept in guidens, guilders, or florins of 30 groschen. The rixdollar = 3 florins = 90 groschen= 270 schillings - 1,620 pfennings. The florin or guilder = 9d. sterling, and the rixdollar= 2s. 3d. A new system was, however, introduced into all parts of the Prussian dominions, conformably to the decrees of the 30th of September, 1821, and of the 22d of June, 1823; but it has not hitherto en- tirely superseded the method of accounting previously in use. The Cologne mark (containing 3,609 Eng. grains) is the weight at present used in the Prussian mint in weighing the precious metals. The fineness of the coins is not determined, as previously, by carats or loths, but the mark is divided for this purpose into 288 grains. Accounts are now kept in the public others in thalers or dollars (R.), silver groschen, and pfennings: 1 dol. = 30 sil. gr. 1 sil. gr. = 12 pf. The only silver monies now coined are dollars and 1-6 dollar pieces but smaller coins are in circu- lation, of former coinages. The Prussian silver coins have t of alloy ; and as the mark is coined into 14 dollars, each should con- tain 257.68 Eng. grains pure silver, and be worth about 2s. 11±d. sterling but the assays do not always strictly coincide with the mint valuation. The gold coins are Frederick d'ors, double, single, and half pieces. The mark of 288 grains, having 260 grains of fine gold, is coined into 35 Fred. d'ors. The Fred. d'or is worth from 5 dol. 18 sil. gr. to 5 dol. 22 sil. gr., according to the demand. Weights and Measures.-The commercial weights are, 32 Loths = 1 Ounce. 20 Pounds - 1 Small stone. 16 Ounces - 1 Pound. 33 Pounds = 1 Large stone. 161 Pounds = 1 Lispound. 110 lbs. = 1 centner 3 centners = 1 shippound (330 lbs.) ; 100 lbs. of Dantzic 103-3 lbs. avoirdupois = 46.85 kilog. = 94.7 lbs. of Amsterdam - 96.6 lbs. of Hamburgh. The liquid measures are, for beer, 5 Quarts = 1 Anker 2 Hhds. = 1 Both. 4 Ankers - 1 Ahm. 2 Both - 1 Fuder. If Ahm = 1 Hhd. 2 Fuder = 1 Last = 620-4 Eng. wine gallons. In wine measure, which is less than beer measure, the ahm - 391 Eng. gallons. The pipe = 1 ahms. The last of corn = 34 malters = 60 scheffels = 240 viertels = 960 metzen and weighs 4,630 lbs. Dant- zic weight in rye. The scheffel = .547 of a hectolitre = 1:552 Winchester bushel. Hence the last of 60 scheffels = 11 quarters 3 bushel the last of 56} scheffels = 10 quarters 7 bushels. The Dantzic foot - 11.3 Eng. inches, or 100 Dantzic feet = 94:16 Eng. feet. The ell is 2 feet Dantxic measure. The Rhineland or Prussian foot = 3138 French metres, or 12:356 Eng. inches: hence 100 Prussian - 102.8 English feet. The Prussian or Berlin ell has 251 Prussian inches = 26-256 Eng. ditto. 100 Berlin ells - 72.93 Eng. yards and 137-142 Berlin ells = 100 Eng. yards. 141 Prussian miles are equal to 15 geographical miles. Oak planks, deals, and pipe staves, are sold by the shock of 60 pieces wheat, rye, &c. are sold by the last of 561 scheffels.-(Kelly's Cambist; Nelkenbrecker, Manuel Universel.) Digitized by Google DANTZIC. 559 Imports.-We regret our inability to lay before the reader any account of the quantities of the different articles usually imported into Dantzic. They consist of sugar, coffee, wine, oil, brandy, spices, copper, lead, furs, cotton stuffs and cotton yarn, woollens, hardware, silks, indigo, dye woods, &c. We subjoin an Account of the principal Articles exported from Dantzic during each of the Three Years ending with 1831, with their Prices and Values in Sterling Money. 1829. 1830. 1831. Articles. Average Average Average Quan- Prices in Value. Quan- Prices in Value. Quan- Prices in Sterling tity. Sterling Sterling Value. tity. tity. Money. Money. Money. L.s.d. L. 8. d. L. t. d. L. s. d. L.s.d. L. 8. d. Wheat, Imp. qr. at 1-3 per last 306,766 271 722,178 5 10 398,588 222 840,356 7 4 133,800 2 2 10 10 2 335,615 0 0 Rye, ditto 78,275 0 17 4 67,838 6 8 85,074 103 86,137 8 6 12,530 186 17,855 5 0 Barley, ditto 6,675 0 13 8 4,561 5 0 7,368 0 15 0 5,526 0 0 11,680 113 12,410 0 0 Oats, ditto 9,197 0 10 11 5,020 07 21,462 0 11 2 11,982 19 0 2,220 0 15 8 1,739 0 0 Peas, ditto 2,842 0 18 8 2,652 10 8 16,916 108 17,479 17 4 15,850 177 21,859 15 10 Flour, barrels of 196 lbs. 2,016 130 2,318 80 11,810 116 12,695 15 0 12 120 13 4 0 Biscuits, bags of 1 cwt. 3,224 0 10 0 1,612 0 0 10,359 0 10 0 5,179 15 0 6,932 011 0 3,812 12 0 Fir timber, squared, pieces 64,794 100 64,794 0 0 47,548 100 47,548 0 0 37,497 100 37,497 0 0 Fir deals, long, short, and cuts, ditto 290,258 040 58,051 12 0 270,309 040 54,061 16 0 179,166 040 35,833 4 0 Masts and spars, ditto 1,001 1 15 0 1,751 15 0 2,707 100 4,060 10 0 313 200 626 0 0 Oak plank, ditto 12,669 090 5,701 1 0 10,298 0810 4,548 5 8 10,706 10 0 5,353 0 0 timber, ditto 2,042 130 2,318 6 0 1,675 130 1,926 5 0 1,197 130 1,376 11 0 staves, shock of 60 pieces 17,464 115 6 30,998 12 0 11,018 200 22,036 0 0 6,210 214 6 16,922 5 0 Clapboards, ditto 117 500 585 0 0 28 500 140 0 0 52 500 260 0 0 Treenails, ditto 5,661 016 424 12 3 2,855 016 214 2 6 5,420 016 406 10 0 Lathwood, fathoms 933 200 1,866 0 0 1,1021 200 2,205 00 936 200 1,872 0 0 Weed-ashes, barrel of about 3 cwt. 8,330 1 13 0 13,744 10 0 6,587 1 13 0 10,868 11 0 5,078 1130 8,378 14 0 Pearlashes, cwt. 13,570 120 14,927 0 0 2,485 120 2,733 10 0 369 130 424 7 0 Bones, ditto 5,5631 250 12,517 17 6 4,232 280 10,375 40 2,867 2100 9,667 10 0 Zinc, ditto 28,510 0 12 8 18,056 6 8 29,767 0 12 8 18,852 8 8 2,946 0 12 4 1,816 14 0 Wool, ditto 1,2821 7 13 6 9,843 4 0 1,835 7 15 2 14,236 10 10 454 880 3,813 12 0 Feathers, pounds 36,010 012 2,100 11 8 22,825 012 1,331 9 2 13,530 012 789 5 0 Salted provisions, barrel of 200 pounds 157 240 345 8 0 376 240 827 4 0 45 240 9900 Spruce beier, kegs 25,460 066 8,274 10 0 30,039 066 9,762 13 6 26,191 066 8,512 16 Total value - - 1,052,511 - - 1,185,085 6 - - 526,952 4 Account, showing the Countries for which the principal Articles exported from Dantzie during the Three Years ending with 1831 were shipped, and the Quantities shipped for each. 1829. 1830. 1831. Articies. Britain Britain Britain and her Posses- France. Holland. Other and her Countries. Posses- France. Holland. Other Countries. Holland. Other and her France. Coun- Posses. sions. sions. tries. sions. Wheat, Imp. qr. at 10 1-3 per last 214,933 24,169 64,594 3,070 328,982 21,473 43,970 4,163 125,330 - 7,908 562 Rye, ditto 8,980 9.455 30,866 28,974 8,453 62 28,753 47,816 2,510 - 4,564 5,456 Barley, ditto 3,648 237 2,118 672 4,128 - 788 2,452 11,380 - - 300 Oats, ditto 8,923 274 - 20,997 - - 465 2,220 Peas, ditto 2,444 - 217 181 14,312 - 1,768 836 14,780 - 560 510 Flour, barrels of 196 lbs. 2,016 - - 8.926 - 2,776 108 10 - - 2 - Biscuits, bags of I cwt. 3,224 - - - 10,287 1-2 - 72 6,732 - - - 200 Fir timber, squared, pieces 31,232 24,013 7,852 1,697 26,639 10,379 8,622 1,908 33,642 2,152 1,115 588 Fir deals, long, short, and cuts, di'to 98,609 92,090 60,724 38,835 85,664 88,913 48,738 46,994 111,347 11,005 18,292 38,522 Masts and spars, ditto 111 750 40 100 132 2,323 .171 81 169 60 18 66 Oak plank, ditto 8,128 2,273 - 2,268 4,746 2,317 - 3,235 8,724 263 - 1,719 timber, ditto 1,170 872 238 I I 97 1,227 I 351 311 - 648 staves, shock of 60 pieces 7,873 7,786 1-2 864 940 1-2 4,388 3,366 807 2,457 5,462 366 34 348 Clapboards. ditto 107 1-2 - 5 41-2 22 - 2 4 44 8 Treenails, ditto 5,285 - - 376 2,288 - - 567 4,712 - - 708 Lathwood. fathoms 929 - - 4 1,096 1-2 - 6 - 936 Weed-ashes, barrel of about 3 cwt. 2,073 - 6,245 12 2,720 - 3,867 - 2,581 - 1,987 510 Pearlashes, cwt. - - 10,436 3,134 2112 - 2,251 212 1-2 - - 369 Bones, ditto 5,563 1-2 - - 4,323 - - 3,867 Zinc, ditto 24,629 I - 3,881 25,689 - - 4,078 1,946 - - 1,000 Wool, ditto 1,219 1-2 - 37 26 1,769 - 66 - 454 Feathers, pound 30,810 - 5,100 100 21,093 - 1,402 330 13,530 Salted provisions, bar- rel of 200 lbs. 157 - - - 376 - - - 4 Spruce beer, kegs 24,950 - 80 430 29,320 - - 719 25,846 - - 345 Remarks on Turiff.-The following Table affords a pretty sufficient specimen of the sort of tariff which the Prussian government are so anxious to extend all over Germany; and in furtherance of which object they have displayed equal address and perseverance. Some of the duties are abun- dantly moderate but those on cotton goods, wrought iron, and woollen goods, are quite exorbitant. It is obvious too, that from their being imposed according to the weight, they fall principally on the coarser fabrics. or those worn by the mass of the people. The high duties on wrought iron are par- ticularly objectionable. If Prussia wish to become a manufacturing country, she ought to open her ports for the reception of all articles made of iron, from wherever they may be had cheapest. They are the principal instruments by which manufactures are carried on and if one were to set about contriving methods for depressing the latter, they would not easily find one better fitted to effect their object than by confining the manufacturers in their choice of tools and instruments, and making them adopt those that were bad and dear, because they happened to be made at home. The duties on su- gar and coffee are also, in the circumstances of Prussia, quite excessive. We are, indeed, astonished that so liberal and intelligent a government as that of Berlin should, at this late period, become the patron of the exploded errors and absurdities of the mercantile system. Digitized by Google 560 DANTZIC. Rates of Duty on the chief Articles imported for Home Consumption into the Eastern Pressian Provinces in 1832. Makes in Makes in Articles. Prumian British Money, Articles. Promian British Menny, Currency. Currency. per about per about R s.g. pf. Lad R 1.8. pf. L.d. Anise seed, per centure of Oil, Provence, in casks, par 110 lbs. Premian 100 cwt. 0 8 101-8 cwt. of 110 lbs. Premian 100 cwt. 0 8 1012 Alum do. do. 1100 - 0310 green do. 100 - 0 2 1018 Almonds do. do. 4150 - 0 13 0 Orange peel do. 4150 - 0 13 10 Brimstone do. do. 050 - 00634 Pimento do. 7100 - I 113 Coffee do. do. 6150 - 0 18 9 Pepper do. 7100 - 111112 Cacao do. do. 6150 - 0 18 9 Porter and ale do. 2150 - 0 7 213 (assia do. do. 7100 - 11118 Raisine do. 4150 - 0 13 0 Currants do. do. 4150 - 0 13 0 Rice do. 300 - 089 Cotton gonds do. do. 5600 - 7180 Rum and brandy do. 800 - 13013 yarn, sewing, do. do. 600 - 0 17 3 Sugar, manufactured, do. 11 0 0 - 1 11 8 twist do. do. 200 - 059 raw do. 500 - 014 5 Coals do. do. 013 - 00114 Syrup do. 500 - 0145 Eartheaware do. do. 0100 - 0 11 1-2 Saltpetre do. 010 0 - 001118 Glass do. do. 300 - 088 Shot do. 200 - 059 Ginger do. do. 7100 - 1 I Steel, unwrought do. 100 - 0 2 10 Herrings, per barrel 100 bris. 0 11 wrought do. 600 - 0 17 3 Hardware, per cwt. of 110lbs. Silk goods do. 11000 - 15 17 8 Prussian 6500 cwt. 7185 Tea do. 1100 - 1 11 $ Indigo de. do. 0 15 0 - 015 Tia, in bare do. 800 - 059 Iron, unwrought, (In bars)do. 100 - 0 2 10 in plates do. 3 20 0 - 0 10 T wrought do. 600 - 0 17 3 Vitriol do. 00718 - 00818 Logwood do. 050 - 00534 White lead do. 200 - 059 Lead do. 0 15 0 - 015 Woollen goods do. 3300 - 4150 Linen do. 1100 - 111 8 Wine do. 800 - 13012 Oil, Provence, in Rasks,&c.do. 800 - 3 018 With the exception of wool and bones, almost all articles of export are duty free. Corn Trade of Dantzic.-The reader will find, under the head CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE (PP. 509-512.), a pretty full account of the Polish corn trade. But the importance of the subject will ex- cuse our giving a few additional details. Grain is almost wholly brought to Dantzic by water, in flat- bottomed boats, suited to the navigation of the Vistula, Bug, &c. Mr. Consul Gibson estimates the expense of the conveyance of wheat and rye thither, including the duty at Thorn and the charges of turning on the river, till put into the granary, as follows:- Per Imp. qr. Per. Imp. or. 8. d. 8. d. a. d. a. From the upper provinces on the Bug, a distance of From Wlaclaweck and its neighbourhood, about 140 from 700 to 500 miles lin, 550 to 350 miles inimin 9 8 ta 7 10 miles 42103 From the provinces of Cracow, Sendomir, and Lub- 66-5 4 From Grandents, a distance of about 70 miles, no duty at Thorn, and when not turned on the 010-09 From Warsaw and its neighbourhood, about 340 miles 49-311 river N. B.-These are the ordinary charges. They are higher when there is any unusual demand for exportation. The Bug has many windings, and its navigation, which is tedious and uncertain, can only be at- tempted in the spring, when the water is high. It is the same, though in a less degree, with some of the rivers that fall into the Vistula before it reaches Warsaw and towards Cracow the Vistula itself is frequently unnavigable, especially in dry seasons, except in spring, and after the midsummer rains, when the snow melts on the Carpathian mountains. The navigation of the Polish rivers in 1832 was more than usually bad. The corn from the upper provinces did not reach Dantzic till from 2 to 4 months later than usual, and was burdened with a very heavy additional expense. In fact, the sup- plies of grain at Dantzic depend quite as much on the abundance of water in the rivers, or on their easy navigation in summer, as on the goodness of the harvests. "There, are," says Mr. Jacob, "two modes of conveying wheat to Dantzic by the Vistula. That which grows near the lower parts of the river, comprehending Polish Russia, and part of the pro- vince of Plock, and of Masovia, in the kingdom of Poland, which is generally of an inferior quality, is conveyed in covered boats, with shifting boards that protect the cargo from the rain, but not from pilfering. These vessels are long, and draw about 15 inches water, and bring about 150 quarters of wheat. They are not, however, so well calculated for the upper parts of the river. From Cracow, where the Vistula first becomes navigable, to below the junction of the Bug with that stream, the wheat is mostly conveyed to Dantzic in open flate. These are constructed on the banks, in seasons of leisure, on spots far from the ordinary reach of the water, but which, when the rains of autumn, or the melted snow of the Carpathian mountains in the spring, fill and overflow the river, are easily floated. " Barges of this description are about 75 feet long, and 20 broad, with a depth of 21 feet. They are made of fir, rudely put together, fastened with wooden treenails, the corners dovetailed and secured with slight iron clamps,-the only iron employed in their construction. A large tree, the length of the vessel, runs along the bottom, to which the timbers are secured. This roughly cut keelson rises 9 or 10 inches from the floor, and hurdles are laid on it, which extend to the sides. They are covered with mats made of rye straw, and serve the purpose of dunnage; leaving below a space in which the water that leaks through the sides and bottom is received. The bulk is kept from the sides and ends of the barge by'a similar plan. The water which these ill- constructed and imperfectly caulked vessels receive, is dipped out at the end and sides of the bulk of wheat. Vessels of this description draw from 10 to 12 inches water, and yet they frequently get aground in descending the river. The cargoes usually consist of from 180 to 200 quarters of wheat. The wheat is thrown on the mats, piled as high as the gunwale, and left uncovered, exposed to all the inclemencies of the weather, and to the pilfering of the crew. During the passage, the barge is carried along by the force of the stream, oars being merely used at the head and stern, to steer clear of the sand banks, which are numerous and shifting, and to direct the vessel in passing under the * A cask, or If barrel, weighs about 51 cwt. A puncheon of 90 to 100 gallons weighs 8 to 9 cwt., according to the degree of strength. # A hogshead weighs about 51 cwt. Digitized by Google DANTZIC. 561 several bridges. These vessels are conducted by 6 or 7 men. A small boat proceeds with a man in it, who is employed sounding, in order to avoid the shifting shoals. This mode of navigating is neces- sarily very slow; and during the progress of it, which lasts several weeks, and even months, the rain, if any fall, soon causes the wheat to grow, and the vessel assumes the appearance of a floating meadow. The shooting of the fibres soon forms a thick mat, and prevents the gain from penetrating more than an inch or two. The main bulk is protected by this kind of covering, and, when that is thrown aside, is found in tolerable condition. The vessels are broken up at Dantzic, and usually sell for about I of their original cost. The men ho conduct them return on foot. " When the cargo arrives at Dantzic or Elbing, all but the grown surface is thrown on the land, spread abroad, exposed to the sun, and frequently turned over, till any slight moisture it may have Imbibed is dried. If a shower of rain falls, as well as during the night, the heaps of wheat on the shore are thrown together in the form of a steep roof of a house, that the rain may run off, and are covered with a linen cloth. It is thus frequently a long time after the wheat has reached Dantzic, before it is fit to be placed in the warehouses. "The warehouses. (speichers) are very well adapted for storing corn. They consist generally of 7 stories, 3 of which are in the roof. The floors are about 9 feet asunder. Each of them is divided by perpendicular partitions, the whole length, about 4 feet high, by which different parcels are kept dis- tinct from each other. Thus the floors have 2 divisions, each of them capable of storing from 150 to 200 quarters of wheat, and leaving sufficient space for turning and screening it. There are abundance of windows on each floor, which are always thrown open in dry weather to ventilate the corn. It is usu ally turned over 3 times a week. The men who perform the operation throw it with their shovels as heigh as they can, and thus the grains are separated from each other, and exposed to the drying in- flue nce of the air. " The whole of the corn warehouses now left (for many were burnt during the siege of 1814), are capable of storing 500,000 quarters of wheat, supposing the quarters to be large enough to fill each of the 2 divisions of the floors with a separate heap; but as of late years it has come down from Po- land in smaller parcels than formerly, and of more various qualities, which must of necessity be kept distinct, the present stock of about 280,000 quarters is found to occupy nearly the whole of those warehouses which are in repair, or are advantageously situated for loading the ships. Ships are load- ed by gangs of porters, with great despatch, who will complete a cargo of 500 quarters in about 3 or 4 hours.' (First Report.) We extract from the work of Mr. Oddy, the following additional information with respect to the Dantzic warehouses :-" The warehouses for linens, ashes, hemp, &c., and the extensive granaries, are situated in an island formed by the Motlau. To guard these warehouses, from 20 to 30 ferocious dogs of a large size, amongst which are blood-bounds, are let loose at 11 o'clock at night. To keep the dogs within their districts, as well as to protect the passengers, large high gates run across the end of each of the streets leading to the main one: no light is allowed, nor any person suffered to live on this island. These dogs prowl about the whole night, and create great terror. It would be im- possible otherwise to keep property secure amongst the hordes of Poles, Jews, &c. met with here no punishment would have half the effect that the dread of the dogs produces. In winter, when the water is frozen over, there are keepers placed at particular avenues, with whips, to keep the dogs in their range. "No fire or robbery was ever known; and the expense to each building, with the Immense pro- perty they contain, is very reasonable. Vessels, either from the interior, or other quarters, lying alongside these warehouses, are not allowed to have a fire, or light of any kind, on board, nor is a sailor or any other person suffered even to smoke. These regulations partly extend to all shipping lying in the harbour."-(European Commerce, p. 249.) Timber Trade, Brack.-Fir timber is usually brought down in its natural state, and is squared into logs, or sawn into planks, in winter, when the labourers cannot be otherwise employed. The staves shipped here are carefully assorted, and are reckoned superior to those of America. The expenses of the water conveyance of squared timber, including duty at Thorn, are- s. d. S. d. From the Bug - - from about 6 0 to 5 9 per piece. - Wieprez (above Warsaw) - 4 6 - 44 do. - Vistula (above do. ) - - 30 - 24 do. Being higher when the demand is unusually great, or when hands are scaree. At Dantzic, as well as at Petersburgh (which see), Riga, and several other Baltic ports, sworn in- spectors (brackers) are appointed by authority to examino certain articles intended for exportation, and to classify them according to their qualities. Staves and timber of all sorts, with the exception of pine wood, is subjected to the brack. Prime quality is branded Krohn or Crewn; second quality, Brack ; and the third or lowest quality, Bracks Brack. All unmerchantable articles are rejected by the brackers, and are not allowed to be exported. The gauge for crown pipe staves, which the bracker has always in his hand, is 41 inches broad, 14 thick, and 64 inches in length, which they must be at least; but they are expected to be larger in every respect. Pipe staves are from 64 to 68 inches long; 6, 5, and 41, at least, broad; and from It to 3 inches thick. Brandy staves are at least 54 to 58 inches long, as thick and broad as pipe staves. Hogshead staves are 42 to 45 inches long, as thick and broad as plpe staves, all English measure. The quality is ascertained by marks, to distinguish each sort, as follows Crown pipe staves, stamped at the end, K. Hogshead bracks brack, II. - brack in the middle, I. 1 Brandy hogshead crown, at the end, B K. - bracks brack, 11. - brack, in the middle, A. Hogsheads crown, at the end, o K. - bracks brack, X X. - brack, in the middle, I. Oak planks are assorted in the same manner. Crown plank is marked in the middle, C. Brack, in the end and middle B. Bracks brack, B B. To distinguish 11 from 2, and 21 from 3 inches, the It are marked with I, and 21 M. At the end, in rough strokes, with coloured paint, brack is yellow 1; bracks brack, white II; crown, red III. Ashes are subjected to the brack. The calcined are opened, and the crust taken off; others are not examined unless there be any suspicion of their quality, or the states of the hogshead be supposed to be too thick. Every cask of potashes is opened. 71 Digitized by Google 502 DANTZIC. Shipping Charges and Duties, exclusive of Commission. R. s.gr. R 8.5% On Wheat about 2 22 On Deck deals Rye Short deals Barley } - 2 20 } about 0 23 1-2 per load. per last of about 10 1.3 Imp. qra. Deal ends Peas Lathwood - 10 - fathom. Oats - 2 12 Clapboards - 20 - shock of 60 pieces. Flour Ship biscuit } 5 per cent. Oak plank Oak ends } - 110 - load. R. s.gr. Staves - 13 10 - mile pipe. Pearlashes about 0 10 per shippound of 330 lbs. Black or spruce bear - 0 12 - last of 11 kep. Wead-ashes - 06 - barrel do. Feathers - 20 - 100 lbs. Fir timber - load. N. B.-The Prussian pound is about 3 1-3 per cent. heavier than the English pound. The expenses of sending goods down are takes of about an average rate; but if the whole, or the greater part of the cargo, were loaded in the Fairwater or roads, the expenses would be somewhat more. Shipping.-Account of the Number of Ships, specifying the Countries to which they belonged, with their Tonnage in Lasts, of 4,000 Prussian lbs. that arrived at, and departed from, Dantzic in 1834. -(Prussian Official Accounts.) Of these or these Ships Ships Arrived Arrived Flags. Lasts Laden. Ballast. Flage. and Lasts. Laden. Ballest. and Sailed. Sailed. Ships. Lasts Ships. Lasts. Ships. Lasts. Ships. Lasts. Arr. 85 1,80% 16 662 9 1,143 Oldenburg Arr. IS 492 6 214 7 878 Danish Dep. 25 1,813 22 1,692 3 121 Dep. 12 470 1 470 Arr. 4 281 1 29 3 252 Netherlands Arr. 133 7,341 55 2,764 78 Mecklenburg 4,577 Dep. 4 270 4 270 Dep. 132 7,393 132 7,393 Arr. 7 $84 5 2:0 2 114 Belgian Arr. Hame-Towns 4 234 - - 4 231 Dep. 18 565 12 665 Dep. 4 240 4 240 Arr. 3 200 2 148 1 32 French Arr. I 50 - - 1 50 Russian Dep. 2 156 1 63 1 93 Dep. 3 197 3 197 Arr. 15 846 13 622 2 224 Swedish Dep. 21 1,180 9 661 12 619 Total Foreign Arr. 359 21,048 196 9,022 163 12.096 Arr. 62 1,843 61 1,797 1 46 Ships Dep. 361 21,791 316 20,082 45 Norwagian 1,700 Dep. 58 1,841 29 861 29 976 Prussian Ships an- Arr. 38 4,532 17 1,734 21 2,798 rived and departed 571 80,941 383 53,675 188 British 27,985 Dep. 38 4,749 38 4,749 Hanoverian Arr. 54 3,040 20 742 34 2,258 Grand Total arrived Dep. 60 2,917 50 2,917 and departed 1,291 123,679 895 82,679 596 41,000 Port Charges.-The charges on a ship of 200 lasts, or about 300 per contner (about Is. 5 1-2d. for about 113 lbs. English) may be tone burden, are- placed in the king's stores (no where else), and remain there for 2 R. 8.5. pf. years without payment of duty. No allowance is made for waste or Harbour money 88 26 8 damage in there stores. Other goods, not capable of being changed, Ditto in gold (say in Fred. d'ors, reckoned at 5 r., in may be placed in private stores, under the king's lock; but not the which this must be paid) 1468 where, without permission. No rent is charged for goods ID the River money 000 king's stores, during the first three months; afterwards about I 1-8d. Commercial contribution 3100 monthly rent is charged for the first, and about 3d. monthly for the Expedition expenses IS 10 0 second year, per centner of about 113 lbs. English. Captain's allowance for expenses on shore 16 20 0 In private warehouses, the monthly rent for 10 quarters of whent Tracking the ship into the harbour (Fairwater) 200 or other grain is from about 1-2d. to 7d., or more, according as Ballast money. &c. 10 24 0 warehouse room is abundant or otherwise. Other goods do not Pilot to the ballast wharf 400 usually pay by the piece, but part of a store is hired for them, and Ditto moving the ship in Fairwater 2150 the rent generally comes somewhat higher is proportion. Police passport 360 The cost of rent and turning grain is from 1a. 2d. to 1a. 6d. month. Clearing the vessel in and out 16 0 ly, for 10 quarters, according to the scason of the year and other circumstances; but more when gramary room is scarce, and wages Making 251. 6a. 6d. sterling, at the exchange of 6r. high. 28 gr. 175 17 4 Banking Extablishments.-Thero is none such here, excepting a branch of the Royal or Government Bank of Berlin. This was The charges on the shipe of all countries having reciprocity treaties founded partly in the view of receiving deposits of money under with Prussia (which in generally the case) are the same, only Dantzic litigation in the courts of the province; monies the property of - captains receive no allowance for shore expenses. River or stream nors and charitable institutions, the former ontil disposable or placed money is only paid by vessels that bring goods to town, or load in the on good security and monies belonging to individuals not mer Motlau (above the blockhouse) if a ship remain in the Fairwater chants, and at times, also, those of the latter. Interest is paid on or Vistula. the river money is levied on the craft carrying the goods, such deposits as follows: via. and falls on the latter. 3 per cent. on sume belonging to minors. Dantzic is a favourable place for ships careening and repairing, and 2 do. do. charitable Institutions, charches, for obtaining supplies of all sorts of sea stores at a reasonable rate. and sums deposited by the courts of justice, and There belong to the port 75 ships, measuring about 16,000 lasts 2 da. all other deposits. = 24,000 tons, navigated by about 950 men. They are employed in The principal is demandable at pleasure, unless otherwise stipo- foreign trade. The port has no fishery, and no coasting trade worth lated. The bank makes advances on grain and some other kinds of mentioning. goods at 5 per cent. interest; discounts bills with 3 signatures, not Custom-house Regulations.-The shipmaster must, within 24 having more than 2 months to run, at 6 per cept., and sometimes, hours after arrival in port, make a declaration of the cargo on board, when money is plenty, at a lower rate. It also makes advances at 4 and of the ship's provisions, and be Incurs a severe penalty If the per cent. on deposits of Fred. d'ors and certain foreign monice; and declaration do not prove correct. The ship's batches (if goods are it occasionally buys bills for account of, and sells bills OR the Berlin on board) are sealed on arrival, and an additional declaration is ac- bank. It does not issue notes. The amount of its capital is not cepted before they are unsealed; but no later declaration, supple- fixed but government guarantees its transactions. It is relieved mentary, or explanatory, of the first, and no submitting the goods to from the payment of postage on money, and it is not required to - investigation by the officers, is received or allowed. If the shipmas- the stamps fixed by law, on bills for its deposit transactions, but only ter be unable to make a complete declaration on arrival, a Custom- those of 10 8. gr.; (about 11 1.2d.); while individuals must - house officer is put on board, who remains until the ship is unloaded, stamps for such bills of 5a. gr. for every 400 r., of not longer date at an expense to her of about 2a. per day and night. The cargo can than 3 months. and for every 200 of louger date. only be discharged in presence of a customs officer. On negotiable bills, however, the bank must USF the stamps fixed The shipmaster, and not the receiver of the goods, is made re. by law, say of 5a. gr. (about 5 3-4d.) for sume of 50 dol. to are dol., sponsible, if the contents of the packages do not correspond with his and at the same rate for every additional sum between 100 del. and declaration: and be is only exonerated from this by solemnly aver- 400 dol. ring, on making the declaration, that the contents are unknown to Bills from and on foreign places, negotiated at Dantaic, are not him. An evident mistake or oversight is treated as rigorously as an subject to the stamp duty. intentional fraud. The affairs of the bank are not made public. Being a government On commencing to load, the shipmaster receives a blank loading concern, there are no dividends. It is not supposed to be very pro- list, in which he must daily note the articles he takes on board, or he fitable, at least in the present circumscribed state of trade, although is liable to fine but this regulation is not very rigidly enforced. On enjoying the advantages of exemption from postage of monies, and clearing out, this list is compared with the goods entered by the ves- paying less stamp duty. It is true, however, that the direct advan- sel, when the sea passport is given. tage of the lower stamp duty is enjoyed by the borrower. Ballast can be discharged only at stated places, on pain of the ship- Credit, Brokerage. & few goods are consigned from abread master being fiued. for sale, for such consignments rarely turn to good account. Imports It is material, however, to observe, that the whole Custom-house are seldom sold for cash, but generally at 1. 2 and 3 months' credit, business of the shipmaster is conducted by Custom house brokers, so or longer. The discount allowed for cash payments. when sold - that be is never at a loss, being informed by the one he selects what time, is usually 6 per cent., but it varies according as money is plea- be has to do. Alterations are frequently made in the Custom-house tiful or otherwise. regulations. Any person, being a burgher of the town (which any cas of - The shipmaster receives, on arrival, from the pilot commodore, a character may become), may transact business as a commission - copy of the harbour regulations, in his own language, with instruc- chant or factor: but brokers must be chosen by the elders of the tions how to act as to ballast. Corporation of Merchants, approved by the regency of the premises, Warehouring.-Soch goods as pay a higher duty than 18 a dollar and sworn in by the magistracy of the town. Digitized by Google DANTZIC. 568 The usual rates of commission are- to the House of Correction but they often escape punishment, from 3 per cent. on wood articles do. exported, the too great laxity in enforcing the laws in criminal matters. 2 other goods The creditors of a bankrupt estate brought into court, rank under 2 do. goods imported, 8 different classes, each prior class enjoying a precedency of claim with from 1 to 2 per cont. on do. for dd credere, or guarantee of over those following, to the full amount. The two most considerable debts. classes, in general, are the 6th and 7th, the former being that of the The corn factor receives Γ. 17 (about 4s. 9d. sterling) per last (of bill, the latter that of the book, creditors. 60 scheffels) of all grain, from the buyer, and 1 per cost. from the Tares, & duties are in general payable on the gross weight seller. a fixed allowance being made, in many cases, according to the pack- agrs; in others, there is no allowance The tariff specifies the par- The rates of brokerage are- ticular regulations on this point. The tare on goods in single sacks 12 1-2 a. gr. (nearly 10. 1-2d) per 100% is 4 lbs. per centner (about 113 lbs. English), it being left to the op- 7 1-2 ( - 87d.) per 100L. tion of the receiver to have the nett weight ascertained. 3 3-4 - 4:3d.) per 100 r. In trade there are fixed rates of tare only on the following goods I per mille for bills on Berlin, Warmw, and Paris. viz- 1.2 per cent. on monies placed at interest, for a period not less than Potashes, 6 per cent., when sold by a merchant. 6 months, from the borrower, and Dye wood, ground, 8 to 11 per bale. 1 per mille from the lender. Currants 14 per cent. in whole butts. 1 per mille usually for short discounts, from both parties. - 16 - half do. 1 per cent. on the actual or the computed amount of transactions in - 18 - 1-4th and 1-8th do. public funds, from both parties. Fign and raisins 10 - casks. 1-2 per cent. usually (sometimes more or less) for merchandise. Olive oil 16 - whole and half butts. On grain for exportation, the brokerage is recently fixed at 1 per - 18 to 20 1-4th and 1-8th. cent., to be paid by the seller, the buyer refunding to him 5 & gr. per - 16 - pipes. last of 56 1.2 scheffels. Seed oil, latterly the thre is ascertained. Burghers being merchants, may act as brokers, without direct au. Pepper, English, in double bags, 7 lbs. thority, in the purchase from, and sale of goods to, Poles, receiving - Danish, in bags and mats, 11 lbs. I per cent. on goods bought, and 1 to 2 per cent. on goods sold, ac. Orange and lemon peel, 6 per cent.,wr tare ascertained. cording to circumstances. Rice from England or Hamburgh, the tare as on the casks, less lbs. Bankruptcies are not of frequent occurrence here. Their most per cask on that from England, and in proportion to the weight on prevalent sources at present are speculations in grain, and general that from Hanburgh. Danish should give 10 per cent. tare, but badness of trade. Bankrupts cannot obtain a discharge except by the buyers are in general not satisfied with this. private composition, without which they always remain responsible Tallow, 10 per cent., or nett tare. to each individual creditor, who can attach them at any time, if be Tea, Danneh bobea, 78 lbs. if in linen and mats. can show that they possess property, although their affairs have been - 24 :bs. in chests above 100 lbs. settled by judicial authority. This, and the tediousness of settle- - 22 lbs. - of about 80 lbs. ments in court, make both debtor and creditor desirous of settling by Most frequently the tare is ascertained. composition; and bence few insolvents are made bankrupt, by their Vitriol, 10 per cent. affairs being brought into court. It is to be observed, that creditors, Raw sugar, 12 to 16 per cent. according to the size of the chests. having claims by bills in force, must by law be paid to the full, be- Candied sugar, tare by invoice, adding is that proportion for the dif- fore those with only book claims receive any thing but to avoid the ference in the weight usually heavier. tardiness of the court. bill creditors here generally agree to let book Syrup in whole casks, 10 per cent. creditors receive half as much in composition as they themselves - in 1-2 do. and barrels, 12 per cent. get. It is, however, difficult to arrange a composition, as each credi- On the sale of imports, I per cent. on the nett weight (called good for can make his own terms and three who hold out, generally get weight) is allowed is favour of the buyer. more, at least privately, than the ostensible rate of composition Insurance-There are an insurance companies not private insurers offered by the debtor. here; but there agents of insurance companies in Hamburgh for If a private composition cannot be effected, and the insolvent is re- ships, and those of London and other places for houses and lives. gularly made bankrupt. by his affairs being put into court, the law Wages of common Labou ers in Dantzic vary from 9d. to 11d. a prescribes that, if a small portion of the creditors will not accept the day, and these of carpenters, masons, Ac. from 1s. 6d. to 2a. Wages divident with which the greater portion are satisfied. the latter can in all the large Prumian towns are higher than in the small towns of require the former to cousent, or become responsible for the estate the country. from the price of flour. bread, and butcher's meat being producing as much finally but so many objections may be made, higher in them. This is occasioned partly by the latter being sub- that this compulsive measure is very seldom resorted to. A private ject to actrois or excise duties on entering the great towns. from composition is, however, generally preferred by all parties, more which the country districts and smaller towns are exempted. The particularly by the debtor, as being the only means by which be can king receives 2.3ds of these duties, and the tow no the other I 3d. become tirely free, and get a general discharge. This duty is a great obstacle in the free intercourse wi b the country. Honest bankrupts. whome affairs are brought into court, may be (We have derived these details from different sources, but princi- freed from personal arrest by faithfully delivering up all their pro- pally from the valuable Answers made by the Consul to the Circu- perty. Dishonest ones, upon conviction, are punished by being sent lar Queries.) PRUSSIAN SHIPPING-Snmmary Statement of the Arrivals of Ships at, and of their Departure from, the different Prussian Ports, in 1834.-(From the Official Accounts furnished by the Prussian Go- vernment.) Laden. In Ballast. Among these were Foreign Ships Burden Entered in Lasts Names of Ports. Ships Burden and of Lasts. Entered in Lasts Laden. In Ballast. Sailed. 4,000 lba. Ships. Lasts. Ships. and 2 Sailed. 4,000 1bs. Ships. Las's Ships. Lasts. Ent. 633 78,257 229 25,634 405 52,613 270 26,483 100 6,905 170 19,578 Memel Sail. 649 $0.937 630 80,249 18 6R9 272 26,892 261 26,519 11 374 Ent. 381 27,211 847 19540 94 7,671 238 11,530 189 8,238 49 3,292 Pillau Sail. 362 24,728 296 16,620 66 8,108 232 10.789 206 9,693 26 1,096 Ent. 649 62.342 309 23,658 340 $8,694 359 21,048 196 9,022 163 12,026 Dantzie Sail. 642 61,337 5H6 59,021 56 2,316 361 21,791 316 20,082 45 1,7 9 Ent. 81 2.202 76 1,999 5 203 I 56 1 53 Stolpmande Sail. 81 2,232 32 736 49 1,496 1 65 - - 1 55 Ent. 84 3,142 33 1,232 61 1,910 31 1,264 9 416 22 848 Regenwalde Sail. 82 3,164 67 2,503 15 661 31 1,264 30 1,217 1 47 Ent. 88 3 30 653 68 2,620 18 642 3 101 15 591 Colberg Sail. 90 3,415 82 2,756 81 659 18 642 19 648 Ent. 817 58,702 608 49.077 209 16,625 296 17.715 214 13,185 82 4,580 Swinemunie Sail. 842 59,107 714 50.472 123 9.335 297 18,003 219 13,681 78 4,322 Ent. 100 5,321 47 2,063 53 3,25 33 1,045 23 701 10 344 Wolgast Sail. 114 6,408 87 4.955 27 1,43 36 1,168 18 537 18 631 Ent. 150 11,591 38 1,495 112 10,096 28 1,3 8 15 461 13 887 Greifswalde Sail. 167 12.314 177 7.019 40 5,251 29 1,029 18 601 II 428 Ent. 388 19.506 159 6,926 229 12,580 138 4,820 100 3,091 38 1,129 Stralsund Sail. 390 19,890 300 19,732 90 7,158 129 4,652 is 1,998 50 2,754 Arrivale . 3.371 271.547 1,815 125,877 1,556 146.270 1,412 85,950 850 42.75 562 43,175 Departures . 3,415 274,232 2.921 237,102 497 37,130 1,406 86,285 1,165 74.89 241 11,416 Total 6,789 545,779 4,736 362,379 2,063 183,400 2.818 172,235 2,015 117,644 803 54,591 Countries to which Foreign Vessels belonged.-Of the foreign vessels that entered and were despatch- ed from Prussian Ports in 1834, there were- Arrivals. Departures. British - - 214 - - 246 Netherlands - 324 - - 331 Danish - - 202 - - 200 Hanoverian - 196 - - 188 Swedish - - 97 - - 99 Norwegian - 194 - 197 Then follow the ships of the Hanseatic cities, Russia, Mecklenburg, &c. Digitized by Google 564 DANUBE, DATES. Ships belonging to Prussia.-M. Ferber gives the following Table of the shipping of Pressis : I Summary Indication of the Vessels belonging to Prussian Owners, in the Years 1825, 1826, 1827, 1828, 1829, 1830, and (Ferber, p. 174.) 1825. 1826. 1827. 1823. 1829. 1830. 1831. Ports. Ships. Lasts. Ships. Lasts. Ships. Lasts. Ships. Lasts. Ships. Lasts. Ships. Last Shipa. Lasts. Königsberg 13 1,617 13 2,368 16 2,539 17 2,738 18 3,026 20 3.008 11 3.225 Pillau - 11 1,767 12 2,026 16 2,670 14 2,468 15 2,602 15 2,660 14 2,5*9 Memel - 36 4,229 36 4,278 35 4,076 36 4,377 36 4,815 38 5,095 38 4,543 Elbing - 12 1,430 15 2,178 17 2,650 19 3,175 18 2,941 19 3,106 20 3,154 Dantzic - 67 12,309 72 14,934 73 15,386 76 15,999 78 16,095 76 16,058 76 15,934 Stettin - - 220 20,559 230 22,808 24! 25,024 238 25,057 235 25,014 211 25,460 152 26,398 Coslin - 32 1,724 28 1,637 34 2,764 35 2,792 39 3,045 39 2,909 41 3,181 Stralsund - 82 6,235 78 5,983 80 6,324 81 6,186 76 6,001 75 6,310 81 7,245 Griefswalde 41 2,957 42 3,069 52 3,928 54 4,070 52 4,103 52 4,185 58 4,179 Wolgast - 21 1,626 19 1,540 18 1,586 20 1,788 22 1,992 21 1,919 23 2,164 Barth - 41 3,554 41 3,572 41 3,784 41 3,784 41 3,784 44 4,369 44 4,369 Total - 576 58,007 589 64,393 623 70,731 631 72,434 630 73,418 643 75,079 1652 76,987 Influence of Reciprocity Treatics.-This Table is important, as exhibiting the utter groundlessness of the clamour raised in this country as to the reciprocity treaty with Prussia. Taking the last at If ton, the total increase of Prussian shipping, from 1825 to 1831 inclusive, will be 76 ships and 28,470 tons, which is very little more than the increase, during the same period, of the shipping belonging to the port of Newcastle ! It will be observed, too, that the increase since 1827 has only amounted to 29 ships and 9,384 tons. If, therefore, our shipping be distressed, it is quite impossible it should have been occasioned by the Increase of shipping in Prussia. Considering, indeed, the extent of sea coast now in possession of that kingdom, the tranquillity she has enjoyed since the peace, and her rapid pro- gress in manufactures and commerce, the small increase of her shipping is not a little surprising. It could not well have been less, though the reciprocity treaty had never been heard of. Indeed. many of the Prussian ship owners think, and, perhaps, justly, that it would have been greater had that treaty not been entered into. It must also be kept in view, that this trifling increase in the shipping of Prussia is the only increase that has taken place in the shipping of any country of the north of Enrope since 1825. The mercantile navies of Sweden, Denmark, and Russia, have undergone little or DO change; but it is a fact, that the shipping of Norway has fallen off even more rapidly than that of Prussia has increased, and yet we have a reciprocity treaty with her Is not this sufficient to show that the influence of these treaties has been grossly exaggerated by our ship owners 1 and that they cannot really have done them any injury1 (DANUBE (NAVIGATION OF). See GALACE.Sup.) DATES (Ger. Datteln; Fr. Dattes; It. Datteri; Sp. Datiles), the fruit of the palm tree (Phoenix dactylifera Lin.). This tree is abundant in Egypt, Barbary, Arabia, Persia, and the adjacent countries, particularly on the confines of the desert, and wherever there is sufficient moisture. It is a tall majestic tree; and repeated references are made to it in the sacred writings (Eccles. xxiv. 14.), and in the Koran. Mohammed, in one of his sayings, beautifully compares the upright and generous man to the palm tree. " He stands erect before his Lord; in his every action he follows the impulse received from above, and his whole life is devoted to the welfare of his fellow-creatures." But the veneration in which the palm tree is held in the East is to be ascribed more to its utility than to its beauty. Dates form the principal part of the subsistence of the inhabitants of many parts of Arabis and Barbary, and they are held in the highest estimation wherever they are met with. " They are," says Burckhardt, by far the most essential article of food for the lower classes of Medina their harvest is expected with as much anxiety, and attended with as much gene- ral rejoicing, as the vintage in the south of Europe; and if the crop fails, which often hap- pens, as those trees are seldom known to produce abundantly for 3 or 4 successive years, or is eaten up by the locusts, universal gloom overspreads the population, as if a famine were apprehended."-(Travels in Arabia, vol. ii. p. 214.) There is an endless variety of dates. Generally, however, they may be described as being somewhat in the shape of an acorn, but usually larger, consisting of a thick fleshy substance, including and freely separating from an oblong stone or kernel, having a furrow on the one side. Their taste is agreeably sweet, accompanied with a slight astringency. The new fruit is called by the Arabs ruteb. When the dates are allowed to remain on the tree till they are quite ripe, and have become soft and of a high red colour, they are formed into a hard solid paste or cake called adjoue. This is formed by pressing the ripe dates forcibly into large baskets, each containing about 2 cwt. In this state," says Burckhardt, " the Bedouins export the adjoue: in the market it is cut out of the basket, and sold by the pound. It forms part of the daily food of all classes of people: in travelling it is dissolved in water, and thus affords a sweet and refreshing drink. During the monsoon, the ships from the Persian Gulf bring adjoue from Bussorah to Djidda for sale in small baskets weigh- ing about 10 lbs. each; this kind is preferred to every other. Ships bound from Arabia for India take with them a considerable quantity of adjoue, which is readily disposed of amongst the Mohammedans of Hindostan."-(Travels in Arabia, vol. i. P. 57.) The Arabians and Egyptians use the leaves of the tree in the preparation of bags and baskets; the boughs, the outer and inner bark of the trunk, and the fleshy substance at the root of the leaves, where they spring from the trunk, have all their respective uses; and be Digitized by Google DEALS-DEMURRAGE. 565 sides this, the kernels of the fruit, notwithstanding their hardness, are used as food for cattle, they are soaked for two days in water, when they become softened, and are given to camels, cows, and sheep, instead of barley they are said to be much more nutritive than that grain. There are shops at Medina in which nothing else is sold but date kernels; and the beggars are continually employed in all the main streets in picking up those that are thrown away.-(Burckhardt, vol. ii. P. 212.) All the refinements of Arabian cookery are exhausted in the preparation of dates and the Arabs say that a good housewife will daily supply her lord, for a month, with a dish of dates differently dressed. Palm trees are raised by shoots; and Dr. Shaw mentions that they arrive at their vigour in about 30 years, and continue so 70 years afterwards, bearing yearly 15 or 20 clusters of dates, each of them weighing 15 or 20 lbs. after this period they begin to decline.—(Tra- wels in the Levant, p. 142. 4to ed.) The best dates imported into Great Britain are said to come from Tunis, but they are most commonly brought from Smyrna and Alexandria. They should be chosen large, soft- ish, not much wrinkled, of a reddish yellow colour on the outside, with a whitish membrane betwixt the flesh and the stone. Those that are dry and hard are of little value. DEALS OR DEAL BOARDS (Ger. Dielen; Du. Deelen, Da. Dæler; Sw. Tiljor Fr. Planches minces; It. Tavole, Piane; Rus. Doski; Pol. Turcice), a thin kind of fir planks, much used in carpentry they are formed by sawing the trunk of a tree into longi- tudinal divisions, of greater or less thickness, according to the purposes they are intended to serve. They are imported from Dantzic, Petersburgh, Narva, and many other ports in the Baltic, and from North America but those from Christiania, the capital of Norway, are the best, and bring the highest price. They are distinguishable from those produced in the con- tiguous provinces of Norway; their superiority has been said to depend principally on their being more perfectly sawed; but it really depends on the greater care with which the sap- wood and other defective portions of the timber are cut away, and on the quality of the timber. A Russian standard deal is 12 feet long, 11 inches wide, and It inch thick 400 feet of If inch plank make a load. A Christiania standard deal is 11 feet long, 9 inches wide, and It inch thick. There is another standard of Norway deals at Dram, 10 feet long, 9 inches wide, and If inch thick.-(See CHRIS- TIANIA.) DEBENTURE, a term used at the custom-house to signify the certificate subscribed by the customs officers, and given to the exporter of goods on which a bounty or drawback is allowed, bearing that the exporter has complied with the required regulations, and that he is entitled to such bounty or drawback. It is enacted by 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. 1 86., that no drawback or bounty shall be allowed upon the exportation of any goods, unless entered in the name of the real owner thereof, or of the person who had actually purchased and shipped the same, in his own name and at his own risk, on commission. Such owner or commission merchant shall make and subscribe a declaration on the debenture that the goods have been actually exported, and are not to be relanded in any part of the United Kingdom, &c. ; and if such owner or commission merchant shall not have purchased the right to such drawback or bounty, he shall declare under his hand in the entry, and in his oath upon the debenture, the person who is entitled thereto; and the name of such person shall be inserted in the cocket, and in the debenture, and his receipt on the latter shall be the discharge of such drawback or bounty.-d 87. For these and the other clauses in the act relating to debentures, see IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION. All debentures must be on 5s. stamps. Debentures or certificates for bounty on the exportation of linens or salicloth exempted from duty. DELFT, OR DELF (Ger. Fayence, Unächtes Porzellün, Du. Delfs porcelyn; Fr. Faience), a coarse species of porcelain originally manufactured at Delft, whence its name. It is now rarely used in this country. DEMURRAGE, in commercial navigation, is an allowance made to the master or owners of a ship by the freighter, for detaining her in port longer than the period agreed upon for her sailing. It is usually stipulated in charterparties and bills of lading, that a certain num- ber of days, called running or working days, shall be allowed for receiving or discharging the cargo, and that the freighter may detain the vessel for a further specified time, or as long as he pleases, on payment of so much per diem for such over-time. When the contract of affreightment expressly stipulates that so many days shall be allowed for discharging or re- ceiving the cargo, and so many more for over-time, such limitation is interpreted as an ex- press stipulation on the part of the freighter, that the vessel shall in no event be detained longer, and that if detained he will be liable for demurrage. This holds even in cases where the delay is not occasioned by any fault on the freighter's part, but is inevitable. If, for ex- ample, a ship be detained, owing to the crowded state of the port, for a longer time than is allowed by the contract, demurrage is due and it is no defence to an action for demurrage, that it arose from port regulations, or even from the unlawful acts of the Custom-house officers. Demurrage is not, however, claimable for a delay occasioned by the hostile deten- tion of the ship, or the hostile occupation of the intended port; nor is it claimable for any delay wilfully occasioned by the master, or owners, or crew of the vessel. The claim for demurrage ceases as soon as the ship is cleared out and ready for sailing, though she should VoL. L-3 B Digitized by Google 566 DENARIUS-DIAMOND. be detained by adverse winds, or tempestuous weather.-(Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. pp. 426-431.) DENARIUS, a Roman coin, estimated by Dr. Arbuthnot to have been worth 71d; but its value differed at different periods. DENIER, a small French coin, of which there were 12 to a sol. (DERELICT, FLOTSAM, JETSAM, AND LAGAN.-It was enacted by the 3 &4 Will. 4. c. 52. (see IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION), that such foreign goods derelict, jetsam, and flotsam, as could not be sold for the amount of the duties, were to be deemed unenumerated goods, and charged with duty accordingly. But this proviso has been repealed; and the Commissioners of Customs are authorised to inquire into the extent to which such goods shall have been damaged, and to make such abatement of the duties as may appear just and reasonable.-(6 & 7 Will. 4. c. 60. § 3.) It is further enacted, that goods found derelict, or under the denomination of flotsam, jetsam, &c. shall, if not claimed within 12 months, be deemed condemned as droits of Admiralty.-( 7.)-Sup.) DIAMOND, (Ger. Du. Da. and Fr. Diamant; Sw. Demant, Diamant; It Sp. and Port. Diamante; Rus. Almas; Pol. Dyamant; Lat. Adamas; Hind. Hira), a precious stone, which has been known from the remotest ages. Pliny has described it (Hist. Nat. lib. 37. § 4.) but his account is, in many respects, inaccurate. It is found in different parts of India, and in Borneo; it is also found in Brazil, on which, indeed, Europe may be said to be at present entirely dependent for supplies of diamonds. Hitherto, however, it has not been met with any where except within the tropics. It is the most beautiful and most value- ble of precious stones. Its most common colours are white and grey of various shades. It occurs also red, blue, brown, yellow, and green. The colours are commonly pale. It is always crystallised, but sometimes 90 imperfectly that it might pass for amorphous. It is the hardest body in nature. External lustre from splendid to glimmering; internal always splendid. It is brittle; its specific gravity is 3.5. When rubbed, it becomes positively elec- tric, even before it has been cut by the lapidary, which is not the case with any other gem. -(Thomson's Chemistry.) According to Mr. Milburn (Orient. Com.), the colour should be perfectly crystalline, resembling a drop of clear spring water, in the middle of which you will perceive a strong light playing with a great deal of spirit. If the coat be smooth and bright, with a little tincture of green in it, it is not the worse, and seldom proves bad ; but if there be a mix- ture of yellow with the green, then beware of it-it is a soft, greasy stone, and will prove bad. Tests of Diamonds. Cutting, &c.-To ascertain whether any specimen is a true diamond or not, a fine file may be used and if the surface of the stone be the least abraded or scratched by its action, it is not a diamond. The difference will also appear upon close examination without this instrument; the rays of light easily pass through other gems, but in the diamond they are refracted to the surface, which occasions its superior brilliancy. If the specimen under examination be very minute. it may be placed between 2 half-crowns, or other flat metallic surfaces, and pressed with the thumb and finger: if a diamond, it will not be injured, but if otherwise, it will brenk and fall to powder. On account of the extreme hardness of the diamond, the art of cutting and polishing it was for a long time unknown in Europe. But, in 1456, a young man of the name of Louis Berghen, a native of Bruges. is said to have constructed a polishing wheel for the purpose, which was fed with diamond powder instead of corundum, which the Chinese and Hindoos had been long accustomed to employ. Berghen was led to this discovery by observing the action produced by rubbing 2 rough diamonds together. Diamonds are cut into brilliants and rose diamonds; the former being, for the most part, made out of the octa- hedral crystals, and the latter from the spheroidal varieties.-(Joyce's Practical Mineralogy; Rees's Cyclopadia, &c.) " Commercial Value of Diamonds.-In the great or wholesale trade there is but little fluctuation in the price of those diamonds which may be termed stones in general demand. I will begin with brilliants from 1 grain to 21 grains each.-Such brilliants, double cut, and what may be termed fine, are worth from 71. to 81. per carat. Needy sellers may take 10 per cent less for cash; but this is the general average price for a lot of 10, 20, or 50 carats of well-made stones, if the quality be good. " Brilliants, from 2 grains to 3, may be bought in lots, at from 71. 7a. to Sl. per carat. It is to be understood, that diamonds in a lot are never all quite free from faults; hence there may arise a differ- ence of 10 per cent. in the price. Stones of 3 grains, if fine and perfect, are always in demand, at SL or 91. per carat. Brilliants, from 3 grains to 4, if very fine and well proportioned, are worth from 81. to 91. per carat. Those of a carat each, if very fine and well selected, are worth 91. or 10% Three years ago I offered 12/. each for eight, and could not obtain them. " Brilliants, from 5 grains to 6, if pure, are worth from 131. to 142.; if perfectly fine, and of the full weight of 6 grains, they are worth from 171. to 181. each: I have, for such, paid 201 " Brilliants, of 2 carate each, are worth from 271. to 301. Stones of this weight, if well proportioned, are considered of a fine size, and well calculated for pins, or the centre of clusters; indeed. well pro- portioned diamonds, from 6 grains to 2 carats each, are always in demand, and are retailed at from 201. to 351. each, according to their degree of perfection. or as the retailer may think fit to charge them. " For brilliants of 3 carats, if fine and well formed, from 701. to 801. may be obtained. Stones of this size, and larger, are more liable to capricions fluctuations of price than the smaller ones before named, being chiefly required for the centre stones of saleable necklaces. " Brilliants of 4 carats, if fine, are worth from 1001. to 130L. I have sold stones, single cut, a little off colour, of this weight, at 50 guineas. I possessed one of 17 grains, perfectly white, having a sor- face as large as that of a 7 carat stone ought to be; it was, consequently, very thin, but being much in request, on account of its great spread, or surface, it was sold for 160L. Brilliants of 5 carats are not frequently met with in general trade, and are valuable in price; M the dealers exact more if they know that such stones are wanted. than they would in the regular course of business. The prices may be said to vary from 1801. to 2001. Digitized by Google DIAPER-DISCOUNT. 567 Brilliants of 6 carats, as before stated, are not common they are suitable for centre stones of ex- pensive necklaces, and single stone rings; if perfect and well shaped, they sell from 2301. to 2501. or more. For estimating the value of peculiarly fine diamonds, there is no fixed standard. Rough diamonds, selected as fine, and well formed for cutting, may be estimated as follows :-Square the weight of the stone, multiply the product by 2, and the result will be the value in pounds sterling. Brilliants, if fine, may be estimated by squaring the weight in carats, and multiplying the product by 8, which will give the amount in pounds sterling. As a very large property, both in this kingdom and in other countries of Europe, is vested in diamonds, it may be interesting to be informed, that not only the price of these gems has for several years been, upon the whole, gradually rising, but that it is likely to continue on the advance. At the present time, indeed, and for the last few years, there has been a dull sale of diamonds in England, nor did the coronation occasion a demand worth notice; but on the Continent the trade has been steady, and rough diamonds have been constantly rising in price. That this advance will be pro- gressive, may be assumed from the fact, that the best diamond ground now known, the Serro do Frio in Brazil, has assuredly passed the zenith of its prosperity. I went over the greater part of what is yet reserved, and still remains to be worked, and I conceive that there would be no difficulty in cal- culating the length of time in which the present number of workmen may reduce it to a state of ex- haustion. like that of the far-famed Golconda. The average annual produce of future years may be estimated by the amount obtained from that portion which has been already. worked. Brazil may be said to furnish Europe with 25,000 or 30,000 carats per annum of rough diamonds; which, if reduced to brilliants, may make an influx into the market of 8,000 or 9,000 carats annually." (Mawe's Treatise on Diamonds, 2d ed. pp. 9-14. and p. 60.) The rule stated by Mr. Mawe, and adopted by the jewellers, for estimating the value of diamonds (multiply the square of the weight in carats by 2, and the product is the value in pounds sterling), can only hold in the case of those that are of a small size, or do not weigh more than 20 carats. The value of the largest diamonds, which are exceedingly rare, (non nisi regibus, et iis admodum paucis cognitus, Pliny,) can, it is clear, depend upon nothing but the competition of the purchasers. The diamond belonging to the Emperor of Brazil is the largest in the world. It is still uncut, and weighs 1,680 carats; 80 that, according to the jewellers' rule, it must be worth the enormous sum of 5,644,8001.! It may, however, be doubted, whether his Imperial Majesty would have any disinclination to part with it for the odd sum of 644,8001. The famous diamond belonging to the Emperor of Russia, which the jewellers tell us is worth 4,804,0001., did not cost 150,000Γ. Diamonds are not used exclusively as articles of ornament or luxury. They are frequently cm- ployed with great advantage in the arts. 'Bad, discoloured diamonds," says Mr. Mawe, are sold to break into powder, and may be said to have a more extensive sale than brilliants, with all their cap- tivating beauty. In many operations of art they are indispensable; the fine cameo and intaglio owe their perfection to the diamond, with which alone they can be engraved. The beauty of the onyx would yet remain dormant, had not the unrivalled power of the diamond been called forth to the artist's assistance. The carnelian, the agate, or cairngorm, cannot be engraved by any other sub- stance every crest or letter cut upon hard stone is indebted to the diamond. This is not all; for without it, blocks of crystal could not be cut into alices for spectacles, agate for snuff-boxes, &c." Diamonds may be landed without report, entry, or warrant.- & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. 1 2.) The carat grain used in weighing diamonds is different from the Troy grain, 5 diamond grains being only equal to 4 Troy grains. DIAPER (Ger. Drell; Du. Drel; Fr. Linge ouvré It. Tela tessuta aopere Sp. Man- teles alemaniscas; Rus. Salfetotsschnoe), a sort of fine flowered linen, commonly used for table-cloths, napkins, &c., brought to the highest perfection in the manufactories in the north of Ireland, in Germany, and Scotland. DICE (Ger. Würfel; Du. Taarlingen; Fr. Dés jouer) It. Dadi; Sp. Dados; Rus. Kosti), cubical pieces of bone or ivory, marked with dots on each of their sides, from 1 to 6, according to the number of the face. The regulations as to the manufacture and sale of dice are the same as those with respect to CARDS (which see). Every pair of dice is to pay a duty of 20s. All pieces of ivory, bone, or other matter, used in any game, having letters, figures, spots, or other marks denoting any chance, marked thereon, to be adjudged dice and if more than 6 chances are signified on any one piece, then such piece to be charged with the full duty of a pair of dice.-(9 Geo. 4. c. 18.) DIMITY (Fr. Basin; It. Dobletto; Sp. Dimite), a species of cross-barred stuff entirely composed of cotton, similar in fabric to fustian. DISCOUNT, an allowance paid on account of the immediate advance of a sum of money not due till some future period. It is usually said to be of two kinds; viz. discount of bills, and discount of goods; but they are essentially the same. When a bill of exchange is presented at a banker's for discount, it is the practice to calcu- late the simple interest for the time the bill has to run, including the days of grace, which interest is called the discount; and this being deducted from the amount of the bill, the ba- lance is paid over to the presenter of the bill. This is the method followed by the Bank of England, the London and provincial bankers, and by commercial men in general. But it is, notwithstanding, inaccurate. The true discount of any sum for any given time is such a sum as will in that time amount to the interest of the sum to be discounted. Thus, if inte- rest be five per cent., the proper discount to be received for the immediate advance of 100L due 12 months hence is not 5L, but 4L 15s. 2jd; for this sum will, at the end of the year, amount to 51., which is what the 100/. would have produced. Those, therefore, who em- ploy their money in discounting, make somewhat more than the ordinary rate of interest upon it for a person discounting 100/. due at the end of a year, advances, supposing interest to be 51. per cent., only 95L; 80 that, as this 95/. produces 100L. at the period in question, the interest received has really been 51. 5s. 3d. per cent. The rule for calculating discount on correct principles is as follows Digitized by Google 568 DIVIDEND-DOCKS. As the amount of 1001. for the given rate and time Is to the given suin or debt; So is 1001. to the present worth, or So is the interest of 100% for the given time To the discount of the given sum. Mr. Smart has calculated, on this principle, a Table of the discount of 1L for any number of days, at 2, 21, 3, 31, &c. to 10 per cent., to 8 decimal places. But the simple interest of the sum being the only thing looked to in practice, such Tables are hardly ever referred to. Bills in the highest credit are discounted on the lowest terms; the discount increasing according to the suspicions entertained of the punctuality or solvency of the parties subscrib- ing the bills. During the war, the rate of interest, or, which is the same thing, of discount, was comparatively high; but since 1818, the rate of discount upon good bills has seldom been above 4, and has often been as low as 3 and even 21 per cent. Discount on merchandise takes place when, after making a purchase of goods at a fixed term of credit, the buyer finds means to make his payment before the expiration of that term, receiving from the seller a discount or allowance, which is commonly a good deal above the current rate of interest. The discount on goods varies, of course, according to the interest of money. During the late war, the loans to government were so large, and the facility of investing money was such, that the discount on goods was often as high as 5 per cent. for 6, and 10 per cent. for 12 months. Now, however, the discount on goods has fallen, with the fall in the rate of interest, to 7 or 71 per cent. for 12 months: being about double the current interest arising from funded property, or the discount of good mercantile bills. Long credits and discounts upon goods have, for a lengthened period, been usual in Eng- land. This arose from a variety of causes, but principally, perhaps, from the magnitude of our exports to the United States, Russia, and other countries where there is a great demand for capital; but in whatever causes it originated, it has latterly been carried to what seems to be an injurious extent.-(See CREDIT.) In France and Germany, the manufacturers, in general bare of capital, are obliged to stipulate with the merchants for short credits. In Holland, the usage of the exporting merchants has been to pay either in ready money, or at 80 short a date as to put discounting out of the question, the manufacturer setting at once the lowest price on his goods. DIVIDEND, the name given to the payment made to creditors out of the estate of a bankrupt, and to the annual interest payable upon the national debt, and other public funds. DJIDDA, a town of Arabia, on the Red Sea, about 21 miles from Mecca, of which it is the sea-port, in lat. 21° 29' N., lon. 39° 14' E. It is well built the streets are unpaved, but spacious and airy ; the houses high, and constructed, for the most part, of madrepores and other marine fossils. The supply of water is scanty, and its quality indifferent. Small vessels approach close to the quays; but large vessels are obliged to anchor in the roads, about 2 miles off, loading and unloading by means of lighters. The entrance to the roads is difficult, and should not be attempted without a pilot. Djidda is a place of considerable commercial importance. It is the entrepôt in which is centred the greater part of the com- merce between India, Egypt, and Arabia. Many of its merchants possess large capitals: some of them as much as from 150,000L to 200,000/. The trade in coffee brought from Mocha, and other ports in Yemen, is the most considerable, but it is said also to be the most hazardous. The returns are principally made in cash. The trade with India and the Gulf of Persia is safer than the coffee trade, and is very considerable. Djidda has also a good deal of intercourse with the ports of Cosseir, Souakin, and Massouah, on the opposite coast of the Red Sea. The imports from the last two principally consist of slaves, gold, tobacco, dhourra or barley, hides, butter (of which immense quantities are made use of in Arabia), mats, &c. ; in return for which the Africans receive Indian goods suitable for their markets, dresses and ornaments for their women, dates (which are not produced in any part of Nubia), iron, &c. The principal article of import from Cosseir is wheat; and not only Djidda, but the whole Hedjaz, or Holy Land of Arabia, is almost entirely dependent upon Egypt for corn. Coffee is the principal article sent in return. Business is transacted at Djidda with ease and expedition. The number of ships belonging to the port is estimated at 250. Owing to the scarcity of timber, none of them are built at Djidda; those belonging to it being either purchased at Bombay or Muscat, or at Mocha, Hodeida, or Suez. For a considorable period each year, before and after the feast of Ramadhan, when pilgrims come from all quarters to visit Mecca, the town is thronged with strangers, and a great deal of mercantile business is transacted. Djidda is at present, and has been for a number of years, under the government of Mohammed Ali, pacha of Egypt. The moneys, weights and measures of the latter coun- try (for which, see ALEXANDRIA) are now generally used in Djidda, the commerce of which has been much improved and extended in consequence of the comparative security and good order enforced by the pacha.-(We have gleaned these details from the different works of Burckhardt, particularly from his Travels in Arabia, vol. i. pp. 1-100.) DOCKS are artificial basins for the reception of ships. The term has been supposed by Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). 569 some to be derived from the Greek Senopeces, to receive but it is obviously no other than the Teutonic dock, originally perhaps derived from dekken, to cover, enclose, or protect. Docks are of 2 sorts-wet and dry. Wet docks are generally constructed with gates to retain the water. Ships are admitted at high water and the gates being shut, they are kept constantly afloat. A dry dock is intended for the building, repairing, or examination of ships. The ships to be repaired or examined are admitted into it at high water and the water either ebbs out with the receding sea, or is pumped out after the gates are shut. Utility of Docks.-The construction of wet docks has done much to facilitate and promote navigation. A large vessel, particularly if loaded, could not be allowed to come to the ground, or to lie on the beach, without sustaining considerable injury, and perhaps being destroyed and even the smaller class of vessels are apt to be strained, and otherwise hurt, if they are left dry, unless the ground be very soft. Hence, when large vessels have to be loaded or unloaded where there are no docks, and where the water close to the shore or quay is not sufficiently deep, the work can only be carried on during a particular period of each tide it being necessary, in order to keep the vessel afloat, that she should leave the shore with the ebbing tide. Attempts have sometimes been made to obviate this inconvenience, by run- ning jetties or piers to such a distance into the sea, that there might always be a sufficient depth of water at their heads but this can only be done in peculiar situations and it re- quires that the ship's position should be frequently changed. It is in most cases, too, impos- sible properly to protect the cargoes of ships loading or unloading at quays, or on the beach, from depredation. Previously to the construction of the wet docks on the Thames, the pro- perty annually pillaged from ships was estimated to amount to 500,000L a year, though this w probably much exaggerated. I. Docks ON THE THAMES. 1. West India Docks. 6. London Port Dues.-Charges 2. London Docks. on Account of Lights, Pilotage, 3. East India Docks. &c. in the Thames.-Shipping, 4. St. Katharine's Docks. &c. of London. 5. Commercial Docks. II. LIVERPOOL Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. III. BRISTOL Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. IV. HULL Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. V. GOOLE DOCKS, SHIPPING, ETC. VI. LEITH Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. I. Docks ON THE THAMES. It is singular that, notwithstanding the obvious utility of wet docks, and the vast trade of the metropolis, there was no establishment of this sort on the Thames till nearly a century after a wet dock had been constructed at Liverpool. The inconvenience arising from the crowded state of the river, at the periods when fleets of merchantmen were accustomed to arrive, the insufficient accommodation afforded by the legal quays and sufferance wharfs, the necessity under which many ships were placed of unloading in the river into lighters, and the insecurity and loss of property thence arising, had been long felt as almost intolerable grievances; but 80 powerful was the opposition to any change, made by the private wharf- ingers and others interested in the support of the existing order of things, that it was not till 1793 that a plan was projected for making wet docks for the port of London ; and 6 years more elapsed before the act for the construction of the West India Docks was passed. 1. West India Docks.-These were the first, and continue to be the most extensive, of the great warehousing establishments formed in the port of London. Their construction com- menced in February, 1800, and they were partially opened in August, 1802. They stretch across the isthmus joining the Isle of Dogs to the Middlesex side of the Thames. They ori- ginally consisted of an Import and Export Dock, each communicating, by means of locks, with a basin of 5 or 6 acres in extent at the end next Blackwall, and with another of more than 2 acres at the end next Limehouse both of these basins communicate with the Thames. To these works the West India Dock Company have recently added the South Dock, formerly the City Canal, which runs parallel to the Export Dock. This canal was intended to facili- tate navigation, by enabling ships to avoid the circuitous course round the Isle of Dogs. It was, however, but little used for that purpose, and is now appropriated to the wood trade, for the greater accommodation of which, a pond of 19 acres has been recently formed on the south side for the reception of bonded timber. The Export Dock, or that appropriated for ships loading outwards, is about 870 yards in length, by 135 in width so that its area is near 25 acres: the North, or Import Dock, or that appropriated for ships entering to dis- charge, is of the same length as the Export Dock, and 166 yards wide; 80 that it contains nearly 30 acres. The South Dock, which is appropriated both to import and export vessels, 3 B 2 72 Digitized by Google 570 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). is 1,183 yards long, with an entrance to the river at each end both the locks, as well SF that into the BlackwalPBasin, being 45 feet wide, or large enough to admit ships of 1,200 tons burden. At the highest tides, the depth of water in the docks is 24 feet and the whole will contain, with ease, 600 vessels of from 250 to 500 tons. The separation of the homeward bound ships, which is of the utmost importance for preventing plunder, and giving additional security to the revenue and the merchant, was, for the first time, adopted in this establish- ment. The Import and Export Docks are parallel to each other, being divided by a range of warehouses, principally appropriated to the reception of rum, brandy, and other spirituous liquors. There are smaller warehouses and sheds on the quays of the Export and South Docks, for the reception of goods sent down for exportation. The warehouses for imported goods are on the four quays of the Import Dock. They are well contrived, and of great extent, being calculated to contain 160,000 hhds. of sugar, exclusive of coffee and other pro- duce. There have been deposited, at the same time, upon the quays, under the sheds, and in the warehouses belonging to these docks, 148,563 hhds. of sugar, 70,875 casks and 433,648 bags of coffee, 35,158 puncheons of rum and pipes of Madeira wine, 14,021 logs of mahogany, 21,350 tons of logwood, &c. The whole area occupied by the docks, ware- houses, &c. includes about 295 acres; and the most effectual precautions are adopted for the prevention of fire and pilfering. This spacious and magnificent establishment was formed by subscription, the property being vested in the West India Dock Company, the affairs of which are managed by 21 di- rectors, as a body corporate. The right of voting is vested in those shareholders only who hold 500L of the Company's stock. The Company's capital is 1,380,000L The West India Docks have proved a very successful undertaking, and have been highly beneficial to the original shareholders. All West India Ships frequenting the Thames were obliged to use them for a period of 20 years from their completion. The dividend on the Company's stock was limited to 10 per cent.; and, after making dividends to the full amount, with the exception of the first half year, they had, in 1819, an accumulated fund of near 400,000/. But they then diminished their charges, at the suggestion of the committee of the House of Commons on the foreign trade of the country, so as to give the trade using the docks the benefit of the surplus fund, which was to be reduced to 100,000/. before the 30th of January, 1826. Latterly the Company have been obliged, in consequence of the competition of the other Companies, to make further reductions of dividend. It now amounts to 51. per cent. At present, the Company's stock sells at about par. The nearest dock gate at Limehouse is about 3 miles from the Exchange; and the other, next Blackwall, about 1 a mile more. This distance has the disadvantage of increasing the expense of cartage, and of being inconvenient to the merchants and others using the docks. On the other hand, however, ships entering the West India Docks avoid a considerable ex- tent of troublesome, if not dangerous, navigation, that must be undertaken by those bound for the St. Katharine's and London Docks. Contrivance for clearing Water in the West India Docks.-In west end of that basin remain closed, the influx from the river would almost all docks and harbours, a serious evil is felt from the constant not be considerable; but when the tide has risen above the level of accumulation of mud, and the consequent expense of preserving the the Import and Export Docks, those gates would also be thrown proper depth of water. In various situations, provision has been open, and then the river would flow in with considerable force; the made for scouring out or raising mud and silt by means of back- muddy water discolouring that of the docks, and of course depositing water, dredgers, Ac., according to local circumstances; but, in the the silt or mud held in suspension. West India Docks, the evil has been entirely obviated a brief notice These facts showed that the exclusion of the river water was the of the manner in which so important an object has been accomplish- only effectual cure for the evil but the loss or waste of water from ed, may be both interesting and useful. the docks was equal, on an average, to 5 inches over the whole - The water of the Thames is generally very muddy, and when it face in 24 hours, and this low had to be supplied and not only that, is admitted into the basins and docks in large quantities, to replace but to keep the river out, it was Decessary at all times to keep the the water lost by evaporation, leakage, locking vessels in and out, water of the docks and basins up to a higher point than that to bich &c., the deposit is very great. In the West India Docks, the accu- the river would rise at the highest spring tides. mulation of mud, from this cause, was most considerable in the After long consideration, the following plan was matured for of Eastern or Blackwall Basin; and the annual cost of clearing out the fecting this object same was between 3,000/. and 4,0001. The Company's spare land on the north side of the Blackwall Be- And yet the process by which that basin was cleared, was probably sin lay below high water mark, and there three reserved were the most economical which could be adopted. A floating dredger, formed the two next the basin receive the water from the river by of the usual description, raised the mud, which was thrown into a culvert with sluices, which are close as BOOD as they are filled; barges; and these, when loaded, were emptied by a stationary en- from these the water is puniped by an engine of 36 home power, gine, working an endless chain of buckets, similar to those of the after having had time to deposit the silt, into the elevated reservor, dredger. But the field where the mud was deposited having become from whence it flows by a conduit into the ba-in, and thence into the full, additional expense was likely to be incurred by removing the dock, and thus the level of the whole is kept up to the highest point mud to a greater distance, 80 that the subject called for and received which can be desired, and the river Thames with its mud is - more attention and the result will show, that the Company have at longer admitted. length provided the most effectual remedy. The great body of water in the docks is thus constantly maintained, All the gates of the locks point inwards, to sustain the water of and is at all times clear and sweet, and no mud will hereafter be do the docks as long as the level of the water within, is higher than posited; great advantage arises, however, from the depth of water, the level of the river, those gites remain closed but as soon as the which is preserved from fluctuating with the level of the neap and river rises above the level of the Blackwall Basin, the gates of the spring tides, as the deepest laden ship can at all times be transported outer lock are thrown open while the gates of the two locks at the -the depth throughout being from 23 to 26 feet. RULES AND REGULATIONS TO BE OBSERVED, AND RATES TO BE PAID, BY THE SHIPPING FREQUENTING THE WEST INDIA Docks. RULES AND ORDERS to be observed by Masters, Pilots, and other Persons having the Charge of Ships, Vessels, Lighters, or Craft, coming into, lying in, and going out of, the West India Docks, pursuant to Act 1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 52. The Company's Moorings-The moorings in the river, within 200 yards of each of the entrances at Blackwall, and that into Limehouse Basin, and within 150 yards of the Limehouse entrance of the South Dock, are reserved for the exclusive use of vessels entering into, or which have recently come out of, the docks. Every master or person in charge of any ship, lighter, barge, boat, or other vessel, of any descrip- tion whatsoever, lying within the above distance, shall immediately remove the same, when required Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). 571 by the dock masters or their assistants. Penalty 51. for every hour which such vessel may remain. Pilots shall not attempt to place ships inside the buoys, if other ships have previously brought up, but shall bring them to their berths in due succession on the outside, unless they shall be expressly ordered by the dock master to take a berth Inside the tier for the convenience of docking. All parties creating obstructions will be prosecuted, and the penalties will be rigidly enforced. Vessels about to enter the Docks, &c. Signals.-The red flag on the flag-staff at the entrance is the signal for ships to prepare. A blue flag will be kept flying the whole time proper for docking; when the tide has reached high water mark, that flag will be struck, after which no ship can be taken in. Declaration Book. ships have brought up properly at the moorings, an officer will deliver the Company's regulations, and the commander or pilot of every vessel exceeding 100 tons must cer- tify in the Declaration Book her draught of water that she is provided with all necessary and suffi- cient warps, ropes, and tackle, to remove and moor her in safety and that her anchors are (or shall be before leaving the moorings) so secured and stowed as not to endanger the works, the ships therein, or the vessel herself. Preparing Ships for Admission.-Every master or pilot, in charge of a ship, should lose no time in making the following preparations, viz. her anchors to be properly secured and stowed her sails all furled all quarter boats lowered down, guns unloaded, gunpowder put out, fires extinguished, and such other precautions taken as the dock master may direct when these preparations are completed, a flag must be hoisted at the fore, as a signal that the ship is ready. All ships are required to send down top-gallant yards and strike top-gallant masts, and to have their jib and mizen booms rigged close in, bomkins, martingales, and all out-riggers unshipped, if time will permit, and at all events immediately after entering. Vessels will, however, be exempted from striking lower yards and top-masts, upon the master certifying that the same may be safely dispensed with, and engaging to be answerable for all consequences; but before being placed at the quay, the yards must be topped well up, and the yard-arms lashed close in to the rigging. Docking Tickets and Order of Admission.-In fixing the order of admission, and issuing the docking tickets, regard will be had to the state of the tides, and the size and draught of water of each vessel, as well as the time of arrival: the largest ships must necessarily be taken in when the tides are highest, although they may have arrived subsequent to smaller vessels. Loaded vessels must always have the preference over light ships. No ship can be admitted, if neither the master nor pilot are on board. The docking ticket will only remain in force for the tide for which it is granted. At the proper time for the admission of each ship, notice will be given by hoisting her ticket num- ber at the pier head, provided she has made the signal for being properly prepared. If any vessel shall attempt to gain admittance before her number is hoisted, the owners, and the master, pilot, or other person in charge, must be responsible for all consequences of such misconduct. Entering.-When a ship's number is hoisted, she must drop up to the entrance, and have good and sufficient warps ready to send to each pier, when ordered by the dock masters. If the ship shall not so come to the entrance, she shall forfeit her turn. When within the piers, proper ropes will be sent on board to guide and check the vessel through the lock: the master and pilot will be held responsible for making these, as well as the ship's warps, pro- perly fast on board the vessel must be bauled ahead by her own warps, and they are on no account to be cast off, unless ordered by the dock master, until the ship is in the basin. Every pilot must bring his boat into the basin, or South Dock, as it is a most essential part of his duty to moor the ship. The owners must be answerable for all ships' boats, and none can be admitted into the Import Dock except such as are conveniently stowed on deck. All other boats must be sent out of the docks. The boats of ships in the South Dock which cannot be securely stowed on deck, must be hauled up on the north bank, or secured afloat in such manner as the dock master may direct, after the ship is moored. Ships, however, which are not lying at a jetty, will be allowed to employ 1 boat during the legal hours of business, which boat must be chained by the Company's officers to the north bank as soon as that time has expired. Any boats found afloat in any of the docks or basins, contrary to these regulations, will be removed by the dock master, and will be detained until the charges occasioned by such removal shall be paid. The hatches of all loaded ships are to be locked down, and the keys delivered to the officer appointed to receive the same. Import Dock.-No person whatever can be allowed to remain in this dock after the established hours of business: nor can any person be permitted to have access to vessels therein, excepting the owner, master, or chief officer, without a pass. Passes will be given on the application of the captain or chief mate, to admit the ship's apprentices, or other persons, to prepare the ship for discharging, or to do any other work which may be unavoid- ably necessary; but, to prevent the abuses which sometimes occur, it is strongly recommended that the Company's labourers be employed. Ships discharging.-Previously to any ship being quayed, the decks must be cleared, and every thing "prepared to begin working out the cargo. If, through want of proper tackle, or any neglect, a ship be not in readiness to take her turn, another will be quayed in the mean time. It is desirable that all baggage or presents should be sent, as promptly as possible, to the Company's baggage warehouse, where an authority from the master for the delivery thereof must be lodged. Masters are particularly cautioned against signing such authorities in blank, or allowing themselves to be influenced by the importunity of brokers; and it is most desirable that one agent only should be appointed for each ship. Packages of bullion or specie (whether cargo or private property) must be delivered by the captain, under his own responsibility, unless from their being liable to examination or other circumstance he may be desirous of placing the same in the Company's charge, in which case such packages or any other of considerable value, should be particularly specified, and, if bills of lading have been granted for them, inserted in the regular manifest of the ship. The delivery of goods overside will also rest with the master, and he must take such steps as he may think necessary to protect his owners in respect to their freight. An officer of the revenue is authorised to forward all despatches for the departments of government packets so addressed will therefore be delivered into his charge, unless the Company receive express directions to the contrary. When a ship is finally discharged and moored in the Export Dock, or either of the basins, for the purpose of going out to the river, all the services provided for In the import rate are completed. For the more expeditious discharge of vessels, or despatch in reloading, every assistance will be given in clearing the decks, or stiffening them; coopering watering casks, and shipping them, when filled; clearing the hold after discharge; shipping and stowing the outward cargo, under the directions of the ship's officers; and any other services which can be reasonably required.-Should the Com- pan/'s movable machinery be desired, it will be lent upon application to the principal dock master.- The following charges will be made for such services Digitized by Google 572 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). & For labourers hired to work under the directions of the com- Two tons, and under 5 tons manding officer of the ship, each man per day, of the regu- (and not less than I ton to be charged.) lated hours of attendance 3 6 Movable machinery leat, each jigger with its gear, per (and not less than 1-4 day to be charged. Over-time will day 10 0 be charged in proportion.) The use of the floating engine for washing ships, including Articles loaded, shipped, or struck down by the dock cranes the attendance of the man in charge, per day 20 6 or jiggers, under 2 tons, per ton . 1 0 (and not Im than 1 day to be charged.) Conditions to be observed by Ships taking in Cargoes From the Import Warehouses.-1. The taking the ship in and out of dock, to and from the quay, to be performed by the master and crew, as directed by the dock masters. 2. The goods to be taken from the slings, and to be stowed away by the crew, under the orders of the master. 3. If a sufficient crew be not on board to receive and stow away the goods as delivered, or to trans- port the vessel, a further number of men shall be provided by the Company, at the charge of 3a. 6d. per man per day, to work under the direction and responsibility of the master and his officers. 4. The vessel to be hauled into the basin or Export Dock after the usual hours of business, by her own officers and crew, and to continue in their charge. Ships, from the Export or South Docks, will be allowed to go into the Import Dock to load, without any addition to the rate to which they may be liable for the use of the docks. Goods sent by land carriage will be shipped in either of the docks, on payment of the usual charges. To prevent delay in loading export vessels, the shippers should pay up the rent and charges upon the goods or where the amount cannot be ascertained without weighing, &c., make a deposit to cover the same. Export and South Docks.-All vessels entering or lying in these docks are in charge of the masters and owners; and it is the duty of the pilots, or officers and crews, to transport their respective ves- sels, under their own responsibility, as directed by the dock master, to or from the river, and to or from any part of the docks or basins. Light ships on entering from the river must be provided with sufficient hands to dock and transport them, and should move in due time into the dock; otherwise they will be removed by the dock master, and the owners charged with the expense. Vessels discharged of their inward cargoes by the Company in these docks will be regarded as pri- vileged ships, and all transporting within the docks will be performed by the dock master. assisted by the crew, gratuitously; but unless there are sufficient crew on board to assist in transporting the out- ward-bound ships, they will not be moved. Whenever assistance is required by other vessels, it will be furnished by the dock master OR the following terms: viz.- A boat with warp and 2 hands - - - 10s. Od. - and 4 hands - - - 15s. Od. And for every additional hand employed, either on board or in the boats, 6d. per hour. The warps are only lent in aid of the ship's warps. Ships taking in cargoes will be moored at the quays in due rotation. Light ships not taking in goods shall be moored in either of the docks or basins, as the dock masters may judge convenient. While ships are lying at, or moving to or from the quay, all out-riggers should be got in and made snug; and sails are by no means to be loose while so moving. No ship must be removed from her berth without notice being given to the dock master, and his assent as to the time of removal being obtained. Craft must be fastened to the ships from which they are receiving, or to which they may be deliver- ing goods: the charge upon craft which shall not be bond fide 80 engaged, will be the same as the rent upon sloops and craft coastwise, and, as usual, not less than 1 week's rent will be charged. To ob- viate any doubt as to the time for which they may be fairly entitled to exemption, 24 hours will be al- lowed, from the time of entering the dock, for receiving goods, and 24 hours after being loaded or dis- charged, for going out of the docks. Convenient receptacles on the quays and craft are provided, wherein all dust, ashes, &c. are to be deposited, and which shall be cleared by the persons appointed by the Company, and by no one else. No vessel shall be permitted to take in ballast after daylight or before daybreak. Ships' provisions or stores cannot be permitted to pass the gates without an order signed by the captain or owner. No repair or caulking can be permitted without the special permission of the court of directors, to whom application should he made through the principal dock master. The Jetties.Ships landing cargoes in the South Dock, or taking in goods by land, shall have the preferable use of the jetties. Ships which are fitting out, but have not commenced loading, shall be accommodated as far as possible; but such ships must be removed to make room for vessels about to discharge or take in cargo by land. In other respects, preference will be given to ships intended for sale, over those which are merely lying up; and as between ships which are similarly circumstanced, the priority of their entering the dock shall determine the preference. The captains or commanding officers of ships are cautioned to be attentive and careful to boom off when the ship is fast loading down in the water, or on the approach of neap tides. Fire and Cundle.-Vessels in these docks shall be considered as forming 3 classes: viz.- I. Vessels actually discharging, having their crews on board, or loading outwards. II. Vessels rigging or fitting out, but which shall not have commenced taking in goods. III. Vessels for sale or lying up. To each of these classes special licences will be granted. Every such licence will express the place in which fire may be kept, and the circumstances under which it may be used upon the slightest infringement of the conditions, the penalty prescribed by law will be rigidly enforced. Every application for a licence must be made by the master or owner, specifying the names and ca- pacity of the persons in charge of the ship, and engaging to be responsible for their attention to the regulations. Opening and shutting the Gates.-The gates of the Export and South Docks will be opened at 6 o'clock in the morning and shut at 8 o'clock in the evening, from the first of March to the 10th of November: and, from the 11th of November to the last day of February, opened at 8 in the morning and shut at 7 in the evening. Captains and mates may be furnished with tickets upon applying at the police office, at the Import Dock, which will entitle them to admission till o'clock, P. M., but no person whatever can be allowed to go out after the hour for closing the gates. Vessels about to leave the Docks.-Export vessels should be hauled out in sufficient time to be at the River Locks, at Blackwall, at low water; to prevent the inconvenience of hauling down the Black- Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). 573 well Basin or South Dock during the time that other vessels are requiring admission, which must have the preference. Vessele can only be let out after high water, upon the special request of the officers in charge of them. Ships going into the river must use their own ropes, as they are out of the dock master's charge when clear of the outer gates. NOTICE.-Two true copies of the manifest of the cargo must be delivered into the General Office, at the West India Dock House, within 12 hours after every vessel shall enter the docks, or after the cargo shall have been reported at the Custom-house, which shall first happen. Penalty for refusal or neglect, any sum not exceeding 51.-(1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 52. 1 84.) No manifests will be required for ships discharging by their own crews. No ships can receive their rotation, or be allowed to break bulk until their cargoes are duly entered and such cargoes will be landed in due succession, according to the strict order in which the manifests are delivered and entries completed. If such manifest, or bill of lading, or copy, shall be false; or if any bill of lading he uttered by any master, and the goods expressed therein shall not have been bonù fide shipped on board such ship; or if any bill of lading uttered or produced by any master shall not have been signed by him or any such copy shall not have been received or made by him previously to his leaving the place where the goods expressed in such bill of lading. or copy, were shipped; penalty 100l.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. 1 11.) Hours of Attendance are, from the 10th of May to the 9th of November inclusive, 8 in the morning to 4 in the afternoon from the 10th of November to the 9th of May inclusive, 9 in the morning to 4 in the afternoon; and there is to be no intermission of business during these hours. No holidays are to be kept, except Sundays, Christmas-day, Good Friday, fast days appointed by royal proclamation, and the King's or Queen's birthdays. In all places not specified or provided for in the foregoing rules and orders, application must be made to the principal dock master. CHARLES C. PARISH, Principal Dock Master. The foregoing regulations approved and confirmed by the Court of Directors of the West India Dock Company. H. LONGLANDS, Secretary. West India Dock House, September 24th, 1833. N. B.-Ships entering the West India Docks are permitted to retain their crews on board, when required by the owners; and the directors have fitted up the ship Waterloo, in the South Dock, for the accommodation of junior officers and apprentices, while their ships are discharging their cargoes in the Import Dock. The captains, officers, and crews of ships are requested not to give either wine, spirits, or grog, to the servants of the Company, as, by so doing, they expose them to the certain and immediate forfeit- ure of their situations. No fee, perquisite, or reward of any kind or denomination whatsoever, is to be taken by the Com- pany's officers, or any persons who shall be employed in the service of the Company, for any act done within the docks. Penalty, forfeiture of the sum taken, and any sum not exceeding 51. for each offence. Dock Rutes.-Import Vessels, when discharged by d. the Company, including docking, mooring, and timber (for every load of hard wood and pine timber 6d. in addition) 6 removing within the docks until discharged, Laden entirely with hard wood or pine timber : 0 ships' cooperage or mending, and the use of the docks, if from Hamburgh or the Mediterranean, Ships discharged in either of the Docks or Basins for 6 weeks from the date of entrance; if from by their own Crews, the expense of docking, any other port or place, for 4 weeks from the mooring, unmooring, and removing, not in- cluded. final discharge; viz. Per Tom reg. Per Tom reg. a. d. For the use of the docks for any period not exceeding, if from Ships laden entirely, or in part, with hogeheads and tierces the Mediterranean, 6 weeks, from other ports or places 4 weeks, from the date of entrance 0 9 of sugar or molasses 8 6 Vensels from any port in the United Kingdom, or European laden entirely, or in part, with chests of sugar above 5 cwt. 8 0 port, outside the Baltic, between the North Cape and entirely, with chests under 5 cwt., or bags of sugar, cof- Ushant, with cargoes for trans shipment, for delivery on board ships, or for landing in either dock (except when fee. spirits, wine, iron, copper, brass, lead, spelter, wood lades), not remaining beyond, if from Hamburgh, 6 or other metal, in pigs, bars, rods, plates, or similar pieces, rice, or other goods, (except oil, tallow. or weeks, if from any other port or place, 4 weeks, from the date of entrance 0 6 ashes,) packed in bales, baga, serons, casks, cases, Sloops and craft coastwise, with bricks for delivery on board chests, or similar packages, or wood in planks or bil- I 6 ships and vessels with broken granite or paving-slones, not lets, such as dye wood, staves, Ac. laden entirely or in part, with mahogany, timber, or remaining beyond I week 0 3 8 6 Vessels entirely corn laden (in lieu of tonnage rate), of 100 other wood in logs lons and upwards, each 21 0 entirely with hemp, or entirely or in part with goods in I 9 Under 100 tons, each 10 6 bulk laden entirely or in part with tobacco or oil, not in- Rent to commence after 1 clear day from final discharge. 1 6 Vensels two thirds laden with cora, will be charged the usual tom- cluding ship's cooperage entirely with tallow, not including ship's cooperage 1 3 nage rates in proportion to the other part of their cargoes. laden entirely with mixed cargoes of hemp and tallow, Vessels entering to load from the Import Ware- or ashes, not including ship's cooperage viz. 8. R houses only. Per too on For every ton of hemp 2 0) The number of tons charged For tom of tallow not to exceed the register ? NL shipped. every or ashes 1 3) d. tonnage. For the use of the dock for 1 week 6 Ships Wood laden from Europe, or the North Ame- Light Vessels, the expense of docking, mooring, rican Colonies, when discharged by the Company, unmooring, and removing, not included. including docking, mooring, and removing with- Per ton reg. in the docks, until discharged; unloading the a. d. cargoes, and the use of the docks for any period Not having discharged in either of the docks, for any period not exceeding 4 weeks from the date of the final not exceeding 4 weeks from the date of entering 0 6 discharge. Dock Rent. Per Ton. reg. For remaining over the periods specified, per week 0 I 8. Vensels which re-enter after having been out for repair, will be Laden entirely with deals, planks, staves, or wood in billets 1 6 allowed their privilege without reckoning the time they remained principally with ditto, and bringing hard wood or pine out. TABLE FOR IMPORTED GOODS. The Prime Rate includes all expenses for landing, wharfage, weighing, or gauging at landing, cooper- ing. marking, sampling, housing, weighing for actual delivery, and delivering furnishing landing and delivery weights or gauges, surveying and furnishing certificates of damage, and rent for 12 weeks from the date of the ship's commencement of discharge. This rate will be charged on all goods imported from the East or West Indies, the Mauritius, Mexico, or South America, and upon wood, spirits, or wine, and tobacco, from whatever place of importation, unless notice be given by the importers, of their desire to have them placed under the landing rate, or Digitized by Google 574 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). their intention to remove them without housing or piling. If such notice is given before housing or piling, the rate in the second column will be discharged. The Landing Rate includes landing, wharfage, and housing, or delivering from the quay, and furnish. ing landing accounts. This rate will attach to all other merchandise than as above specified, which may be imported; to East India cotton, to hides and skins, hair, horns and tips, to manufactures returned, and to every description of goods relanded, or removed in bond or coastwise into the dock, unless the importers signify their wish that they should be warehoused under the prime or consolidated rates. The Rates for Unhousing and Loading, or Unloading and Housing, when not otherwise specified, are each one third of the landing rate; and that for unhousing, wharfage, and shipping, is the whole rate, as stated in the second column. When the prime rate bas not been paid, those charges will be made, together with reasonable charges for coopering, sampling, and other operations contingent on housing. The Charges for Weighing and Rehousing are each one third of the rate in the second column. For repiling or weighing wood, one fourth of that rate is charged. Goods sold from the Landing Scale, or not intended to be warehoused, will be allowed 4 clear days from the final weighing of the parcel for removal; in default of which, they will be housed or piled. If intended for immediate trans-shipment, they may remain on the quay, subject to the same regula- tions as goods prepared for shipment, paying rent as if housed at landing. Warehouse Rent, on goods to which the prime rate does not attach, will be charged from the date of the ship's breaking bulk; but when goods sold from the landing scale are housed, the rent will be charged from the tinal weighing of the parcel. A week's rent will be charged for all fractions of a week. Before the transfer by the Company, or delivery of any goods can take place, the charges on the quantity to be transferred or delivered must be paid either to the collector, at the General Office in London, or to the comptroller, at the General Office at the docks. Rates on Goods imported. N. B.-All sorts of goods may be imported into and warehoused at the West India Docks, on about the same terms as at the other docks. We have given, under the head London Docks, a Table of the dock dues, &c. on most articles commonly imported, which may be applied, with very trining modi- fications, either to the West India or St. Katharine's Docks. The following table includes merely the dock charges on the importation, warehousing, &c. of the principal articles of West India pro- duce: Prime Articles. Landing Rent per Prime Rate. Articles. Landing Rent per Rate. Week. Rate. Rate. Week. Nett per. s.d. a.d. Gross per a. d. Nett per 8. d. 8. d. Gross per & d Annotto ton 21 0 70 ton 0 7 Mother-o'-pearl shells too 18 6 7 6 ton -04 bask. and pack.under cwt. 00 1 7 1-2 100 pckgs. 4 2 ware chest 00 16 chest .02 Arrow root ton 20 0 76 ton 0 7 box 00 I 0 box - 0 1 Cauella alba cwt. 18 06 cwt. 0 03-4 Piccaba cwt 00 06 tom 04 Chocolate box 00 09 box -02 Pickles, cases dos. bottles 00 0 21-4 doz both. 9 012 Cochineal cwt. 30 09 cwt. 0 11.2 barrels gallon 00 0 0 1-2 barrel 01 Cocoa and coffee, casks - 16 06 ton 6 Pimento, casks cwt. 16 06 ton -06 bags - 12 06 - 6 bags - 12 06 - -06 Cotton wool, presspacked- 09 03 - 5 Snake root - 00 0 10 1-2 barrel or not press packed - 10 0 414 - 6 1-2 Sale 01 Ginger, casks - 16 06 - 6 trc. or bale 0 2 bags 1 2 06 - - 06 hhd. .03 preserved. Succades. Succades, under 28 lbs. pack. 06 03 cwt. 0 034 Jalap - 00 0 10 1-2 bale, 3 cwt. 0 1 28 lbs. to 1 cwt. - 10 06 - 0 034 Indian rubber hhd. or pipe 0 0 16 hogehead or 1 cwt. and upwards cwt. 10 06 - 0 034 pipe 0 4 Sugar, carks - 08 03 tos -05 case 2 to 4 cwt. 00 16 case to chests above 5 cwt., case 1 10 2 cwt. 00 10 cwt. 01 or baskets - 07 03 - 0 5 bag or barrel 00 06 barrel 0 01-2 chests under 5 cwt., loose, cwt. 00 10 in bottle 0,1 or bags - 06 03 - 04 Ipecacuanha CWL 00 0 10 1-2 ton 10 candy 00 0 41-2 cwt. 018 Molames - 07 03 pun. 0 1.2 Tobacco. See London Docks. hhd. or tre. 0 11-2 Wood. See separate Table, barrel or keg 0 03-4 p. 675. Rates on Sugar. Wharfage Rent Wharfage Rent and and Porterage. per Week. Porterage. per week. S. d. 3. d. 8. d. s.d. Sugar, 4 to 5 cwt. bag or basket 08 01 Sugar, refined, 14 and under about 2 cwt. do. or mat 04 0 of 18 cwt. - cask 10 06 boxes or chests ton 34 05 12 and under 14 cwt. do. 10 04 bastards, 14 cwt. and upwards Do. packed in hhds. or vats, to Vat. Hbd. cask 1 8 be housed for exportation. 12 and not exceeding 14 cwt. 0 5ton Housing 10 06 cask 12 Weighing or re-weighing 10 06 under 8 - tierce 08 02 Unhousing, wharfage, and not exceeding 21 barrel 05 0 1 shipping - - 30 18 refined, 18cwt. to 24 cwt. cask 20 0 7 Rent - per week 06 03 Crushing Sugar.-The following charges include all expenses for receiving, delivering, coopering, and rent, for two weeks: viz. s. d. s. d. Crushed fine by the mill and packed into broken small and rammed with entire Havannah cases ton 21 0 lumps ton 14 0 partly crushed and packed with lumps 16 0 broken large and rammed with entire crushed rough - - 19 0 lumps - ton 19 0 crushed fine - - - — 22 0 Transferring - - - 02 ground by the mill - - - - 16 0 Rent per week - - - - 07 broken and packed, rough and not to par- Sampling - - - - cask 06 ticular weights - - - ton 14 0 Papering - - - - - 06 Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). 575 : Rates on Dye Woods. ! r Prime Rate, viz. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, 12 Weeks' Rent, and Delivering. Landing, Wharfage, Weighing, and Delivering. Rent per Week, after the first 12 months. Prime Rate, viz. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, 12 Weeks' Rent, and Delivering. Landing, Wharfage, Weighing, and Delivering. Rent per Week, af the first 12 months. Dyers' wood, &c. 8. d. 8. d. 8. d. Dyers' wood, &c. s. d. 3. d. s.d. Bar wood Braziletto ton 80 56 02 Box wood Brazil wood, small 80 56 02 I Brazil wood, large Fustic, young 80 56 03 Cam wood Nicaragua wood, small 80 56 02 Cocus wood Sapan 80 56 0 2 Ebony ton 66 46 01 Sassafras 80 56 03 Fustic under cover 70 - 0 11-2 Sandal 80 56 03 Lignum vitae Other wood, charged with duty, at Logwood per ton Nicaragua, large Mahogany, cedar, jacaranda, rose Quassia wood, satin wood, tulip, zebra, &c. 7 0 5 0 0 11-2 Sanders wood Wood Rates.-The West India Dock Company having appropriated the South Dock to the timber trade, and afforded other facilities for carrying it on with ease and expedition, we subjoin a Table of the dock rates on wood imported. N. B.-For the rates on ships laden with wood, see ante, p. 573. Goods imported. Prime Rate, viz. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, One Quarter's Rent, and Delivering. Rent per Quarter. Goods imported. Prime Rate, viz. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, One Quarter's Rent, and Delivering. Rent per Quarter. #. d. 8. d. S. d. 8. d. Deals, Battens from all ports, American, Russian, and Prussian deals, and 2 1-2 and 3 in. thick, under 10ft. long 120 80 23 deal ends, per standard hundred 12 feet - 10 to 12 - 10 0 30 long and I 1-2 thick 96 30 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 12 0 39 Spruce deals from Quebec, 12 +3+9 per 120 14 6 4 6 - - 14 to 16 - 14 0 46 Swedish deals from ports in the Baltic, - - 16 to 18 - 16 0 53 2 1-2 and 3 inches thick, 14 feet long 120 18 0 60 - - 18 to 20 - 18 0 60 11-2 and 2 do. do. - 12 0 40 - - 21 - 19 0 66 Norway and Swedish, from ports in the - - 22 to 30 each 06 02 North Sea, Batten ends 120 40 14 34 and I in. thick, under 10 ft. long 120 50 16 Paling boards, not exceeding 7 feet - 50 20 - - 10 to 12 - 60 110 Fir, thick stuff and plank load 50 18 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 70 22 Fir boards, 1 1-2 inch thick and under - 70 26 - - 14 to 16 - 80 : Lathwood, under 5 feet fm. 10 0 36 - - 16 to 18 - 90 2 10 5 feet and not exceeding 8 feet - 15 0 50 - - 18 to 20 - 10 0 32 Firewood - 76 26 - 20 to 21 - 10 6 36 Balks above 24 feet and under 5 inch - 42 0 14 0 1 1-4 inch thick, under 10 feet long - 70 22 under 24 feet and under 5 inch - 82 0 11 0 - 10 to 12 - 86 28 Norway timber in bilks load 40 0 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 10 0 32 Spare under 6 and above 4 inches 120 40 0 12 0 - - 14 to 16 - 11 6 38 Lancewood - 30 0 9 0 - 16 to 18 - - 13 0 42 Rickers, under 4 inch, 24 feet long and - - 18 to 20 - 14 6 48 upwards 120 20 0 7 0 - - 20 to 21 - 15 3 52 under 24 feet long - 10 0 3 0 I 1-2 and 2 in. thick, under 10 ft. long 90 28 Ufers, under 24 feet long - 21 0 7 6 - 10 to 12 11 0 34 24 to 32 ditto - 35 0 10 0 - exceeding 12 to - 13 0 40 above 32 ditto - 50 0 15 0 - - 14 to 16 - 15 0 48 Sparholtz and 10 ells, one third more than - - 16 to 18 - 17 0 54 Ufers, - - 18 to 20 - 19 0 60 Oak, African and other (square, per load of) - - 20 to 21 - 20 0 68 timber charged with 50 ft. round, per 6 6 I 0 2 1.2 and 3 in. thick, under 10 ft. long 11 6 40 duty at per load load of 40 ft. - - 10 to 12 14 6 46 Black birch 50 10 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 17 6 56 under cover 7 0 I 6 - - 14 to 16 - 20 6 66 Wainscot logs, 14 feet long (grealer length - - 16 to 18 - 23 6 76 in proportion) each 20 08 - - 18 10 20 - 26 6 86 7 feet long - 08 02 - - 20 to 21 - 28 0 90 Oak and other planks (except fir planks) load 70 1 6 Deal ends, 6 feet and under - 60 2 0 Clap boards, 6 feet long each 03 0 1 Deck deals, 3 feet long - 01 0 3 inches thick, 30 to 45 feet long each 10 04 Handspikes 120 60 20 21-2 - - 0 10 03 Spokes 1,200 15 0 66 2 - 08 0 21 Oars, under 24 feet long 120 15 0 50 2 1-2 and 3 22 to 30 - 08 03 above 24 feet long - 20 0 70 2 - 06 02 Treenails, 2 feet and under 200 80 26 Battens from all ports, above 2 feet - 12 0 40 3-4 and 1 inch thick, under 10 long 120 36 12 Staves, - 10 to 12 - 42 14 Quebec, pipe 3 to 4 each pr. 1,200 S0 0 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 410 16 2 to 2 12 - 55 0 - — 14 to 16 - 58 10 to 1-2 - - 35 0 - - 16 to 18 - 64 22 hogshead 3 to 4 - --- 70 0 - - 18 to - 74 26 2to212 - - 45 0 - 21 - 10 28 toll2 - - 30.0 1 1-4 inch thick, under 10 long 50 8 barrel and heading 3 10 4 15a. per 1,200, - - 50 0 pipe 1-2 inch. - 10 to 12 - 5 8 11 2 to 21-2 - - 40 0 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 64 22 11011-2 - - 30 0 - - 14 to 16 - 70 25 North American, - - 16 to 18 - 78 28 puncheon and hogshead, I inch and - - IS to 20 - 88 211 under - 18 0 60 - - 21 - 92 32 barrel and heading ditto - 12 0 40 1 1-2 and 2 in. thick, under 10 ft. long 6 7 20 Hamburgh and Baltic, pipe - 40 0 15 0 - 10 to 12 - 7 4 24 hogshead - 35.0 15 0 - exceeding 12 to 14 - 88 OF 8 barrel - 30 0 10 0 - I 14 to 16 - 10 0 34 heading - 27 6 10 0 - - 16 to 18 - 11 4 40 pipe, thin 1 to 1 1-2 inch thick - 25 0 10 0 - - 18 to 20 - 13 4 48 hogshead ditto - 22 0 10 0 - - 21 - 14 0 50 barrel and heading ditto I 16 0 10 0 The quarter to be calculated from the date of the ship's breaking bulk. Digitized by Google 576 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (WEST INDIA). Goods imported, Prime Rate, viz. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, One Quarter's Rent, and Delivering. Rent per Quarter. Goods imported. Prime Rate, viz. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, One Quarter's Rent, and Delivering. Rent per Quarter. 8. d. 1. d. 8. d. & d. Billet staves, oak or ash, Norway timber and spars per load 0 4 exceeding 3 1-2 inch to long an 48 0 20 0 not exceeding 4 ft. Rent on stored goods to commence from the 35 0 15 0 final discharge of the ship, and to be charged under 112 22 0 10 0 likewise on goods not stored, unless they Pipe boards, 3 1-2 inches thick 60 0 22 6 are removed within 14 days after delivery Packs, under cover from the ship pipe each 1 0 0 6 Repairing floats for delivery:- half pipe 0 8 0 4 No charge to be made during the 1st and 2d quarter pipe 04 0 or quarter's rent, but at the commencement The Company will be answerable for the of the 3d quarter the charge to be per load 0 3 number of pieces only of lathwood, And at the commencement of every suc- and cannot be responsible for the di- ceeding quarter per load 0 1 mensions of Quebec or billet staves. Round masts to be reckoned at 40 feet to the Fir staves fm. 15 0 5 0 load. Heading and stave ends, not exceeding 20 inches long 1,200 12 0 40 Special Charges. Floated Timber. Rummaging timber and other measured wood, as usual per Rafting, including ropes, staples, laying up or ton or load 0 towing to the dock gates, or to the pond :- Delivering into decked vessels 06 East Country, Swedish and American tim- Sticking deck deals, when required each 01 ber and ma-ts, per load 1 6 1 0 oak plank and fir thick stuff per load 04 Norway timber 23 1 6 Sorting Quebec and billet staves for freight per 1,200 7 0 Spars, 6 inch and upwards 4 6 2 0 Turning to measure for sale at landing, oak, black birch, Rafted timber floated from the river 0 3 10 African, and other timber per load 10 Delivering stored timber at the dock gates Marking lots of American and other timber piled in tiers East Country, Swedish, and American tim- (one lot to a tier), or floated timber, per lot 0 4 ber and masts per load 0 3 Memoranda for the information of the consignees and proprietors directions from the importer are required, notice will be given on of goods imported in ships which discharge their cargoes in the the landing accounts it is desirable that particular and early after- West India Docks. tion should be paid in such notices, and that the importers of caties, No ship is allowed to break bulk until her cargo is duly entered pepper. or other articles which usually require being made mer- it is therefore important that consignees should give directions for chantable, should lodge a general order directing that operation to be the entry of their respective consignments at the Custom- as performed to all their importations. soon as the ship is reported. The first warrants of the West India Dock Company will be Bagrage and presents may be cleared at the baggage warehouse at issued to the order of the importers or their amigns (provided there the docks. after examination by the revenue. is no stop upon the goods for freight or otherwise), upon payment of The original bills of lading must be deposited, when required, the prime rates or landing charges. except " here a part of the gno is are intended to be placed under the Such payments must include all charges to the time of bousing, East India Company's care; in that case the original bill must be and three for lotting or making merchantable for the importer, but, exhibited, and a true copy thereof deposited. Should the original if the goods are deliverable by warrant, are not to include real :- bill have been previously delivered at the East India House, a certi- charges accruing subsequently, and the rent, must to part by the fied copy must he obtained from the accountant general of the holders of the warran's before delivery of the gonds. The propri- Honourable Company. etors of goods may, however, clear the rent and incidental charges Particular attention is necessary to the regularity of the indorse- to any desired date, and have new warrants or cheques accord- ments, as the Company's officers cannot pass any bill of lading, on ingly. which the authority from the shipper to the holder is not deduced When the assignment or removal of part of the goods only is is- by a complete and accurate chain of indorsement. lended, the warrants or cheques should be divided at the dock home Every bill of la ling should be specially indorsed, so as clearly to in London, as hereafter provided. designate the party to whose order the contents are to be delivered. If the delivery of the whole of the cratents is directed and the Is all cases of informality in bills of lading. from want of indorse- goods are not removed within 2 days. a new warrant or cheque for ment. &c., or of their being lost, application must be made to the the remainder of the parcel must be taken not. court by letter, stating the circumstances, and enclosing any docu. In the case of casks of liquids used to fill up others, the warrant ments which will show the title in the g ds; in every such case the must be Indged, and the proprietor may either have a new warrant applicant must engage to indemnify the Company by bond, or other. for the remainder. or it may be delivered (if not required again to wise. as the Court may direct. be used in the same way) to his order. When bills of lading are produced, which are at variance with When the holders of warrants or cheques are desiress of assign- the manifest, as to the original consignee, the Company will not pass ing part of their contents, without delivery. reweighing, rehousise, any delivery order founded thereon, until 3 clear days shall have &c., new documents will be given in exchange, on loring the one)- clapsed. nais. duly indorsed. The indorsement should specially direct the The delivery of goods affort will be the act of the captain or manner in which the contents are to be divided, and state the salms officer in charge of the vessel. of the parties in whose favour the new warrants - cheques are to No order can be received until the manifest of the cargo, duly cer- be issued, in the following form:-" Please to divide the within;" tified by the captain. has been doposite at the West India Dock or " hen part is to be delivered, " Deliver to bearer (state how many House: but the orders of the importers of all goods entrusted to the packages), and grant new one for (state how many West India Dock Company's management may then be passed. packages) is favour of one for." A.c. When parties hol ling orders for delivery from the quars wish the Warrants may be exchanged or divided without assigning the goods housed in their own names or in the names of other parties, gonds, when desired by the holder, at the same M'e of charge. they must Indge the order indorsed to that effect, and warrants will The original warrant is not charged for; but the clarges for di- be granted accor 'ingly. viding or issuing new documents, or transferring, are-For each All merchandise warehoused under the care of the West India warrant or transfer, Dock Company is deliverable in the ordinary course of business by d. d. warrant, with the exception of muscovado sugar, wood!, returned manufactures, and articles importet in bulk. of which the weight or 1 or 2 packages or quanti- 26 to 30 packages or quanti- ties - ties a measure is liable to increase or decrease from natural causes, and 3 or 4 do. 2 31 35 do. 9 goods which are not to he warehoused, or are intended for imme- 5 to do. 3 36 40 do. 10 diate shipment in the latter case, the importers must state OR their 10 do. 4 41 45 do. " orders tha 64 warrants are not required." 11 15 do. All goods entrusted to the management of the East India Com- 5 46 and upwards 12 16 20 do. 6 Goods in bulk. per too $ pany. although deposited in the West India Docks, will be delivered 21 do. 7 in the usual course of the Honourable Company's business by East Every new cheque granted 2 India warrants. If from the nature of the contract between the seller and buyer, To facilitate passing orders and paying the charges due upon the reweighing, &c. may be necessary, the warrants should be deposited goods, the Company will open deposit accounts upon request from indorsed with directions to that effect. and new warrants will be the merchants as hereinafter noticed. issued, containing the landing weigh's and reweights, as soon as the That the course of business, as respects the West India Dock operations are completed. Company. may be fully understood, the attention of importers and When any alterations, such as repacking. &c., are to be made (ex purchasers of produce is particularly requested to the following cept when preparatory to immediate delivery), the warrants - be memoranda Indged and others, representing the goods correctly, issued in the The West India Dock warrants for mode which are usually and same manner. without lotting. will be made out for such quantities as have been The warrants must likewise be lodged on giving orders to val. but found generally convenient to the importers. Warran's or cheques if immediate shipment is and intended, new warrants wall be issued for smaller quantities. or single packages. may. however, be granted, as snon as the casks are refilled. on pay for the extra number. at the rates herein fixed. In the 3 last mentioned cases the charges for performing the open- For made which are lotted. made merchantable. &c., the warrants tions include the expense of the new warrants. will be made out as soon as the operations are performed. When When warrants or cheques are lost 01 mildaid, the Company - . If not removed within 2 tides after being brought for delivery, 10 be charged per tide per load 24. 1 Warrants will be granted. how ever, at the desire of the proprietor, for dye wood imported from the East or any article that can be separated intordistinct and corresponding parcels, on his paying the xpenses of making such allotment. Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 577 quire that they should be advertised in the Public Ledger, the paper Parties having deposit accounts with the Company, must transmit containing the advertisement, and an engagement to indemnify the a note of advice on the proper form with each deposit, and it will be Company, by bond or otherwise, to be enclosed with the application necessary that they should invariably state on their orders or war- for duplicates. The new documents not to be issued (unless the rants whom the charges are to be paid by, thus original shall be found and delivered up) until 7 clear days shall " Cha ges to the (date) to our account. (Signature.)" have elapsed from the date of notice by advertisement. Upon no- Or, " Charges to be paid by the holder. (Signature.)" tice of the loss, the goods will be stopped; and the original document By opening such accounts, the business of merchants with the as on no account be acted upon. When East India warrants are Company, particularly where goods are upon real, is much facili- lost, the notice should be given to the Honsurable Company's ware- tated. The proper forms and pass books may be obtained on appli- houselkeeper. cation at the dook house. Irregularities in the indorsements leason the security of the propri- Orders for Extra Work-The charges for repacking, or preparing alore of goods, and render the documents incomplete as authorities. for exportation, and all work not comprised in these Tables, will be The attention of the holders is therefore particularly called to that fixed from time to time, with reference to the cost of labour and ma- point, to prevent the impediments which must otherwise arise to the terials. No such work, however, can be done but by the order of regular despatch of business. the proprietors of goods, or parties duly authorised by them. The Any attempt to remove such impediments by indorsing any war- warrants, or other documents, must therefore be produced, to show rant, order, or cheque without due authority, even although no fraud their authority, except for tasting of wine, and sampling wine and may be intended, will be invariably noticed in the most serious man- spirits; in these cases the number of the warrant must be inserted ner by the directors of the West India Dock Company. on the order. Forms on which persons may be authorised to sign for others, may The charges under this head must be paid by the parties giving the be obtained in the general office at the dock house and as no signa- order or clearing the goods. thre but that of the party named on the warrant, delivery order, or Goods prepared for Shipment.-When goods housed in the im- ebeque, can be acted upon, when goods are made deliverable to port warehouses are prepared for shipment, and are not taken away order, persons so authorised should adhere to the following form - within the fixed number of days, they will be rehoused at the ex- For (name or firm.) pense of the proprietor, and the charge for such rehousal, and any (Signature of the person authorised.)" additional rent which may have accrued, must be paid before delivery. Deposit Accounts may be opened with such deposits as the mer- The time allowed to elapee before rehousing, or restowing, is as chants think proper; when the balance is reduced below 10c. a fur- follows: mahegany and other measured wood, 4 days; dye woods, ther deposit must be made, 16L being the smallest sum which can be and all other goods, 7 clear days: when the export veasel loads in received at a time. the docks, the time will be exiended to the date of her departure. 2. London Docks.-These were the next undertaking of this sort set on foot in the Thames. They are situated in Wapping, and were principally intended for the reception of ships laden with wine, brandy, tobacco, and rice. The western dock covers a space of above 20 acres; and the new or eastern dock covers about 7 acres. The tobacco dock lies between the above, and exceeds 1 acre in extent, being destined solely for the reception of tobacco ships. The entire space included within the outer dock wall is 71 acres and 3 roods. The warehouses are capacious and magnificent. The great tobacco warehouse, on the north side of the tobacco dock, is the largest, finest, and most convenient building of its sort in the world. It is calculated to contain 24,000 hhds. of tobacco, and covers the immense space of near five acres! There is also a very large tobacco warehouse on the south side of the to- bacco dock. These warehouses are wholly under the management of the officers of customs; the Dock Company having nothing whatever to do with them, save only to receive the rent accruing upon the tobacco deposited in them. The vaults are under the tobacco and other warehouses; they include an area of about 184 acres, and, after allowing for gangways, &c., have stowage for 56,000 pipes of wine and spirits! These docks were opened in 1805. All ships bound for the Thames, laden with wine, brandy, tobacco, and rice (except ships from the East and West Indies), were obliged to unload in them for the space of 21 years but this monopoly expired in January, 1826; and the use of the docks is now optional. The only entrances to the London Docks were, until lately, by the basins at Hermitage and Wapping. Recently, however, another entrance has been completed from old Shadwell Dock, through what was formerly Milkyard, to the eastern dock. This new entrance is 4 of a mile lower down than Wapping entrance, and is a most material improvement. The capital of the Company amounts to 3,238,310L 5s. 10d. A considerable portion of this vast sum, and of a further sum of 700,000L borrowed, was required for the purchase of the houses, about 1,300 in number, that occupied the site of the docks. The present dividend is 21 per cent., and a 100L share is worth about 55l 10a. The Board of Directors consists of 25 members, of whom the Lord Mayor, as conservator of the river Thames, is one. The Regulations to be observed by Ships in the different Docks being very much alike, as are also the regulations as to loading and unloading, working hours, &c., it seems unnecessary, having already given those issued by the West India Dock Company, to do more than refer to them. TONNAGE RATES. Vessels are not permitted to leave the dock until the tonnage dues and other expenses have been paid; for which purpose the register must be produced at the superintendent's office, if British, or a certificate of admeasurement by the proper officer of the customs, if foreign when a pass will be granted, which must be lodged with the dock master on leaving the dock. First arriving from any port in the United Kingdom, Isle of Man, Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney. Sark, or other European port outside the Baltic, between the North Cape and Ushant (Hamburgh excepted, see Second Class), with liberty to reload for any port, for every register ton of the vessel 6d. and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance, if cargo discharged by own crew from the date of final discharge, if cargo discharged by the Dock Company, Id. per register ton per week. If with part of their cargoes, for every ton of goods landed, 6d. and rent, after one week from date of entrance, 1d. per register ton per week. Vessels loading for any of those places, not having previously discharged their cargoes in the docks, for every register ton of the vessel, 6d.; and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Second Class.-Vessels arriving from Hamburgh, with liberty to reload, for every register ton of the vessel, 6d. ; and rent, after 6 weeks from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels loading for Hamburgh, not having previously discharged their cargoes in the docks, for every register ton of the vessel, 6d.; and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance, Id. per register ton Third per Class.-Veseels arriving from any port in the Mediterranean, with liberty to reload for any week. port, for every register ton of the vessel, 9d.; and rent, after 6 weeks from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels loading for any port in the Mediterranean, not having previously discharged their cargoes in VOL. I.-3 73 Digitized by Google 578 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). the docks, for every register ton of the vessel, 9d.; and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Fourth Class.-Vessels arriving from any other port or place whatsoever (with the exception of those hereafter enumerated), with liberty to reload, for every register ton of the vessel, W: and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance, if cargo discharged by own crew; from date of final discharge, if cargo discharged by Dock Company, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels loading for any other port or place whatsoever (with the exception of those hereafter eno- merated), not having previously discharged their cargoes in the dock, for every register tom of the vessel, 9d.; and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance Id. per register ton per week. Exceptions.-Vessels from Spain, laden with cork or wool, for every register ton of the vessel, 6d.; and rent, after the expiration of 3 weeks, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels to or from the whale fisheries, for every register ton of the vessel, 1s.; and rent, after the expiration of 6 weeks, 1d. per register ton per week; for every tun of oil delivered into craft, Od. Vessels (excepting coasters, for which see First Class), landing part of their cargoes, for every tom of goods landed, 9d.; and rent, after 1 week from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels loading part of their cargoes, for every ton of goods taken on board from the quays or by craft, 9d. ; and rent, after 1 week from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels two thirds laden with corn will be charged dock dues on the proportion which the other part of the cargo bears to the register tonnage. No tonnage rates will be charged on vessels wholly corn-laden, but they will be charged for docking and undocking as under Vessels of 100 tons and upwards, 11. 1s. Do. under 100 tons, 10s. 6d. with liberty to remain in the dock, without further charge, for 24 hours after final discharge, Rent, after the expiration of that period, Id. per register ton per week. Should the vessel load outwards, the usual tonnage rates, according to the port of destination, will be charged, instead of the rate for docking and undocking. Vessels coal laden, for docking and undocking, 21s. each; for every ton of coals landed, 6d.; for every ton of coals transhipped, 6d.; and rent, after 1 week, Id. per register ton per week. Vessels which enter the docks light, and load out, pay dues according to their ports of destination, instead of those on light vessels. Light vessels entering the dock to lie up, for every register ton of the vessel, 6d.; and rent, after 4 weeks from date of entrance, Id. per register ton per week. Whenever required, the Company will discharge the cargo of a vessel upon the following terms; via. Cargoes consisting, either in the whole or in part, of hogsbeads or tierces of sugar (including ship cooperage), 1s. 9d. per register ton. Cargoes consisting of sugar in chests, 5 cwt. and upwards (including ship cooperage), Is. 3d. per register ton. Cargoes consisting of sugar in bags or chests, under 5 cwt., or other goods (not being oil direct from the fisheries, tallow, hemp, ashes, corn, wood goods, pitch, tar, hay, or straw), contained in casks, bales, serons, chests, cases, bags, baskets, mats, bundles, or similar packages; also, spelter or metal in pigs, bars, rode, plates, &c., 9d. per register ton. Cargoes consisting of mahogany timber, or other wood, in logs, 1s. 9d. per register ton. Blue gum wood, or large timber, additional for every load delivered, 6d. Cargoes consisting of hemp only, or merchandise, in bulk, 1s. per register ton. Cargoes consisting of tallow only, 6d. per register ton. Mixed cargoes; hemp, 18. 3d. per ton of goods; tallow, 6d. per ditto; ashes, 6d. per ditto. Mixed cargoes, part being in bulk, on the latter, 1s. per ton of goods. (No charge made for excess beyond the register tonnage. Vessels which leave the docks for repairs are not charged rent while absent. Memoranda.-Registera of ships inwards and outwards are kept in the superintendent's office. The wicket gates at the north-west principal entrance, at Wapping, and on the east side of the eastern dock, are opened and closed as under :- From 22d Sept. to 20th Oct., both inclusive, opened at 6 o'clock, closed at 6 o'clock 21st Oct. 20th March - 7 - 6 - Visiters are not admitted on Sundays. No person is permitted to quit a vessel after the wicket gate is closed. The hours for the commencement of business, and opening and closing the barrier gate, are, From 1st March to 31st Oct., both inclusive, opened at 8 o'clock, closed at 4 o'clock. 1st Nov. 28th Feb. - 9 - 4 - Lodgment of Manifrst.-Masters of shipe are required to deliver at the superintendent's office, within 12 hours after the arrival of the vessel in the dock, or reporting at the Custom-bouse, (which shall first happen,) a true copy of the manifest or report of the cargo, signed by themselves. Discharge of Vessels.-Vessels are not to break bulk, without the permission of the superintendent, until the whole of the cargo has been entered at the Custom-house. Upon application of the master, the Company will pass a warehousing entry for such goods as the owners or consignees may have neglected or refused to enter within 48 hours; and will also land goods not entered within 7 days; both periods to be computed from the date of the report. Labourers or lumpers are not allowed to work on board vessels, on the quays, or in the warehouses, unless engaged by the Company but may be hired of the Company, to work under the direction and responsibility of the master, the charge being 3s. 6d. per day for each man: and should not a sufficient number be employed for the timely discharge of the cargo, additional hands will be provided by the Company, at the expense of the vessel. The decks are to be speedily cleared of such articles as may impede the discharge and the master, mate, or some person duly authorised by the owners, is to remain on board during the unloading Stops for Freight.-Goods landed will be detained for the freight, on due notice in writing, by the owner, master, or other person interested therein; and will not be delivered, nor warrants granted for them, until orders shall have been given for the release of the goods, or the freight deposited with the Company; nor can a stop be received after the goods have been transferred in the Company's books, or a warrant has been granted for them. Goods delivered into craft to be landed elsewhere, cannot be detained for freight. Vessels leaving the dock for repairs are not charged rent whilst absent; nor is any charge made for ballast, chalk, or flints, received from or delivered into craft. Water is supplied from the reservoir, and delivered into the ships' boats, at Is. per ton, on appli- cation to the dock master. Abstracts of cargoes, for the purpose of making up freight accounts, will be supplied on application at the comptroller's office, at the following charge 8. d If the goods have 10 marks or under - - 2 0 - - 11 to 20 marks - - 3 0 - 21 and upwards, 2d. each mark or parcel. Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 579 Steam boats are furnished by the Company, in certain cases, to vessels (not laden with corn or timber) proceeding to these docks, arriving from North and South America, the West India Islands, the Cape of Good Hope, and all ports to the eastward thereof, upon application to the secretary, the superintendent, or the agent of the Company. Regulations regarding Goods and the Rates and Charges thereon. Rent is charged on goods from the day on which the importing vessel breaks bulk. If goods be landed by a duty paid, a sight, or a warehousing entry, and taken away within 3 days, no rent is pay- able; but if they remain on the quay after that time, quay rent or watching is charged for such longer period. Goods landed by Dock Order.-Before goods which have been landed by the Company for want of entry, can be delivered or transferred, the bill of lading must be lodged at the warehouse, and the goods entered at the Custom-bouse: and such goods are subject to an additional charge for porterage. Orders for transfer or delivery (the forms of which may be obtained at the comptroller's office), unless the goods are to be delivered from the landing scale, cannot be accepted until the goods have been landed. Neither can orders for transfer be received, until the charges due on the goods composing the whole of the entry have been paid; goods landed under the consolidated rate, and wines and spirits, excepted. Orders for delivery cannot be acted upon, unless signed by the party in whose name the goods stand in the Company's books, or by a person duly authorised to sign them: and should any interlineation, erasure, or alteration have been made in an order, it can only be accepted with the initials of the party set against such alteration. Payment of Charges and Deposit Accounts.-The only persons authorised to receive money are, the collectors at the superintendent's office, and wine and spirit department the deputy warehouse-keeper at the tobacco-warehouse; the dock-master (for water furnished to vessels in the dock) and the warehouse-keeper at the eastern dock; exceptior consolidated rates, which may be paid at the Lon- don Dock House, in New Bank Buildings. Deposit accounts may be opened at the superintendent's office. If the order does not specify the party by whom the charges due at the date of the order or transfer are to be paid, the amount thereof will be placed to the deposit account of the party transferring. Warrants and Transfers.-Warrants for goods in general, are granted on written application at the dock, in favour of such person as the party in whose name they stand in the Company's books may direct. The first are issued free of charge on all subsequent warrants and transfers, the charges are as follow:- For each warrant or transfer containing 8. d. For each warrant or transfer containing s. d. 1 or 2 packages - - - 0 I 26 to 30 packages - - - 0 8 3 4 - - - - - 0 2 31 - 35 - - - - - 0 9 5 to 7 - - - - - 0 3 36- 40 - - - - - 0 10 8 — 10 - - - - - 0 4 41 - 45 - - - - - 11 11 - 15 - - - - - 0 5 46 and upwards - - - - 1 0 16 - 20 - - - - - 0 6 and for goods in bulk, per ton - - 0 2 21 - 25 - - - - - 0 7 The contents of one warrant may be divided into warrants for smaller quantities, at the will of the holder. Whenever housing, taring, weighing, dipping, rehousing, or counting of goods is required, the operation must be performed before a warrant can be issued; and if reweighing, &c. be required, a new one must be obtained. Applications for duplicate warrants, in consequence of the originals being lost or mislaid, must be addressed to the secretary, at the London Dock House, who will make known the conditions on which the Company will issue them. Weights of Goods.-Duplicates are furnished, upon reasonable cause for requiring them being assigned. Second Samples of Goods.-Orders for second samples, if the goods are for exportation only," are issued at the comptroller's office, the proprietor paying the customs' duty thereon. Empty Casks and Packages.-If not removed from the dock within 7 days, are sold by the Company, and the proceeds paid to the owners, after deducting the sale charges and other expenses. Explanation of the following Table of Rates and Charges on Goods imported into the London Docks. The consolidated rate is charged upon the nett weight, and includes landing, wharfage, and housing, or piling on the quay, coopering, sampling, weighing for delivery, delivery, and 12 weeks' rent from the date of the importing ship breaking bulk; which may be paid on each mark separately, and will attach unless notice be given to the contrary, prior to final weighing or gauging. The import rate is charged upon the gross weight, and includes landing, wharfage, and housing, or piling on the quay, or loading from the landing scale, and furnishing the landing weights or tales; to be paid before the delivery of any part of an entry can take place. The charges for reweighing, rehousing, unhousing and loading or repiling, are each one third of the import rate; those for unhousing or unpiling, wharfage and shipping, the same as the import rate when not otherwise specified. TABLE OF RATES AND CHARGES ON GOODS IMPORTED INTO THE LONDON Docks. Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Goods imported. Import Rate. Per Per Week. Quantities, ac. Week. Quantities, &s. Per 8. d. a. Per Par 2.d. 8. d. Per Alkanst root cwt. 06 01 cwt. Aloes, Almonda, from Africa ton 46 04 ton in chests or casks ton 60 0 package under Scwt. in boxes and barrels cwt. 06 20 100 boxes or a ennsolidated rate of 0 1-2 ditto 3 and under 5 13 100 half boxes 20s. per too nett. cwt. 0 2 barrel 2 cwt. 2 qre- 0 2 ditto 6 and under 8 to 3 cwt. cwt. 0 01-2 1-4 barrel 0 3 ditto 8 cwt. and up- shell cwt. 09 0 8 large bale wards 0 1-2 small bale Alum ton 36 0 3 ton 0 half bale or seron 3-4 Alva marina, to 1-2 cwt. in bales prese-packed, Aloss, in gourds too 8.0 0 1 score gourds ton 30 0 4 ton or a consolidated rate of in bags prese-packed, 30z. per too nett, ton 50706 tom Digitized by Google 580 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Goods imported. Per Import Rate. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, &c. Per s.d. s. d. Per Per 3. d. 8. d. Per Amber and beads, package 16 0 1 box or case Beef and pork tierce 0 81-4 0 01-2 tierce Ameergris, in boxes or barrel 0 51-4 30 100 barrels kegs package I 6 0 3 package tub, kit, or half barrel 0 334 20 100 barrels Anchovies cwt. 0 9 2 6 100 barrels or dou- Berries, juniper ton 80 2 6 100 bags under2 cut ble barrels 5 0 100 bags 2 to 4cwt. I 3 100 kegs yellow or bay ton 50 04 ton 0 01-2 cask under 1 1-2 cwt. Betel nuts ton 50 05 ton Angelica root ton 50 0 1 barrel Biscuits cwt. 03 0 01-4 keg 0 2 tierce 0 012 bag or barrel 0 3 bogshead Bones 1,000 30 02 1,000 Aniseed cwt. 0 3 06 ton in bags bag 06 0 01-2 bag star cwt. 0 41-2 0 10 ton Books cwt. 10 02 bale or box Annotto ton 70 0 7 03 package or chest or a consolidated rate of Boracie acid ton 50 0 4 ton 21s. per ton nett in Borax,rough orrefined ton 50 0-10 ton casks. Bottles, empty glass gross 30 01 gross in baskets or small pack- Brass ton 50 0 2 ton ages ewt. 1 712 0 2 cask 3 to 8 cwt. Brimstone, loose ton 36 0 2 tom 0 01-2 mat or basket 1 cwt. Unhousing, wharfage, & and under shipping, 3s. per ton. Antimony ton 50 04 ton Filling and weighing, 2s. ore ton 36 0 2 ton per ton. if loose, filling and in casks or cases ton 33 0 $ ton in casks weighing, 2s. per ton. Unhousing, wharfage, 8 4 100 cases of about 2 Apples basket or barrel 06 0 01-2 basket or barrel and shipping, 2s. 6d. cwt. tierce 10 0 11-2 tierce 4 2 100 breabout cat. per ton. hogshead 16 0 3 hogshead 21 100 bxs. about lbs. Argol ton 50 0 4 ton in casks Bristles, in packages above 1 6 100cases under 2 cwt 5 cwt. ton 7 0 0 6 ton 2 6 100 bags or cases 2 under 6 ewt. ton 6 814 0 6 ton cwt. and under 4 Bronze case 16 0 2 case cwt. case I 0 0 1 box Arrow root ton 7 6 0 7 ton Bucco leaves cwt. 10 0 1-2 case or barrel 2 cwt. or a consolidated rate of 02 case 3 to cwt. 20s. per ton nett in Bugles ton 50 0 9 ton casks, or 30s. in boxes Bullion cask or case I 6. or chests. small package 10 Arsenic ton 5 0 04 ton smaller packages, not Asafœtida cwt. 0 6 0 01-3 cwt. exceeding 51. in value. 06 Ashes, from America, ton 3 0 0 01-2 cask Burr stones. See Stone. Russia ton 3 0 0 2 cask Butter, foreign, No rent or Odessa ton 30 03 Friesland or Holstein, watching will ton Unhousing, wharfage, landing, wharfage, and be charged if and shipping, 2s. per housing, or loading, taken away ton. and furnishing land- from thequage Asphaltum ton 5) 0 06 ton ing weights to the im- within EX porters 1-4 cask 03 40 100 working days Unhousing, the like half qr. cask 20 100 from the peri- 03 Wharfage, and Loading from the ware- od of the im- Shipping. house, Id. per cask. porting ship Bacon hogshead 20 0 3 16 Weighing on delivery, if breakingbulk. bale 06 0 1 0 6 required, and furnish- Watching on side 0 21-4 0 1-4 0 1-2 ing delivery weights the quarys, af- -middles, 3 cwt. tierce 0 8 1-4 01 to the buyer, Id. per ter the expi- 0 6 ditto, ! to 2ewt. cask 06 0 01-2 0 4 cask. ration of one Emden or Holland, week, per Baggage, including deli- landing, wharfage, and night, on any very and one week's housing or loading, number of casks or fir- rent. and furnishing land. presents, samples, par- ing weights firkin 03 20 100 kins, cels of papers, and Loading from the ware- Not exceeding ad other small articles, house, 3-4d. perfirkin package 0 6 Weighing on delivery, 25 06 0 1 package when required, 3-4d. 26&not50 cases, trunks, boxes,bun- dles of bedding, and 1 wearing apparel, package per firkin. 51 to 0112 s Irish score firkins 30 20 10 76 package 6 Weighing upon deliv. On any num- middle-sized ditto and ery, Id. per cask or berabove 100, chests package 2 0 0 2 package firkin. in like pro- larger packages in pro- Unhousing, wharfage, & portion. portion. shipping, 1-2d. per Bags, empty score 0 2 0 01-2 score cask or firkin. Balsam capivi,in jars, ewt. 1 112 0 01-2 jar Cables, iron ton 50 03 ton in barrels ewt. 0 6 0 1 barrel, under 2 cwt. hempen ton 10 0 ⁴ 04 ton 0 2 barrel, 3 cwt. and coir ton 12 6 05 ton upwards Cambric package 9 6 04 package Peru, in jars cwt. 1 112 0 01-2 jar Camels' hair cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 2 bale or case Cooper'sattendance at Camphor cwt. 0 6 0 10 1-2 ton landing and delivery is or a consolidated rate of a separate charge. 1s. 8d. per cwt. nett. Canada package 16 0 1 package Canes, common rattan, Bamboos. See Canes. 1,000 16 0 112 1,000 Bark, oak, in bags or or a consolidated rate of loose ton 5 0 04 ton 3s. 6d. per 1,000. in casks ton 3 0 0 4 ton ground 1,000 40 0 3 1,000 in cases about 1 cwt. reed, in bundles, 25 each 2 qrs. cwt. 06 0 1 case 100 bundles 6 3 I 6 100 bundles Jesuits' or Peruvian, cwt. 1 0 0 1 chest whanghee, bamboo, and 0 03-1 1-2 chest or seron Jumbo 1,000 5 0 0 2 1,000 0 0 1-2 1-2 seron Canilla alba cwt. 0 6 0 03-4 cwt. Barilla, loose ton 36 0 2 ton or a consolidated rate of Unhousing, wharfage, & 1s. 8d. per cwt. nett. shipping, 3e. per ton Cantharides cwt. I 0 0 3 case or cask under Filling and weighing, 2s. cwt. per ton. 0 4 case or cask 4 and in serons ton 33 02 ton under S cwt. Unhousing, wharfage, 0 6 case or cask 8 cat and shipping, 2s. 6d. and upwards per ton. Capers ewt. 0 3 0 6 butt Baskets bale 30 0 3 bale 0 4 punchoon 1-2 bale 16 0 1-2 1.2 bale 0 3 hogshead large bundle 10 0 1 large bundle 0 I barrel small bundle 0 6 0 012 small bundle Cards, playing package 16 0 or package Beads, jet, or other kinds, small package 10 0 - small package not described package I 6 0 1 package Cardamoms cwt. 06 0 1.2 chest Beans, in bags bag 06 0 1 bag bag 0 1 bag castor cwt. 0 3 06 ton Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 581 Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Goods imported. Per Import Rate. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, &c. Per 5. d. s, d. Per Per s.d. s. d. Per Carpets, bale above 70 Cobalt ton 50 0 5 ton square yards 2 0 0 4 bale Cochineal cwt. 09 0 11.2 cwt. ballot, under TO square or a consolidated rate of yards I 11.2 0 2 ballot 3s. per cwt. Carraway seed ton 5 0 0 5 ton dust 4 2 100 bags Cashew nuts cwt. 0 6 0 01-2 cwt. Cocoa and coffee, all kinds, Casks landed empty, or cwt. 0 6 06 ton cask cases, if not deli- or a consolidated rate, vered within days (and in casks, Is. 6d. per includes delivery) cwt. nett; in bags, 12. butt. pipe, or pun- 2d. per cwt. nett. cheon 0 8 0 1 butt, pipe, or pun- Coeque de perle chest 10 0 2 chest cheon Coculus Indicus cwt. 0 6 0 0 1-2 cwt. smaller cask or case 0 4 0 01-2 smaller cask or case or a consolidated rate of N. B.-If taken away Is. 6d. per cwt. nett. within 6 days, half the Coir, unwrought, press- above charges, and DO packed ton 3 0 rent. rope, under 6 inches wine or spirit, small ul. girth ton 63 04 ton lages (including turn- yarn ton 50 ing over the contents. Coker nuts 100 16 0 3 100 storing and delivery) or a consolidated rate of each 10 0 1 each 3s. 4d. per 100. Cassia lignes cwt. 0 6 1 0 ton Coloquintida cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 1 case or cask under I buds cwt. 0 6 I 0 ton, in chests cwt. or a consolidated rate of 5 0 100 bags 0 2 case or cask 1 and 1s. 6d. per cwt. nett. under 3 cwt. fistula cwt. 0 6 0 03-4 ewt. 0 3 case or cask 3 cwt. Castor beans ton 0 3 0 6 ton and upwards. Castorum, keg or small Columbo root cwt. 06 0 1-2 cwt. box 1 0 0 1 keg or small box Copper ton 50 0 2 ton Catlings case or chest 10 0 2 case or chest Wharfage and shipping Caviare package 0 6 0 1 package copper slabs, when Chaises or carriages, with piled on the quay, 3s. 2 wheels each 76 1 0 each 4d. per ton. 4 ditto each 10 6 I 6 each Copperas ton 50 0 6 ton Chalk, French ton 50 0 6 ton Coquilla nuts 1,000 13 0 1 1,000 Chassum bale 16 0 I bale Counting the whole par- Cheese, foreign tom 40 1 0 ton ccl is a separate charge. To be housed in a Coral, fragments cwt. 0 71-2 0 3 case or cask well lighted and beads case 16 0 2 case ventilated ware- box 10 0 1 box Landing, wharfage, and house, with the Cordage, hempen, under 6 housing, or loading, use of scaffolding, inches ton 5 0 0 4 ton "and furnishing land- upon which the Cork ton 60 0 7 ton on quay ing weights to the im- cheese will be Unhousing, wharfage, & I 0 ton under cover porters. stowed, so as to shipping, 4s. per ton. admit of separate Corks cwt. 2 0 0 1 bag cwt. and convenient 0 01-2 bag 56 lbs. Turning, each time, per examination; and 0 2 hogshead ton, 9d. the rent to com- Cornelians & beads, chest 16 0 OF chest mence after one box 16 0 1 box week from the day Corpses each 15 0 of landing. Cortex Winteranus cwt. 0 6 0 03-4 On delivery, weighing, N. B.-By this mode or a consolidated rate of per ton, 1s. 4d. of stowage and 1s. 6d. per cwt. nett. well regulated Cotton goods bale 1 6 0 2 bale ventilation, the box or case 10 0 1-2 box or case loss in weight trunk 0 9 0 1 trunk Unhousing and loading, usually sustained Cotton wool, press-packed per ton, 1s. 4d. upon housing will cwt. 0 3 0 5 ton be materially di- not press-packed cwt. 0 41-2 0 6 ton minished. or a consolidated rate on in tub or case cwt. 0 6 0 I tub or case press-packed, 9d. per 16 100 small ditto cwt. nett not press- Chesnuts bushel 0 1-4 4 0 100 sacks packed, 19. per cwt. 2 0 100 bags nett. 4 2 100 barrels Cotton yarn cwt. 0 51-4 0 1 bale Chicoree, under 1 cwt. Cowhage cwt. 0 6 0 1-2 cwt. 2 qrs. case or cask 06 ) Cowries ton 5 0 0 3 ton under 3 cwt. case or -001-2 case or cask Cows each 10 0 cask 0 9 1 Cranberries keg 0 6 0 1 keg 3 and under 5 cwt. barrel 09 0 1 barrel case or cask I 0 0 1 case or cask Cream of tartar ton 5 0 0 6 ton 5 cwt. and above, 0 2 cask under 13 cwt. cask 16 0 2 case or cask Cubebs cwt. 0 6 0 03-4 cwt. Chillies cwt. 0 6 0 7 ton Cummin seed cwt. 0 6 0 014 cwt. or a consolidated rate of 1s. per cwt. nett. Unhousing, China root cwt. 0 6 0 01-2 cwt. and China ware or porcelain, Loading. 1 case 16 0 3 case Currants, 23 cwt. and up- 5. d. small case I 0 0 2 small case wards butt 4 6 0 6 10 box 1 0 0 I box 15 to 23 cwt. butt 3 0 0 4 0 8 Chirayeta cwt. 0 8 1-4 0 3 cask or case 9 to 15 cwt. pipe 23 0 3 0 6 Chocolate box 0 9 0 2 box 5 to 9 cwt. carotel 16 0 2 0 4 Cinnabur cwt. 2 41-2 0 10 ton Deals. See Wood Goods. or a consolidated rate of Deer each 50 4a. 6d. per cwt. nett. Diamonds package 16 0 3 package Cinnamon cwt. I 81-4 0 1 cwt. Dragons' blood cwt. 0 6 0 01-2 cwt. or a consolidated rate of Dripstones each 0 9 0 01-2 each 3r. per cwt. nett. Dye flower ton 5 0 0 6 ton Citron, in salt pipe 16 0 4 pipe or a consolidated rate of hogshead 10 0 3 hogshead 14a. 6d per ton nett. Cooper's attendance is a Eau de Cologne case 16 0 4 case separate charge. small case 10 0 2 small case preserved. See Suc- Eggs box 0 6 0 1 box cades. Elephants' feeth. See Clocks, wooden chest 2 0 0 2 chest Ivory. Cloth, woollen, case or Emery stone. See Stone. large bale or 0 0 3 case or large bale Essences, I cwt. and up- from 8 to 12 pieces, or. wards case or 0 0 4 case dimary bale 1 6 0 2 ordinary bale under 1 cwt. case 16 0 2 small case under 8 pieces small bale 1 0 0 11-2 small bale Extract from oak bark, cwt 0 3 0 I cask about 4 cwt. Cloves cwt, 0 81-4 0 1 cwt. 0 1.2 cask above 61-2 cwt. or a commidated rate of rhatania ewt. 0 9 0 cwt. 2s. 3d. per cwt. nett. Jesuits' bark cwt. 0 9 0 1 cwt. 3c2 Digitized by Google 582 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Per Goods imported. Import Rate. Week. Quantities, &c. Per Week. Quantities, be Per a. d. 8. d. Per Per s.d. ed Per Fans case 10 0 1.2 case Hair, horse, OX OF cow box I 0 0 1 box cwt. 06 01 bale under $ cwt Feathers, bed ewt. 0 10 1-2 0 1 small bale 0 112 bale 3 and under 5 0 1-2 bag 1 1.2 and under cwt. or cwt. 0 2 bale 5 swt. and up- 0 2 bag 2 and under 3 wards cwt. 0 01-2 cwt. loose I 0 3 bale 3 and under 5 human cwt. 10 02 bale cwt. from Ireland 0 2 bale Unleg. ostrich package 16 0 2 package Whige. vulture, not exceeding 2 and cwt. package 16 0 2 package Shipg. not exceeding 50 lbs. bag 06 0 01-2 bag not exceeding 8.d. 50 lbs. Hams hogshead 20 03 16 hogshead tierce 16 0 1 08 tierce Rent Unhosng barrel or basket 06 0 1 04 brl. or tas- per and ket Week. Landg. loose each 0 03-4 0 014 each Figa, 3 qrs. to I cwt. 1 qr.; s.d. Hats, Leghorn 10 doz. 06 01 10 dozen chest 0 3 0 01-2 20 100 chests 02 middling case or about 56 lbs. 1-2 chest 03 0 01-2 13 1001-2chests package 1-4 chest-28 lbs. score 26 0 6 04 large case or pckg. drums score 26 0 6 chip tub of 80 doz. 16 02 tub of 80 dozen 1-2 & 1-4 drums score I 6 0 6 1 5 ton Hellebore root cwt. 06 0 10 ton half qr. drums score 16 0 6 Hemp (including weigh. tapnets score I 6 0 6 ing) fon 46 05 ton Fish, cod If sold from landing ton 46 0 4 ton scale to importer, herrings tierce 1 0 3 0 100 tierces mackerel barrel ton 3s. 6d. ; to buyer, 0 6 1 6 100 barrels ton Is. salmon tierce 0 6 5 0 100 tierces Weighing in the ware- kit 0 1-2 1 6 100 kits house, ton 2s. stock, or sturgeon 1,000 6 0 0 4 1,000 stock Loading, ton 2s. 1 0 100 kegs sturgeon Unhousing, wharfage, 2 6 100 barrels stock or and shipping, 4s. per sturgeon ton. not otherwise described, press-packed ton 40 04 ton tierce 10 5 0 100 tierces codilla,hemp or flax ton 60 0 6 ton barrel 0 6 2 6 100 barrels box If sold from landing 0 3 I 6 100 boxes scale: roes barrel 0 9 3 0 100 barrela to importer, ton 5s. Flax(including weighing,) to buyer, ton 1s. ton 5 0 0 5 ton If sold from landing Weighing, 2s. per ton. Loading, 3s. per ton. scale, to importer, per ton, 3s. 6d. to buy- Unhousing, wharfage, & ers, ditto, 1s. 6d. shipping, 5s. per ton. Unhousing, wharfage, Consolidated rate, on and shipping, 4s. 6d. East India, press- packed, Hs. per ton. per ton. Flour Hides, horse bale or chest 2 81-4 03 containing 150 or ton 49 0 21-4 ton under including delivery by land or water. larger bale in pro- portion Repiling, Is. per ton. loose each Weighing on delivery, 0 03-4 0 6 100 from Hambro', dry 100 7 6 08 100 if required, Id. per bundle of 2 hides barrel or chest. 0 3 0 10 100 horse, ox, cow, or buf- Flowers, artificial case 10 0 1 case falo, wet salted each 0 11-2 010 100 hides box 0 9 0 0 1-2 box Forest seeds, nuts and ox, cow, or buffalo, with short horns each barrel 02 20 100 acorns 09 0 1 barrel Frankincense other hides, not enume- chest 0 1-4 0 10 ton Fruit. See the species of rated, dry, or dry fruit. salted,averaging more than 22 lbs. each Furniture, very large case 0 11-2 0 10 100 4 6 0 4 large case do. averaging lbs. and ordinary case 30 03 ordinary case middling case not exceeding 22 lbs. 20 0 2 middling case 100 intermediate package 9 0 0 10 100 10 0 11-2 intermediate pack- do.7 lbs.and under 12lbs. age 100 6 3 06 100 small case 0 6 0 1 small case do. under 7 lbs, Furs. See Skins. 100 42 0 6 100 Galangal in bales, about 8 cwt. cwt. 0 6 0 01-2 cwt. bale Galbanum 30 0 3 bale cwt. 0 6 0 012 cwt. Galls about 4 cwt. bale 16 0 11-2 tale cwt. 0 33-4 0 10 ton Gamboge small bale 13 0 small bale cwt. 0 6 0 012 cwt. losh Gentian root bale or chest 20 0 3 bale or chest ton 5 0 0 10 ton Ginger Honey cwt. 0 6 0 1 barrel cwt. 0 6 0 6 ton or a consolidated rate of, 0 01-2 keg or jar Hoofs cwt. in casks, 1s. 6d, per 0 6 0 10 ton Hops cwt. cwt. nett; in bags, Is. 0 412 0 2 bag 2d. do. 0 I pocket Ginseng root ton Horns, and horn tips, or 5 0 0 1 barrel Glass cask or chest 16 plates, including count- 0 3 cask or chest ing cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 10 ton horns case 1 0 0 2 case 06 ton tips box ] 0 0 1 box Glue in packages cwt. 06 0 01-2 tag ton 5 0 0 4 ton Granilla hart, stag, or deer, cwt. 0 9 0 2 barrel or a consolidated rate of 100 pair 3 0 0 3 100 pair in bales under 2 cwt. 3s. per cwt. nett. bale Grapes 10 0 I bale box 0 6 5 0 100 boxes 2 cwt. and above bale 16 0 112 bale jar 0 3 2 6 100 jara Horses Grease each 12 6 ton 5 0 0 3 ton Greaves Jalap cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 1 bale about $ cwt. ton 4 6 0 3 ton 0 034 bale about 1-2cmt Guinea grains cwt. 0 6 0 10 ton Jewellery package I 6 0 3 package Gum, in serons, bags, or box 16 0 2 box in cases. chests or casks, from Africa Indian rubber, hogshead or ton 4 6 0 4 ton pipe 16 0 4 hogshead or pipe in cases, chests, or bar. 2 to 4 cwt. case 16 0 I case rels, from other places I to 2 cwt case 10 0 - case cwt. 0 6 0 11.2 chest or case barrel 06 0 01-2 barrel 0 012 barrel loose cwt. 10 0 cwt. in bottle loose or in hogsheads ton 5 0 0 4 ton 0 03-4 cwt. solid Guns, carronades, 6 cwt. Indian corn and upwards each bag 03 0 012 bag 20 0 1 no rent iftakenaway Indigo, not E. India, cwt. 09 01 seron Other sizes are charged in 7 days or a consolidated rate of in proportion. 1s. 6d. per cwt. nett. Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 583 Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Per Goods imported. Import Rate. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, &c. Per #. d. 8, d. Per Per s. d. s. d. Per Indigo-continued. Linseed. See Wheat. East India, in chests cakes ton 3 6 0 3 ton cwt. 0 81-4 0 11-2 chest Liquorice cwt. 0 334 0 1 case or barrel or a consolidated rate, root cwt. 0 6 1 0 loose, ton including all opera- 0 1 bale under 2 cwt. tions incident on tar- Mace cwt. 1 0 0 1-2 chest ing, raising, repack- or a consolidated rate of 0 1 cask about 1 cwt. ing, stowing, and at- 3s. per cwt. tendance whilst on Madder ton 3 41-2 0 6 ton show, nailing down, roots cwt. 0 0 1 bale under 3 cwt. lotting and piling 2 qrs. away, of 17s. 6d. per 0 11.2 bale 3 cwt. 2 qrs. chest. and under 5 cwt. 0 2 bale 5 cwt. and up- Ink cwt. 09 0 2 cask wards Inkle cwt. 10 0 1-2 case Maiden hair bale 10 0 1 bale 0 1 box or keg Manna cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 1 chest or cask Ipecacuanha cwt. 0 10 0 10 ton Marbles ton 5 0 04 ton Iron (including weighing), Marble baths each 6 0 06 each ton 3 4 0 1 ton mortars ton 5 0 0 6 ton if landed for transit, and sculptured works of art not weighed ton 26 0 1 ton import rate according when shipped from to the size and value 0 3 case landing scale (includ- 02 small case ing delivery) ton 42 none if shipped withm 1 rough, in cases - cwt. 0 6 02 case Unpiling, wharfage, and week from the last shipping, without day of landing. Delivered weighing, 2s. 6d. per into craft, ton. per Ton Wharf- When weighed on of 25 age and board, (including use Palms or Shipping. of scales and weights), 12 Cubic 2s. per ton. Feet. old ton 34 02 ton s.d. d. ore ton 3 0 0 2 ton blocks, under 2 tons, ton 60 03 30 46 steam engines, boilers, above 2 tons ton 10 0 0 3 50 7 6 cylinders, and other above 10 tons ton 20 0 0 3 10 0 15 0 heavy machinery ton 76 0 1 ton if discharged from the vessel into craft, with- Mastic cwt. 0 6 0 1 case or chest about out landing or weigh- 3 cwt. ing ton 60 Mats :- 100 1 1-4 0 6 100 bundles Isinglass cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 10 ton Indian chest 10 0 2 chest Ivory cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 I cwt. box 0 9 0 1 box Junk, or old rope ton 36 0 3 ton from corn vessels, bun- Jute, press-packed ton 40 0 4 ton die of 10 0 2 0 6 100 bundles or a consolidated rate of Delivery by land, 1-2d. 11s. per ton nett. per bundle; by water, Kelp ton 36 0 2 ton Id. per bundle. Filling and weighing, Melting pots cask 40 0 4 cask 2s. per ton. Minerals case 1 0 0 2 case Knives package 16 0 or case Mohair yarn cwt. 0 71-2 0 1 bale 0 1 barrel Molasses. See West In- 0 0 1-2 box dia Dock Charges. Lac dye or lake chest 10 0 1 chest Moss, rock or Iceland, ton 7 6 0 9 ton in bags Lace case or box 26 0 6 case or box 1 6 100 casks about 84 Lacquered ware chest 16 0 2 chest lbs. box 1 0 0 1 box 3 0 100 casks about 2 Lard bladder 0 034 0 6 100 bladders Mother-o'-pearl, shells, cwt. Lead ton 26 0 1 ton ton 7 6 0 4 ton Unpiling, wharfage, and or a consolidated rate of shipping, 1s. 8d. per 18s. 6d. per ton nett. ton. ware chests 1 6 0 2 chest ore ton 30 0 2 ton box I 0 0 I box black ton 39 0 4 ton Munjeet, in bales cwt. 0 6 0 0 1-2 cwt. white ton 50 0 4 ton in a consolidated rate of Leather, foreign (tanned) 1s. 6d. per cwt. nett. bale 16 0 2 bale in bundles cwt. 0 9 0 03-4 cwt. demi bale 1 0 0 1-2 bale or a consolidated rate of loose ton 50 0 9 ton 2s. per cwt. nett. Irish (tanned) bale,under Musk chest I 6 0 2 chest cwt. 0 9 0 03-4 bale under 1 cwt. box I 0 0 1 box bale, I cwt. to or cwt. 10 0 1 bale 1 to 2 cwt. Myrabolans cwt. 0 4 1-2 0 01-4 ewt. bale, 2 cwt. to-4 cwt. 1 6 0 1-2 bale 2 to 4 cwt. Myrrh cwt. 0 6 0 012 cwt. small or middling crate 2 0 0 1-2 small or middling Nails cwt. 0 3 0 0 1-2 barrel or bag crate Nankeen chest I 3 0 I chest large crate 2 6 0 2 large crate Natron, loose ton 36 0 3 ton Lemons. See Oranges. Filling and weighing, Lexia ton 50 0 4 ton 2s. per ton. Limes barrel 0 81-4 0 I barrel Nutmegs cwt. 0 6 0 10 ton Lime juice 100 gallons 21 0 5 puncheon or a consolidated rate of Laying up to guage, and 0 3 hogshead Is. 6d. per cwt. nett. cooper's attendance at 0 2 barrel Nuts bushel 0 21.4 4 0 100 sacks landing and delivery, barrel 0 41-2 0 1 barrel form aseparate charge. bag or sack 0 41-2 2 0 100 bags Linen, German bale 23 0 4 bale castania bushel 0 2 1-4 I 0 100 bushels 1-2 bale 1 3 0 2 1-2 bale Nux vomica cwt. 0 41-2 0 014 cwt. 1-4 bale 0 81-4 0 I 1-4 bale Oakum ton 5 0 0 4 ton loose or in bags roll 0 1 1-2 1 0 100 rolls Oatmeal, about 2 1-2 cwt., chest 2 6 0 4 chest including delivery ton 4 9 0 1-2 ton if not cleared 1-2 chest 13 0 2 1-2 chest Weighing for delivery, within 14 days of 1-4 chest 0 814 0 1 1-4 chest Id. per sack or barrel breaking bulk. Russia bale 1 214 0 2 bale Ochre ton 39 0 4 ton 1-2 bale, containing 10 Oil, bay cask 10 0 1 cask pieces, or boarded castor cwt. 0 6 0 3 puncheon or hhd. bale 09 0 1 1-2 bale I 3 ton, in jara or dup- 1-4 bale 0712 0 - 1-4 bale pers crash bale 1 214 0 3 bale 0 2 tierce 1-2 bale 0 9 0 2 1-2 bale 0 1 barrel under 2 cwt. 1-4 bale 0 71-2 0 I 1-4 bale 0 11-2 barrel above 2 cwt. sail cloth bolt or roll 0 I 1-2 I 0 100 bolts or rolls 0 01-2 case 12 bottles mats, 2 pieces each 0 3 2 0 100 mate (2 pieces) Irish case or bale I 6 0 3 case or bale chemical, 1 cwt. and box or bundle 0 9 0 2 box or bundle upwards package 2 0 0 4 large case sample box 0 6 0 1 sample box under 1 ewt. package 1 6 0 2 small case Digitized by Google 584 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). Rent. Rent.) Goods imported. Import Rate. Goods imported. Per Import Rate. Week. Quantities, &c. Per Week. Quantities, be Per Per Tun of 262 Imp. Gallons. Per 8. d. s.d. Per Oil-continued. Pictures-continued. Olive middling tale or case 30 Newfound- 04 middling bale or in Fish. case land. Casks. small bale or case 16 03 small bale case 8, d. s.d. Piece goods bale 13 0 1-2 bale Landing, wharfage, and Pill boxes large vat 46 0 6 large vat laying up to gauge 46 30 30 small vat 30 04 small vat Cooper's attendance, if Pimento cwt. 06 06 ton delivered from the or a consolidated rate, quay 20 20 20 in bags Is. 2d. cwt. Searching and filling up in casks 1s. 6d. cwt. (if done) 10 10 10 Pink root cwt. 06 02 bale Loading or housing 16 16 12 Pitch ton 26 3 0 100 barrels Cooper's attendance at Plaster of Paris ton 30 0 2 ton housing, and at de- Plums, Portugal, in boxes, livery from the vault 10 10 10 dozen 09 10 100 boxes Unhousing and loading 16 16 16 Porcelain case 16 0 3 case Unhousing, wharfage, small case 10 02 small case and shipping 46 30 30 Potatoes ton 36 03 ton Rent per week 0 6 04 0 4 Potash. See Ashes. N. B.-Fourteen days Preserves, allowed from final day under 28 lbs. package 03 of landing previous to 28 to 112 lbs. package 06 the commencement of 0034 1 cwt. and upwards, cwt. rent but the Company package 06 are at liberty to house 6 or a consolidated rate, days after gauging, un- under 28 Ibs.package,6d. less detained by written 28 to 112 lbs. do. 1s. order previously. 112 lbs. and upwards, Rent on the quantity package, is. per cwt. remaining will be nett. charged from the day of the vessel breaking bulk. Unhousg Rent and per Rent Prunes or French plums, Landing. Week. Import about 8 cwt., hhd. or s. d. Rate. per s.d. Week. puncheon 6 06 02 hd.orpun. 5 to 7 cwt. barrel 10 03 0 11-2 barrel olive, in jars: 8. d. 8. d. 2 to 5 cwt. 1-2 barrel 09 02 0 1 1-2 barrel common jars cwt. 0 81-4 03 common jar under 2 cwt. 1-4 barrel 06 02 4 2 100 1-2 jars cwt. 0 02 1-2 jar about I cwt, containing large jars cwt. 0 6 06 large jar boxes or cartoons case 06 02 01 case cases containing 30 about 50 lbs. box 02 0 6 13 100 quart bottles case 10 0 31-2 score cases score salad, 1-2 chest of 30 about 28 lbs. 1-4 chest 0 06 10 100 bottles 06 0 21-2 score 1-2 chests score palm and cocoa nut, ton 3 9 04 ton in large casks, for every Rent cwt. above 30 cwt. 0 9 per seed tun 60 06 tun Week. Oil cake. See Linseed Prussiate of potash ton 46 04 ton Cakes. Puree chest 06 01 chest Olibanum. See Gum, in Pyrolignate of lead ton 50 0 5 ton cases or chests. Quassia cwt. 06 0 034 cwt. Olives, about 12 galls. Quicksilver, in bottles, 1-2 brl. 04 01 1-2 barrel bottle 03 0 01-4 bottle - 6 - 1-4 bri. 0 3 0 01-2 1-4 barrel containing 1 skin case 06 0 01-2 case - 23-4 keg 0 21-4 0 0 1-4 keg Quills vat 46 04 vat about 5 quarts small keg. small val 30 0 3 small vat score 16 02 score hogshead or barrel 16 03 hogshead or barrel 3 pint jars score 0 9 01 score case 20 03 case in larger packages, gall. 0 0 3 tierce bale 06 02 bale 02 barrel, 30 gallons Quinine, sulphate of, con- 01 1.2 barrel taining about 3 quarts, Onions bushel 06 0 I basket or barrel case 09 01 case Opium cwt. 0 10 12 0 1-2 chest under 3 cwt. Radix contrayerve cwt. 09 0.2 case Oranges and lemons, chest 0 712 0 1 chest seneke barrel 06 0 012 barrel box 0 514 0 01-2 box Rags or old ropes ton 30 03 ton Oranges, in cases case 10 0 1-2 case Orange buds cwt. 0 41-2 02 tierce Unhousg Rent 03 hogshead and per Orchella weed cwt. 0 614 01 bale Landing. Week. Orpinent ton 50 04 ton Raisins, 12 to 20 cwt., butt 30 08 04 butt Orrice root cwt. 0 3 03 hogshead 9 to 12 ewt. pipe 23 0 6 0 3 pipe 02 herce 5 to 9 cwt. carotel 16 04 02 carotel 01 barrel or seron 2 cwt. 2 qrs. to 4 cwt. Orsidew package 16 03 large case 2 qrs. barrel 09 02 0 barrel 0 2 small case 1 cwt. 2 qrs. to 2 cwt. Otto of roses package 26 or qrs. 1-2 barrel 06 02 0 1-2 1-2 barrel middling package 16 04 package under 1 cwt. 2 qrs. small package 10 14 barrel 03 0 01-2 20 100 Oxen each 10 0 Weighing do. Is. score. Paddy, in bulk quarter 0 10 01 quarter Cape, casks under 3cwt., Paper cwt. 06 0 10 ton cask 09 0 03-4 cask Pearl barley keg 0 3 0 keg 3 cwt. to 5 cwt., cask 16 0 2 100 barrel 0 6 0 0 1-2 barrel boxes, about 60 lbs., score 30 1 8 Peas tierce or barrel 0 9 0 1 tierce or barrel Denia & Valentia, boxes, bag 0 26 100 bags score 26 06 1 3 100 Pepper (unsifted) ton 50 06 ton Weighing do. 8d. score. or a consolidated rate of 1-4 and 1-2 boxes score 16 06 10 100 9d. per cwt. nett or frails or baskets score 18 05 1 0 100 of 2s. 3d. per cwt. Weighing do. 6d. score. nett, including ordi- 1-4 and 1-2 frails or bas- nary sifting and bag- kets, score 10 04 10 100 ging 01 bag of 317 lbs. nott. Weighing do. 4d. score. long or Cayenne cwt. 06 07 ton Malaga, boxes score 20 06 10 100 or a consolidated rate 1-4 & 1.2 boxes score 16 0 6 0 10 100 of Is. per cwt. nett. Weighing do. 8d. score. Piano.fortes each 46 06 each Smyrna, drums score 26 06 10 100 Piccaba cwt. 06 04 ton Weighingdo. 10d. score. Pickles dozen bottles 0 214 0 01-2 dozen bottles 1-4 & 1-2 drums score 16 06 10 100 in barrels gallon 0 012 0 1 barrel Weighing do. 6d. score. large bottles or jars, Rent under 2 gallons gall. 0 11-2 0 bottle or jar per 2 & under 5 do., gall. 0 0 bottle or jar Week. 5 and upwards gall. 0 034 0 034 bottle or jar Rhatania extract cwt. 09 01 cwt. Pictures, large bale or case 46 06 large bale or case root cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 01-2 cwt. Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 585 Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Goods imported. Per Import Rate. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, &c. Per 8. d. 8. d. Per Per s. d. 1. d. Per Rhubarb cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 10 ton Skins-continued. A consolidated rate on goat, Trieste, bale about East India, including 8 cwt. 20 0 3 bale also starting into bulk, Hamburgh, bale of taring, repairing, re- 100 skins and under 1 0 0 1 bale taring, refilling, nail- bale above 100 skins 16 0 1-2 bale ing down, reweighing, Mogadore, above 100 and piling away, of 5a. skins bale I 6 0 2 120 skins per chest. above 60 to 100skins, Rice cwt. 0 214 0 4 ton bale 0 9 0 2 120 skins or a consolidated rate of, above 30 to 60 skins, in casks 13s. 4d. ton bale 0 6 0 2 120 skins in bags 10s. 6d. ton of 30 & under, bale 0 3 0 2 120 skins Roots, sassafras or winters loose dozen 0 2 0 3 120 skins cwt. 0 9 0 2 cask or case hare and coney, 500 Rosin ton 2 6 0 6 ton, loose skins bale 1 6 0 3 bale 3 0 100 barrels under 500 skins, bale I 0 0 OF bale Rugs bale 1 6 0 3 bale large cask 2 0 0 6 large cask 1-2 bale 1 0 0 1-2 1.2 bale middling cask 16 0 4 middling cask Rushes load I 6 0 3 load small cask 1 0 0 3 small cask for polishing bundle 0 I 1-2 1 0 100 bundles kangaroo dozen 0 0 1-2 0 2 bale Sac Saturni cwt. 0 3 0 3 chest kid or lamb, hhd., pun., Saffron cwt. 2 0 0 2 bale or case or bale 1 6 0 3 hhd., pun., or bale Safflower ton 5 0 0 6 ton tieree 1 0 0 2 tierce or a consolidated rate of barrel 0 6 0 I barrel 14s. 6d. per ton nett. large bundle I 0 0 2 large bundle Sago cwt. 0 6 0 6 ton ordinary bundle 0 9 0 1 ordinary bundle Sal ammoniac ton 5 0 0 6 ton small bundle 0 6 0 1 small bundle Salop package 1 6 0 2 package lamb, Hamburgh, or Saltpetre ton 5 0 0 3 ton Copenhagen, under Salts cwt. 0 3 0 4 ton 200 skins bale 1 0 0 1 bale Samples which are by law above 200 skins, bale 1 6 0 11-2 bale exempted from duty, leopard, lion, and tiger, free. each 0 1-1-2 0 0 1-2 each Saphora package 0 6 0 1 package nutria hogshead 16 0 4 bogshead Sarsaparilla cwt. 16 01 cwt. barrel 1 0 0 1 barrel 0 10 100 bundles about 150 doz. skins, or a consolidated rate of bale 16 0 4 bale of 150 dozen 4s. 6d. per cwt. nett. about 100 doz. skins, Reweighing bales 4 cwt. bale 0 0 3 bale of 100 dozen and upwards 1s. 6d. about 50 doz. skins, per bale. bale 0 9 0 2 bale of 50 dozen under 4 cwt., Is. opossum, about 50 skins, Scaleboards 100 bundles 3 0 0 4 100 bundles bundle 0 6 0 1 bundle Scammony cwt. 30 0 01-2 drum Quebec or Hudson's Seed, agricultural (or not Bay, case, bale, or otherwise rated), puncheon 16 0 3 case, bale, or pun- in bags ton 3 9 0 31-2 ton cheon in cassks ton 4 6 0 312 ton large bundle 10 0 2 large bundle Seed lac cwt. 0 9 0 01-2 cwt. ordinary bundle 0 9 0 1 ordinary bundle or a consolidated rate of small bundle or keg 0 6 0 1 small bundle or keg 2s. per cwt. nett. seal pipe 20 0 3 pipe Senna cwt. 0 6 0 71-2 ton puncheon or hogshead 16 0 2 puncheon or hogs- Shawls, small box or bale 2 0 0 11-2 small box or bale head large box or bale 3 0 0 or large box or bale barrel I 0 0 1 barrel loose 120 16 Shaya root, press-packed, 0 3 120 ton 40 0 4 ton South Seas, wigs 120 I 9 0 6 120 Shellac ewt. 0 9 0 0 1-2 cwt. middlings 120 1 9 0 4 120 or a consolidated rate of smalls and pups 120 1 6 0 3 120 2s. per cwt. nett. Greenland, loose 120 I 6 0 2 120 Ships' stores warehoused, sheep, Hamburgh bale 1 6 0 2 bale consolidated rate, 2 cwt. sheep or goat, 20 0 2 bale and upwards cwt. 16 0 I package Cape bale, 100 skins under 2 cwt. package 1 0 0 01-2 package 75 skins 16 0 1-2 bale under 28 lbs. package 0 6 0 14 package 60 skies 1 0 0 I bale if liquids gallon 0 0 5 tun 25 skins 0 6 0 0 1-2 bale I Shot ton 3 0 0 1-2 ton loose, dry dozen 0 3 0 3 120 0 412 120 Shurf ton 5 0 0 2 ton salted dozen 0 4 Silk, raw or thrown, cwt. 1 0 0 or bale above 2 ewt. India, loose 120 1 0 0 2 120 0 1 1-2 bale under 2 cwt. about 4 cwt. large bale 2 0 0 manufactured, I cwt.and 3 bale upwards bale case 1 6 0 11-2 bale or case small calf, Russia, 100 skins, bundle 0 9 0 11-2 under 1 cwt., small bundle bale or case 1 0 0 11-2 small bale or case swan, bale containing 150 skins 16 0 2 waste, 4 cwt. and up- bale wards bale 2 6 0 1 bale 100 skins 10 0 1 bale Vicienia, loose 120 16 0 3 120 2 and under 4 cwt. bale 2 0 0 1 bale Smalts ton 50 0 5 ton 1 and under 2 cwt. Snake root cwt. 0 10 1-2 0 1 1-2 bale or barrel bale 0 9 0 01-2 bale 0 2 tierce 0 1 0 2 Silk ribands case 2 0 case bale 0 3 Skins, calf or kip, 4 cwt. hogshead and upwards bale 1 6 0 11-2 bale Soap ewt. 0 6 0 1 case under 6 cwt. about 2 cwt. Soda ton 30 0 4 ton middling bale 1 0 0 01-2 middling bale Soy chest 0 1 0 2 chest small bale 0 9 0 0 1-2 small bale in casks gallon 0 1 0 5 puncheon salted, wet dozen 0 41-2 0 4 120 0 3 hogshead dozen 0 3 0 01-2 dozen 0 2 kit or barrel loose, dry 1 dry salted dozen 0 4 0 4 120 skins Speciacles case 10 0 1 case Weighing and loading, Spelter ton 3 0 0 1 ton Wharfage and shipping, 0 2 Id. per dozen each ton, in casks charge. 2s. per ton, when Mogadore, dry salted, piled on the quay. loose dozen 03 0 01-2 dozen Sponge cwt. 0 9 0 2 case or bale under * eat or fitch. cask or case I 6 0 3 cask or case 1 cwt. 2 qrs. 0 3 chinchilli, bale, cask, or large case or cask case I 6 0 3 bale, cask, or case Squills ton 50 0 3 ton deer, pun., hhd., or bale I 6 0 2 pun,, hhd., or bale dried, about 4 ewt. case 16 0 1-2 case case or pack I 0 0 I case or pack about 2 cwt. case 10 0 I case bundle 0 9 0 01-2 bundle in bags cwt. 0 6 0 0 1-2 bag dog fish bale 0 9 0 1 bale Starch ton 50 0 6 ton elk, loose 120 3 0 0 4 120 Steel ton 46 0 2 ton furs, large bale, case, or Stick lac cwt. 0 9 0 01-2 cwt. cask I 6 0 6 large bale, case, or or a consolidated rate of middling bale, case, cask 2s. per cwt. nett. or cask 1 0 0 3 middling ditto Sticks, walking 1,000 50 0 2 1,000 small bale case, or cask 0 9 02 small ditto Stock fish. See Fish. 74 Digitized by Google 586 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Goods imported. Per Import Rate. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, & Per 8. d. 8. d. Per Per 1. d. i.d. Per Stone, burr each 0 I-2 09 100 Valonia ton 46 03 ton emery ton 36 0 1 ton Filling and weighing, Filling and weighing, 2s. per ton. 2s. per ton. Vanelloes, case or canister 16 0 11-2 case or canister lithographic ton 5 0 0 6 ton Verdigris ton 5 0 06 ton pumice ton 76 0 8 ton Vermilion cwt. 2 41-2 0 10 tom 0 4 ton in bricks Vermicelli, case under Turkey cwt. 0 3 0 I cask 3 to 5 cwt. cwt. cwt. 1 0 0 012 box under 56 lbs. Straw, manufactured, 1 to 2 cwt. case ] 0 0 1 case under cwt. under 1 ewt. case 08 0 0 1-2 case 2cwt and upwards, cwl. 06 0 2 ease 2 and under 4 1 & under 2 cwt. case 10 0 I case cwt. 2 - 3 cwt. case 6 0 1-2 case 0 4 case 4 and under 6 3 - 4 cwt. case I 9 0 2 case cwt. 4 cwt. and upwards, 06 case 6 cwt and up case 2 0 0 2 case wards unmanufactured, Vinegar, pun. of 100 galls. 21 04 punchesn 1 to 2 cwt. case 1 0 0 2 case hogshead 12 0 2 hogshead 2 to 3 cwt. case 16 0 3 case tierce or barrel 10 02 tierce or barrel 3 cwt. and upwards, 1-4 cask 0 6 0 11-2 H cask case 2 0 0 4 case Cooper's attendance in Sugar, in casks cwt. 0 3 0 5 ton addition. See Wines in chests, 5 cwt. and and Spirits. above, or in baskets If housed, including at- of any size, cwt. 0 3 0 5 ton tendance at delivery, chests, mats, or bags un- puncheon 2s hhd. der 5 cwt. cwt. 0 3 0 4 ton 1s. 6d.; tierce 1s. or a consolidated rate of Walnuts bushel 0212 40 100 sacks -in casks, 8d. cwt. 20 100 bags nett; in chests, 5 cwt. Water, mineral, dozen and above, or in bas- bottles 0 3 0 01-2 dozen bottles kets of any size, 7d. Wax ton 50 06 ton cwt. nett; in chests, Sealing cwt. 09 01 cwt. mais, or bags, under 5 Weld ton 7 6 09 ton cwt., 6d. cwt. nett. Whalebone ton 76 04 ton candy cwt. 0 4 1-2 0 0 1-2 cwt. Whale fins ton 76 06 ton Sulphate of zine ton 5 0 0 5 ton Sumach ton 3 9 0 2 ton Tallow. in casks ton 3 6 0 3 ton Landing, if sold from the landing Wharfage, Housing, and Rent scale to the importer, ton 24 Three working Delivering. per 100 also to the buyer, ton 12 days from the last Qrs.per Unhousing, wharfage, day of weighing at In In Week. and shipping, 2a. 6d. the landing scale, Ship. Barge. per ton. will be allowed to Wheat, &c. s. d. s. s.d. Wharfage and shipping, clear tallow from Seed, heavy grain, &c. 2s. 4d. per ton. the quays no rent quarter 09 06 49 Rent com. will be charged for Oats, light grain.&c. qr. 08 06 3 10 meaces that period, if so s. from the cleared when not Filling and porter- last day of so cleared, rent will age at landing, landing. be charged from ves. qr. 02 Risk from sel breaking bulk. Ditto at delivery, fire for 20- in skins ton 39 0 3 qr. 0 2 count of Mediterranean, Cape, or Turning each time proprietors American, packages 100 qrs. 26 under 5 cwt. ton 50 0 1-2 package under Scwt. Screening, 100 qrs. 6 6 0 1 package above 3cwt. One turning to be Tamarinds. See Preserves. charged on Tapes bale 16 02 bale screening. Tapioca cwt. 0 8 1-4 0 01-2 barrel Transferring Tar barrel of 32 gallons 03 3 0 100 barrels 100 sacks 06 Tares quarter 10 0 1 quarter Peeling heavy Working out and deli- grain qr. 05 vering into craft, 3d. Ditto light qr. 0 41 per quarter. If imported in Terra japonica ton 50 03 ton bags, an addi- sienna ton 5 0 03 ton tional charge of verde ton 50 0 3 ton d. per bag, for umbra & Pozzolani ton 3 6 0 3 ton cutting openand Weighing Porzolani on shooting out. board, 1s. per ton. Collecting empty Thread bale 16 02 bale bags and pack- Timber. See Wood. ing into bun- Tin ton 40 02 ton dies bdle 01 ore ton 50 0 4 ton Loading or ship. Tobacco, a consolidated ping, bdle. 01 rate, see page 587. Working out and deli- Tongues, about bale 06 0 1 bale vering into craft, 3d. loose dozen : 0 01-2 dozen per quarter. 3 cwt. tierce 0 8 1-4 0 1 tierce 1 to 2 cwt. cask 06 0 012 cask 1 to 2 cwt. Tonquin beans chest 16 1-2 chest Import Rent 0 in casks cwt. 10 I cwt. Rate. per 0 Quantities, &tc. Week. Tortoiseshell cwt. 10 0 2 case s.d. a. d. or a consolidated rate of 0 I cwt. in casks Whetstones cwt. 03 0 112 cask 3 to 5 cwt. 4s. 6d. per cwt. nett. 0 012 case or cask est. Tow, in bales cwt. 0 41-2 0 1 bale 4 cwt. & under Whisks for brooms 0 11-2 bale above 4 and 100 bundles 30 0 3 100 bundles under 6 cwt. loose 1,000 30 0 4 1,000 0 2 bale 6 cwt. and up- bale 1 10 1.2 0 3 bale wards 1-2 bale 10 0 11.2 1-2 bale Toys large case or vat 46 0 6 large case or vat 1-4 bale 09 0 1-4 bale middling case or vat 30 0 4 middling case or vat one eighth of a bale 06 0 01-2 one eighth of a bale small case or vat 20 0 3 small case or vat manufactured 100 16 02 100 Trees, live plants, &c. Wine in casks, see conso- large case 16 0 1 large case lidated rate, p. 587. small case 10 0 1 small case in cases, see p.588. Turmeric cwt. 03 0 5 ton Wire, iron cwt. 0 414 0 01-2 cwt. or a consolidated rate of 0 01-2 chest 1 cwt. 2 qrs. plated or gilt cwt. 0 814 0 03-4 cwt. Is. per cwt. nett. Woad. See Weld. Turpentine ton 26 36 100 tierces Wool, sheep or lamb, Delivery by land or wa- 3 0 100 barrels German cwt. 0 41-2 0 034 bale under 3 cart. ter, 1s. 8d. per ton. 5 0 100 casks from or a consolidated rate of 0 1 tale 3 to cart. France 5s. per bale of about 0 1.2 bale to 6cwt. Twine cwt. 0 41-2 0 1 mat or bundle 4 ewt. 0 8 bale 6 cwt. ADÁ Valerian bale 16 02 bale wards Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 587 Rent. Rent. Goods imported. Import Rate. Per Goods imported. Import Rate. Week. Quantities, &c. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Per s.d. 8. d. Per Per s.d. s.d. Per Wool-comtinued. Wood-continued. Unhousing or loading by Barwood land or water, and Boxwood mending at delivery, ton if under cover, Brazil, large when charged under 1 1-2d. per ton. Camwood consolidated rate, per Black ebony, from Cocus wood bale of about 4 cwt., ton 46 0 1 the East Indies, Ebony and lignum vita, 1s. Fustic, large Australian cwt. 0 41-2 0 03-4 bale under 3 cwt. rent after 1 year Lignum vitas from vessel break- or a consolidated rate of 0 bale 3 to 4 cwt. Logwood 4a. per bale of about 0 1-2 bale 4 to 6 cwt. ing bulk, Id. per Nicaragua, large 2 1-2 cwt., including 0 2 bale 6 cwt. and up. ton per week. Unhousing or unpi ing, landing, wharfage, wards wharfage, and ship- housing,and 12 weeks' ping, 2s. 6d. per ton. rent from the date of or a consolidated rate of the ship breaking 6s. 6d. per ton. If bulk, landing weights, under cover, 7s. per original warrants, cer- ton. tificale of damage, or Braziletto ton 56 02 ton survey after landing, Brazil wood, small ton 56 02 ton mending at landing, Fustic, young ton 56 0 3 ton taring, lotting, sam- Nicaragua, small ton 56 0 2 ton pling, unpiling for Sandal ton 56 0 3 ton show, showing, re- Sassafras ton 56 0 3 ton piling, mending, and Sapan ton 56 0 2 ton filling in, reweighing, or a consolidated rate of and any other usual 8a. per ton. operation performed Jaccaranda by order of the im- Mahogany porter. Maple Unhousing and loading Rosewood by land, or direct into Satin ship or lighter, and Tulip mending, 8d. per bale Zebra ton 50 0 112 ton of about 2 1-2 cwt. Bird's eye 0 1 ton, after 1 year goats' cwt. 06 01 bale about 2 cwt. Cedar and other from vessel break- 02 bale above 2 cwt. woods charged ing bulk. hair or beards cwt 0 10 1-2 0 2 case with duty, or Spanish cwt. 0 41-2 0 1 bale 2 cwt. 2 qrs. sold at or a consolidated rate of 0 03-4 bale about 2 cwt. or a consolidated rate of 4s. per bale of about 0 01-2 bale about I cwt. 7s. per ton. 2 cwt., and 3s. per Rummaging mahogany half bale, including timber, or other mea- the same operations sured woods, 1s. per as to Australian wool. ton. Unhousing, &c., 6d. per Delivering into decked bale, 4d. per half vessels, 6d. per ton bale. extra. Vigonia cwt. 0 41-2 03 bale Yarn, in vats not above Woollen cloth. See Cloth. 20 cwt. ton 50 04 ton above 20 cwt. ton 53 0 4 ton Wood. For consolidated additional for every rate on staves, deals, cwt. above 1 ton 03 &c. see P. 590. in bales cwt. 0 4 1-2 0 bale Zaffres ton 50 05 ton Zinc. See Spelter. Consolidated Rates and Charges on CIGARS and TOBACCO. Boxes containing Chests Cigars. containing Above 300 Above 200 Above 100 from 500 and not and not and not to 600 lbs. exceeding exceeding exceeding 400 lbs. 300 lbs. 200 lbs. Import rate; including landing, wharfage, housing, weighing gross; and exa. s. d. 8. d. s.d. 8. d. mining, or sampling, one side 80 40 29 23 both sides 10 0 50 39 30 Unpacking, weighing nett. repacking (when in bundles*), and coopering 10 6 4 0 29 2 0 If loose, an extra charge is made. Garbling, or sorting, is also an extra charge. Examining, or resampling, one side 40 10 10 10 both sides 60 26 20 2 0 Unhousing, wharfage, and shipping 30 20 20 16 Ditto, and loading 10 10 09 0 6 Transferring 02 02 02 0 2 Boxes or chests, not of the above specified weights, charged in proportion. Tobacco. Landing charges and coopering, weighing, sampling, s. d. #. d. and making merchantable at landing scale, per Warrant, 100 lbs nett 06 1 hogshead 0 6 On delivery for exportation, including coopering, 2 0 9 per 100 lbs. nett 0 21.2 3 1 0 Ditto, if resampled, ditto 0 3 Any quantity exceeding 3 hogsheads, 2d. per hogs- Unhousing and loading, per hogshead 1 0 head additional. Resampling 20 Transfer, per hogshead 02 Weighed gross when an average tare is taken, im- } 26 porter's charge Rates and Charges on WINES and SPIRITS. The Landing and Delivery Rate includes landing, wharfage, laying up to gange, watching, cooper's attendance at landing, delivery, and while on the quay the privilege of lying on the quay 14 days from the versel breaking bulk, or the first landing from craft original warrants, gauges, strengths of spirits, and first samples. The Landing and Housing Rate includes landing, wharfage, laying up to gange, cooperage, cooper's attendance at landing and housing, superintendence in the vaults for the first 18 months; original Digitized by Google 588 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). warrants, gauges, strengths of spirits, and first samples. This rate attaches after the expiration of one calendar month from the ship breaking bulk, or the first landing from craft. Nute.-Merchants requiring wines or spirits to be housed within the time allowed, (one calendar month,) are particularly requested to leave a written order to that effect, when this rate will become immediately chargeable. The Consolidated Rate on Rum includes landing, wharfage, housing, cooper's attendance, coopering, furnishing original warrants, gauges, strength, first samples, and 12 weeks' rent from the ship break- ing bulk, or the first landing from the craft. Rent attaches to Wines and Spirits, charged with the landing and delivery rate, after 14 days, charged with the landing and housing rate, from the ship breaking bulk, or the first landing from craft on rum charged with the consolidated rate, after 12 weeks from the ship breaking bulk. Note.-Rent is in all cases calculated from the date of the ship breaking bulk, or the first landing from craft, such day being included in the term. Racking.-Forty-eight hours' notice will be given when racking is necessary, to enable the pro- prietor to send his own casks, or they will be supplied by the company, at the prices stated herein. The proceeds of the racked casks, when sold, will be paid to the proprietors, upon application, after deducting the expenses of sale, &c. No charge is made on wines and spirite racked in the vaults within 6 months from the period of the landing and housing rate attaching, those for exportation or to be sent coastwise excepted. Tusting is not permitted without a written order, the usual charge for which is not made, when the tasting is by the proprietor or his clerk, (authorised to sign delivery and all other orders,) provided he is not accompanied by any other person. Coopering and Repairs, &c. when required for the preservation of the property on landing, examina- tion, or delivery, will be performed, unless directions are received from the proprietor to the contrary, and charged at the rates specified herein; and any work required to be performed, not particularly described, will be charged at a proportionate rate. Unsizeable casks, at the rate of 210 gallons per tun, for 2 pipes or 4 hogsheads. Deficiencies.-The company make good the following deficiencies from whatever cause arising, If the casks are of oak timber, but not otherwise also, provided the claim be made within 6 months from delivery, viz. Exceeding one gallon each cask, for any period not exceeding one year. Two gallons, if more than one and not exceeding two years, and in like proportion for each succeed- ing year. Payment of Charges.-Previous to warrants being issued, or the transfer or delivery of any wines or spirits taking place, the landing and housing rate on the whole of the mark or parcel housed, must be paid the rent and other charges on the quantity delivered or transferred. Wines and Spirits in cases. Containing 6 dozen. Containing 3 Dosea. Quarts. Plats. Quarts. Fish. s.d. 8. d. s.d. Landing and delivery rate; including landing, wherings, and loading 16 09 09 06 Landing and housing rate including landing, wharfage. housing, examining, coo- pering, and first tasting $ 6 19 19 10 Examining und coopering 16 09 09 06 Rent, from the date of ship breaking bulk, per week 03 0 0 If 01 Wharfage and shipping, is addition to landing and delivery rate 06 0 3 03 08 Breaking out and opening for samples, or second tasting, mailing down, and restowing 06 06 06 04 Lotting for public sale 02 08 02 02 Unhousing and Inading 10 0 6 06 04 Unhousing, wharfage. and shipping 16 : 09 06 Dividing 6-dosen cases into two 3-domen cases, meluding new ends, unpacking, and repacking, each new case 3e. 3d. Cases containing quantities not specified above, are chargeable in the like pro- portion. Unsize- able Aums. Casks per Tun Pipes. Hhds. Thirds. Qr. Half Qr. Casks. Casks. of Double. Single. Half. 210 galls. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. Landing and delivery rate, on wines and spirits, except rum, by land carriage 70 36 21 19 14 10 26 16 12 Shipping from the quay, additional 14 08 05 05 04 03 06 04 03 Quay rent, after 14 ays, per week 10 06 0 31-2 0 31-2 0 21-2 02 04 0 312 0 212 Landing and housing rate, on port, Lisbon, sherry, Malaga, Marsala, Spanish red, Sicilian, and other wines, in wood bound casks; and sherry in iron bound casks 20 10 60 43 38 2 10 Ditto, on Madeira, Cape, Teneriffe, Canary, Marsala, Sicilian, and other wines, in iron bound casks 16 0 80 4 10 38 2 10 56 29 or 20 Ditto, on claret 50 40 30 Ditto, on spirits, (except rum) 18 0 90 55 3 10 33 26 Casks landed with less than the standard number of iron hoops, pay in addition. for each hoop de- ficient* 0 41-2 0 41-2 0 41-2 0 412 0 41-2 0 41-2 0 412 0.412 Delivery from the vault, and cooper's atten lance 50 26 16 13 11 09 19 12 019 If shipped, additional 14 08 05 05 04 03 06 04 03 Rent, from the ship breaking bulk, per week 0 10 05 03 0 21-2 02 0 11-2 03 02 Cooper's superintendence com- mences after 18 months, at per week, additional 02 01 0 01-2 0 01-2 0 01-2 0 01-2 01 0 012 0.018 . The standard number of iron hoops is as follows viz. port and Lisbon pipes, tem; sherry butts, eight; Spanish red, brandy, - Geneva puncheons, six; sums, hogeheads, and smaller casks, six, Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 589 Rum. 100 Gallons. Butts. Pune. Hhds. Barrels.' 8. d. & d. & d. & d. 8. d. Consolidated rate 10 0 Reat, after 12 weeks, per week - 06 04 0 21.2 0 11-2 Cooper's superintendence, ditto - 01 01 01 0 018 Landing and delivery rate 36 Bottling. Magnums. Quarts. Pints. s.d. s.d. s.d. Consolidated rate for bettling, per down 16 10 0 10 Unhousing, wharfage, and shipping, ditto 04 0 3 0 2 Rent to commence the day after bottling, per down per week 01 0 01.8 Ditto, per case of 6 dozen, ditte - - 0 2 Vatting Rum. 100 Gallons. 8. d. Vatting TUIR, including removing to the warehouse, drawing off, refilling, bunging up, the use of the vat for one night, and delivery by land or water $ 8 Ditto, for government contracts $ 6 Ditto, when brought into the dock, including the foregoing openations, and the privilege of lying in the warehouse 4 days 50 Water for reducing the strength, per puncheon 10 Remaining in the vat the second night 0 6 Ditto, more than two nights, per night 0 3 Coopering for exportation, on delivery, per puncheon 09 Ditto, per hogshead 06 Old iron hoops 0 6 Surveys and Certificates. 8. d. Under 5 casks 26 Above 5 casks and under 20 5 0 20 and upwards 7 6 Cooperage, and Extra Rates and Charges on WINES and SPIRITS. Pipes. Hhds. Thirds. Qr. Casks. Half Aums. Qr. Cashs. Double. Single. Half. 8. d. ed s.d. ad. a.d. 8. d. s.d. s. d. Trimming, including wood hoops, or boughing off 20 12 10 0 9 0 7 16 1 0 0 9 Driving 0 10 0 6 0 5 04 0 31 06 04 0 4 Pitching and turning 03 0 2 0 11 0 1 0 0 st 0 11 0 1 Breaking out for coopering 06 0 st 0 3 0 8 0 2 0 6 0 3 0 2 Ditto for delivery, inspection, redip- ping or racking, and laying up again 10 07 06 04 03 09 06 04 Filling up 03 03 0 3 03 03 03 0 3 0 3 Casing or uncasing 16 0 11 0 9 06 04 1 2 09 0 6 Ditto in canvas 70 5 0 5 0 40 8 0 56 46 3 0 Ditto and cases 19 6 12 0 11 0 76 5 6 14 0 86 56 Racking 26 16 13 10 09 19 12 0 10 Racking from the less 36 21 19 16 10 26 19 16 Ditto and repairing casks 15 0 12 6 10 6 90 70 12 6 90 60 Ditto and new casks in bond 27 0 18 0 16 6 13 6 10 6 22 0 14 0 9 6 Ditto and new casks on the quay 24 0 17 0 15 6 12 6 10 0 20 0 13 6 9 0 Trimming cask cases 10 0 8 06 04 0 3 Sampling in the vault, or second sam- pling on the quay 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 06 Tasting in store, each time 02 02 0 2 02 0 2 02 02 0 2 Ditto at public mls 0 1 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 Painting casks 40 86 86 19 10 $ 0 20 16 Painting the heads each 10 09 09 06 06 10 09 06 Bark hoops 19 14 14 10 09 16 14 10 Iron hoops 08 08 08 06 05 08 06 06 New heads 36 3 0 2 9 26 2 3 36 30 2 6 Overdrawing and brandying, or fining 10 0 9 06 06 0 4 09 06 06 TEA. Packages landed in good condition. Rates. 130 lbs. 80 lbs. 60 lbs. 40 lbs. 200 lbs. 30 lbs. 20 lbs. Under and under and under and under and under and under and under gross and 20 lbs. 200 lbs. 130 lbs. 80 lbs. 60 lbs. 40 lbs. 30 lbs. upwards. Gross. Gross. Gross. Gross. Gross. Gross, Gross. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. s.d. . d. s.d. s.d. Landing; comprising landing, wharf. age, weighing. furnishing landing weights, and delivery by land from the quay 16 13 10 0 101-2 09 0 71-2 06 03 Additional, if shipped 06 05 04 0 31-2 03 0 21-2 02 01 Landing and housing; comprising 0 landing, wharfage, weighing, fur- nishing landing weights, housing, and delivery by land 20 18 12 10 10 010 08 04 Additional, if shipped 10 0 10 08 07 06 05 04 02 Minagement; comprising landing, wharfage, weighing, and furnishing landing weights, housing, ordinary mending, tarring, placing on show, extra warehouse room, and attend. ance whilst on show, lotting, nailing down. re-weighing and piling away, and delivery by land 76 56 38 30 24 20 13 10 Additional, if shipped 10 08 06 05 04 03 02 01 Rent. per week 0 11-2 0 1 0 01-2 0 01-2 0 01-2 0 01-2 0 01-4 0 01-4 VoL. 1.-3 D Digitized by Google 590 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). Consolidated Rates on Wood Goods.-Transferring. One Penny per Load. Goods imported. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, Delivery, and One Quarter's Rent. Landing, Wharfage, and Delivery. Rent per Quarter after the first Quarter. Goods imported. Landing, Wharfage, Piling, Delivery, and One Quarter's Rent. Landing, Wharfage, and Delivery. Rent per Quarter fier the first Quarter. Staves, Per #. d. 8. d. 1. d. Deck deals, Per a.d. . d . d from America, 3 in. thick, 30 to 40 feet long each 10 06 04 pipe 1,200 24 0 12 0 5 0 21-2 - 30 40 - - 0 10 05 0 31 hogshead - 20 0 10 0 4 0 2 - 30 40 - - 08 04 03 barrel or heading - 14 0 70 3 0 3 - 20 30 - - 09 05 03 barrel logs - 88 0 44 0 14 8 21-2 I 20 30 - - 0 71 04 0 21 double barrel - 44 0 22 0 7 4 2 - 20 30 - - 06 03 02 from Quebec Dunnage boards 120 12 6 03 40 pipe logs 3 to 4in. thick - 120 0 60 0 20 0 Norway timber and balks load 60 36 30 double pipe 2-21-2 - 64 0 32 0 10 8 Spars under 6 and above 4 inches 120 40 0 20 0 134 single 1-2 - - 36 0 18 0 6 0 Rickers, under 4 inches, and 24 feet hogshead logs 3-4 - - 100 0 50 0 16 8 long and upwards - 25 0 12 6 84 double hogshead 21-2 - - 50 0 25 0 8 4 under 24 feet long - 12 0 60 40 single 1-2 30 0 15 0 5 8 Handspikes 60 30 20 - - - barrel logs 4 - - 88 0 44 0 14 0 Ufers, under 24 feet long - 25 0 12 6 84 double barrel 2 21-2 - - 44 0 22 0 7 4 from 24 to 32 - - 40 0 90 0 13 4 single - 1-2 - - 26 0 13 0 4 4 32 feet long and upwards - 66 0 33 0 a 0 heading logs 3 - 4 - - 88 0 44 0 14 8 Sparholtz and 10 ells to add one double heading 21-2 - - 44 0 22 0 7 4 third to the rates on ufers. single 1.2 - - 26 0 13 0 4 4 Oars under 24 feet long - 12 6 63 42 from Hambro' and Dantzic, from 24 to 32 - - 20 0 10 0 68 pipe - 40 0 20 0 15 0 32 feet long and upwards - 30 0 15 0 16 0 hogshead - 37 6 18 9 12 6 Lancewood spare - 30 0 15 0 90 barrel - 35 6 17 9 10 0 Gun stocks - 60 30 20 heading - 32 0 16 0 10 0 Lathwood under 5 feet long fathom 90 46 30 thin pipe to 1-2 in. thick - 27 0 13 6 10 6 from 5 to 8 - - 12 0 60 40 hogshead - 25 0 12 6 10 0 Fir staves - 16 0 76 50 barrel and heading - - 20 0 10 0 8 0 Treenails, large, above 2 ft. long 1,200 12 0 60 40 sorting, per 1,200 7s. small, under 2 - 80 40 26 - Deals, standard hundred of 120 Wainscot logs, 7 feet long each 09 05 03 Russia and Prussia deals and deal ends, 14 - - 20 10 08 11-2 inch thick and 12 ft. long - 12 6 6 3 4 0 Clap boards 3 - - 03 0 01 Swedish deals from ports in the 6 - - 06 03 0 : Baltic, Oak and other timber charged with 2 1-2 and 3 in. thick, 14 ft. long 20 0 12 6 7 0 duty by the load, 1 1.2 and 2 - 14 - - 16 8 8 4 5 6 square, per load of 50 ft. 66 40 10 Quebec. Norway. and Swedish round, per load of 40 ft. deals from ports in the North including under cover, per load 70 16 Sea, Deal plank and boards 70 36 26 2 1-2 and 3 in. thick, Firewood fathom 70 36 16 10 and 12 feet long - 16 0 80 5 6 Spokes, American 1,200 20 0 10 0 40 to 14 - - 19 0 96 6 6 Teakwood, planks of, not under - 16 - 22 0 11 0 76 cover load 70 40 16 - - 18 - - 25 0 12 6 86 under cover - 76 20 - 20 - - 23 0 14 0 96 Battens from all ports, Turning to measure for sale at land- 2 1-2 and 3 in. thick, ing, oak or other timber, 1a. per 10 and 12 feet long - 12 0 6 0 4 0 load. to 14 - - 14 3 70 49 - 16 - - 16 6 83 56 Sorting staves for freight, 7s. per - 18 - - 18 9 90 63 1,200. 20 - - 21 0 10 6 70 2 1-2 and 3 inch half deals - 9 0 46 3 0 Marking lots on timber piled in tiers deal ends - 70 36 24 4d. per lot. batten ends - 50 26 20 paling boards - 60 30 26 RATES ON GOODS SENT TO THE LONDON DOCKS FOR EXPORTATION. Which, if cleared, may be shipped on board until sunset. If goods be not shipped at the expiration of 3 weeks, rent is charged upon them. Goods not enti- merated in the following Table, are charged by the package, see post. Rent after Three Weeks. Rent after Three Wesks. Goods for Exportation. Wharfage and Shipping. Goods for Exportation. Quantities, ac. Wharfage pers Per Shipping. Per Quantities, in Week. Week. Per 8. d. a. Per Per 8. d. 8. d. Per Acide middling case 30 09 middling case Bagging, about 2 qra, roll 0 8 26 100 mile small case 20 06 small case Bark chest 10 03 chest Almonds, in serons ton 34 08 ton balf chest or seron 0 8 08 1-8 chest or in boxes or barrels cwt. 0 4 40 100 Barley tierce 1 0 03 tierce 2 0 100 half ditto small cask 08 0 1-2 small cosk barrel about Scwt. sack 01 0 3 06 sack 2 qrs. 0 2 05 0 1 1-2 or 1-4 barrel jug or barrel to to score shell cwt. 0 6 0 4 large bale 04 010 0 3 small ditto Barrows each 02 05 score 0 2 1-2 bale from 3qra. Bedsteads, according to 06 01 to I cwt. 2 qra. to to Alum ton 26 0 6 size each) tom 16 03 Anchors or grapnels, too 34 0 3 ton Beef and pork tierce 06 80 100 therem Anchovies, case containing barrel 04 60 100 terrels 8 barrels 0 8 0 I case Bear kilderkin 04 01 kilderkin double barrel 02 05 barrel 0 4 0118 barrel keg or single barrel 0 I score hogehead 0 8 02 Aniseed chest 09 0 1 chest butt or punchese 1 4 0 4 hogebead butt or peachess half chest 06 0 1.2 1-2 chest bottled, in casks, dozen Annotto small basket 04 0 small basket bottles 0 I 0 01-4 doesn bottles 06 0 1 in cases, bottles, or ham- Axle tress each to to each pers dossn bottles 0 2 0 018 doses bottles 16 08 Bess' wax, in casks ton S 4 0 10 too Bacom bale 06 0 bale 5 to 6 cwt. bale 14 04 fule side 02 0 0 side about 4 cwt. bale 10 0 3 06 0 08 0 2 Baggage package to to package Bellows, smiths' pair to to 20 06 26 06 Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 591 Rent after Three Weeks. Rent after Three Weeks. Goods for Exportation. Wharfage and Shipping. Goods for Exportation. Wharfage and Per Shipping. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, &c. Per #. d. s. d, Per Per 8. d. s. d. Per 2 6 0 6 Colours, in casks ton 3 4 0 8 ton Billiard tables each to to each Copper, in casks, 4 to 6 5 0 1 0 cwt. ton 3 4 0 4 ton Blacking firkin 0 4 0 03-4 firkin in cases, 5 to 7 cwt. case 1 4 barrel 0 6 0 I barrel 7 to 8 cwt. case 2 0 06 ton small cask 0 8 0 1-2 small cask 9 to 10 cwt. case 2 6 from 5 to 7 cwt. cask 1 0 0 2 cask bottoms, 1 cwt. bottom 0 4 - 0 ton about 8 cwt. cask I 2 0 2 1-2 cask 2 cwt. bottom 0 8 1 0 ton 9 cwt. cask 1 4 0 3 cask bolts 2 ewt. bundle 0 8 0 I bundle from 10 to 15 cwt. cask 1 6 0 3 1-2 cask sheets, loose ton 40 1 0 ton 15 & under 20 cwt. cask 26 0 4 cask cakes ton 3 4 including weighing about 20 cwt. cask 30 0 6 cask Coppers, about 14 cwt. Bottles, empty glass, con- each 5 0 1 0 ton taining from 15 to 20 Cordage ton 3 4 0 8 ton dozen crate 08 0 2 crate Cork ton 40 I 0 ton from 21 to 29 doz. crate 10 0 2 1-2 crate 0 2 0 I 30 to 44 doz. crate 14 0 3 crate Corks bag or cask to to bag or cask 45 to 50 doz. crate 20 0 4 crate 0 8 0 2 0 1 Corn, in sacks each 06 0 1 each small basket or box to 001-4 small basket or box Cotton, East India bale 0 8 0 1-2 bale 0 2 1 1-2 bale 0 4 0 1 1-2 bale Bran sack 04 0 I sack American bale 1 0 0 2 bale Bread hag 0 4 0 0 1-2 bag twist, under 2 cwt. 2 qrs. Bricks 1,200 7 6 0 6 1,200 bale 0 8 0 2 bale if shipped by crew 1,200 2 6 0 6 1,200 presses, wooden each 10 0 1 0 each Brooms, birch, 1 dozen iron each 20 0 1 6 each bundle 0 I 0 01-4 bundle Cows, shipped by machine 2 dozen bundle 02 0 0 1-2 bundle each 8 6 hair or house bundle 0 2 0 01-2 bundle Cowries ton 3 4 0 6 ton Bullion large package I 0 Currants butt 2 0 0 6 butt small package 0 8 pipe 16 0 3 pipe Butter tub or firkin 0 2 3 0 100 firkins or tub carotel 1 0 0 2 carotel 1-4 cask 0 4 6 0 100 quarter casks 0 4 , Cables, hemp ton 3 4 0 8 ton Dampers, iron each to 03 ton chain ton 3 4 0 3 ton 0 8 , Camphor chest 0 8 0 11-2 chest Dogs each 06 Candles, less than 28 lbs. Drips and pots 1,000 10 0 1 6 1,000 box 0 2 0 01-2 box Drugs, under 2 cwt. 2 qrs. 28 lbs. to 1 cwt. box 03 0 box chest 0 8 0 2 chest above 1 cwt. box 0 4 0 1-2 box 2 cwt. 2 qrs. to 5 CWL Canes, common rattan, chest 1 0 0 3 chest 1,000 1 0 0 3 1,000 0 6 0 2 Cannons, under 2 tons, each 3 0 04 Earthenware crate to to crate under 4 tons® each 6 0 0 6 each 1 4 0 3 . Larger in proportion 5 0 0 6 Canvass bolt 0 1 1 3 100 bolts Engines, fire each to to each 20 0 3 10 0 0 9 Carts, according to size, each to to each garden each 2 6 0 3 each 5 0 06 0 8 0 2 0 4 0 1 Felt bale to to bale Cart wheels pair to to pair 1 0 0 3 1 0 02 Fire-arms large chest 1 4 0 3 large chest Casks, empty sugar hhd. 0 6 0 1-2 sugar hogshead 0 8 0 2 butt or puncheon 0 4 0 1 butt or puncheon case or chest to to case or chest hogshead 0 2 0 0 1.2 hogshead 1 0 0 3 barrel 0 I 0 3 score Fire or flagstones ton 3 4 0 3 ton Cassia chest 0 8 0 2 chest Fish, loose ton 5 0 0 8 ton under cwt. 1-2 chest 0 4 0 I 1-2 chest 0 3 0 01-2 Cement barrel 0 6 0 1 barrel barrel or box to to barrel or box 1.2 barrel 04 0 03-4 1-2 barrel 0 4 0 1 1 6 0 2 Flax ton 3 0 0 8 ton Chaff cutters, according to to each 1 cwt. or qrs. bag 0 4 0 03-4 bag to size each 2 6 03 Flints, under 1 cwt. kez 02 0 01-2 keg Chairs, single or mahoga- Flour barrel 0 4 0 10 score barrels each 0 2 0 012 each Furniture in ny packages, common, bundle con- according to size. taining 2 0 4 0 012 bundle other bundles in pro- Ginger ton 5 0 I 0 ton portion. Glass box or 1-2 box 0 4 0 1 box or 1-2 box F Chaises with 4 wheels, crate 0 8 02 crate each 60 0 10 each 1-4 crate 0 8 0 1 1-4 crate 2 wheels, each 5 0 06 each butt or hogshead I 6 04 butt or hogshead / Chalk. in casks ton 26 0 6 ton pipe or puncheon 12 0 3 pipe or puncheon Chariots each 8 6 1 0 each tierce I 0 0 3 tierce , Cheese, loose cwt 0 3 0 01-2 cwt. 0 4 0 I hamper 0 4 0 I hamper small cask to to small cask about I cwt. basket 0 4 0 I basket 0 8 : ) 2 qrs. basket 0 2 0 01-2 basket plate small case 0 8 02 small case / Cider pipe - 6 04 pipe middling case 1 4 0 4 middling case hogshead 09 02 hogshead large case 2 0 0 6 large case Cinnamon single bale 0 8 0 2 single bale 0 6 0 2 double bale 1 0 0 3 double bale Grates and stoves each to to each 3 or 4 bolts, package 16 04 package 10 03 j 6 bolts, package 26 08 package Grindstones, for every six case or chest 14 03 case or chest inches in diaineter 0 2 0 0 1-2 1-2 chest 0 8 02 1-2 chest Gritts firkin 0 2 0 5 ton I 0 0 2 Gum seron 0 6 0 1 seron Clocks in cases, accord- to to each chest 1 0 0 3 chest ing to size each 20 04 j Guns. See Fire-arms. Cloves small bag 0 4 01 small bag great. See Cannons. about 2 cwt. bag 0 8 : bag Gypsum hogshead 1 6 0 4 hogshead 5 or 6 cwt. cask 20 06 cask puncheon I 2 0 2 puncheon i Coaches, stage each 15 0 16 each Hams, loose each 0 1 0 5 score private each 10 0 1 0 each 0 6 0 I , Coals hogehead 1 6 0 3 hogshead in casks cask to to cask Coffee bag 04 I 6 04 s small bale 0 6 Hardware, 5 to cask 1 0 0 212 cask 3 cwt. 2 qrs. to 4 cwt. 10 ton 8 to 9 cwt. cask I 4 0 3 cask r bale 08 to cwt. cask 1 6 0 4 cask 5 ewt. bale 10 12 to 15 cwt. cask 2 0 05 cask 3 0 06 ? 15 to 7cwt. cask or 6 06 cask fans each to to each 26 06 50 08 Harps or harpsichords, to to each I 26 0 6 according to size, each 5 0 09 engines or shellers, to to each Harrows pair 2 0 04 pair each 50 08 Hats case 1 0 0 3 case Coke chaldron 40 10 chaldron Hat boxes each 0 2 Digitized by Google 592 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). Rent after Three Weeks. Wharfage Rent after Three Weeks. Goods for Exportation. and Shipping. Goods for Exportation. Wharfage and Per Shipping. Per Week. Quantities, &c. Week. Quantities, kc. Ppr #. d. s. d. Per Per a. d. s. d. Per Hay load of 36 trusses 4 0 , Paper bale 08 02 bale bale of 3 trusses 04 03 score trusses small bale 0 6 0 11-2 small bale truss 0 2 ) Pearl barley, 1 cwt. barrel Hemp ton 3 0 0 8 ton or keg 0 4 0 1 barrel or keg screws each 0 4 0 I each 04 0 03-4 ) Herrings barrel 0 4 0 01-2 barrel Pepper bag to to bag Hides or skins, East India, 06 0 1 1 5 to 7 lbs. 100 2 0 06 100 Perry butt 16 04 butt 10 to 12 lbs. each 0 0 1-2 0 6 100 Piano-fortes, grand, each 40 1 0 each OX and cow 100 6 0 16 100 cabinet each 30 0 9 each Hoops, wood bundle 0 1 0 3 score bundles square each 20 06 each truss bundle 0 2 0 5 score bundles Pickles large package 10 0 2 large package Hops bag 0 8 02 bag middling package 06 0 I middling package pocket 0 6 0 1 pocket small package 03 0 012 small package Horn, tips and plates, hhd. I 4 0 4 hogshead Pigs each 06 Horses each 10 0 Pipeclay, loose ton 34 0 3 fon cob or pony each 5 6 hogshead 16 0 2 1.2 hogshead Indian rubber barrel 0 6 0 11-2 barrel puncheon I 2 0 2 puncheon Indigo seron 0 6 0 11-2 seron 04 0 1 about 3 qrs. 1-2 chest or small cask to to small cask box 0 6 0 1.2 1.2 chest or box 08 0 11-2 , chest 0 8 0 2 chest Pipes, empty each 04 0 1 each Iron, bars and unmanu. Pitch barrel 0 4 6 0 100 barrels factured ton 2 6 0 3 ton Plants, about 5 cwt. pack- hoops 1 cwt. bundle 0 4 ) age 16 0 4 package 3 qrs. bundle 0 3 06 ton middling package 10 0 3 middling package 2 qrs. bundle 0 2 small package 0 8 0 2 small package pots 100 4 0 0 9 100 Ploughs each 1 0 0 3 each ( 0 2 Potatoes, about 1 cwt. tire bundle to 01-2 bundle basket 0 3 0 0 1-2 basket 04 3 bushels, sack 06 0 1 sack heavy manufactured ma- ton 30 0 4 ton chinery, mill work, Quicksilver, iron bottle 02 0 01-2 each &c. &c., pieces above Rags 3 cwt. bag 04 0 1 bag 1 ton ton 60 06 ton Rice bag 0 3 0 4 ton under ton ton 5 0 06 ton Rigging ewt. 04 0 034 cwt. scrap, loose ton 4 0 06 ton Rosin barrel 0 4 6 0 100 barrels in bags ton 3 0 06 ton Safflower, under 2 cwt. burdles each 0 1 05 score 2 qrs. bale 08 0 2 bale . Weighing 1s. 6d. per above 2 cwt. 2 qrs. bale 10 0 3 bale ton. Sago, in boxes about 1 cwt. Ivory cwt. 0 3 0 1 cwt. box 04 0 I box Knives, Malay, small cask 0 8 02 small cask Sail-cloth bolt 0 1 0 3 score Lac dye 3 cwt. chest I 0 0 or chest Saltpetre, rough, in bags, about 1 cwt. 2 qrs. chest 0 8 0 11-2 chest tnn 30 0 6 ton 0 9 0 4 refined, 1 cwt. barrel 04 0 012 barrel Lace package to to package above 1 to 2 cwt. cask 06 0 I cask I 6 09 10 cwt. cask 12 03 cask Laths bundle 0 1 1 6 100 bundles Saws bundle 06 0 10 score bundles Lead, in pigs ton 2 0 03 ton Seed, clover or other bale 0 8 0 112 bale black 40 lbs. cask 0 2 0 01-2 cask Seed lac, 2 cwt. to 2 qrs. shot, bars, or rolls, ton 3 4 0 3 ton bag 08 0 2 bag Lime puncheon 12 0 3 puncheon Sheep each 06 hogshead I 6 0 4 hogshead Shellac, in bags or bundles, 0 4 0 1 , ton 50 1 0 ton small cask to to small cask Skins 18 to 20 cwt. cask 30 0 7 cask 0 8 02 s 15 cwt. cask 26 0 6 cask Logwood ton 2 3 0 6 ton vat 16 0 6 vat Mace and nutmegs, small hogshead 12 0 4 hogshead cask 0 8 0 2 small cask tierce 10 0 3 tierce Mangles each 5 0 0 6 each goat and Mogadore, Manure, about I ton cask 26 0 4 cask about 2 cwt 2 qrs. Melting pots ton 5 0 0 6 ton bale 04 0 1 1-2 bale ( 1 0 0 3 , large bale 06 0 2 large bale Mill cases each to to -each Slates hogshead 20 04 hogshead 20 0 4 j puncheon 16 0 3 puncheon gudgeons each 1 0 0 3 each Soap, 56 lbs. and under, stones, about I ton each 40 0 6 each small box 02 0 01-2 small box Mineral brown (in turpen- 67 and under 112lbs. box 04 0 I box tine casks) 3 cwt. barrel 0 6 06 ton 1 and under 2 cirt. chest 06 0 1-2 chest Molasses puncheon 12 0 3 puncheon 2 and under 3 cwt. chest 08 0 2 chest Mother-o-pearl shells, ton 5 0 0 8 tou 3 to 5 cwt. chest 10 03 chest Mules each 2 6 I 0 0 3 Musk box 1 box 0 8 0 2 Sofas each to to each Mustard keg 04 0 1 keg 1 6 04 not exceeding 28 lbs. keg 0 2 0 01-2 keg Spades 1 doz. bundle 04 0 I bundle Nails 2 qrs. keg 0 2 3 0 100 kegs 2 doz. bundle 08 0 OF bundle I cwt. 2 qrs. keg 0 4 0 034 keg Spelter ton 20 0 4 ton 1 cwt. 2 qrs. to 2 cwt. Spirits, see Wines. cask 0 6 0 1 cask Starch 1 cwt. box 06 0 1 box ton 5 0 0 6 ton under I cwt. box 0 4 0 1 box Nankeens, not exceeding Staves, wine hogshead, I cwt. case or chest 0 6 0 11-2 case or chest pack 02 0 012 pack Negro clothing, puncheon 1 0 0 3 puncheon pipe, leager, or sugar Nutria skins 4 cwt. bale 0 8 0 2 bale hogshead pack 04 0 01-2 pack 5 ewt. bale 10 0 3 bale Steel, in bars ton 3 4 0 4 ton Oakum 2 qra. bundle 02 0 0 1-2 bundle in bundles, 1 cwt. Oil cake ton 36 0 6 ton bundle 04 06 ton hogshead I 6 0 4 hogshead ( 06 02 puncheon 12 0 3 puncheon Stoves and grates each to to each' Oil tun 36 0 8 tun - 10 03 j under 3 gallons, jug 0 2 Straw truss 01 03 score trusses 3 to 7 gallons, ug 04 0 1-4 gallon Sugar mat or bag 0 4 0 01-2 mat or bag 8 to 10 gallons, jug 06 1 4 or 5 cwt. mat or 11 to 12 gallons, jug : 0 0 1-4 gallon basket 0 8 0 1 mat or basket chest 08 0 01-2 chest boxes or chests ton 3 4 0 5 ton 1-2 chest 04 0 0 1-4 1-2 chest bastard, not exceeding 2 0 0 6 2ewt. 2 qrs. barrel 0 5 0 1 barrel Organs each to to each under 8 cwt. tierce 0 9 0 2 tierce 50 1 0 12 and under 14 cwt. Osnaburghs, loose, piece 0 1 0 01-4 piece cask 16 Ox bowsor yokes, 1 dozen 05 ton 14 cwt. and upwards, bundle 0 3 0 bundle cask 20 Oxen each 10 0 refined hogshead 12 0 3 bogshead Paint, in small kegs, ton 8 0 1 0 ton 12 & und. 14cwt. cask 16 04 cask in casks containing do., 14 - 18 cwt. cask 20 06 cask ton 3 4 06 ton 18 - 24 cwt. cask 2 6 0 7 cask Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (LONDON). 593 Goods for Exportation. Wharfage Rent after Three Weeks. and Shipping. Per Goods for Exportation. Quantities, &c. Wharfage and Shipping. Rent after Three Weeks. Per Week. Week. Quantities, &c. #. d. 8. d. Per 8. d. a. d. Per Sugar-continued. Per vat, 76 10 Refined, packed in hogs- Per 16 cwt. Wagons each to to each heads or vats, to be hhd. and up- 10 0 I 6 housed for exportation. wards. Whalebone 5 cwt. bale 10 04 bale ton 50 10 ton Housing 06 10 04 0 I Weighing or re-weighing 06 10 Wheels, according to to to Unhousing, wharfage, and size pair pair 10 02 shipping 18 30 Wheelbarrows each 02 0 01-4 each Rent per week 03 0 6 Wine, bottled, in casks, dozen bottles 0 1 0 014 dozen bottles Wharfg. Rent in cases dozen bottles 0 2 0 dozen bottles and per Spirits, pipe, puncheon, Shipping Week. or butt 20 06 pipe, pun. or butt Per . d. 3. d. Per hogshead 10 0 3 hogshead Tallow ton 26 06 ton No charge is made for Tar barrel 0 4 60 100 barrels wharfage of wines and Tea chest I 0 03 chest spirits landed at the 1-2 chest 0 8 02 1.2 chest docks, and carted to the 1-4 chest 0 6 0 112 1-4 chest export quay, except for small box 0 4 0 1 small box striking and ship- Tiles, Welch, about 1 foot ping," viz. square 100 20 0 6 100 pipe, butt, and pun- Tin box 0 4 0 01-2 box cheon 8d. barrel 0 6 0 1 barrel hogshead 4d. 1. block 0 2 06 score Wire, iron, 1 cwt. 2 qrs. Tombstones each 5 0 06 each bundle 0 6 01 bundle Tripe keg 0 2 0 0 1-4 keg Wood ton 23 03 ton 0 0 1-2 When not cleared the Turmeric bag to 10 ton same day as sent down, 0 2 piling is charged. 0 6 0 1 1 Wood hoops bundle 0 1 03 score bundles Turpentine carboy to to carboy truss bundle 0 2 05 score bundles 10 03 1 Wool, English, 3 cwt. to Varnish barrel 0 6 0 I barrel 3 cwt. 2 qrs. bale 0 9 0 234 bale Vermilion, 2 to 3 cwt. 3 cwt. 2 qrs. to 5 cwt. chest or package 20 04 chest or package bale 10 0 3 bale Vinegar puncheon I 4 04 puncheon Spanish 1 cwt. bag 0 5 0 1 bag hogshead 0 8 0 2 hogshead 2 cwt. bag 0 8 02 bag barrel or 1-2 hogshead 06 0 11-2 barrel or 1-2 hhd. 2 cwt. 2 qrs. bag 09 0 214 bag *Vitriol, carboys gallon 0 4 0 1 gallon German, under 4 cwt. middling case 3 0 09 middling case bag 08 02 bag small case 2 0 0 6 small case 4 to 6 cwt. bag 10 0 3 bag 6 cwt. & upwards, bag 14 0 4 bag * N. B.-" Persons sending to the dock, for shipment, aquafortis, oil of vitriol, or other goods of a dangerous quality, and neglecting to distinctly mark, or state, the nature of such goods on the outside of the package, or otherwise give due notice thereof to the superintendent, are subject to a penalty of 20L."-(See act 9 Geo. 4. c. 116. 132.) WHEN CHARGED BY THE PACKAGE. Wharfage Rent after Three Weeks. Goods for Exportation. and Shipping. Quantities, &c. Wharfage Rent after Three Weeks. Per Goods for Exportation. and Shipping. Per Week. Week. Quantities, &c. Per #. d. #. d. Per Per s. d. 8. d. Per . Bags, small each 04 01 each Cases-continued. Bales, small each 08 02 each extra large, 7 to 8 cwt. middling each 1 0 0 3 each each 20 large, 5 and under 7 cwt. 9 to 12 cwt. each 26 001-2 cwt. each 14 0 3 each above 12 cwt. each 30 7 and under 8 cwt. Casks, butts each 16 0 4 each each 16 hogshead each I 2 0 3 each 8 and under 12 cwt. pipe or puncheon each 14 0 4 each each 2 0 tierce or wine hhd. each 0 8 0 2 each 12 and under 14 cwt. 04 0 1 each 2 6 0012 cwt. small each to to each 14 and under 16 cwt. 06 0 11-2 each 3 0 Chests, small each 08 0 2 each 16 cwt. and upwards middling each 10 0 3 each each 40 large each 14 0 4) each E.I. goods, single, each 08 02 each Hogsheads, not exceeding double each I 4 03 each 8 or 9 cwt. each 12 0 3 each half bales repacked, Jars, see Bottles. each 06 0 11-2 each 02 0 012 Barrels each 06 0 11-2 each Kegs each to to each Baskets, small each 02 0 01-2 each 04 01 middling each 04 0 each 09 0 1 large each 0 6 0 1-2 each Packs, vats, &c. bale to to bale Bottles or jars, 1 to 3 gal- 1 0 02 lons each 0 2 Pipes each 14 0 4 each 4 to 7 gallons each 04 7 to 10 gallons 06 0014 gallon Portmanteaus, ordinary each size each 0 6 0 11-2 each 11 to 12 gallons each 08 Other sizes will be r 0 2 0 01-2 charged in proportion, Boxes each to to each and rent one fourth of 0 8 02 the rate for wharfage Bundles, large each I 0 03 each and shipping. middling each 09 0 21-4 each Puncheons each 14 04 each small each 06 0 11-2 each 08 02 Cases, small each 08 02 each Tierces each to to each middling each 10 03 each 10 03 large, 5 to 6 cwt. each 14 0 3 each Trunks each 0 6 0 11-2 each 6 to 7 cwt. each 16 0 01-2 cwt. 06 06 Trusses each to to each 10 0 112 Goods not included in the foregoing Tables pay in proportion to the rates therein contained, according to weight or size. 3. East India Docks.-These docks, situated at Blackwall, were originally intended for the accommodation of ships employed by the East India Company, or in the East Indian trade; but they are now open to vessels from all parts. There are 2 docks; 1 for ships un- 3 D 2 75 Digitized by Google 594 DOCKS ON THE THAMES (ST. KATHERINE'S). loading inwards, and 1 for those loading outwards. The Import Dock contains about 18 acres, and the Export Dock about 9 acres. The entrance basin, which connects the docks with the river, contains about 21 acres: the length of the entrance lock is 210 feet, the width of the gates 48 feet clear. The depth of water in the East India Docks is never less than 23 feet; so that they can accommodate ships of greater burden than any other esta- blishment on the river. There is attached to them a splendid quay fronting the river, nearly 700 feet in length, with water sufficient at all times of the tide to float the largest steam ships; and the Export Dock is furnished with a machine for masting and dismasting the largest ships. The Company have, also, since the termination of the East India Company's trade, purchased 3 of the bonded warehouses belonging to that body, situated in the heart of the city, in which they warehouse and show tea and other goods, on the same terms as st the London or St. Catherine's Docks.-(See Rates below.) The discharging of ships in the Import Dock is wholly performed by the servants of the Company, and the regulations as to fire, cooking, &c. are similar to those in the other docks. The docks are distant 31 miles from the Royal Exchange, and coaches run every half hour between those places, at the moderate charge of 6d. Should the projected railway to Blackwall be completed, the journey to the docks, or from them to the Exchange, will be accomplished in less than 10 minutes. Were this effected, no steamers, or at least none above 100 tons burden, should be allowed to come higher up than Blackwall. It will, we apprehend, be found to be quite impossible, so long as they are allowed to come further up than this, to regulate their speed, or to prevent the perpetual recurrence of accidents. The company's capital, including the cost of the city warehouses, is 623,000L The pre- sent dividend is 6 per cent.; and the stock is now (December 1836) worth from 116/ to 117L The management is committed to 12 directors, each holding 2,000L stock. Rates of Charge.-The charges on goods exported are the same as at the other docks. Inwards they are, as before stated, the same as at the other docks, when the goods are brought up to the city warehouses; but if kept down at the docks, or while they are there, the charges and rent are considerably lower. Tonnags Rates, &c., on Shipping. Vessals Inwards. 8. d. Charges for Masting or Dismosting at the Mest-Building. For discharging cargoss, and for the use of the dock for twenty-eight days from the date of final discharge, with Main Fore Misso Bow. liberty to load for any port, per register ton 16 Mast. Mast. Mast. april. N. B -Ship cooperage, when incurred, will be charged and vessels discharging the whole, or greater Ships of Lad. L.s.d. Lid L.d. part of their cargoes into lighters, will be subject to 1,000 to 1,500 tons 900 880 $ 12 0 4100 3120 such terms as shall be agreed upon between the ship- 800 1,000 - 6 15 0 660 owners and the Dock Company. 660 800 - 400 3180 200000 600 650 - 340 2 16 0 1120 Rent, after the expiration of twenty-eight days from the 300 560 - 2126 850 163 time of final discharge, per register ton per week 01 under 300 - 1176 IS 9 186 Vensels of 600 tons and upwards (having landed the greater part of their import cargoes in the East India Dock) when lying up, per register ton per week 0 For putting on or taking off Tops. Vessels Outwards. Main. Fore. Mom. Entering to load, that have not discharged their Import cargoes in the docks, for any period not exceeding twenty- For Ships of L.s.d. Led Led eight days from the date of entrance, per register ton 1,000 to 1,600 tone 0 15 0 0150 0100 06 800 1,000 0100 0100 050 Rent, after the expiration of twenty-eight days, per register 500 800 - 076 076 050 ton per week 01 under 500 in proportion. Vensels Lying up. The prices of the above Tables are for each operation, which it Light vessels (other than steam vemels) entering the dock to cludes the use of masting-fall and alings. lie up for any period not exceeding twenty-eight days, per N. B.-Owners of ships may purchase not less than half a fall, at register ton 06 25 per cent. under the ready money cost price. Rent, after the expiration of twenty-eight days, per register ton per week - 01 Rates on Goods in up-town Warehouses. Steam Vessels. Landing Manage- Rest per Rent, from the date of entrance, per register ton per week 01 and ment. Went. The charge for getting out and landing, lifting, or shipping Housing. boilers and heavy machinery (including the use of gear) is, per ton 50 Tea, in packages of ad ed ad Use of wharf for ditto, per ton per week 0 6 200 lb. gross, and upwards 20 7 6 0113 130 and under 200 18 56 01 Coasters and Craft. 80 - 130 18 38 0012 60 - 20 10 30 0013 Other than lighters, with cargo for outward bound ships, with 40 - 60 10 24 0 013 liberty to remain for one week, per register ton 06 30 0018 - 40 010 80 Other than lighters loading from the Import Warehouses, 1 20 - 30 08 13 0014 with the like privilege, on the gross weight they take on under 20 04 10 0014 board, per ton 06 Silk, Bengal, per bale In either case, rent, after the expiration of one week, per 150 lbs. and upwards 88 $ 6) OIH register tou 01 104 to 150 20 76 0118 under 104 16 66 Water. China, per bale, Supplied from the reservoir, per tun 0 104 lbs. and upwards 20 76 who including 0112 Filtered water, do. 2 0 under 104 16 16 0113 4. St. Katharine's Docks.-The Company for the construction of these docks was incor- porated by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 105. (local), and they were partially opened on the 25th of October, 1828. They are situated immediately below the Tower, and are consequently the most contiguous of any to the city, the Custom-house, and other places where business is transacted. The capital raised by shares amounts to 1,352,800/. but an additional sum of 800,000/. has been borrowed, on the security of the rates, for the completion of the works, Digitized by Google DOCKS ON THE THAMES (ST. KATHERINE'S). 595 and the purchase of a freehold property possessing river frontage from the Tower to the corner of Lower East Smithfield, of the value of upwards of 100,000l., but not required for the immediate purpose of the act. A portion of this property has been appropriated as a steam packet wharf, where passengers embark and land without the aid or risk of boat con- veyance. The purchase of the numerous houses that stood upon the ground occupied by the docks proved, as in the case of the London Docks, a heavy item of expense. The space included within the outer wall is about 24 acres, nearly 11 of which are water. There are 2 docks, communicating by a basin. The lock leading from the river is 180 feet long, and 45 broad it is so constructed, that ships of upwards of 600 tons burden may pass in and out 3 hours before high water, so that outward-bound ships have the opportunity of reach- ing Blackwall before the tide begins to recede. Ships of upwards of 800 tons register are docked and undocked without difficulty, and the depth of water at the entrance exceeds that of any other wet dock in the port of London. Vessels are also docked and undocked by night as well as by day,-an advantage peculiar to this establishment. A clear channel of not less than 300 feet in width is at all times to be kept in the pool; and vessels drawing 18 feet water may lie afloat at low water at the principal buoy off the dock entrance. The warehouses and vaults are upon a very large scale; far more so than one might be disposed to infer from the extent of water. The warehouses are exceedingly well contrived and com- modious; and, owing to their being built partly on pillars (within which what is called the quay work of the other docks is transacted, close to the water's edge, goods are hoisted direct from the hold of the vessel, without its being necessary, as in the West India and London Docks, to land them on quays; so that there is in this way a great saving both of room, time, and labour. The whole establishment is exceedingly complete, and reflects the greatest credit on the public spirit, enterprise, and skill, of those by whom it was pro- jected and executed. The regulations to be observed by vessels using the St. Katharine's Docks are similar to those enforced in the West India Docks, to which, as in the case of the London Docks, we beg to refer. Table of Tonnage Rates chargeable on Vessels entering the St. Katherine Docks and also of the Rates for discharging Cargoes landed by the Company, subject to such Revision, from Time to Time, as shall be found expedient. Vessels Inwards. Vessels Outwards entering the Docks without Cargoes. On Vessels laden, Per Ton arriving from Register. Privilege. Per Ton Register. Privilege. s. d. Vessels whose cargoes are dis- charged by the Dock Company. Loading for any) s. d. Use of the Docks to vessels arriving port enumerated First Class. Any from Hambro', or from any port in the Import 0 6 Use of dock to port of the United in the Mediterranean, for 6 Table in first load 4 weeks Kingdom, Isle of weeks from the dateo entrance; class from date of Rent after ex- Man, Jersey, Guern- if arriving from any other port, Do. do. 2d. do. 0 9 entrance piration of the sey, Alderney, Sark, 4 weeks from the date of final Vessels loading in privilege, Id. or other European discharge, with liberty to load part, on quantity per ton regis- ports outside the Bal- outwards for any port or place, taken on board Use of dock to ter per week. tic, between the and to quit the docks for repairs, according to as above load 1 week North Cape and and re-enter the period of ab- their port of des- from entrance* Ushant 0 6 sence from dock for such pur- tination, asabove poses not to affect the privilege. classified. Vessels whose cargoes are dis- Second Class-Any charged by their crews. Table of special Regulations, Remissions, and Exemptions, and other port. 0 9 The like privilege, but to com- Miscellaneous Charges applicable to Vessels inwards, not being mence from the date of en- fully laden, or laden with the Articles enumerated, or entering trance, the Docks light, &c. No tonnage rate will be charged on vessels wholly corn laden, Per Ton whose cargoes shall be landed in the docks; but a charge will in Register. such case be made for docking and undocking, as under: L. s. d. Rent, in each case, after the expiration of the pri- 8. d. Vessels of 100 tons and upwards 110 vilege, per week 0 1 Vessels under 100 tons 0 10 6 For partial remissions and exemptions on ves- with liberty to remain in dock without further charge for 24 sels partly laden, or arriving from Spain or hours after final landing. Rent, after expiration of that period, Portugal, wool or cork laden, or vessels with Id. per ton register per week. Should the vessel load outwards, corn, see annexed Table. the usual tonnage rates, according to the port of destination, will be charged, instead of the rate for docking and undocking. The Rates for discharging Cargoes by the Company. Dock Company reserve the power of refusing the admission of Cargoes, consisting, in the whole or in part, of ships Jaden entirely with corn. sugar in hogsheads or tierces, including ship Other vessels, not being fully laden at the time of entering the 1 9 Cargoes, cooperage consisting of sugar in chests of 5 cwt. docks, will be charged tonnage rate only, on the proportion of cargo brought in; the amount of rate to be determined by the and upwards, including ship cooperage 1 3 port from whence the vessel has arrive and if discharged by Cargoes, consisting of sugar in bags, mate, or the Company, rates for unloading in addition, according to the chests under 5 cwt, or other goods (not being description of the cargo, and quantity so discharged. Rent, after hemp, tallow, ashes, wood goods, corn, pitch, 1 week, Id. per ton register per week. tar, hay, or straw), contained in casks, bales, Vessels laden with cork or wool from Spain or Portugal will be serons, chests, cases, bags, baskets, or similar charged only 6d per ton register. Rent, after 3 weeks from date packages; also spelter, or metal in pigs, bars, of entrance, Id. per ton register per week. rods, plates, &c. 0 9 L. 8. d. Cargoes, consisting of hemp only, or merchandise Light vessels entering the dock to he up, will be in bulk, wholly or in part 1 0 charged, for any period not exceeding 4 weeks, per tallow only 0 6 ton register 006 d. Rent per week, after the expiration of the 4 weeks, on hemp 13) Per ton of the register tonnage, per ton 001 Mixed cargoes of tallow 0 goods, charge Vessels two thirds laden with corn will be charged tonnage rate ashes 0 in no case to only on the proportion which the other part of the cargo bears to Blue gum wood, or large timber, addi- exceed the re- the register tonnage. tional for every load delivered 06 gister tonnage Vessels chiefly laden with wood goods, pitch, tar, hay, straw, or in- No charge upon excess landed beyond a ship's of the vessel. tending to discharge the whole of their cargoes into lighters, will register tonnage. only be permitted to enter or depart the docks, subject to such Dil, additional for every tun delivered terms as shall be first mutually agreed upon between the owners into craft 06 and the Dock Company. Digitized by Google 596 DOCKS (LONDON PORT DUES). Table of Tonnage Rates, &ec.-continued. the purpose of making up freight accounts, the following charge Miscellaneous Charges. will be made :- a. d. 8. d. For labourers bired of the Company, to work on board, If the goods have 10 marks, or under 2 0 and who shall be under the directions and responsibility 11 marks to 20 marks 3 6 of captains or owners of vemels, both or either (which 21 marks and upwards 0 8 each mark or rule applies to all over-board deliveries), a charge will parcel. be made for each man per day, of 36 N. B.-The dock-dues, rent, &c. of most articles landed, ware- Thames water supplied to vessels by the Company, per housed, or shipped at the different docks, being, in general, nearly tue 1 0 Identical, the reader is referred for an account of the same to the For an abstract of a ship's cargo inwards, and weights thereof. for Table under the head London Docks. 5. Commercial Docks.-Exclusive of the previously mentioned docks, which are all on the north side of the river, there are on the south side the Commercial Docks, opposite to the west end of the West India Docks. The docks are of large extent; the space included within the outer wall being about 49 acres, of which nearly 38 acres are water. They are principally intended for the reception of vessels with timber, corn, and other bulky com- modities. They have but little accommodation for warehousing and their establishments are not constructed so as to entitle them to bond all goods. The Surrey Canal Company also admit vessels to be docked in the basin of their canal. 6. London Port Dues; Charges on Account of Lights, Pilotage, &c. in the Thames; Shipping, &c. of London. It is highly desirable that expert pilots, brilliant lights, and every other means that it is possible to devise, should be afforded to render navigation safe and expeditious. But to secure these advantages, it is indispensable that the charges on their account should be mo- derate. If they be otherwise, navigators are not unfrequently tempted to resort to what are less expensive, though less secure, channels. This principle has not, however obvious, been always kept sufficiently in view either in this or in other countries. During the latter years of the war, and down to 1825, the charges on account of docks, lights, pilotage, &c. on ships, in the Thames, and most other British ports, were exceedingly heavy and would no doubt, had they been maintained, have materially injured our commerce. Instead, also, of encou- raging the resort of foreign ships to our ports, a contrary policy was adopted the charges laid on them being usually about double those laid on British ships. This regulation was intended to promote the employment of the latter; but, as it led to reprisals in other coun- tries, its real influence is believed to have been quite different; while by driving away foreigners, it injured the trade of the country, and prevented our ports from becoming, what they are so well fitted to be, the emporiums of the world. We are glad, however, to have to state that the circumstances now alluded to have been materially changed within the last dozen years. In 1825, the various dock monopolies expired; and a very great reduction has been made in the charges on account of the docks, which, as already seen, are now very moderate indeed. Exclusive of the dock duties, certain port or tonnage duties were imposed on ships frequenting the port of London, by the acts 39 Geo. 3. c. 69., 43 Geo. 3. c. 124., &c., partly to pay the harbour masters, provide mooring chains, &c., and partly to create a fund for the improvement of the port, and in par- ticular for defraying the cost of making a navigable canal across the Isle of Dogs. But this canal having been sold (antè p. 569.) for 120,000Γ. to the West India Dock Company, under the 10 Geo. 4. c. 130., and the sums advanced by the public for the improvement of the port having been repaid, it was judiciously resolved to reduce the port duties to the lowest rates capable of defraying the necessary expenses. This was effected by the 4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 32., which imposes the following tonnage duties on vessels in the port :- Per Tea. d. 1st Class.-For every ship or other vessel trading coastwise between the port of London and any port or place in Great Britain, Ireland, the Orkneys, Shetland, or the Western Islands of Scotland, there shall be paid for every voyage in and out of the said port t 2d Class.-For every ship, &c. entering inwards or clearing outwards from or to Denmark. Nor- way, or Lapland (on this side of the North Cape), or from Holstein, Hamburgh, Bremen, or any other part of Germany bordering on or near the Germanic Ocean, or from or to Holland or any other of the United Provinces, or Brabant. Antwerp, Flanders, or any other part of the Netherlands, or from or to France (within Ushant), Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Sark, or the Tale of Man, there shall be paid for every, &c., as above à 3d Class.-For every ship, &c. entering inwards or clearing outwards from or to Lapland (beyond the North Cape), Finland, Russia (without or within the Baltic Sea), Livonia, Courland, Poland, Prussia, Sweden, or any other country or place within the Baltic Sea, there shall be paid for every, &c. as above t 4th Class.-For every ship, &c. entering inwards or clearing outwards from or to France (between Ushant and Spain), Portugal, Spain (without the Mediterranean), or any of the Azores, Ma- deira, or Canary Islands, or any of the United States of America, or of the British colonies or provinces in North America or Florida, there shall be paid for every, &c., as above - 1 5th Class.-For every ship, &c. entering inwards or clearing outwards from or to Greenland, Gibraltar, France, or Spain (within the Mediterranean), or any country, island, port, or place within or bordering on or near the Mediterranean or Adriatic Sea, or from the West Indies, Louisiana, Mexico, South America, Africa, East India, China, or any other country, island, port or place within or bordering on or near the Pacific Ocean, or from any other country, island, port, or place whatsoever to the southward of 25 degrees of north latitude, there shall be paid, &c. as above Digitized by Google DOCKS (LONDON PORT DUES).. 597 Exemptions.-Ships of war, and ships the property of his Majesty, or any of the royal family-Any vessel coming to or going coastwise from the port of London, or to any part of Great Britain, unless such vessel should exceed 45 tons.-Any vessel bringing corn coastwise, the principal part of whose cargo shall consist of corn.-Any fishing smacks, lobster and oyster boats, or vessels for passengers.- Any vessel or craft navigating the Thames above and below London Bridge, as far as Gravesend only. -Any vessel entering inwards or outwards in ballast. N. B.-The port or tonnuge duties paid by shipe in the port of London, as stated in the accounts below, were those payable previous to the act 4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 32., which only took effect on the 25th of July, 1834; and were, at an average, from 4 to 6 times as high as at present. Owing to the distance of London from the sea, and the rather intricate navigation at the mouth of the river, the charges on account of lights and pilotage must necessarily be pretty heavy. They have, however, been very materially reduced of late years. The charges on account of the lights under the management of the Trinity House have been diminished, in almost every instance, at least one third and in many instances as much as a half, and sometimes even more, since 1823.-(See LIGHT-HOUSES.) The illiberal and impolitic prac- tice of imposing discriminating light and pilotage dues on foreign vessels is still kept up but owing to the general establishment of reciprocity treaties with foreign powers, the griev- amce thence arising has become rather nominal than real, and at present affects very few of the foreign vessels coming to our ports. The act 6 Geo. 4. c. 125, made a reduction of 8 per cent. in the charge authorised to be demanded by the pilots licensed by the Trinity House for the port of London and foreign vessels, privileged as British vessels, have been relieved from the additional or surplus rate of 25 per cent. payable to the Trinity pilots, as well as to those licensed by the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports.-(See PILOTAGE.) The oppressive and troublesome charges in the port of London, imposed on alien goods under the names of package, scavage, &c.-(see PACKAGE)-were put an end to during last session (1833). At present, therefore, we believe we are warranted in affirming that, considering its distance from the sea, the public charges on shipping in the port of London are quite as reasonable as in any other port of the empire, or of the world. But we are inclined to think that further reductions may still be effected, particularly in the article pilotage. The following accounts show the nature and amount of the various charges that are at present incurred by vessels in the port of London :- Pro forma Account of Charges on a Ship of about 480 Tons, entering and departing the Port of London, laden both Ways, supposing every thing to be conducted with strict Economy, and excluding any & Charge on account of extraordinary Despatch or superior Accommodation. £ s. d Reporting the ship and appointment - . - - - - - 1 1 o Pilotage from the Downs - - - - - - - - 14 0 4 Boarding the pilot at sea - - - - - - - - % o 0 Waterman, boat, and kedge, from Gravesend - - - - - 1 11 6 London port dues inwards, 5d. per ton - - - - - - 10 0 0 Do. do. outwards, do. - - - - - - - 10 0 0 N. B.-This duty is of a temporary character, and will cease in about 5 years. Trinity dues and lights inwards - - - - - - - 11 00 Dock dues, in and out, 9d. per ton - - - - - - - 12* 0 0 Trinity dues and lights outwards - - - - - - - 8 18 6 Dungeness light in and out - - - - - - - - 250 Clearing outwards, and victualling bill - - - - - - 2126 Steam-boat to Blackwall, optional - - - - - - - 10 0 0 Pilotage to the Downs - - - - - - - - 12 8 6 Putting the pilot on shore, unless landed in the ship's boat - - - - 0 10 0 £98 7 4 Charges on a British Vessel of 285 Tons, entering and departing the Port of London, laden both Ways. £ 8. d. Reporting, appointing, &c. - - - - - - - - 2 10 6 Tonnage duty inwards (with cargo) - - - - - - - 5186 Do. outwards (do.) - - - - - - 5186 Putting pilot on board at Deal - - - - - - - 2 10 0 Pilotage, Downs to London, draft 15 feet 6 inches - - - - - 16 8 7 Do. outwards, draft about 14 feet - - - - - - 9 15 0 Boat and men up and down, 3 guineas each - - - - - - 6 6 0 Trinity lights, inwards - 613 % - - - - - - - Do. outwards - - - - - - - - 566 Private do. in and out - - - - - - - - - 9 10 0 Dungeness do. - - - - - - - - - 1 9 0 Dock duty, 9d. per ton - - - - - - - - - 10 13 9 Clearing outwards 0 - - - - - - - : - 270 £85 6 6 * If discharged by the Dock Company, there would be an additional charge of 124. on that account. Digitized by Google 598 DOCKS (LONDON PORT DUES). Charges actually paid on the President, American Packet Ship of from 470 to 480 Tons, in the River Thames, in October, 1833. £ 8. d Reporting and appointing - - - - - - - - 2 10 6 Tonnage duty inwards, and entry - - - - - - - 10 6 6 Do. outwards - - - - - - - 10 10 6 Trinity lights and pilotage inwards - - - - - - - 15 12 0 Do. do. outwards - - - - - - - 28 10 0 Private and Foreland, in and out - - - - - - - 518 0 Pilot from Dungeness - - - - - - - - - 15 12 0 Boat and men up and down - - - - - - - - 6 0 0 Dock charges - - - - - - - - - - 21 2 0 Clearing and victualling bill - - - - - - - - 2 12 6 Printing bills and cards - - - - - - - - 3 13 6 Advertisements in bills of entry - - - - - - - 0106 £122 18 0 In this case, the pilotage inwards and outwards, lights, &c. are charged from Cowes, so that a con- siderable portion of these items cannot be considered as an expense peculiar to the Thames. A part of the dock charges might also have been avoided, by employing the crew; the last two items are not properly port charges. Amount of Shipping, &c. belonging to the Port of London.-According to the official accounts, there belonged to this port, in 1832, besides boats and other vessels not registered, 2,669 ships, of the burden of 565,174 tons, manned by 32,786 men and boys. In 1819, the gross customs' duty collected in the port of London amounted to 7,749,463L, the ex- penses of collection being 277,913L, or at the rate of 3/. 11s. 8dd. per cent. In 1832, the gross duty had risen to 9,434,8541., while the expenses of collection had sunk to 243,678L, being at the rate of only 21. 11s. 73d. per cent-(Parl. Paper, No. 414. Sess. 1833.) So vast an amount of shipping and commerce was never previously concentrated in any single port. London may be truly said to be universi orbis terrarum emporium. May her pros- perity be as lasting as it is great ! The following tabular statement will serve to illustrate the progress of the foreign trade and navigation of London. Number and Tonnage of Vessels entering the Port of London from Foreign Parts, distinguishing between British and Foreign Ships. Years. British. Foreign. Years. British. Foreign. Ships. Tona. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Toma 1700 839 80,040 496 76,995 1890 3,354 655,239 656 122,619 1750 1,498 198,023 184 36,346 1821 3,000 585,994 671 89,073 1790 2,234 431,890 1,116 149,205 1822 3,230 603,167 597 106,059 1791 2,184 419,374 1,256 149,058 1823 3,031 611,451 865 161,705 1792 2,489 451,188 1,186 152,243 1824 3,132 607,106 1,643 264,098 1793 2,348 478,105 1,193 177,019 1825 3,989 785,563 1,743 309,122 War. 1896 3,496 675,096 1,586 215,254 1814 269,834 1827 4,012 769,162 1,534 221,008 1815 875,375 1823 4,084 767,218 1,303 195,989 1816 115,463 1889 4,108 784,070 1,300 215,606 1817 131,647 1830 3,910 744,229 1,268 207,500 1818 272,656 1831 4,140 780,988 1,557 269,159 1819 158,882 1832 3,268 639.340 884 154,142 N. B.-The temporary failing off in 1832 is to be ascribed to the prevalence of cholera, and the an- fortunate misunderstanding with Holland. Account of the Number and Tonnage of the Ships that have entered the Port of London, with Car- goes from Foreign Parts, distinguishing the Countries whence they came, during the Years 1833, 1834, and 1835.-(Papers published by the Board of Trade, part V., p. 36.) 1833. 1834. 1835. Countries. British. Foreign. Britis Foreign. British. Foreign. Ships. Tons. Ships, Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Toes. Russia 358 76,157 47 17,150 399 87,205 71 24,978 312 67,193 54 18,657 Sweden 12 2,686 51 15,698 22 3,848 76 22,549 22 3,520 67 18,899 102- 31,859 15 2,157 122 38,328 - - Norway S7 28,108 - Denmark 10 1,370 70 6,309 22 2,699 207 18,349 19 2,469 136 13,697 Prussia 45 6,621 130 31,486 36 6,639 125 30,622 35 6,456 107 26,372 German States 243 43,085 48 5,173 217 44,253 122 12,292 190 44,362 81 7,956 Netherlands 309 41,301 277 23,705 466 67,291 240 21,541 465 72,794 226 21,125 France 188 21,475 197 12,480 225 24,153 178 12,147 245 24,220 125 9,656 Portugal, Azorea, and Madeira 377 37,331 4 394 364 38,504 4 519 369 38,840 20 2,151 Spain and Canaries 180 33,398 44 4,585 239 27,302 27 3,272 210 23,371 22 2,617 Italian States 124 18,380 8 1,808 107 16,063 19 4,903 118 16,948 6 1,558 Ionian Islands 33 4,464 - - 25 3,637 - - 25 3,700 Turkey and Continental Greece 58 8,481 69 9,538 - - 75 - - 11,034 Morea and Greek Islands 9 1,350 - 14 2,026 - - - 12 1,752 Egypt - - - - 4 756 Tripoli, Barbary, and Moroeco 132 29,812 - - 28 3,438 - - 21 2,347 Foreign possessions in Asia 185 96,085 1 290 6 2,323 3 956 11 3,963 4 1,647 China - - - 27 28,199 - - 47 28,918 United States of America 18 5,126 44 18,463 24 7,116 51 20,053 14 4,030 68 28,099 Foreign West Indies 35 6,963 7 2,073 29 5,648 5 1,367 19 3,303 2 389 Foreign Continental Colonies in America 75 14,394 1 258 85 16,172 4 758 SO 15,061 3 976 Totals 2,491 448,479 1,031 171,731 2,123 398,967 1,254 212,634 2,289 374,281 1,008 181,196 Digitized by Google DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). 599 II. LIVERPOOL Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. The first wet dock in the British empire was constructed at Liverpool, in pursuance of an act of parliament obtained in 1708. At this period Liverpool was but an inconsiderable town ; and the accommodation she has derived from her docks is one of the circumstances that has done most to promote her extraordinary increase in commerce, population, and wealth. A second wet dock was opened about the middle of last century ; and since that period many more have- been constructed, some of them on a very magnificent 'scale, and furnished with all sorts of conveniences. When those now in progress are completed, the total area of water in the docks will exceed 90 acres. The entrance to the port of Liverpool is a good deal incommoded with sand banks; through which, however, there are several channels which, when the proper precautions are observed, afford an easy and safe access to the port. In spring tides, the water rises in the Mersey about thirty feet, and in neap tides about fifteen but the height depends much on the state of the winds, and other cir- cumstances. The following Table gives the annual amount of the Liverpool dock duties since 1757, the number of vessels entering the docks since that period, and the tonnage of the same since 1800. It exhibits an increase of commerce unequalled in any other port. Amount of Dock Duties at the Port of Liverpool, from the Year 1757, ending the 24th of June each Year. Year. No. of Versels. L & d Year. No. of Vessels. L 8. r 1757 1,371 396 15 0 1779 2,374 4,967 17 10 1758 1,453 2,408 6 3 1780 2,951 3.528 7 9 1750 1,281 2,372 12 2 1781 2,518 3,915 4 1 1760 1,945 2,330 6 7 1782 2,496 4,249 6 3 1761 1,319 2,362 0 2 1783 2,816 4.840 8 3 1762 1,307 2,526 19 6 1784 3,098 6,597 11 1 1763 1,752 3,141 1 5 1786 3,429 8,411 5 3 1764 1,626 2,780 3 4 1786 3,228 7,508 0 1 1785 1,900 3,465 8 4 1787 8,667 9,199 IS 8 1766 1,908 3,653 19 2 1788 3,677 9,206 13 10 1767 1,704 3,615 9 2 1789 3,619 8,901 10 10 1768 1,808 3,566 14 9 1790 4,923 10,037 6 st 1769 2,054 4,004 5 0 1791 4,045 11,645 6 6 1770 2,073 1,142 17 2 1792 4,488 13,243 17 at 1771 2,087 4,203 19 10 1793 4,129 12.480 5 5 1772 2,259 4,662 5 4 1794 4,965 10,678 7 0 1773 2,214 4,725 1 11 1796 3,948 9,368 16 4 1774 2,258 4,680 5 5 1796 4,738 12,377 7 7 1775 2,291 5,3-4 4 9 1797 4,528 13,319 12 8 1776 2,216 5,064 10 10 1798 1777 1799 1 4,478 12,067 18 3 2,361 4,60 4 9 4,518 14,049 15 1 1778 2,292 4,649 7 7 Year. No. of Venecls. Tonnage. L. 8. d. Year. No. of Vessile. Tennage. L. a. d. 1800 4,746 450,000 23,379 13 6 1806 4,676 507,925 44,500 7 3 1801 5,060 450,719 28,365 8 21 1807 5,791 662,309 02,931 5 10 1802 4,781 510,691 28,192 9 10 1808 5,225 516,836 40,698 10 4 1803 4,791 494,581 28,027 IS 7 1809 6,023 504,601 47,580 19 3 1804 4,291 445,761 96,157 0 = 1810 6,720 734,391 66,782 1 0 1805 4,618 463,498 33,364 IS 1 1911 5,816 611,190 54,758 18 5 No. of Vessels. Tonnage. . Year. L 8. d. L a. d. 1812 4,599 446,788 20,260 3 5 Duties on goods 24,143 4 6 44,403 7 11 1813 5,341 547,426 24,134 18 8 Duties on goods 26,042 14 6 50,177 13 2 1814 5,706 548,957 28,630 11 3 Duties OD goods 31,110 11 I 59,741 2 4 1815 6,440 708,849 36,310 1 9 Daties on goods 40,605 6 II 76,915 8 8 1816 6,888 774,243 43,765 6 3 40,881 4 92,646 10 9 Duties on goods 6 1817 6,079 658,425 36,186 8 0 75,889 16 4 Daties on goods 40,703 8 4 1818 6,779 764,690 43,142 16 6 Duties OD goods 54,695 11 9 98,538 8 3 1819 7,849 867,318 50,012 7 8 Daties OD goods 60.0:4 14 0 110,127 I 8 1890 7,276 805,083 44,717 17 10 94,412 11 10 Duties on goods 49,694 14 0 1821 7,810 839,848 43,131 6 2 Duties on goods 51,425 2 " 94,556 9 1 1822 8,136 892,902 47,229 10 4 Duties 00 goods 66,174 7 0 102,408 17 4 1823 8,916 1,010,819 52,837 5 5 Duties on goods 62.945 16 I 115,788 1 6 1894 10,001 1,180,914 60,878 9 7 Duties DE goods 70,033 I " 180,911 11 6 1896 10,837 1,223,820 59,446 7 8 69,245 12 0 128,691 19 8 Daties on goods 1896 9,601 1,223,318 60,411 9 11 Daties on goods 70,49 9 1 131,000 19 0 1827 9,592 1,225,813 $1,601 0 6 Daties on goods 72871 IS 9 134,472 14 3 Digitized by Google 600 DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). Amount of Dock Duties at the Port of Liverpool.-continued. Year. No. of Vessels. Tonnage. L a. d. L & & 1828 10,703 1,311,111 62,969 7 10 Duties on goods 78,400 7 141,300 15 7 1829 11,383 1,387,957 66,128 18 10 Duties on goods 81,198 6 147,327 411 1830 11,214 1,411,964 68,322 9 11 Duties OR goods 83,007 11 151,229 17 10 1831 12,537 1,592,436 81,039 = 11 Duties on goods 102,415 12 4 188,455 4 3 1832 12,928 1,540,057 74,30 4 11 Duties on goods 95,517 2 0 170,047 6 11 1838 12,964 1,590,461 79,558 3 11 Duties on goods 103,422 18 5 192,980 16 4 1834 13,444 1,692,870 84,061 15 " Duties OR goods 107,668 1 9 191,729 17 8 1835 13,941 1,768,426 87,644 14 5 Duties on goods 110,993 4 4 198,627 18 , 1836 Daties on goods 1837 15,038 1,958,984 84,506 II 1 Duties on goods 89,256 19 0 173,853 10 I 1838 14,820 2,026,206 76,324 II Duties on goods 69,965 12 10 146,290 3 11 A Statement of Dock and Light Duties received from the 25th September, 1836 (from which date the Dock Duties were reduced), to the 24th June, 1837; and from the 25th Sept. 1837, to the 24th June, 1838. Year. Duties on Tonnage. Duties on Goods. Lighthouse Duties. Floating Light Duties. Total L 8. d. L. 8. d. L 8. d L 8. d. L 8. d. 1837 55,805 11 0 52.768 12 4 3,995 8 6 1,832 0 8 114,401 6 6 1838 57,125 6 8 54,329 I 2 4,227 13 1 1,873 0 10 117,565 6 9 Increase. 1,319 15 8 1,560 8 10 232 15 7 41 0 2 3,154 0 3 Dock Dues.-The following dues are payable by order of the 6th of September 1836, upon all vessels entering inwards, or clearing outwards, at the port of Liverpool, for dock rates and harbour lights:- 8. d. From between the Mull of Galloway and St. David's Head, Isles of Man and Anglesea, the ton 0 2 From between the Mull of Galloway and Duncansby Head, Orkney Isles, and islands on the western coast of Scotland; between St. David's Head and the Land's End, the Scilly Islands, and the east coast of Ireland, from Cape Clear to Mallin Head, the ton 0 # From the east and southern coast of Great Britain, between Duncan's Bay Head and the Land's End, the islands of Shetland, the west coast of Ireland, from Cape Clear to Malling Head, including the islands on that coast, the ton 54 From Europe, north of Cape Finisterre, and westward of the North Cape, and without the Cattegat and Baltic Sea, the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Sark, the Faro Islands, and Iceland, the ton 0 9 From within the Cattegat and Baltic, the whole of Sweden, the White Sea, eastward of the North Cape, Europe, south of Cape Finisterre. without the Mediterranean, Newfoundland, Greenland, Davis's Straits, Canaries, Western Islands, Madeira, and Azores, the ton 10 From the east coast of North America, the West Indies, east coast of South America, north of Rio Plata, the West coast of Africa, and islands north of the Cape of Good Hope, all parts I within the Mediterranean, including the Adriatic, the Black Sea, and Archipelago, the islands of St. Helena, Ascension, and Cape de Verd Islands, the ton 16 From South America, south of Rio Plata, the Pacific Ocean, Africa and Asia, eastward of the Cape of Good Hope, the ton 23 Note.-Vessels remaining longer than 6 months in dock, to pay in addition to the above rates, per month 1 All vessels arriving at or clearing from the said port, are to pay the said rates from or for the most distant port or place from or for which they shall trade ; but vessels arriving from any parts in bal- last do not pay dockage on entering inwards; and should such vessels proceed to sea again in ballast, then only one half of the dock rates are due, with the whole of the lights; but taking a carge outwards subjects such vessels to full dock dues. N. B.-New vessels built in Liverpool are subject only to half of the above rates on the first outward clearance. Floating Light, at the Entrance of the River Mersey.-Towards this light, the following rates are payable:- All vessels sailing to or from Liverpool, to any port or place between Duncan's Bay Head and the Land's End, on the west side of Great Britain, and between Malling Head and Cape Clear on the east side of Ireland, fd. per ton. All vessels sailing to or from Liverpool, to any port or place between Duncan's Bay Head and the Land's End, on the east and southern coast of Great Britain, and between Malling Head and Cape Clear on the west coast of Ireland, td. per ton. All vessels sailing to or from Liverpool, to any port or place not being within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or the adjacent islands to the northward of the Cape of Good Hope, and the northward of Cape Horn, dd. per ton. All vessels sailing to and from Liverpool, to any port or place to the eastward of the Cape of Good Hope, and the westward of Cape Horn, Id. per ton. as In the day time, from sunrise to sunset, a blue flag, with the letters N. W. in white, will be hoisted at the mainmast head, and in thick and foggy weather, either by night or day, a bell will be kept constantly ringing, to prevent vessels from running foul of the light-vessel. Dock Regulations. Extracts from Acts of Parliament.-Any owner, or master, or any person having the command, agency, or consignment of any vessel chargenble with dock duties, refusing to pay de same, is liable to have such vessel or goods seized. Any person throwing any ballast or rubbish from out of any vessel upon any of the quays, &c. shall Immediately cart or carry away the same: penalty 40s. Every ship shall, before whe comes within any of the piers, take down all her sails: penalty & Digitized by Google DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). 601 Any person having the charge of any vessel in any of the docks, refusing to remove the same, after 24 hours' notice in writing, shall forfeit 201., and pay the expenses of removal by the water bailiff. Any person having the command of any vessel moored in the river, refusing to remove the same, when ordered by the water bailiff, shall forfeit 20% The master, or other person having the command of any vessel from which any cannon or gun shall be fired whilst in the port, shall forfeit 10/. Any person making payment of dock duties, who refuses to answer such questions as shall be put to him by the collector, or give a false or untrue answer, shall forfeit 101. Any master, &c. evading payment of the duties, shall forfeit and pay double the duties evaded and by 53 Geo. 3. a sum of 20/. in addition thereto. Whenever it shall be necessary, for the purpose of cleaning or repairing the docks, to remove the vessels lying therein, the master, mate, or other person taking the command of such vessel, shall, within 3 days after notice given, remove such ship from such dock, on pain of forfeiting 101. Any master, &c. refusing to moor and remove the same in docks, according to the direction of the dock master, will forfeit 51., together with the costs of removal by the dock master. Any master, &c. acting contrary to the direction of the dock master, will forfeit 201. Any master, &c. entering and giving false information of the draught of water of any ship to any of the dock masters, will forfeit 201. Any master, &c. bringing the same into the entrance basins, when a signal is hoisted on the pier, at the entrance of such basin, signifying that such dock is full of vessels, will forfeit 20/. Any master, &c. bringing his vessel into any of the docks, contrary to the directions of the dock master, will forfeit 201. Every master, or other person, damaging any of the dock gates, bridges, piers, quays, &c. is liable to have the ship seized, and sold to compensate for damage done. Any person opening or shutting any of the dock gates, sluices, or clews, is liable to forfeit 100% ; or opening or shutting any drawbridge, 201. Any owner, &c. leaving gunpowder, pitch, tar, &c., or combustible matter of any kind, on the quays of the docks, &c., or upon the deck of any vessel lying in any of the docks, for above 48 hours after passing the Custom-house officers, is liable to a penalty of 5s. an hour on neglecting to watch such goods in the night time, to a penalty of 51. Any master, or other person, having the command of any ship, suffering any fire, candles, or lamp to be lighted and burning on board penalty 102. Any owner, &c., landing, or causing to be landed and laid, any pumps, boats, anchors, cables, lime- stones, &c., or other things whatsoever, upon any of the dock quays, shall within 48 hours wholly remove the same from off such quay, or shall forfeit 5s. per hour above the 48. Any person wilfully cutting, damaging, or destroying any cables, &c. by which any vessel in the river or in any of the docks shall be fastened: penalty 501. Any person damaging or breaking any lamp, &c. set up near the docks: penalty for each lamp, 51. Any master, or other person, having the command of any vessel about which any offence shall have been committed, in relation to any of the docks, &c., is liable to the penalty imposed for such offence. Any owner or master of any ship or vessel giving or offering a bribe to any officer employed in pur- suance of the dock acts penalty 201. Any owner, consignee, or master of any vessel arriving and departing in ballast without payment of dock duties, is liable to a suin equal to double the amount of dock duty which should have been paid, and the master liable to the penalty of 20/. in addition. Every master, &c. wilfully throwing, casting, or putting any earth, stones, rubbish, &c. out of any ship, &c., into any part of the port penalty 50% Any owner, &c. of any vessel laid up for sale, or which shall not be actually employed for two months, not removing the same within 24 hours' notice in writing from the harbour master, or left on board: penalty 51. and costs of removal. Any person discharging timber in any dock without having obtained the consent in writing of the chairman or deputy chairmen of the dock committee, or of some justice of the peace penalty 10% Any person having consent, not removing the same therefrom within 24 hours, liable to a fine of 5s. an hour. Any person damaging any ship, &c. in any of the docks, &c., or in the river, and refusing to make compensation, liable to have his goods, or the tackle of the ship, &c. doing the damage, seized. Any justice of the peace for the county of Chester or borough of Liverpool, upon complaint made to them, may summon persons to appear before him, and may fix the amount to be paid to boatmen, and persons finding and taking possession of anchors, &c. in any part of the port of Liverpool. Any person throwing, casting, or emptying any ballast, ashes, &c. out of any ship, &c. into the river Mersey, the Rock or Horse Channel, or Formby Channel, to the eastward of the Floating Light, or from any of the piers into the docks or basins, or into the river Mersey: penalty 10/. That every vessel laden with a cargo consisting solely of limestones, paving-stones, flintstones, grave, and chalk, shall be charged tonnage rates, as if coming in ballast. Every owner or master, &c. of any vessel arriving at or departing from the said port, shall produce to the collector, upon demand, at the time of making entry, all books, accounts, &c. in relation to such vessel, or which show the weights and quantities of the goods, &c. In case of dispute, such owner, &c. shall produce a statement in writing, to be verified by oath, and showing the actual weights and quantities of such goods, &c., or the accuracy of the said books, &c. In case the master, &c. of any vessel from which rubbish, ballast, dirt, or other refuse of any kind shall be landed, shall permit or suffer the same to be so landed, or laid within 3 yards from the margin of any such dock or basin, or of the river Mersey, and shall not cause such rubbish, &c. to be wholly removed from off such quays, &c. within 24 hours after the same shall be so landed or laid: pe- nalty 51. Any owner, &c. of any boat or vessel, permitting gunpowder, exceeding 10 pounds in weight, to be brought into any of the docks or basins, or any vessel or boat lying therein, without the previous con- sent in writing of a justice of the peace of the borough of Liverpool penalty 100% That upon due proof, on oath, to the satisfaction of any justice ofthe peace of the borough of Liver- pool, or county of Lancaster, that any dealer in marine stores, within the said borough, or Toxieth Park, shall have been guilty of receiving stolen goods, or purchasing, or receiving, &c. every such shall forfeit 201 for the first offence, 301. for the second offence; and after conviction for such second person offence, shall not carry on business as such dealer in marine stores within 200 yards from the margin or side of any dock or basin (exclusive of 40 yards prohibited by a former act) on pain of for- feiting the sum of 101. for every day he, she, or they shall carry on such trade or business. In case any person or persons giving or accepting any bribe to or from any water bailiff, harbour master, &c. give information thereof. he or she shall be excused from the penalty of 201. imposed by the 51 Geo. 3. for such offence, provided such information be given before any proceeding for punish- ing the said offence shall have commenced, or any information laid before any justice of the peace against such person in respect of the same. Justices of the peace may, upon complaint 76 made, summon parties and ascertain and award the VoL. I-3 E Digitized by Google 602 DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). amount of recompence, for any services rendered by boatmen, &c. to vessels in the said docks or basins, and, in case of non-payment, may levy the sum so awarded by distress. By-laws.-1. That the master, &c. who shall permit or suffer any pitch or tar, or any other com- bustible matter, to be bolled or heated for the use of such ship or vessel, erther on board of such ves- sel, or within 5 yards of the same, shall forfeit 40s. for every offence. 2. That the master, &c. discharging or loading any cotton or other combustible goods OR or from any of the quays, who shall permit or suffer any person or persons to smoke or burn tobacco, shall for each offence forfeit 20s.; and any other person or persons who shall burn or smoke tobacco, or any other thing, amongst cotton or any other combustible goods, lying and being on the quays, shall for each offence forfeit the like penalty of 20s. 3. That if the master, &c. shall bring the same into any of the docks, basins, or entrances, with loaded cannon or guns, with gunpowder on board, or, when driven in by stress of weather. shall neg- lect immediately to discharge the same, or who shall take gunpowder on board, until clear of the docks and pier-heads, shall forfeit 51. 4. That the master, &c. of any vessel, or any other person or persons whomsoever, who shall permit or suffer any rope from such vessel to be made fast to any chain-post or quay-fender, or any rope, chain, or tackle of any description, to be made fast to any of the pillars of any iron or other shed on any of the quays, or to the roof or any other part of such shed, shall for every offence forfeit 40s. 5. That the master, &c. of any vessel lying within or up to any of the docks, basins, &c., who shall suffer any ballast, &c. to be taken on board such vessel, or thrown, discharged, or carried out of the same, without having a canvass nailed to the ship's side, or some other safeguard from falling into any such docks or basins, shall for every offence forfeit the sum of 40s. 6. That the master, &c. of any ship or vessel lying in any of the said docks or basins, or the entrances to the same, who shall suffer any repairs to be done to the outsides of such vessels, without having a canvass or some other safeguard secured from the side of such vessel, and placed or fixed so as to prevent any chips or pieces of wood from falling into the said docks or basins during the whole of such work or repairs, shall for every offence forfeit 40s. 7. That the master, &c. of any vessel lying or being within any of the docks, &c. who shall not cause all ballast. &c. discharged from or to be laden on board of any vessel, to be thrown at least 5 feet from the edge of the quay, or on the outsides of the cart or chain-posts of the said quay, and taken away immediately, shall for every offence forfeit 40s. 8. That the master, &c. or other person having the charge or command of every vessel lying within any of the docks or basins, shall have a ship-keeper on deck to attend the vessel every tide, at least 2 hours before the time of high water, and 1 hour after high water, under the penalty of 10s. 9. That the master, &c. of any vessel, when hauling into or out of the docks or basins, &c., shall (except when any such vessel be driven by stress of weather) have the yards a-peak, and the sprit- sail yard fore and aft, and the jib-boom run in, within 3 feet from the cap, If practicable; and, after any such vessel shall be brought into any dock or basin, shall have the anchors got in on the fore- castle or deck, and shall have the steering-sail booms and irons taken off from the yards, and shall have the main or mizen booms, and the stern or quarter davits rigged in, within 94 hours, under the penalty of 40s. 10. That the master or other person having the command of any vessel, ho shall, by negligence or otherwise, leave an anchor in the entrance to any of the docks, or upon the strand of the river, with- out a buoy, for a longer period than one tide, shall for every offence forfelt 51. 11. That the owner, &c. of any vessel who shall refuse to strike the top-gallant masts and yards of every such vessel entering any of the repairing or graving docks, shall forfeit 51. 12. That the owner or driver of any cart, &c., or any other person or persons who shall draw, or cause, or permit, or suffer to be drawn upon or over any of the dock bridges, any anchors, balks, &c. shall for every offence forfeit 40s. Every day, two hours before high water, a bell will be rung for 1 minute at each dock, when every ship-keeper is to make his appearance on the deck of his vessel, or incur the penalty of 40s. All merchants and other owners or agents of ships and vessels trading to the port of Liverpool, will be required to enter the names of such vessels, their draught of water, and the date of their arrival at the port of Liverpool, together with the name of the dock into which they are intended to be brought, in a book kept for that purpose, in the office of the harbour master in Trentham Street. And all TPS- sels will thereafter be admitted into the said docks or basins in the order only in which they shall be 80 entered. LIVERPOOL DOCK RATES.-The following is a Table of the Dock Duties that may be charged 08 goods imported, export d, or brought coastwise into the port of Liverpool; but the collector or receiver of dock duties is directed, by order of the dock committee of the 6th of September, 1636, to charge only two thirds of the under mentioned duties; and all goods imported coastwise into Liver- pool from places in the U. K. were, at the same time, exempted from all charge on account of dock duties. w The Duties Outwards are for Foreign, British, or Irish Goods, except those marked thus (*) which are for British or Irish Goods only. I Inwards. Inwards. Out- Out- Articles. F.r Coast- wards. Articles. Fo- Coast- wark reign. WISE. reign. wine. #. d. a d. 8. d. 1.d , d. 1.d. Acorns ton (40 bus. 20 10 0 8 Bacon ton 20 10 0 Alabester fon 10 06 04 Bagging piece 0 01-2 0 01-1 0 018 Als, beer, and porter 100 gallons 05 04 06 Ballast of paving and other stones hogehea 06 0 6 05 that may be used for making or bottled, the punch. or cask 04 0 4 04 repairing roads too 0 8 0 0 lierce 0 3 0 3 03 Bark, angustura, eleutherise, Jesuits', barrel 0 1-2 0 11-8 0 1-2 cascaril'a, or Winterabus CWL 06 03 0 2 hamper 0 0 0 oak, cork tree, birch, and larch, 11-2 16 09 0 6 Alkanet roof, amber, and aloes CWI. 03 0 0 I ton Almonts ton 20 1 0 08 quercitrom - 80 I 0 0 S Alum. mohe - 10 0 6 04 sa-safras cnt 03 0 11-3 0 Anch if palies - 10 06 0 8 Basket rods bundle 0 01-3 0 01-1 0 01: 812 Anchovies, angelica, and annotto cwl. 0 3 0 1-2 0 I 1,000 0 5 0 212 0 Anive autimony - 0 3 0 1.2 0 1 Base mate 120 0 3 0 0 Apples bushel 01 0 012 0 1-8 Best rope 100 10 06 04 Aquafortis, and arsenic cwt. 03 0 hogehead 10 06 05 1-2 0 I Beef or pork Argol ton 20 I 0 0 8 puncheon 08 04 04 Armar mot and powder cwt. 03 0 1-2 0 I tierce 04 08 0 112 Ashes-barilla ton 16 0 9 06 barrel 0 3 0 11-2 0 013 pearl and pot - 20 10 08 1-2 barrel and smaller package 0 11-2 0 034 0 "Asbes-black, weed & wood - 10 06 04 Beer, spruce 32 gallons 05 0 212 0 113 bleaching - 20 10 08 Rees' was. or bell metal CWI. 0 8 0 1 0 common Irish - - 06 - Bellows, smiths' each) 03 01 DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). 603 Inwards. Inwards. Articles. Out- Fo- Coast- wards. Articles. On:- Fo- Coast- wards. reign. wise. reign. wise. . d ad s.d. s. d. a. d. . d Berries, bay, juniper, yellow tom 80 10 08 Coral cwt. 06 03 0 2 Blacking hogebead 06 05 Cork too 80 10 08 puncheon or cask 04 04 Corks X 0 4 0 2 0 1 tierce 0 3 03 Corn-Barley, bere, and big beans, barrel 0 112 0 1-2 Indian, peas, or rye quarter 0 3 0 11-2 01 smaller package 0 1 0 Meal, barley meal or oat meal, Bladders containing lard, &c. each 0 tom 80 10 08 Blocks, heel group 0 1 Malt, also wheat quarter 04 0 8 01 last 1,009 06 Oats - 0 2 0 I 0 ship 100 0 06 03 Wheat flour ewi. 01 0 0 3-4 0 01-2 Blubber too 16 0 9 06 Cotton seed bushel 01 0 01-8 0 01-2 Blue package 03 0 118 01 twist, thread, and yara cwt. 0 4 0 2 Boats each 10 06 06 waste, also cotton wool, Robbins cask 06 04 100 lbs. 03 0 1-2 0 1 Bone dust and bones of cattle, and Cottons, manufactured package 10 06 03 bran ton 10 06 04 Cream of tartar, also currants ton 20 1 0 08 Books package 04 0 8 03 Crystal package 03 0 118 0 I Blorax or tincal cwt. 03 0 112 01 Culm ton 0 4 0 2 02 *Bottles crate 03 Curiosities, natural or artificial, of green or common glass, package 0 6 0 3 02 not less than pints gross 03 0 11-2 03 Drapery, linen or woollen piece 0 0 1-2 0 01-2 Boulder(Mones ton 08 04 08 Earth, black, brown, red or yellow, Bowls of wood dozen 0 01-2 0 01-2 ton 20 10 Bows for cattle - 0 018 0 01-8 fullers' - 10 06 Brass cwt. 02 0 I 01 Earthenware crate or other package 04 0 2 0 8 old too I 8 0 10 06 load 30 16 10 Bread cwt. 02 01 0 1 Eggs 1,200 06 0 3 0 2 bag or sack 0 01-2 Emery stones cwt. 0 1 0 01-8 0 01-2 Bricks, bearers, and tiles 1,200 10 06 04 Empty bags, baskets, crates, ham- Bristles cwt. 06 0 3 08 pers, and sacks score 02 01 01 Broom and brush handles bundle 0 012 0 01-8 barrels - 010 05 010 1,000 0 9 1-2 barrels and smaller pack. Brooms dosen 0 01-2 0 0 1-4 0 01-4 ages - 0 5 0 21-2 05 load (48 bundles) 10 boxes each 0 01-2 0 014 0 014 Brown powder too 80 1 0 load 2 0 10 Brush heads and stocks bag 0 1 0 01-2 0 crates each 02 01 01 1,000 06 cases, chests, half quarter Brushes bundle or box 06 03 0 2 crates, tierces, and tranks, cask 04 each 01 0 01-2 0 01-2 Buckets of wood dozen 0 01-2 0 01-8 Feathers cwt. 06 08 08 Bugle too 20 10 08 ostrich 100 lbs. 2 0 10 0 8 Bullion package 06 03 0 2 Felt package 0 2 Bullrushes load (63 bundles) 10 06 04 Figs ton 80 10 08 Rurr stones 100 10 06 04 Filtering stones each 0 1 0 01-2 0 1 Butter cask or firkin 01 0 01.2 0 01-2 Fish, dry salted ton 10 06 0 4 1-2 farkin or keg 0 01-2 0 01-4 0 01.2 herrings, fresh 1,900 0 8 e 11-2 Cables or cordage ton 80 10 08 pickled and salted of all de- Cakes, linseed or rape - 10 06 04 scriptions barrel 0 2 0 0 1 Calamine, calaminaris lapis - 06 03 08 Arkin, 1-2 barrel, or kit 01 0 01.2 0 01-2 Cambric piece 01 0 01.2 0 01-2 pipa, punchson, cask 04 02 0 2 Camphor, canella alba cwt. 03 0 11-2 01 hogebead 06 03 03 *Candles, and candlewick - 0 8 0 1 tierce 0 3 0 11.8 01 package 0 British cured "hogshead 06 Cane reeds 1,900 06 03 0 8 *puncheon 04 Cantharides, caontebue, and capers, *tierce 0 1-2 cwt. 03 0 114 01 "barrel 0 Carpets. See Woollens. $1.8 brl. and smaller package 0 0 1.2 Carriages, cars, and carts each 1 0 10 Flagstones, also freestone ton 06 08 03 for guns - 03 03 Flax, rough - 20 10 0 8 handcarts - 06 06 Flint, ground or dried ton 08 04 04 Cassia buds ewt. 06 03 08 stones - 0 4 08 0 2 fistula and lignea - 03 0 112 0 1 Floor-cloth (containing 1 roll), box, Cattle, area and mules, bulls, cows, bag, or mat 01 01 and oxen each 06 03 06 Furniture, household load 10 06 I OR calves - 03 01 03 *package 0 3 00 0 1-8 horses - 10 06 10 box, bundle, mat, or *truss 0 2 lambs, sheep, and swine - 01 0 01-2 01 case, chest, or trunk 0 6 Caviare too 30 16 10 Galangal, galbanum, galls, gamboge, Cement - 10 06 cwt. 0 3 0 11-2 0 1 Chalk - 04 02 Gentian root, granella (cochineal re- Charcoal - 14 0 8 fuee) cwt. 0 8 01 01 *Cheese - 10 06 04 Gigs each 10 hamper 0 012 Ginger, Glauber salts, or glue too 20 I 0 08 box or other package, not preserved cwt 0 $ 0 11-8 0 1 described 0 I Ginsong ton 3 0 16 10 if loose, cwt. 0 01-2 Glass cwt. 0 1 0 0 1-8 Cheese boards dozen 0 018 0 01-2 broken - 0 018 0 0 1-4 Chesnuts busbel 01 0 012 0 01-2 crown package 0 10 Chima. See Earthenwore. flint - 0 30 Chirt stones ton 0 8 0 4 03 Grapes - 0 1 0 018 0 01-2 British or Irish - 0 8 Grease or greaves ton 1 0 0 6 04 Chocolate and COCOR paste ewt. 03 0 112 01 *Groats barrel 0 1-2 Cider tun (262 gallons) 24 12 09 cask 0 4 Cinanbar cwt. 06 03 0 8 jar or jug 0018 Cinnamon - 10 06 04 tieres 03 Citron, preserved - 06 03 0 2 Grinding stones each 0 - 0 01-2 0 01-4 Clay, Cambria and pipe ton 06 0 3 Gum. Ammoniac, animi, Arabic, China, stone, and firebrick - 08 0 4 cashew, copal, elemi, guaiacum, *Clocks case 05 Sanegal, and tragacanth ton $ 0 16 0 Cloves, cobalt, cochineal ewt. 1 0 06 04 Guapowder cwt. 10 06 "Coals (Winchester meas.) chal. 04 #barrel 0 14 ton 0 4 0 2 $1.2 barrel 0 Cocon, coffee, cork ton 80 10 08 4 barrel and keg 0 01-2 Cocon muts 100 03 0 11-2 01 Haberdashery package 10 06 0 3 Colouring for porter, ac. 100 gallons 08 04 05 Hair, bull, cow, and ox, goats' and "Combe package 0 6 02 horse cwl. 02 0 1 0 1 Copper, British or frish *box or tub 02 Hairpowder package 03 0 1.2 0 I *case 05 Hummocks dozen 02 0 I 01 *cask 04 Hame ton 20 10 0 8 *tierce 03 Handcoops 100 0 I 0 01-8 "barrel 0 11-8 Hardens package 10 0 6 03 stag or keg 0 loose piece 0 012 0 018 ton 20 10 0 8 Hardware bundle 02 0 1 0 01-8 old - 18 010 06 keg 02 01 : are - 06 08 0 8 all other packages 06 03 08 dross and sing I 04 0 2 02 Harrows, also bats each 06 03 0 8 Copperas I 10 06 04 Hay ton 06 03 0 3 Digitized by Google 604 DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). Inwards. Inwards. Out- Out- Articles. Articles Fo- Coast- wards. Fo- Coast- wards. reign. wise. reign. wise. s. d. 8. d. s.d. s. d. 1.d. 1.d. Hay rakes dozen 01 0 01-2 0 Oakum ton 10 06 04 Hemp, rough ton 20 10 0 8 Oatmeal shudes, or dust - 02 Hides, dry cwt. 0 3 0 11-2 0 112 Ochre, or oker - 20 10 08 wet - 0 11-2 0 034 0 01-2 03 0 11-2 01 Oil, castor cwt. pieces of, or glue pieces ton 20 1 0 08 cod too 19 010 07 Honey cwt. 02 01 dubbing, linseed, also olive 24 12 09 Hoops, mast, and truss 120 0 9 0 41-2 in flasks chest 06 03 02 set 0 01.2* box or 1-2 chest 03 0112 0 wood 1,200 1 6 0 9 06 palm, seal, train, or whale tun 16 09 06 06 04 rape, also spermaceti 24 12 09 Hoofs of cattle ton 10 - Hops cwt. 0 2 0 1 0 1 of vitriol - 30 16 10 bag or pocket 0 1 *Oils of all kinds boiled or manu- Horns and horn tips 1,200 1 0 0 6 04 factured since their importation hogshead 05 butt or pipe 06 0 3 04 tierce puncheon or cask shavings, also slugs ton 10 0 6 hogshead 02 0 2 0 I 0 I barrel 0 1.2 Hurdles (containing one dozen) mat pair 06 02 0 012 Jackscrews 0 3 bottle, jar, jug, or can *Jars and jugs containing barley, package 02 01 0 Onions oatmeal, groats, peas, or other ar- loose bushel 01 0 012 0 ticles of British or Irish growth, Opium, also orange peel cwt. 03 0 11-2 0 produce, or manufacture, not other- Oranges case or chest 03 0 112 0 wise rated, each 0 01-2 box or other package 02 0 I 0 Iceland moss,or lichen Islandicus,cwt. 03 0 11-2 0 1 Orchella weed ton 30 1 6 10 Indigo - 10 06 04 Orrice root ewt. 0 3 0 112 01 Ipecacuanha root - 03 0 11-2 0 1 Packing boards dozen 0 0 01-4 Iron, viz. bar, bolt, or rod ton 10 06 0 8 Paint and painters' colours and ma- broken or old - 09 0 41-2 04 terials ton 20 1 0 cast, or pig - 06 03 0 8 case, chest, or hogshead 06 05 hoops and sheet - 16 09 0 8 tieree 0 6 03 *plate and sheet box 0 01-2 cask or puncheon 0 4 04 nails package 0.1 barrel 02 0 ore ton 04 02 0 2 box or bundle 0 2 02 0 01-2 wire, or wrought - 20 1 0 0 8* keg 0 012 *cask 0 4 jar or jug 0 01-2 0 01-2 Isinglass ewt. 0 3 0 1-2 0 1 Paper bale, case, chest 08 04 Juice, lemon, lime, and orange tun 24 12 09 1-2 bale, bandle, box 04 02 Junk ton 10 06 04 ream 0 012 0 0 01-4 Ivory cwt. 06 03 02 Paving stones ton 0 2 0 I 01 Kelp ton 1 0 06 04 Pearl and shelled barley, pepper, Lac, gum, stick, seed, and shell, cwt. 0 3 0 0 1 white or black, pewter, or pimento Lace package 10 06 0 3 ton 20 10 08 Lampblack, latton black, & lard, ton 20 10 0 8 Pears, pistachio nuts bushel 01 0 012 0 014 Laths bundle 0 I 0 01-2 0 012 Pickles gallon 0 01-2 0 014 Lead, and lead ore ton 1 0 06 0 8 03 *box, case, or chest black, red, white, & powder 20 I 0 0 8 #barrel 0 012 Leather (tanned) cwt. 0 3 0 1-2 0 1 *keg, jar, or jug 0 01-2 wrought package 06 03 Pink root cwt. 03 0 11-2 0 Leeches 06 03 0 2 Pitch last of 12 barrels 16 0 9 06 Lemons case or chest 03 0 11-2 01 Plaster of Paris ton 1 0 06 04 box or other package 0 2 0 1 0 1 Plate and plated ware package 10 06 03 Lime hogshead 06 0 3 Ploughs loose, each 04 0 2ª *keg 0 01-2 0 0 1-2 Potatoes ton 06 0 3 03 *puncheon or cask 0 3 exported in packages barrel 0 10 *tierce 0 3 hamper 001-2* Limes package 03 0 112 0 1 Preserved ginger cwt. 0 3 0 112 0 Limestones ton 02 01 0 I Preserves - 04 0 2 Linen cloth package 10 06 0 3 Printers' liquor 100 gallons 07 0 312 0 314 piece 0 1 0 0 1-2 0 01-2 Prints or pictures case or box 06 03 03 *rags crate 0 3 Prunelloes ewt. 02 01 01 thread yarn cwt. 04 02 Prunes ton 20 1 0 08 *manufactured package 03 Pumice stone - 10 0 6 04 Liquorice paste, also litharge ton 20 10 08 Quern stones each 09 0 41.2 03 Maccaroni cwt. 06 03 02 Quicksilver package 06 0 3 02 Mace 06 0 4 Quills 1,200 0 I 0 012 - 10 0 3ª *Machines, bark mills, binnacles, package brewing, coffee fanners, and cook- Rags ton 10 0 6 04 ing apparatus each 06 06 06 Raisins, also rock moss 20 1 0 08 copying - 06 02 02 Rhubarb cwt. 03 0 12 0 corn, also filtering - 06 06 Rice ton 16 09 06 fire engines - 09 09 Riddles bundle 0012* gins, linseed cribbles, Rosin ton 16 0 9 06 0112* malt mills, mangles, barrel packing presses, paper Rushes load (63 bundles) 10 0 6 04 moulds, sawing, sedans, Safflower, sal ammoniac, or gem, ton 20 10 08 and shower baths, each 06 06 Saffron package 06 0 3 02 soap cutters - 03 03 Sago, sanguis draconis, salep, also straw cutters, also tin - 06 06 sanders wood, white and yellow, turning fathes 03 03 cwt. 03 0 112 01 - turning drills - 02 02 Saileloth package 10 06 0 $ all other packages of ma- Sails each 06 0 3 02 0 6 16 09 06 chinery - 06 Saltpetre ton Machinery (loose) ton 20 10 08 firkin 0 Madder - 20 10 0 8 Salt, rock ton 16 09 03 roots - 16 09 0 6 white 10 06 04 Manganese, also marble - I 0 06 04 Sand for ironfounders and glass- Manure 1 02 0 1 blowers ton 0 1 Marble, sculptured, loose pieces 26 13 0 10 silversmiths casks 0 6 10 06 Sarsaparilla, also sausages cwt. 02 01 01 package Marmalade cwt. 10 0 6 0 4 Sassafras ton 16 0 9 06 Mastich, & mother-of-pearl shell : 0 112 0 1 Seammony cwt 1 0 0 6 04 Matchets package 0 3* Seythe stones dozen 0 012 0 014 0 012 Millboards 120 0 6 Scythes bundle - 0012 stones each I 0 0 6 04 Seeds, viz. aniseeds, caraway, clover, Mineral waters package 06 0 3 0 2 or trefoil cwt. 03 0 1-2 0 08 Molisses ton 16 0 9 0 6 Canary ton 20 10 cask or puncheon 0 4ª coriander and garden cwt. 03 0 11-2 01 Mum tun 24 1 2 0 9 flax or linseed, hemp and Muriate of lime, potash, and soda, ton 10 0 6 0 4 rape quarter 03 0 112 0 Musical instruments package 10 0 6 furze 100 bushels 20 10 08 Muskets case or chest 05 mustard ton 20 10 0.5 cwt. 02 0 1 rye grass 100 bushels 20 10 08 Mustard package 0 2* Senna ton 20 1 0 08 Natron, also nixon sal ton 20 1 0 0 8 Shaddocks package 03 0 112 01 Nests of trunks each 05 Shakes hhd. puncheon, or tierce 01 0 1 0 1" Nutmegs cwt. 10 0 6 04 barrel, 1-2 barrel, or 14 cask 0 012 0 012 0012" Nuts bushel 01 0 012 0 1 Sheathing ton 10 0 6 Digitized by Google DOCKS (LIVERPOOL) 605 Inwards. Inwards. Out. Out- Articles. Count- Articles. Fo- wards. Fo- Coast- wards. reign. wise. reign. wise. a. d. 8. d. a.d. 8. d. 8. d. s.d. Shovels or spades bundle 01 0 01-2 Wood, vis. anchor stocks each 03 0 11.8 01 Shumae ton 16 09 06 axe handles 120 0 3 0 11.8 0 1 Sieves dozen 0 I 0 012 0 01-2 battens, vis. to 21 fL long Silk, raw or thrown CWL 16 0 9 06 120 10 06 04 waste - 09 0 41.2 03 above 21 ft. long - 16 09 0418 minnufactured package 10 0 6 03 batten ends - 05 0 21-2 0 2 Skins, kip and calf, dry cwt. 0 3 0 11.2 0 1 beech poles load 10 0 6 04 wet - 0 118 0 03-4 0 01-8 boards, vis beach, birch, pine, 001-49 and poplar 120 20 10 0 8 badger, bear, beaver, deer, alk, clap - 10 06 04 ermine, fisher, fox, leopard, oak, above 15 n. - 30 16 1 0 Itom, marten, otter, pastber, under do. - 8 0 10 0 8 seal, (fur), tiger score 06 03 0 2 wainscot, above do. - 3 0 16 10 eat, chinchilli, husse, mink, under do. 2 0 10 0 8 racoon, seal (hair) 120 06 0 8 08 coal pit props load 06 goat, fatch, kid, lamb, mus- crate and crop wood - 03 quash, autria, sheep, swan, deals, viz under 21 ft. 120 20 10 0 8 120 03 0 11-2 0 1 exceeding do. - 30 16 I 0 (coney, here, mole - 0 1 0 01-8 0 01-8 deal ends - 10 06 0 4 Siskates, also slate pencils package 06 0 3 0 2 fir quarters or balks, viz. Slate and slate slabs ton 06 0 3 0 2 under 8 in. square - 20 10 08 States puncheon or cask 0 40 8 inches and above load 0 9 0 41.2 0 3 writing package 0 30 fire wood fathom 04 0 8 Slime too 0 % lath wood - 0 6 08 08 Smalts cwt. 08 0 I 0 1 masts, via. 6 in. and under Smart sticks 1,200 16 0 9 06 8 in. each 0 3 0 11-2 01 Souff ton 20 10 0 8 8 in. and under 12in.- 0 6 0 3 0 2 Seep - 20 10 0 8 oak knees, viz. under 8 in. package 00 square 120 26 13 010 Soder, or solder, or spelter ton $0 1 0 0 8 8 in-square & apwards, load 10 06 04 Spermaceti ewt. 03 0 1-4 0 1 car rafters and cars 120 10 06 04 Spinnel bales 03 011801 old wood load 06 03 0 8 Spirits 100 gallons 010 0 5 planks, viz. beach, birch, pipe 0 6 oak, and poplar load 13 0 71.8 05 puncheon 0 4 pine 120 20 10 0 8 hogehead 0 2 spare, viz. under 22 ft. long- 10 06 04 Spirits of salts bottle 08 01 0 1 22 ft. long & upwards- 20 10 0 8 Sponge cwt. 06 0 3 0 2 sprace knees, via. under 8 in. Spra's 1,000 0 01-2 120 20 10 0 8 Spruce beer 22 gallons 06 0 3 08 8 in. and upwards, load 09 0 41-8 0 3 Squills cwt. 03 0 1-2 0 1 staves, above 1 1-2 in. thick, Starch ton 20 10 08 not exceeding 36 in. loog, *Stationery package 04 0 2 0 3 120 03 0 11-2 01 Steel, also sulphur vivam lon 16 09 06 exceeding 36 in. and under Straw and straw plait package 06 0 3 02 60 120 06 0 3 0 8 Sturgeon - 01 0 01-2 0 01-2 exceeding 60 in. long - 09 0 41-2 0 3 Succades and sweetments cwt. 10 06 04 not above 1 1.8 in. thick, not Sugar ton 20 10 08 exceeding 36 in. long 120 0 1 0 018 0 refund hogshead 05 exceeding 36 in. and under tierce 0 3 60 120 02 0 01 barrel 0 1-2 exceeding 60 in. long - 03 0 11-2 0 1 puncheon 0 4 timber, viz. fir load 09 0 41.8 03 eaudy cwt. 08 01 teak or oak - 10 0 6 04 Tale, tamariads, or tapioca - 03 0 1-8 1 pine, & all other timber 09 0 41-2 03 Tallow, also tin of all kinds too 80 I 0 08 ufers, vis. under un. long 120 80 10 08 Tanners' waste - 04 02 24 ft. long or upwards 30 16 10 Tapes, British package 06 0 3 wainscot logs load 16 09 06 Tar last (18 barrels) 80 1 0 0 1 wedges 1,00 1 6 0 9 06 water barrel 02 0 1 0 1 British or Irish - 03 Tarras bushel 0 01-2 0 1-4 wheel spokes and fellies - 16 0 9 06 Tes package 06 03 0 2 British or Irish 03 Thread, linen, twist, cotton, or yarn, barwood or boxwood ton 16 0 9 0 6 cwt. 04 0 2 Brazil and Braziletto, or cam- Thrums bag 03 0 11-2 01 wood ton 20 10 08 Tin plates box 0 018 pipe boards. See Staves. Tobacco & stalks, also turmeric CWL 01 0 01-2 0 01-2 masts, 12 in. and upwards. Tobacco pipes box 08 See Fir Timber. Tongues package 0 1 0 01-8 0 018 cedar wood, ebony, fustie, Tortoise shell cwi. 06 03 02 Guinea wood, ligum vita, Tow too 10 06 04 logwood, mahogany, or red Toys package 06 08 0 3 sanders ton 16 09 0 6 Treenails 1,200 06 03 08 Nicaragua wood, sapan, or Trucks each 04 02 0 2 resewood too 20 10 08 Truffles CWL 10 06 04 Woollens package 10 Turnips ton 03 0 30 Yame package 03 0 11-8 01 Turpentine - 16 09 0 6 Yarn, bay cwt 02 0 0 1 Twine cwt. 0 2 0 1 cotton or twist - 04 0 2 0 2 Types box 04 02 grogram, also worsted - 02 0 1 Valerian cwt. 0 2 01 0 I linen - 04 0 2 Valouia, also varnish ton 16 09 0 6 Yeart package 10 06 02 Vanelloes cwt. 1 0 0 6 04 Zaffre (a species of cobalt) cwt. 04 0 8 08 Venice turpentine - 0 3 0 11-2 0 1 too 20 10 0 8 Verdigris Vermicelli, also vermilion cwt. 06 03 0 2 Vinegar and verjuice ton 84 12 09 pipe 0 6# Articles not rated, but to pay as follows. cask 0 40 hogshead 0 ge Inwards, viz. Carpets as woollens; china as earthenware; cider, 1.2 hogshead 0 10 bottled, as ale; cordials as spirits, dammon as main; coin, foreign, Vitriol, white tun 80 1 0 0 8 as bullion; hosiery as haberdashery, iron liquor as printers' oil of - 86 1 3 0 10 liquor, ima in packages as hardware. millinery as haberdashery, Whalebone fins cwt. 0 2 0 I 0 I mlad oil as alive in finsks, pomegrana's as oranges ; saddlery, Wheelbarrows each 04 0 8 0 8 wrought leather slops, see Haberdashery straw bonnets and Whetstopes cask 10 06 04 wearing apparel as haberdashery. Whip-sricks bundle 0 1 0 01-2 0 018 Outwards, viz. Bacon, hams, lard, and tripe, as beef and pork Whiting ton 10 06 04 iron, in packages, as hardware linen as cotton, machinery as Wine tun 24 18 09 wrought iron, paper as stationery, pewter and tin as copper, pre- bottled barrel 0 1.2 serves as pickles soda water as pickles, tapes or linen, and twine, box 0 2 thread, twist, as cottons. case 0 2 Painters' colours. in packages, outwards, includes ashes, brown pow. cask 0 4 der, cement, chalk. charcoal, chromate of lead, or imp, copperse, bogshead 0 5 cudbear, earths, blue, grease or greaves, lamp black, lead, litharge, puncheon 0 4 manganess, ochre, starch, and whiting. tierce 0 3 3 E 2 Digitized by Google 606 DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). LIVERPOOL Town DuEs.-Besides the dock rates, town dues are levied on goods inwards and on- wards, at a certain rate per package. The annual amount of these duties, since 1812, is shown ina previous Table, and we now subjoin an account of the rate at which they are charged. Articles. Inwards. Outwards. Articles. lawards. Outwarks ad a. ad ad Alabaster, the ton 0 2 0 2 Nuts, the barrel 0 % 01 Arbes of fern, the 100 bushels 14 08 the bag 01 01 Bacon, the ton 1 0 06 Oak bark, the tom 06 " Bricks, the 1,000 01 timber, the tom 06 " Butter. the ton I 0 06 planks, the 120 10 06 Calamine, the ton 0 3 03 Oil, viz. fish or train, the tom 08 08 Candles, the box 0 I 0 018 Paper, the pack 0 2 08 Cheese, the ton 06 06 Perry or cider, the hogebead 08 02 Clay for potters, the tom 0 3 03 Potatoes, the 100 bushels 10 10 Copper, the ton 06 03 Pots of iron, the ton 06 03 Cotton, the bag 0 2 01 Raisina, the 100 baskets 10 06 Coals, the chaldren (Winchester mea- Salt, white, the 100 bushels 20 sure) 0 834 0 234 coastwies 10 the tom 08 0 % rock, the 100 bushels 14 Cow shanks, the 1,000 0 2 0 constwise, do. 08 borns, the 100 01 0 Seeds, garden, the sack 01 0 012 Cork wood, the ton 10 06 States, the ton 02 02 Corn, of all sorts, the 100 bushels 14 08 Soap, the box 01 0 018 Currants, the butt 08 04 Spirits, the puncheon 08 04 Deals, the 120 10 06 the hogshead 06 0 $ Deer skins, loose, the 100 03 0 drawn from corn, the punchson 0 % " dreased, the hogehead 04 0 2 Staves, heading, and handspikes, the Dyeing wood, of every kind, the too 06 0 3 1,000 06 " Earthomware, the crate 0 8 Starch, the chest 0 8 0 2 the 1-8 crate 01 Sugar, the bogshead 04 0 % loose, the load 8 pieces) 04 the tierce 03 9 Ebony, the ton 06 03 the barrel 0 2 0 Elephants' teeth, the tom I 0 06 Tallow, the cwt. 01 0 Feathers, the bed or bag 08 03 Tar and pitch, the barrel 08 01 Fish, salted, or stockfish, the tom 10 06 Timber (Br, &c.), the load 06 03 Ginger, the bag 0 I 0018 Tobacco, the hogshead 04 02 Glass bottles, the 100 dozen 10 06 Turpentine, the barrel 12 01 Groceries, constwise, the hogshead 0 2 02 Wainscot boards, the 120 10 " the firkin 0 01-2 0 Wine, the pipe 10 06 Gum Senegal, the tom 10 06 the hogebead 06 0 3 Guppowder, the barrel 01 0 coastwise, the pipe 10 06 Hemp or flax, the ton 10 06 Window glass, the side 01 01 Herrings, the barrel 01 01 the box 0 01-2 0012 Hides of cows and oxen, each 01 0 01-8 Wool, the bag 04 04 imported from the East Yarms, lines, the trues 06 08 Indies, the dosen 01 0 01-2 the peck 04 08 of horses, each 0 01-4 0 01-4 foreign, the fatt 08 04 Hope, the pocket 0 2 02 bay, the pack 04 $ 2 Iron, in bars, the ton 10 06 Dry goods, not before described, the in pigs, or cast, the tom 06 03 package, viz. ore, the tom 08 03 bale 04 01 Kelp, the ton 06 03 barrel 02 01 Lead, lead ore, or eapper are, the ton 06 06 box 0 2 01 Lathwood, the fathom 0 2 01 bundle 01 0012 Linen, of all sorts, the pack 04 08 case 04 02 a box or bundle 08 01 cask 04 : Lemons or oranges, the chest 0 2 01 chest 04 01 the box 01 0 crate 0 8 0 2 Lignum vitas, the ton 0 6 03 1-2 crate 01 01 Mahogany, the ton 06 06 hamper 01 0 Masts, above 12 inches diameter 0 3 03 hogebend 04 0 2 8 inches and under 12 inches puncheon 06 03 diameter 0 2 0 2 tierce 03 0 6 inches and under 8 inches trunk 0 % 01 diameter 01 01 truss 08 01 Meal of oats, Ac. the ton 06 06 keg 0 1 0013 Molasses, the horshead 0 8 02 as The above duties are not due on goods, the property of, and to be sold solely on account of. per- sons free of Liverpool, Bristol, London, Waterford, or Wexford; nor on the exportation of goods. which may have been imported, or brought coastwise, provided they are, at the time of exportation. the same property as when so imported, or brought coastwise. The Liverpool Docks are all constructed upon the estate of the corporation, and are me naged by commissioners appointed by parliament. The warehouses belong to individuals and are private property. None of them belong to the Dock estate. Most of them course, situated in the immediate vicinity of the docks. The discharging and loading d vessels in Liverpool is effected by a class of men called tumpers. Individuals who follow this business engage to discharge a ship for a specific, or lump sum, from 2 guineas, perhaps, up to 20, according to the size and description of cargo, having the requisite number of com- mon labourers (chiefly Irishmen) to do the work; the lumper being master and superm- tendent: these labourers are generally paid day wages, but sometimes the job is a joint coll cern among the whole. A West India ship of 500 tons would be discharged by lumpers for from 15L to 20L: $ cotton ship of the same burden for 4l. to 6L By discharging is merely meant putting out the cargo on the quay the proprietors of the goods employ their own porters to weigh load, and warehouse the property they likewise employ their own coopers, where cooper age is required. It will be seen that the system of managing business of this sort in Liverpool is entirely different from the plan followed in London, at least in the East India Docks, where all these operations are performed by the Dock Company. The expense of loading a West India ship of 500 tons outwards would not be half # much as that of discharging inwards, because they very seldom take a full cargo outwork Digitized by Google DOCKS (LIVERPOOL). 607 The average does not, perhaps, exceed a third. Hence the total expense of a West India ship of 500 tons, coming into and going out of the port of Liverpool, may be estimated as follows :- L. 8. d. L. 8. d. Pilotage inwards - - - 8 11 0 Pilotage outwards - - - 3 8 0 Boat hire, warping, &c. - - 0 10 6 Boat hire assisting out - - - 0 10 6 Lumpers' discharging - - 17 10 0 Labourers' hire for loading - - 510 0 L. 37 0 0 0 Besides these, there is the charge for the various light-houses in St. George's Channel which cannot be called an expense peculiar to Liverpool. On the 1st of January, 1836, there belonged to Liverpool 966 registered vessels, of the burden of 207,833 tons, manned by 11,511 men and boys. The gross customs duty col- lected in the port during the year 1837 amounted to the enormous sum of 4,351,496L! Imports of the principal Articles of East and West Indian, American, &c. Produce into Liverpool, during each of the Five Years ending with 1838, with the Stocks on Hand on the 31st of December each Year.-(From the Circular Statement of Messrs. Jee, Brothers, and Co., 31st December, 1838.) Imports. Stocks on Hand, 31st of December. Articles. Packages and Quantities. 1834. 1835. 1836. 1837. 1838. 1834. 1835. 1836. 1837. 1838. Ashes, American barrels. pot. 2,150 3,500 6,700 4,500 7,500 6,580 13,900 17,500 14,800 15,700 pri. 2,100 1,000 2,400 2,500 2,500 Brimstone tons 9,780 11,900 14,800 14,500 16,900 2,500 2,900 7,500 7,400 11,000 Cocoa bris. and bags 3,080 1,550 6,500 5,500 2,300 1,950 520 5,000 5,200 1,500 Coffee, West India casks 8,040 7,500 7,600 5,600 8,100 ditto bris. and bags 5,170 5,900 5,000 5,000 6,800 tons 800 1,990 1,500 950 1,630 East India, &c. do. 9,930 8,800 6,900 15,700 8,420 Cotton bags, &c. 839,285 968,279 1,022,871 1,034,000 1,330,430 145,300 184,700 204,590 170,820 248,340 Dyewood, fustic tons 11,770 8,500 3,700 3,100 3,150 4,200 4,400 3,200 1,700 250 logwood do. 10,460 8,900 6,900 9,000 8,860 3,800 3,100 2,300 1,500 350 Nicaragua wood do. 3,460 4,550 3,700 1,750 900 1,850 3,500 4,800 4,900 4,000 Camwood do. 520 450 350 550 250 200 100 100 200 50 barwood do. 1,500 2,200 1,000 1,200 640 1,100 760 950 1,700 1,000 Flour, American barrels 21,020 3,800 2,800 440 16,200 163,500 100,000 69,000 52,000 20,000 Ginger, West India bris. and bags 2,070 2,350 2,000 2,450 2,000 an 600 1,500 2,700 East India, &c. pockets 10,020 15,100 28,000 22,100 28,000 bags 2,300 4,600 7,000 tons 300 tons 450 Hides, foreign, cow and OX number 469,400 323,500 264,600 295,000 350,000 211,700 91,000 71,000 20,000 44,420 East India do. 203,200 396,000 364,000 275,000 171,000 27,000 100,000 60,000 24,000 21,400 horse do. 36,100 72,000 28,200 39,000 62,000 9,100 30,000 11,000 6,000 3,800 Indigo bxs. & serons 1,460 920 990 2,700 1,810 140 170 800 100 40 East India chests 2,040 1,380 2,050 760 1,330 250 320 400 250 350 Molasses puncheons 18,850 12,800 12,700 11,250 10,100 7,450 5,000 1,800 300 2,500 Olive oil casks 7,400 2,300 7,800 6,500 8,000 tuns 1,500 500 1,100 1,300 1,050 Palm oil tons 10,860 9,000 10,800 8,300 9,000 ton 5,000 2,200 1,200 1,800 2,000 Pepper bags & pckts. 19,550 14,300 29,700 23,400 13,000 6,000 9,500 25,350 27,300 29,000 Pimento bris. and bags 1,910 3,800 4,200 3,350 1,160 6,650 4,200 6,200 8,000 6,000 Quercitron bark hogsheads 930 1,600 1,760 1,590 1,600 650 900 700 450 250 Rice, American casks 900 450 440 160 26 none none none none none paddy bushels 83,040 99,200 113,700 203,400 109,006 uncert. uncert. uncert. uncert. uncert. Brazil, African bags 850 1,100 none none none none none none none none East India do. 61,310 6,300 24,100 102,800 66,000 17,300 36,000 5,000 30,000 12,000 Rum pun. & hhds. 10,880 12,160 12,150 11,030 9,100 11,090 9,550 8,800 6,200 5,460 Salipetre bags, &c. 64,660 61,900 63,800 72,500 66,700 22,150 20,800 35,000 37,000 28,000 Seed, flax quarters 18,240 25,900 34,500 39,500 23,000 5,000 5,000 2,200 1,000 1,500 Shumac bags 46,600 53,000 54,000 33,400 68,750 8,440 10,000 6,500 5,500 12,000 Sugar, British plant. hhds. and tcs, 51,360 65,050 56,500 47,800 47,000 9,550 12,600 17,000 7,800 14,000 Havannah boxes - 680 none 840 620 1,500 none 550 none Brazil cases 2,180 3,900 5,500 2,300 3,820 550 350 1,900 1,000 1,300 Maurit. & E. I. bags and bxs. 133,650 113,000 102,300 143,000 155,700 21,800 22,000 44,000 47,000 32,500 Manilla, &c. bags and bris. 12,970 16,000 14,100 42,000 26,200 15,500 3,000 12,000 19,500 13,500 Tar, American barrels 19,180 16,200 19,000 12,000 12,000 500 none 1,200 300 2,500 Stockholm, &c. do. 41,700 41 200 17,500 19,800 44,570 10,600 15,000 6,00 4,000 16,500 casks 24,530 25,600 21,900 18,400 24,000 5,500 8,500 3,600 2,000 3,000 Tallow serons 320 1,060 100 1,300 400 Tobacco hogsheads 9,800 9,200 9,793 6,100 8,100 8,300 8,800 10,263 6,050 5,280 Turpentine barrels 87,1/70 58,200 104,000 104,300 122,000 13,000 4,500 25,000 24,000 50,000 Arrivals at Liverpool.-Account of the Number of Vessels, and their Tonnage, that have entered the Port of Liverpool from Foreign Ports, distinguishing British from Foreign, since 1820. Years. British. Foreign. Years. British. Foreign. Ships. Tens. Ships. Tone. Ships. Tone. Ships. Tone. 1820 1,146 228,233 633 166,821 1827 1,422 306,369 810 231,863 1821 1,188 242,392 582 149,151 1828 1,652 344,644 660 179,514 1822 1,263 261,137 699 174,607 1829 1,487 326,311 811 210,713 1823 1,459 296,710 798 199,866 1830 1,655 368,268 1,055 272,463 15" 1824 1,554 327,198 702 174,593 1831 1,862 413,928 978 265,037 13668 1825 1,531 315,115 863 222,187 1832 1,719 397,933 626 227,087 1826 1,387 299,037 680 181,907 The falling off in 1832 is ascribable partly to the cholera then prevailing but more to the rupture n°II with the Dutch towards the end of the year. men: a portes Irish Trade-The trade between Liverpool and Ireland has always been of considera- a pers, ble value and importance; but since the establishment of regular steam-packets to Dublin, Belfast, &c., it has increased prodigiously, The imports from Ireland into Liverpool may, iverpon' cks, at present, be estimated at about 4,500,000/. a year. They consist principally of articles of provision, which meet a ready and advantageous market in Manchester, and the surround- ing manufacturing towns. The benefits resulting to Ireland from this intercourse are quite ⑉ equal to those it confers on England; and the influence of the wealth arising from it is suf- II of Digitized by Google 608 DOCKS (BRISTOL). ficiently apparent in the improved aspect of all the eastern parts of the country. We sub- join an account, which, though not official, may be depended upon as being sufficiently ac- curate for all practical purposes, of The Quantity and Value of the various Articles of Irish raw Produce imported into Liverpool in 1831. Articles. Quantities. Av. Price. Amount. Articles. Quantities. Av.Price. Amount £ 8. £ 8. £ 8. £ 3. Cows - 90,715 10 0 907,150 0 Butter - 258,087 firks. 2 10 645,217 10 Horses 296 20 0 5,920 0 Do. - 19,217 1 firks. 1 5 24,021 5 Sheep 134,702 1 5 235,833 10 Eggs - 2,596 crates 20 0 50,120 0 Mules - 243 15 0 3,645 0 Wheat 277,060 qrs. 3 0 831,183 0 Pigs - 156,001 3 15 585,003 15 Oats - 380,679 - I 12 532,950 12 Calves 1,196 2 10 2,990 0 Barley - 21,328 - 1 15 37,394 0 Lambs - 25,725 1 0 25,725 0 Rye - 613 - 1 10 919 10 Bacon - 13,099 bales 5 0 65,494 0 Beans - 8,452 - % 0 16,904 0 Pork - 14,554 bris. 3 0 43,662 0 Peas - 1,724 - % 4 3,448 0 Do. - 936 t bris. I 15 1,638 0 Malt - 6,850 - 2 10 17,125 0 Hame and Meal - 149,816 loads 1 5 187,270 6 tongues 590 hhds. 20 0 11,800 0 Flour - 23,154 sacks 2 5 209,596 10 Beef - 6,391 tcs. 4 5 27,171 15 Do. - 1,189 bris. 3 0 3,567 4 Thus making the gross value) Lard - 465 tcs. 8 0 3,720 0 of Irish produce imported in- Do. - 4,542 firks. 1 10 6,813 0 to Liverpool in 1831 } 4,497,708 0 - Butter - 5,754 cools 2 0 11,508 0 Account of the Quantities of Salted Beef, Pork, and Butter, imported into Liverpool from Ireland during the Twelve Years ending with 1832. Year. Beef. Pork. Butter. Ticros. Barrels. Barrels. Half Barrels. Firkins. Half Firkins. 1821 6,283 2,444 25,263 3,096 232,048 13,585 1822 5,387 2,713 13,222 1,423 166,365 14,629 1823 9,936 2,137 17,408 1,498 270,521 19,265 1824 7,114 1,743 16,389 1,650 296,564 15,684 1825 7,371 1,696 14,434 1,606 327,143 13,711 1826 5,358 773 11,351 844 236,647 12,957 1827 6,201 997 15,540 2,427 302,945 20,949 1828 6,852 1,538 9,978 1,169 336,603 21.402 1829 5,170 1,536 14,453 1,494 286,740 15,808 1830 7,105 828 19,380 2,458 256,385 17,670 1831 6,391 1,189 14,554 936 258,087 19,217 1832 6,887 1,173 11,919 1,297 292,292 15,866 III. BRISTOL Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. The Bristol Docks were formed in pursuance of the act 43 Geo. 3. c. 142., by changing the course of the rivers Avon and Frome, and placing gates or locks at each extremity of the old channel. The accommodation thus obtained is very extensive. The warehouses at Bristol, as at Liverpool, are not in any way connected with the docks: they all belong to private individuals. Bristol, as a port, used to be inferior only to London; but now she ranks far below Liverpool. and probably is second to Hull. However, she still enjoys a very extensive trade, particularly with the West Indies and Ireland. The custom duties collected in Bristol amounted in 1831, to 1,161,976L In 1832, there belonged to the port 296 registered rest sels, of the burden of 46,567 tons. The produce of the dock duties on tonnage and goods, since 1820, has been as fot lows - Years. Tonnage Rates. Rates on Goods Years. Tonnage Rates. Rates on Goods. £. 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 1821 10,469 19 6 7,237 7 6 1826 14,863 10 0 9.438 14 3 1822 10,530 11 2 8,062 5 3 1827 13,934 1 8 7,773 12 0 1823 10,747 19 2 7,746 7 7 1828 15,292 0 2 8,396 16 1 1824 12,395 6 4 7,990 7 2 1829 15,833 4 6 8,871 13 0 1825 13,424 4 10 9,409 11 0 1830 15,998 12 8 8,087 1 0 The charges on ships entering Bristol are very heavy. They are as follow :- For every vessel on entering into the port of Bristol, except barges or other vessels passing or going to or from the Bath River Navigation, or Kennet and Avon Canal, or re-shipping or discharging the cargoes to be again laden, and pass or go up the said navigation or canal, but not discharging any part of their cargoes at the quays of Bristol for sale, the several rates or duties, according to the register tonnage of such vessels following, viz.- Per To £ , 1 First Class.-For every vessel trading from Africa, Honduras, Surinam, and other ports in South America, the United States of America, the East and West Indies, all the ports within the Straits of Gibraltar, and the Southern Whale Fishery - 0 3 1 Second Class.-For every vessel trading from the British Colonies, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, Spain without the Straits, and Sweden 0 1 I - Digitized by Google DOCKS (HULL). 609 Per Ton Third Class.-For every vessel trading from Flanders, France without the Straits, Germany, £ 8. d. Guernsey, Holland, Jersey, Norway, Poland. and Zealand - 0 1 0 Fourth Class.-For every vessel trading from Ireland, the Isle of Man, and Scotland - 0008 Fifth Class.-For every vessel employed as a coaster, except as aforesaid, not including vessels from Cardiff, Newport, and other ports to the eastward of the Holmes, at each entering into the said port - 006 For vessels from Cardiff, Newport, and other ports to the eastward of the Holmes (except as aforesaid), being market boats or vessels, having one third part at least of the lading consisting of coal, scruff, tin, iron, tin plates, grain, copper, bricks, stones, coal, tar, slate, bark, timber, or wood, and not exceeding 75 tons burden, each voyage - - - 050 if exceeding 75 tons burden, each voyage - - - 0 7 6 For all other vessels from Cardiff, Newport, and other ports to the eastward of the Holmes (except as aforesaid), if under 40 tons burden, each voyage - - - - 0 7 6 if of 40 tons and under 75 tons burden, each voyage - - - - - 0 12 6 if 75 tons and under 100 tons burden, each voyage - - - - - 0 16 0 if 100 tons burden or upwards, each voyage - - - - - - 110 The following is an estimate of the various expenses incurred by a West India ship of 500 tons, entering and discharging at Bristol Inmards.-Anchorage, moorage, and lights, about 6d. per ton.-Dock dues, 3s. per do.-Pilotage, 152. to 251.-Warner, 11. Is.-Mayor and quay wardens' fees, 21. 5s.-Cranage about 301.-Labour dis- charging, 30/. to 40l.-Coopers' charges, from 501. to 1001. The two last items depend greatly on the condition the cargo is in. Outwards.-Lights, about 4d. per ton.-Pilotage, 151. to 201. Account of the Number of Ships and their Tonnage, distinguishing between British and Foreign, which have entered inwards at Bristol since 1820. Years. British. Foreign. Years. British. Foreign. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. 1820 311 53,919 46 5,652 1827 412 75,916 72 8,368 1821 266 46,811 52 7,350 1828 357 66,558 61 8.508 1822 291 53,808 56 8,165 1829 371 73,129 63 8,561 1823 305 57,186 39 7,121 1830 357 66,479 50 7,818 1824 338 65,878 64 10,177 1831 404 76,807 97 12,387 1825 359 73,709 68 11,393 1832 240 46,871 29 4,352 1826 334 65,087 60 6,931 IV. HULL Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. There are three considerable docks in Hull occupying, inclusive of their basins, an area of 26 acres. They are capable of affording accommodation for about 312 ships of the average size of those that frequent the port. Hull is the next port in the empire, after Bris- tol, or perhaps Liverpool; for, although the customs duty collected in Hull be inferior to that of Bristol, it having amounted, in 1831, to only 689,116L, she has a larger amount of shipping. In 1832, there belonged to this port 557 registered vessels, of the aggregate burden of 68,892 tons. The produce of the Hull dock duties, since 1824, has been as follows :- Years. Amount. Years. Amount. Years. Amount. £ 3. d. £ s. d. £ 8. d. 1824 18,776 6 3 1827 22,381 9 9 1830 18,544 19 4 1825 25,861 16 0 1828 18,546 18 5 1831 22,386 18 5 1826 19,089 16 0 1289 19,609 5 4 1832 16,797 9 2 The decline in the last year was owing to the temporary falling off in the trade of the port, occasioned by the cholera, and the interruption of the intercourse with Holland. The regulations to be observed by ships using the Hull Docks are similar to those in the Thames ; but the dues on most articles are higher. The dock and harbour dues on ships are as follow:- Per Ton. 8. d. From within the Baltic - - - - - - - - - 1 3 Denmark, Sweden, Norway below Elsinore, or any place in Germany, Holland, Flanders, France, to the eastward of Ushant, Ireland, Guernsey, and Jersey - - - 0 10 Westward of Ushant, without the Straits of Gibraltar - - - - - 1 3 West Indies, North and South America, Africa, Greenland, eastward of the north cape of Norway, within the Straits of Gibraltar - - - - - 1 9 Number of Vessels, with the Amount of their Tonnage, entering inwards from Foreign Parts, at the Port of Hull, each Year from 1820, separating British from Foreign.-(Part. Paper, No. 656. Sess. 1833.) Years. British. Foreign. Years British. Foreign. Ships. Tvns. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. 1820 627 117,434 117 15,111 1827 932 191,364 800 72,338 1821 578 113,133 106 13,820 1828 881 156,925 674 60,082 1822 672 134,999 103 14,011 1829 883 165,791 603 58,854 1823 778 153,313 203 26,103 1830 897 163,657 556 51,015 1821 776 142,615 510 58,603 1831 974 187,361 725 73,547 1825 1,171 27,363 1,000 100,773 1839 762 140,788 454 43,481 1826 717 130,674 851 70,137 77 Digitized by Google 610 DOCKS (GOOLE, LEITH), DOG. The port of Goole has latterly drawn off some portion of the trade of Hull. A large proportion of the foreign vessels frequenting the port are of small burden, and are engaged in the importation of bones, rags, rapeseed, &c. V. GOOLE Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. The port of Goole, situated on the Ouse, a little above its junction with the Humber, about 22 miles more inland than Hull, promises to prove a formidable rival to the latter. Ten or 12 years ago, Goole was but an insignificant hamlet. It communicates by means of canals with Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, Wakefield, &c. Though so remote from the sea, vessels drawing 15 or 16 feet of water reach Goole in safety. It has 2 wet docks and a basin. The first, or ship dock, is 800 feet long by 200 in breadth. The second, or barge dock, is 900 feet long by 150 wide, and is intended for the accommodation of the small craft which ply upon the canals and rivers. The warehouses at Goole are extensive and conve- venient; and it has been admitted to the privileges of a bonding port. There belonged to it, in 1832, 119 registered ships, of the burden of 8,545 tons. VI. LEITH Docks, SHIPPING, ETC. Leith has 2 wet docks, constructed in the very best manner, containing more than 10 acres of water room, and capable of accommodating 150 such ships as frequent the port. There are also 3 dry docks contiguous to the wet docks. The total expense of these docks seems to have amounted to 285,108L sterling. Exten- sive improvements are at present going forward at the harbour of Leith but the money for this purpose has not been furnished by individuals, but by government, and there is much reason to doubt whether the expenditure will be profitable. The customs duty collected at Leith in 1831 amounted to 431,8214; the number of registered vessels belonging to the port is 246, and their burden 25,629 tons. Dock Rates at Leith are as follow: :- Per Tea For every ship or vessel, from any port between Buchanness and Eyemouth, including the great canal and the river Clyde, as far down as Greenock, coming by the canal. 4 from any other port in Great Britain and Ireland 8 from Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holstein, Hamburgh, Bremen, Holland, and Flanders, that is, without the Baltic, and no further south than Dunkirk 10) from the Baltic, all above the Sound, Onega, Archangel, Jersey or Guernsey, Portugal, France, and Spain, without the Straits of Gibraltar, Newfoundland, Madeira, or Western Islands If from within the Straits of Gibraltar, or from America 4 - - from the West Indies, Asia, Africa, or the Cape de Verd Islands - 8 - - from Greenland or Davis's Straits 0 But if such ship or vessel shall make a second voyage, she shall be credited in the charge for such voyage 0 4 For all ships and vessels (excepting those from Greenland or Davis's Straits) remaining in the dock above 3 calendar months, for each after-month, or any part thereof 0 & For all foreign vessels from any of the before-mentioned ports or places, the aforesaid re- spective rates, and one half more. For all loaded vessels not breaking bulk, and for all vessels in ballast which do not take in goods, coming into the present harbour, provided they do not make use of any of the docks, nor remain in the harbour above 4 weeks, one half of the aforesaid rates or duties. For every ship or vessel going from the port of Leith to any other port in the Frith of Forth, to take in a part of a cargo, and return to Leith, upon her return 0 1 No ship or vessel shall be subjected in payment of the aforesaid rates and duties for more than8 voyages in any 1 year. Flag, or Light Dues.-Every vessel, of whatever burden, from foreign ports 2 6 of 40 tons burden and upwards, to pay for each coasting voyage 0 2 6 It Beacon and anchorage, per ton This duty is only charged upon four-fifths of the register tonnage. DOG (Fr. Chien; Ger. Hund; It. Cane; Lat. Canis familiaris). Of this quadruped, emphatically styled " the friend and companion of man," there is a vast variety of species. But to attempt to give any description of an animal so well known, would be quite out of place in a work of this kind and we mention it for the purpose principally of laying the following account before our readers, with a remark or two with respect to Asiatic dogs. An Account of the Number of Dogs entered, and for which Duty was paid in Great Britain, in the Year 1830; distinguishing the Number of Packs of Hounds, and the Number of each Description of Dog, the Rate of Duty on each, and the aggregate Amount paid. Description of Dogs. Rates of Duty. Total Number. Amount of Daty. £ 8. d. £ 8. & Greyhounds - 100 18,192 18,192 0 0 Pointers, hounds, setting dogs, spaniels, terriers, lurchers, or any other dogs, where persons keep two or more dogs - 0140 113,307 79,314 18 0 Other dogs persons keepings one only - - 080 219,013 87,605 4 0 Total, exclusive of packs of hounds - - - - 350,512 185,112 2 0 , Packs of hounds - - - - - 36 0 0 68 2,448 0 " From the number of persons compounding for their taxes, it is impossible to ascertain the number " Many dogs are exempted, either as belonging to poor persons, or as sheep dogs on small farms. of dogs kept ; the account is, therefore, made out of the number assessed." Digitized by Google DOWN-DRAWBACK. 611 Cuvier, the great French naturalist, says, "The dog is the most complete, the most re- markable, and the most useful conquest ever made by man every species has become our property each individual is altogether devoted to his master, assumes his manners, knows and defends his goods, and remains attached to him until death; and all this proceeds nei- ther from want nor constraint, but solely from true gratitude and real friendship. The swift- ness, the strength, and the scent of the dog have created for man a powerful ally against other animals, and were, perhaps, necessary to the establishment of society. He is the only animal which has followed man through every region of the earth." It is singular, however, that neither Cuvier, nor any one of those by whom his statements have been copied, should have mentioned that this account is applicable only to Europe. All Mahommedan nations regard the dog as impure, and will not touch it without an ablu- tion. The same is also the case with the Hindoos. From the Hellespont to the confines of Cochin-China, dogs are unappropriated, and have no master. They prowl about the towns and villages; and though they are naturally more familiar, they are in no respect more do- mesticated, than the carrion crows, kites, vultures, &c. which assist them in performing the functions of scavengers. In China and Cochin-China, the dog is eaten as food its flesh being, with the exception of that of the hog, the most common in their markets. The unnecessary multiplication of dogs, particularly in large cities, is a very great nui- sance; coming, as they often do, into the possession of those who are without the means of providing for them, they are frequently left to wander about in the streets; and from ill usage, want of food and of proper attention, are apt, during hot weather, to become rabid. In several districts of the metropolis the nuisance has attained to a formidable height; and it is singular, considering the numerous fatal occurrences that have taken place, that no effort should have been made to have it abated. It has grown to its present excess, partly from too many exemptions being granted from the duty, and partly from a want of care in its collection but besides lessening the number of the former, and more rigidly enforcing the latter, it would be proper to enact that all dogs found wandering in the streets without mas- ters should be destroyed. DOWN (Ger. Dunen, Flaumfedern Du. Dons; Fr. Duvet; It. Penna malta, Piu- mini ; Sp. Flojel, Plumazo; Rus. Puch; Lat. Plumæ), the fine feathers from the breasts of several birds, particularly those of the duck kind. That of the eider duck is the most valuable. These birds pluck it from their breasts and line their nests with it. Mr. Pennant says that it is 80 very olastic, that a quantity of it weighing only } of an ounce, fills a larger space than the crown of the greatest hat. That found in the nest is most valued, and termed live down ; it is much more elastic than that plucked from the dead bird, which is com- paratively little esteemed. The eider duck is found on the western islands of Scotland, but the down is principally imported from Norway and Iceland. DRAGONS' BLOOD. See BALSAM. DRAWBACK, a term used in commerce to signify the remitting or paying back of the duties previously paid on a commodity on its being exported. A drawback is a device resorted to for enabling a commodity affected by taxes to be ex- ported and sold in the foreign market on the same terms as if it had not been taxed at all. It differs in this from a bounty,-that the latter enables a commodity to be sold abroad for less than its natural cost, whereas a drawback enables it to be sold exactly at its natural cost. Drawbacks, as Dr. Smith has observed, " do not occasion the exportation of a greater quan- tity of goods than would have been exported had no duty been imposed. They do not tend to turn towards any particular employment a greater share of the capital of the country than would go to that employment of its own accord, but only to hinder the duty from driv- ing away any part of that share to other employments. They tend not to overturn that balance which naturally establishes itself among all the various employments of the society ; but to hinder it from being overturned by the duty. They tend not to destroy, but to preserve, what it is in most cases advantageous to preserve-the natural division and distribution of labour in the society.' ii. p. 352.) Were it not for the system of drawbacks, it would be impossible, unless when a country enjoyed some very peculiar facilities of production, to export any commodity that was heavier taxed at home than abroad. But the drawback obviates this difficulty, and enables mer- chants to export commodities loaded at home with heavy duties, and to sell them in the foreign market on the same terms as those fetched from countries where they are not taxed. Most foreign articlesimported into this country may be warehoused for subsequent exporta- tion. In this case they pay no duties on being imported and, of course, get no drawback on their subsequent exportation. Sometimes a drawback exceeds the duty or duties laid on the article; and in such cases the excess forms a real bounty of that amount, and should be so considered. It is enacted by the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52., that no drawback or bounty shall be allowed upon the exportation from the United Kingdom of any goods, unless such goods shall have been entered in the name of the person who was the real owner thereof at the time of entry and shipping, or of the per- Digitized by Google 612 DUBBER-EARTHENWARE. son who had actually purchased and shipped the same, in his own name and at his own liability and risk, on commission, according to the practice of merchants, and who was and shall have continued to be entitled in his own right to such drawback or bounty, except in the cases herein-after provided for.-0 86. No drawback shall be allowed upon the exportation of any goods, unless such goods be shipped within 3 years after the payment of the duties inwards thereon. And no debenture for any draw- back or bounty upon the exportation of any goods, shall be paid after the expiration of 2 years from the shipment of such goods; and no drawback shall be allowed upon any goods which, by reason of damage or decay, shall have become of less value for home use than the amount of such drawback; and all goods so damaged which shall be cleared for drawback shall be forfeited; and the person who caused such goods to be 80 cleared shall forfeit 2001., or treble the amount of the drawback, at the option of the commissioners of customs.-d 90. No drawback or bounty shall be allowed upon goods exported and cleared as being press-packed, unless the quantities and qualities of the same be verified by oath of the master packer thereof, or, in case of his unavoidable absence, by oath of his foreman.- 93. No goods cleared for drawback or bounty, or from any warehouses, shall be carried to be put on board ship for exportation, except by a person authorised for that purpose by licence of the commis- sioners of customs.-d 91.-(See IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION.) [All goods, wares, and merchandise, which were entitled to debenture on the 6th of January, 1829, or which shall have been imported into the United States subsequently to that date, may be exported with the benefit of drawback, and without any deduction from the duty on the same, at any time within three years from the date when the same shall have been imported. For the regulations concerning drawback, the reader is referred to the article IMPORTA- TION AND EXPORTATION.-Am. Ed.] DUBBER, a leathern vessel, bottle, or jar, used in India to hold oil, ghee, &c. Barrels, as already observed—(see BARRELS),-are entirely a European invention. Liquids, in Eastern countries, are for the most part packed for exportation in leathern vessels. Dub- bers are made of thin untanned goat skins; and are of all sizes, from a quart up to nearly a barrel. DUNNAGE, in commercial navigation, loose wood, consisting of pieces of timber, boughs of trees, faggots, &c., laid in the bottom and against sides of the ship's hold, either, 1st, by raising the cargo when she is loaded with heavy goods, to prevent her from becom- ing too stiff-(see BALLAST) or, 2d, to prevent the cargo, should it be susceptible of damage by water, from being injured in the event of her becoming leaky. A ship is not reckoned seaworthy unless she be provided with proper and sufficient dunnage.-(Falconer's Marine Dictionary; Abbott (Lord Tenterden) on the Law of Shipping, part iii. c. 3.) E. EARNEST, in commercial law, is the sum advanced by the buyer of goods in order to bind the seller to the terms of the agreement. It is enacted by the 17th section of the in- mous Statute of Frauds, 29 Cha. II. c. 3., that no contract for the sale of any goods, wares, and merchandises, for the prices of 10/. sterling or upwards, shall be allowed to be good, except the buyer shall accept part of the goods so sold, and actually receive the same, or give something in earnest to bind the bargain, or in part payment, or that some note or memorandum in writing of the said bargain be made and signed by the parties to be charged by such contract, or their agents thereunto lawfully authorised." As to what amounts to sufficient earnest, Blackstone lays it down, that if any part of the price is paid down, if it is but a penny, or any portion of the goods is delivered by way of earnest, it is binding." To constitute earnest, the thing must be given as a token of ratification of the contract, and it should be expressly stated so by the giver.-(Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. p. 289.) EARTHENWARE (Ger. Irdene Waaren ; Du. Aardegoed; Fr. Vaisselle de terre, Poterie; It. Slov glie, Terraglia; Sp. Loza de barro; Rus. Gorschetschüe possodü; Pol. Glinianæ naczyniu), or crockery, as it is sometimes termed, comprises every sort of house- hold utensil made of clay hardened in the fire. Its manufacture is, in England, of very con- siderable importance; and the improvements that have been made in it since the middle of last century have contributed powerfully to its extension, and have added greatly to the comfort and convenience of all classes. " There is scarcely," it has been well observed, any manufacture which is so interesting to contemplate in its gradual improvement and extension as that of earthenware, presenting, as it does, so beautiful a union of science and art, in furnishing us with the comforts and ornaments of civilised life. Chemistry administers her part, by investigating the several species of earths, and ascertaining as well their most appropriate combinations, as the respect ive degrees of heat which the several compositions require. Art has studied the designs of antiquity, and produced from them vessels even more exquisite in form than the models by which they have been suggested. The ware has been provided in such gradations of quality as to suit every station from the highest to the lowest. It is to be seen in every country, and Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 613 1 almost in every house, through the whole extent of America, in many parts of Asia, and in most of the countries of Europe. At home it has superseded the less cleanly vessels of pewter and of wood, and, by its cheapness, has been brought within the means of our poorest housekeepers. Formed from substances originally of no value, the fabrication has induced labour of such various classes, and created skill of such various degrees, that nearly the whole value of the annual produce may be considered as an addition made to the mass of national wealth. The abundance of the ware exhibited in every dwelling-house is sufficient evi- dence of the vast augmentation of the manufacture, which is also demonstrated by the rapid increase of the population in the districts where the potteries have been established." -Quarterly Review.) For the great and rapid extension of the manufacture we are chiefly indebted to the late Mr. Josiah Wedgwood whose original and inventive genius enabled him to make many most important discoveries in the art; and who was equally successful in bringing his in- ventions into use. The principal seat of the manufacture is in Staffordshire, where there is a district denominated the Potteries, comprising a number of villages, and a population, which is supposed to amount, at this moment to above 60,000, by far the greater proportion of which is engaged in the manufacture. There are no authentic accounts of the popula- tion of this district in 1760, when Mr. Wedgwood began his discoveries; but the general opinion is that it did not at that time exceed 20,000. The village of Etruria, in the Potte- ries, was built by Mr. Wedgwood. The manufacture has been carried on at Burslem, in the same district, for several centuries. The canals by which Staffordshire is intersected, have done much to accelerate the pro- gress of the manufacture. Pipe-clay from Dorsetshire and Devonshire, and flints from Kent, are conveyed by water carriage to the places where the clay and coal abound; and the finished goods are conveyed by the same means to the great shipping ports, whence they are dis- tributed over most parts of the globe. It is estimated that the value of the various sorts of earthenware produced at the Potteries may amount to about 1,500,000/. a year; and that the earthenware produced at Worcester, Derby, and other parts of the country, may amount to about, 750,000L. more; making the whole value of the manufacture 2,250,000L a year. The consumption of gold at the Pot- teries is about 650L. a week, and of coal about 8,000 tons a week. The earthenware manufacture has increased considerably since 1814, but it is not possi- ble to state the exact ratio. It has been estimated at I for the porcelain, 3 for the best earth- enware, and t or 1/5 for the common or cream-coloured ware. The prices of the different sorts of earthenware are said to have fallen 20 per cent. during the last 15 years. Wages have not fallen in the same proportion; but we are assured that a workman can, at the pre- sent day, produce about four times the quantity he did in 1790.-(This article has been prepared from information obtained at the Potteries, obligingly communicated by James Loch, Esq. M. P.) The real value of the earthenware exported from Great Britain to foreign countries, during the 6 years ending with 1832, according to the declarations of the exporters, was as follows :- £ 8. d. £ 8. d. 1827 - - - - 437,812 17 8 1830 - - - - 439,566 19 2 1828 - - - - 499,743 6 6 1831 - - - - 458,965 11 11 1829 - - - - 461,710 5 7 1832 - - - - 489,980 17 7 The foreign demand for earthenware has increased considerably since 1815. The ex- ports to South America, Cuba, and other ci-devant Spanish colonies, have been largely in- creased. But notwithstanding this increase, the United States continues to be by far the best marke for British earthenware. Of the entire value exported in 1831, amounting to 458,965/., the exports to the United States amounted to no less than 255,159/. The markets next in importance are Brazil, the British North American and West Indian colonics, Cuba, Germany, the Netherlands, &c. We have been assured that it is necessary to add ± to the declared value of the exports, to get their true value. [The average annual value of British earthenware imported into the United States, during the five years ending September 30th, 1838, was $1,602,000 that of the earthenware of every other description imported amounting to no more than $11,560.-Am. Ed.] EAST INDIA COMPANY, a famous association, originally established for prosecuting the trade between England and India, which they acquired a right to carry on exclusively. Since the middle of last century, however, the Company's political have become of more importance than their commercial concerns. EAST INDIES, a popular geographical term not very well defined, but generally understood to signify the continents and islands to the east and south of the river Indus, as far as the borders of China, including Timor and the Moluccas, but excluding the Philippine Islands, New Guinea, and New Holland. China and the Philippine Islands were, however, included within the limits of the East India Company's peculiar privileges. VoL. I.-3 F Digitized by Google 614 EAST INDIA COMPANY. I. EAST INDIA COMPANY (HISTORICAL SKETCH of). II. EAST INDIA COMPANY (CONSTITUTION OF). III. EAST INDIES (STATE OF SOCIETY IN, GROWING DEMAND FOR ENGLISH Goods, TRADE, COLONISATION, ETC.). IV. EAST INDIES (Extest, POPULATION, MILITARY FORCE, REVENUE, ETC. or BRITISH). I. EAST INDIA COMPANY (HISTORICAL SKETCH OF). The persevering efforts of the Portuguese to discover a route to India, by sailing round Africa, were crowned with success in 1497. And it may appear singular, that, notwith- standing the exaggerated accounts that had been prevalent in Europe, from the remotest antiquity, with respect to the wealth of India, and the importance, to which the commerce with it had raised the Phoenicians and Egyptians in antiquity, the Venetians in the middle ages, and which it was then seen to confer on the Portuguese, the latter should have been allowed to monopolise it for nearly a century after it had been turned into a channel acces- sible to every nation. But the prejudices by which the people of most European states were actuated in the sixteenth century, and the peculiar circumstances under which they were placed, hindered them from embarking with that alacrity and ardour that might have been expected in this new commercial career. Soon after the Portuguese began to prose- cute their discoveries along the coast of Africa, they applied to the pope for a bull, securing to them the exclusive right to and possession of all countries occupied by infidels, they either had discovered, or might discover, to the south of Cape Non, on the west coast of Africa, in 27° 54' north latitude: and the pontiff, desirous to display, and at the same time to extend, his power, immediately issued a bull to this effect. Nor, preposterous as a proceeding of this sort would now appear, did any one then doubt that the pope had a right to issue such a bull, and that all states and empires were bound to obey it. In consequence, the Portuguese were, for a lengthened period, allowed to prosecute their conquests in India without the in- terference of any other European power. And it was not till a considerable period after the beginning of the war, which the blind and brutal bigotry of Philip II. kindled in the Low Countries, that the Dutch navigators began to display their flag on the Eastern Ocean, and laid the foundations of their Indian empire. The desire to comply with the injunctions in the pope's bull, and to avoid coming into collision, first with the Portuguese, and subsequently with the Spaniards, who had conquered Portugal in 1580, seems to have been the principal cause that led the English to make repeated attempts, in the reigns of Henry VIII. and Edward VI., and the early part of the reign of Elizabeth, to discover a route to India by a north-west or north-east passage chan- nels from which the Portuguese would have had no pretence for excluding them. But these attempts having proved unsuccessful, and the pope's bull having ceased to be of any effect in this country, the English merchants and navigators resolved to be no longer deterred by the imaginary rights of the Portuguese from directly entering upon what was then reckoned by far the most lucrative and advantageous branch of commerce. Captain Stephens, who performed the voyage in 1582, was the first Englishman who sailed to India by the Cape of Good Hope. The voyage of the famous Sir Francis Drake contributed greatly to diffuse a spirit of naval enterprise, and to render the English better acquainted with the newly opened route to India. But the voyage of the celebrated Mr. Thomas Cavendish was, in the latter respect, the most important. Cavendish sailed from England in a little squadron, fitted out at his own expense, in July, 1586; and having explored the greater part of the Indian Ocean, as far as the Philippine Islands, and carefully observed the most important and cha- racteristic features of the people and countries which he visited, returned to England, after a prosperous navigation, in September, 1588. Perhaps, however, nothing contributed so much to inspire the English with a desire to embark in the Indian trade, as the captures that were made, about this period, from the Spaniarde. A Portuguese East India ship, or carrack, captured by Sir Francis Drake, during his expedition to the coast of Spain, inflamed the cupidity of the merchants by the richness of her cargo, at the same time that the papers found on board gave specific information respecting the traffic in which she had been engaged. A still more important capture, of the same sort, was made in 1593. An armament, fitted out for the East Indies by Sir Walter Raleigh, and commanded by Sir John Borroughs, fell in, near the Azores, with the largest of all the Portuguese carracks, a ship of 1,600 tons burden, carrying 700 men and 36 brass cannon and, after an obstinate conflict, carried her into Dartmouth. She was the largest vessel that had been seen in England and her cargo, consisting of gold, spices, calicoes, silks, pearls, drugs. porcelain, ivory, &c., excited the ar dour of the English to engage in so opulent a commerce. In consequence of these and other concurring causes, an association was formed in Lon- don, in 1599, for prosecuting the trade to India. The adventurers applied to the queen for a charter of incorporation, and also for power to exclude all other English subjects, who had Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 615 not obtained a licence from them, from carrying on any species of traffic beyond the Cape of Good Hope or the Straits of Magellan. As exclusive companies were then very generally looked upon as the best instruments for prosecuting most branches of commerce and indus- try, the adventurers seem to have had little difficulty in obtaining their charter, which was dated the 31st of December, 1600. The corporation was entitled, The Governor and Company of Merchants of London trading into the East Indies:" the first governor (Tho- mas Smythe, Esq.) and 24 directors were nominated in the charter; but power was given to the Company to elect a deputy governor, and, in future, to elect their governor and directors, and such other office-bearers as they might think fit to appoint. They were empowered to make by-laws; to inflict punishments, either corporal or pecuniary, provided such punish- ments were in accordance with the laws of England to export all sorts of goods free of duty for 4 years and to export foreign coin, or bullion, to the amount of 30,000L a year, 6,000L of the same being previously coined at the mint; but they were obliged to import, within 6 months after the completion of every voyage, except the first, the same quantity of silver, gold, and foreign coin that they had exported. The duration of the charter was limit- ed to a period of 15 years but with and under the condition that, if it were not found for the public advantage it might be cancelled at any time upon 2 years' notice being given. Such was the origin of the British East India Company,-the most celebrated commercial association either of ancient or modern times, and which has now extended its sway over the whole of the Mogul empire. It might have been expected that, after the charter was obtained, considerable eagerness would have been manifested to engage in the trade. But such was not the case. Notwith- standing the earnest calls and threats of the directors, many of the adventurers could not be induced to come forward to pay their proportion of the charges incident to the fitting out of the first expedition. And as the directors seem either to have wanted power to enforce their resolutions, or thought it better not to exercise it, they formed a subordinate association, consist- ing of such members of the Company as were really willing to defray the cost of the voyage, and to bear all the risks and losses attending it, on condition of their having the exclusive right to whatever profits might arise from it. And it was by such subordinate associations that the trade was conducted during the first 13 years of the Company's existence. The first expedition to India, the cost of which amounted, ships and cargoes included, to 69,091/., consisted of 5 ships, the largest being 600 and the smaller 130 tons burden. The goods put on board were principally bullion, iron, tin, broad cloths, cutlery, glass, &c. The chief command was intrusted to Captain James Lancaster, who had already been in India. They set sail from Torbay on the 13th of February, 1601. Being very imperfectly acquaint- ed with the seas and countries they were to visit, they did not arrive at their destination, Acheen in Sumatra, till the 5th of June, 1602. But though tedious, the voyage was, on the whole, uncommonly prosperous. Lancaster entered into commercial treaties with the kings of Acheen and Bantam; and having taken on board a valuable cargo of pepper and other produce, he was fortunate enough, in his way home, to fall in with and capture, in concert with a Dutch vessel, a Portuguese carrack of 900 tons burden, richly laden. Lancaster re- turned to the Downs on the 11th of September, (Modern Universal History, vol. X. p. 16.; Macpherson's Commerce of the European Powers with India, p. 81.) But notwithstanding the favourable result of this voyage, the expeditions fitted out in the years immediately following, though sometimes consisting of larger ships, were not, at an average, materially increased. In 1612, Captain Best obtained from the court at Delhi seve- ral considerable privileges; and, amongst others, that of establishing a factory at Surat; which city was, henceforth, looked upon as the principal British station in the west of India, till the acquisition of Bombay. In establishing factories in India, the English only followed the example of the Portu- guese and Dutch. It was contended, that they were necessary to serve as depôts for the goods collected in the country for exportation to Europe, as well as for those imported into India, in the event of their not meeting with a ready market on the arrival of the ships. Such establishments, it was admitted, are not required in civilised countries but the peculiar and unsettled state of India was said to render them indispensable there. Whatever weight may be attached to this statement, it is obvious that factories formed for such purposes could hardly fail of speedily degenerating into a species of forts. The security of the valuable property deposited in them, furnished a specious pretext for putting them in a condition to withstand an attack, while the agents, clerks, warehousemen, &c. formed a sort of garrison. Possessing such strong holds, the Europeans were early emboldened to act in a manner quite inconsistent with their character as merchants; and but a very short time elapsed be- fore they began to form schemes for monopolising the commerce of particular districts, and acquiring territorial dominion. Though the Company met with several heavy losses during the earlier part of their traffic with India, from shipwrecks and other unforeseen accidents, and still more from the hostility of the Dutch, yet, on the whole, the trade was decidedly profitable. There can, however, be little doubt, that their gains, at this early period, have been very much exaggerated. During Digitized by Google 616 EAST INDIA COMPANY. the first 13 years, they are said to have amounted to 132 per cent. But then it should be borne in mind, as Mr. Grant has justly stated. that the voyages were seldom accomplished in less than 30 months, and sometimes extended to 3 or 4 years: and it should further be re- marked, that on the arrival of the ships at home, the cargoes were disposed of at long credits of 18 months or 2 years; and that it was frequently even 6 or 7 years before the concerns of a single voyage were finally adjusted.-(Sketch of the History of the Company, p. 13.) When these circumstances are taken into view, it will immediately be seen that the Com- pany's profits were not, really, by any means so great as has been represented. It may not, however, be uninstructive to remark, that the principal complaint that was then made against the Company did not proceed so much on the circumstance of its charter excluding the public from any share in an advantageous traffic, as in its authorising the Company to export gold and silver of the value of 30,000/. a year. It is true that the charter stipulated that the Com- pany should import an equal quantity of gold and silver within 6 months of the termination of every voyage; but the enemies of the Company contended that this condition was not complied with ; and it was, besides, highly injurious to the public interests and contrary to all principle, to allow gold and silver to be sent out of the kingdom. The merchants and others interested in the support of the Company could not controvert the reasoning of their opponents, without openly impugning the ancient policy of absolutely preventing the exporta- tion of the precious metals. They did not, however, venture to contend, if the idea really occurred to them, that the exportation of bullion to the East was advantageous, on the broad ground of the commodities purchased by it being of greater value in England. But they contended that the exportation of bullion to India was advantageous because the commodi- ties thence imported were chiefly re-exported to other countries from which a much greater quantity of bullion was obtained than had been required to pay for them in India. Mr. Tho- mas Mun, a director of the East India Company, and the ablest of its early advocates, inge- niously compares the operations of the merchant in conducting a trade carried on by the exportation of gold and silver to the seed time and harvest of agriculture. If we only be- hold," says he, " the actions of the husbandman in the seed time, when he casteth away much good corn into the ground, we shall account him rather a madman than a husband- man. But when we consider his labours in the harvest, which is the end of his endeavours, we find the worth and plentiful increase of his actions."-(Treasure by Foreign Trade, P. 50. ed. 1664.) We may here remark, that what has been called the mercantile system of political eco- nomy, or that system which measures the progress of a country in the career of wealth by the supposed balance of payments in its favour, or by the estimated excess of the value of its exports over that of its imports, appears to have originated in the excuses now set up for the exportation of bullion. Previously to this epoch, the policy of prohibiting the exports- tion of bullion had been universally admitted but it now began to be pretty generally al- lowed, that its exportation might be productive of advantage provided it occasioned the sub- sequent exportation of a greater amount of raw or manufactured products to countries whence bullion was obtained for them. This, when compared with the previously existing preju- dice-for it hardly deserves the name of system-which wholly interdicted the exportation of gold and silver, must be allowed to be a considerable step in the progress to sounder opinions. The maxim, ce n'est que le premier pas qui coute, was strikingly verified on this occasion. The advocates of the East India Company began gradually to assume a higher tone, and, at length, boldly contended that bullion was nothing but a commodity, and that its exportation ought to be rendered as free as that of any thing else. Nor were these opinions confined to the partners of the East India Company. They were gradually com- municated to others; and many eminent merchants were taught to look with suspicion on several of the previously received dogmas with respect to commerce, and were, in conse- quence, led to acquire more correct and comprehensive views. The new ideas ultimately made their way into the House of Commons; and, in 1663, the statutes prohibiting the exportation of foreign coin and bullion were repealed, and full liberty given to the East India Company and to private traders to export them in unlimited quantities. But the objection to the East India Company, or rather the East India trade, on the ground of its causing the exportation of gold and silver, admitted of a more direct and con- clusive, if not a more ingenious reply. How compendious soever the ancient intercourse with India by the Red Sea and the Mediterranean, it was unavoidably attended with a good deal of expense. The productions of the remote parts of Asia, brought to Ceylon, of the ports on the Malabar coast, by the natives, were there put on board the ships which arrived from the Arabic gulf. At Berenice they were landed, and carried by camels 250 miles to the banks of the Nile. They were there again embarked, and conveyed down the river to Alexandria, whence they were despatched to different markets. The addition to the price of goods by such a multiplicity of operations must have been considerable; more especially as the price charged on each operation was fixed by monopolists, subject to no competition or control. Pliny says, that the cost of the Arabian and Indian products brought to Rome when he flourished (A. D. 70,), was increased a hundred fold by the expenses of transit Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 617 -(Hist. Nat. lib. vi. c. 23.); but there can be little or no doubt that this is to be regarded as a rhetorical exaggeration.-(See ante, p. 21.) There are good grounds for thinking that the less bulky sorts of Eastern products, such as silk, spices, balsams, precious stones, &c., which were those principally made use of at Rome, might, supposing there were no politi- cal obstacles in the way, be conveyed from most parts of India to the ports on the Mediter- ranean by way of Egypt, at a decidedly cheaper rate than they could be conveyed to them by the Cape of Good Hope. But at the period when the latter route to India began to be frequented, Syria, Egypt, &c. were occupied by Turks and Mamelukes; barbarians who despised commerce and naviga- tion, and were, at the same time, extremely jealous of strangers, especially of Christians or infidels. The price of the commodities obtained through the intervention of such persons was necessarily very much enhanced; and the discovery of the route by the Cape of Good Hope was, consequently, of the utmost importance, for, by putting an end to the monopoly enjoyed by the Turks and Mamelukes, it introduced, for the first time, something like com- petition into the Indian trade, and enabled the western parts of Europe to obtain supplies of Indian products for about a third part of what they had previously cost. Mr. Mun, in a tract published in 1621, estimates the quantity of Indian commodities imported into Europe, and their cost when bought in Aleppo and in India, as follows: Cost of Indian commodities consumed in Europe when bought in Aleppo (or Alexandria). £ 8. d. 6,000,000 lbs. pepper cost, with charges, &c. at Aleppo, 2s. per lb. - - - 600,000 0 0 450,000 lbs. cloves, at 4s. 9d. - - - - - - - 106,875 10 0 150,000 lbs. mace, at 4s: 9d. - - - - - - - - 35,626 0 0 400,000 lbs. nutmegs, at 2s. 4d. - - - - - - - - 46,666 2 4 350,000 lbs. indigo, at 4s. 4d. - - - - - - - - 75,833 6 8 1,000,000 lbs. Persian raw silk, at 12a. - - - - - - - $ 600,000 0 £1,465,000 19 0 But the same quantities of the same commodities cost, when bought in the East Indies, according to Mr. Mun, as follows :- £ s. d. 6,000,000 lbs. pepper, at 2jd. per lb. - - - - - - - 62,500 0 0 450,000 lbs. cloves, at 9d. - - - - - - - - - 16,875 0 0 150,000 lbs. mace, at 8d. - - - - - - - - - 5,000 0 0 400,000 lbs. nutmegs. at 4d. - - - - - - - - 6,666 13 4 350,000 lbs. indigo, at is. 2d - - - - - - - - 20,416 12 4 1,000,000 lbs. raw silk, at 8s. - - - - - - - - $ 400,000 0 £511,458 5 8 Which being deducted from the former, leaves a balance of 953,542l. 13s. 4d. And suppos- ing that the statements made by Mr. Mun are correct, and that allowance is made for the difference between the freight from Aleppo and India, the result would indicate the saving which the discovery of the route by the Cape of Good Hope occasioned in the purchase of the above-mentioned articles.-(A Discourse of Trade from England to the Eust Indies, by T. M., original ed. p. 10. This tract, which is very scarce, is reprinted in Purchas's Pilgrims.) In the same publication (p. 37.), Mr. Mun informs us that, from the beginning of the Company's trade to July, 1620, they had sent 79 ships to India of which 34 had come home safely and richly laden, 4 had been worn out by long service in India, 2 had been lost in careening, 6 had been lost by the perils of the sea, and 12 had been captured by the Dutch. Mr. Mun further states, that the exports to India, since the formation of the Company, had amounted to 340,376L; that the produce brought from India had cost 356,288/., and had produced here the enormous sum of 1,914,600/.; that the quarrels with the Dutch had oc- casioned a loss of 84,088/; and that the stock of the Company, in ships, goods in India, &c., amounted to 400,000/. The hostility of the Dutch, to which Mr. Mun has here alluded, was long a very formida- ble obstacle to the Company's success. The Dutch early endeavoured to obtain the exclu- sive possession of the spice trade, and were not at all scrupulous about the means by which they attempted to bring about this their favourite object. The English, on their part, natu- rally exerted themselves to obtain a share of so valuable a commerce and as neither party was disposed to abandon its views and pretensions, the most violent animosities grew up be- tween them. In this state of things, it would be ridiculous to suppose that unjustifiable acts were not committed by the one party as well as the other though the worst act of the English appears venial, when compared with the conduct of the Dutch in the massacre at Amboyna, in 1622. While, however, the Dutch Company was vigorously supported by the government at home, the English Company met with no efficient assistance from the feeble and vacillating policy of James and Charles. The Dutch either despised their re- monstrances, or defeated them by an apparent compliance; so that no real reparation was obtained for the outrages they had committed. During the civil war, Indian affairs were- necessarily lost sight of; and the Datch continued, until the ascendancy of the republican 78 3 F 2 Digitized by Google 618 EAST INDIA COMPANY. party had been established, to reign triumphant in the East, where the English commerce was nearly annihilated. But notwithstanding their depressed condition, the Company's servants in India laid the foundation, during the period in question, of the settlements at Madras and in Bengal. Per- mission to build Fort St. George was obtained from the native authorities in 1640. In 1658, Madras was raised to the station of a presidency. In 1645, the Company began to establish factories in Bengal; the principal of which was at Hooghly. These were, for a lengthened period, subordinate to the presidency at Madras. No sooner, however, had the civil wars terminated, than the arms and councils of Crom- well retrieved the situation of our affairs in India. The war which broke out between the long parliament and the Dutch, in 1652, was eminently injurious to the latter. In the treaty of peace, concluded in 1654, it was stipulated that indemnification should be made by the Dutch for the losses and injuries sustained by the English merchants and factories in India. The 27th article bears, that the Lords, the states-general of the United Provinces, shall take care that justice be done upon those who were partakers or accomplices in the massacre of the English at Amboyna, as the republic of England is pleased to term that fact, provided any of them be living." A commission was at the same time appointed, conformably to another article of the treaty, to inquire into the reciprocal claims which the subjects of the contract- ing parties had upon each other for losses sustained in India, Brazil, &c.; and, upon their decision, the Dutch paid the sum of 85,000L to the East India Company, and 3,615/. to the heirs or executors of the sufferers at Amboyna.-(Bruce's Annals, vol. i. p. 489.) The charter under which the East India Company prosecuted their exclusive trade to India, being merely a grant from the Crown, and not ratified by any act of parliament, was understood by the merchants to be at an end when Charles I. was deposed. They were confirmed in this view of the matter, from the circumstance of Charles having himself grant- ed, in 1635, a charter to Sir William Courten and others, authorising them to trade with those parts of India with which the Company had not established any regular intercourse. The reasons alleged in justification of this measure, by the Crown, were, that the East India Company had neglected to establish fortified factories, or seats of trade, to which the king's subjects could resort with safety that they had consulted their own interests only, without any regard to the king's revenue; and, in general, that they had broken the condition on which their charter and exclusive privileges had been granted to them."-(Rym. Fædera, vol. xx. p. 146.) Courten's association, for the foundation of which such satisfactory reasons had been as- signed, continued to trade with India during the remainder of Charles's reign; and no sooner had the arms of the Commonwealth forced the Dutch to desist from their depreda- tions, and to make reparation for the injuries they had inflicted on the English in India, than private adventurers engaged in great numbers in the Indian trade, and carried on with a zeal, economy, and success, that monopoly can never expect to rival. It is stated in a little work, entitled Britannia Languens, published in 1680, the author of which has evidently been a well-informed and intelligent person, that during the years 1653, 1654, 1655, and 1656, when the trade to India was open, the private traders imported East India commodities in such large quantities, and sold them at such reduced prices, that they not only fully supplied the British markets, but had even come into successful competition with the Dutch in the market of Amsterdam, and very much sunk the actions (shares) of the Dutch East India Company."-(p. 132.) This circumstance naturally excited the greatest apprehensions on the part of the Dutch Company for, besides the danger that they now ran of being de- prived, by the active competition of the English merchants, of a considerable part of the trade which they had previously enjoyed, they could hardly expect that, if the trade were thrown open in England, the monopoly would be allowed to continue in Holland. A strik- ing proof of what is now stated is to be found in a letter in the third volume of Thurlow's State Papers, dated at the Hague, the 15th of January, 1654, where it is said, that the merchants of Amsterdam have advice that the Lord Protector intends to dissolve the East India Company at London, and to declare the navigation and commerce of the East Indies free and open; which doth cause great jealousy at Amsterdam, as a thing that will very much prejudice the East India Company in Holland." Feeling that it was impossible to contend with the private adventurers under a system of fair competition, the moment the treaty with the Dutch had been concluded, the Company began to solicit a renewal of their charter; but in this they were not only opposed by the free traders, but by a part of themselves. To understand how this happened, it may be proper to mention that Courten's association, the origin of which has been already noticed, had begun, in 1648, to found a colony at Assuda, an island near Madagascar. The Com- pany, alarmed at this project, applied to the council of state to prevent its being carried into effect; and the council, without entering on the question of either party's rights, recommend- ed to them to form a union which was accordingly effected in 1649. But the union was, for a considerable time, rather nominal than real ; and when the Dutch war had been put . end to, most of those holders of the Company's stock who had belonged to Courten's associt- Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 619 tion joined in petitioning the council of state that the trade might in future be carried on, not by a joint stock, but by a regulated company so that each individual engaging in it might be allowed to employ his own stock, servants, and shipping, in whatever way he might con- ceive most for his own advantage.-(Petition of Adventurers, 17th of Nov. 1656 Bruce's Annals, vol. i. p. 518.) This proposal was obviously most reasonable. The Company had always founded their claim to a monopoly of the trade on the alleged ground of its being necessary to maintain forts, factories, and ships of war in India; and that as this was not done by government, it could only be done by a Company. But, by forming the traders with India into a regulated company, they might have been subjected to whatever rules were considered most advisable and such special duties might have been laid on the commodities they exported and imported, as would have sufficed to defray the public expenses required for carrying on the trade, at the same time that the inestimable advantages of free competition would have been secured each individual trader being left at liberty to conduct his enterprises, subject only to a few general regulations, in his own way and for his own advantage.-(See COMPANIES.) But notwithstanding the efforts of the petitioners, and the success that was clearly proved to have attended the operations of the private traders, the Company succeeded in obtain- ing a renewal of their charter from Cromwell in 1657. Charles II. confirmed this charter in 1661; and at the same time conferred on them the power of making peace or war with any power or people not of the Christian religion of establishing fortifications, garrisons, and colonies; of exporting ammunition and stores to their settlements duty free ; of seizing and sending to England such British subjects as should be found trading to India without their leave; and of exercising civil and criminal jurisdiction in their settlements, according to the laws of England. Still, however, as this charter was not fully confirmed by any act of parliament, it did not prevent traders, or interlopers as they were termed, from appearing within the limits of the Company's territories. The energy of private commerce, which, to use the words of Mr. Orme, sees its drift with eagles' eyes," formed associations at the risk of trying the consequence at law, being safe at the outset, and during the voyage, since the Company were not authorised to stop or seize the ships of those who thus attempted to come into competition with them. Hence their monopoly was by no means complete; and it was not till after the Revolution, and when a free system of government had been established at home, that, by a singular contradiction, the authority of parliament was interposed to enable the Company wholly to engross the trade with the East. In addition to the losses arising from this source, the Company's trade suffered severely, during the reign of Charles II., from the hostilities that were then waged with the Dutch, and from the confusion and disorders caused by contests among the native princes; but in 1668, the Company obtained a very valuable acquisition in the island of Bombay. Charles II. acquired this island as a part of the marriage portion of his wife, Catharine of Portugal and it was now made over to the Company, on condition of their not selling or alienating it to any persons whatever, except such as were subjects of the British crown. They were allowed to legislate for their new possession but it was enjoined that their laws should be consonant to reason, and as near as might be" agreeable to the practice of England. They were authorised to maintain their dominion by force of arms; and the natives of Bombay were declared to have the same liberties as natural born subjects. The Company's western presidency was soon after transferred from Surat to Bombay. In 1664, the French East India Company was formed; and 10 years afterwards they laid the foundation of their settlement at Pondicherry. But the reign of Charles II. is chiefly memorable in the Company's annals, from its being the era of the commencement of the tea trade. The first notice of tea in the Company's records is found in a despatch, addressed to their agent at Bantam, dated 24th of January, 1667-8, in which he is desired to send home 100 lbs. of tea, " the best he can get."-(Bruce's Annals, vol. ii. p. 210.) Such was the late and feeble beginning of the tea trade; a branch of commerce that has long been of vast importance to the British nation; and with- out which, it is more than probable that the East India Company would long since have ceased to exist, at least as a mercantile body. In 1677, the Company obtained a fresh renewal of their charter; receiving at the same time an indemnity for all past misuse of their privileges, and authority to establish a mint at Bombay. During the greater part of the reigns of Charles II. and James II., the Company's affairs at home were principally managed by the celebrated Sir Josiah Child, the ablest commercial writer of the time; and in India, by his brother, Sir John Child. In 1681, Sir Josiah pub- lished an apology for the Company, under the signature of Филохатек, "A Treatise wherein is demonstrated that the East India Trade is the most National of all Foreign Trades:" in which, besides endeavouring to vindicate the Company from the objections that had been made against it, he gives an account of its state at the time. From this account it appears that the Company consisted of 556 partners; that they had from 35 to 36 ships, of from 775 to 1000 tons, employed in the trade between England and India, and from port to port Digitized by Google 620 EAST INDIA COMPANY. in India-(p. 23.) that the custom duties upon the trade amounted to about 60,000L 8 year; and that the value of the exports, in lead, tin, cloth, and stuffs, and other commodi- ties of the production and manufacture of England," amounted to about 60,000L or 70,000L a year. Sir Josiah seems to have been struck, as he well might, by the inconsiderable amount of the trade; and he therefore dwells on the advantages of which it was indirectly productive, in enabling us to obtain supplies of raw silk, pepper, &c. at a much lower price than they would otherwise have fetched. But this, though true, proved nothing in favour of the Company it being an admitted fact, that those articles were furnished at a still low- er price by the interlopers or private traders. Sir Josiah Child was one of the first who projected the formation of a territorial empire in India. But the expedition fitted out in 1686, in the view of accomplishing this purpose, proved unsuccessful; and the Company were glad to accept peace on the terms offered by the Mogul. Sir John Child, having died during the course of these transactions, was suc- ceeded in the principal management of the Company's affairs in India by Mr. Vaux. On the appointment of the latter, Sir Josiah Child, to whom he owed his advancement, exhorted him to act with vigour, and to carry whatever instructions he might receive from home into immediate effect. Mr. Vaux returned for answer that he should endeavour to acquit him- self with integrity and justice, and that he would make the laws of his country the rule of his conduct. Sir Josiah Child's answer to this letter is curious:- He told Mr. Vaux roundly that he expected his orders were to be his rules, and not the laws of England, which were a heap of nonsense, compiled by a few ignorant country gentlemen, who hardly knew how to make laws for the good government of their own private families, much less for the regulating of companies and foreign commerce."-(Hamilton's New Account of the East Indies, vol. i. p. 232.) During the latter part of the reign of Charles II., and that of his successor, the number of private adventurers, or interlopers, in the Indian trade, increased in an unusual degree. The Company vigorously exerted themselves in defence of what they conceived to be their rights; and the question with respect to the validity of the powers conferred on them by their charter was at length brought to issue, by a prosecution carried on at their instance against Mr. Thomas Sandys, for trading to the East Indies without their licence. Judg- ment was given in favour of the Company in 1685. But this decision was ascribed to cor- rupt influence; and, instead of allaying, only served to increase the clamour against them. The meeting of the Convention Parliament gave the Company's opponents hopes of a suc- cessful issue to their efforts; and had they been united, they might probably have succeeded. Their opinions were, however, divided-part being for throwing the trade open, and part for the formation of a new company on a more liberal footing. The latter being formed into a body, and acting in unison, the struggle against the Company was chiefly carried on by them. The proceedings that took place on this occasion are amongst the most disgraceful in the history of the country. The most open and unblushing corruption was practised by all parties.-" It was, in fact, a trial which side should bribe the highest; public authority inclining to one or other as the irresistible force of gold (Modern Universal History, vol. X. p. 127.) Government appears, on the whole, to have been favourable to the Company; and they obtained a fresh charter from the Crown in 1693. But in the following year the trade was virtually laid open by a vote of the House of Commons, " that all the subjects of England had an equal right to trade with the East Indies, unless prohibited by act of parlia- ment." Matters continued on this footing till 1698. The pecuniary difficulties in which government was then involved, induced them to apply to the Company for a loan of 2,000,000/. for which they offered 8 per cent. interest. The Company offered to advance 700,000/. at 4 per cent.; but the credit of government was at the time so low, that they pre- ferred accepting an offer from the associated merchants, who had previously opposed the Company, of the 2,000,000/. at 8 per cent., on condition of their being formed into a new and exclusive company. While this project was in agitation, the advocates of free trade were not idle, but exerted themselves to show that, instead of establishing a new Company, the old one ought to be abolished. But however conclusive and unanswerable. their argu- ments, having no adventitious recommendations in their favour, failed of making any im- pression. The new Company was established by authority of the legislature; and as the charter of the old Company was not yet expired, the novel spectacle was exhibited of two legally constituted bodies, each claiming an exclusive right to the trade of the same possessions! Notwithstanding all the pretensions set up by those who had obtained the new charter during their struggles with the old Company, it was immediately seen that they were as anxious as the latter to suppress every thing like free trade. They had not, it was obvious, been actuated by any enlarged views, but merely by a wish to grasp at the monopoly, which they believed would redound to their own individual interest. The public, in consequence, became equally disgusted with both parties; or if there were any difference, it is probable that the new Company was looked upon with the greatest aversion, inasmuch as we are Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 621 naturally more exasperated by what we conceive to be duplicity and bad faith, than by fair undisguised hostility. At first the mutual hatred of the rival associations knew no bounds. But they were not long in perceiving that such conduct would infallibly end in their ruin; and that while one was labouring to destroy the other, the friends of free trade might step in and procure the dissolution of both. In consequence, they became gradually reconciled; and in 1702, hav- ing adjusted their differences, they resolved to form themselves into one company, entitled, The United Company of Merchants of England trading to the East Indies. The authority of parliament was soon after interposed to give effect to this agreement. The United Company engaged to advance 1,200,000/. to government without interest, which as a previous advance had been made of 2,000,000/. at 8 per cent., made the total sum due to them by the public 3,200,000/., bearing interest at 5 per cent. ; and government agreed to ratify the terms of their agreement, and to extend the charter to the 25th of March, 1726, with 3 years' notice. While those important matters were transacting at home, the Company had acquired some additional possessions in India. In 1692, the Bengal agency was transferred from Hooghly to Calcutta. In 1698, the Company acquired a grant from one of the grandsons of Aurengzebe, of Calcutta and 2 adjoining villages with leave to exercise judiciary powers over the inhabitants, and to erect fortifications. These were soon after constructed, and re- ceived, in compliment to William III., then king of England, the name of Fort William. The agency at Bengal which had hitherto been subsidiary only, was now raised to the rank of a presidency. The vigorous competition that had been carried on for some years before the coalition of the old and new Companies, between them and the private traders, had occasioned a great additional importation of Indian silks, piece goods, and other products, and a great reduction of their price. These circumstances occasioned the most vehement complaints amongst the home manufacturers, who resorted to the arguments invariably made use of on such occa- sions by those who wish to exclude foreign competition affirming that manufactured India goods had been largely substituted for those of England that the English manufacturers had been reduced to the cruel necessity either of selling nothing, or of selling their commodities at such a price as left them no profit; that great numbers of their workmen had been thrown out of employment; and last of all, that Indian goods were not bought by British goods, but by gold and silver, the exportation of which had caused the general impoverishment of the kingdom ! The merchants and others interested in the India trade could not, as had previously happened to them in the controversy with respect to the exportation of bullion, meet these statements without attacking the principles on which they rested, and maintain- ing, in opposition to them, that it was for the advantage of every people to buy the products they wanted in the cheapest market. This just and sound principle was, in consequence, enforced in several petitions presented to parliament by the importers of Indian goods; and it was also enforced in several able publications that appeared at the time. But these argu- ments, how unanswerable soever they may now appear, had then but little influence; and in 1701, an act was passed, prohibiting the importation of Indian manufactured goods for home consumption. For some years after the re-establishment of the Company, it continued to prosecute its efforts to consolidate and extend its commerce. But the unsettled state of the Mogul empire, coupled with the determination of the Company to establish factories in every convenient situation, exposed their affairs to perpetual vicissitudes. In 1715, it was resolved to send an embassy to Delhi, to solicit from Furucksur, an unworthy descendant of Aurengzebe, an extension and confirmation of the Company's territory and privileges. Address, accident, and the proper application of presents, conspired to ensure the success of the embassy. The grants or patents solicited by the Company were issued in 1717. They were in all 34. The substance of the privileges they conferred was, that English vessels wrecked on the coasts of the empire should be exempt from plunder; that the annual payment of a stipulated sum to the government of Surat should free the English trade at that port from all duties and ex- actions; that those villages contiguous to Madras formerly granted and afterwards refused by the government of Arcott, should be restored to the Company that the island of Diu, near the port of Masulipatam, should belong to the Company, paying for it a fixed rent that in Bengal, all persons, whether European or native, indebted or accountable to the Company, should be delivered up to the presidency on demand that goods of export or import, belonging to the English, might, under a dustuck or passport from the president of Calcutta, be conveyed duty free through the Bengal provinces; and that the English should be at liberty to purchase the lordship of 37 towns contiguous to Calcutta, and in fact com- manding both banks of the river for 10 miles south of that city.(Grant's Sketch of the Hist. of the East India Company, p. 128.) The important privileges thus granted, were long regarded as constituting the great char- ter of the English in India. Some of them, however, were not fully conceded but were withheld or modified by the influence of the emperor's lieutenants, or soubahdara. Digitized by Google 622 EAST INDIA COMPANY. In 1717, the Company found themselves in danger from a new competitor. In the course of that year some ships appeared in India fitted out by private adventurers from Ostend. Their success encouraged others to engage in the same line and in 1722, the adventurers were formed into a company under a charter from his Imperial Majesty. The Dutch and English Companies, who had RO long been hostile to each other, at once laid aside their animosities, and joined heartily in an attempt to crush their new competitors. Remonstrances being found ineffectual, force was resorted to ; and the vessels of the Ostend Company were captured, under the most frivolous pretences, in the open seas on the coasts of Brazil. The British and Dutch governments abetted the selfish spirit of hostility displayed by their respective Companies. And the emperor was, in the end, glad to purchase the sup- port of Great Britain and Holland to the pragmatic sanction, by the sacrifice of the Com- pany at Ostend. Though the Company's trade had increased, it was still inconsiderable; and it is very difficult, indeed, when one examines the accounts that have from time to time been published of the Company's mercantile affairs, to imagine how the idea ever came to be entertained that their commerce was of any considerable, much less paramount, importance. At an average of the 10 years ending with 1724, the total value of the British manufactures and other products annually exported to India amounted to only 92,410L 12s. 6d. The average value of the bullion annually exported during the same period, amounted to making the total annual average exports 617,513/. 3s. 10d. a truly pitiful sum, when we consider the wealth, population, and industry of the countries between which the Company's commerce was carried on and affording by its smallness a strong presumptive proof of the effect of the monopoly in preventing the growth of the trade. In 1730, though there were 3 years still unexpired of the Company's charter, a vigorous effort was made by the merchants of London, Bristol, and Liverpool, to prevent its renewal. It has been said that the gains of the Company, had they been exactly known, would not have excited any very envious feelings on the part of the merchants; but being concealed, they were exaggerated; and the boasts of the Company as to the importance of their trade contributed to spread the belief that their profits were enormous, and consequently stimu- lated the exertions of their opponents. Supposing, however, that the real state of the case had been known, there was still enough to justify the utmost exertions on the part of the merchants for the limited profits made by the Company, notwithstanding their monopoly, were entirely owing to the misconduct of their agents, which they had vainly endeavoured to restrain and to the waste inseparable from such unwieldy establishments. The merchants, on this occasion, followed the example that had been set by the petition- ers for free trade in 1656. They offered, in the first place, to advance the 3,200,000L lent by the Company to the public, on more favourable terms. And in the second place, they proposed that the subscribers to this loan should be formed into a regulated company, for opening the trade, under the most favourable circumstances, to all classes of their countrymen. It was not intended that the Company should trade upon a joint stock, and in their cor- porate capacity, but that every individual who pleased should trade in the way of private adventure. The Company were to have the charge of erecting and maintaining the forts and establishments abroad and for this, and for other expenses attending what was called the enlargement and preservation of the trade, it was proposed that they should receive a duty of 1 per cent. upon all exports to India, and of 5 per cent. upon all imports from it. For ensuring obedience to this and other regulations, it was to be enacted, that no one should trade to India without licence from the Company. And it was proposed that 31 years, with 3 years' notice, should be granted as the duration of their peculiar privilege. " It appears from this," says Mr. Mill, that the end which was proposed to be answered, by incorporating such a company, was the preservation and erection of the forts, buildings, and other fixed establishments, required for the trade of India. This Company promised to supply that demand which has always been held forth as peculiar to the India trade, as the grand exigency which, distinguishing the traffic with India from all other branches of trade, rendered monopoly advantageous in that peculiar case, how much soever it might be inju- rious in others. While it provided for this real or pretended want, it left the trade open to all the advantages of private enterprise, private vigilance, private skill, and private economy, -the virtues by which individuals thrive and nations prosper. And it gave the proposed company an interest in the careful discharge of its duty, by making its profits increase in exact proportion with the increase of the trade, and, of course, with the facilities and accom- modation by which the trade was promoted. " Three petitions were presented to the House of Commons in behalf of the proposed company, by the merchants of London, Bristol, and Liverpool. It was urged, that the pro- posed company would, through the competition of which it would be productive, cause a great extension of the trade that it would produce a larger exportation of our own produce and manufactures to India, and reduce the price of all Indian commodities to the people at home; that new channels of traffic would be opened in Asia and America, as well as in EAST INDIA COMPANY. 623 Europe ; that the duties of customs and excise would be increased and that the waste and extravagance caused by the monopoly would be entirely avoided."-(Mill's India, vol. iii. p. 37.) But these arguments did not prevail. The Company magnified the importance of their trade and contended, that it would be unwise to risk advantages already realised for the sake of those that were prospective and contingent. They alleged that, if the trade to India were thrown open, the price of goods in India would be so much enhanced by the compe- tition of different traders, and their price in England so much diminished, that the freedom of the trade would certainly end in the ruin of all who had been foolish enough to adven- ture in it. To enlarge on the fallacy of these statements would be worse than superfluous. It is obvious that nothing whatever could have been risked, and that a great deal would have been gained, by opening the trade in the way that was proposed. And if it were really true that the trade to India ought to be subjected to a monopoly, lest the traders by their competition should ruin each other, it would follow that the trade to America-and not that only, but every branch both of the foreign and home trade of the empire-should be surrendered to exclusive companies. But such as the Company's arguments were, they seemed satisfactory to parliament. They, however, consented to reduce the interest on the debt due to them by the public from 5 to 4 per cent. and contributed a sum of 200,000/. for the public service. On these conditions it was agreed to extend their exclusive privileges to Lady-day, 1766, with the customary addition of three years' notice. For about 15 years from this period, the Company's affairs went on without any very prominent changes. But notwithstanding the increased importation of tea, the consumption of which now began rapidly to extend, their trade continued to be comparatively insig- nificant. At an average of the 8 years ending with 1741, the value of the British goods and products of all sorts, exported by the Company to India and China, amounted to only 157,9441. 4s. 7d. a year ! And during the 7 years ending with 1748, they amounted to only 188,176L 16s. 4d. And when it is borne in mind that these exports included the military stores of all sorts, forwarded to the Company's settlements in India and at St. Helena, the amount of which was, at all times, very considerable, it does appear exceedingly doubtful whether the Company really exported, during the entire period from 1730 to 1748, 150,000Z. worth of British produce as a legitimate mercantile adventure Their trade, such as it was, was entirely carried on by shipments of bullion; and even its annual average export, dur- ing the 7 years ending with 1748, only amounted to 548,711L 19s. 2d. It would seem, indeed, that the Company had derived no perceptible advantage from the important conces- sions obtained from the Mogul emperor, in 1717. But the true conclusion is, not that these concessions were of little value, but that the deadening influence of monopoly had so para- lysed the Company, that they were unable to turn them to account; and that, though with- out competitors, and with opulent kingdoms for their customers, their commerce was hardly greater than that carried on by some single merchants. In 1732, the Company were obliged to reduce their dividend from 8 to 7 per cent., at which rate it continued till 1744. The opposition the Company had experienced from the merchants, when the question as to the renewal of their charter was agitated, in 1730, made them very desirous to obtain the next renewal in as quiet a manner as possible. They therefore proposed, in 1743, when 23 years of their charter were yet unexpired, to lend 1,000,000L to government, at 3 per cent., provided their exclusive privileges were extended to 1780, with the usual notice. And as none were expecting such an application, or prepared to oppose it, the consent of govern- ment was obtained without difficulty. But the period was now come, when the mercantile character of the East India Company if, indeed, it could with propriety, be, at any time, said to belong to them,-was to be eclipsed by their achievements as a military power, and the magnitude of their conquests. For about two centuries after the European powers began their intercourse with India, the Mogul princes were regarded as amongst the most opulent and powerful of monarchs. Though of a foreign lineage-being descended from the famous Tamerlane, or Timur Bec, who overran India in 1400-and of a different religion from the great body of their subjects, their domi- nion was firmly established in every part of their extensive empire. The administration of the different provinces was committed to officers denominated soubahdars, or nabobs, intrusted with powers, in their respective governments, similar to those enjoyed by the Roman pretors. So long as the emperors retained any considerable portion of the vigour and bravery of their hardy ancestors, the different parts of the government were held in due subordination, and the soubahdars yielded a ready obedience to the orders from Delhi. But the emperors were gradually debauched by the apparently prosperous condition of their affairs. Instead of being educated in the council or the camp, the heirs of almost unbounded power were brought up in the slothful luxury of the seraglio; ignorant of public affairs; benumbed by indo- lence; depraved by the flattery of women, of eunuchs, and of slaves; their minds contracted with their enjoyments; their inclinations were vilified by their habits; and their govern- ment grew as vicious, as corrupt, and as worthless as themselves. When the famous Kouli Digitized by Google 624 EAST INDIA COMPANY. Khan, the usurper of the Persian throne, invaded India, the effeminate successor of Tamex- lane and Aurengzebe was too unprepared to oppose, and too dastardly to think of avenging the attack. This was the signal for the dismemberment of the monarchy. No sooner had the invader withdrawn, than the soubahdars either openly threw off their allegiance to the emperor, or paid only a species of nominal or mock deference to his orders. The inde- pendence of the soubahdars was very soon followed by wars amongst themselves and, be- ing well aware of the superiority of European troops and tactics, they anxiously courted the alliance and support of the French and English East India Companies. These bodies, having espoused different sides, according as their interests or prejudices dictated, began very soon to turn the quarrels of the soubahdars to their own account. Instead of being contented, as hitherto, with the possession of factories and trading towns, they aspired to the dominion of provinces; and the struggle soon came to be, not which of the native princes should prevail, but whether the English or the French should become the umpires of India. But these transactions are altogether foreign to the subject of this work; nor could any intelligible account of them be given without entering into lengthened statements. We shall only, therefore, observe that the affairs of the French were ably conducted by La Bour- donnais, Dupleix, and Lally, officers of distinguished merit, and not less celebrated for their great actions than for the base ingratitude of which they were the victims. But though vic- tory seemed at first to incline to the French and their allies, the English affairs were effect- ually retrieved by the extraordinary talents and address of a single individual ;-Colonel (afterwards Lord) Clive was equally brave, cautious, and enterprising not scrupulous in the use of means; fertile in expedients; endowed with wonderful sagacity and resolution; and capable of turning even the most apparently adverse circumstances to advantage. Hav- ing succeeded in humbling the French power in the vicinity of Madras, Clive landed at Calcutta in 1757, in order to chastise the soubahdar, Surajah ul Dowlah, who had a short while before attacked the English factory at that place and inhumanly shut up 146 English- men in a prison, where, owing to the excessive heat and want of water, 123 perished in a single night. Clive had only 700 European troops and 1,400 Sepoys with him when he landed but with these, and 570 sailors furnished by the fleet, he did not hesitate to attack the immense army commanded by the soubahdar, and totally defeated him in the famous battle of Plassey. This victory threw the whole provinces of Bengal, Bahar, and Orissa, into our hands; and they were finally confirmed to us by the treaty negotiated in 1765. Opinion has been long divided as to the policy of our military operations in India; and it has been strenuously contended, that we ought never to have extended our conquests beyond the limits of Bengal. The legislature seems to have taken this view of the matter; the House of Commons having resolved, in 1782, " that to pursue schemes of conquest and extent of dominion in India are measures repugnant to the wish, the honour, and the policy of this nation." But others have argued, and apparently on pretty good grounds, that, hav- ing gone thus far, we were compelled to advance. The native powers, trembling at the increase of British dominion, endeavoured when too late to make head against the growing evil. In this view they entered into combinations and wars against the English; and the latter having been uniformly victorious, their empire necessarily went on increasing, till all the native powers have been swallowed up in its vast extent. The magnitude of the acquisitions made by Lord Clive powerfully excited the attention of the British public. Their value was prodigiously exaggerated; and it was generally ad- mitted that the Company had no legal claim to enjoy, during the whole period of their charter, all the advantages resulting from conquests, to which the fleets and armies of the state had largely contributed. In 1767, the subject was taken up by the House of Commons; and a committee was appointed to investigate the whole circumstances of the case, and to calculate the entire expenditure incurred by the public on the Company's account. During the agitation of this matter, the right of the Company to the new conquest was totally denied by several members. In the end, however, the question was compromised by the Company agreeing to pay 400,000Z. a year for 2 years; and in 1769, this agreement, including the yearly payment, was further extended for 5 years more. The Company, at the same time, increased their dividend, which had been fixed by the former agreement at 10, to 12} per cent. But the Company's anticipations of increased revenue proved entirely visionary. The rapidity of their conquests in India, the distance of the controlling authority at home, and the abuses in the government of the native princes, to whom the Company had succeeded. conspired to foster a strong spirit of peculation among their servants. Abuses of every sort were multiplied to a frightful extent. The English, having obtained, or rather enforced, an exemption from those heavy transit duties to which the native traders were subject, engrossed the whole internal trade of the country. They even went so far as to decide what quantity of goods each manufacturer should deliver, and what he should receive for them. It is due to the directors to say, that they exerted themselves to repress these abuses. But their reso- lutions were neither carried into effect by their servants in India, nor sanctioned by the pro- prietors at home; so that the abuses, instead of being repressed, went on acquiring fresh Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 625 strength and virulence. The resources of the country were rapidly impaired; and while many of the Company's servants returned to Europe with immense fortunes, the Company itself was involved in debt and difficulties; and so far from being able to pay the stipulated sum of 400,000!. a year to government, was compelled to apply, in 1772, to the Treasury for a loan ! In this crisis of their affairs, government interposed, and a considerable change was made in the constitution of the Company. The dividend was restricted to 6 per cent., till the sum of 1,400,000/., advanced to them by the public, should be paid. It was further enacted, that the court of directors should be elected for 4 years, 6 members annually, but none to hold their seats for more than 4 years at a time that no person was to vote at the courts of proprietors who had not possessed his stock for 12 months; and that the amount of stock required to qualify for a vote should be increased from 500L to 1,000/. The jurisdiction of the Mayor's Court at Calcutta was in future confined to small mercantile cases; and, in lieu of it, a new court was appointed, consisting of a chief justice and 3 principal judges appointed by the Crown. A superiority was also given to Bengal over the other presidencies, Mr. Warren Hastings being named in the act as governor-general of India. The governor- general, councillors, and judges were prohibited from having any concern whatever in trade and no person residing in the Company's settlements was allowed to take more than 12 per cent. per annum for money. Though strenuously opposed, these measures were carried by a large majority. At this period (1773) the total number of proprietors of East India stock, with their quali- fications as they stood in the Company's book, were as follows :- Proprietors. Stocks. £ 8. d. Englishmen, possessing 1,000l. stock and upwards - 487 1,018,398 19 11 Foreigners, possessing 1,000L stock and upwards - 325 890,940 17 0 Englishmen, possessing 500L stock and upwards - 1,246 634,464 1 8 Foreigners, possessing 500L stock and upwards - 95 50,226 0 0 Total - - - - 2,153 £2,594,029 18 7 Notwithstanding the vast extension of the Company's territories, their trade continued to be apparently insignificant. During the 3 years ending with 1773, the value of the entire exports of British produce and manufactures, including military stores exported by the Com- pany to India and China, amounted to 1,469,4112., being at the rate of 489,8031. a year the annual exports of bullion during the same period being only 84,933/. During the same 3 years, 23 ships sailed annually for India. The truth, indeed, seems to be, that, but for the increased consumption of tea in Great Britain, the Company would have entirely ceased to carry on any branch of trade with the East and the monopoly would have excluded us as effectually from the markets of India and China as if the trade had reverted to its ancient channels, and the route by the Cape of Good Hope been relinquished. In 1781, the exclusive privileges of the Company were extended to 1791, with 3 years' notice; the dividend on the Company's stock was fixed at 8 per cent. three fourths of their surplus revenues, after paying the dividend, and the sum of 400,000Z payable to govern- ment, was to be applied to the public service, and the remaining fourth to the Company's own use. In 1780, the value of British produce and manufactures exported by the Company to India and China amounted to only 386,152/. the bullion exported during the same year was 15,014L The total value of the exports during the same year was 12,648,616% show- ing that the East India trade formed only one thirly-second part of the entire foreign trade of the empire ! The administration of Mr. Hastings was one continued scene of war, negotiation, and intrigue. The state of the country, instead of being improved, became worse; so much so, that in a council minute by Marquis Cornwallis, dated the 18th of September, 1789, it is distinctly stated, " that one third of the Company's territory is now a jungle for wild beasts." Some abuses in the conduct of their servants were, indeed, rectified; but, notwithstanding, the nett revenue of Bengal, Bahar, and Orissa, which, in 1772, had amounted to 2,126,766/., declined, in 1785, to 2,072,963/. This exhaustion of the country, and the expenses incurred in the war with Hyder Ally and France, involved the Company in fresh difficulties. And being unable to meet them, they were obliged, in 1783, to present a petition to parliament, setting forth their inability to pay the stipulated sum of 400,000/. year to the public, and praying to be excused from that payment, and to be supported by a loan of 900,000/. All parties seemed now to be convinced that some further changes in the constitution of the Company had become indispensable. In this crisis Mr. Fox brought forward his famous India Bill; the grand object of which was to abolish the courts of directors and proprietors, and to vest the government of India in the hands of 7 commissioners appointed by parlia- ment. The coalition between Lord North and Mr. Fox had rendered the ministry exceed- VoL. I.-3 G 79 Digitized by Google 626 EAST INDIA COMPANY. ingly unpopular; and advantage was taken of the circumstance to raise an extraordinary clamour against the bill. The East India Company stigmatised it as an invasion of their chartered rights; though it is obvious, that, from their inability to carry into effect the stips- lations under which those rights were conceded to them, they necessarily reverted to the public; and it was as open to parliament to legislate upon them as upon any other question. The political opponents of the government represented the proposal for vesting the nomina- tion of commissioners in the legislature, as a daring invasion of the prerogative of the Crown, and an insidious attempt of the minister to render himself all-powerful, by adding the patron- age of India to that already in his possession. The bill was, however, carried through the House of Commons; but, in consequence of the ferment it had excited, and the avowed op- position of his Majesty, it was thrown out in the House of Lords. This event proved fatal to the coalition ministry. A new one was formed, with Mr. Pitt at its head and parlie- ment being soon after dissolved, the new minister acquired a decisive majority in both Houses. When thus secure of parliamentary support, Mr. Pitt brought forward his India Bill, which was successfully carried through all its stages. By this bill a Board of Control was erected, consisting of 6 members of the privy council, who were " to check, superintend, and control all acts, operations, and concerns, which in anywise relate to the civil or military government, or revenues, of the territories and possessions of the East India Company." All communi- cations to or from India, touching any of the above matters, were to be submitted to this Board; the directors being ordered to yield obedience to its commands, and to alter or amend all instructions sent to India as directed by it. A secret committee of 3 directors was formed, with which the Board of Control might transact any business it did not choose to submit to the court of directors. Persons returning from India were to be obliged, under very severe penalties, to declare the amount of their fortunes; and a tribunal was appointed for the trial of all individuals accused of misconduct in India, consisting of a judge from each of the Courts of King's Bench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer 5 members of the House of Lords, and 7 members of the House of Commons; the last being chosen by lot at the com- mencement of each session. The superintendence of all commercial matters continued, as formerly, in the hands of the directors. During the administration of Marquis Cornwallis, who succeeded Mr. Hastings, Tippoo Saib, the son of Hyder Ally, was stripped of nearly half his dominions; the Company's territorial revenue was, in consequence, greatly increased at the same time that the perma- nent settlement was carried into effect in Bengal, and other important changes accomplished. Opinion has been long divided as to the influence of these changes. On the whole, how- ever, we are inclined to think that they have been decidedly advantageous. Lord Cornwallis was, beyond all question, a sincere friend to the people of India; and laboured earnestly, if not always successfully, to promote their interests, which he well knew were identified with those of the British nation. During the 3 years ending with 1793, the value of the Company's exports of British produce and manufactures fluctuated from 928,783/. to 1,031,262L But this increase is wholly to be ascribed to the reduction of the duty on tea in 1784, and the vast increase that, consequently, took place in its consumption.-(See article TEA.) Had the consumption of tea continued stationary, there appear no grounds for thinking that the Company's exports in 1793 would have been greater than in 1780 unless an increase had taken place in the quantity of military stores exported. In 1793, the Company's charter was prolonged till the 1st of March, 1814. In the act for this purpose, a species of provision was made for opening the trade to India to private individuals. All his Majesty's subjects, residing in any part of his European dominions, were allowed to export to India any article of the produce or manufacture of the British dominions, except military stores, ammunition, masts, spars, cordage, pitch, tar, and copper; and the Company's civil servants in India, and the free merchants resident there, were allow- ed to ship, on their own account and risk, all kinds of Indian goods, except calicoes, dimities, muslins, and other piece goods. But neither the merchants in England, nor the Company's servants or merchants in India, were allowed to export or import except in Company's ships. And in order to insure such conveyance, it was enacted, that the Company should annually appropriate 3,000 tons of shipping for the use of private traders it being stipulated that they were to pay, in time of peace, 51. outwards, and 15/. homewards, for every ton occupied by them in the Company's ships and that this freight might be raised in time of war, with the approbation of the Board of Control. It might have been, and, indeed, most probably was foreseen that very few British mer- chants or manufacturers would be inclined to avail themselves of the privilege of sending out goods in Company's ships; or of engaging in a trade fettered on all sides by the jealousy of powerful monopolists, and where, consequently, their superior judgment and economy would have availed almost nothing. As far, therefore, as they were concerned, the relaxation was more apparent than real, and did not produce any useful results.* It was, however, made In his letter to the East India Company, dated the 21st of March, 1812, Lord Melville savs: It will not be denied that the facilities granted by that act (the act of 1793) have not been satisfactory Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 627 use of to a considerable extent by private merchants in India; and also by the Company's servants returning from India, many of whom invested a part, and some the whole, of their fortune, in produce fit for the European markets. The financial difficulties of the East India Company led to the revolution which took place in its government in 1784. But, notwithstanding the superintendence of the Board of Control, its finances have continued nearly in the same unprosperous state as before. We have been favoured, from time to time, with the most dazzling accounts of revenue that was to be immediately derived from India; and numberless acts of parliament have been passed for the appropriation of surpluses that never had any existence except in the imagination of their framers. The proceedings that took place at the renewal of the charter, in 1793, afford a striking example of this. Lord Cornwallis had then concluded the war with Tippoo Saib, which had stripped him of half his dominions: the perpetual settlement, from which 80 many benefits were expected to be derived, had been adopted in Bengal; and the Company's receipts had been increased, in consequence of accessions to their territory, and subsidies from native princes, &c., to upwards of eight millions sterling a year, which, it was calcu- lated, would afford a future annual surplus, after every description of charge had been de- ducted, of 1,240,000L Mr. Dundas (afterwards Lord Melville), then president of the Board of Control, availed himself of these favourable appearances, to give the most flattering repre- sentation of the Company's affairs. There could, he said, be no question as to the perma- nent and regular increase of the Company's surplus revenue: he assured the House that the estimates had all been framed with the greatest care; that the Company's possessions were in a state of prosperity till then unknown in India; that the abuses, which had formerly insinuated themselves into some departments of the government, had been rooted out; and that the period was at length arrived, when India was to pour her golden treasures into the lap of England ! Parliament participated in these brilliant anticipations, and in the act pro- longing the charter it was enacted, 1st, That 500,000/. a year of the surplus revenue should be set aside for reducing the Company's debt in India to 2,000,000/ 2dly, That 500,000/. a year should be paid into the exchequer, to be appropriated for the public service as parlia- ment should think fit to order; 3dly, When the India debt was reduced to 2,000,000/., and the bond debt to 1,500,000L, one sixth part of the surplus was to be applied to augment the dividends, and the other five sixths were to be paid into the Bank, in the name of the com- missioners of the national debt, to be accumulated as a guarantee fund, until it amounted to 12,000,000/.; and when it reached that sum, the dividends upon it were to be applied to make up the dividends on the capital stock of the Company to 10 per cent., if, at any time, the funds appropriated to that purpose should prove deficient, &c. Not one of these anticipations has been realized Instead of being diminished, the Com- pany's debts began immediately to increase. In 1795, they were authorised to add to the amount of their floating debt. In 1796, a new device to obtain money was fallen upon. Mr. Dundas represented that as all competition had been destroyed in consequence of the war, the Company's commerce had been greatly increased, and that their mercantile capital had become insufficient for the extent of their transactions. In consequence of this repre- sentation, leave was given to the Company to add two millions to their capital stock by creat- ing 20,000 new shares; but as these shares sold at the rate of 173L each, they produced 3,460,000/. In 1797, the Company issued additional bonds to the extent of 1,417,000/.; and, notwithstanding all this, Mr. Dundas stated in the House of Commons, on the 13th of March, 1799, that there had been a deficit in the previous year of 1,319,000/. During the administration of the Marquis Wellesley, which began in 1797-8 and terminated in 1805-6, the British empire in India was augmented by the conquest of Seringapatam and the whole territories of Tippoo Saib, the cession of large tracts by the Mahratta chiefs, the capture of Delhi, the ancient seat of the Mogul empire, and various other important acquisi- tions; so that the revenue, which had amounted to 8,059,000/. in 1797, was increased to 15,403,000/. in 1805. But the expenses of government, and the interest of the debt, in- creased in a still greater proportion than the revenue; having am ounted, in 1805, to 17,- 672,000l., leaving a deficit of 2,269,000/. In the following year the revenue fell off nearly 1,000,000/., while the expenses continued nearly the same. And there was, at an average, a continued excess of expenditure, including commercial charges, and a contraction of fresh debt, down to 1811-12. Notwithstanding the vast additions made to their territories, the Company's commerce with them continued to be very inconsiderable. During the 5 years ending with 1811, the exports to India by the Company, exclusive of those made on account of individuals in their ships, were as under:- M 13 1807 - - - 952,416 1810 - - - 1,010,815 1808 - - - 919,544 1811 - - - 1,033,816 1809 - - - 866,153 at least to the merchants either of this country or of India. They have been the source of constant dispute, and they have even entailed a heavy expense upon the Company without affording to the public any adequate benefit from such a sacrifice. (Papers published by E. I. Comp. 1813, p. 84.) Digitized by Google 628 EAST INDIA COMPANY. The exports by the private trade, and the privilege trade, that is, the commanders and officers of the Company's ships, during the above-mentioned years, were about as large. During the 5 years ending with 1807-8, the annual average imports into India by British private traders, only, amounted to 305,496l.-(Papers published by the East India Com- pany in 1813, 4to. p. 56.) The Company's exports include the value of the military stores sent from Great Britain to India. The ships employed in the trade to India and China, during the same 5 years, varied from 44 to 53, and their burden from 36,671 to 45,342 tons. For some years previously to the termination of the Company's charter in 1813, the con- viction had been gaining ground among all classes, that the trade to the East was capable of being very greatly extended and that it was solely owing to the want of enterprise and competition, occasioned by its being subjected to a monopoly, that it was confined within such narrow limits. Very great efforts were, consequently, made by the manufacturing and commercial interests to have the monopoly set aside, and the trade to the East thrown open. The Company vigorously resisted these pretensions; and had interest enough to procure a prolongation of the privilege of carrying on an exclusive trade to China to the 10th of April, 1831, with 3 years' notice; the government of India being continued in their hands for the same period. Fortunately, however, the trade to India was opened, under certain conditions, to the public. The principal of these conditions were, that private individuals should trade, directly only, with the presidencies of Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay, and the port of Penang; that the vessels fitted out by them should not be under 350 tons burden and that they should abstain, unless permitted by the Company, or the Board of Control, from engaging in the carrying trade of India, or in the trade between India and China. And yet, in despite of these disadvantages, such is the energy of individual enterprise as compared with mono- poly, that the private traders gained an almost immediate ascendancy over the East India Company, and in a very short time more than trebled our trade with India ! In the Report of the committee of the House of Lords on the foreign trade of the country, printed in May, 1821, it is stated, that " the greatly increased consumption of British goods in the East, since the commencement of the free trade, cannot be accounted for by the de- mand of European residents, the number of whom does not materially vary and it appears to have been much the greatest in articles calculated for the general use of the natives. That of the cotton manufactures of this country alone is stated, since the first opening of the trade, to have been augmented from four to five fold (it is now augmented from fifty to sixty fold). The value of the merchandise exported from Great Britain to India, which amounted, in 1814, to 870,177/., amounted,* in 1819, to 3,052,741/.; and although the market appears then to have been so far overstocked as to occasion a diminution of nearly one half in the exports of the following year, that diminution appears to have taken place more in the arti- cles intended for the consumption of Europeans than of natives; and the trade is now stated to the committee, by the best informed persons, to be reviving. When the amount of popu- lation, and the extent of the country over which the consumption of these articles is spread, are considered, it is obvious that any facility which can, consistently with the political in- terests and security of the Company's dominions, be given to the private trader, for the dis- tribution of his exports, by increasing the number of ports at which he may have the option of touching in pursuit of a market, cannot fail to promote a more ready and extensive de- mand." Besides the restraints imposed by the act of 1813, on the proceedings of the free traders,f they frequently experienced very great loss and inconvenience from the commercial speculs- tions of the East India Company. The latter have had commercial residents, with large ea- tablishments of servants, some of them intended for coercive purposes, stationed in all the con- siderable towns; and the Marquis Wellesley has stated, that the intimation of a wish from the Company's resident is always received as a command by the native manufacturers and producers." It was obviously impossible for a private trader to come fairly into competition with persons possessing such authority, and who were often instructed to make their pur- chases on any terms. Mr. Tucker, now deputy chairman of the Company, states, in his useful work on Indian finance, that the Company's investments (purchases) in India during the last 10 years may in some instances be said to have been forced; meaning by this, that the goods exported by them from India have sometimes been compulsorily obtained from the natives, and sometimes bought at a higher price than they would have brought in a market frequented only by regular merchants. But the truth is, that it was not in the nature of things that the Company's purchases could be fairly made; the natives could not deal with their servants as they would have dealt with private individuals; and it would be absurd to suppose that agents authorised to buy on account of government, and to draw on the public treasury for the means of payment, should generally evince the prudence and discretion of is- dividuals directly responsible in their own private fortunes for their transactions. The inter- This is the amount of the Company's exports only, and the sum is not quite accurate, see post. t These restraints were a good deal modified by the 3 Geo. 4. c. 80., passed in pursuance of the recommendation of the committee quoted above. Digitized by Google EAST INDIA COMPANY. 620 ference of such persons would, under any circumstances, have rendered the East India trade peculiarly hazardous. But their influence in this respect was materially aggravated by the irregularity of their appearances. No individual, not belonging to the court of directors, could foresee whether the Company's agents would be in the market at all; or, if there, to what extent they would either purchase or sell. So capricious were their proceedings, that in some years they have laid out 700,000/. on indigo, while in others they have not laid out a single shilling; and so with other things. A fluctuating demand of this sort necessarily occasioned great and sudden variations of price, and was injurious alike to the producers and the private merchants. Mr. Mackenzie, late secretary to the government of Bengal, set the mischievous influence of the circumstances now alluded to in the clearest point of view, in his masterly evidence before the select committee of 1832 on the affairs of India; and he further showed, that it was not possible, by any sort of contrivance, to obviate the incon- veniences complained of, and that they would unavoidably continue till the Company ceased to have any thing to do with commerce. But besides being injurious to the private trader, and to the public generally, both in India and England, this trade was of no advantage to the East India Company. How, indeed, could it be otherwise? A company that maintained armies and retailed tea, that carried a sword in the one hand and a ledger in the other, was a contradiction; and, had she traded with success, would have been a prodigy. It was impossible for her to pay that attention to details that is indispensable to the carrying on of commerce with advantage. She may have gained something by her monopoly of the tea trade, though even that is very question- able; but it is admitted on all hands, that she has lost heavily by her trade to India.* When, therefore, the question as to the renewal of the charter came to be discussed in 1832 and 1833, the Company had no reasonable objection to urge against their being deprived of the privilege of trading. And the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 85., for continuing the charter till 1854, has terminated the Company's commercial character; by enacting, that the Company's trade to China is to cease on the 22d of April, 1834t, and that the Company is, as soon as possi- ble after that date, to dispose of their stocks on hand, and close their commercial business. We congratulate our readers on this consummation. The trade to India, China, and the East generally, is now, for the first time, opened to free and unfettered mercantile enterprise. What has been effected since the opening of the trade to India in 1814, notwithstanding the many drawbacks under which it has laboured, is an earnest of what may be anticipated from the new arrangements. We have no doubt that it will be found that the commerce between the Eastern and Western worlds is as yet only in its infancy; and that it is destined, now that the incubus of monopoly is wholly removed, to attain to a magnitude and importance of which we can form no definite idea. II. EAST INDIA COMPANY (CONSTITUTION of). Under the new act, the functions of the East India Company are wholly political. She is to continue to govern India, with the concurrence and under the supervision of the Board of Control, nearly on the plan laid down in Mr. Pitt's act, till the 30th of April, 1854. All the real and personal property belonging to the Company on the 22d of April, 1834, is vested in the Crown, and is to be held or managed by the Company in trust for the same, subject of course to all claims, debts, contracts, &c., already in existence, or that may hereafter be brought into existence by competent authority. The Company's debts and liabilities are all charged on India. The dividend, which is to continue at 10} per cent., is to be paid in England out of the revenues of India; and provision is made for the establishment of a se- curity fund for its discharge. The dividend may be redeemed by parliament, on payment of 2001. for 100/. stock, any time after April, 1874; but it is provided, in the event of the Company being deprived of the government of India in 1854, that they may claim redemp- tion of the dividend any time thereafter upon 3 years' notice.- & 4 Will. 4. c. 85.) Company's Stock-forms a capital of 6,000,0001., into which all persons, natives or foreigners, males or females, bodies politic or corporate (the Governor and Company of the Bank of England only ex- cepted). are at liberty to purchase, without limitation of amount. Since 1793, the dividends have been 101 per cent., to which they are limited by the late act. General Courts.-The proprietors in general court assembled are empowered to enact by-laws, and in other respects are competent to the complete investigation, regulation, and control of every branch of the Company's concerns; but, for the more prompt despatch of business, the executive detail is vested in a court of directors. A general court is required to be held once in the months of March, June, September, and December, in each year. No one can be present at a general court unless pos- sessed of 5001. stock nor can any person vote upon the determination of any question. who has not been in possession of 1,000L. stock for the preceding 12 months, unless such stock have been obtained It is needless now to enter upon the controversy as to the origin of the Company's debt.-(See former edition of this work, p. 507.) L is probable that those who contend that this debt is wholly attributable to the Company's commercial operations, may have somewhat exaggerated their injurious influence. But we do not think that there is any room for doubting, notwithstanding the enormous prices charged on tea, that for these many years past, the Company's trade has been, on the whole, productive of nothing but loss. t For the new regulations as to the China trade, see CANTON. 3 G 2 Digitized by Google by bequest or marriage. Persons possessed of 1,0001. stock are empowered to give a single vote; 3,0001. are a qualification for two votes; 6,0001. for three votes; and 10,0001. and upwards for four votes. There were 2,003 proprietors on the Company's books in 1825; of these 1,494 were qualified to give single votes 392, two votes 69, three votes and 48, four votes. Upon any special occasion, 9 proprietors, duly qualified by the possession of 1,000L. stock, may, by a requisition in writing to the court of directors, call a general court; which the directors are required to summon within 10 days. or, in default, the proprietors may call such court by notice affixed upon the Royal Exchange. In all such courts the questions are decided by a majority of voices ; in case of an equality, the determina- tion must be by the treasurer drawing a lot. Nine proprietors may, by a requisition in writing, de- mand a ballot upon any question, which shall not be taken within 24 hours after the breaking up of the general court. Court of Directors.-The court of directors is composed of 24 members, chosen from among the pro- prietors, each of whom must be possessed of 2,0001. stock; nor can any director, after being chosen, act longer than while he continues to hold stock. Of these, 6 are chosen on the second Wednesday in April in each year, to serve for 4 years, in the room of 6 who have completed such service. After an interval of 12 months, those who had gone out by rotation are eligible to be re-elected for the en- suing 4 years. Formerly, no person who had been in the Company's civil or military service in India was eligible to be elected a director until he had been a resident in England 2 years after quitting the service but this condition no longer exists; and all civil or military servants of the Company in India, supposing they are otherwise eligible, may be chosen directors immediately on their return to England, provided they have no unsettled accounts with the Company; if so, they are ineligible for 2 years after their return, unless their accounts be sooner settled.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 85. P. 25.) The directors choose annually, from amongst themselves, a chairman and a deputy chairman. They are required by by-laws to meet once in every week at least but they frequently meet oftener, as occa- sion requires. Not less than 13 can form a court. Their determinations are guided by a majority: in case of an equality, the question must be decided by the drawing of a lot by the treasurer; upon all questions of importance, the sense of the court is taken by ballot. The Company's officers, both at home and abroad, receive their appointments immediately from the court; to whom they are responsible for the due and faithful discharge of the trust reposed in them. The patronage is, never- theless, 80 arranged, as that each member of the court separately participates therein. Secret Committee-The principal powers of the court of directors are vested in a secret committee, forming a sort of cabinet or privy council. All communications of a confidential or delicate nature between the Board of Control and the Company are submitted, in the first instance at least, to the consideration of this committee ; and the directions of the Board, as to political affairs, may be trans- mitted direct to India, through the committee, without being seen by the other directors. The secret committee is appointed by the court of directors, and its members are sworn to secresy. III. EAST INDIES (STATE OF SOCIETY IN, GROWING DEMAND FOR ENGLISH Goods, TRADE, COLONISATION, ETC.). 1. Distinction of Castes in India. Inaccuracy of the Representations as to the Inhabit- ants being unalterably attached to ancient Customs and Practices.-We have taken occa- sion, in the preceding sketch of the history of the East India Company, repeatedly to notice the small extent of the trade carried on by its agency. It has been contended, however, that this is to be ascribed, not to the deadening influence of monopoly, but to the peculiar state of the people of India. A notion has long been prevalent in this quarter of the world, that the Hindoos are a race unsusceptible of change or improvement of any sort; that every man is brought up to the profession of his father, and can engage in none else; and that, owing to the simplicity and unalterableness of their habits, they never can be consumers, at least to any considerable extent, of foreign commodities. " What is now in India, has always been there, and is likely still to continue."-(Robertson's Disquisition, p. 202.) The Hindoos of this day are said to be the same as the Hindoos of the age of Alexander the Great. The description of them given by Arrian has has been quoted as applying to their actual situa- tion. It is affirmed that they have neither improved nor retrograded; and we are referred to India as to a country in which the institutions and manners that prevailed 3,000 years ago may still be found in their pristine purity The President de Goguet lays it down distinctly, in his learned and invaluable work on the origin of laws, arts, and sciences, that in India every trade is confined to a particular caste, and can be exercised only by those whose parents professed it."-(Origin of Laws, &c. Eng. trans. vol. iii. p. 24.) Dr. Robertson says, that "the station of every Hindoo is unalterably fixed; his destiny is irrevocable; and the walk of life is marked out, from which he must never -(Disquisition on India, p. 199.) The same opinions are maintained by later authorities. Dr. Tennant says, that the whole Indian community is divided into 4 great classes; and each class is stationed between certain walls of separation, which are impassable by the purest virtue, and most conspicuous merit."-Quoted by Mr. Rickards, p. 6.) This unalterable destiny of indi- viduals has been repeatedly assumed in the despatches and official papers put forth by the East India Company and has been referred to on all occasions by them and their servants, as a proof that the depressed and miserable condition of the natives is not owing to mis- government, or to the weight of the burdens laid upon them; and that it is in vain to think of materially improving their condition, or of making them acquainted with new arts, or giving them new habits, so long as the institution of castes, and the prejudices to which it has given rise, preserve their ascendancy unimpaired. But notwithstanding the universal currency which the opinions now referred to have obtained, and the high authority by which they are supported, they are, in all the most essential respects, entirely without foundation The books and codes of the Hindoos them- selves, and the minute and careful observations that have recently been made on Indian society, have shown that the influence ascribed to the institution of castes by the ancients, by EAST INDIES, (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). 631 and by the more early modern travellers, has been prodigiously exaggerated. In the first part of his excellent work on India, Mr. Rickards has established, partly by references to the authoritative books of the Hindoos, and partly by his own observations, and those of Mr. Colebrook, Dr. Heber, and other high authorities, that the vast majority of the Hindoo popu- lation may, and, in fact, does engage in all sorts of employments. Mr. Rickards has further shown, that there is nothing in the structure of Indian society to oppose any serious obstacle to the introduction of new arts, or the spread of improvement; and that the causes of the poverty and misery of the people must be sought for in other circumstances than the institu- tion of castes, and the nature of Hindoo superstition. The early division of the population into the 4 great classes of priests (Brahmins), soldiers (Cshatryas), husbandmen and artificers (Vaisyas), and slaves (Sudras), was maintained only for a very short period. The Hindoo traditions record that a partial intermixture of these classes took place at a very remote epoch; and the mixed brood thence arising were divided into a vast variety of new tribes, or castes, to whom, speaking generally, no employments are forbidden. " The employments," says Mr. Rickards, allowed to these mixed and Impure castes, may be said to be every description of bandicraft, and occupation, for which the wants of human society have created a demand. Though many seem to take their naines from their ordinary trade or profession, and some have duties assigned them too low, and disgusting, for any others to perform, but from the direst necessity yet no employment, generally speaking, is forbidden to the mixed and impure tribes, excepting three of the prescribed duties of the sacerdotal class; viz. teaching the Vedas, officiating at a sacrifice, and receiving presents from a pure-handed giver; which three are exclu- sively Brahminical." Mr. Colebrook, who is acknowledged on all hands to be one of the very highest authori- ties, as to all that respects Indian affairs, has a paper in the fifth volume of the Asiatic Re- searches, on the subject of castes. In this paper, Mr. Colebrook states that the Jatimala, a Hindoo work, enumerates forty-two mixed classes springing from the intercourse of a man of inferior class with a woman of a superior class, or in the inverse order of the classes. Now, if we add to these the number that must have sprung from intermixture in the direct order of the classes, and the hosts further arising from the continued intermixture of the mixed tribes amongst themselves, we shall not certainly be disposed to dissent from Mr. Colebrook's conclusion, " that the subdivisions of these classes have further multiplied distinctions to an endless variety." Mr. Colebrook has given the following distinct and accurate account of the professions and employments of the several classes at the present day. It forms a curious commentary on the "irrevocable destiny" of Dr. Robertson, and the "impassable walls" of Dr. Tennant. A Brahman, unable to subsist by his duties, may live by the duty of a soldier if he cannot get a subsistence by either of these employments, he may apply to tillage and attendance on cattle, or gain a competence by traffic, avoiding certain commodities. A Cshatrya in distress, may subsist by all these means; but he must not have recourse to the highest functions. In seasons of distress, a fur- ther latitude is given. The practice of medicine, and other learned professions, painting, and other arts, work for wages, menial service, alms, and usury, are among the modes of subsistence allowed both to the Brahman and Cshatrya. A Vaisya, unable to subsist by his own duties, may descend to the servile acts of a Sudra: and a Sudra, not finding employment by waiting on men of the higher classes, may subsist by handicrafts principally following those mechanical operations, as joinery and masonry, and practical arts, as painting and writing, by which he may serve men of superior classes and although a man of a lower class is in general restricted from the acts of a higher class, the Sudra is expressly permitted to become a trader, or a husbandman. " Besides the particular occupation assigned to each of the mixed classes, they have the alterna- tive of following that profession, which regularly belongs to the class from which they derive their origin on the mother's side; those at least have such an option, who are born in the direct order of the classes. The mixed classes are also permitted to subsist by any of the duties of a Sudra, that is, by menial service, by handicrafts, by commerce. and agriculture. Hence it appears, THAT ALMOST EVERY OCCUPATION, THOUGH REGULARLY IT BE THE PROFESSION OF A PARTICULAR CLASS, IS OPEN TO MOST OTHER CLASSES; and that the limitations, far from being rigorous, do in fact reserve only the pecu- liar profession of the Brahman, which consists in teaching the Veda, and officiating at religious cere- monies." We have thus," says Mr. Rickards, by whom this passage has been quoted, the highest exist- ing authority for utterly rejecting the doctrine of the whole Hindoo community being divided into four castes; and of their peculiar prerogatives being guarded inviolate by impassable walls of separation.' It is also clear that the intermixture of castes had taken place, to an Indefinite extent, at the time when the Dherma Sastra was composed, which Sir William Jones computes to be about 880 years B. C. for the mixed classes are specified in this work, and it also refers, in many places, to past times, and to events which a course of time only could have brought about. The origin of the intermixture is therefore lost in the remotest and obscurest antiquity and having been carried on through a long course of ages, a heterogeneous mass is every where presented to us, in these latter times. without a single example in any particular state, or kingdom, or separate portion of the Hin- doo community, of that quadruple division of castes, which has been 80 confidently insisted upon. 1 have myself seen carpenters of five or six different castes, and as many different bricklayers employed on the same building. The same diversity of castes may be observed among the crafts. men in dockyards, and all other great works; and those, who have resided for any time in the prin cipal commercial cities of India, must be sensible, that every increasing demand for labour, in all its different branches and varieties of old and new arts, has been speedily and effectually supplied, in spite of the tremendous institution of castes; which we are taught to believe forms so impassable ar obstruction to the advancement of Indian industry." 2. Growing Demand for English Goods.-It is difficult to suppose that the directors of the East India Company should not have been early aware of the fallacy of the opinions as Digitized by Google 632 EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). to the fixedness of Indian habits. So far, however, as we know, they have not, in this in- stance, evinced any acquaintance with the discoveries of their servants. On the contrary, in all the discussions that took place with respect to the opening of the trade in 1814, the Com- pany invariably contended that no increase of trade to India could be expected. In a letter of the chairman and deputy chairman to the Right Honourable Robert Dundas, dated 13th of January, 1809, it is stated, that the small demand for foreign commodities in India "re- sults from the nature of the Indian people, their climate, and their usages. The articles of first necessity their own country furnishes more abundantly and more cheaply than it is possible for Europe to supply them. The labour of the great body of the common people only enables them to subsist on rice, and to wear a slight covering of cotton cloth; they, therefore, can purchase none of the superfluities we offer them. The comparatively few, in better circumstances, restricted, like the rest, by numerous religious and civil customs, of which all are remarkably tenacious, find few of our commodities to their taste; and their climate, so disimilar to ours, renders many of them unsuitable to their use; so that a com- merce between them and us cannot proceed far upon the principle of supplying mutual wants. Hence, except woollens, in a very limited degree, for mantles in the cold season, and metals, on a scale also very limited, to be worked up by their own artisans for the few utensils they need, hardly any of our staple commodities find a vent among the Indians; the other exports which Europe sends to India being chiefly consumed by the European population there, and some of the descendants of the early Portuguese settlers, all of whom, taken collectively, form but a small body, in view to any question of national commerce."-(Papers published by authority of the East India Company, 1813, p. 21.) The volume from which we have made this extract contains a variety of passages to the same effect. So confident, indeed, were the Company that they had carried the trade to India to the utmost extent of which it was capable, that it is expressly stated, in resolutions passed in a general court held at the India House, on the 26th of January, 1813, that no large or sudden addition can be made to the amount of British exports to India or China;" that the Company had suffered a loss in attempting to extend this branch of their trade; that the warehouses at home were glutted with Indian commodities for which there was no demand; and that to open the outports to the trade would be no other than "a ruinous transfer of it into new channels, to the destruction of immense and costly establishments, and the beggary of many thousands of industrious individuals." Luckily, however, these representations were unable to prevent the opening of the trade, and the result has sufficiently demonstrated their fallacy. The enterprise and exertion of individuals has vastly increased our exports to India-to that very country which the Com- pany had so confidently pronounced was, and would necessarily continue to be, incapable of affording any additional outlet for our peculiar products The commercial accounts for 1812 and 1813 were unfortunately destroyed by the fire at the Custom-house. The trade to India was opened on the 10th of April, 1814; and in that year the declared or, real value of the products exported from Great Britain to the coun- tries eastward of the Cape of Good Hope, excepting China, by the East India Company, was 826,558/., and by the private traders, 1,048,132/. In 1817, the Company's exports had declined to 638,382/., while those of the private traders had increased to 2,750,333/.; and in 1828, the former had sunk to only 488,6017., while the latter had increased to 3,979,072L being more than double the total exports to India, as well by the Company as by private traders, in 1814! The Company have stated, and no doubt truly, that they have lost a very large sum in attempting to extend the demand for British woollens in India and China, which, notwith- standing, continues very limited. But in-their efforts to force the sale of woollens, they seem to have entirely forgotten that we had attained to great excellency in the manufacture of cotton stuffs, the article principally made use of as clothing in Hindostan and that, not- withstanding the cheapness of labour in India, the advantage we derived from our superior machinery might enable us to offer cotton stuffs to the natives at a lower price than they could afford to manufacture them for. No sooner, however, had the trade been opened to private adventurers, than this channel of enterprise was explored; and the result has been, that, instead of bringing cottons from India to England, the former has become one of the best and most extensive markets for the cottons of the latter. We question, indeed, whether, in the whole history of commerce, another equally striking example can be produced of the powerful influence of competition in opening new and almost boundless fields for the suc- cessful prosecution of commercial enterprise. In 1814, the first year of the free trade to India, the exports of cotton amounted to 817,000 yards, of which only about 170,000 yards, valued at 17,778L, were exported by the Company ! The progress of the trade will be seen in the following statement:- Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). 633 Account specifying the Quantities of the printed and plain Cotton Stuffs, the declared Value of all Sorts of manufactured Cotton Goods, the Quantity of Cotton Twist or Yarn, and the declared Year from 1814. Value of the same, exported from the United Kingdom, to all Parts of the East, except China, each Cotton Manufactures. Cotton Twist. Years. Printed. Plain. Declared Value. Twist. Declared Value. Yards. Yards. L. Lbs. L. 1814 604,800 213,408 109,480 8 7 1815 866,077 489,399 142,410 1816 991,147 714,611 160,534 624 190 1817 2,848,705 2,468,024 422,814 2,704 505 1818 2,227,665 4,614,381 700,892 1,861 455 1819 3,713,601 3,414,060 461,268 971 138 1820 7,509,000 6,484,256 834,118 224 24 1821 9,715,374 9,423,352 1,084,440 5,865 805 1822 9,029,204 11,712,639 1,145,057 22,200 2,335 1823 9,431,700 13,047,717 1,128,468 121,500 16,993 1824 9,611,880 14,858,515 1,113,477 105,350 13,041 1825 8,826,715 14,201,496 1,036,871 233,360 35,345 1826 9,750,076 15,248,781 994,019 918,587 100,804 1827 14,264,794 27,295,286 1,614,517 3,063,668 274,002 1828 12,410,220 30,411,857 1,621,560 4,558,185 388,888 1829 11,215,743 32,893,931 1,453,404 2,927,476 200,552 1830 13,595,074 43,481,156 1,760,552 4,689,570 324,955 1831 14,569,583 35,012,953 1,419,995 6,541,853 483,762 1832 18,291,650 39,276,511 1,531,393 4,295,427 309,719 The East India Company contributed nothing whatever to this extraordinary increase of the cot- ton trade their exports not having been so large in any one year as in 1814, when they only amounted to the inconsiderable sum already mentioned. The demand for several other articles of British manufacture has recently increased, though not in the same unprecedented manner as cotton, with considerable rapidity. Not- withstanding all that has been said as to the immutability of Hindoo habits, the fact is not to be denied, that a taste for European products and customs is rapidly spreading itself over India. And the fair presumption is, that it will continue to gain ground according as edu- cation is more diffused, and as the natives become better acquainted with our language, arts, and habits. The authenticity of Dr. Heber's statements cannot be called in question and there are many passages in different parts of his Journal that might be quoted in corrobora- tion of what has now been stated. Our limits, however, will only permit us to make a very few extracts. " Nor have the religious prejudices, and the unchangeableness of the Hindoo habits, been less exaggerated. Some of the best informed of their nation, with whom I have conversed, assure me, that half their most remarkable customs of civil and domestic life are borrowed from their Moham- medan conquerors; and at present there is an obvious and increasing disposition to imitate the English in every thing, which has already led to very remarkable changes, and will, probably, to still more important. The wealthy natives now all affect to have their houses decorated with Corinthian pil- lars, and filled with English furniture they drive the best horses and the most dashing carriages in Calcutta many of them speak English fluently, and are tolerably read in English literature: and the children of one of our friends I saw one day dressed in jackets and trowsers, with round hats, shoes, and stockings. In the Bengulee newspapers, of which there are two or three, politics are can- vassed with a bias, as 1 am told, inclined to Whiggism; and one of their leading men gave a great dinner, not long since, in honour of the Spanish revolution: among the lower orders the same feel- ing shows itself more beneficially in a growing neglect of caste. (Vol. ii. p. 306.) " To say that the Hindoos or Mussulmans are deficient in any essential feature of a civilised peo- ple, is an assertion which I can scarcely suppose to he made by any who have lived with them; their manners are at least as pleasing and courteous as those in the corresponding stations of life among ourselves; their houses are larger, and, according to their wants and climate, to the full as conveni- ent as ours; their architecture in at least as elegant; nor is it true that in the mechanic arts they are inferior to the general run of European nations. Where they fall short of us, (which is chiefly in agricultural implements, and the mechanics of common life,) they are not, so far as I have under- stood of Italy and the south of France, surpassed in any degree by the people of those countries. Their goldsmiths and weavers produce as beautiful fabrics as our own; and it is 80 far from true that they are obstinately wedded to their old patterns, that they show an anxiety to imitate our models, and do imitate them very successfully. The ships built by native artists at Bombay are no- toriously as good as any which sail from London or Liverpool. The carriages and gigs which they supply at Calcutta are as handsome, though not as durable, as those of Long Acre. In the little town of Monghyr, 300 miles from Calcutta, I had pistols, double-barrelled guns, and different pieces of cabinet work, brought down to my boat for sale, which in outward form (for 1 know no further) nobody but perhaps Mr. could detect to be of Hindoo origin; and at Delhi, in the shop of a wealthy native jeweller, I found brooches, ear-rings, snuff-boxes, &c. of the latest models (so far as I am a judge), and ornamented with French devices and mottos. ii. p. 382.) As Bishop Heber penetrated into the interior of India, he found the same taste as in Cal- cutta, for European articles and for luxuries, to prevail every where among the natives. Of Benares, he writes as follows :- 44 But what surprised me still more, as I penetrated further into it, were the large, lofty, and hand- some dwelling-bouses, the beauty and apparent richness of the goods exposed in the bazaars, and the evident hum of business. Benares is in fact a very industrious and wealthy, as well as a very holy city. It is the great mart where the shawls of the north, the diamonds of the south, and the muslins of Dacca and the eastern provinces centre and it has very considerable silk, cotton, and Including lace, hosiery, and small wares. 80 Digitized by Google 634 EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). fine woollen manufactories of its own ; while English hardware, swords, shields, and spears, from Lucknow and Monghyr, and those European luxuries and elegancies which are daily becoming more po- pular in India, circulate from bence through Bundlecund, Gorruckpoor, Nepaul, and other tracts which are removed from the main artery of the Ganges."-(Vol. i. p. 289.) Proceeding still further into the interior of the country, and when at Nusseerabad, distant above 1,000 miles from Calcutta, the bishop continues his Journal in the same strain; viz. " European articles are, at Nusseerabad,* as might be expected, very dear the shops are kept bya Greek and two Parsees from Bombay they had in their list all the usual items of a Calcutta ware- house. English cotton cloths, both white and printed, are to be met with commonly in wear among the people of the country, and may, 1 learned to my surprise, be bought best and cheapest, as well as all kinds of hardware, crockery, writing-desks, &c., at Palle, a large town and celebrated mart in Marwar, on the edge of the desert, several days' journey west of Joudpoor, where, till very lately, no European was known to have penetrated."-( ii. p. 36.) As to the character of the Hindoos, their capacity, and even anxious desire for improve- ment, the bishop's testimony is equally clear and decided and as this is a point of pre-emi- nent importance, the reader's attention is requested to the following statements :- In the schools which have been lately established in this part of the empire, of which there are at present 9 established by the Church Missionary, and 11 by the Christian Knowledge Societies, some very unexpected facts have occurred. As all direct attempts to convert the children are dis- claimed, the parents send them without scruple. But it is no less strange than true, that there is no objection made to the use of the Old and New Testament as a class-book ; that so long as the teachers do not urge them to eat what will make them lose their caste, or to be baptised, or to curse their country's gods, they readily consent to every thing else: and not only Mussulmans, but Brab- mins, stand by with perfect coolness, and listen sometimes with apparent interest and pleasure, while the scholars, by the road side, are reading the stories of the creation and of Jesus Christ."- (Vol. ii. p. 290.) Hearing all I had heard of the prejudices of the Hindoos and Mussulmans, I certainly did not at all expect to find that the common people would, not only without objection, but with the greatest thankfulness, send their children to schools on Bell's system and they seem to be fully sensible of the advantages conferred by writing, arithmetic, and, above all, by a knowledge of English. There are now in Calcutta, and the surrounding villages, 20 boys' schools, containing 60 to 120 each; and 23 girls', each of 25 or 30."--(Vol. ii. p. 300.) In the same holy city (Benares) I visited another college, founded lately by a wealthy Hindoo banker, and intrusted by him to the management of the Church Missionary Society, in which, be- sides a grammatical knowledge of the Hindoostanee language, as well as Persian and Arabic, the senior boys could pass a good examination in English grammar, in Hume's History of England. Joyce's Scientific Dialogues, the use of the globes, and the principal facts and moral precepts of the Gospel ; most of them writing beautifully in the Persian, and very tolerably in the English charac- ter, and excelling most boys I have met with in the accuracy and readiness of their arithmetic."- (Vol. ii. p. 388.) "The different nations which I have seen in India, (for it is a great mistake to suppose that all India is peopled by a single race, or that there is not as great a disparity between the inhabitants of Guzerat, Bengal, the Dooab, and the Deccan. both in language, manners, and physiognomy, as be- tween any four nations in Europe,) have, of course, in a greater or less degree, the vices which must be expected to attend on arbitrary government, a demoralising and absurd religion, and (in all the independent states, and in some of the districts which are partially subject to the British) a laxity of law, and an almost universal prevalence of intestine feuds and habits of plunder. The general chs- racter, however, has much which is extremely pleasing to me ; they are brave, courteous, intelligent, and most enger after knowledge and improvement, with a remarkable talent for the sciences of geometry, astronomy, &c., as well as for the arts of painting and sculpture. In all these points they have had great difficulties to struggle with, both from the want of models, instruments, and element- ary instruction the indisposition, or rather the horror, entertained, till lately, by many among their European masters, for giving them instruction of any kind and now from the real difficulty which exists of translating works of science into languages which have no corresponding terms."-(Vol.ii. p. 409.) Even if our space permitted, it would be unnecessary to add to these extracts. The facts and circumstances now mentioned, must, we think, satisfy every one that there is nothing in the nature of Indian society, in the institution of castes as at present existing, or in the habits and customs of the natives, to hinder them from advancing in the career of civilisation, com- merce, and wealth. It may safely be asserted," says Mr. Hamilton, " that with 60 vast an extent of fertile soil, peopled by 80 many millions of tractable and industrious inhabitants, Hindostan is capable of supplying the whole world with any species of tropical merchandise; the production, in fact, being only limited by the demand." 3. Trade with India.-The principal obstacle in the way of extending the commerce with India does not consist in any indisposition on the part of the natives to purchase our com- modities, but in the difficulty under which they are placed of furnishing equivalents for them. This, however, is rather a factitious than a real difficulty. It results more from the discrimi- nating duties laid on several articles of Indian produce, than from their being, in any respect, unsuitable for our markets. Instead of admitting all the articles raised in the different de- pendencies of the empire for home consumption on the same terms, we have been accustomed to give a marked preference to those raised in the West Indies. We confess, however, that we are wholly unable to discover any grounds on which to vindicate such preference. The protection which every just government is bound to afford to all classes of its subjects, cannot vary with the varying degrees of latitude and longitude under which they happen to live. And as no one denies that the inhabitants of Bengal are, as well as those of Demerara or Jamaica, liege subjects of the British crown, it does seem quite at variance with every fair Nusseerabad, near Ajmere, in the heart of the Rajepoot country. Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). 635 principle, to treat them worse than the West Indians, by imposing higher duties on their pro- duce when brought to our markets. The following Tables give a comprehensive view of the trade with India since the relaxa- tion of the monopoly in 1814, and particularly during the 3 years ending with 1832 :- An Account of the Value of the Imports and Exports between Great Britain and all the Places Eastward of the Cape of Good Hope (excepting China); distinguishing the Private Trade from that of the East India Company, in each Year, from 1814 to the latest Period to which the same can be made up. Value of Imports into Great Britain, from all Places Eastward of the Cape of Good Hope (except China), Value of Exports from Great Britain to all Places East- according to the Prices at the East India Company's ward of the Cape of Good Hope (except China), ac- Years. Sales in the respective Years. cording to the Declarations of the Exporters. By the East Private Trade. By the East India Company. Total Imports. India Company. Private Trade. Total Exports. £ £ £ £ £ £ 1814 4,208,079 4,435,196 8,643,275 826,558 1,048,132 1,874,690 1815 3,016,556 5,119,611 8,136,167 996,218 1,569,513 2,565,761 1816 2,027,703 4,402,082 6,429,785 633,546 1,955,909 2,589,455 1817 2,323,630 4,541,956 6,865,586 638,382 2,750,333 3,388,715 1818 2,305,003 6,901,144 9,206,147 553,385 3,018,779 3,572,164 1819 1,932,401 4,683,367 6,615,768 760,508 1,586,575 2,347,083 1820 1,757,137 4,201,389 5,958,526 971,096 2,066,815 3,037,911 1821 1,743,733 3,031,413 4,775,146 887,619 2,656,776 3,544,395 1822 1,092,329 2,621,334 3,713,663 606,089 2,838,354 3,444,443 1823 1,587,078 4,344,973 5,932,051 458,550 2,957,705 3,416,255 1824 1,194,753 4,410,347 5,605,100 654,783 2,841,795 3,496,578 1825 1,462,692 4,716,083 6,178,775 598,553 2,574,660 3,173,213 1826 1,520,060 5,210,866 6,730,926 990,964 2,480,588 3,471,552 1827 1,612,480 4,068,537 5,681,017 805,610 3,830,580 4,636,190 1828 1,930,107 5,135,073 7,065,180 488,601 3,979,072 4,467,673 1829 1,593,442 4,624,842 6,218,284 434,586 3,665,678 4,100,264 1830 1,593,566 4,085,505 5,679,071 195,394 3,891,917 4,087,311 1831 1,434,372 4,295,438 5,729,810 146,480 3,488,571 3,635,051 1832 1,107,787 5,229,311 6,337,098 149,193 3,601,093 3,750,286 An Account of the Imports into Great Britain from all Places Eastward of the Cape of Good Hope (excepting China), distinguishing between those made by the East India Company and those made by private Traders during the Three Years ending with 1832.-(From Parl. Paper, No. 425. Sess. 1833.) 1830. 1831. 1832. Articles. East Private East East India Total. India Private Total. India Private Total. Company. Trade. Company. Trade. Company. Trade. Aloee lbs. 51,065 51,085 20,305 20,305 31,684 81,684 Asafoctida - 8,722 8,722 892 892 13,731 13,731 Benjamin - 27,428 27,428 83,879 83,579 92,193 92,493 Borax - 172,642 172,642 188,241 188,241 150.795 168,995 Camphire, unrefined - 273,682 273,682 106,979 106,979 208,734 208,734 Canes, vis. rattans (not ground) numb. 2,414,562 2,414,562 3,908,423 3,908,423 3,922,355 3,922,365 Cotiee lbs. 7,026,799 7,025,799 7,656,386 7,656,886 10,407,837 10,407,837 Cotton piece goods, white calicoes and muslins, pcs. 171,223 171,223 1,467 15,900 17,367 79,080 79,090 Cotton piece goods, dyed cotton & grass cloths, pcs. 47,538 205,025 252,563 32,107 136,731 168,838 11,126 216,100 227,226 Nanquin cloths - 573,581 673,381 854,671 854,671 195,507 195,807 Cardamoms lbs. 41,035 41,035 72,800 72,800 67,218 67,218 Cassia buds 86,758 86,758 171,720 171,720 76,173 75,173 Cassia lignea - 831,296 881,296 392,789 392,789 996,368 995,368 Cinnamon - 449,656 449,656 222,991 222,991 25,738 25,738 Cloves - 3,198 3,198 124,607 124,607 224,644 224,644 Cotton wool - 620,333 11,892,556 12,512,589 446,930 25,366,643 25,813,573 2,586,416 32,633,009 35,219,604 Dye and hard 2 abony, tons 1,301 1,301 III 111 70 70 woods, viz s red sanders, 14 14 66 65 149 149 Elephants' teeth cwt. 1,602 1,609 2,173 2,173 1,010 1,010 Galls - 1,561 1,561 1,081 1,031 867 867 Ginger - 35 1,234 1,269 850 850 2,509 2,609 Gum, animi and copal, lbs. 55,651 55,651 190,274 190,274 166,290 155,290 Arabic CWL 1,962 1,962 2,489 2,489 2,693 2,698 Lac dye, lac lake, and cake lac lbs. 486,269 495,969 753,252 753.252 459,379 459,379 Shell lac and seed lac - 649,636 649,636 1,146,128 1,146,128 1,070,261 1,070,261 Stick lac - 37,596 37,595 149,144 149,144 319,373 319,873 Hemp cwt. 14,130 14,130 11,735 11,736 61,940 64,940 Nutnings lbs. 45,059 45,059 110,039 110,039 223,426 223,420 Oil, castor - 441,275 441,275 343,373 343,373 257,387 257,387 Cocus nut cwt. 6,484 6,484 3,535 3,535 10,660 10,660 of mace & nutmegs, lbs. oz. 486,15 466,15 661,14 651.14 264.10 264,10 Ol-banum cwt. 4,181 4,181 761 761 3,306 3,306 Pepper, of all sorts lbs. 2,742,924 2,742,224 1,079,464 5,057,776 6,129,240 4,630,475 4,630,475 Hides, untanned CWL 5,104 5,104 3,376 3,376 10,739 10,739 Indigo lbs. 2,154,341 5,772,516 7,926,857 1,781,978 5,923,268 7,005,246 1,731,898 4,479.997 6,211,895 Mace 12,962 12,963 40,921 40,921 72,022 72,022 Madder root cwt. 992 992 2,571 2,571 334 384 Mother o' pearl shells, rh.lbs. 465,591 465,591 510,492 510,492 721,527 721,527 Musk OF. 8,390 3,320 3,447 3,447 8,129 8,129 Rhubarb lbs. 157,211 157,211 138,462 138,462 115,237 115,237 Rice, not in the husk, cwt. 125,497 125,487 133,887 133,887 171,560 171,560 in the busk bush. 21,948 21,948 38,563 33,553 19,744 19,744 Safflower cwt. 2,170 2,170 2,436 2,436 5,558 5,556 Sago 2,661 2,661 2,253 2,253 3,377 3,377 Saltpetre - 44,928 98,774 143,702 28,818 141,904 170,722 49,512 180,028 229,538 Senna lbs. 176,598 176,593 200,990 200,990 464,917 464,917 Silk, raw, waste, & flow, - 1,020,963 715,288 1,736,231 1,088,973 686,677 1,725,650 727,175 1,087,644 1,814,819 Digitized by Google 636 EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). Imports-continued. 1830. 1831. 1832. Articles. East Private East East India Total. India Private Total. India Priva's Trade. Total. Company. Company. Trade. Company. Trade. Silk, manufactured, Viz Bandana handkerchiefs and romals pieces 68,534 65,752 124,276 62,997 121,401 184,398 63,547 148,340 211,887 Crape, in pieces - 513 613 932 932 Crape shawls, scarf, and gown-pieces and hand- aerchiefs numb. 23,711 23,711 17,740 17,740 11,469 11,469 Taffaties, and other silks, in pieces pieces 6,173 2,356 8,529 4,282 8,086 7,368 2,206 2,319 4,55 Soap cwt. 11 11 I I Spirits, viz. arrack, imp.gall. 41,419 41,419 7,911 7,911 20,591 90,591 Sugar, unrefined CWL 118,358 660,729 779,087 102,476 647,972 750,448 56,060 647,077 703,137 Tin 14,574 14,574 5,472 5,472 26,642 25,042 Tortoiseshell, rough lbs. 32,199 32,189 30,902 30,902 39,004 39,004 Turmeric - 1,867,764 1,867,764 1,292,028 1,292,026 1,004,045 1,004,045 Vermilion 10,923 10,923 1,926 1,926 Other articles value L 2,815 206,020 208,835 2,181 201,279 203,460 205,719 208,719 Total Value of Imports, L. 1,598,588, 4,085,505 5,679,071 1,434,372 4,295,438 5,729,810 1,107,787 5,229 311 6,337,199 An Account of the Quantities and declared Values of the various Articles exported from Great Bri- tain to all Places Eastward of the Cape of Good Hope (except China), distinguishing between those made by the East India Company, and those made by private Traders, during the Three Years ending with 1832.-(From the Parl. Paper, No. 425. Sess. 1833.) 1830. 1831. 1832. Articles. East India Private East Private East Total. Trade. India Total. India Private Total. Comp. Comp. Trade. Comp. Trade. Apothecary wares Declared value L. 10,588 9,642 20,230 6,582 6,169 12,751 6,967 9,778 16,745 Apparel 4,352 28,224 32,576 1,895 27,362 29,257 9,271 23,477 32,748 Beer and ale tuns 3,473 3,473 26 3,144 3,170 4,737 4,737 Declared value L. 71,364 71,364 390 60,405 60,795 87,606 87,606 Books, printed cwt. 40 703 743 6 823 829 13 1,032 1,045 Declared value L. 1,143 19,504 20,647 259 23,016 23,275 237 27,189 27,426 Brass cwt. 10 232 242 5 164 169 45 124 169 Declared value L. 90 2,145 2,235 40 1,244 1,284 393 1,005 1,395 Cabinet and upholstery wares Declared value L. 3,525 3,525 2,019 2,019 47 3,098 3,145 Carriages number 133 133 137 137 80 80 Declared value L. 11,835 11,835 9,382 9,382 5,430 5,430 Coals tons 1,877 2,166 4,043 2,013 3,043 5,056 1,926 4,547 6,473 Declared value L. 2,538 1,053 3,591 2,314 2,555 4,869 1,870 3,598 5,708 Cochineal lbs. 44,329 44,329 34,676 34,676 29,588 29,588 Declared value L. 21,056 21,056 13,870 13,870 11,095 11,095 Colours for painters Declared value L. 679 14,434 15,113 891 8,573 9,464 1,150 11,961 13,100 Copper, unwrought, in bricks and pigs cwt. 46,807 46,807 49,359 49,359 2,639 43,710 46,349 Declared value L. 200,050 200,050 204,936 204,936 11,180 178,036 189,216 wrought, of all sorts, cwt. 1,028 43,156 44,214 714 35,216 35,930 243 40,548 40,791 Declared value L. 5,058 195,098 200,156 3,500 153,534 157,034 1,232 173,576 175,108 Cordage cwt. 441 911 1,352 1,405 1,595 3,000 285 6,751 6,035 Declared value L. 1,101 2,187 3,288 3,270 3,645 6,915 602 10,524 11,126 Cotton manufactures (British) Calicoes, &c., white or plain yards 7,500 37,555,687 37,563,187 10,410 28,639,567 28,649,977 6,414 34,077,810 34,084,274 Declared value L 240 1,008,865 1,009,105 320 726,386 726,706 268 818,921 819,189 Ditto, printed, checked, stained, or dyed yards 2,600 13,426,203 13,428,803 890 13,971,220 13,972,110 17,907,088 17,907,088 Declared value L. 160 535,951 536,111 71 471,617 471,688 531,654 531,654 Muslins, &c., white or plain, yards 5,917,969 5,917,969 6,362,976 6,362,976 5,192,257 5,192,257 Declared value L. 185,940 185,940 179,652 179,652 143,140 143,140 Ditto, printed, checked, stained, or dyed yards 166,271 166,271 597,473 597,473 384,562 $84,562 Declared value L. 7,562 7,562 22,579 22,579 14,168 14,168 Hosiery, and small wares Declared value L. 149 21,685 21,835 90 19,280 19,370 23,242 23,342 Aggregate value of British cot. ton manufactures Declared value L. 549 1,760,003 1,760,552 481 1,419,514 1,419,995 268 1,531,125 1,531,393 Cotton twist and yarn lbs. 38 4,689,532 4,689,570 6,541,858 6,541,853 169 4,295,258 4,295,427 Declared value L. 1 324,954 324,955 483,762 483,762 12 309,719 309,734 Cotton manufactures (foreign) square yards 2,885 2,885 7,806 7,806 value L. 114 114 I I 991 991 Declared value L. 258 258 327 327 991 991 Earthenware of all sorts pieces 42,000 1,245,800 1,287,800 27,000 1,253,525 1,280,525 6,900 2,097,339 2,091,200 Declared value L. 429 20,072 20,501 312 17,209 17,521 82 27,004 27,086 Glass Declared value L. 1,746 102,870 104,616 2,354 100,069 102,423 1,060 100,067 101,147 Guns and pistols number 2,300 1,400 3,700 1,420 478 1,898 820 8,219 9,099 Declared value L. 4,284 5,100 9,384 1,583 3,640 5,223 1,416 11,957 12,673 Haberdashery and millinery Declared value L. 112 25,367 25,479 20 20,862 20,882 16 29,543 29,509 Hardwares and cutlery Declared value L. 9,030 72,013 81,043 10,352 50,690 61,042 11,264 71,025 52,583 Hats of all sorts dozens 1,222 2,232 3,454 980 2,014 2,994 1,001 2,791 3,792 Declared value L. 1,847 13,540 15,387 1,471 9,376 10,847 1,604 12,760 14,384 Iron, bar and bolt tons 43 12,290 12,333 83 11,765 11,848 30 17,400 17,430 Declared value L. 376 86,938 87,314 980 79,258 80,238 272 103,765 104,057 cast and wrought cwt. 5,980 69,616 75,596 10,402 75,987 86,389 2,495 58,854 61,349 Declared value L. 7,341 50,231 57,572 12,624 50,628 63,252 2,740 37,916 40,5% Lace and thread of gold and sil- ver lbs. 163 557 720 96 212 30% 187 474 61 Declared value L. 1,455 4,661 6,116 786 1,677 2,463 1,465 2,944 4,400 Lead and shot tons 34 1,226 1,260 52 1,280 1,332 61 1,565 185 Declared value L. 487 16,507 16,994 719 16,432 17,151 827 18,986 E Leather and saddlery Doclared value L. 1,345 29,051 30,396 3,671 18,367 22,038 1,505 22,709 24,574 Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). 637 Exports.-continued. 1830. 1831. 1832. Articles. East East Private Private East Private India Total. India Trade. Trade. Total. India Total. Comp. Comp. Trade. Comp. Linen manufactures Declared value L. 2,077 21,211 23,288 1,611 23,724 25,335 5,341 43,715 49,056 Machinery and mill-work Declared value L.. 7,384 21,105 28,489 3,092 10,340 13,432 3,651 11,523 15,174 Military stores not otherwise described Declared value L. 5,983 494 6,387 1,081 221 1,302 128 115 243 Musical instruments Declared value L. 294 12,060 12,354 240 8,954 9,194 252 7,085 7,337 Opium lbs. 21,890 21,890 5,483 5,483 Declared value L. 16,418 16,418 4,524 4,524 Ordnance, of brass and iron tons 223 116 339 224 5 229 34 23 57 Declared value L. 8,140 730 8,870 3,256 140 3,426 816 130 946 Plate, plated ware, jewellery and watches Declared value L. 10,025 44,370 54,395 2,333 38,208 40,541 33,778 33,778 Provisions, Declared value L. 7,889 21,347 29,236 7,931 16,151 24,082 10,992 21,454 32,446 Quicksilver lbs. 153,948 153,948 95,702 95,702 36,743 36,743 Declared value L. 14,112 14,112 8,972 8,972 3,521 3,521 Silk manufactures Declared value L. 9,873 9,873 1,083 8,015 9,098 45 25,159 25.204 Soap and candles ewt. 619 S66 1,485 405 830 1,235 2 1,344 1,346 Declared value L. 1,845 3,899 6,734 1,318 3,657 4,975 4 5,207 5,211 Spelter, foreign ewt. 62,376 62,376 49,964 49,964 37,499 37,499 Declared value L. 32,747 32,747 27,480 27,480 21,093 21,093 Spirits, British gallons 3,632 3,632 6,001 6,001 6,289 6,289 Declared value L. 1,780 1,780 2,121 2,121 2,362 2,362 Spirits, foreign gallons 99,453 99,453 128,174 128,174 208,581 208,581 Declared value L. 12,072 12,072 19,310 19,310 32,032 32,032 Stationery, Declared value L. 13,175 33,064 46,239 20,663 27,298 47,961 23,924 26,252 50,176 Steel, unwrought cwt. 10,881 10,881 21,651 21,651 20 14,446 14,466 Declared value L. 11,153 11,153 24,439 24,439 40 15,106 16,146 Sugar, refined cwt. 44 853 897 763 763 31 778 809 Declared value L. 89 1,890 1,979 1,792 1,792 57 1,951 2,008 Swords number 1,700 90 1,790 750 161 911 1,150 90 1,240 Declared value L. 1,635 140 1,775 484 139 623 1,052 101 1,153 Tin, unwrought cwt. 5 5 41 41 6 129 135 Declared value L. 15 15 165 165 20 495 515 Tin and pewter wares, and tin plates, Declared value L. 731 10,138 10,869 704 8,558 9,262 573 6,822 7,395 Wines Imp. gallons 1,332 239,259 240,591 116 205,777 205,893 900 338,535 339,435 Declared value L. 459 104,945 105,404 51 92,530 92,581 308 149,949 150,257 Woollen manufactures (British) Cloths of all sorts pieces 6,029 47,719 53,748 2,959 51,7121 54,6713 3,507 30,186 33,693 Declared value L. 60,563 211,171 271,734 31,470 195,136 226,606 34,108 141,365 175,473 Stuffs, viz. camlets, serges, &c. pieces 94 20,148 20,242 251 14,767 15,018 56 18,909 18,965 Declared value L. 302 49,129 49,431 352 40,757 41,109 84 42,801 42,885 Other woollens, Declared val. L. 4,127 19,106 23,233 2,226 11,497 13,723 3,609 15,542 19,151 Aggregate value of British wool- lens, Declared value L. 64,992 279,406 344,398 34,048 247,390 281,438 37,801 199,708 237,509 Woollen manufactures (foreign) pieces 2 2 372 372 483 483 value L 40 40 404 404 400 400 Declared value L. 58 68 3,566 3,566 4,505 4,505 All other articles 16,215 147,218 163,433 14,661 122,656 137,317 8,709 162,236 170,945 Total value of exports L. 195,394 3,891,917 4,087,311 146,480 3,488,571 3,635,051 149,193 3,661,093 3,750,286 The preference in favour of West Indian commodities was within these 5 years much greater than at present; but the following statement shows that it is still very considerable:- An Account of Articles imported from British Possessions East of the Cape of Good Hope, on which a higher Customs Duty is charged on Import into the United Kingdom, than is charged on the same Articles imported from British Possessions in any other Parts of the World: showing, in Three parallel Columns, the Different Rates and the Excess of Duty on each Article; also, the Amount of Duty levied on each of these Articles in the Year 1832, and the Quantity on which the same was levied. Rates of Duty charged. Quantity charged with Duty Amount of Duty received in the Year 1832. in the Year 1832. On Importa- tions from Excess of Imported Imported On Import- On Import- Brit. Posses- Duty charged from British from other ations from Bri- ations from Articles. sione within the On Importations on Import- Possessions British Posses- fish Posses- other British Limits of the from other ations within within the sions, and Possessions, sions within E. 1. Co.'s British possessions. the limits Limits of the charged with the Limits of and charged of the E. L with a lower Charter. ex. E. I Co.'s a lower rate the Company's Rate of cept the Co.'s Charter. Charter. of Duty. Charter. Mauritius. Duty. 6d. per lb., if the pro- Coffee { duce of and imported Lbs. Lbs. L 2. d. L. 8. d. 9d. lb. from the Mauritius 3d. per lb. 1,953,744 90,996,837 73,227 18 0 524,920 18 6 or any British pos- session in America Cut. QT. 13. Cut. or. 1b. Sugar 32s. per cwt. 24s. per cwt., if do. 8a. per cwt. 79,608 8 6 4,355,814 2 21 127,373 13 6 5,226,977 12 6 Spirl's 15e. per gal. 9a. per gal. 6e. per gl. $ 513,250 gal. 1,580,962 10 0 Tobacco 3a. per 1b. 2c. 9d. per lb. 3d. per lb. Under the new regulations as to residence in India (see post), Englishmen will be allowed to employ themselves in the raising of sugar, as they have hitherto been allowed to employ themselves in the raising of indigo; but, unless the duty be equalised, this concession will be of little importance, at least in so far as respects sugar. An equilisation is, however, impe- riously required, as well in justice to India as in the view of promoting the interests of the Quantity of tobacco brought from the East too trifling to deserve mention. VoL. I.-3 H Digitized by Google 638 EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). British public; and should it take place, we have little doubt that the growth of sugar in In- dia will be very greatly extended, and that it will become an article of great commercial value. The regulations as to the importation of coffee from India are as objectionable as can well be imagined. Why should the coffee of Malabar and Ceylon pay 3d. per lb. more duty than that of the Mauritius? A distinction of this sort is an outrage upon common sense, and an insult to India. Foreign coffee may be imported from any port of British India at 9d. per lb.; but if it be imported from a foreign port it pays 1s. Hence, if a British ship take on board coffee at Mocha, Manilla, or Java, she is obliged to call in her way home at Bombay or Sin- gapore; and must there unload and then reload her cargo ! Such a regulation requires no lengthened commentary; it is enough to remark that its existence is a disgrace to a civilised nation. Besides being unfairly assessed, the duties on several most important articles of East In- dia produce are signally oppressive in their amount. Arrack, for example, which may be bought in bond here for about 3s. a gallon, is loaded with a duty of 15s. It is almost unne- cessary to add that this duty is perfectly unproductive ; its only effect is to exclude a value- ble article from the market; to deprive the public of a gratification they might otherwise enjoy, and the government of a considerable amount of revenue. The duty on pepper is also most extravagantly high; being no less than 1s. on an article that sells from about 3d. to 41d Considering the degree in which the demand for pepper is checked by this anti-consumption impost, we believe we may safely affirm that its reduction to 3d. or 4d. would be productive of an increase of revenue. However, it is but fair to add that a very material deduction has been made from the du- ties charged on several articles of East India produce since the publication of the former edition of this work. It is to be hoped that the good effects of which these reductions can- not fail to be productive may speedily lead to others. The following account will no doubt receive the attentive consideration of the reader :- Account showing the Prices in Bond in London of the different Articles of East India Produce. on the 1st of November, 1833 the present Duty on such Articles, and the Rate per Cent. of the Duty on the Price. A Column is added, showing the Duties in 1831 that have since been modified. Prices, 1st of November, Duty. 1833. Duties, 1st of Per Rate per Cent. Duties, let of Goods. November, January, 1831. 1833. From To From To L. 8. d. L. S. d. s. d. per Ledger Aloes 200 12 0 0 cwt. 0 2 lb. 7 46 013h Asafœtida 1 10 0 300 - 60 cwt. 10 20 4 cat. Benjamin, 1st sort 4000 - 0-5) 2d 10 0 0 2000 - } 40 1 27 1140- 3d - 0 7 10 0 - 27 4) Barilla 500 ton 40 0 ton 40 Borax, refined 400 450 cwt. 10 0 cwt. 12 12-5 2 16 0 unrefined 400 490 - 40 - 45 5 180- Camphor 750 - 0 0.7 094- Cardamons, Ceylon 016 018 lb. 10 lb. 60 66 020h Malabar 036 039 - 10 - 26 30 020- Cassia buds 400 cwt. 10 - 140 lignea 350 450 - 06 - 65 86 Cinnamon 046 096 lb. 06 - 5 11 Cloves, Bourbon 010 012 - 20 - 170 200 Amboyna . 013 016 - 20 - 133 160 Cocculus Indicus 0 15 0 ewt. 26 - 1860 Cochineal 010 013 lb. 02 - 13 16 004- - Coffee, Mocha 3100 660 cwt. 09 66 120 other sorts 2100 300 - from British ports 140 168 Cotton, Bengal 006 007 lb. 0-5 0-6 Madras 0 0 61-2 008 - 0 4 cwt. 0-4 0-7 Surat 0 0 51-2 007 - 0-5 06 Cubebs 2 15 0 350 cwt. 06 lb. 80 100 020- Dragon's blood 5100 25 0 0 - 4 cwt. 0-8 3.7 8 ewt. Ebony wood 6100 7100 ton 3 ton 2 23 0 15 Galls 3100 450 cwt. 2 cwt. 2 3 05 Gamboge 900 18 0 0 - 40 - 1.1 22 968- Ginger, Bengal 1 15 0 1 18 0 - 11 0 29 SI 0116 Gum ammoniac 2100 500 - 60 6 12 700- animi 600 10 0 0 - 60 - 13 5 2160 Arabic 210 0 2150 - 60 - 11 12 Gum lac, lac dye fine DI. 016 023 lb. 60 - 2.2 3-5) other sorts 009 013 - 60 - 4 75 5 per cent. shell lac 650 7150 cwt. 60 - 37 47 20 Hemp 2300 ton 1 8 ton 0-3 free dry 005 0 0 91-2 lb. 2 4 cwt. 2.5 5 Hides, buffalo and OX wet 003 005 - 1 2 - 2.5 4 Indigo, fine 069 086 - 3 3-7 good and middling 043 066 - an 0 3 1b. 4 6 ordinary 036 040 I 6-2 7 Mace 040 066 - 36 - 53 87 Mother-o'-pearl shells, Bombay 150 200 cwt. Manilla 3150 400 - } 5 per cent. 5 Musk 0 15 0 180 oz. 0 OZ. 1.7 3-3 050m Myrrh 400 1400 cwt. 6 cwt. 2 7.5 968cmL Nutmegs 036 066 lb. 2 lb. 38 71 Nux vomica 0 15 0 cwt. 26 - 1860 Oil of aniseed 0 0 63-4 oz. 14 - 15 040h cassia 00612 007 - 14 - 14 15 0160- cinnamon 056 I 14 - 1-3 0160- cloves 009 0 0 10 - 14 0 - 105 116 1120- mace 002 004 14 - 25 50 200- nutmers 0 0 10 013 - 14 67 10 200- Olibanum 200 3150 cwt. 6 0 cwt. 8 15 200m Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). 639 Table-continued. Prices, 1st of November, Duty. 1833. Duties, 1st of Goods. Per Rate per Cent. Duties, 1st of November, January, 1831. 1833. From To From To L.s.d. L. 8. d. #. per L s. d. per Pepper, black 00334 00412 lb. 0 1b. 266 320 white 004 009 - 10 - 183 300 Rhubarb, common 0 10 0 2 4 - 10 - 43 54 fine Dutch, trimmed 086 050 - 10 - 20 23, 0 2 6 lb. Rice from British possessions 0 18 0 100 cwt. 1 0 cwt. 6 8 Spirits, arrack 030 gal. 15 0 gal. 500 bafflower 550 8 10 0 cwt. 1 0 cwt. 0-6 1 0 2 6 cwt. Sago, common 010 0 - 10 - 10 pearl 0160 200 - 10 - 2.5 6-7 0 10 0 cwt. Sal ammoniac 300 - 10 - 1.7 18 0 - Saltpetre 1150 8 0 0 - 06 - 1-8 1.4 Sapan wood 800 17 0 0 ton I 0 tom 03 0-6 0 15 0 tom Saunders' wood, red 1300 1600 - 10 - 0-6 0-4 012 0 - Seeds, aniseed, star 850 cwt. 5 0 cwt. 7-5 1 10 0 cwt. Silk, Bengal and China 0160 I 3 0 lb. 0 lb. 0-35 0.45 Sugar, Rengal, white 140 1110 cwt, 32 0 cwt. 103 133 yellow 110 130 - 32 0 - 139 162 Mauritive, yellow 160 1140 - 24 0 - 70 92 brown 180 160 - 24 0 - 92 109 Teeth, elephants' 1900 2800 - 20 0 - 3-5 5-2 Terra japonica 3150 400 - 10 - 1-2 13 0 3 0 cwt. Tortoise shell 1100 2150 lb. 0 I lb. 0.1 0-3 0 0 6 lb. Turmeric, Bengal 0160 0180 cwt.) 13 15 Java 100 130 - } 2 4 cwt. 10 11.4 China 100 150 - from British ports 9 11.4 Vermilion 0 8 10 lb. 0 6 lb. 17.8 010 - N. B.-We are indebted for this valuable Table to Mr. Begbie, secretary to the East India Asso- clation. There is another grievance affecting the East India trade, which calls loudly for redress. Goods from America, the West Indies, or any where except the East Indies, may be con- veyed from one warehousing port to another without payment of the duties. But with East India goods a different rule has been established. There are only about a dozen ports in the empire in which East India goods may be received and warehoused; and whenever it becomes necessary to remove those goods to any other place, not privileged to receive India goods, the whole duties have to be paid so that if a merchant found it expedient to ship 1000/. worth of pepper from London, Hull, or any other privileged port, to Newcastle, Ply- mouth, Aberdeen, or any non-privileged port, he would, before he could make such ship- ment, have to advance about 4,000l. of duty ! This is a most oppressive regulation. There is not, and there never was, any good reason for prohibiting East India goods from being removed, under bond, from one port to another where other goods are allowed to be bonded. Many considerable advantages would result from permitting this to be done. It would dis- tribute East India goods more equally over the country and country dealers would be able to lay in and keep up sufficient stocks with a far less outlay of capital than at present. Such a measure, coupled, as it ought to be, with an adequate reduction of the duties, would ma- terially extend the comforts of all classes at home. 4. Colonization of India.-Hitherto very considerable obstacles have been thrown in the way of Europeans establishing themselves in India, and particularly of their acquiring or holding land. This policy was dictated by various considerations; partly by a wish to prevent the extrusion of the natives from the soil, which it was supposed would be eagerly hought up by Europeans, and partly by the fear lest the latter, when scattered over the coun- try, and released from any effectual control, should offend the prejudices of the natives, and get embroiled with them. Now, however, it seems to be the general opinion of those best acquainted with India that but little danger is to be apprehended from these circumstances; that the few Europeans established in it as indigo planters, &c. have contributed very mate- rially to its improvement; and that the increase and diffusion of the English population, and their permanent settlement in the country, are at once the most likely means of spreading a knowledge of our arts and sciences, and of widening and strengthening the foundations of our ascendancy. It is obvious, indeed, that the duration of our power in India must depend on a very uncertain tenure, unless we take root, as it were, in the soil, and a considerable portion of the population be attached to us by the ties of kindred, and of common interests and sympathies. In this respect we ought to imitate the Roman in preference to the Lace- demonian or Athenian policy. Quid aliud exitio Lacedæmoniis Atheniensibus fuit, quanquam armis pollerent, nisi quod victis pro alienigenis arcebant Looking, however, at the density of population in India, the low rate of wages, the nature of the climate, and other similar circumstances, it seems very doubtful whether it will ever become the resort of any considerable number of English settlers; at least of such a number as would be suffi- cient, within any reasonable period, to form any thing like a powerful native English inte- rest. But to whatever extent it may be carried, it promises to be highly advantageous. " We need not, I imagine," says the present Governor-General of India, Lord William Ben- tinck, use any laboured argument to prove that it would be infinitely advantageous for India to borrow largely in arts and knowledge from England. The legislature has expressly declared the truth; its acknowledgment has been implied in the daily acts and professions Digitized by Google 640 EAST INDIES (SOCIETY IN, TRADE, &c.). of government, and in all the efforts of humane individuals and societies for the education of the people. Nor will it, I conceive, be doubted, that the diffusion of useful knowledge, and its application to the arts and business of life, must be comparatively tardy, unless we add to precept the example of Europeans, mingling familiarly with the natives in the course of their profession, and practically demonstrating, by daily recurring evidence, the nature and the value of the principles we desire to inculcate, and of the plans we seek to have adopted. It seems to be almost equally plain, that independently of their influencing the native community in this way, various and important national advantages will result from there being a considerable body of our countrymen, and their descendants, settled in the country. To question it, is to deny the superiority which has gained us the dominion of India it is to doubt whether national character has any effect on national wealth, strength, and good government: it is to shut our eyes to all the perils and difficulties of our situation: it is to hold as nothing community of language, sentiment and interest, between the govern- ment and the governed: it is to disregard the evidence afforded by every corner of the globe in which the British flag is hoisted it is to tell our merchants and our manufacturers, that the habits of a people go for nothing in creating a market, and that enterprise, skill, and capital, and the credit which creates capital, are of no avail in the production of com- modities." The existing regulations as to the residence of Englishmen in India are embodied in the act 3 & 4 Will. 4. C. 85., and are as follows:- Authority for his Majesty's Subjects to reside in certain Parts of India.-It shall be lawful for any natural-born subjects of his Majesty to proceed by sea to any port or place having a Custom-house establishment within the same, and to reside thereat, or to proceed to reside in or pass through any part of such of the said territories as were under the government of the said Company on the 1st day of January, 1800, and in any part of the countries ceded by the nabob of the Carnatic, of the pro- vince of Cuttack, and of the settlements of Singapore and Malacca, without any licence whatever; provided that all subjects of his Majesty not natives of the said territories shall, on their arrival in any part of the same from any port or place not within said territories, make known in writing their names, places of destination, and objects of pursuit in India, to the chief officer of the customs or other officer authorised for that purpose at such port or place as aforesaid.-481. Subjects of his Majesty not to reside in certain Parts of India without Licence.-It shall not be lawful for any subject of his Majesty, except the servants of the said Company and others now lawfully authorised to reside in the said territories, to enter the same by laud, or to proceed to or reside in such parts of the said territories as are not herein-before in that behalf mentioned, without licence first obtained from the commissioners of the board of control, or the court of directors, or the go- vernor-general, or a governor of any of the said presidencies: provided, that no licence given to any natural-born subject of his Majesty to reside in parts of the territories not open to all such subjects shall be determined or revoked unless in accordance with the terms of some express clause of revo- cation or determination in such licence contained.- 82. The Governor-General with previous Consent of Directors, may declare other Places open.-It shall be lawful for the governor-general in council, with the previous consent and approbation of the said court of directors, to declare any place or places whatever within the said territories open to all his Majesty's natural-born subjects, and it shall be thenceforth lawful for any of his Majesty's natural- born subjects to proceed to, or reside in, or pass through any place or places declared open without any licence whatever.-d 83. Laws against illicit Residence to be made.-The governor-general shall and is required to make laws or regulations providing for the prevention or punishment of the illicit entrance into or residence in the said territories of persons not authorised to enter or reside therein.-d Laws and Regulations to be made for Protection of Natires.And whereas the removal of restric- tions on the intercourse of Europeans with the said territories will render it necessary to provide against any mischiefs or dangers that may arise therefrom, it is enacted, that the governor-general shall and is required, by laws or regulations, to provide with all convenient speed for the protection of the natives of the said territories from insult and outrage in their persons, religions, or opinions. -0 85. Lands within the Indian Territories may be purchased.-It shall be lawful for any natural-born sub- ject of his Majesty authorised to reside in the said territories to acquire and hold lands, or any right, interest, or profit in or out of lands, for any term of years, in such part or parts of the said territories as he shall be 80 authorised to reside in provided always, that nothing herein contained shall be taken to prevent the governor-general in council from enabling, by any laws or regulations, or other- wise, any subject of his Majesty to acquire or hold any lands, or rights, interests, or protits in or out of lands, in any part of the said territories, and for any estates or terms whatever.-d 86. No Disabilities in respect of Religion, Colour, or Place of Birth.-No native of the said territories, nor any natural-born subject of his Majesty resident therein, shall, by reason only of his religion, place of birth, descent, colour, or any of them, be disabled from holding any place, office, or employ- ment under the said Company.-δ7. IV. EAST INDIES, (Extent, POPULATION, MILITARY FORCE, REVENUE, ETC. OF BRITISH). 1. Extent, Population, &c. of British Dominionsin Hindostan, and of the Tributary and Independent States.-We copy the following Table from the second edition of Mr. Hamil- ton's Gazetteer. It must, however, be regarded as an approximation only, inasmuch as no means exist of coming at correct conclusions but the talents of the writer, and his perfect acquaintance with the subject, warrant the belief that it is as accurate as it can be made with the present imperfect means of information. Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (Extent, POPULATION, &c. OF BRITISH). 641 Table of the relative Area and Population of the Modern States of Hindostan. British Square Miles. Population. Bengal, Bahar, and Benares - - - - - - 162,000 39,000,000 Additions in Hindostan since A. D. 1765 - - - - 148,000 18,000,000 Gurwal, Kumoon, and the tract between the Sutuleje and Jumna - 18,000 500,000 Total under the Bengal Presidency - - - - 328,000 57,500,000 Under the Madras Presidency - - - - - - 154,000 15,000,000 Under the Bombay Presidency - - - - - 11,000 2,500,000 Territories in the Deccan, &c. acquired since 1815, consisting of the Peishwa's dominions, &c., and since mostly attached to the Bom- bay Presidency - - - - - - 60,000 8,000,000 Total under the British government - - - - 553,000 83,000,000 British Allies and Tributaries. The Nizam - - - - - - - - 96,000 10,000,000 The Nagpoor Raja - - - - - - - 70,000 3,000,000 The King of Oude - - - - - - - 20,000 3,000,000 The Guicowar - - - - - - - - 18,000 2,000,000 Kotah, 6,500; Boondee, 2,500; Bopaul, 5,000 - - - - 14,000 1,500,000 The Mysore Raja - - - - - - - 27,000 3,000,000 The Satara Raja - - - - - - - 14,000 1,500,000 Travancore, 6,000 Cochin, 2,000 - - - - - 8,000 1,000,000 Under the Rajas of Joudpour, Jeypoor, Odeypoor, Bicancere, Jessel- mere, and other Rajpoot chiefs, Holcar, Ameer Khan, the Row of Cutch, Bhurtpoor, Macherry, and numerous other petty chiefs, Seiks, Gonds, Bheels, Coolies, and Catties, all comprehended within the line of British protection - - - - 283,000 15,000,000 Total under the British government and its allies - - 1,103,000 123,000,000 Independent States. The Nepaul Raja - - - - - - - 53,000 2,000,000 The Lahore Raja (Runjeet Singh) - - - - - 50,000 3,000,000 The Ameers of Sinde - - - - - - - 24,000 1,000,000 The dominions of Sindia - - - - - - 40,000 4,000,000 The Cabul sovereign east of the Indus - - - - 10,000 1,000,000 Grand total of Hindostan - - - - - 1,280,000 134,000,000 India beyond the Ganges.-British Acquisitions in 1824 and 1825. British Square Miles. Population. Countries south of Rangoon, consisting of half the province of Mar- taban, and the provinces of Tavoy, Ye, Tenasserim, and the Mer- gui Isles - - - - - - - - 12,000 51,000 The province of Arracan - - - - - - 11,000 100,000 Countries from which the Burmese have been expelled, consisting of Assam and the adjacent petty states, occupying a space of about 54,000 150,000 Total - - - - 77,000 301,000 In 1805, according to official returns transmitted, the total number of British-born subjects in Hindostan was 31,000. Of these, 22,000 were in the army as officers and privates the civil officers of government of all descriptions were about 2,000; the free merchants and mariners who resided in India under covenant, about 5,000 the officers and practitioners in the courts of justice, 300 ; the remaining 1,700 consisted of adventurers who had smuggled themselves out in various capacities. Since the date above mentioned, no detailed reports have been published but there is reason to believe that even now the total number of British subjects in Hindostan does not exceed 40,000 the removal of the restrictions on the commercial intercourse having, contrary to expectation, added very few to the previous number. The army required for the protection of these extensive provinces, and for the retaining them under due subordination, although it presents a formidable grand total, probably does not amount to a fifth part of the number maintained by the Mogul sovereigns and their func- tionaries, when their empire was in its zenith yet, even under the ablest of the emperors, commotions in some quarter of their ill-subdued territories were unceasing. The British sys- tem in India has always been to keep the troops in a constant state of preparation for war but never to enter into unprovoked hostilities, or engage in any contests except those rendered necessary by the principle of self-defence. At present, with the exception of the Russian, the British military force is probably the largest standing army in the world. In 1796, it amounted to 55,000. In 1830, the latest period for which we have a detailed statement, it consisted of infantry 170,062, cavalry 19,539, artillery 17,385, engineers 1,084, with pioneers, invalids, &c., making a grand total of 223,476 men. Of these, 187,068 were natives, and 37,376 Europeans; the latter being divided between the King's and the Com- pany's services in the proportion of 20,292 to the furmer, and 17,084 to the latter. The total expenditure on account of the Indian army during the same year amounted to 9,461,953/. It may, perhaps, be worth while remarking, that the war department in Prussia, 3 , 2 81 Digitized by Google 642 EAST INDIES (Extent, POPULATION, &c. OF BRITISH). which has one of the most efficient armies in Europe, cost, in 1829, 22,165,000 rix-dollars, or 3,324,000/., being little more than the third of the cost of the British Indian army Re- cently, however, very great efforts have been made to economise in this department. The army has been reduced to about 190,000 men, and some of the former allowances have been discontinued. A good deal of rather conflicting evidence was given before the late select committee on the state of the Indian army. On the whole, it would seem to be decidedly superior, in re- spect of discipline and efficiency, to any native army ever organised in India. But many very intelligent officers doubt whether it could make any effectual opposition to European troops, to whom, generally speaking, the sepoys are inferior both in physical strength and moral energy. Some of the witnesses seem to think that the Indian army has recently been a good deal deteriorated. The army is distributed throughout Hindostan under the orders of the supreme govern- ment, promulgated through its political agents. Commencing from the great stations in the Doab of the Ganges, at Ajmeer is one corps another at Neemutch ; a third at Mow; all supplied from the Bengal army. These are succeeded by the Gujerat subsidiary forces, the field corps at Mulligaum, and the Poonah division, furnished chiefly by the Bombay army. The circle is further continued by the field force in the southern Mahratta country the Hyderabad and Nagpoor subsidiaries, composed of Madras troops; and the detachments from the Bengal establishment, forming the Nerbudda and Saugur divisions, from whence the cordan terminates in Bundelcund. Such is the general outline, liable, of course, to tem- porary modifications, and occasional change in the selection of stations. At present, with the exception of a tract 35 miles broad on each side of Aseerghur, there is an unbroken line of communication through the British territory from Bombay to Calcutta. In direct and authoritative control, the dominion of the British government extends much further than that possessed by any prior dynasty, whether Patan or Mogul; yet the latter, so long as they abstained from persecution, had nothing to apprehend from the religion of the Hindoos; and history proves that the commotions which agitated the Mohammedan monar- chies chiefly arose from their own internal dissensions and national disputes. Neither does it appear that any prior conquerors ever employed disciplined corps of their own countrymen in defence of their own sovereignty, although they had to contend with one very numerous tribe-the Hindoo; while the British, more advantageously situated, have two to put in motion against each other, and in process of time may raise up a third. Each foreign in- vader certainly favoured his own countrymen; but it was by bestowing on them places and high appointments, which excited envy, without essentially strengthening his domination. Besides, therefore, total abstinence from persecution, the British government, in a powerful corps entirely European, and totally distinguished from the natives by colour, language, and manners, possesses a solidity and consistence much beyond any of the prior Mohammedan dynasties.-(Hamilton's East India Gazetteer, 2d ed. vol. i. pp. 656-659.) 2. Revenue and Expenditure of the East India Company.-The far greater part of the revenue of India is at present, and has always been, derived from the soil. The land has been held by its immediate cultivators generally in small portions, with a perpetual and transferable title but they have been under the obligation of making an annual payment to government of a certain portion of the produce of their farms, which might be increased or diminished at the pleasure of the sovereign and which has in almost all cases, been so large, as seldom to leave the cultivators more than a bare subsistence. Under the Moham- medan government, the gross produce of the soil was divided into equal or nearly equal shares, between the ryots, or cultivators, and the government. We regret we are not able to say that the British government has made any material deductions from this enormous assess ment. Its oppressiveness, more than any thing else, has prevented our ascendancy in India; and the comparative tranquillity and good order we have introduced, from having the bene- ficial effects that might have been anticipated. The cultivators throughout Hindostan are proverbially poor and till the amount of the assessment they are at present subject to be effectually reduced, they cannot be otherwise than wretched. They are commonly obliged to borrow money to buy their seed and carry on their operations, at a high interest, on a spe- cies of mortgage over the ensuing crop. Their only object is to get subsistence-to be able to exist in the same obscure poverty as their forefathers. If they succeed in this, they are satisfied. Mr. Colebrooke, whose authority on all that relates to India is 80 deservedly high, mentions that the quantity of land occupied by each ryot, or cultivator, in Bengal is com- monly about 6 acres, and rarely amounts to 24 and it is obvious that the abstraction of half the produce raised on such patches can leave their occupiers nothing more than the barest subsistence for themselves and their families. Indeed, Mr. Colebrooke tells us that the con- dition of ryots subject to this tax is generally inferior to that of a hired labourer, who receives the miserable pittance of 2 annas, or about 3 pence, a day of wages. Besides the land revenue,* a considerable revenue is derived in India from the monopo- For an account of the land revenue of India, of the various modes in which it is assessed, and its influence on the condition of the inhabitants, we beg to refer to Mr. Rickards's work on India. TM Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (EXTENT, POPULATION, &c. OF BRITISH). 643 . lies of salt and opium, the sale of spirituous liquors, land and sea customs, post-office, &c. Of these monopolies, the first is, in all respects, decidedly the most objectionable. Few things, indeed, would do more to promote the improvement of India, than the total abolition of this monopoly. An open trade in salt, with moderate duties, would, there can be no doubt, be productive of the greatest advantage to the public, and of a large increase of revenue to government. The opium monopoly, though less objectionable than the last, is, notwith- tanding, very oppressive. It interferes with the industry of the inhabitants; those who are engaged in the cultivation of opium being obliged to sell their produce at prices arbitrarily fixed by the Company's agents. It would be worse than useless to waste the reader's time, by pointing out in detail the mischievous effects of such a system they are too obvious not to arrest the attention of every one. The produce of these and the other branches of Indian taxation is specified in the subjoined Table, which we have carefully compiled from the official accounts. Account of the Territorial Revenues of the East India Company during the Official Year 1827-28. Description. Bengal. Madras. Bombay. Penang. Ma- Singa- Saint London. Total. lacca. pore. Helena. £ £ £ £ £ £ £ & & Land rent - - 8,252,797 3,519,745 1,965,093 21,893 4,881 18,559 1,064 - 13,784,032 Liquors (nett) - 485,422 257,638 - - - - - - 743,060 Opium (monopoly) - 2,051,620 - - - - - - - - - 2,051,620 Tobacco (do.) - - - 85,482 - - - - - - - 85,482 Salt (partial monopoly) 2,389,600 346,192 19,936 - - - - - 2,755,728 Farms and licences (nett) - - 56,252 225,650 - - - 66 - 281,968 Mint - - - 38,139 4,332 5,440 - - - - - 47,911 Post-office - - 91,833 32,043 12,584 - - - - - 136,460 Stamps - - 327,709 56,261 5,161 - - - - - 389,131 Bank, Madras, (nett) - - 9,162 - - - - - 9,162 Customs-sea - - - 126,859 65,698 - - - 2,216 - 194,773 inland - - - 439,870 109,209 , - - - - 549,079 do. unspecified 831,734 - - 219,784 - - - - - 1,051,518 Sundries - - 308,355 392,355 - - - - - - - 700,710 Revenue - 14,777,209 5,326,191 2,628,555 21,893 4,881 18,559 3,346 - 22,780,634 General board, (repay- ment by) - - - - - - - - 3,617 - - - - 3,617 Marine (pilotage) - 38,486 7,802 18,383 367 - - - - 65,038 Judicial (fines and fees) 106,287 13,845 17,890 5,039 - - 52 - 143,113 Total civil revenue 14,921,932 5,347,838 2,664,828 30,916 4,881 18,559 3,398 - 22,992,402 Military (repayments) - - - - - - 373 - - - - 373 Buildings (do.) - - - - - - - 49 - - - - 49 Total receipts - 14,921,982 5,347,838 2,664,828 31,338 4,881 18,559 3,398 - 22,992,821 Interest - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Gross revenue and receipts - 14,921,982 5,347,838 2,664,828 31,338 4,881 18,559 3,398 - 22,992,821 Nett surplus revenue over expenditure - 1,479,273 - - - - - - - - - Account of the Territorial Charges of the East India Company during the Official Year 1827-28. Description. Bengal. Madras. Bombay. Penang. Ma- Singa- Saint London. Total. lacca. pore. Helena. & £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ Land rent (collec- tion, pensions, &c.) - - 1,608,480 702,677 642,551 3,000 500 1,500 - - 2,958,708 Liquors (charges of collection not specified.) Opium (cost and charges) 658,254 - - 658,254 Tobacco (do.) - - 31,843 - - - - 31,843 Salt (do.) 808,322 74,419 - - - 882,741 Farms and licenses (charges of collection not specified.) Mint (charges on) 51,786 20,406 3,637 - - - - - 75,829 Post-office (do.) 89,075 29,339 18,848 - - - 137,262 Stamps (do.) 81,690 9,437 - - 91,127 Bank (charges not specified.) Customs-sea (charges of col- lection) - - - 23,445 14,867 38,312 inland (do.) - - 28,587 3,037 31,624 general unspe- cified - 126,808 - - 25,605 - - - - - - 152,413 Sundries - 140849 363,854 136,944 - - - - - - 641,647 Charge under re- venue board - 3,565,264 1,284,007 845,489 3,000 500 1,500 - - - 5,699,760 various important and difficult questions with respect to Indian taxation are there treated with great learning and sagacity, and placed in the most luminous point of view. Digitized by Google 644 EAST INDIES (EXTENT, POPULATION, &c. OF BRITISH). Account of the Territorial Charges of the East India Company-continued. Description. Bengal. Madras. Bombay. Penang. Ma. Singa- Saint London. Total. lacea. pore. Helena. $ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ Brought over 3,565,264 1,284,007 845,489 3,000 500 1,500 - - - 5,699,760 Charges under ge- neral board - 1,102,824 353,659 474,781 100,014 12,825 36,637 46,808 - - 2,127,548 Charges under ma- rine do. - 117,745 18,781 212,862 6,000 1,000 3,000 - - - 359,388 Charges under ju- dicial do. - 1,150,394 371,751 305,446 12,000 2,000 6,000 - - - 1,847,591 Gross amount of civil charges 5,936,227 2,028,198 1,838,578 121,014 16,325 47,137 46,808 - - 10,034,287 Do. military do. 5,245,737 3,897,520 2,051,810 49,255 8,030 11,341 75,172 - - 11,338,865 Buildings both ci- vil and milita- ry do. - 548,492 81,877 163,088 4,833 1,186 4,606 1,989 - - 786,071 Charge in India 11,730,456 6,007,595 4,033,476 175,102 25,541 63,084 123,969 - - 22,159,223 Interest on debt 1,712,253 179,025 27,230 2,024 - - - - - 1,920,538 Unspecified - - - - - - - - - - - 2,060,141 2,060,141 Gross charge - 13,442,709 6,186,620 4,060,706 177,126 25,541 63,084 123,969 2,060,141 26,139,896 Nettcharge, or ex- cess of expendi- ture over reve- nue - - - - 638,782 1,395,881 145,788 20,660 44,525 120,571 2,060,141 3,147,975 The territorial revenues at the disposal of the East India Company have, for a lengthened period, equalled those of the most powerful monarchies. At present they are greater than those of either Russia or Austria, being inferior only to those of Great Britain and France! Still, however, the Company's financial situation is the very reverse of prosperous. Vast as their revenue has been, their expenditure appears, in most instances, to have been still larger; and at this moment their debts exceed 60,000,000!! The Company have given the following statement of their affairs, which is applicable, as respects India, to the 1st of May, 1831 ; and as respects England, to the 1st of May, 1832 :- £ Total territorial and political debts abroad and at home - - - 61,197,782 Ditto, credits, ditto - - - - - - - - 29,579,523 Balance deficient in the territorial and political branch - - - 31,618,259 Total commercial debts abroad and at home - - - £ 1,928,494 Ditto, credits, ditto - - - - - - 21,647,149 Balance in favour in the commercial branch - - - - 19,718,655 Balance deficient - - - - - - - - 11,899,604 Add the amount of the Company's home bond debt - - - 3,542,854 Total balance deficient, including the home bond debt - - - - £ 15,442,458 Of the credits placed to account of the Company, arrears of revenue, &c. form an impor- tant item ; but of these it is most probable a considerable portion will never be realised. In a statement laid by the East India Company before parliament, and printed in a former edition of this work (p. 511.), intended to represent the situation of the Company's affairs on the 1st of January, 1831, their assets were said to exceed their debts and liabilities by about 3,000,000L The wide difference between that account and the one given above, is princi- pally owing to the Company having struck out of the latter a sum of 10,870,000/. expended by them on account of fortifications, buildings, &c. erected in India, which they took credit for in the former. The statement now given renders it abundantly obvious, that the recent arrangements with the Company have been quite as beneficial to it as, we doubt not, they will prove to the public. All the territorial and other property made over to the Crown will certainly be far short of meeting the claims upon it. The following account shows the balance between the revenue and expenditure of our Indian dominions, from 1809-10 to 1830-31 :- Digitized by Google EAST INDIES (EXTENT, POPULATION, &c. OF BRITISH). 645 As Account of the Total annual Revenues and Charges of the British Possessions in India under the East India Company, from 1809-10 to 1830-31 ; showing also the Nett Charge of Bencoolen, Prince of Wales Island, and St. Helena; the Interest paid on account of Debts in India; and the Amount of Territorial Charges paid in Engiand.-(Abstracted from the Parl. Papers, No. 22. Sess. 1830, and No. 306. Sess. 1833.) Territorial Charges paid in England. General Result. Nett Other Terri- Charge of torial Pay. Years. Total Gross Total Bencoolen, Interest ments Prince of Cost of Revenues of Charges in Wales on Debts. Political chargeable Total. Surplus Surplus India. India. on the Revenue. Charge. Island, and Stores. Revenue. St. Helena. (Pensions, &c.) £ £ £ £ £ £ £ & £ 1809-10 16,464,391 13,775,577 203,361 2,159,019 190,128 867,097 1,057,225 - - 730,791 1810-11 16,679,198 13,909,953 199,663 2,196,691 217,703 901,688 1,119,391 - 736,530 1811-12 16,605,616 13,220,967 168,288 1,457,077 154,998 922,770 1,077,768 681,516 1812-13 16,459,774 13,659,429 201,349 1,491,870 193,784 1,184,976 1,378,768 271,634 1813-14 17,228,711 13,617,725 209,957 1,537,434 64,257 1,148,156 1,212,413 651,182 1814-15 17,231,191 14,182,454 204,250 1,502,217 129,873 1,064,223 1,194,596 147,677 1815-16 17,168,195 15,081,587 225,558 1,584,157 81,903 1,199,952 1,281,885 - - 1,004,992 1816-17 18,010,135 15,129,839 205,372 1,719,470 194,374 1,071,176 1,265,550 - - 310,096 1817-18 18,305,265 15,844,964 219,793 1,753,018 81,941 1,094,701 1,176,642 - 689,152 1818-19 19,392,002 17,558,615 210,224 1,665,928 130,162 1,150,378 1,280,540 - - 1,323,305 1819-20 19,172,506 17,040,848 142,049 1,940,327 265,055 1,150,391 1,415,446 - 1,466,164 1820-21 21,292,036 17,520,612 220,043 1,902,585 228,058 1,072,106 1,300,164 348,632 1821-22 21,753,271 17,555,668 207,816 1,932,835 202,735 1,175,149 1,377,884 679,068 1822-23 23,120,934 18,083,482 154,761 1,694,731 204,147 1,354,960 1,559,107 1,528,853 1823-24 21,238,623 18,902,511 257,276 1,652,449 395,276 758,590 1,153,866 - - 727,479 1821-25 20,705,152 20,410,929 279,277 1,460,433 414,181 1,166,078 1,580,259 - - 3,025,746 1825-26 21,096,960 22,346,365 214,285 1,575,941 740,728 1,076,504 1,817,232 - - 4,856,857 1826-27 23,327,753 21,424,894 207,973 1,749,068 1,111,792 1,318,102 2,429,894 - - 2,484,076 1827-28 22,818,184 21,778,431 272,014 1,958,313 805,016 1,255,125 2,060,141 - - 3,250,715 1828-29 22,692,711 19,298,622 250,794 2,121,165 449,603 1,517,802 1,967,405 - - 945,275 1829-30 21,662,310 18,300,715 213,304 2,007,693 293,873 1,454,867 1,748,740 - - 608,142 Estimate. 22,366,926 18,075,428 86,044 2,211,869 138,430 1,335,135 1,473,565 520,020 1830-31 However much this account of the financial concerns of our Eastern empire may be at variance with the exaggerated ideas entertained respecting it, as well by a large proportion of the people of England as by foreigners, it will excite no surprise in the mind of any one who has ever reflected on the subject. It is due, indeed, to the directors, to state, that though they have occasionally acted on erroneous principles, they have always exerted themselves to enforce economy in every branch of their expenditure, and to impose and collect their revenues in the best and cheapest manner. But though they have succeeded in repressing many abuses, it would be idle to suppose that they should ever entirely succeed in rooting them out. How can it be imagined, that strangers sent to India, conscious that they are armed with all the strength of government, placed under no real responsibility, exempted from the salutary influence of public opinion, fearing no exposure through the medium of the press, and anxious only to accumulate a fortune, should not occasionally abuse their authority ? or that they should manage the complicated and difficult affairs of a vast empire, inhabited by a race of people of whose language, manners, and habits, they are almost wholly ignorant, with that prudence, economy, and vigilance, without which it were idle to expect that any great surplus revenue could ever be realised ? (Abstract View of the Revenues and Charges of India for the Years 1831-32, 1832-33, 1833-34, and (by estimate) 1834-35. Revenue. Charge. 1831-32. 1832-33. 1833-34. 1834-35. 1831-32. 1832-33. 1833-34. 1834-35. L. L. L. L. L. L. L. L. Bengal 9,474,084 9,487,778 8,844,241 5,445,100 Bengal 7,535,170 7,687,228 7,018,449 6,749,293 Agra 3,657,900 Agra 581,800 Madras 3,222,155 2,969,956 3,235,233 3,301,982 Madras 3,239,261 3,174,347 3,258,995 3,076,404 Bombay 1,401,916 1,497,308 1,600,691 1,503,782 Bombay 2,060,498 2,034,710 1,968,045 1,905,749 Total revenues of Total charges in 12,834,929 12,896,285 12,245,489 12,313,246 India 14,198,155 13,955,642 13,680,165 13,908,764 India Charge onaccount of St. Helena 94,152 95,553 91,641 10,986 Charge on account of India in Eng. land 1,476,655 1,227,536 1,293,637 2,162,863 Total charges of India 14,405,736 14,219,374 13,630,767 14,487,100 Deficiency of or- Surplus of ordina- dinary revenue 207,551 264,32 578,336 ry revenue 49,398 14,405,736 14,219,374 13,680,165 14,487,100 14,405,736 14,219,374 13,680,165 14,487,100 N.B. The Company realised in 1834-35 the sum of 10,679,2231. by the sale of commercial assets. The debts of the Company in India on the 30th of April, 1834, amounted to 35,463,4831., bearing an interest of 1,754,5451. a year.-(Parl. Paper, No. 380. Sess. 1836.)-Sup.) Digitized by Google 646 EBONY-ELM. EBONY (Ger. Ebenholz; Du. Ebbenhout; Fr. Ebene; It. Ebano; Rus. Ebenowoo- derewo; Lat. Ebenus), a species of wood brought principally from the East. It is exceed- ingly hard and heavy, of great durability, susceptible of a very fine polish, and on that ac- count used in mosaic and other inlaid work. There are many species of ebony. The best is that which is jet black, free from veins and rind, very compact, astringent, and of an acrid pungent taste. This species, (denominated by botanists Diospyrus Ebenus), is found prin- cipally in Madagascar, the Mauritius, and Ceylon. The centre only of the tree is said to be valuable. In 1826, 2,002,783 lbs. of ebony, of the estimated value of 9,017% 7s. 64d. were exported from the Mauritius. Besides the black, there are red, green, and yellow ebonies; but the latter are not so much esteemed as the former. Cabinet-makers are in the habit of substituting pear-tree and other woods dyed black, in the place of genuine ebony these, however, want its polish and lustre, though they hold glue better. The price of ebony varies, in the London market, from 51. to 20L a ton. The quantities imported are but in- considerable. EEL (Anguilla muræna of Linnæus), a fish, the appearance of which is too well known to require any description. It is a native of almost all the waters of Europe, frequenting not only rivers but stagnant pools. Eels are, in many places, extremely abundant, particularly in Holland and Jutland. Several ponds are appropriated in England to the raising of cels; and considerable numbers are taken in the Thames and other rivers. But by far the largest portion of the eels used in England are furnished by Holland. Indeed, very few except Dutch eels are ever seen in London and even Hampton and Richmond are principally sup- plied by them. The trade is carried on by two Dutch companies, who employ in it several small vessels, by means of which the market is regularly and amply provided for. A cargo of eels is supposed to average from 15,000 to 20,000 lbs. weight, and is charged with a duty on importation of 13/. 1s. 3d. In 1832, this duty produced 940L. 10s., showing that 72 cargoes had been imported that year.—(Report on Channel Fisheries, p. 93. &c.) EGGS (Fr. Eufs; Lat. Ova), are too well known to require to be described. They differ in size, colour, taste, &c. according to the different species of birds that lay them. The eggs of hens are those most commonly used as food; and form an article of very considerable im- portance in a commercial point of view. Vast quantities are brought from the country to London and other great towns. Since the peace they have also been very largely imported from the Continent. At this moment, indeed, the trade in eggs forms a considerable branch of our commerce with France, and affords constant employment for a number of small vessels! Account of the Number of Eggs imported since 1826, specifying the Countries whence they were brought, and the Revenue accruing thereon. Countries from which imported. 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1930. 1831. 1832 Number. Number. Number. Number. Number. Number. Number. Germany 7,200 9,020 80 3,600 3,120 United Netherlands 2,524,410 3,098,698 5,447,390 6,749,759 4,626,748 7,557,146 5,734,960 France 59,507,899 63,109,618 60,043,026 56,370,479 48,026,006 60,401,506 65,651,363 Isles of Guerneey, 'Jersey, Alderney, and Man, produce (duty free) inn 718,086 456,802 609,930 671,435 705,760 732,998 665,229 Isles of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, and Man, produce (foreign) 493,985 220,674 348,447 373,419 281,664 505,798 546,065 All other places 9,047 1,220 5,090 300 400 240 1,200 Total of the importations into the United Kingdom 63,260,627 66,886,132 66,455,773 64,165,472 53,644,168 59,197,688 62,501,817 L. 8. d. L. 8. d. L. 8. d. L 8. d. L a. d. L. 3. d L & d. Amount of duty received 21,726 10 2 23,071 4 I 22,920 8 3 22,189 2 10 18,505 14 8 20,372 15 9 21,537 2 0 Rate of duty charged 10d. per 120 during the whole period. It appears from this official statement, that the eggs imported from France amount to about 55,000,000 a year; and supposing them to cost, at an average, 4d. a dozen, it follows that the people of the metropolis and Brighton (for it is into them that they are almost all imported) pay the French about 76,388/. a year for eggs and supposing that the freight, importers' and retailers' profit, duty, &c. raise their price to the consumer to 10d. a dozen, their total cost will be 190,9721. EJOO. See GOMUTI. ELEMI, a resin obtained from the Amyris elemifera, a tree growing in different parts of America, Turkey, &c. It is obtained by wounding the bark in dry weather, the juice being left to thicken in the sun. It is of a pale yellow colour, semi-transparent; at first softish, but it hardens by keeping. Its taste is slightly bitter and warm. Its smell, which is, at first, strong and fragrant, gradually diminishes. It used to be imported in long roundish cakes, wrapped in flag leaves, but it is now usually imported in mats and chests.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) ELEPHANTS' TEETH. See IVORY. ELM (Ulmus), a forest tree common in Great Britain, of which there are several varie- ties. It attains to a great size, and lives to a great age: its trunk is often rugged and crooked, and it is of slow growth. The colour of the heart-wood of elm is generally darker Digitized by Google ELSINEUR. 647 than that of oak, and of a redder brown. The sapwood is of a yellowish or brownish white, with pores inclined to red. It is in general porous, and cross-grained, sometimes coarse- grained, and has no large septa. It has a peculiar odour. It twists and warps much in drying, and shrinks very much both in length and breadth. It is difficult to work, but is not liable to split, and bears the driving of bolts and nails better than any other timber. In Scotland, chairs and other articles of household furniture are frequently made of elm wood but in England, where the wood is inferior, it is chiefly used in the manufacture of coffins, casks, pumps, pipes, &c. It is appropriated to these purposes because of its great durability in wa- ter, which also occasions its extensive use as piles and planking for wet foundations. The naves of wheels are frequently made of elm those of the heavy wagons and drays of London are made of oak, which supports a heavier weight, but does not hold the spokes so firmly. Elm is said to bear transplanting better than any other large tree-(Tredgold's Principles of Carpentry, pp. 201-203. &c.) ELSINEUR, OR HELSINGOR, a town in Zealand about 22 miles north of Copenha- gen, in lat. 56° 2' 17" N., lon. 12° 38' 2" E. Population about 7,000. Adjacent to Elsineur is the castle of Cronborg, which commands the entrance to the Baltic by the Sound. All merchant ships passing to and from the Baltic are obliged, under the reserva- tions mentioned below, to salute Cronborg Castle by lowering their sails when abreast of the same and no ship, unless she belong to Sweden, is allowed to pass the Sound without clearing out at Elsineur, and paying toll, according to the provisions in the treaties to that effect negotiated with Denmark by the different European powers. The first treaty with England having reference to this subject is dated in 1450. The Sound duties had their origin in an agreement between the King of Denmark on the one part, and the Hanse Towns on the other, by which the former undertook to construct light-houses, landmarks, &c. along the Cattegat, and the latter to pay duty for the same. The duties have since been varied at different periods. Ships of war are exempted from the payment of duties. Most maritime nations have consuls resident at Elsineur. The following plan of the Sound is taken from the Admiralty Chart, compiled from Danish authorities.-(See following page.) Ordinance respecting lowering in the Sound.-This ceremony being attended with much inconveni- ence in unfavourable weather, his Danish Majesty issued, in 1829, the following ordinance 1. All ships salling through the Sound, whether they come from the north or south, must salute Cronborg Castle, by lowering their sails so soon as the northernmost church in Elsineur begins to be concealed behind the castle. The lowering must not commence before the church goes in behind the castle, and must continue till the church opens itself without the castle again, or for the full space of 5 minutes. Every person neglecting this duty must expect to be compelled, by cannon-shot, to the same, and to be fined for contumacy. N. B.-When a ship lowers her sails on her first entrance into the marks, and keeps them lowered 5 minutes, though not come out of the marks, it is considered sufficient. 2. The sails to be lowered are as follow :-Ships carrying top-gallant sails, standing or flying, must lower the top-gallant sails entirely down on the cap: ships having only one top-yallant sail, and at the same time, the fore-top-sail, they must be lowered half-mast down: ships having no top-gallant sails must lower both the top-sails on half-mast all other ships, be they galliots, smacks, ketches, brigantines, or of what denomination soever, carrying only flying top-sails, must lower the top-sails entirely down; but those having no standing or flying top-sails, or which have all their reeis in their top-sails, are exempt from lowering. 3. When ships cruize through the Sound with a contrary wind, or when (with a scant wind or small breeze) the current is so strong against them that it would set them astern, if they lowered their sails, then it shall be made known to them, by hoisting the colours at the castle, that no salute is re- quired. and that they may make the best of their way without striking their sails. 4. When any vessel has been fired at, then the master or mate, with two of the ship's crew, must go on shore, and make declaration, on oath, before the Court of Inquest, why they have not lowered in the time or in the manner prescribed. If it be deposed that lowering was performed in due timo and manner, then the master will be free from paying for the shot fired at him; on the contrary, he must then pay for each shot fired at him from the castle, 5 rix dollars 20 stivers current; and 1 ducat for each shot from the guard-ship's boat when in pursuit of the ship. If the master of a vessel should sail away without acquitting himself, when it is proved who the master or ship was, the fine will be demanded of the person who clears him at the Custom-house. In stormy weather, when a ship cannot come to auchor in Elsineur roads without danger, or if she be leaky, or going to repair or deliver; in such cases, going to Copenhagen is not considered a fraud. But it is in all cases indispensable that the ship's papers should be sent to Elsineur as soon as possi- ble, that she may be cleared. Pilotage, &c.-When ships come into Elsineur roads, or lie wind-bound near the Lappen, watermen come on board to inquire if the master will be carried ashore to clear and in rough weather it is always best to make use of their services, their boats being generally very safe. The Danish author- ities have published a Table of rates, being the highest charge that can be made by the boatmen upon such occasions; but captains may bargain with them for as much less as they please. Most ships passing the Sound take on board pilots, the signal for one being a flag at the fore-topmast-head. Those bound for the Baltic take a pilot at Eisineur, who either carries the ship to Copenhagen, or Dragon, a small town on the south-east extremity of the island of Amack, where she is clear of the grounds. Those leaving the Baltic take a pilot from Dragoe, who carries the ship to Elsineur. Sometimes, when the wind is fresh from the E. and S. E., it is impossible for a ship bound for Co- penhagen or the Baltic to double the point of Cronborg; and in that case an Elsineur pilot is some- times employed to moor the ship in the channel towards Kull Point on the Swedish shore, in lat. 56° 18' 3" N., lon. 12° 26' E. This contingency is, however, less likely to happen in future, as we un- derstand the Danish government have recently hired a steam tug for the special purpose of bringing ships, in adverse weather, round Cronborg Point. The pilots are regularly licensed, so that, by em- ploying them, the captain's responsibility is at an end. Their charges are fixed by authority, and depend on the ship's draught of water. We subjoin a copy of the tariff applicable to pilots taken on board at Elsineur to carry ships to Dragoe, Copenhagen, or Kull Point, with the sums both in silver and in Rig bank paper dollars. Digitized by Google 648 ELSINEUR. 10 15 16 9 3 9 It 18 15 is 10 6 is 18 16 5 18 3 18 6 4 8 D 17 H 2 5 T 15 10 c 18 7 18 5 7 4 8 14 st 6 E 7 4 10 9 8 14 IS References to Plan.-A, Castle and light of Cronberg B, Elsineur; C, Helsingborg in Swedes; D, the bank called the Lappen; E, the bank called the Disken. The soundings are in fathern. Pilotage from the 1st of April to the 30th of September. Dragoe. Copenhagen. Kell Perst. Ships drawing water. Silver. Paper. Silver. Paper. Silver. Paper Feet. R.b. dr. ach. R.D. dr. sch. R.b. dr. ach. R.b. dr. ach. R.b. dr. seh R.b. dr. KA Under 8 11 78 12 18 9 10 9 35 5 72 5 9 Between 8 and 9 13 16 13 56 TO 6 10 36 6 63 6 W 9 10 14 50 14 94 " 2 11 35 7 53 T % 10 11 15 84 16 36 M 94 12 34 5 44 8 . 11 12 17 22 17 74 12 91 18 33 9 35 9 a 12 18 18 56 19 10 IS 87 14 st 10 25 10 if 13 14 19 90 20 54 14 83 15 31 11 16 11 50 14 15 21 28 21 98 15 78 16 30 12 7 12 0 16 16 22 62 23 34 16 75 17 29 12 93 13 % 16 17 24 65 25 43 18 56 19 16 13 84 14 , 27 20 37 21 2 15 44 15 9 17 18 26 68 52 18 19 23 71 29 61 22 19 22 85 17 3 17 34 19 20 30 74 31 72 94 0 24 72 IS 59 19 If 26 20 19 90 . 20 21 32 77 33 80 25 77 58 21 22 34 PO 35 89 27 50 28 46 21 74 22 . 22 23 36 98 38 1 29 40 30 32 23 34 94 Digitized by Google ELSINEUR. 649 Pilotage from the 1st of October to the 30th of March. Dragos. Copenhagen. Kull Point. Ships drawing water. Silver. Paper. Silver. Paper. Silver. Paper. Fact. R.b. dr. sch. R.b. dr. sch. R.b. dr. sch. R.b. dr. ach. R.b. dr. sch. R.b. dr. sch. Under 8 14 92 15 40 11 35 11 70 7 53 7 76 Between 6 and 9 16 75 17 30 12 61 13 2 8 73 9 3 9 10 18 66 19 16 13 88 14 64 9 92 10 26 10 - 11 20 37 21 2 15 19 15 64 11 16 11 60 H 12 22 19 22 86 16 47 17 - 18 36 12 73 12 - 13 24 - 24 72 17 73 IS 30 13 55 14 - 18 - 14 25 77 26 58 19 4 19 62 14 75 15 24 14 - 15 27 59 28 46 20 29 20 90 15 95 16 48 15 - 16 29 40 30 32 21 57 23 26 17 17 17 68 16 17 32 12 33 12 24 - 24 78 18 37 IS 92 17 - 18 34 80 35 88 26 39 27 22 90 48 21 14 18 19 37 62 83 68 28 79 29 70 22 57 23 28 19 20 40 24 41 48 31 21 32 19 24 68 25 46 20 21 42 92 44 28 33 60 34 65 26 79 27 64 21 22 45 64 47 9 36 4 37 16 28 88 29 78 22 22 - 23 48 36 49 85 38 43 39 62 31 3 32 0 N. B. When a pilot is taken on board at Dragoe to carry a ship to Elsineur, the charge is the same as that given under the first head of the above column.-(Archires du Commerce, tome iii. p. 145.) The Monies, Weights, and Measures of Elsineur are the same as those of Copenhagen (which see), except that the rixdollar is divided into 4 orts instead of 6 marcs: thus, 24 skillings make 1 ort; and 4 orts 1 rixdollar. In paying toll, however, at the passage of the Sound, the monies are distinguished into three differ- ent values; namely, specie, crown, and current. Specie money is that in which the duties of the Sound were fixed in 1701. Crown money was the ancient currency of Denmark, in which the toll is sometimes reckoned. Current money is the actual currency of the country. The proportion between these denominations is as follows:- Eight specie rixdollars - 9 crown rixdollars; 16 crown rixdollars - 17 current rixdollars: therefore to reduce specie money into crown money, add one eighth and for the reverse operation, subtract one ninth. To reduce crown money into current money, add one sixteenth; and for the reverse operation, sub- stract one seventeenth. Hence, also, 128 specie rixdollars are worth 144 crown rixdollars, or 153 current rixdollars; and therefore specie money is 12t per cent. better than crown money, and 1917 32 per cent. better than cur- rent money. Houses in the Baltic charge the Sound duties in the invoices, and have their own agents at Elsineur to clear all the merchandise shipped by them. If this be not the case, the merchants at Elsineur then draw upon the owners or agents where the goods are directed or addressed. Weights.-A shippound from the Baltic, of 10 stone, is calculated as 300 lbs. Danish; a Russian ber- kowitz, as 300 lbs. ; a pud, as 30 lbs. Danish; a centner from the Baltic, as 110 lbs.; and a cwt. En- glish, as 112 lbs. Danish. Corn Measure of different Places reduced to Danish Lasts, for paying the Sound Dues. Barth Grypawalde Colberg Wismar Anclam } lasts reckoned as Riga 5. Konigsberg Demmin 3 lasts will be reck- Dentzic Rugenwalds oned in the Sound Rostock, 5 lasts for 6. Elbing The same as Stolpe Stettin as 4 lasts. } Memel the Dutch Treptow Warnemunde 6 lasts for 7. Revel Stralsund Winemunde Petersburgh Wolgast Lubeck, 7 lasts for 8. Oesel Lasts. Lasts. 16 Russian chetwerts I 10 muids from Havre 12 1 cent. of 28 muids French salt, from Rochelle IS 7 moyos from Cadiz, Lisbon, &c. 12 1 cent. from Bordeaux 18 400 Dutch marts (measures) 7 13 raziers from Dunkirk 1 1 English chaldron, 2 weighs, 2 tons, or 80 bushels I Liquid Measure.-A tonneau of French wine is considered as 4 oxhofts, or 24 ankers. A pipe of Spanish or Portuguese wine, as 2 oxhofts. 30 Spanish arrobas, or 25 Portuguese almudes, as a regular pipe. 30 Spanish arrobas, or 48 pots of oil, as a regular both (pipe); a hogshead of brandy, as 6 ankers; a tierce, as 4 ankers an anker, 5 velts, or 40 Danish pots. Duties payable at the Sound on the principal Articles commonly passing through Rixd. st. Rixd. et. Ale or beer. the 8 borsheads, at 4 1.2 0 36 Bristles, the shippound, valued at 36 rixdollars 0 18 Almonds, the 100 lbs. 0 9 Butter, the barrel 0 5 Alum, the shippound 0 12 Cables, cordage, or cable yarn, the shippound 0 6 Anisee 1, the 100 lbs. 0 9 Calicoes, the 8 pieces 0 15 Antimony, the shippoond 0 12 Capers, the pipe, or 2 hogsheads 0 IS Anchor and locks, the shock of 60 I 0 Cards, for playing or for wool, the 10 dozen 0 6 Apples, the last of 22 barrels 0 18 Cardamoms, cinnamon, cloves, or cochineal, the 100 lbs. 0 34 Apothecaries' drugs, the lispound valued at 36 rix-dollars 0 18 Camlets, the 4 pieces 0 10 Argol. the shippound 0 6 Canvass, or cambrics, 4 do. 0 15 Ashes, Arsenic weed, the last of 12 barrels, or 12 do. do. 0 12 Callimancoes, the 8 do. 0 10 0 6 Campeachy wood, the 500 lbs. 0 18 pot, the last of 12 do., or 12 do. 1 0 Caraway seeds, the 100 do. 0 9 Racon, the shippound 0 9 Caviare, the shippound, valued at 36 rixdollars 0 9 Baize, the single piece 0 3 Cheese, the shippound 0 4 the double do. 0 6 Chesnuts, the 36 sacks 0 36 Balks, great, of oak, the piece 0 3 Cider, the hogshead 0 12 fir, 4 do. 0 6 Clock-work, the 100 lbs. valued at 36 rixdollars 0 18 small, do 20 do. 0 13 Cloth of silk, the piece 0 9 Bay. berries, the 200 lbs. 0 9 fine or short cloths, or double dozens, the 8 pieces 0 9 Beef, salted. the last of 12 barrels 0 36 coarse. or long cloths, or dozens, the 4 do. 0 9 Biscuit, or bread of wheat, 4 barrels 0 6 Coffee, the 200 lbs. 0 24 rye, 4 do. 0 4 Copper, the shippound 0 24 Books, printed, the 100 lbs, valued at 36 rixdollars 0 18 wrought, the 100 lbs. valued at 32 rixdollars 0 6 Brass, or brass wire, the shippound 0 24 Cork, the 30 bundles 0 36 wrought, the 100 lbs. vilued at 36 rixdollars I 18 Copperas, calamine, or cream of tartar, the shippound 0 6 Brimstone, the last of 12 shippound 1 0 Cotton wool, the 100 lbs. 0 18 Brandy, French or Spaaish, the hogshead 0 24 Corn, barley, the last of 20 barrels 0 22 corn. the barrel 0 6 beans, peas, oata, or buckwheat, the last of 12 do. 0 18 Rhenish, the ahm 0 24 malt, the last of 12 do. 0 12 Brazil wood, the 500 lbs. 0 15 rye, the last of 20 do. 0 10 VoL. L-3 I 82 Digitized by Google 650 ELSINEUR. Rixd. st. Rind at. Corn, wheat, the last of 20 barrels 1 2 on, train, the last of 8 hogsheads, or 12 barrels 0 % Cortaader and currants, the 200 lbs. 0 6 Olibanum, the 100 lbs. 0 , Damask, of silk, the piece 0 12 Olives, the pipe, or 2 hogebeads 0 IS linen, the 4 pieces 0 10 Oranges, the 12 chests, or 3,600 0 st woollen, the 8 do. 0 10 Paper, the 8 bales, or 80 reams 0 30 Deals of oak or fir, above 20 feet, the shock 1 0 Pepper, the 100 lbs. 0 12 Carlsham, under 20 feet 0 24 Powter, the shippound 0 14 Prussian 0 36 Pitch, great band IS common, 10 to 14 feet, the 1,000 0 36 small 0 , Diaper or drilling, the 20 pieces 0 30 Plates of tim, the 4 casks, or shippound 8 12 Down, the shippound 0 36 Plaiding, the 1,000 ells, or 40 pieces 0 50 Druggets, the 2 pieces 0 9 Prunes, the 400 lbs. 0 9 Eels, the last of 12 barrels 0 30 Prunelloes, the 100 do. 0 , Elephants' teeth, each 0 36 Quicksilver, the 50 do. 0 % Feathers, the shippound 0 6 Rapeseed, the last of 24 barrels 0 % Fernambuco wood, 1,000 lbs. 0 30 Raisins, the 400 lbs., or 36 baskets 0 35 Figa, the 18 baskets, 800 do. 0 48 Rasin, the shippound 0 6 Fish, cod, the last, 12 barrels 0 12 Ribands of silk, or ferrets, the 4 lbs. 0 10 stock, the last, 12 shippound, or 1,000 fish 0 30 gold or silver, the 2 do. 0 10 salmon, the barrel 0 5 Rice, the 200 do. 0 9 salied herrings, do. 0 2 Saffron, the 2 do. 0 , red herrings, the last of 20 straes, or 20,000 0 12 Salt, Spanish, French, and Scotch, the last of 18 barrels, or Flannels, the 8 pieces of 25 ells each 0 10 8 bushels 0 x Flax, dreased, the shippound 0 36 Lunenburg, the last of 12 bushels 0 % undressed, as Petersburgh, Narva, 12 bogsheads Saltpetre, the shippound 9 6 Marienburgh, all fine sorts podilla, racketzer, and Saya, double, the 2 pieces 0 9 patermoster, the 4 do. 1 0 single, or English, the 4 do. 0 6 coarse, half clean, Furken, Raseets, Memels, and Sailcloth, the 8 do. 0 20 Marienburg, the 6 do. I 0 Sarsaparilla, do. 0 IS tow, the 5 do. 0 18 Shumac, the 400 lbs. 0 , Flounders, dry, the 20.000 0 12 Silk, sewing, ferret, wrought lace, the 4 do. 0 10 Flour of wheat, the 200 lbs. 0 9 raw, the 100 do. 0 20 barley or rye, the last of 12 barrels 0 12 stuffs, do. 0 15 Frieze, the piece 0 6 with gold and silver, the piece 0 IS Galls, or gum, the 200 lbs. 0 9 Skins, beaver, the 5 deckers 0 24 Glass for windows, English, French, Lubeck, and Dantzic, otter, the piece 0 6 the 8 ches's 0 30 Russia, dry. wolf and fox, the 5 deckers 0 15 Venice, drinking do., the chest 0 9 goat, the 20 do. 0 % bottles, the ton, 4 hogsheads and 30 schocks 0 30 calf, the 10 do. 0 N the 2 pipes 0 10 cat and sheep, the 500 pieces 0 IS quart botiles, 100 lozen, 50 rixdollars 0 24 black rabbit, or lamb, the 1,000 do. 0 IS Gloves, Russia, or Courland, the 250 pair 0 9 grey rabbit, of kid, the 2,000 0 is leather, the lozen, value 2 rixdollars 1 0 marten, the 40 0 to Guapowder, the 100 lbs. 0 6 hare, the bale. valued at @2 rizdollars 0 36 Haberdashery ware, the 100 lbs. valued at 36 rixdollars 0 18 Soap, white, the 100 lhs. 0 , Hair, camels' or coneys', the 50 lbs. 0 50 green, the last of 12 barrels 0 36 Handspikes, the 500 0 9 Spara, great, the 25 pieces 0 36 Ha's, felt, the cask 0 12 small, the 1,000 do. 0 16 beaver. the dozen, value 48 rixdollars 0 24 Starch, the 300 lbs. , 8 cas'or, the dozen, do. 0 12 Staves, pipe, hogshead, and barrel, the great hundred of 48 Hemp, the shippound 0 8 shocks 0 30 fow, the 10 do. 0 36 Steel, the 100 lbs. 0 4 Hides, elks'. harte', bucks', or Ruesia, the decker 0 9 Stones, Poland. the 1,000 feet of 500 elle 0 30 salted, elks. harts', bucks', or Russia, dr. 0 6 Stockings of silk, the dozen, or 12 lbs. 0 30 dry, elks', harts', bucks', or Russia, the 5 do. 0 18 kerney, woollen, or worsted, for children, the Russis, the shippound 0 36 100 pair 0 30 Honey, the hogshead 0 7 worsted, floret, and sayet, the 50 do. 0 39 Hops, the hippound 0 6 woollen. for children, the 200 do. 0 30 Horses, the pair 0 36 Sturgeon, the last of 12 barrels 18 Indigo, the 100 lbs. 0 36 Stuffs, woollen, the 8 pieces 0 If Iron wire, or pans, do. 0 Succade, the 50 lbs. 0 12 4 stoves, plates or pots. the shippound 0 6 Sugar candy, or confectionary, the 100 do. 0 15 bars, bate. bolts, hoops, anchors, and guns, do. 0 4 Inaves, powder, or Muscavado, the 200 lbs. 0 IS wrought. the 100 lbs. valued at 24 rixdollars 0 12 Sword blades. the 50 0 12 o'd, the "hippound 0 3 hilts, do. 0 15 Ostermunds, do. Sweetwood, the 100 lbs. 0 , 0 2 Isinglass, the 100 lbs. 6 Tallow, the shippound 0 6 0 Juniper berries, the 200 do. 0 9 Tarras, the last. 6 shippownd. or 12 barrels 0 % Kerseys, the 8 pieces Tar, great band, the last of 12 barrels 0 15 0 10 Lace, silk, or ferret, the 4 lbs. 0 10 small band, the last of do. 0 9 thread, wool, cotton, or hair, the 10 do. Thread, white and coloured, the 50 lbs. 0 30 0 6 gold and silver, the 1b. 0 5 0 6 gold and silver, the lb. Lemons, the 12 chests, or 36,000 0 24 Tin, the shippetend 0 94 pickled, the pipe or hogshead 0 9 0 18 Tobacco, the 100 lbs. Load, fodder, the 'on, or 6 shippound Treacle, the pipe, or 2 hogsheads 0 35 0 24 shot, the 100 lbs. 0 6 0 4 Turpentine, the shippound red or white, do. 0 , 0 2 Verdigria, the 100 lbs. Leather, Russia or Scotch, the decker 0 % 0 9 Vermilion. do. Spanish, Conlovan, Turkey, and buff, do. 0 9 0 6 Velvet, fine, the piece Seme, the 10 do. 0 9 0 36 with thread, the 8 pieces Bisanes, the 10 do. 0 If 0 18 Vinegar of wine, the hogshead tanned or sole, the 100 lbs. , , 0 9 beer, ale, or cider, the 8 do. alumed or white, the 500 pieces 0 % 0 18 Wax, the shippound Lignum vita, the 100 lbs. 0 14 0 9 Wainscot boards, the schock Lineeed, the last of 24 barrels 0 36 Wine, Bordeaux, the ton, or 4 bogebeads, at 52 rixdollars $ 1 % Linco, calicoes, the 16 pieces 0 30 Picardin, Hoogland, Muscat, and Frontignac, the flax. the 20 do. 0 0 30 hogsheads Holl nd. Silesia, and Westphalia, the 4 do. 24 0 10 Spanish or Portuguese, the pipe hemp. black tow, the 80 do. 1 0 0 30 Italian and Levant canvass, the 8 do. 0 40 0 30 Rhenish, the ahm damask, the 12 do. 0 24 0 30 Wire, imn, or brase, the shippound drilling, the 20 do., or 500 arsbeens 0 94 0 30 steel, the 100 lbs. from Petersburgh, all sorts, the 40 da., or 2,000 do. 0 5 0 30 gold and silver, the lb. Logwood, the H00 lbs. I 0 0 30 Wool, beaver, the 50 lbs. Mace, the 50 lbs. 0 % 0 18 Spanish, or fine. the 4 shippound Masts, 15 palms and upwards, the piece 0 X 0 24 coarse, or Sc tch, the 6 do. small 0 9 0 I flock. or cutting wool, the 2 do. for boats, the schock 0 15 1 24 Scotch shirts, the 40 pieces Mats from Petersburgh, the 1,000 0 10 0 15 shifts, the 8 do. Mohair. the 50 the 0 , 0 30 Wood shovels, the 10 schocks Mustand are I. the last of 12 barrels 0 , 0 30 dishes or trays, the 5 do. Nails, Holland or Lubeck. the centner 0 9 0 4 plates, the 5 do. 0 IS tree nails for ships, the 40,000 0 36 nails, the 20,000 Nutmers. do. 0 % 0 18 Yarn, ton, the 50 lbs. Nuts. the tast of 20 burrels or sacks 0 X 0 12 linen, the shippound, or 40 schocks 0 % Oars, great. the schock 0 12 tow, the 4 do. 0 36 small do. 0 8 sail, the shippound Oil, olive, of Seville or Portugal. the pipe 0 36 0 36 all sorts of woolles, the 50 libe. rape, lineed, hemp, the last of 8 ahms 0 36 Digitized by Google ELSINEUR. 651 Memorandum respecting the Mode of preventing certain Overcharges of Sound Duties on Goods shipped for the Bultic. There have been many complaints of the Sound duty being overrated on goods which, as they are not noticed in the tariff, are chargeable ad valorem, (1 per. cent. in the case of the English, Dutch, and Swedes; 11 per cent. in the case of other nations;) this charge being solely regulated by the value ex- pressed in the cockets, the only documents by which the Custom-house officers at the Sound are go- verned. This originates in the shippers of goods finding it expedient occasionally to give a nominal value to merchandise not liable to an export duty in England, far exceeding the real value, in order to provide for a further shipment of the same species of goods in the same vessel (which entry can alone be con- sidered as expressive of the intention to ship goods to that extent). It is, therefore, suggested to the shippers of merchandise for the Baltic, that, besides the above-mentioned nominal value, they should cause the real value of the goods actually shipped to be inserted on the reverse of the cocket, as there is every reason to believe that this real value will then become the criterion by which the Sound duty will be calculated. For instance, supposing a cocket to run thus " Know ye that Parkinson and Co. have entered British cottons, value 10,0001, sterling, to be shipped per the Newland, Francis Hunter, master, for St. Petersburgh:' The indorsement should be - P. 1. a. 10. Ten bales cambrics, value 4,7941. 5a. sterling, shipped on board the Newland, Francis Hunter, for Petersburgh." (Signed by) PARKINSON and Co. (Or by the signing Custom-house officer) N.N. The Sound duty will then probably be charged not on 10,000L., but on 4,794L 5s. Should, however, the latter entry be wanting, the first sum will be the only criterion by which to calculate the Sound duty; and in case of overcharge, no restitution need be hoped for-(Rordanz, Enropean Commerce.) NAVIGATION OF THE BALTIC. This is exhibited in the following Account of the Number of Ships that have passed (going and re- turning) the Sound at different Periods, from the Year 1777 to the present Time, specifying the Countries to which they belonged. Countries. 1777. 1780. 1783. 1785. 1787. 1789. 1790. 1792. 1814. 1816. 1820. 1825. 1827. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. British Islands 2,552 1,701 2,862 2,537 2,959 3,501 3,771 4,349 2,319 1,848 3,597 5,186 5,099 4,805 4,274 4,772 3,330 Holland 2,567 2,058 510 1,571 1,436 1,924 2,009 2,181 551 876 853 630 814 1,105 1,227 1,023 1,425 Sweden 1,773 1,880 2,474 2,136 2,395 53 430 2,134 2,759 2,042 1,519 1,319 1,389 1,117 1,188 1,347 1,005 Denmark 1,110 1,341 1,796 1,787 1,337 1,343 1,586 1,362 476 787 792 803 856 865 744 695 835 Prussia 472 671 2,086 1,358 743 943 599 737 1,033 1,014 1,554 2,391 3,038 2,186 2,253 1,810 1,763 Russia 47 43 137 114 96 6 65 495 399 242 335 384 367 405 424 2,483 United States 3 20 30 42 44 68 168 169 230 191 ISO 152 179 189 France 21 8 20 35 111 123 25 12 16 63 72 103 180 199 72 231 Spain 10 7 15 10 23 32 40 22 9 10 8 4 4 Hanover 55 263 458 413 457 602 645 451 542 Imp. (Austria) 5 30 533 66 61 107 6 40 Dantzie 231 174 202 161 200 186 248 209 Mecklenburgh 386 547 602 555 627 664 535 594 Oldenburgh 2 24 35 18 29 47 34 35 44 56 53 78 Lubeek 78 82 125 79 66 83 89 86 28 45 64 121 99 104 80 77 77 Bremen 82 146 263 176 142 181 177 188 248 111 59 34 55 85 79 92 80 Hamburgh 22 31 61 77 62 104 83 36 36 15 31 35 46 25 41 21 Rostoc 79 104 57 101 224 339 338 Papenburgh 61 99 142 Portugal 12 21 29 28 16 33 28 11 42 48 2 9 11 2 Courland 2 7 10 25 10 5 22 21 Naples I Venice 2 2 4 2 (It.) 9 2 6 12 8 Norway 83 794 946 951 879 1,161 1,202 1,357 1,535 Greece 2 Totals 9,053 8,291 11,233 10,268 9.746 8,823 9,742 12,114 8,186 8,871 10,926 13,160 13,000 13,486 13,212 12,946 12,202 The statement in this Table for the years 1777, 1780, 1783, and 1789, are taken from the valuable work entitled Voyage de Deux François au Nord de l' Europe (tom. i. p. 360.); the other years are taken from the returns sent by the British consul at Elsineur, printed in various parliamentary pn- pers. We have seen no two returns of the shipping that pass the Sound that quite agree, though the differences are not very material. The above account, though in many respects most interesting, is defective, inasmuch as it does not give the tonnage as well as the number of the ships. Since 1831, however, the British consul has sent returns of the shipping; and it is not improbable that the Danish authorities may be able to supply this desideratum for a lengthened period. The falling off in- the amount of British shipping in 1832 was wholly owing to the alarm caused by the prevalence of cholera, and other evanescent causes.-We subjoin an Account of the British Shipping employed in the Baltic Trade through the Sound in 1832; exhibiting the Number of Vessels sent out, the Number of Voyages performed by them, and their Tonnage, as ascertained by the Consul at Elsineur.-(Papers published by Board of Trade, vol. ii. p. 53.) To what Ports belonging. Number of Ships sent out. Tonnage. Number of Voyages performed. Aggregate Tonnage. England and Wales 679 140,469 1,891 403,997 Scotland 395 50,694 1,362 175,992 Ireland 16 2,193 38 5,233 Guernsey and Jersey 22 3,556 43 6,914 The Colonies 3 699 6 1.398 Total - 1,115 197,611 3,330 593,533 There were lost in the Baltic, in 1832, 14 British ships, of the burden of 2,897 tons; and 8 British ships, of the burden of 1,823 tons, were detained in it by the frost at the close of the year, and obliged to winter in its various ports. EMBARGO, an order issued by the government of a country to prevent the sailing of ships. EMERALD (Fr. Eméraude; Ger. Smaragd; It. ,Smeraldo; Lat. Smaragdus, Sp. Esmeralda), a precious stone in high estimation. It is distinguished from all other gems by its peculiar emerald green lustre, varying in intensity from the palest possible tinge to a full and deep colour, than which, as Pliny has truly stated, nothing can be more beautiful and Digitized by Google 652 EMERY, EMIGRANTS. pleasing nullius coloris aspectus jucundior est. It emulates, he continues, if it do not sur- pass, the verdure of the spring ; and the eye, satiated by the dazzling glare of the more bril- liant gems, or wearied by intense application, is refreshed and strengthened by the quiet en- livening green of the emerald. In Pliny's time, the best came from Seythia. Those met with in modern times do not often exceed the size of a walnut. Some of a much larger size, and perfect, have been found, but they are extremely rare. Nero used one as an eye-glass in surveying the combats of the gladiators. Hitherto it has always been found crystallised. Specific gravity from 2.6 to 2.77.-(Plin. Hist. Nat. lib. xxxvii. cap. 5.; Thomson's Chemistry.) " For the last two centuries and more, the only country known to yield emeralds is Peru. where they occur in Santa Fé, and in the valley of Tunca. Several large stones have appeared in Europe: about 2 years ago I cut one, exceeding 2ounces in weight, for the Emperor of Morocco, but it was full of imperfections. The largest specimen known is an hexagonal crystal, nearly 6 inches long. and above 2 in diameter. This gem, however small, is so rarely seen perfect, that 'an emerald without: flaw has passed into a proverb. A fine stone of 4 carats may be valued at 401. or 501, or even more if very pure. Inferior stones of 1 or 2 carats are sold at from 40s. to 70s. per carat; and if smaller and defective, at 10s. or 15s. per carat. Fine emeralds are rare, and in such demand, that a particular BUR has been known to have passed into the possession of a series of purchasers, and to have made the tour of Europe in the course of half a century."-(Mawe on Diamonds, 2d ed. p. 104.) EMERY (Fr. Emeril, Emeri; Ger. Smirgel; It. Smerglio, Smeregio; Sp. Esmeril; Rus. Nashdak; Lat. Smiris), a mineral brought to Britain from the isle of Naxos, where exists in large quantities. It occurs also in Germany, Italy, and Spain. It is always in shapeless masses,.and mixed with other minerals. Colour intermediate between greyish black and bluish grey. Specific gravity about 4. Lustre glistening and adamantion. Emery is extensively used in the polishing of hard bodies. Its fine powder is obtained by trituration.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) (EMIGRANTS.-It will be seen from the subjoined accounts, that the number of emigrants to Canada and the United States, was very decidedly greater in 1831 and 1832 than in either of the 2 preceding or 2 following years. The falling off in 1833 seems to have been mainly a consequence of the alarms occasioned by the breaking out of cholera, during the previous year, in a very aggravated state, in some of the emigrant ships, and at Quebec. This cit- cumstance had less influence in 1834, and the emigration for that year was considerably greater; but it has since fallen off, particularly to Canada, partly because of the increasing prosperity of this country, and partly because a higher price is demanded for government land in Canada than for public land in the United States. Account of the Number of Emigrants, specifying the Coun- Account of the Number of Emigrants tries whence they came, and the Numbers from each, that arrived at New-York from the arrived at Quebec during the Seven Years ending with United Kingdom,separating between 1835.-(Part. Paper, No. 76. Sess. 1836.) those from England, Scotland, and Ireland, during the Seven Years end- Where from. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1838. 1934. 1835- ing with 1835.-(Part. Paper, at SEP). England and Wales 3,563 6,799 10,343 17,481 5,198 6,799 3,067 Ireland 9,614 18,300 34,133 28,204 12,013 19,206 7,108 Eng. Ire- Scot- Year. Total Scotland 2,643 2,450 5,354 5,500 4,196 4,591 2,127 land. land. land. Hamburgh and Gib- raltar 15 1829 8,110 2,443 94% 11.5% Nova Scotia, New. 1830 16,360 3,497 1,584 31,433 foundland, West 1831 13,908 6,721 2,07% 26" 18,947 3.26 NN Indies, &c. &c. 123 451 424 546 345 339 225 1882 6,050 1833 M6,190 15,945 28,000 50,254 21,752 30,935 1834 1530 51,746 12,527 1833 16.70 Grand Total 211,152 Grand Total 143,213 Return of the Number of Emigrants from the United Kingdom in 1833, 1834, and 1835, specifying the Colonies and Countries for which they cleared out, and the Numbers that cleared out for esch- (Parl. Paper, at supra.) Colonies in North United States of America. America. Cape of Good Hope. Australian Colours t 1833. 1834. 1835. 1833. 1834. 1835. 1833. 1834. 1835. 1833. 1834. 1985. England 5,783 6,520 3,665 22,392 25,981 22,046 516 287 325 3,317 2,666 1,746 Scotland 5,592 4,954 2,450 1,963 2,880 1,990 1 1 253 134 1141 Ireland 17,431 28,586 9,458 4,764 4,213 2,684 - 23 Totals 28,808 40,060 15,573 29,109 33,074 26,720 517 283 325 4,093 2,800 1.90 Total Number of Emigrants, in 1833, 62,527-in 1834, 76,229-in 1835, 44,488. Passenger Acts-Policy of.-It appears from the above statement that, during 1833 1834, and 1835, no fewer than 183,237 voluntary emigrants left the United Kingdom: 173,344 being destined for America, and 9,893 for the Australian colonies and the Cape of Good Hope. Such being the extent to which emigration is carried, the propriety, or rather necessity, of enacting some general regulations, with respect to the conveyance of emigrants to their destination, must be obvious to every one at all acquainted with the subject. The greater number of emigrants are in humble life; few among them know any thing of ships, or of the precautions necessary to insure a safe and comfortable voyage they are, also, for the most part poor, and exceedingly anxious to economise, so that they seldom hesitate to embat Digitized by Google EMIGRANTS. 653 in any ship, however unfit for the conveyance of passengers, or inadequately supplied with provisions, provided it be cheap. Unprincipled masters and owners have not been slow to take advantage of this, and in order to prevent the frauds that have been, and that would be, practised on the unwary, it has been found indispensable to lay down some general regula- tions as to the number of passengers to be taken on board ships as compared with their ton- nage, the quantity of water and provisions as compared with the passengers, &c. But this is no very easy task. If the limitations be too strict, that is, if comparatively few passengers may be carried, or if the stock of provisions to be put on board be either unnecessarily large or expensive, the cost of emigration is proportionally enhanced; and an artificial and serious impediment is thrown in the way of what ought to be made as easy as possible, consistent with security. But, on the other hand, if too many passengers be allowed, their health is liable to suffer; and should the supply of provisions be inadequate, or the quality bad, the most serious consequences may ensue. The Passage Act (6 G. 4. c. 116.) obliged too great a quantity of expensive provisions to be put on board, and was, in consequence, objected to by emigrants as well as shippers. The act, 9 G. 4. c. 21. (art. PASSENGERS) avoided this error; but it, too, was defective, inasmuch as it made no provision with respect to the sufficiency of the ship, the having a surgeon or other properly qualified medical person on board ships carrying a certain number of passengers, and in other particulars. These deficiencies have been in part supplied by the act of 1835 (5 & 6 W. 4. c. 53.), of which a full abstract is subjoined. But we doubt whether even it will completely answer the end in view. During 1834 no fewer than 17 ships, with passengers on board, bound for Quebec, were wrecked on the passage: 731 emigrants losing their lives in consequence, while many more lost most part of their property, and were reduced to the greatest difficul- ties. These losses principally took place in the gulf and river of St. Lawrence; but we should err if we ascribed them entirely, or principally even, to the difficulty of the navigation. Emigrants to Quebec are mostly taken out in ships engaged in the timber trade; and it is well known that, speaking generally, these are a very inferior class; it being the usual prac- tice to turn worn-out ships, unfit to carry dry cargoes, into this department. Most part of the catastrophies alluded to may, we are assured, be ascribed to this circumstance, and to the misconduct of the masters and crews. We doubt whether the clause (7th) in the present act as to the sea-worthiness of the ship will be sufficient to obviate the disasters arising from the use of improper vessels. And we incline to think that, in addition to what is stated in the act, it should be further provided that all British ships, not standing in the class A. or the class AE. of the new register (see post), should be prohibited from undertaking to carry passen- gers and that either some similar regulation should be adopted with respect to foreign ships, or that they should be prohibited from clearing out with passengers, unless reported as sea- worthy and suitable for their conveyance by government surveyors appointed for that pur- pose. There can be no question as to its being the bounden duty of government to take every reasonable precaution for obviating shipwreck. And, even if higher considerations did not make an effectual interference imperative, it is pretty certain that the check given to emigration to Canada, by the shipwrecks and destruction of life that have recently taken place, is much greater than any that could be given by the trifling addition that the adoption of some such plan as has now been suggested would make to its cost. The subjecting of captains of ships to an examination, and the exclusion of spirits (see arti- cle SHIPS, Supplement), would go far to obviate the other causes of loss. The abso- lute prohibition of ardent spirits in emigrant ships, except as a medicine, has been strongly recommended by Mr. Buchanan, the agent for emigrants in Canada. This recommendation should, we think, be adopted. It is partially, indeed, carried into effect by the 10th clause of the subjoined act. But the better way would be, not to allow any spirits of any sort to be taken on board ships conveying emigrants, except a few gallons to be used as a cordial in case it should be recommended by the doctor. If more than this be allowed, it will afford facilities for the clandestine introduction of a still greater quantity; and cannot be otherwise than injurious. The new act does not make it imperative on ships conveying passengers to America to have a surgeon on board and, perhaps, when bound for New York, he may not be required. But the voyage to Quebec is often very tedious; and much suffering and loss of life have frequently arisen from no medical officer being on board emigrant ships destined for that port. It has been said, that if we lay constrictions on the conveyance of emigrants to Quebec, it will make New York the great landing port, and throw the business of their conveyance entirely into the hands of the Americans. But the regulations enforced in the subjoined act, and those we have suggested, apply equally to both parties. And it is, besides, true that a continuance of the old system, attended as it, no doubt, would have been by a repetition of the most appalling disasters, would have had the very effect falsely ascribed to judicious regulations. It would have prevented any one not compelled by necessity-who was not, in fact, a beggar-from sailing in a vessel bound for Quebec. We subjoin the new act:- 3 I 2 Digitized by Google 654 EMIGRANTS. Repeal, &c.-The act 9 Geo. 4. c. 21. directed to be repealed.- 1. No Ship to sail with more than Three Persons on board for every Five Tons.-No ship carrying passen- gers from any port or place in the U. K., or in Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Bark, or Man, on any voy- age for any port or place out of Europe, and not within the Mediterranean, shall proceed on her voyage with more than 3 persons on board for every 5 tons of the registered burden of such ship, the master and crew being Included in, and forming part of, such prescribed number; and no ship, having more than one deck, shall carry any passengers upon any such voyage, unless she be of the height of 51 feet at least between decks; and no ship, having only one deck, shall carry any passengers upon any such voyage, unless a platform be laid beneath such deck, 80 as to afford a space of the height of at least 51 feet, and no ship shall have more than 2 tiers of berths; and no ship ving 2 tiers of berths, shall carry any passengers, on any such voyage, unless there be an interval of 6 inches, at least, be- tween the deck or platform and the floor of the lower tier, throughout the whole extent thereof: pro- vided, that whatever be the tonnage of the ship, no greater number of persons shall be taken on board, as passengers, than shall be after the rate of one person for every 10 superficial feet of the lower deck or platform unoccupied by goods or stores, not being the personal luggage of such persons, if such ship shall not have to pass the line on her voyage, or after the rate of one such person for every 15 clear superficial feet, if such ship have to pass the line.-> 2. Quantity of Water and Provisions to be carried by Vessels with Passengers.-No ship carrying passen- gers on any voyage, as aforesaid, shall be cleared out for such voyage from any port in the U. K., or in the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, &c., unless there be actually laden and on board such ship good and wholesome provisions for the use and consumption of the said passengers, over and above the victualling of the crew, to the amount or in the proportion following; viz. a supply of five gallons of pure water to every week of the computed voyage for every passenger on board such ship, such water being carried in tanks or sweet casks, and a supply of 7 lbs. weight of bread, biscuit, oatmeal, or bread stuffs, to every week of the computed voyage for every passenger provided, that to the extent of one third of such supply, and no more, 7 lbs. weight of potatoes may be held to be equivalent to 1 lb. weight of bread, biscuit, oatmeal, or bread stuffs, in the supply of any ship bound to any place is North America: provided, that when any ship shall be destined to call at a port or place in the course of her voyage, for the purpose of filling up her water, a supply of water, at the rate before mentioned, for every week of the computed voyage to such port or place of calling, shaH be deemed to be a com- pliance with the provisions of this act.-d 3. Number of Weeks requisite for Voyage of Vessel.-The number of weeks deemed to be necessary for the voyage of any such ship, according to her destination, shall be determined by the following rule of computation viz. For a voyage to North America, 10 weeks. - South America, on the Atlantic Ocean, or to the West Coast of Africa, 12 weeks. - the Cape of Good Hope, 15 weeks. - to the Mauritius, 18 weeks. Any other voyage, 24 weeks.-d 4. Officers to examine Provisions and Water before Departure of Vessel.-Before any such ship shall be cleared out, the officers of customs shall survey, or cause to be surveyed by some competent person, the provisions and water before required for the consumption of the passengers, and ascertain that the same are sweet and good, and shall also ascertain that, over and above the same, there is on board an ample supply of water and stores for the victualling of the crew of the ship; and such officers shall also ascertain that the directions herein contained, in respect of the situations of berths, have been complied with. 5. Table of the Prices of Provisions to be sold on board.-The master of every such ship shall cause a table to be drawn up of the prices at which any provisions or stores, to be sold by any person on board to the passengers, during the voyage, are to be supplied; and a copy of the same, printed or written ina fair and legible manner, shall be affixed in some convenient and conspicuous place on board said ship, and the same shall be maintained for continual reference, as well during the period in which passen- gers shall be engaged, as during the whole of the voyage; and no higher prices than are stated in such table shall in any case be charged for such provisions or stores during the voyage but nothing herein contained shall be construed as requiring the master of any ship to provide provisions or stores for the purpose of sale to passengers who have contracted to victual themselves during the voyage - 6. Seaworthiness of the Ship may be ascertained by Survey.-If doubts arise whether any ship about to proceed with passengers, as aforesaid, is seaworthy, or fit for her intended voyage, and such doubts are not removed to the satisfaction of the collector and comptroller of customs at the port from which such vessel is to be cleared out, it shall be lawful for such collector and comptroller to cause such ship to be surveyed by 2 competent persons; and if it be reported by them, that such ship is not. in their opinion, seaworthy, with reference to such voyage, such ship shall not be cleared out, unless the con- tents of such report he disproved to the satisfaction of the commissioners of customs, or until the ship be rendered seaworthy.-d Copies or Abstracts of this Act to be kept on board.-Two copies of this act, or abstracts of the same, provided and issued by the commissioners of customs, and authenticated by the signature of the col- lector or comptroller of customs at the port of clearance, shall be delivered to the master, on demand, by the collector or comptroller at the time of clearance, and shall be kept on board every ship proceed- ing with passengers as aforesaid, and one of such copies or abstracts shall, upon request made to the master of the ship, be produced to any passenger for his perusal.-d 8. A Medical Practitioner to sail with every ship carrying 100 Passengers.-No ship carrying passengers to any port or place as aforesaid, except in North America, if the number of passengers amount to of exceed 100, shall clear out from any port in the U. K., or in the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, Ac., un- less there be rated, and actually serving on board such ship. some person duly authorized to practise as a physician, surgeon, or apothecary, and no such ship shall put to sea, or proceed on such voyage, unless such medical practitioner be therein, and bonu fule proceed on such voyage, taking with him a medicine chest. and a proper supply of medicines, instruments, and other things suitable to the in- tended voyage and no ship carrying passengers under the provisions of this act shall clear out for any voyage as aforesaid, unless there be actually laden and on board such ship medicines and other things necessary for the medical treatment of the passengers on board, during such intended voyage. and available for that purpose, nor unless such medicines and other things shall be adequate. 18 amount and kind, to the probable exigencies of any such voyage; and, together with such medicines and things, shall also be put on board every such ship previously to her clearing out for such voyage. n certificate under the hands of 2 or more medical practitioners, to the effect that such medicines and things have been inspected by them, and are, in their judgment, adequate to meet any such probable exigencies.- 9. Ships carrying Passengers prohibited from exporting Spirits, &c.-No ship carrying passengers If aforesaid shall be cleared out if there be laden on board her, by way of stores, over and above the stores proper for the crew, any quantity of spirits or strong waters beyond one tenth part of such quantity as would, except for this restriction, be allowed by the officers of customs upon the victual- Digitized by Google EMIGRANTS. 655 ling bill of such ship for the outward voyage only, according to the number of persons going the voy- age.-d 10. Muster to deliver List of Passengers to Collector of Customs.-The master of every ship carrying pas- sengers shall, before clearing out his ship, deliver to the collector or other principal officer of customs, at such port or place, a list in writing, together with a duplicate of the same, specifying, as accurately as may be, the name, age, profession, or occupation of every passenger on board such ship, with the name of the port or place at which he hath contracted to land each passenger; and such collector or other officer shall thereupon deliver to the said master a counterpart of such list signed by him; and the master shall exhibit this counterpart of his said list to the collector or other chief officer of cus- toms at any port or place in H. M.'s possessions, or to H.M.'s consul at any foreign port, at which the said passengers, or any of them, shall be landed, and shall deposit the same with such collector or chief officer of customs, or such consul, at his final port of discharge in such possessions.— 11. Master not to land Passengers at Place not contracted for.-The master of a ship carrying passen- gers as aforesaid shall not, without his or her previous consent, land or put on shore any passenger at any port or place other than that at which he contracted to land or put such passenger on shore.- 12. How Children are to be computed.-For the purpose and within the meaning of this act, 2 children, each being under the age of 14 years, but above the age of 7 years, or 3 children, each being under the age of 7 years, shall in all cases be computed as one person only; and children under the age of 12 months shall not be included in the number of persons.- Φ 13. Fines in case of Detention.-It any ship shall not actually put to sea and proceed upon any intended voyage on the day appointed for that purpose by any contract made by the owner, master, or charterer of such ship, or by their agent, with any passenger who shall on that day be on board the same, or ready to proceed on such intended voyage, then, in every such case, the master of the ship shall pay to each and every passenger as shall have contracted to victual himself, a fine at the rate of 1s. for each day during which he or she shall be detained previously to the actual clearing out and final de- parture of the ship on the voyage, and the same may be recovered daily; and the master of such ship shall victual each and every passenger as shall have contracted to be victualled by the ship owner on and from the day 50 appointed: provided that no such fine shall be payable in respect of any detention of the vessel by stress of weather or other unavoidable cause.- 1 14. Passengers to be maintained for 48 Hours after their Arrival.-At the close of any voyage every per- son arriving as a passenger at any port or place shall, during the space of 48 hours after arrival, be entitled to continue on board such ship, and to be provided for and maintained on board in the same manner as during the voyage, unless it have been expressly stipulated between such passenger and the master of such ship, that such passenger shall not be entitled to such maintenance during the said 48 hours, or unless, in the ulterior prosecution of her voyage, the ship quit such part or place within the said 48 hours.-> 15. Penalties in case of Infringement of the preceding Enactments.-If any ship carrying passengers on any voyage from the U. K., or the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, &c., to or for any port or place out of Europe, and not in the Mediterranean, shall carry any number of passengers exceeding by more than 1 person in 50 the proportion authorised and allowed by this present act; or if such ship shall not be of the height between decks before required; or if such a platform as before directed shall not be laid and continued throughout the whole duration of such voyage, in the manuer before required: or if there be more than 2 tiers of berths; or if there be not throughout the whole duration of such voyage such an interval, as is before prescribed, between the deck and the floor of the lower tier of berths or if such ship shall clear out and put to sea, not having on board such water and provisions as afore- said, for the use and consumption of the passengers, of the kind, and to the amount, and in the propor- tion, before required; or if a table of the prices of provisions or stores be not exhibited as before re- quired or if any higher prices than are named in such table shall be charged; or if there be not on board such vessel such medical practitioner as aforesaid, or such medicines and other things necessary to the medical treatment of the passengers, as is before required; or if such ship shall be cleared out bo- fore such list of passengers as before mentioned have been delivered in manner and form aforesaid to such officer ns aforesaid; or if any such list be wilfully false; or if the copy or abstract of this act be not produced as before required or if any passenger be not allowed to continue on board such ship as before provided; or if any passenger, without previous consent, be put on shore at any place other than that at which the master had contracted to land such passenger; the master of such ship shall, in respect of each and every such offence, be liable, on summary conviction, as is after mentioned, to the payment of a fine of not less than 51. nor more than 201. sterling British money.- 16. The Right of Action of Passengers not taken away or abridged.-Nothing herein contained shall take away or abridge any right of suit or action which may accrue to any passenger or other person, in respect of the breach or non-performance of any contract made or entered into between or on behalf of such passenger or person, and the master or owners of such ship.-d 17. Prosecution and Recovery of Penalties.-These are to be sued for, proceeded with, and determined in the same manner and under the same condition, as in the case of penalties under the smuggling acts (art. SMUGGLING), or the acts relating to the customs, or to trade or navigation. Provided, that in preferring and prosecuting indictments or informations under this act, the direction and consent of commissioners of customs shall not be required, any thing in such acts of parliament to the contrary notwithstanding.-& 18. Masters of Vessels to enter into Bond for the due Performance of Regulations.-Before any ship carry- ing passengers clear out from the U. K., or the islands of Guernsey, Jersey, &c. for any port or place out of Europe, and not in the Mediterranean, the master of said ship shall enter into a bond to H. M., with one good and sufficient surety, to be approved by the collector or chief officer of customs at the port of clearance, in the sum of 1,000l., the condition of which bond shall be, that the said ship is sea- worthy, and that all the rules and regulations prescribed by this act for the carriage of passengers shall be well and truly performed before and during such intended voyage, and that all penalties, fines, and forfeitures, which the master of such ship may be sentenced or adjudged to pay in respect of the breach or non-performance of any such rules and regulations, shall be well and truly paid: provided that such bond shall be without stamps, and that no such bond shall be put in suit, and that no prosecu- tion, suit, action, or information shall be brought by virtue of this act, or by reason of the breach of any of its provisions, in any of H. M.'s possessions abroad, after the expiration of 12 calendar months succeeding the commencement of any such voyage, nor in the U. K., or any of the islands before men- tioned, after the expiration of 12 calendar months after the return of the master to the port whence he sailed on such voyage.-d 19. Exception of particular Ships.Nothing in this act shall be construed to extend to ships carrying pas- sengers in cases in which the number of persons, computed in manner before provided, shall not ex- ceed 1 person for every 5 tons of the registered burden of such ship; nor shall any thing in this act extend to any ship in the service of the Lords of the Admiralty, of H. M.'s Postmaster General, or of the East India Company.-> 20. Bahamas, &c., deemed in South America.-The Bahama Islands, and all places in America southwards of the same, shall be deemed to be in South America for the purposes of this act.-d 21.-Sup.) Digitized by Google 656 ENGROSSING-EXCHANGE. ENGROSSING, is " the buying up of corn and other dead victuals with intent to sell them again."-(Blackstone, book iv. cap. 12.) We have shown in another article, how ab- surd it is to suppose that this practice should have any injurious influence-(antè, p. 491.). But, for a long time, most scarcities that occurred were either entirely ascribed to the infu- ence of engrossers and forestallers—(see FORESTALLING)-Or, at least, were supposed to be materially aggravated by their proceedings. In consequence, however, of the prevalence of more just and enlarged views upon such subjects, the statutes that had been made for the suppression and punishment of engrossing, forestalling, &c. were repealed in 1772.-(See antè, p. 485.) But notwithstanding this repeal, engrossing continues to be an indictable offence, punishable at common law by fine and imprisonment; though it is not at all likely, were an attempt made, that any jury would now be found ignorant or prejudiced enough to convict any one on such a charge. ENTRY, BILL OF. See IMPORTATION. ERMINE (Ger. Hermelin; Fr. Hermine, Ermine; Rus. Gornostai), a species of weasel (Mustela candida Lin.), abundant in all cold countries, particularly Russia, Norway, Lap- land, &c., and producing a most valuable species of fur. In summer, the ermine is of a brown colour, and is called the stoat. It is in the winter only that the fur has that beautiful snowy whiteness and consistence 80 much admired.-(See FURS.) ESPARTO, a species of rush, the Stipa tenacissima of botanists. It is found in the southern provinces of Spain; and is particularly abundant on all the sterile, uncultivated and mountainous districts of Valencia.-Beckmann (Hist. of Invent. vol. ii. p. 288. Eng. ed.) supposes, apparently with good reason, that the stipa tenacissima is the plant described by Pliny under the name of Sparta, who ascribes its application to useful purposes to the Car- thaginians-(Hist. Nat. lib. xix. c. 2.). It is still used for the same purposes as in anti- quity, being manufactured into cordage, shoes, matting, baskets, nets, mattrasses, sacks, &c. Cables made of esparto are said to be excellent being light, they float on the surface of the water, and are not, therefore, so liable as hempen cables to be cut or injured by a foul bottom. They are exclusively made use of in the Spanish navy. Esparto is largely consumed in the manufacture of alpergates. These are light shoes worn by the Valentian peasantry, having platted soles made either of esparto or hemp, but principally of the former. They are ex- tremely cheap and commodious in hot climates; and besides being in extensive demand at home, used to be exported in immense quantities to both Indies; but since the emancipation of Spanish America, this trade has greatly fullen off. The Spanish peasantry have attained to wonderful dexterity in the manufacture of esparto. " After having soaked the rush in water, the women and children, without either wheel or spindle, contrive to twist two threads at the same time. This they do by rubbing them between the palms of their hands, in the same manner as a shoemaker forms a thread upon his knees, with this difference, that one motion gives the twist to each thread, and, at the same time unites them. To keep the threads asunder, the thumb of the right hand is interposed between them and when that is wanted for other purposes, the left thumb supplies its place. Two threads being thus twisted into one of the bigness of a large crow-quill, 46 yards are sold for little more than Jd, the materials being worth about 3th part of the Townsend's Travels in Spain, vol. iii. p. 177., see also p. 129.; Fischer's Picture of Valencia, Eng. ed. p. 92. and p. 57. &c.) ESTRICH OR ESTRIDGE (Fr. Duvel d'autruche; It. Penna matta di strozzo; Sp. Plumazo de avestrux; Lat. Struthionum plumæ molliores), is the fine soft down which lies immediately under the feathers of the ostrich. The finest is used as a substitute for bea- ver in the manufacture of hats, and the coarser or stronger sort is employed in the fabrication of a stuff which resembles fine woollen cloth. Estridge is brought from the Levant, Italy, and other parts of the Mediterranean. EUPHORBIUM (Ger. Euphorbiengummi; Lat. Euphorbium ; Fr. Euphorbe; Arab. Akal-nafzah), the produce of a perennial plant, a native of Africa, and of many parts of India, &c. It is a concrete gum resin is inodorous; when first chewed has little taste, but it soon gives a very acrid burning impression to the tongue, palate, and throat, which is very perma- nent, and almost insupportable. It is imported in serons containing from 100 to 150 lbs. It is in small, hollow, forked pieces, often mixed with seeds and other impurities.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) EXCHANGE. In commerce, this term is generally used to designate that species of mercantile transactions, by which the debts of individuals residing at a distance from their creditors are cancelled without the transmission of money. Among cities or countries having any considerable intercourse together, the debts mutually due by each other approach, for the most part, near to an equality. There are at all times, for example, a considerable number of persons in London indebted to Hamburgh; but, speaking generally, there are about an equal number of persons in London to whom Ham- burgh is indebted. And hence, when A. of London has a payment to make to B.of Hamburgh, he does not remit an equivalent sum of money to the latter but he goes into the market and buys a bill upon Hamburgh, that is, he buys an order from C. of London his addressed to his debtor D. of Hamburgh, requesting him to pay the amount to A. or Digitized by Google EXCHANGE. 657 order. A., having indorsed this bill or order, sends it to B., who receives payment from his neighbour D. The convenience of all parties is consulted by a transaction of this sort. The debts due by A. to B., and by D. to C., are extinguished without the intervention of any money. A. of London pays C. of ditto, and D. of Hamburgh pays B. of ditto. The debtor in one place is substituted for the debtor in another; and a postage or two, and the stamp for the bill, form the whole expenses. All risk of loss is obviated. A bill of exchange may, therefore, be defined to be an order addressed to some person residing at a distance, directing him to pay a certain specified sum to the person in whose favour the bill is drawn, or his order. In mercantile phraseology, the person who draws a bill is termed the drawer; the person in whose favour it is drawn, the remitter; the person on whom it is drawn, the drawee; and after he has accepted, the acceptor. Those persons into whose hands the bill may have passed previously to its being paid, are, from their writ- ing their names on the back, termed indorsers; and the person in whose possession the bill is at any given period, is termed the holder or possessor. The negotiation of inland bills of exchange, or of those drawn in one part of Great Britain and Ireland on another, is entirely in the hands of bankers, and is conducted in the manner already explained.-(See anlè, p. 71.) Bills drawn by the merchants of one country upon another are termed foreign bills of exchange, and it is to their negotiation that the following remarks principally apply. 1. Par of Exchange.-The par of the currency of any two countries means, among merchants, the equivalency of a certain amount of the currency of the one in the currency of the other, supposing the currencies of both to be of the precise weight and purity fixed by their respective mints. Thus, according to the mint regulations of Great Britain and France, 1L sterling is equal to 25 fr. 20 cent., which is said to be the par between London and Paris. And the exchange between the two countries is said to be at par when bills are negotiated on this footing; that is, for example, when a bill for 100L drawn in London is worth 2,520 fr. in Paris, and conversely. When 14 in London buys a bill on Paris for more than 25 fr. 20 cent., the exchange is said to be in favour of London and against Paris; and when, on the other hand, 1/. in London will not buy a bill on Paris for 25 fr. 20 cent., the exchange is against London and in favour of Paris.-(See Table of the par of exchange at the end of this article.) II. Circumstances which determine the course of Exchange.-The exchange is affected, or made to diverge from par, by two classes of circumstances: first, by any discrepancy be- tween the actual weight or fineness of the coins, or of the bullion for which the substitutes used in their place will exchange, and their weight or fineness as fixed by the mint regula- tions; and, secondly, by any sudden increase or diminution of the bills drawn in one country upon another. 1. It is but seldom that the coins of any country correspond exactly with their mint stand- ard and when they diverge from it, an allowance corresponding to the difference between the actual value of the coins, and their mint value, must be made in determining the real par. Thus, if, while the coins of Great Britain corresponded with the mint standard in weight and purity, those of France were either 10 per cent. worse or debased below the standard of her mint, the exchange, it is obvious, would be at real par when it was nominally 10 per cent. against Paris, or when a bill payable in London for 100l. was worth in Paris 2,772 fr. instead of 2,520 fr. In estimating the real course of exchange between any 2 or more places, it is always necessary to attend carefully to this circumstance; that is, to examine whether their currencies be all of the standard weight and purity, and if not, how much they differ from it. When the coins circulating in a country are either so worn or rubbed as to have sunk considerably below their mint standard, or when paper money is depreciated from ex- cess or want of credit, the exchange is at real par only when it is against such country to the extent to which its coins are worn or its paper depreciated. When this circumstance is taken into account, it will be found that the exchange during the latter years of the war, though apparently very much against this country, was really in our favour. The depression was nominal only being occasioned by the great depreciation of the paper currency in which bills were paid. 2. Variations in the actual course of exchange, or in the price of bills arising from circum- stances affecting the currency of either of two countries trading together, are nominal only such as are real grow out of circumstances affecting their trade. When two countries trade together, and each buys of the other commodities of precisely the same value, their debts and credits will be equal, and, of course, the real exchange will be at par. The bills drawn by the one will be exactly equivalent to those drawn by the other, and their respective claims will be adjusted without requiring the transfer of bullion or any other valuable produce. But it very rarely happens that the debts reciprocally due by any two countries are equal. There is almost always a balance owing on the one side or the other; and this balance must affect the exchange. If the debts due by London to Paris exceeded those due by Paris to London, the competition in the London market for bills on Paris would, because of the comparatively great amount of payments our merchants had to make 83 Digitized by Google 658 EXCHANGE. in Paris, be greater than the competition in Paris for bills on London; and, consequently, the real exchange would be in favour of Paris and against London. The cost of conveying bullion from one country to another forms the limit within which the rise and fall of the real exchange between them must be confined. If 1 per cent. sufficed to cover the expense and risk attending the transmission of money from London to Paris, it would be indifferent to a London merchant whether he paid 1 per cent. premium for a bill of exchange on Paris, or remitted money direct to that city. If the premium were less than 1 per cent., it would clearly be his interest to make his payments by bills in preference to remittances: and that it could not exceed 1 per cent. is obvious; for every one would prefer remitting money, to buying a bill at a greater premium than sufficed to cover the expense of a money remittance. If, owing to the breaking out of hostilities between the two countries, or to any other cause, the cost of remitting money from London to Paris were increased, the fluctuations of the real exchange between them might also be increased. For the limits within which such fluctuations may range, correspond in all cases with the cost of making remittances in cash. Fluctuations in the nominal exchange, that is, in the value of the currencies of countries trading together, have no effect on foreign trade. When the currency is depreciated, the premium which the exporter of commodities derives from the sale of the bill drawn on his correspondent abroad, is only equivalent to the increase in the price of the goods exported, occasioned by this depreciation. But when the premium on a foreign bill is a consequence, not of a fall in the value of money, but of a deficiency in the supply of bills, there is no rise of prices; and in these circumstances the unfavourable exchange operates as a stimulus to exportation. As soon as the real exchange diverges from par, the mere inspection of a price current is no longer sufficient to regulate the operations of the merchant. If it be unfavour- able, the premium which the exporter will receive on the sale of his bill must be included in the estimate of the profit he is likely to derive from the transaction. The greater that pre- mium, the less will be the difference of prices necessary to induce him to export. And hence an unfavourable real exchange has an effect exactly the same with what would be produced by granting a bounty on exportation equal to the premium on foreign bills. But for the same reason that an unfavourable real exchange increases exportation, it pro- portionally diminishes importation. When the exchange is really unfavourable, the price of commodities imported from abroad must be so much lower than their price at home, as not merely to afford, exclusive of expenses, the ordinary profit of stock on their sale, but also to compensate for the premium which the importer must pay for a foreign bill, if he remit one to his correspondent, or for the discount, added to the invoice price, if his correspondent draw upon him. A less quantity of foreign goods will, therefore, suit our market when the real exchange is unfavourable; and fewer payments having to be made abroad, the competition for foreign bills will be diminished, and the real exchange rendered proportionally favourable. In the same way, it is easy to see that a favourable real exchange must operate as a duty on exportation, and as a bounty on importation. It is thus that fluctuations in the real exchange have a necessary tendency to correct themselves. They can never, for any considerable period, exceed the expense of transmitting bullion from the debtor to the creditor country. But the exchange cannot continue either permanently favourable or unfavourable to this extent. When favourable, it corrects itself by restricting exportation and facilitating importation; and when unfavourable, it produces the same effect by giving an unusual stimulus to exportation, and by throwing obstacles in the way of importation. The true PAR forms the centre of these oscillations; and although the thousand circumstances which are daily and hourly affecting the state of debt and credit, prevent the ordinary course of exchange from being almost ever precisely at par, its fluctua- tions, whether on the one side or the other, are confined within certain limits, and have a constant tendency to disappear. This natural tendency which the exchange has to correct itself, is powerfully assisted by the operations of the bill-merchants. England, for example, might owe a large excess of debt to Amsterdam, yet, as the aggregate amount of the debts due by a commercial country is generally balanced by the amount of those which it has to receive, the deficiency of bills on Amsterdam in London would most probably be compensated by a proportional redundancy of those on some other place. Now, it is the business of the merchants who deal in bills, in the same way as of those who deal in bullion or any other commodity, to buy them where they are cheapest, and to sell them where they are dearest. They would, therefore, buy up the bills drawn by other countries on Amsterdam, and dispose of them in London; and by so doing, would prevent any great fall in the price of bills on Amsterdam in those countries in which the supply exceeded the demand, and any great rise in Great Britain and those countries in which the supply hap- pened to be deficient. In the trade between Italy and this country, the bills drawn on Great Britain amount almost invariably to a greater sum than those drawn on Italy. The bill- merchants, however, by buying up the excess of the Italian bills on London, and selling Digitized by Google EXCHANGE. 659 them in Holland, and other countries indebted to England, prevent the real exchange from ever becoming very much depressed. III. Negotiation of Bills of Exchange.-Bills of exchange are either made payable at sight, at a certain specified time after sight or after date, or at usance, which is the usual term allowed by the custom or law of the place where the bill is payable. Generally, however, a few days are allowed for paymentbeyond the term when the bill becomes due. which are denominated days of grace, and which vary in different countries. In Great Britain and Ireland, three days' grace are allowed for all bills except those payable at sight, which must be paid as soon as presented. The following is a statement of the usance and days of grace for bills drawn upon some of the principal commercial cities:- [m/d. m/s. d/d. d|s. d/a. respectively denote months after date, months after sight, days after date, days after sight, days after acceptance.] London on Usance. Days of London on Usance. Days of London on Usance. Days of Grace. Grace. Grace. Amsterdam 1 m/d. 6 Geneva 30 d d. 5 Viennat 14 d|a. 3 Rotterdam 1 m/d. 6 Madrid 2 m's. 14 Malta 30 d d. 13 Antwerp 1 m d. 6 Cadiz 60 d. 6 Naples 3 m d. 3 Hamburgh 1 12 Bilboa 2 m d. 14 Palermo 3 m d. 0 Altona 1 m d. 12 Gibraltar 2 m S. 14 Lisbon 30 d S. 6 Dantzic 14 d a. 10 Leghorn 3 in d. 0 Oporto 30 d S. 6 Paris* 30 d d. 10 Leipsic 14 d a. 0 Rio Janeiro 30 d d. 6 Bordeaux 30 d.d. 10 Genoa 3 m d. 30 Dublin 21 d s. 3 Bremen 1 m d. 8 Venice 3 m d. 6 Cork 21 d;s. 3 Barcelona 60 d'd. 14 In the dating of bills, the new style is now used in every country in Europe, with the ex- ception of Russia. In London, bills of exchange are bought and sold by brokers, who go round to the prin- cipal merchants and discover whether they are buyers or sellers of bills. A few of the brokers of most influence, after ascertaining the state of the relative supply and demand for bills, suggest a price at which the greater part of the transactions of the day are settled, with such deviations as particular bills, from their being in very high or low credit, may be subject to. The price fixed by the brokers is that which is published in Wettenhall's List; but the first houses generally negotiate their bills on 1, 1, 11, and 2 per cent. better terms than those quoted. In London and other great commercial cities, a class of middlemen speculate largely on the rise and fall of the exchange; buying bills when they expect a rise, and selling them when a fall is anticipated. It is usual, in drawing foreign bills of exchange, to draw them in sets, or duplicates, lest the first should be lost or miscarry. When bills are drawn in sets, each must contain a condition that it shall be payable only while the others remain unpaid: thus, the first is payable only, " second and third unpaid;" the second, first and third being unpaid," and the third, first and second unpaid." All bills of exchange must be drawn upon stamps as under:- Inland Bills and Notes.Not exceeding Two Months after Date, or Exceeding Two Sixty Days after Sight. Months, &c. £ s. £ s. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. If - - 20 and not above 55 - - - 0 1 0 0 1 6 Above 55 - 20 0 - - - 0 1 6 020 - 20 0 - 30 0 - - - 0 2 0 026 - 30 0 - 50 0 - - - 0 2 6 0 3 6 - 50 0 - 100 0 - - - 0 3 6 046 - 100 0 - 200 0 - - - 0 4 6 0 5 0 I 200 0 - 300 0 - - - 0 5 0 060 - 300 0 - 500 0 - - - 0 6 0 086 - 500 0 - 1,000 0 - - - 0 8 6 0126 - 1,000 0 - 2,000 0 - - - 0 12 6 0 15 0 - 2,000 0 - 3,000 0 - - - 0 15 6 150 - 3,000 0 - - - - - - 150 100 Promissory notes from 21. to 100Z. inclusive are not to be drawn payable to bearer on demand (ex- cepting bankers' re-issuable notes, which require a different stamp).-But notes for any sum exceed- ing 1001. may be drawn either payable to bearer on demand, or otherwise.-(See antè, p. 75.) Foreign Bills of Erchange.-Foreign bill, drawn in but payable out of Great Britain, if drawn singly the same duty as an inland bill. Foreign bills of exchange, drawn in sets, 8. d. s. d. for every bill of each set, if the sum does Exceeding 500l. and not exceeding 1,0001. 50 not exceed 1001. - 1 6 - 1,000l. - 2,000! 7 6 Exceeding 1001. and not exceeding 2001. - 3 0 - 2,0001. - 3,0001. 10 0 - 2001. - 5001. - 40 - 3,000l. - - 15 0 No one acquainted with the fundamental rules of arithmetic can have any difficulty what- ever in estimating how much a sum of money in one country is worth in another, according to the state of the exchange at the time. The common arithmetical books abound in examples * In France, no days of grace are allowed on bills payable a tue. + In Austria, bills payable at sight, OF on demand, or at less than 7 days after sight or date, are not allowed any days of grace. Digitized by Google 660 EXCHANGE. of such computations. But in conducting the business of exchange, a direct remittanceisnet always preferred. When a merchant in London, for example, means to discharge a debt due by him in Paris, it is his business to ascertain not only the state of the direct exchange between London and Paris, and, consequently, the sum which he must pay in London for a bill on Paris equivalent to his debt, but also the state of the exchange between London and Hamburgh, Hamburgh and Paris, &c.; for it frequently happens that it may be more advan- tageous for him to buy a bill on Hamburgh, Amsterdam, or Lisbon, and to direct his agent to invest the proceeds in a bill on Paris, rather than remit directly to the latter. This is termed the ARBITRATION of exchange. An example or two will suffice to show the prim- ciple on which it is conducted. Thus, if the exchange between London and Amsterdam be 35s. Flemish (old coinage) per pound ster- ling, and between Paris and Amsterdam 1s. 6d. Flemish per franc, then, in order to ascertain whether a direct or indirect remittance to Paris would be most advantageous, we must calculate what would be the value of the franc in English money if the remittance were made through Holland; for if it be less than that resulting from the direct exchange, it will obviously be the preferable mode of remit- ting. This is determined by stating, as 35s. Flem. (the Amsterdam currency in a pound sterling) Is. 6d. Flem. (Amsterdam currency in a franc) 11. 10d. the proportional, or arbitrated value of the franc.-Hence, if the English money, or bill of exchange, to pay a debt in Paris, were remitted by Amsterdam, it would require 10d. to discharge a debt of a franc, or 11. to discharge a debt of 24 france: and, therefore, if the exchange between London and Paris were at 24, it would be indifferent to the English merchant whether he remitted directly to Paris, or indirectly via Amsterdam but if the ex- change between London and Paris were above 24, then a direct remittance would be preferable; while, if, on the other hand, the direct exchange were less than 24, the indirect remittance ought as plainly to be preferred. Suppose," to borrow an example from Dr. Kelly (Universal Cambist, vol. ii. p. 137.), "the ex- change of London and Lisbon to be at 68d. per milree, and that of Lisbon on Madrid 500 rees per dollar, the arbitrated price between London and Madrid is 34d. sterling per dollar; for as 1,000 rees 66d. 500 rees 34d. But if the direct exchange of London on Madrid be 35d. sterling per dollar, then London, by remitting directly to Madrid, must pay 35d. for every dollar; whereas, by remitting through Lisbon, he will pay only 34d. it is, therefore. the interest of London to remit indirectly to Madrid through Lis- bon. On the other hand, if London draws directly on Madrid, he will receive 35d. sterling per dollar; whereas, by drawing indirectly through Lishon, he would receive only 34d. : it is, therefore, the interest of London to draw directly on Madrid. Hence the following rules 1. Where the certain price is given, draw through the place which produces the lowest arbitrated price, and remit through that which produces the highest. "2. Where the uncertain price is given, draw through that place which produces the highest arbitrated price, and remit through, that which produces the lowest." In compound arbitration, or when more than 3 places are concerned, then in order to find how much a remittance passing through them all will amount to in the last place, or, which is the same thing, to find the arbitrated price between the first and the last, we have only to repeat the different statements in the same manner as in the foregoing example. Thus, if the exchange between London and Amsterdam be 35s. Flem. for 11. sterling; between Am- sterdam and Lisbon 42d. Flem. for 1 old crusade and between Lisbon and Paris 480 rees for 3 france: what is the arbitrated price between London and Paris In the first place, as 35a. Flem. II. : 42d. Flem. 2s. sterling = 1 old crusade. Second, as 1 old crusade, or 400 rees: 2s. sterling 480 rees: 2s. 48d. sterling = 3 francs. Third, as 2s. 48d. sterling: 3 francs 11. sterling 25 francs, the arbitrated price of the pound ster- ling between London and Paris. This operation may be abridged as follows :- 11. sterling. 11. sterling = 35s. Flemish. 31 shillings Flem. = 1 old crusade. 1 old crusade - 400 rees. 480 rees - 3 france. 35 x 400 x 3 4,200 Hence = = 25 francs. 480 3t 168 This abridged operation evidently consists in arranging the terms so that those which would form the divisors in continued statements in the Rule of Three are multiplied together for a common di- visor, and the other terms for a common dividend. The ordinary arithmetical books abound with examples of such operations. The following account of the manner in which a very large transaction was actually conducted by indirect remittances, will sufficiently illustrate the principles we have been endeavouring to explain. In 1804, Spain was bound to pay to France a large subsidy and, in order to do this, three distinct methods presented themselves:- 1. To send dollars to Paris by land. 2. To remit bills of exchange directly to Paris. 3. To authorise Paris to draw directly on Spain. The first of these methods was tried. but it was found too slow and expensive and the second and third plans were considered likely to turn the exchange against Spain. The following method by the indirect, or circular exchange, was, therefore, adopted. A merchant, or banquier, at Paris, was appointed to manage the operation, which he thus conduct- ed :-He chose London, Amsterdam, Hamburgh, Cadiz, Madrid, and Paris, as the principal binges on which the operation was to turn; and he engaged correspondents in each of these cities to support the circulation. Madrid and Cadiz were the places in Spain from whence remittances were to be made; and dollars were, of course, to be sent to where they bore the highest price, for which bills were to be procured on Paris, or on any other places that might be deemed more advantageous. The principle being thus established, it only remained to regulate the extent of the operation, 90 as not to issue too much paper on Spain, and to give the circulation RS much support as possible from real business. With this view, London was chosen A8 a place to which the operation might be chicfly directed, as the price of dollars was then high in England; a circumstance which rendered the pro- portional exchange advantageous to Spain. The business was commenced at Paris, where the negotiation of drafts issued on Hamburgh and Amsterdam served to answer the immediate demands of the state; and orders were transmitted to these places to draw for the reinbursements on London, Madrid, or Cadiz, according as the course of exchange was most favourable. The proceedings were all conducted with judgment, and attended will Digitized by Google EXCHANGE. 661 complete success. At the commencement of the operation, the course of exchange of Cadiz on Lon- don was 36d. ; but, by the plan adopted, Spain got 394d., or above 8 per cent. by the remittance of dol- lars to London, and considerable advantages were also gained by the circulation of bills through the several places on the Continent.-(Kelly's Cambist, vol. ii. p. 168.; Dubost's Elements of Commerce, 2d ed. p. 218.) LAW OF BILLS OF EXCHANGE. The chief legal privileges appertaining to bills are, first, that though only a simply contract, yet they are always presumed to have been originally given for a good and valuable consideration ; and, se- condly they are assignable to a third person not named in the bill or party to the contract, so as to vest in the assignee a right of action, in his own name which right of action, no release by the drawer to the acceptor, nor set-off or cross demand due from the former to the latter, can affect. All persons, whether merchants or not, being legally qualified to contract, may be parties to a bill. But no action can be supported against a person incapable of binding himself, on a bill drawn, indorsed, or accepted by such incapacitated person; at the same time the bill is good against all other compe- tent parties thereto. Bills may be drawn, accepted, or indorsed by the party's agent or attorney verbally authorised for the purpose. When a person has such authority, he must either write the name of his principal, or state in writing that he draws, &c. as agent: thus, per procuration, for A. B." Where one of several partners accepts a bill drawn on the firm, for himself and partners, or in his own name only, such acceptance binds the partnership if it concern the trade. But the acceptance of one of several partners on behalf of himself and partners, will not bind the others, if it concern the acceptor only in a separate and distinct interest ; and the holder of the bill, at the time he becomes so, was aware of that circumstance. If, however, he be a bonú fide holder for a sufficient consideration, and had no such knowledge at the time he first became possessed of the bill, no subsequently acquired knowledge of the misconduct of the partner in giving such security will prevent him from recovering on such bills against all the partners. Although no precise form of words is required to constitute a bill of exchange or promissory note, yet it is necessary that it should be payable at all crents, and not depend on any contingency and that It be made for the payment of money only, and not for payment of money and performance of some other act, as the delivery of a horse, or the like. If, however, the event on which the payment is to depend must Inevitably happen, it is of no im- portance how long the payment may be in suspense 80 a bill is negotiable and valid if drawn payable 6 weeks after the death of the drawer's father, or payable to an infant when he shall become of age Any material alteration of a bill after it has been drawn, accepted, or indorsed, such as the date, sum, or time of payment, will invalidate it: but the mere correction of a mistake, as by inserting the words "or order," will have no such effect. The negotiability of a bill depends on the insertion of sufficient operative words of transfer; such as by making it payable to A. or order, or to A. or bearer, or to bearer generally. Although a bill is presumed to have been originally drawn upon a good and valuable consideration, yet in certain cases a want of sufficient consideration may be insisted on in defence to an action on a bill. Certain considerations have been made illegal by statute; as for signing a bankrupt's certificate, for money won at gaming, or for money lent on a usurious contract. But with respect to gaming, it is held, that a bill founded on a gambling transaction is good in the hands of a bona fide holder; and by 58 Geo. 3. c. 93. a bill or note in the hands of an innocent holder, although originally founded on a usu- rious contract, is not invalid. In general, if a bill is fair and legal in its origin, a subsequent illegal contract or consideration on the indorsement thereof will not invalidate it in the hands of a bond fide holder. A bill cannot be given in evidence in a court of justice, unless it be duly stamped, not only with a stamp of the proper value, but also of the proper denomination. Acceptance of a Bill.-An acceptance is an engagement to pay a bill according to the tenor of the ac- ceptance, which may be either absolute or qualified. An absolute acceptance is an engagement to pay a bill according to its request, which is done by the drawee writing Accepted" on the bill, and sub- scribing his name, or writing Accepted" only ; or merely subscribing his name at the bottom or across the bill. A qualified acceptance is when a bill is accepted conditionally as when goods conveyed to the drawee are sold, or when a navy bill is paid, or other future event which does not bind the ac- ceptor till the contingency has happened. An acceptance may be also partial; as to pay 1001., instead of 150L., or to pay at a different time or place from that required by the bill. But in all cases of a conditional or partial acceptance, the holder should, if he mean to resort to the other parties to the bill in default of payment, give notice to them of such partial or conditional acceptance. In all cases of presenting a bill for acceptance, it is necessary to present the bill at the house where the drawee lives, or where it is made payable. By 1 & 2 Geo. 4. c. 78., all bills accepted payable at a banker's or other place are to be deemed a general acceptance but if they are accepted payable at a banker's only, and not otherwise or elsewhere," it is a qualified acceptance, and the acceptor is not liable to pay the bill, except in default of payment when such payment shall have been first demanded at the banker's. The drawee is entitled to keep the bill 24 hours when presented for acceptance. The acceptance of an inland bill must be in writing on the fuce of the bill, or, if there be more parts than one. on one of such parts; nothing short of this constitutes a valid acceptance. If a bill is made payable a certain time after sight, it must, in order to fix the time when it is to be paid, be presented for acceptance, and the date of the acceptance should appear thus Accepted, July 1st, 1831." Due diligence is the only thing to be considered in presenting any description or bill for acceptance; and such diligence is a question depending on the situation of the parties, the distance at which they live, and the facility of communication between them. When the drawee refuses to accept, any third party, after protesting, may accept for the honour of the bill generally, or for the drawee, or for the indorser; in which case the acceptance is called an ac- ceptance supra protest. The drawers and indorsers are discharged from liability, unless due notice of non-acceptance when presented for acceptance, or non-payment at the time the bill becomes due, is given. These notices must be given with all due diligence to all the parties to whom the holder means to resort for pay- ment. Generally, in both foreign and Inland bills, notice is given next day to the immediate in- dorser, and such indorser is allowed a day, when he should give fresh notice to the parties who are liable to him. Notice may be sent by the post, however near the residence of the parties may be to each other and though the letter containing such notice should miscarry, yet it will be sufficient; but the letter containing the notice should be delivered at the General Post-office, or at a receiving-house appointed by that office, not to the bellman in the street. In all cases of notice, notice to one of several parties is held to be notice to all; and if one of several drawers be also the acceptor, it is not necessary to give notice to the other drawers. VOL. I.-3 K Digitized by Google 662 EXCHANGE. Upon the non-acceptance or non-payment of a bill, the holder, or a public notary for him, should protest it; that is, draw up a notice of the refusal to accept or pay the bill, and the declaration of the holder against sustaining loss thereby. Inland bills need not be protested in practice they are usually only noted for non-acceptance; but this, without the protest, is wholly futile, and nothing whatever to the evidence of the holder, while it entails a useless expense on those liable to pay. Indorsement of Bills.-An indorsement is the act by which the holder of a negotiable instrument transfers his right to another person, termed the indorsee. It is usually made on the back of a bill, and must be in writing ; but the law has not prescribed any set form of words as necessary to the ceremo- ny, and in general the mere signature of the indorser is sufficient. All bills payable to order or to bearer for 11. and upwards are negotiable by indorsement; and the transfer of them for a good consideration, before they are payable, gives a right of action against all the precedent parties on the bill, if the bills in themselves are valid; but a transfer after they are due will only place the holder in the situation of the person from whom he takes them. Bills may be transferred either by delivery only, or by indorsement and delivery bills payable to order are transferred by the latter mode only; but bills payable to bearer may be transferred by either mode. On a transfer by delivery, the person making it ceases to be a party to the bill; but on a transfer by indorsement, he is to all intents and purposes chargeable as a new drawer. A bill originally transferable may be restrained by restrictive words; for the payee or indorsee. having the absolute property in the bill, may, by express words, restrict its currency, by indorsing it " Payable to A. B. only," or to A. B. for his use," or any other words clearly demonstrating his in- tention to make a restrictive and limited indorsement. Such special indorsement precludes the person in whose favour it is made from making a transfer, so as to give a right of action against the special indorser, or any of the precedent parties to the bill. In taking bills to account or discount, it is important well to examine all special indorsements. Lord Tenterden decided that a person who discounts a bill indorsed Pay to A. B. or order for my use," discounts it subject to the risk of having to pay the money to the special indorser, who $0 limited the application for my use; thus a party may be liable to pay the amount of the bill twice over, unless he previously ascertains that the payment has been made conformably to the import of the indorsement. After the payment of part, a bill may be indorsed over for the residue. Presentment for Payment-The holder of a bill must be careful to present it for payment at the time when due, or the drawer and indorsers will be exonerated from their liability ; even the bankruptcy, insolvency, or death of the acceptor will not excuse a neglect to make presentment to the assignees or executor; nor will the insufficiency of a bill in any respect constitute an excuse for non-presentment; the presentment should be made at a reasonable time of the day when the bill is due; and if by the known custom of any trade or place bills are payable only within particular hours, a presentment must be within those hours. If a bill has a qualified acceptance, the presentment should be at the place mentioned in such qualified acceptance, or all the parties will be discharged from their obli- gations. If a bill fall due on Sunday, Good Friday, Christmas Day, or any public fast or thanksgiving day, the presentment must be on the day preceding these holidays. By 7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 15., if a bill or note be payable on the day preceding these holidays, notice of the dishonour may be given the day following the holiday and if Christmas Day fall on Monday, notice may be given on Tuesday. Bills, however, payable at usance, or at a certain time after date or sight, or after demand, ought not to be presented for payment precisely at the expiration of the time nentioned in the bills, but at the expiration of what are termed days of grace. The days of grace allow vary in different coun- tries, and ought always to be computed according to the usage of the place where the bill is due.-See antè, p. 659.) At Hamburgh, and in France, the day on which the bill falls due, makes one of the days of grace; but no where else. On bills payable on demand, or #hen no time of payment is expressed, no days of grace are allowed; but they are payable instantly on presentment. On bank post bills no days of grace are claimed; but on a bill payable at sight the usual days of grace are allowed from the sight or demand. Payment of a bill should be made only to the holder; and it may be refused unless the bill be pro- duced and delivered up. On payment, a receipt should be written on the back and when a part is paid, the same should be acknowledged upon the bill, or the party paying may be liable to pay the amount a second time to a bona fide indorser. Promissory Notes and Checks.-The chief distinction between promissory notes and bills of exchange is, that the former are a direct engagement by the drawer to pay them according to their tenor. with- out the intervention of a third party as a drawee or acceptor. Promissory notes may be drawn payable on demand to a person named therein, or to order, or to bearer generally. They are assignable and indorsable and in all respects so nearly assimilated to bills by 3 & 4 Ann. c. 9., that the laws which have been stated as bearing upon the latter, may be generally understood as applicable to the former. In Edis V. Bury it has been decided, in case an instrument is drawn so equivocally as to render it uncertain whether it be a bill of exchange or promissory note, the holder may treat it as either against the drawer. Promissory notes, bills, drafts. or undertakings in writing, being made negotiable or transferable, for a less sum than 20s., are void, and persons uttering such are subject to a penalty not exceeding 201, recoverable before a justice of peace. The issue of any promissory note payable to bearer on demand for a less sum than 51. by the Bank of England, or any licensed English banker, is prohibited and by 9 Geo. 4, c. 65. it is provided. that no corporation or person shall utter or negotiate, in England, any such note which has been made or issued in Meotland, Ireland, or elsewhere, under a penalty not exceeding 201. nor less than 51. But this does not extend to any draft or order on bankers for the use of the drawer. Promissory notes for auy sum exceeding 1001. may be drawn payable to bearer on demand or other- wise; but notes from 21. to 1001. inclusive are not to be drawn payable to bearer on demand, except bankers' re-issuable notes, which require a different stamp. A check or draft is as negotiable as a bill of exchange, and vests in the assignee the same right of action against the assignor. As to the presentation of checks, &c., see CHECK. Any person making. accepting, or paying any bill, draft, order, or promissory note, not duly stamped, is liable to R penalty of 501. for post-dating them, 1001. ; and for not truly specifying the place where unstamped drafts are issued, 1001 ; and any person knowingly receiving such unstamped draft, 201.; and the banker knowingly paying it, 1001.; besides not being allowed such suin in account. Before concluding this article on mercantile paper, it may not be improper to introduce one or two cantions with regard to acceptances, and accoumodation paper, and proceedings in case of the loss of bills. First, A man should not put his name as acceptor to a bill of exchange without well considering whether he has the means of paying the same when due, as otherwise he may be liable not only to the costs of the action against himself, but also to the costs of the actions against the other parties to the bill: the shrewd tradesman is generally anxious to get the acceptance of his debtor at a short date, well knowing that it not only fixes the amount of the debt, but it is more speedily recoverable by legal procedure than a book debt. Digitized by Google EXCHANGE. 663 Secondly, Traders who wish to support their respectability, and desire to succeed in business, should be cautious in resorting to the destructive system of cross-accommodation acceptances it sel- dom ends well, and usually excites suspicion as to the integrity of the parties it being an expedient often adopted by swindlers to defraud the public. Independent of the expense in stamps and discounts, and frequently in noting, interest, and law expenses, the danger attending such accommodation is sufficient to deter from the practice. Suppose, for instance, A. and B. mutually accommodate each other to the amount of 1,000l. the acceptances being in the hands of third persons both A. and B. are liable to such third persons to the extent of 2,000% each; and should A. by any unforeseen occurrence be suddenly rendered unable to meet his acceptances, the holders of the whole, as well the accept- ances of A. as the acceptances of B., will resort to B. for payment; and it may 80 happen, that al- though B. could have provided for his own share of the accommodation paper, he may be unable to provide for the whole, and may thus become insolvent. Thirdly, In case of a loss of a bill, the 9 & 10 Will. 3. c. 17. provides, that if any inland bill be lost or missing within the time limited for its payment, the drawer shall on sufficient security given to indemnify him if such bill be found again, give another bill of the same tenor with the first. Lastly, It is of great importance to bankers and others taking bills and notes, that they should have some knowledge of the parties from whom they receive them; otherwise, if the instrument turn out to have been lost or fraudulently obtained, they may, without equivalent, be deprived of their securi- ty, on an action by the owner to recover possession. Lord Tenterden decided, "if a person take a bill, note, or any other kind of security, under circumstances which ought to excite suspicion in the mind of any reasonable man acquainted with the ordinary affairs of life, and which ought to put him on his guard to make the necessary inquiries, and he do not, then be loses the right of maintaining posses- sion of the instrument against the rightful owner."- Guildhall, Oct. 25, 1826.) 1. Table containing the VALUE OF THE MONIES of Account of different Places (expressed in Pence and Decimals of Pence), according to the Mint Price both of Gold and Silver in England that is, 31. 17s. 104d. per OZ. for Gold, and 5a. 2d. per oz. for Silver.-(Kelly's Cambist, vol. ii. p. 149.) Coins. Value in Value in Coins. Value in Value in Silver. Gold. Silver. Gold. d. d. Hamburgh, Pound Flemish cur- d. d. Aix-la-Chapelle, Rixdollar cur- rent - 111.15 variable rent - - 3140 31:43 Hanover, Rixdollar (In cash) - 42. 42.26 Amsterdam, Rixdollar banco Rixdollar (gold value) - 39 39-24 (agio at 4 per cent.) - 52.54 variable Königsberg, Gulden or florin - 12. variable Florin banco - - 21. ditto Leghorn, Pezza of 8 reals - 46.25 4916 Florin current - - 20.72 ditto Lira moneta buona - 8.13 8-55 Pound Flemish current 12432 ditto Lira moneta lunga - 7.79 8.19 Antwerp, Pound Flemish (mo- Leipsic, Rixdollar convention ney of exchange) - 123.25 123.87 money - 37.80 variable Florin (money of ex- Rixdollar in Louis d'ors change) - - 20.54 20-64 or Fredericks - - 39.68 Pound Flemish current 105.65 106-18 Malta, Scudo or crown - 21.32 23:34 Fiorin current - - 17-60 1770 Milan, Lira Imperiale - - 10:41 10:53 Barcelona, Libra Catalan - 28:14 2670 Lira corrente - - 7-45 7.44 Basil Rixdollar, or ecu of ex- Scudo Imperiale - 60.90 61.60 change - - 47.27 47- Scudo corrente - 42.32 4278 Rixdollar current - 42.45 42-20 Modena, Lira - - - 3.72 Berlin Pound banco - - 47.25 variable Munich, Gulden or florin - 21. 21.28 Rixdollar current - 35. ditto Naples, Ducat of 1818 - - 41:20 41.22 Berne, Ecu of 3 livres - - 42.64 42.90 Parma, Lira - - 2.35 2.40 Crown of 25 batzen - 35.53 35.75 Persia, Toman of 100 mamoodis 287.60 Bremen, Rixdollar current - 37.80 variable Poland, Gulden or florin - 6.03 6.27 Rixdollar in Carls d'op 39-68 Portugal, Milree - - - 67.34 Cassel, Rixdollar current - 37.80 variable Old crusade - - - 26.94 Cologne, Rixdollar specie of 80 Riga, Rixdollar Alberts - 52.54 variable albuses - - 31.38 ditto Rixdollar currency (agio Rixdollar current of 78 at 40 per cent.) - 37.53 ditto albuses - - 30.60 ditto Rome, Scudo or crown - 52.05 51-63 Constantinople, Piastre, or dollar 9:45 uncert. Scudo di stampa d'oro 79.37 78.73 Dantzic, Gulden or florin - a 9. Russia, Rouble - - - variable Denmark, Rixdollar specie - 54.72 Sardinia, Lira - - - 18:21 18:82 Rixdollar crown money 48.37 Sicily, Ounce - - - 123.54 124.80 RixdollarDanish currency 44 27 44.88 Rcudo or crown - 49.02 49.92 England, Pound sterling - 240 240 Spain, Real of old plate - 488 4 57 Florence, Lira - - , 8:12 8.53 Real of new plate 5.18 4.86 Ducat, or crown current 56:84 59.71 Real of Mexican plate 6.48 6.07 Scudo d'or,or gold crown - 63.97 Real vellon - - 2.59 2.43 France, Livre Tournois - 9.58 9:38 Dollar of old plate, or of Franc (new system) - 970 9.52 exchange - - 39. 36.59 Francfort, Rixdollar convention Sweden, Rixdollar - - 55:41 56:43 money - - 37:80 37.65 Switzerland, Franc, (new sys- Rixdollar Muntze, or in tem) - - 22.14 small coins - - 31.50 Trieste, Florin, Austrian cur- Germany, Rixdollar current - 37.80 variable rency - - 25.20 25.05 Rixdollar specie . - 50:40 ditto Lira, Trieste currency 4'76 4-73 Florin of the Empire - 25.20 ditto Lira di plazza - - 4.65 4-63 Rixdollar Muntze - 31 50 ditto Turin, Lira - - - 11.28 11.23 Florin Muntze - - 21. ditto Valencia, Libra - - 39:45 39.59 Geneva, Livre current - - 16.13 16:13 Venice, Lira piccola (in the old Florin - - - 4.60 484 coins) - - 5.07 variable Genoa, Lira fuori banco - 8. 7.83 Lira piccola (in the coins Pezza, or dollar of ex- introduced by the Aus- change - - 45.92 45.50 trians) - - 4.25 ditto Scudo di cambio, or Vienna, Florin - - - 25:20 25.05 crown of exchange - 36-75 36.02 Zante, Real - - - 4'06 variable Hamburgh, Mark banco (at med.) 18:22 variable Zurich, Florin (money of ex- Pound Flemish banco - 136.65 ditto change) - . 25.85 ditto Mark current - - 14.82 variable Florin current - - 23.50 ditto Digitized by Google 664 EXCHANGE. II. Par of Exchange between England and the following Places, viz. Amsterdam, Hamburgh, Parks, Madrid, Lisbon, Leghorn, Genoa, Naples, and Venice the same being computed from the intrinsic Value of their principal Coins, by comparing Gold with Gold, and Silver with Silver, according to their Mint Regulations, and to Assays made at the London and Paris Mints.-Presented by Dr. Kelly Payments.) to the Committee of the House of Lords, on the Expediency of the Bank's resuming Cash Gold. Silver. Explanations. Old Coinage. New Coinage. Mint Regula- Assays. Mint Mint Monies of Exchange. tions. Regula- Assays. Regula. Assays. tions. tions. Amsterdam, banco 36 8 36 6.8 37 3 37 10-5 35 0 35 6-5 Schillings and pence Flemish per pound sterling. Agio 2 per cent. Do. current 11 4-5 11 3.8 11 8-5 11 11-8 10 14-6 10 17.6 Florins and stivers per pound sterling. Hamburgh 3435 35 1-5 34 35 1-3 32 11 32 11.5 Schillings and pence Flemish banco per pound steri. Paris 25-20 25 26 24 73 24 91 23 23 23 40 France and centimes per pound sterling. Madrid 373 37-2 39.2 39-0 41.7 41-5 Pence sterling for the piastre or dollar of exchange. Lisbon 67-4 67.5 60.41 58-33 64.30 62-69 Pence sterling per milres. Leghorn 49-1 49-0 46-46 46-5 49-60 49-5 Pence sterling per pezza of exchange. Genoa 45-5 45-5 46-46 489 49.4 52-0 Pence sterling per pezra fuori banco." Naples 41-22 41-42 43.9 Pence sterling per ducat (new coinage of 1818). Venice 46.3 46-0 47.5 49-9 44'6 46-1 Lire piccole per pound sterling. III. An Account of the Course of Exchange, London, 18th of November, 1836, with some Explans- tory Statements. Course of Exchange. Explanatory Statements. Ameterdam, 3 ms. 12 1-2 that is, London receives 12 florins 4 1-2 stivers for IL Antwerp 12 21-2 - receives 12 dito 2 1-2 ditto for IL Hamburgh, mcs. beo. 13 11 - receives 13 marcs 11 schillings banco for IL Paris, 3 ms. 25 70 receives 25 france 70 centimes for 12 Francfort 151 3-4 - receives 151 3-4 batzen for 11. Petersburgh, p. rou. 3 us. 10 - gives 10 pence sterling for 1 rouble bank money. Vienna, eff. Flo. 2 ms. 10 10 - receives 10 florins 10 creutzers for 11. Madrid, 3 ms. 35 7-8 - gives 35 7-8 pence sterling for I dollar. Leghorn 48 - gives 48 ditto for I pezza of 8 reals. Genon 25 75 - receives 25 lire Italiane 75 cont. for 14 Venice, p. 6 Aust. livr. 47 1-2 - receives 47 1.2 lire piccoli for IL Naples 40 5-8 - gives 40 5.8 pence sterling for 1 ducato di regno. Lisbon, 30 days' sight 54 - gives 54 ditto for 1 milres. Rio Janeiro, ditto 36 - gives 36 ditto for I ditto. For further and more ample elucidations, see the articles on the great trading towns, in this Dic- tionary. [What follows is extracted from a report of the Secretary of the Treasury to Congress, dated May 26th, 1838 The American dollar contains 3711 grains of pure silver, or 416 grains of standard silver. The Spanish dollars are not all of the same weight. Those in circulation in 1829 were said by the director of the mint to be worth, on an average, 100 cents 3 mills. The Mexican dollars are said to be equal to the Spanish. The Carolus" dollars are the Spanish dollars coined prior to the year 1809, in the reigns of Charles III. and IV. They are said to be not superior in weight and fineness to the Mexican. The American eagle of the old coinage, previous to the 31st of July, 1834, contained 2471 grains of pure gold. The American eagle of the new coinage contains 232 grains of pure gold. The British sovereign, when coined, contains 113 grains and 18-1214 parts of a grain of pure gold, worth, according to our present mint valuation, #4 87 7-120. The Spanish doubloon should, according to the regulations which have nominally prevailed since the year 1772, contain 376 grains of pure gold, which would, at our mint valuation, be worth 16 dollars 20 cents. But, according to assays made at the London and Philadelphia mints, previous to the year 1829, Spanish doubloons contained only from 360 to 362 4-10 grains of pure gold. This would make their average value, at our mint valuation, about $15 561. The Patriot doubloons are said to be equal in weight and fineness to the Spanish. The difference in the price of Spanish and Patriot doubloons, and of the different species of dollars, at New York and Philadelphia, is chiefly owing to difference of demand for them in foreign markets. In the price currents, $4 44 4-9 are assumed as the par of exchange on England. This practice began when the Spanish pillar dollars were in circulation, and when the market value of gold, compared with silver, was less than it is at present. The true par varied as the market value of gold varied, when compared with silver. It was estimated by Mr. Gallatin, writing in 1829, at 7 per cent. above the nominal par; by others, at 8 per cent. Since the passage of the act of 1834, for reforming the American gold coinage, the true par exchange with England, estimating gold against gold, is about 9 7-10 above the nominal par. The quotations of exchange on France are 80 many francs and centimes payable in France for a dollar paid here. According to the regulations of the French mint, the silver franc should contain 69-453 troy grains of pure silver, equivalent to 18 708-1000 cents in silver currency of the United States. The quan- tity of pure silver in an American dollar is equal to that in 5 francs 34 535-1000 centimes. But as foreign coins are not a legal tender in France, and as a seignorage of about 11 per cent. is charged on silver coinage at the French mint, American dollars, when sold as bullion in France, are said to bring, on an average, not more than 5 francs 26 25-1000 centimes. This is, by some writers, assumed as the par of exchange on France. Other writers assume 5 francs 34 centimes as about par. The quotations of exchange on Holland, are so many cents a guilder; on Hamburg, so many cents a mark banco; and on Bremen, so many cents a rix dollar. The exact value of the guilder of Holland is 39 97-100 cents of United States silver currency; but 40 dents are usually assumed as the par of exchange. The mark banco of Hamburg is a money of account equal to 35 144-1000 cents United States cur- rency. The rix dollar of Bremen is a money of account, equal to 80 cents and a very small fraction United States currency. The currency of Genoa has consisted, since 1826, of Lire Italiane of exactly the same weight and fineness as francs; so that the par of exchange with Genoa is now the same as with Paris. Digitized by Google EXCHANGE. 665 The quotations of foreign exchanges are for bills payable sixty days after sight. The quotations of domestic exchange are for bills payable at sight. In the following tables the letter d. stands for discount and p. for premium. A Table showing the highest and lowest rates of foreign and domestic exchanges, and of specie, at New York, in each year, from 1825 to 1831. Billson 1825. 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. London 434 to ll p. 71-2 to 18 p. 934101134p. to 93-4boll-2p. 8 to 10 p. 6 to 9 1-S p. 61-4 to ll p. France P 520to 5 40 51218to58718 5101058118 to 51718to530 5 25 10 5 47 1-2 27 Holland 40 10 41 1-8c. 39 to 41 401-2 to 41 1-2 40 1-2 to 42 40 1-4 to 41 38 1-2 to 40 39 10 41 Boston par to 1 4 d. par to 1-2 d. 1.2 d. to par, par to 1.8 d. to 1-4101-2d. 1-4 to 1-2 d. par to 1 & d. to Phils telphia - par to 1-4 d. 1-4 to 1.2 d. 1-4 to 1.2 d. par par to l d. to 14tol-8d. 1-4 to 1-8 d. partol.8d. to Baltimore P 1-8 to ld. 1-2 to l d. 12teld. 3-410 1-8d. 1-2 to 3-4d. 4 to ld. Richmond 3-4 to 11-2d. 3-4 to 1.8d. 3-4to 11-2d. 3-4 to 1 1-4 d. 1d. 3-4 to 1 d. 3-4 to ld. North Carolina 31-2 lo 5 d. 23-41051-2d. Sto 6d. 33-4 to 14 d. to 2 to 4 d. 1 to & d. Charleston 3-4 to 3 d. 1 to 3 d. 114to2d. 11031-2d. 11-2to81-2d. 1 to & d. 12tolled. Savannah 11-4 to 3 1-2 d. 21-2 to 4d. 11-8 to 3 d. 1to31-8d. 11-Sto31-8d. 11.8102d. 1.2 to 1 1-2 d. New Orleans 1-4p-1021.2d. 1 103 d. par to 3 d. par to 3 d. 1to21-8d. Itoll-2d. 1-8 to 1 1-2 d. American gold 1 to 6 p. 81-2 to6 1-Sp. 41.8to71.2p. 5to7p- Sto6p. Sto41-Sp. Sto6p. Portuguese gold 11.2 to 6 p. 4to 61-2p. 41-Sto718p. 6 to 7 p. 3106p. 21041-2p. 21-2to 6 p. to Spanish doublooms D.15 50 to 16 18 1-8 15 50 to 15 87 16 50 to 16 66 15 70 to 16 50 15 40 to 16 80 15 10 to 16 00 1530 to 16 10 Patriot doubloons D.15 35 to 16 00 1490 to 15 50 15 30 to 15 75 15 36 to 15 85 15 10 to 15 50 15 00 to 15 45 15 10 to 15 65 Sovereigns 21.2 to 10 p. 6 th 11 1-2 p. 81-8tollp. 81-2to 10 p. 7 to 9 p. 4 to 9 p. 5 to 10 p. Heavy guiness 12to to 10 p. 6 to li p. 8 to 10 1.2 p. 8 to 10 p. 31.2w8p. 5to91-2p. Spanish dollars par to l p. parto l p. Htolp. to par to 1-8 p. par Carolus dollars 1.2103p. 1.8 to & p. 14toll4p. par to 1 & p. par partolisp. Mexican dollars 14to l p. 14tolp. par to 1.8 p. par parto I p. to Five franc pieces 11-8to s p. par to & p. par to 3-4 p. to parto 21-8 p. A Table showing the highest and lowest rates of foreign and domestic exchanges, and of specie, at New York, in each year, from January, 1832, to May 1st, 1838. Bills on 1832. 1833. 1834. 1835. 1836. 1837. 1838. London 71-8to 10 1-Sp. 5 to 83-4 p. 2d.to71-2p. 61-2 to 10 p. 63-4 to 10 p. to 71-Sto22p. 41.8101.2p. France 5 30 to 5 40 530 to 5 65 520 to 5 36 5821-8to 5371-8 4 70 10 5 36 5 20 10 6 47 1 -2 Holland 40 to 41 1-2 c. 39 to 41 37 to 39 1.8 39 to 40 39 1-4 to 40 1-2 Humburg 33 to 35 1-4 35 to 36 35 to 36 36 1-2 to 39 34 10 87 7-8 Bremen -10771.8c. 771-210791-4 78 to 79 3-4 79 18 to 67 77 to 81 1-4 Boston 1-4 to 1-2 d. 1-8d-tol-Sp. par par par to 3-4d. to parto 2 d. par to 2 d. Philadelphia 1-4 to 1-2 d. 1-4 to 1-2 d. 1-4 to - d. par to 1-4 d. par to 1 34 d. 11-4105d. Baltimere 1-410 1-8 d. 1-4 to 3-4d. 38to-d 3-8 to - d. to par to 3-8 d. to par to % d. 13410584d. Richmond 34 to 1 d. 3-4 to ld. 34 to 1 d. 34told. 34to11-2d. 1 to 3 d. 2 to 7 1.2 d. North Carolina 11-2 to 3 d. 21.2d. P-4818 21-8 to - d. 81-20-d. 21-2 to b d. -to5d. Charieston 1 to & d. 2d. 11-2 to & d. 1-2 to l d. 1-8 lo & d. 21-2 to 5 d. 2 to 8 d. Savannah 1 to & d. 11-Sto2d. 2d. Itolled 1 to 3 d. 2341010d. to New Orleans Itolled 1 to 1 12 d. ltoll-8d. 1-8 to ld. 1-2 to 4 d. 3 to 10 d. 2 10 18 d. American gold 31-2to6p. 2 to 43-4 p. 1.21061-Sp. 61-Sto-p. 61-2 to 16 p. 7 to 9 p. American, new coinage par par par par to 18 p. to 1-8 to 5 p. Sovereigns 61-2 to 9 1-4 p. 41.2to81-2p. & to 8 p. D.4 84 to 4 86 1-2 484 to 4 86 486 10 5 08 Heavy guiness 61-Sto 9 1-4 p. 41-21081-8p. 2 to 4 p. D.5 06 to 5 08 506 10 5 08 5 06 to 5 45 495 to 5 10 to Portuguese gold 21-2106p. 2 to 43-4 p. 1-8 to 6 1-2 p. 61-810-p. 61-8 to - p. 61-8 to 10 p. par to 21.2 p. Spinish doubloons D.1575 to 16 70 16 15 to 17 45 15 50 to 16 60 16 12 1-2 to 17 00 16 00 to 17 95 16 30 to 18 25 15 90 to 17 55 Patriot doubloons D.15 25 to 15 80 15 20 to 16 12 1490 to 15 60 15 50 to 16 15 15 63 to 16 30 to 15 75 to 17 60 15 53 to 16 30 to Spanish dollars 1-8 to 2 1.2 p. 1-2 to 4 1-4 p. parto 3 1-2 p. 1 to 5 p. 21-8 to 6 p. 2 to 15 p. 1 to 7 p. Carolus dollars 1 to 2 1-S p. par to 3 1-2 p. par 1 to 5 p. 21-8 to 6 p. 2 to 15 p. 11.2108p. Mexican dollars parto l p. par par par par to l p. par to parto l p. 1-4 to 5 p. American half do. par par par par par partoll p. 1-4 to 4 l-Sp. to Five-franc pieces par to 2 p. to par 93 to 98 1-2cts. to 93 to 94 1-2 93 1-4 10 95 94 to 106 93 10 96 Rates of Exchange at Philadelphia on London, Paris, and Amsterdam, from 1788 to 1814, with the paper medium of England valued in gold, and the London prices of standard gold and of Spanish dollars per oz. Exchange on. Paper medium London price of standard London price of Spanish Year. of England gold per OZ. dollars per oz. London. Paris. Amsterdam. valued in gold. 1788 3|p. 3p. 21 p. - 77 06 1789 31 p. 3p. 21 p. - 77 06 1790 2d. Hp. 21 p. - 77 06 5 001 to 02 1791 2 p. 10 d. 24 p. - 77 06 5 001 to 5 02 1792 2d. 22 d. - - 77 06 5 03 to 5 1793 4d. - - I 77 06 to 4 11 1794 4p. - 5p. - 77 06 4 111 to 5 01 1795 2 - 21p. - 77 06 4111 to 5 04f 1796 5¥ d. - - - 77 06 5 02 to 5 05 1797 2 d. - par - 77 06 to 101 4.10 to 5 061 1798 5¥ d. 5 d. - - 77 10} to 09 4 11 to 1799 7₫ d. - 7&d. - 77 09 to 77 07 5 051 to 5 07 1800 - - - par 77 101 to 5 09 1801 - - - 81 d. 85 5 09 to 5 11 1802 1p. - 21p. d. 84 5 03 to 5 041 1803 2p. - 2p. 21 80 5 021 to 5 06 1804 7 d. - par 21 d. 80 5 00 to 5 07 1805 I - - 21 d. 80 5 to 5 08 1806 - - - 21 d. 80 5 04 to 5 051 1807 - - - 21 d. 80 5 041 to 5 061 1808 - - - 21 d. 80 5 02 to 5 07 1809 - - - 21 d. 80 5 03 to 5 07 1810 - - - 13} d. 90 to 5 081- 1811 6 d. - - 8d. 84 06 5 101 to 6 011 1812 19 d. - - 201 d. 95 06 6 to 6 081 1813 16 d. - - 22 d. 101 6 111 to 7 001 1814 7 d. - - 25 d. 104 5 06 to 5 07 Note.-The rates of exchange, and the value of the paper medium of England, have been taken from a table appended to the letter of the Secretary of the Treasury, of May 29, 1830. From the same table has been taken the price of standard gold at London, from 1800 to 1814. The 3 K 2 84 Digitized by Google 666 EXCHANGE. London prices of standard gold, from 1790 to 1800, and of Spanish dollars, from 1790 to 1814, have been taken from Marshall's Statistics of the British Empire. The prices of gold and of Spanish dollars are expressed in shillings and pence sterling. Considerable difference exists among authorities as to the prices of gold, and the depreciation of the paper medium, during the suspension of specie payments by the Bank of England. The following was the rate of exchange on England at Boston and Baltimore, from 1800 to 1510, embracing the years for which no quotations are given at Philadelphia : Year. At Boston. At Baltimore. Year. At Boston. At Baltimers. 1800 4f d. to 3 p. 2 d. to 5 p. 1806 1 d. to 21 p. 2 d. to par 1801 1 to 5 d. 4 d. to 2. p. 1807 2 d. to 4 p. 2 d. to par 1802 3 d. to + p. 1 d. to 3t p. 1808 31 to 8 p. par to 8 p. 1803 1 to 4f p. par to 3t p. 1809 It d. to of p. par to 8p. 1804 par to 3 p. par to 31 p. 1810 21 to 74 d. 2 to 5 d. 1805 1 to 6 d. 5 d. to par Rates of exchange at Philadelphia on London, Paris, and Amsterdam, from 1815, to April, 1838, with the paper medium of Philadelphia valued in silver, the paper medium of England valued in gold, and the London price of standard gold and Spanish dollars per OZ. Exchange on Paper medium of Philadelphia Paper medium London price of London price of valued in Ame- of England standard gold per Spanish dollars Year London. Paria. Amsterdam. rican silver. valued in gold. OK per OR. 1815 1 d. to 18 p. 23 p. 22 p. 5 to 16 d. 6 to 26f d. 83 to 106 5 03 to 6 09 1816 of to 19 p. 12 to 23 p. 71 to 20 p. 7 to 16 d. 1 to 5 d. 78 06 to 82 4 10 1817 If to If p. par to 91 p. 1 d. to 71 p. 41 d. to par 1 to 24 d. 78 06 to 80 5 04 1818 par to 2 p. + p. - par 31. to 51 d. 80 06 to 81 06 05 to 5 06 1819 1 d. to 3 p. 1p. - - 41 d. to par 77 10f to 81 06 5 02 to 5 09 1820 f d. to 3f p. 6 d. 61 d. - par 77 10f 4 101 to 5 02 1821 34 to 121 p. 6 d. to par 1 d. to par - - 77 10t 09 to 4 11 1822 81 to 13 p. par to 21 p. par to It p. - - 77 10f to 77 06 4 09 to 4 10 1823 5 to 12t p. 21 d. to 3} p. 1 d. to If p. - - 77 06 4 081 to 4 091 1824 71 to 111 p. 21 d. to 21 p. 1 d. to If p. - - 77 06 to 77 09 091 to 4 104 1825 5 to 10f p. It d. to 21 p. If to 3 p. - - 77 06 to 77 10+ 4 10+ to 4 111 1826 71 to 12+ p. 3 d. to t p. 11 d. to 11/ p. - - 77 06 4 091 to 4 11 1827 10 to 111 p. d. to 2. p. par to 3t p. - - 77 06 4 091 to 4 10+ 1828 91 to 11 p. 11 to 21 p. If to 3 p. - - 77 09 to 77 101 4 091 to 4 111 1829 of to 10 p. + d. to 2} p. 11 d. to 21 p. - - 77 09 to 77 10f 08; to 4 09; 1830 6 to 91 p. 3 d. to I p. 31 d. to par - - 77 09 to 77 104 08: to 4 091 1831 to 102 p. d. to 31 p. 11 d. to 21 p. - - 77 09 to 87 101 091 to 4 101 1832, 7 to 11 p. 2f d. to 11 p. 21 d. to 31 p. - - 77 09 to 77 10+ 4 081 to 4 IIf 1833 5 to 9 p. I to 41 d. 1 d. to 21 p. - - 77 09 to 77 10f 1834 2 d. to 8 p. 1 to 7 d. It to 5 d. - - 77 09 to 77 101 1835 71 to 10 p. 31 d. to 11 p. 5 d. to 11. p. - - 77 09 to 77 101 1836 7 to 101 p. 11 d. to 11 p. 21 d. to 2f p. - - 77 09 to 77 101 1837 to 21 p. It d. to 9f p. par to 121 p. par to 12 d. - 77 09 to 77 10+ 1838 8 to 12 p. 11 d. to 21 p. par to 31 p. 3 to 6 d. - 77 09 to 77 10f The rates of exchange from 1815 to 1828, the value of the paper medium of Philadelphia from 1815 to 1818, and the London price of standard gold from 1815 to 1825, have been taken from a table ap- pended to the Treasury report of May 29, 1830. In forming that table, 5 france 26 centimes were assumed as the par of exchange on Paris, and 40 cents a guilder, as the par of exchange on Amsterdam. In calculating the rates of exchange on Paris and Amsterdam, from 1829 to 1838, it has not been thought necessary to assume a new par. The prices of Spanish dollars in London from 1815 to 1818, have been taken from Marshall's Sta- tistics of the British Empire. The prices of standard gold London from 1826 to 1832, and of Spanish dollars at London from 1819 to 1832, have been taken from the "Report from the Committee of Secrecy on the Bank of England Charter." From the Report of the Select Committee on the Royal Mint," ordered to be printed June 30, 1837, it appears that, though standard gold has been steadily quoted in the price currents since the year 1832, at 77 shillings and 9 pence per ounce, it is not unfrequently sold at 77 shillings and 101 pence. On this authority, and that of some late English papers, the price of gold is represented in the table as having been the same from 1833 to 1838, that it was from 1829 to 1832.-Am. Ed.] EXCHEQUER BILLS. See FUNDS. EXPECTATION, of life. See INSURANCE. EXPORTATION, in commerce, the act of sending or carrying commodities from one country to another.-(See IMPORTATION and EXPORTATION.) EXCISE, the name given to the duties or taxes laid on such articles as are produced and consumed at home. Customs duties are those laid on commodities when imported into or exported from a country. Excise duties were introduced into England by the Long Parliament in 1643; being then laid on the makers and venders of ale, beer, cider, and perry. The royalists soon after followed the example of the republicans; both sides declaring that the excise should be continued no longer than the termi- nation of the war. But it was found too productive a source of revenue to be again relinquished; and when the nation had been accustomed to it for a few years, the parliament declared, in 1649, that the impost of excise was the most easy and indifferent levy that could be laid upon the people." It was placed on a new footing at the Restoration and notwithstanding Mr. Justice Blackstone says, that from its first original to the present time its very name has been odious to the people of Eng- land"- (Com. book i. c. 3.),-it has continued progressively to gain ground; and is at this momest imposed on a variety of most important articles, and furnishes nearly half the entire public revenue of the kingdom. The prejudices in the public mind to which Blackstone has alluded, against the excise duties, neems Digitized by Google EXCISE. 667 to have originated more in the regulations connected with their imposition, than in the oppressive ex- tent to which they have sometimes been carried. The facilities of smuggling, and the frauds that might be committed upon the revenue, unless a strict watch were kept, have led to the enactment of several rather severe regulations. The officers have been empowered to enter and search the houses of such individuals as deal in exciseable commodities at any time of the day, and in most instances also of the night. And the proceedings in cases of transgression are of such a nature, that persons may be convicted in heavy penalties, by the summary judgment of 2 commissioners of excise, or 2 jus- tices of the peace, without the intervention of a jury. For the more easily levying the revenue of excise, England and Wales are divided into about 56 col- lections, some of which are called by the names of particular counties, others by the names of great towns, where one county is divided into several collections, or where a collection comprehends the contiguous parts of several counties. Every such collection is subdivided into several districts, within which there is a supervisor; and each district is again subdivided into out-rides and foot-walks, within each of which there is a guager or surveying officer. Abstract of the Gross Excise Revenue of England, Scotland, and Ireland, for 1832, 1833, and 1834. 1832. 1833. 1834. L d. L d. The expense of collecting the excise revenue, in 1834, 8. 8. L. 8. d. England 14,616,143 17 6 amounted in Great Britain to 62. 1a. 5 1-4d. per cent. of the 14,922,847 1 11 13,061,852 3 714 Scotland 1,714,627 18 6 1,928,810 13 5 1,966,183 II 11-4 gross produce, and in Ireland to 94. 6a. 81-2d. per do. The Ireland 1,865,299 10 2 1,790,502 7 6 1,849,256 = 10 total gross receipt of the excise revenue in the United King- dom, in 1835, was 15,229,352L United K. 18,266,071 6 2 18,642,160 2 9 16,877,292 6 63-4 This falling off in the excise revenue is apparent only, having been entirely occasioned by the trans- ference of the tea duty from the excise to the customs, and by the repeal of certain duties, as those on tiles, sweets, starch, &c., and the reduction of others. The excise duty of 1835 was collected (exclud- ing arrears) from ten articles only, viz. auctions, bricks, glass, hops, licences, malt, paper, soap, spirits, and vinegar. Of these the duty on glass is by far the most objectionable.-(Bee art. GLASS.) But were it repealed we do not know, now that the paper duties are reduced (see art. PAPER), that any of the others can be justly objected to. That on bricks, is, perhaps, the most exceptionable. The table below shows in detail the quantities and numbers of the articles and persons charged with excise duties in 1832, 1833, and 1834, and the gross revenue they respectively produced each year.-N. B. Tea has since been transferred to the customs; and the duties on tiles, starch, stone bottles, and sweets have been repealed. (For detailed accounts of the duties and regulations affecting the different articles subject to the excise, see those articles.) Complexity of Excise Laws.-The great objection to the excise laws, as they at present stand, con- sists in their obscurity and complexity. Being intended for the guidance of traders, they ought to be brief, clear, and level to the apprehension of every one; but, instead of this, they are in the last de- gree lengthened, contradictory, and unintelligible. There are, at this moment, some 40 or 50 acts in existence relating to the duties on glass, and from 25 to 30 relating to those on paper so that it is all but impossible for any one to tell what the law is on many points. This disgraceful state of things might, however, be easily remedied, by getting the Treasury to prepare a short digest of the law as to each duty, drawn up in a clear and unambiguous manner; and enacting, that a manufacturer or dealer abiding by this abstract should be held to have abided by the law, and should not be liable to be fur- ther questioned on the subject. The adoption of some plan of this sort would be the greatest improve- ment which it seems possible to introduce into the excise. An Account of the Quantities of the several Articles charged with Duties of Excise, in the United Kingdom, together with the Gross Amount of Duty thereon, during the Years 1832, 1833, and 1834. -(Papers published by Board of Trade, vol. iv. p. 28.) Quantities charged. Amount of Duty. Articles. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1832. 1833. 1834. L. s. d. L. 8. d. L. s. d. Auctions, amount of sales charged with duty L. 6,523,753 6,867,396 7,331,892 236,319 8 0 243,981 11 11 256,336 7 103-4 Bricks No. 998,346,362 1,103,591,566 1,180,161,228 294,322 18 10 304,942 1 11 347,305 5 21-2 Tiles 76,601,051 8,293,186 38,010 17 I 4,680 1 1 Glass, crown cwts. 103,902 129,984 136,708 381,839 17 0 477,691 4 0 502,401 18 0 Flint 79,468 78,387 83,325 212,145 6 5 219,483 12 0 233,304 8 0 Plate - 12,270 14,518 18,922 35,810 0 0 43,586 6 0 56,781 4 0 Broad 5,304 6,306 6,766 7,956 0 0 9,459 0 0 10,149 0 0 Bottle 312,361 323,398 344,014 109,326 7 0 113,189 6 0 120,404 18 0 Hops lbs. 29,012,406 32,777,310 39,587,497 241,770 1 0 272,894 5 0 329,895 16 2 Licenses, auctioneers' No. 3,628 3,686 3,604 18,140 0 0 18,430 0 0 18,020 0 0 Brewers of strong beer, not exceeding 20 barrels - 8,623 8,527 8,496 4,311 10 0 4,263 10 0 4,248 0 0 Ditto exceeding 20 and not exceeding 50 6,848 7,249 7,276 6,848 0 0 7,249 0 0 7,276 0 0 Ditto exceeding 50 and not exceeding 100 - 9,165 9,540 9,861 13,747 10 0 14,310 0 0 14,791 10 0 Ditto exceeding 100 and not exceeding 1,000 - 16,888 17,390 18,433 33,776 0 0 34,780 0 0 36,866 0 0 Ditto exceeding 1,000 brls. - 1,564 1,710 1,806 14,610 15 0 15,395 5 0 17,212 15 0 Brewers of table beer - 134 96 69 217 5 0 87 10 0 74 0 0 Retail brewers, under the act 5 Geo. 4. c. 54. - 50 50 47 262 10 0 262 10 0 246 15 0 Sellers of strong beer only, not being brewers - 911 966 1,074 2,869 13 0 3,042 IS 0 3,383 2 0 Beer retailers, hose pre- mises are rated under 20L per annum - 70,142 73,390 72,755 73,649 2 0 77,068 19 0 76,392 15 0 Ditto at 201. or upwards - 17,052 17,439 17,393 53,713 16 0 54,923 8 0 54,787 19 0 Retailers of beer, cider, or perry, under the acts 1 Will. 4. c. 64., and 4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 85. - 33,515 34,976 37,381 70,381 10 0 73,449 12 0 90,997 4 0 Ditto of cider and perry only, under the said acts - 188 653 1,054 197 8 0 685 13 0 1,106 14 0 Tea and coffee dealers - 100,191 101,579 103,549 55,105 1 0 55,868 9 0 56,951 19 0 Glass manufacturers I 118 126 122 2,360 0 0 2,520 0 0 2,440 0 0 Maltsters - 12,822 13,243 12,891 23,869 10 0 24,346 12 6 23,931 5 0 Paper makers - 592 682 571 2,368 0 0 2,328 0 0 2,284 0 0 Paper stainers 138 154 150 552 0 0 616 0 0 600 0 0 Soap makers 615 499 471 2,060 0 0 1,996 0 0 1,884 0 0 Distillers and rectifiers - 466 450 4b3 4,660 0 0 4,500 0 0 4,530 0 0 Digitized by Google 668 EXCISE. Table-continued. Quantities charged. Amount of Duty. Articles. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1832. 1833. 1834. Licenses-continued L 8. d. L. s. d. L. 1. d. Dealers in spirits, not be- ing retailers No. 3,772 3,894 3,925 37,720 0 0 38,940 0 0 39,250 0 0 Retailers of spirits, whose premises are rated under 101. per annum - 38,450 41,018 39,161 80,745 0 0 86,137 16 0 121,644 12 0 Do. do. at 10/. & under 201. - 26,201 26,887 26,358 110,044 0 0 112,925 8 0 165,446 8 0 - 20L - 251. - 3,700 3,728 3,645 23,310 0 0 23,486 8 0 34,261 10 0 - 25/. - 301. - 2,154 2,199 2,159 15,831 18 0 16,162 13 0 23,655 19 6 - 30L - 40L - 3,879 3,928 3,875 32,583 12 0 32,995 4 0 48,459 12 0 - 40L 50L - 2,472 2,503 2,528 23,360 8 0 23,653 7 0 35,357 3 6 - 50L & upwards - 4,700 4,894 4,846 49,350 0 0 51,387 0 0 75,363 15 0 Makers of stills - 44 28 23 12 0 0 14 0 0 11 10 0 Chemists or any other trade requiring a still - 52 66 68 26 0 0 33 0 0 3400 Retailers of spirits in Ire- land, being duly licensed to sell coffee, tea, &c., whose premises are rated under 251. per annum - 68 84 102 642 12 0 793 16 0 963 18 0 Do. do. at 251. & under 30L - 4 4 7 42 0 0 42 0 0 73 10 0 - 30/. - 40L - 5 4 7 57 15 0 46 4 0 80 17 0 - 401. 501. - 8 11 9 100 16 0 138 12 0 113 8 0 - 501. and upwards - 36 38 30 491 8 0 518 14 0 409 10 0 Starch makers - 59 60 60 295 0 0 300 0 0 300 0 0 Makers of sweets - 25 27 28 52 10 0 56 14 0 58 16 0 Retailers of ditto - 883 923 924 927 3 0 969 0 0 970 4 0 Manufacturers of tobacco and snuff - 739 741 720 6,440 0 0 6,565 0 0 6,550 0 0 Dealers in ditto - 164,058 167,785 172,300 41,014 10 0 41,946 5 0 43,075 0 0 Vinegar makers - 54 55 54 270 0 0 275 0 0 270 0 0 Dealers in foreign wine, not having a licence for retailing spirits, and a licence for retailing beer - 1,960 1,990 1,960 19,600 0 0 19,000 0 0 19,600 0 0 Dealers in foreign wine, having a licence to retail beer, but not having a li- cence to retail spirits - 99 83 115 373 16 0 348 12 0 483 0 0 Dealers in foreign wine, having licences to retail beer and spirits - 23,111 24,079 23,714 48,533 2 0 50,565 18 0 49,799 8 0 Passage vessels, on board which liquor and tobac. CO are sold - 257 279 280 257 0 0 279 0 0 280 0 0 Surcharges 3,792 14 3 3,753 15 9 4,174 7 6 Amount of duty on licenses granted for periods less than a year 17,567 8 0 18,060 5 0 18,328 S 0 Malt from barley bush. 36,343,094 38,851,522 39,807,287 4,694,316 6 0 5,018,321 14 5 5,141,774 11 5 From beer or bigg - 1,047,355 1,224,368 1,338,309 104,735 10 0 123,436 16 0 133,830 IS 0 Paper, first class lbs. 49,404,596 51,941,859 54,053,721 617,557 9 0 649,273 4 9 675,671 10 3 Second class - 15,531,059 16,477,105 16,562,168 97,069 2 2 102,981 17 " 103,451 0 11 1-2 Pasteboard, millboard, &c. cwts. 43,468 46,655 49,392 48,468 9 6 52,246 18 6 54,689 0 3 Stained paper yards 7,140,347 7,970,761 8,749,144 52,064 18 3 58,120 2 3 63,795 16 534 Soap, hard lbs. 119,503,092 138,170,787 144,344,043 1,493,788 13 I 1,115,167 19 0 902,150 5 4 Soft - 10,350,703 11,731,156 10,401,281 75,473 17 4 59,253 4 4 43,338 13 5 Spirits galls. 20,778.521 21,874,455 23,397,806 4,975,438 5 10 5,253,513 19 OF 5,243,438 6 10 Starch lbs. 8,070,026 8,805,513 4,726,921 109,281 11 9 119,241 6 2 64,010 8 0 1-4 Stone bottles cwts. 16,626 17,038 16,911 4,156 10 0 4,259 10 0 4,227 15 0 Sweets galls. 158,932 122,267 126,805 3,973 6 0 3,056 13 6 3,170 2 6 Tea lbs. 31,548,407 31,829,619 14,427,616 3,509,820 15 6 3,444,103 7 7 1,455,365 19 10 Vinegar galls. 2,914,261 2,863,080 3,091,254 24,285 10 2 23,859 0 0 25,760 9 0 Total 18,266,071 6 2 18,642,160 2 9 16,877,292 6 634 The laws with respect to the general management of the excise or secreted, in order to avoid the duty, to be forfeited; and every were consolidated by the 7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 53, from which the fol- person assisting in such removal shall forfeit and lose treble lowing particulars are selected :- the value of such goods, or 100L, at the discretion of the commin- Comminioners-Four commissioners constitute a board. They sioners. are to be subject, in all things relating to their peculiar duty, to the Obstructing Officers-All persons who shall oppose, molest, atc. orders of the Treasury. They may appoint collectors and other sub- any officer of excise in the execution of his duty, shall respectively, ordinate officers, and give them such salaries and allowances as the for every such offence, forfeit 200L Treasury shall direct but they are not allowed to increase the num- Officers violently resisted in making any seizure may oppose force ber of inferior officers without the permission and approval of the to force; and in the event of their wounding, maiming, or killing Treasury. No member of the House of Commons can be a com- any person, when so opposed, they shall be admitted to bail, and missioner of exclee. may plead the general issue. Officers of Excise-N officer of excise is to vote or interfere at Justices, mayors, balliffs. constables, &c. are required to assist - any election of a member of parliament, under pain of forfeiting cise officers and any constable, or peace officer, who, on notice and 500L, and being rendered incapable of over holding any office or request, declines going with an excise officer, is to forfeit 20L for place of trust under his Majesty. every such offence. No person holding any office of exclse is to deal in any sort of Claimants of Goods seized.-No claim shall be entered for goods goods subject to the excise laws. seized, except in the real names of the proprietors of such goods. Any person bribing or offering to bribe any officer of excise shall Claimants are bound with 2 sureties in a penalty of 100L to pay the forfeit 500L. ; and every officer accepting such bribe, or doing, con- expenses of claim and in default thereof the goods are to be com- giving at, or permitting any act or thing whereby any of the provi- demned. sions of the excise laws may be evaded or broken, shall forfeit 500L., Proceedings in Courts of Low-All penalties under the excise and be declared incapable of ever after serving his Majesty in any laws may be sued for and recovered in the Courts of Exchequer at capacity whatever. But if any of the parties to such illegal trans- Westminster, Edinburgh. or Dublin respectively, according as the actions shall inform against the other, before any proceedings there- offence may have taken place in England, Scotland, or Ireland pro- upon shall have been instituted, he shall be indemnified against the vided that the proceedings in the courts commence within 3 years penalties and disabilities imposed for such offences. after the commission of the offence. Duties and Powers of Officers-It is lawful for any officer to Informations for the recovery of penalties against the excise laws enter any building or other place, used for carrying on any trade in London may be heard and adjudged by any 3 or more of the com- subject to the excise, either by night or by day (but if by night, in missioners of excise; and in other places such informations may be the presence of a constable or peace officer), to inspect the same, &c. exhibited before I of more justices of the peace, and may be heard And upon an officer making oath that he has cause to suspect that and adjudged by any 2 or more such justices. goods forfeited under the excise acts are deposited in any private Miligation of Prnalties.-Justices are authorised, if they shall house or place, 2 commissioners of excise, or 1 justice of the peace, see cause, except when there is a special provision to the contrary, may grant a warrant to the officer to enter such house or place (if in to mitigate any penalty incurred for any offence committed against the night, in the presence of a constable), to search for and seize the excise laws to one fourth part thereof; but it is lawful for the such forfeited goods. commissioners of excise, when they see cause, further to mitigate, Specimen Books may be left by the officers on the premises of per- or entirely remit. such penalty. sons subject to the excise laws; and any one who shall remove or Distribution of Penalties-All penalties and forfeitures incurred deface such books shall be liable to a penalty of 2001. under the excise acts are to be distributed, half to his Majorty, and Removing Goods to avoid Duty.-Goods fraudulently removed half to the officer or person who shall discover, inform, or sue for Digitized by Google FACTOR. 669 the penalty. On proof being made of any officer acting collusively that if any one shall forge, counterfeit, or knowingly give any à making a seizure, the commissioners may direct his share to be forged certificate required to be granted by any officer of excise, be forfeited. shall be guilty of felony, and being convicted, shall be transported Oaths and A firmations-Persons wilfully taking or making any for 7 years. false oath or affirmation as to any matter connected with the excise All individuals carrying on any business subjected to the control laws shall, upon being convicted of such offence, suffer the pains and of the excise, must take out licences renewable annually on the 5th penalties incident to wilful and corrupt perjury; and those pro- of July.-(See Licences.) curing or suborning such persons to swear or affirm famely shall, All such individuals are also obliged to make entries of every upon conviction, be liable to the pains and penalties incident to sub- building, place, vessel, or utensil, as the case may be, in the name ornation of perjury. of the real owner, with the officer of excise in whose survey such Actions against Excise Officers-No writ, summons, or process building, place, &c. shall be situated. Individuals found employed shall be sued out or served upon, nor shall any action be brought, in unentered excise manufactories are severally liable in a penalty raised, or prosecuted against any officer of excise for any thing of 30/. for the first offence and in the event of any such offender done under any of the excise laws, until after the expiration of I refusing or neglecting to pay such penalty, he is to be committed to calendar month next after notice in writing has been delivered to the house of correction or other prison for 3 calendar months, to be such officer, specifying the cause of such action, and the name and kept to hard labour, and not to be liberated until the fine of 30/. has place of abode of the person in whose name it is to be brought. No been paid, or the term of 3 months has expired and if found guilty action shall lie against any excise officer for any thing done under of a second offence, the fine is to be 60L and in the event of its not the excise laws, unless it be brought within 3 months after the cause being paid, the imprisonment is to be for 6 months.-(7 & 8 Geo. 4. of action shall have arisen. If judgment be given against the plain- c 53. S. 33.) Uff. and in favour of the defendant, the latter shall, in every such Permits are usually necessary for the removal of exciseable com- action, have treble costs awarded to him. modition-(See Permits.) Forging Certificates, &c-By the 41 Geo. 3. c. 91. it is enacted, EXPORTS, the articles exported, or sent beyond seas.-(See IMPORTS AND Exports.) F FACTOR, an agent employed by some one individual or individuals, to transact business on his or their account. He is not generally resident in the same place as his principal, but, usually, in a foreign country. He is authorised, either by letter of attorney or otherwise, to receive, buy, and sell goods and merchandise and, generally, to transact all sorts of business on account of his employers, under such limitations and conditions as the latter may choose to impose. A very large proportion of the foreign trade of this and most other countries is now carried on by means of factors or agents. Factors and brokers are, in some respects, nearly identical, but in others they are radically different. A factor," said Mr. Justice Holroyd, in a late case, " differs materially from a broker. The former is a person to whom goods are sent or consigned and he has not only the possession, but, in consequence of its being usual to advance money upon them, has also a special property in them, and a general lien upon them. When, therefore, he sells in his own name, it is within the scope of his authority; and it may be right, therefore, that the principal should be bound by the consequences of such sale. But the case of a broker is different: he has not the possession of the goods, and so the vendor cannot be doceived by the circumstance; and, besides, the employing a person to sell goods as a broker does not authorise him to sell in his own name. If, therefore, he sells in his own name, he acts beyond the scope of his authority and his principal is not bound." A factor is usually paid by a per-centage or commission on the goods he sells or buys. If he act under what is called a del credere commission, that is, if he guarantee the price of the goods sold on account of his principal, he receives an additional percentage to indemnify him for this additional responsibility. In cases of this sort the factor stands in the vendee's place, and must answer to the principal for the value of the goods sold. But where the factor un- dertakes no responsibility, and intimates that he acts only on account of another, it is clearly established that he is not liable in the event of the vendee's failing. The second maxim, that the principal is responsible for the acts of his agent, prevails uni- versally in courts of law and equity. In order to bind the principal, it is necessary only that third parties should deal bonâ fide with the agent, and that the conduct of the latter should be conformable to the common usage and mode of dealing. Thus, a factor may sell goods upon credit, that being in the ordinary course of conducting mercantile affairs; but a stock broker, though acting bonâ fide, and with a view to the benefit of his principal, cannot sell stock upon credit, unless he have special instructions to that effect; that being contrary to the usual course of business. A sale by a factor creates a contract between the owner and buyer; and this rule holds even in cases where the factor acts upon a del credere commission. Hence, if a factor sell goods, and the owner give notice to the buyer to pay the price to him, and not to the factor, the buyer will not be justified in afterwards paying the factor, and the owner may bring his action against the buyer for the price, unless the factor has a lien thereon. But if no such notice be given, a payment to the individual selling is quite sufficient. If a factor buy goods on account of his principal, where he is accustomed so to do, the con- tract of the factor binds the principal to a performance of the bargain; and the principal is the person to be sued for non-performance. But it is ruled, that if a factor enter into a charter- party of affreightment with the master of a ship, the contract obliges him only, unless he lade the vessel with his principal's goods, in which case the principal and lading become liable, and not the factor. Where a factor, who is authorised to sell goods in his own name, makes the buyer debtor to himself; then, though he be not answerable to the principal for the debt, if the Digitized by Google 670 FACTOR. money be not paid, yet he has a right to receive it, if it be paid, and his receipt is a sufficient discharge the factor may, in such a case, enforce the payment by action, and the buyer can- not defend himself by alleging that the principal was indebted to him in more than the amount. " Where a factor," said Lord Mansfield, "dealing for a principal, but concealing that prin- cipal, delivers goods in his own name, the person contracting with him has a right to consider him, to all intents and purposes, as the principal; and though the real principal may appear, and bring an action on that contract against the purchaser of the goods, yet that purchaser may set off any claim he may have against the factor, in answer to the demand of the prin- cipal." Merchants employing the same factor run the joint risk of his actions, although they are strangers to each other thus, if different merchants remit to a factor different bales of goods, and the factor sell them as a single lot to an individual who is to pay one moiety of the price down and the other at 6 months' end; if the buyer fail before the second payment, each merchant must bear a proportional share of the loss, and be content to accept his dividend of the money advanced.-(Beawes, Lex. Merc.) A factor employed, without his knowledge, in negotiating an illegal or fraudulent trans- action, has an action against his principal. On this ground it was decided, that a merchant who had consigned counterfeit jewels to his factor, representing them to be genuine, should make full compensation to the factor for the injury done to him by being concerned in such a transaction, as well as to the persons to whom the jewels had been sold. The office of a factor or agent being one of very great trust and responsibility, those who undertake it are bound, both legally and morally, to conduct themselves with the utmost fidelity and circumspection. A factor should take the greatest care of his principal's goods in his hands: he should be punctual in advising him as to his transactions on his behalf, in sales, purchases, freights, and, more particularly, bills of exchange he should deviate as sel- dom as possible from the terms, and never from the spirit and tenor, of the orders he receives as to the sale of commodities: in the execution of a commission for purchasing goods, he should endeavour to conform as closely as practicable to his instructions as to the quality or kind of goods: if he give more for them than he is authorised, they may be thrown on his hands; but he is bound to buy them for as much less as he possibly can. After the goods are bought, he must dispose of them according to order. If he send them to a different place from that to which he was directed, they will be at his risk, unless the principal, on getting advice of the transaction, consent to acknowledge it." A factor who sells a commodity under the price he is ordered, may be obliged to make good the difference, unless the commodity be of a perishable nature and not in a condition longer to be kept. And if he purchase goods for another at a fixed rate, and their price having afterwards risen, he fraudulently takes them to himself, and sends them some- where else, in order to secure an advantage, he will be found, by the custom of merchants, liable in damages to his principal. If a factor, in conformity with a merchant's orders, buy with his money, or on his credit, a commodity he is directed to purchase, and, without giving advice of the transaction, sells it again at a profit, appropriating that profit to himself, the merchant may recover it from him, and have him amerced for fraud. If a factor buy, conformably to his instructions, goods of which he is robbed, or which suffer some unavoidable injury, he is discharged, and the loss falls on the principal. But if Whoever," says Dr. Paley, " undertakes another man's business, makes it his own; that is, promises to employ upon it the same care, attention, and diligence, that be would do if it were ac- tually his own; for he knows that the business was committed to him with that expectation. And be promises nothing more than this. Therefore, an agent is not obliged to wait, inquire, solicit, ride about the country, toil, or study, whilst there remains a possibility of benefiting his employer. If be exert as much activity, and use such caution, as the value of the business in his judgment deserves; that is, as he would have thought sufficient if the same interest of his own had been at stake; he has discharged his duty, although it should afterwards turn out, that by more activity, and longer perseverance, he might have concluded the business with greater advantage. (Moral and Pol. Phil. c. 12.) There seems to be a good deal of laxity in this statement. It is necessary to distinguish between those who, in executing a commission, render their services for the particular occasion only, without hire, and those who undertake it in the course of business, making a regular charge for their trouble. If the former bestow on it that ordinary degree of care and attention which the generality of mankind bestow on similar affairs of their own, it is all, perhaps, that can be expected: but the latter will be justly censurable, if they do not execute their engagements on account of others with that care and diligence which a provident and attentive father of a family" uses in his own private concerns. It is their duty to exert themselves proportionally to the exigency of the affair in hand; and neither to do any thing, how minute soever, by which their employers may sustain damage, nor omit any thing, however inconsiderable, which the nature of the act requires. Perhaps the best general rule on the subject is, to suppose a factor or agent bound to exert that degree of care and vigilance that may be reasonably expected of him by others. At all events, it is clear he is not to be regulated by his own notions of the value of the business." A man may neglect business of his own, or not think it worth attending to but he is not, therefore, to be excused for neglecting any similar business he inc undertaken to transact for others.-(There are some very good observations on this subject in Sir William Jones's Essay on Bailments, 2d ed. p. 53. and passim.) Digitized by Google FACTOR. 671 the goods be stolen from the factor, he will not be so easily discharged; for the fact of their having been abstracted by stealth, and not by violence, raises a strong presumption that he had not taken that reasonable care of them which was incumbent upon him. If, however, he can prove that the goods were lodged in a place of security, and that he had not been guilty of positive negligence, nor exercised less care towards them than towards his own property, he will not be held responsible even for a theft committed by his servants.—(Jones on Bail- ments, 2d ed. p. 76. Chitty on Commercial Law, vol. iii. p. 368.) If a factor, having money in his hands belonging to his principal, neglect to insure a ship and goods, according to order, he must, in the event of the ship miscarrying, make good the damage; and if he make any composition with the insurers after insurance, without orders to that effect, he is answerable for the whole insurance. A principal, at the end of a very long letter, directed his agent thus: Observe the premium on this value is also to be insured." But the agent, not noticing this sentence, neglected to insure the premium and, being sued, was held liable for the omission. If goods are remitted to a factor, and he make a false entry of them at the Custom-house, or land them without entry, and they are, in consequence, seized or forfeited, he is bound to make good the damage to his principal: but if the factor make his entry according to invoice or letters of advice, and these proving erroneous, the goods are seized, be is discharged. It is now a settled point, that a factor has a lien on goods consigned to him, not only for incidental charges, but as an item of mutual account for the balance due to him so long as he remains in possession. If he be surety in a bond for his principal, he has a lien on the goods sold by him on account of such principal, to the amount of the sum he is bound for. It being the general rule of law, that property does not change while in transitu," or in the hands of a carrier, a consignment made before the bankruptcy of a consignor, but not arriv- ing till after, remains the property of the consignor, except, indeed, where the delivery is made by the order and upon the account of the consignee, and is a complete alienation from the consignor. In the case, therefore, of a consignment to a factor, the property remains the consignor's, and passes into the hands of his assignees. When a factor has a lien on goods, he has a right to the price, though received after the bankruptcy. Where general or unlimited orders are given to a factor, he is left to buy and sell on the best conditions he can. And if detriment arise to a principal from the proceedings of a factor acting under such authority, he has no redress, unless he can show that he acted fraudulently or with gross negligence. A factor or broker acting against the interest of his principal cannot even receive his com- mission. If he pay money on account of his principal, without being authorised, he cannot recover it back. An agent cannot delegate his rights to another so as to bind the principal, unless expressly authorised to nominate a sub-agent. (For further information as to the general powers and liabilities of factors and agents, see Beawes's Lex Mercatoria, art. Factors, Supercargoes, &c. Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. c. 3.; Woolrych on Commercial Law, pp. 317-329, &c. See also the article BROKERS.) The law with respect to the effect of the transactions of factors or agents on third parties was placed on its present footing by the act 6 Geo. 4. c. 94. Under the law that previously obtained, it was held, that a factor, as such, had no authority to pledge, but only to sell the goods of his principal; and it was repeatedly decided that a principal might recover back goods on which a bonâ fide advance of money had been made by a third party, without his being bound to repay such advance; and notwithstanding this third party was wholly ignorant that the individual pledging the goods held them as a mere factor or agent. It used also to be held, that bonâ fide purchasers of goods from factors or agents not vested with the power of sale, might be made liable to pay the price of the goods a second time to the real owner. The extreme hardship and injurious influence of such regulations are obvious. It is the business of a principal to satisfy himself as to the conduct and character of the factor or agent he employs; and if he make a false estimate of them, it is more equitable, surely, that he should be the sufferer, than those who have no means of knowing any thing of the matter. The injustice of the law in question, and the injury it did to the commerce of the country, had frequently excited attention; and was very ably set forth by Lord Liverpool, in his speech in the House of Lords, on moving the second reading of the new bill. "Those of their Lordships who were acquainted with commercial transactions, would know that money was frequently advanced on goods, without its being possible for the person advancing the money to have any further acquaintance with the transactions, than that the factor was in actual possession of the goods. It then became a question, putting fraud out of view, if the factor became a bankrupt, or in any other way failed to execute his engagements, whether the loss should fall on the principal who had consigned these goods, or on the pledgee who had advanced money on them. It had been of late ruled, that if the factor were intrusted only to dispose of the property, the loss must fall on the pledgee. He meant to contend, that this was contrary to equity, and contrary to analogy that it was disapproved of by high authority, and was contrary to the law in every country of the world, except this, and the United States of America, which had drawn their law from this country. It was contrary to equity, be thought, that the pledgee, who had advanced his money without any fraud, but on the bona fide possession of the goods, should suffer. He had placed no confidence, but the principal who had appointed the factor had placed confidence. He could limit him in his operations Digitized by Google 672 FACTOR. as he pleased-he could give him any kind of instructions-he might qualify his power-he bound to take precautions before placing confidence ; and he was in all respects more liable to suffer from his faults than the pledgee. The latter knew nothing of the power of the factor, he saw only the goods, and advanced his money on what was a sufficient security for repayment. On every principle of natural equity, therefore, the loss ought to fall, not on the pledgee, but on the principal. He knew that this view was connected with one very important question-that of possession and title; but it was not possible for transactions to goon, unless the possession was admitted as the title to the goods. If this were an indifferent question, or a question involving only a few cases, he would not have called on their Lordships to legislate on this subject; but all the commercial interests of the country were connected with it. And he might say, he believed that two-thirds of the whole commerce of the country was carried on by consigning goods to a factor, and leaving it to his discretion to dispose of them to the greatest advantage, sending them to market when he pleased. and raising money on them when he could not send them to market. Bills of Exchange, Exchequer bills, and money bills of every description, were subject to this rule. If a person consigned Exchequer bills to a second person, and he parted with them, the third party who obtained them was held to have a right to them. Commer- clal proceedings were of as much importance as money proceedings, and he could not see why they should not receive the same security. It might be asked, perhaps, when this was felt to be so great an evil, why it was not altered before; but it seemed to be one of those things which had grown up gradually, and which did much mischief before they became extensively known. The first decision, he believed, which established the law as it now stood, was delivered in 1742; and he Knew that Lord Chief Justice Gibbs had said, he could not explain the origin of that decision. He supposed it might have been dictated by some fraud. That decision, the Lord Chief Justice maintained, was at vari- ance with the best interests of commerce, and had grown out of circumstances he could not explain. From the time of the first decision, the decisions had not been numerous, till of late years. He did not doubt but the judges had decided according to the law as it was established by these precedents; but in doing that they had expressed their regret that these precedents had been established. (Here his Lordship read an extract from opinions delivered by the late Lord Chief Justice Ellenborough, and a late judge, Mr. Le Blanc, expressing their regret, in deciding cases according to these precedents, that they had been established.) He inferred from these opinions, that these judges, though they had felt themselves obliged to decide in this way, supposed that the law was contrary to the general analogy of our laws, and to the principles of justice. He then came to the last consideration, the law of this country being in this respect different from the laws of all other countries, except the law of the United States of America. In all other countries, the law was recognised to be what he wished to establish it by the bill before their Lordships. When there was no evidence of fraud, it was held, that the man, advancing money on goods held by a factor, should not suffer for his faults, but that the per- son who confided in the factor must be the sufferer. This was also the law in Scotland. He had un- derstood, too, that the evils of the law were felt in America, and that means bad been taken for bringing it before the congress, with a view to assimilate the law of America to the law of other coun- tries. If the question were examined by the principles of equity, by analogy with other cases, by the authority of those who decided in our courts, or by the practice of other countries, it would be found that the reasons were strong in favour of the bill. It was of great importance in commercial transac- tions, that our law should be like the laws of other countries. It was not the same with the laws re- lative to real property-to our local law, if he might so call it but when the bill was founded on equity and analogy, he thought it was an additional reason in its favour, that it assimilated our commercial law to the commercial law of other countries. He did not know if he had made himself understood, or If he had sufficiently explained the object of the bill; but the measure was founded in justice, and he hoped to have their Lordships' consent to it." The noble Earl concluded by moving the second reading of the bill. By the new law, all persons intrusted with and in possession of goods are supposed, unless the contrary be made distinctly to appear, to be their owners, so far, at least, that they may pledge them or sell them to third parties. The following are the principal clauses of this im- portant act, 6 Geo. 4. c. 94. Factors or Agents having Goods or Merchandise in their Possession, shall be deemed to be the true Owners.-Any person intrusted for the purpose of consignment or of sale, with any goods, wares. or merchandise, and who shall have shipped such in his own name, and any person in whose name any goods, wares, or merchandise shall be shipped by any other person, shall be deemed to be the true owner, 80 far as to entitle the consignee to a lien thereon in respect of any money or negotiable secu- rity advanced by such consignee for the use of the person in whose name such goods, wares, or mer- chandise shall be shipped, or in respect of any money or negotiable security received by him to the use of such consignee, in like manner as if such person was the true owner ; provided such consignee shall not have notice by the bill of lading, or otherwise, before the time of any advance of such money or negotiable security, or of such receipt of money or negotiable security, in respect of which such lien is claimed, that such person so shipping in his own name, or in whose name any goods, wares, or merchandise shall be shipped by any person, is not the actual and bond fide owner, any law, usage. or custom to the contrary thereof notwithstanding provided also, that the person in whose name such goods, wares, or merchandise are so shipped shall be taken, for the purposes of this act, to have been intrusted therewith for the purpose of consignment or of sale. unless the contrary thereof shall be made to appear by bill of discovery, or be made to appear in evidence by any person disputing such fact.-d. Persons in Possession of Bills of Lading to be the Owners, 80 far as to make valid Contracts.-From and after the 1st of October, 1826, any person intrusted with any bill of lading, India warrant, dock warrant, warehouse keeper's certificate, wharfinger's certificate, warrant or order for delivery of goods, shall be deemed to be the true owner, so far as to give validity to any contract or agreement thereafter to be entered into by such person so intrusted, with any person, body politic or corporate, for the sale of the said goods, wares, and merchandise, or for the deposit or pledge thereof as a secu- rity for any money or negotiable instrument advanced or given by such person, body politic or corpo- rate, upon the faith of such documents; provided such person, body politic or corporate, shall net have notice, by such documents or otherwise, that such person so intrusted is not the actual and bond fida owner.- 2. No Person to acquire a Security upon Goods in the Hands of an Agent for an antecedent Debt. beyond the Amount of the Agent's Interest in the Goods.-In case any person, body politic or corporate, shall, after this act, accept any such goods, in deposit or pledge, from any such person so intrusted, without notice as aforesaid, as a security for any debt or demand due from any such person so intrusted, to such per- son, body politic or corporate, before the time of such deposit, then such person, body politic or corpo- rate, 80 accepting such goods in deposite or pledge. shall acquire no further interest in the said goods, or any such document, than was possessed, or might have been enforced, by the said person $0 Intrust- ed, at the time of such deposit or pledge but such person, body politic or corporate, so accepting such goods in deposit or pledge, shall acquire, possess, and enforce such right, title, or interest as must have been enforced by such person so intrusted.- 3. Digitized by Google FACTORAGE. 673 Persons may contract with known Agents in the ordinary Course of Business, or out of that Course, if within the Agent's Authority.-From and after the 1st of October, 1826, it shall be lawful for any per- son, body politic or corporate, to contract with any agent, intrusted with any goods, or to whom the saine may be consigned, for the purchase of such goods, and to receive the same of and pay for the same to such agent; and such contract and payment shall be binding upon the owner, notwithstand- ing such person, body politic or corporate, shall have notice that the person making and entering into such contract, or on whose behalf such contract is made, is an agent provided such contract and pay- ment be made in the usual course of business, and that such person, body politic or corporate, shall not have notice that such agent is not authorised to sell the said goods, or to receive the said purchase money.- 4. Persons may accept and lake Goods in Pledge from known Agents.-From and after the passing of this act, it shall be lawful for any person, body politic or corporate, to accept any such goods, or any such document as aforesaid, in deposit or pledge from any factor or agent, notwithstanding such person, body politic or corporate, shall have notice that the person making such deposit or pledge is a factor or agent; but then and in that case such person, body politic or corporate, shall acquire no further in- terest in the said goods, or any such document, than was possessed or might have been enforced by the said factor or agent, at the time of such deposit or pledge; but such person, body politic or corporate, shall acquire, possess, and enforce such right, title, or interest as was possessed and might have been enforced by such factor or agent.-05. Right of the true Owner to follow his Goods while in the Hands of his Agent or of his Assignee in case of Bankruptcy.-Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to deprive the true owner or proprietor of such goods from demanding and recovering the same from his factor or agent, before the same shall have been so sold, deposited, or pledged, or from the assignees of such factor or agent, in the event of his, her, or their bankruptcy nor to prevent such owner or proprietor from demanding or recovering of and from any person, bodies politic or corporate, the price agreed to be paid for the purchase of such goods, subject to any right of set-off on the part of such persons, bodies politic or corporate, against such factor or agent; not [nor] to prevent such owner or proprietor from demanding or re- covering of and from such persons, bodies politic or corporate, such goods, so deposited or pledged, upon repayment of the money, or on restoration of the negotiable instrument 80 advanced or given on the security of such goods, by such persons, bodies politic or corporate, to such factor or agent and upon payment of such further sum, or on restoration of such other negotiable instrument (if any) as may have been advanced or given by such factor or agent. to such owner or proprietor, or on pay- ment of a sum equal to the amount of such instrument; nor to prevent the said owner or proprietor from recovering of and from such persons, bodies politic or corporate, any balance remaining in their hands, as the produce of the sale of such goods, after deducting thereout the amount of the money or negotiable instrument 80 advanced or given upon the security thereof; provided always, that in case of the bankruptcy of any such factor or agent, the owner or proprietor of the goods so pledged and redeemed shall be held to have discharged pro tanto the debt due by them to the estate of such bankrupt.- 6. Agents fraudulently pledging the Goods of their Principals.-The 7 & 8 Geo. 4. c. 29. 0 51. enacts, That if any factor or agent intrusted, for the purpose of sale, with any goods or merchandise, or in- trusted with any bill of lading, warehouse keeper's or wharfinger's certificate, or warrant or order for the delivery of goods or merchandise, shall, for his own benefit, and in violation of good faith, deposit or pledge any such goods or merchandise, or any of the said documents, as a security for any money or negotiable instrument borrowed or received by such factor or agent, at or before the time of making such deposit or pledge, or intended to be thereafter borrowed or received, every such offender shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the discretion of the court, to be transported beyond the seas for any term not exceeding 14 years, nor less than 7 years, or to suffer such other punishment by fine or imprisonment, or by both as the court shall award but no such factor or agent shall be liable to any prosecution for depositing or pledging any such goods or mer- chandise, or any of the said documents, in case the same shall not be made a security for, or subject to the payment of, any greater sum of money than the amount which, at the time of such deposit or pledge, was justly due and owing to such factor or agent from his principal, together with the amount of any bill or bills of exchange drawn by or on account of such principal, and accepted by such factor or agent." This provision does not extend to partners not being privy to the offence nor does it take away any remedy at law or equity which any party aggrieved by any offence might have been entitled to against such offender. And no one shall be liable to be convicted by any evidence whatever as an offender against this act, in respect of any act done by him, if he shall, at any time previously to his being indicted for such offence, have disclosed such acts, on oath, in consequence of any comput- sory process of any court of law or equity, in any action, suit, &c. which shall have been bona Ade in- stituted by any party aggrieved, or if he shall have disclosed the same in any examination or deposition before any commissioners of bankrupt.-d 52. FACTORAGE, OR COMMISSION, the allowance given to factors by the merchants and manufacturers, &c., who employ them: it is a percentage on the goods they purchase or sell on account of their principals; and varies in different countries, and as it refers to different articles. It is customary for factors, as observed in the previous article, to insure the debts due to those for whom they sell for an additional, or del credere, commission, generally averaging from 1} to 2 per cent. Factorage or commission is also frequently charged at a certain rate per cask, or other package, measure, or weight, especially when the factor is only employed to receive or deliver: this commission is usually fixed by special agreement between the merchant and factor. FACTORAGE, BROKERAGE, AND COMMISSION TABLE. Amount. At per Ct. At 1-4 per Ct. At per Ct. At 1-8 per Ct. At 5-8 per Ct. At 8-4 per Ct. At 7-8 per Ct. At per Ct. L L.d. L.d. L 8. d. Lad L #. d. L.a.d. L.d. L.a.d. 1 00014 00012 00034 001 0 0 11-2 00184 002 00214 2 00018 001 00134 0 0 21-4 003 0031-2 004 00434 3 00034 0 0 3-4 00818 0031-2 00418 00514 00614 007 4 001 00814 00318 0 0 434 006 007 0 0 81.4 0 0 91-2 5 0 0 1-2 003 00418 006 0 0 71-2 009 0 0 10 1-2 010 6 0 0 134 00312 0 0 61-4 007 009 0 0 103-4 01013 018 7 008 004 00634 0 0 814 0 10 01012 0 1 21-2 01 13-4 8 00214 00434 007 00918 010 01814 0 1 434 017 9 00219 00514 008 0 0 10 3-4 01112 014 01634 0 1 918 10 008 006 009 010 013 016 019 080 20 006 010 016 020 086 030 036 040 20 009 010 0 2 8 080 0 3 9 040 058 060 VOL I.-3 L 85 Digitized by Google 674 FACTORY, FAIRS AND MARKETS. Table-continued. Amount. At 1-8 per Ct. At 1-4 per Ct. At 38 per Ct. At 1-2 per Ct. At 5-8 per Ct. At 34 per Ct. At 7-8 per Ct. At a L L.i.d. L.d. L.d. L.d. L.d. Led L.e.d Lid 40 010 020 030 040 050 060 070 010 50 013 086 039 050 063 076 089 0100 60 016 030 046 060 076 090 0106 0120 70 019 036 053 070 089 0106 0123 040 80 080 040 060 080 0100 0120 0140 0160 90 083 046 069 090 0113 0136 0159 015 0 100 026 050 076 0100 0126 0150 0176 100 200 050 0100 0150 100 150 1100 1150 200 300 076 0150 126 1100 1176 250 2126 $00 400 0100 100 110 200 $ 10 0 300 3100 400 500 0126 160 1176 2100 326 3150 476 500 600 0 15 0 1100 850 300 3150 4100 550 600 700 0176 1150 2126 3100 476 550 626 700 800 100 200 300 400 600 600 700 800 900 126 250 376 410 0 5126 6 15 0 7176 900 1,000 150 8 10 0 3150 500 650 7100 8 15 0 1000 2,000 2100 500 7100 1000 12 10 0 1500 17 10 0 2000 3,000 8 15 0 7100 1150 1500 18 15 0 22 10 0 9650 3000 4,000 500 1000 1500 2000 2600 3000 3500 4000 5,000 650 12 10 0 18 15 0 2500 3150 37 10 0 43 16 0 5000 10,000 12 10 0 2500 37 10 0 6000 62 10 0 7500 8710 0 100 0 0 Amount. At 1-2 per Ct. At 2 per Ct. At per Ct. per Ct. At 4 per Ct. At per CL At per CL L L.s.d. L. i. d. L. . d. L.s.d. L.d. L. . d. L.d. 1 00312 0 0 434 006 007 009 0 0 1034 010 2 007 00918 010 0 234 017 01912 020 3 0 0 103-4 0 1 214 016 0 1 91.2 0 2 4 0 8 81-4 039 4 01814 017 0 2 0 0 8 434 032 037 040 5 016 080 026 030 040 046 050 6 01912 0 2 43-4 030 037 049 05434 . 6 0 7 0 8 1 0 8 913 036 04214 057 06312 070 8 02434 03214 040 0491-2 064 07814 080 9 0 2 81-4 037 046 05434 072 081 080 10 030 040 050 060 080 090 0100 20 060 080 0100 0120 0160 0 18 0 100 30 090 0100 0150 0180 140 170 1100 40 0120 0160 100 140 1120 1160 200 50 0150 100 150 1100 200 250 200 60 0180 140 1100 1160 280 2140 $00 70 110 180 1150 220 2160 830 310' 80 140 1180 200 280 340 3120 400 90 170 1160 250 2140 $ 12 0 410 4100 100 1100 200 2100 300 400 4100 500 200 300 400 600 600 800 900 1000 300 4100 600 7100 900 1200 13 10 0 1500 400 600 800 1000 12 0 0 16 0 0 1800 x.. 500 7100 1000 12 10 0 15 0 0 2000 22 10 0 300 600 900 1200 1500 1800 2400 2700 3000 700 10 10 0 1400 17 10 0 2100 2800 31100 3500 800 1200 1600 2000 2400 200 3600 4000 9001 13 10 0 18 0 0 22 10 0 2700 3600 4010 0 4500 1,000 1500 2000 2500 3000 4000 4500 5000 2,000 3000 4000 5000 6000 8000 9200 100 0 0 3,000 4500 6000 75 0 0 9000 120 0 0 135 0 0 150 0 0 4,000 6000 8000 100 0 0 120 0 0 160 0 0 180 0 0 20000 5,000 7500 100 0 0 225 0 0 150 0 0 200 0 0 225 0 0 2000 10,000 150 0 0 200 0 0 250 0 0 300 0 0 400 0 0 450 0 0 500 00 FACTORY, a place where merchants and factors reside, to negotiate business for them- selves and their correspondents on commission. We have factories in China, Turkey, Por- tugal, Russia, &c. FAIRS AND MARKETS. These institutions are very closely allied. A fair, as the term is now generally understood, is only a greater species of market recurring at more distant intervals. Both are appropriated to the sale of 1 or more species of goods, the hiring of servants, or labourers, &c.: but fairs are, in most cases, attended by a greater concourse of people, for whose amusement various exhibitions are got up. 1. Origin of Fairs.-Institutions of this sort are peculiarly serviceable in the earlier stages of society, and in rude and inland countries. The number of shops, and the com- modities in them, are then either comparatively limited, or they are but little frequented by dealers; so that it is for the advantage of all, that fairs should be established, and merchants induced to attend them. For this purpose various privileges have been annexed to fairs, and numerous facilities afforded to the disposal of property in them. To give them a greater de- gree of solemnity, they were originally, both in the ancient and modern world, associated with religious festivals. In most places, indeed, they are still held on the same day with the wake or feast of the saint to whom the church is dedicated; and till the practice was prohibited, it was customary, in England, to hold them in churchyards!-(Jacob's Law Dict. art. Fair.) But since the growth of towns, and the opportunities afforded for the disposal and purchase of all sorts of produce at the weekly or monthly markets held in them, the utility of fairs, in this country, at least, has very much diminished; they have, also, lost much of their ancient splendour; and, though some of them are still well attended, and of real use, a good number might be advantageously suppressed. But it is far otherwise in inland countries, where the facilities for carrying on commercial transactions are comparatively circumscribed. There it is of the utmost importance, that certain convenient places and specified periods should be appointed for the bringing together of commodities and dealers. This is not only the readiest and best means of promoting Digitized by Google FAIRS AND MARKETS. 675 commerce, but also of softening national antipathies, and diffusing a knowledge of the pro- ducts, arts, and customs of other countries. 2. Establishment of English Fairs.-No fair can he holden without grant from the Crown, or a prescription which supposes such grant. And before a patent is granted, it is usual to have a writ of ad quod damnum executed and returned, that it may not be issued to the prejudice of a similar establishment already existing. The grant usually contains a clause that it shall not be to the hurt of another fair or market; but this clause, if omitted, will be implied in law: for if the franchise occasion damage either to the king or a subject, in this or any other respect, it will be revoked and a person, whose ancient title is prejudiced, is entitled to have a scire facias in the king's name to repeal the letters patent. If his Majesty grant power to hold a fair or market in a particular place, the lieges can resort to no other, even though it be inconvenient. But if no place be appointed, the grantees may keep the fair or market where they please, or rather, where they can most conveniently. 3. Times of holding Fairs and Markets.-These are either determined by the letters patent appointing the fair or market, or by usage. The statute 2 Edw. 3. c. 15. enacts, that the du- ration of the fair shall be declared at its commencement, and that it shall not be continued beyond the specified time. By statute 5 Edw. 3. c. 5., any merchant selling goods after the stipulated time is to forfeit double the value of the goods sold. 4. Effect of Sales in Fairs and Markets.-A bona fide sale made in a fair or open market, in general, transfers the complete property of the thing sold to the vendee; so that, however vicious or illegal the title of the vendor may be, the vendee's is good against every one ex- cept the king. But the sale, in order to come within this rule, must take place on the market day, and at the place assigned for the market. The city of London is said to be a market overt every day of the week except Sunday; every shop being a market overt for such things as the shopkeeper professes to deal in. The property of goods may, however, be changed, and effectually transferred to the buyer, by a bona fide sale in a shop out of London, whether the shopkeeper be the vendor or vendee, if the goods are of the kind in which he trades. A wharf in London is not within the custom, and is not a market overt for articles brought there. But a sale in a market will not be binding, if it be such as carries with it a presump- tion of fraud as, for example, if it take place in a back room, or secret place; if the sale be covinous, and intended to defraud the real owner; or if the buyer know that the vendor is not the real owner of the goods, &c. It is very difficult to transfer the property of horses, even when they are sold in an open market, without the consent of the real owner.—(See HORSES.) 5. Court of Pié Poudre.-To every fair or market there is incident, even without any express words in the grant, a court of pié poudre, in allusion to the dusty feet of the suitors. The steward or mayor may preside. It has cognizance of all questions as to contracts made in the market, respecting goods bought and delivered there, &c. Formerly pié poudre courts were held at every considerable fair; but they are now entirely laid aside. 6. Clerk of the Market.-Owners and governors of fairs are to take care that every thing be sold according to just weights and measures. And for that and other purposes they may appoint a clerk of the fair or market, who is to mark and allow all such weights, &c. charg- ing 1d. for sealing and marking a bushel, 4d. for marking a half bushel or peck, and id. for marking a gallon, pottle, quart, pint, &c., under penalty of 51.-(22 Cha. 2. c. 8.) 7. Tolls.-Being a matter of private benefit to the owners of fairs or markets, and not in- cident to them, tolls are not exigible unless specially granted in the patent: but the king may by a new grant authorise a reasonable toll to be taken. If the toll granted be excessive, the patent will be void. It is a general rule, unless changed by a contrary custom obtaining time out of mind, that no toll be paid for any thing brought to a fair or market, before the same is sold, and that it shall then be paid by the buyer. The owner of a house next to a fair or market is not allowed to open his shop during such fair or market, without paying stallage (toll for having a stall) ; on the ground that if he take the benefit of the market, he ought to pay the duties thereon. This regulation has been a good deal complained of. The owners of fairs and markets are required by statute (2 & 3 Ph. and M. c. 7.) to ap- point a person in a special open place to take the toll. The most important part of this person's duty has reference to his entering the horses sold with three distinguishing marks, and the names, &c. of those who buy and sell them.-(See HORSES.) An action lies against any one who refuses to pay the customary toll. (For further information as to British fairs and markets, see Chitty on Commercial Law, vol. ii. c. 9.) The 3 Geo. 4. c. 55. enacts, that at all fairs held within 10 miles of Temple Bar, business and amuse- ments of all kinds shall cease at 11 o'clock in the evening, and not re-commence before 6 clock in the morning, under a penalty of 40s. to be paid by any master, mistress, or other person, having the care or management of any house, shop, room, booth, standing, tent, caravan or wagon, where any breach of this enactment shall have been committed. Power is also given by the same act to any 2 Justices of the peace, within their respective jurisdictions, to put a stop tc any fair which is held with- out charter, prescription, or lawful authority. Digitized by Google 676 FAIRS AND MARKETS. 8. Principal British Fairs.-Among these may be specified Stourbridge. in Worcester- shire. Bristol has two considerable fairs, one in March, and one in September. Exeter December fair, for cattle, horses, and most sorts of commodities. Weyhill fair, in Hampshire (October 10,) has, probably, the greatest display of sheep of any fair in the kingdom. Bar- tholomew fair, in London, used to be of considerable importance, but is now appropriated only to shows of wild beasts, and such like exhibitions, and might be suppressed with advan- tage. St. Faith's, near Norwich (October 17.), is the principal English fair for Scotch cattle. They are sold to the graziers and feeders of Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, &c., by whom they are fattened for the London markets, where they are met with in great abundance. But besides those sold at St. Faith's, large numbers of Scotch cattle are disposed of at Market Harborough, Carlisle, Ormskirk, and other places. Ipswich has two considerable fairs one in August, for lambs; and one in September, for butter and cheese: it is reckoned that above 100,000 lambs are annually sold at the former. Woodborough-hill, in Dorset, for west country manu- factures, as kerseys, druggets, &c. Woodstock October fair, for cheese. Northampton and Nottingham have each several large fairs, for horses, cattle, cheese, &c. The August fair of Horncastle, in Lincolnshire, is the largest horse fair in the kingdom, many thousand horses being exhibited for sale during its continuance: it is resorted to by crowds of dealers from all parts of Great Britain, by several from the Continent, and sometimes even from North America. Howden, in Yorkshire, has, also, a very large horse fair, particularly for Yorkshire hunters. Devizes, in Wiltshire, has several large fairs for sheep and cattle. There is usually a large display of cheese at the Gloucester April fair. A guild, or jubilee, commencing the last week of August, is held every twentieth year at Preston, in Lancashire; the last was held in 1822, and was well attended. The October fair of Market Harborough, Leicestershire, lasts 9 days, and a great deal of business is usually done in cattle, cheese, &c. Woodbridge Lady-day fair is celebrated for the show of Suffolk horses. Falkirk fair, or tryst, is one of the most important in Scotland, for the sale of cattle and sheep. The October fair of Ballinasloe, in the county Galway, is famous for the display of cattle and sheep; by far the largest proportion of these animals raised for sale in Connaught being disposed of at it. The sheep are generally from 3 to 4, the heifers from 3 to 4, and the bullocks from 4 to 5 years of age. They are mostly lean; and are kept for a year in Leinster before they are fit for the Dublin or Liverpool markets. It would seem that the number of cattle and sheep disposed of at Ballinasloe is rather declining; a result ascribable to the increase of cultivation caused by the great augmentation of population, and the continued subdivision of the land. We subjoin an Account of the Number of Sheep and Cattle, sold and unsold, at the October Fairs of Ballinasloe from the Year 1820 to the Year 1832, both inclusive. (Agricultural Report of 1832, p. 349.) Years. Sheep sold. Sheep unsold. Total. Cattle sold. Cattle unsold. Total. 1820 59,943 20,833 80,776 4,504 4,001 8,505 1821 72,834 10,566 83,400 6,062 1,222 7,854 1822 74,718 15,459 90,177 5,322 3,695 9,017 1823 75,684 20,315 95,999 6,588 4,321 10,909 1824 77,448 6,786 84,234 9,058 1,447 10,505 1825 72,577 17,688 90,265 8,012 2,254 10,266 1826 57,808 36,597 94,405 4,393 3,844 8,240 1827 77,075 14,300 91,375 6,638 1,711 8,349 1828 86,374 11,010 97,384 7,707 3,806 11,513 1829 71,434 14,979 86,413 5,677 3,666 9,347 1830 66,874 14,611 81,485 5,894 1,663 7,457 1831 57,940 3,399 61,339 6,192 1,321 7,513 1832 58,055 4,793 62,948 6,101 556 6,657 9. Principal French Fairs.-Among these may be specified the fairs of St. Germains, Lyons, Rheims, Chartres, Rouen, Bordeaux, Troyes, and Bayonne; but they are said to be, for the most part, much fallen off. This, however, does not appear to be the case with the fair held at Beaucaire, in the department of the Gard, in July. It is said that there were from 70,000 to 80,000 persons at the fair of 1833, and that the business done exceeded 160,000,000 fr., or 6,400,000Z.! These statements are not, however, official, and are, most probably, exaggerated; and it is admitted, that the last was the greatest fair that has been held for these many years past.-(Archives du Commerce, tom. iii. pp. 236-245.) 10. German Fairs.-The principal German, or rather European, fairs, are those of Frank- fort on the Maine, Frankfort on the Oder, and Leipsic. The concourse of merchants, and the business done at these fairs, is generally very great. They are copiously supplied with the cotton stuffs, twist, cloths, and hardware of England; the silks and jewellery of France the printed cottons of Switzerland and Austria; the raw, manufactured, and literary products of Germany; the furs of the North; Turkey carpets; Cachemere shawls, &c.; and there, also, are to be found merchants of all countries, those of Ispahan negotiating with those of Montreal for the purchase of furs; and Georgians and Servians supplying themselves with the cottons of Manchester and the jewellery of Paris. There, in fact, are met the repre- sentatives, as it were, of every people in the world, labouring, though without intending it, to promote each other's interest, and to extend and strengthen those ties that bind together the great family of the human race. Digitized by Google FAIRS AND MARKETS. 677 The fairs at Frankfort on the Maine should begin, the first on Easter Tuesday, and the second on the Monday nearest to the 8th of September. Their duration is limited to 3 .weeks, but they usually begin from 8 to 15 days before their legal commencement. Accounts are kept in rixdollars: 1 rixdollar of account - If florin, or 41 copsticks, or 221 batzen. The rixdollar 3s. 1.8d.; so that the par of exchange is 141 batzen per 11. sterling. 100 lbs. common Frankfort weight 103 lbs. avoirdupois. The foot - 11.27 English inches. The fairs at Frankfort on the Oder are 3 in number: viz. Reminiscere, in February or March; St. Margaret, in July; and St. Martin, in November. They ought, strictly speak- ing, to terminate in 8 days, but they usually extend to 15. The Prussian government gives every facility to those who attend these fairs. Accounts are kept in Prussian money, that is, in rixdollars of 2s. 111d. 100 lbs. Prussian = 103 lbs. avoirdupois. The foot - 12-356 English inches. The fairs of Leipsic are still more celebrated than those of either Frankfort. They are held thrice a year,-on the 1st of January, at Easter, and at Michaelmas. The first is the least important. Above 20,000 dealers are said to have been present at the Easter fair in 1832, and above 13,000 at that of Michaelmas. The Easter and Michaelmas fairs are fa- mous, particularly the former, for the vast number of new publications usually offered for sale. They are attended by all the principal booksellers of Germany, and by many from the adjoining countries, who adjust their accounts, learn the state of the trade in all parts of the world, and endeavour to form new connections. Most German publishers have agents in Leipsic; which is to the literature of Germany, what London is to that of Great Britain. As many as 4,000 new publications have been in a single Leipsic catalogue! The fairs ought to close in 8 days, but they usually continue for about 3 weeks. No days of grace are allowed. The holder of a bill must demand payment on the day it becomes due; and, if not paid, he must have it protested on that very day, and returned by the first opportunity. If he neglect any of these regulations, he loses all right of recourse upon the drawer and endorsers. Money of account at Leipsic same as at Frankfort on the Maine. 100 lbs. Leipsic : - 103 lbs. avoir- dupois. The foot 11.11 English inches.-(Kelly's Cambist; Manuel de Nelkenbrecher Archires du Commerce, tom. ii. p. 27., &c.) Dr. Bright gives, in his Travels in Hungary (pp. 201-223.), an interesting account of the fairs held at Debretzin and Pesth. The latter has become the grand centre of Hungarian commerce; most part of which is conducted at its fairs. 11. Italian Fairs.-Of these, the most celebrated is that of Sinigaglia, a small but hand- some town of the Papal dominions, on the Misa, near its confluence with the Adriatic. The fair commences on the 14th of July, and should terminate on the last day of that month, but it usually continues 5 or 6 days longer. The duties on goods brought to the fair are extremely moderate, and every thing is done to promote the convenience of those frequent- ing it. All sorts of cotton and woollen goods, lace, iron and steel, hardware, jewellery, brandy and liqueurs, raw and refined sugar, dried fish, cacao, coffee, spices, &c. are brought here by the English, French, Austrians, Americans, Swiss, &c. These are exchanged for the various raw and manufactured products of Italy and the Levant; consisting, among others, of raw, thrown, and wrought silks; oil, fruits, cheese, alum, soda, sumach, sulphur, &c. The value of the imports for the fair of 1832 was estimated at about 2,000,000/. Ac- counts are kept in scudi of 20 soldi; the scudo = 4s. 4d. very nearly. 100 lbs. Sinigaglia - 73$ lbs. avoirdupois. The ell or braccio measures 25.33 English inches.-(Munuel.de Nelkenbrecher; Archives du Commerce, tom. ii. p. 38.) 12. Russian Fairs.-These are numerous, and many of them well attended. The most important is held at Nishnei-Novogorod. This city is situated at the confluence of the Oka with the Wolga, in lat. 56° 16' N., lon. 44° 18' E. It is the great emporium of the internal trade of Russia: communicating by an inland navigation with the Baltic, the Black Sea, and the Caspian. The fair was formerly held at Makarief, 84 versts distant. It generally lasts from 6 weeks to 2 months, and is well known all over the east of Europe. The bazaars erected for the accommodation of those who attend this fair, form, according to Dr. Lyall, the finest establishment of the kind in the world. The sale of iron and iron articles is said usually to amount to above 10,000,000 roubles; the furs to 36,000,000; the images to 1,300,000. Captain Cochrane is of opinion, that " the fair, in point of value, is second to none in Europe ; the business done being estimated at nearly 200,000,000 roubles." The stationary population of the place amounts to from 15,000 to 16,000 but during the fair it is said to amount to 120,000 or 150,000; among whom may be seen Chinese, Persians, Cir- cassians, Armenians, Tatars, Bucharians, Jews, " and a specimen of almost every European nation."-(See Modern Traveller, art. Russia, p. 305.) We suspect, however, that these statements are very far beyond the mark. It is stated in the Archives du Commerce (tom. i. p. 173.), that the total value of the merchandise disposed of at the fair of Nishnei-Novo- gorod, in 1832, amounted to 123,200,000 roubles. Theatrical exhibitions, shows of wild beasts, and other Bartholomew fair amusements, add to the attractions of the scene. Another celebrated Russian fair is held, in the month of December, at Kiachta, in Mon- golia, on the Chinese frontier, in lat. 50° 20' N., lon. uncertain, but about 105° E. The 3 L 2 Digitized by Google 678 FAIRS AND MARKETS. town is small, the population not exceeding 4,000 or 5,000; but by far the largest part of the commerce between the Russian and Chinese empires is transacted at its fair, and it is also the centre of the political intercourse between them. The commodities brought by the Russians consist principally of furs, sheep and lamb skins, Russian and German broadcloths, Russia leather, coarse linens, worsted stuffs, cattle, &c., with, for the most part, bullion. These they exchange with the Chinese for tea, raw and manufactured silk, nankeens, por- celain, sugar candy, rhubarb, tobacco, musk, &c. The quantity of tea, using the word in the sense in which it is understood here, purchased at the Kiachta fairs by the Russians, amounts, at an average, to about 60,000 boxes a year, that is, to about 4,200,000 lbs.; the greater part being the fine species of black tea called pekoe. But, exclusive of this, the Russians buy large quantities of a coarser species of tea, called break or Tartar tea, which, though not thought worth the trouble of putting into packages, is largely consumed by the nomadic Tar- tars and Siberians. According to the official accounts published by the Russian Custom- house, the total value of the exports by way of Kiachta, in 1831, amounted to 4,655,536 roubles, and that of the imports to 6,775,858 ditto. The Russian trade is in the hands of a comparatively small number of merchants, some of whom are very rich; that of the Chinese is much more diffused. Commodities may be conveyed from Kiachta to European Russia either by land or by water. In the former case the journey takes a year; in the latter, it takes 3 years, or rather 3 very short summers; the rivers being for the most part of the year frozen over.(Schnitzler, Statistique Générale de l'Empire de la Russie, p. 143.; private communications from Captain Gordon, who visited Kiachta in 1819; Official Statement of the Trade of the Russian Empire in 1831, &c.) 13. Eastern Fairs.-The most important fair in the Eastern world is that held at Mecca, during the resort of pilgrims in the month of Dhalbajja. It used to be frequented by many thousands of individuals of all ranks and orders, brought together from the remotest corners of the Mohammedan world; and though the numbers attending it have declined of late years, the concourse is still very great.-(See CARAVAN.) Hurdwar, in Hindostan, in lat. 29° 57' N., lon. 78° 2' E., 117 miles N. E. from Delhi, is famous from its being one of the principal places of Hindoo pilgrimage, and the greatest fair in India. The town, which is but inconsiderable, is situated on the Ganges, at the point where that sacred stream issues from the mountains. The pilgrimage and fair are held to- gether at the vernal equinox; and Europeans, nowise addicted to exaggeration, who have been repeatedly present on these occasions, estimate that from 200,000 to 300,000 strangers are then assembled in the town and its vicinity. But every twelfth year is reckoned pecu- liarly holy; and then it is supposed that from 1,000,000 to 1,500,000, and even 2,000,000 pilgrims and dealers are congregated together from all parts of India and the countries to the north. In 1819, which happened to be a twelfth year, when the auspicious moment for bathing in the Ganges was announced to the impatient devotees, the rush was so tremendous that no fewer than 430 persons were either trampled to death under foot, or drowned in the river ! The foreigners resorting to Hurdwar fair for commercial purposes only, consist prin- cipally of natives of Nepaul, the Punjab, and Peshwaur, with Afghans, Usbeck Tartars, &c. They import vast numbers of horses, cattle, and camels; Persian dried fruits, shawls, drugs, &c.: the returns are made in cotton piece goods, indigo, sugar, spices, and other tropical pro- ductions. The merchants never mention the price of their goods, but conduct the bargain by touching the different joints of their fingers, to hinder the hystanders gaining any informa- tion. During the Mahratta sway, a kind of poll-tax and duties on cattle were levied but all is now free, without impost or molestation of any sort. Owing, also, to the precautions adopted by the British government, the most perfect order is preserved much to the surprise and satisfaction of the natives; for, antecedent to our occupation of the country, the fairs usually ended in disorder and bloodshed.-(Private information, and the excellent account of Hurdwar in Hamilton's Gazelteer.) The fares of Portobello, Vera Cruz, and Acapulco, once so famous, are now totally desert- ed that of the Havannah is also much fallen off. FATHOM, a measure of length, 6 feet, chiefly used for measuring the length of cordage, and the depth of water and mines. FEATHERS, BED-FEATHERS (Fr. Plumes, Plumes à lit; Ger. Federn, Bettfedern; Du. Bedveern, Pluimen; It. Piume; Sp. Plumas), make a considerable article of com- merce; particularly those of the ostrich, heron, swan, peacock. goose, and other poultry for plumes, ornaments of the head, filling of beds, quilts, &c. The coarsest part of the ostrich plumage is generally denominated hair, to which it bears a resemblance, and is used in the manufacture of hats. Many parts of Great Britain supply feathers for beds, and an inferior sort is brought from Ireland. Eider down is imported from the north of Europe; the ducks that supply it being inhabitants of Greenland, Iceland, and Norway. The eider duck breeds in the islands on the west of Scotland, but not in sufficient numbers to form a profitable branch of trade to the inhabitants. Hudson's Bay furnishes very fine feathers. The down of the swan is brought from Dantzic, as well as large quantities of superior feathers. Digitized by Google FIDDLES-FISH. 679 The bed-feathers imported in 1828 amounted to 3,103 cwt., yielding 6,8261. 12s. of duty. The duty on ostrich feathers during the same year produced 962/ 8s. 9d. FIDDLES, OR VIOLINS (Ger. Violinen, Geigen; Du. Vioolen; Fr. Violons; It. Violi- ni; Sp. Violines; Rus. Skripizii), musical instruments, too well known to need any parti- cular description. The finest toned violins are those made in Italy; they are usually called Cremonas, from the name of the town where they were formerly manufactured in the high- est perfection: 50 to 60 guineas have not unfrequently been given for a Cremona violin. FIGS (Ger. Feigen; Du. Vygen; Fr. Figues; It. Fichi; Sp. Higos; Lat. Fici, Ca- rica; Arab. Teen), the fruit of the fig tree (Ficus carica), a native of Asia, but early introduced into Europe. It flourishes in Turkey, Greece, France, Spain, Italy, and North- em Africa, and even sometimes ripens its fruits in the open air in this country. Figs, when ripe, are, for the most part, dried in ovens to preserve them; and then packed very closely in the small chests and baskets in which we import them. The best come from Turkey; those of Kalamata, in the Morea, are said to be the most luscious.-(Thomson's Dispen- satory.) Dried figs form a very considerable article of commerce in Provence, Italy, and Spain; besides affording, as in the East, a principal article of sustenance for the population. In Spain, figs are chiefly exported from Andalusia and Valencia; but they are more or less abundant in every province. In the northern parts of France there are many fig gardens, particularly at Argenteuil. Figs belong to that class of articles, the duties on which might be reduced, not only without any loss, but with very great advantage to the revenue. They are extensively used at the tables of the opulent; and would, there is no doubt, be much used by the middle classes, were their price lower. The importation, even with the present duty of 21s. 6d., is about 20,000 cwt; and as this duty is full 100 per cent. upon their price in bond, it may be fairly concluded, that were it reduced to 8s. or 10s. a cwt., the quantity imported would very soon be trebled, or more. No abatement of duty is made on account of any damage received by figs. (The duty on figs has been reduced from 21s. 6d. to 15s. a cwt. Nearly the same may be said of this reduction as of that of the duty on currants. It is too trifling to have much effect on consumption; and there can, we apprehend, be little doubt that a duty of 10s. would, by stimulating the latter, be more productive of revenue than a duty of 15s.--Sup.) FILE, FILES (Da. File; Du. Vylen; Fr. Limes; Ger. Feilen; It. Lime), an instru- ment of iron or forged steel, cut in little furrows, used to polish or smooth metals, timber, and other hard bodies. FIR. See PINE. FIRE-ARMS. Under this designation is comprised all sorts of guns, fowling-pieces, blunderbusses, pistols, &c. The manufacture of these weapons is of considerable import- ance; employing at all times, but especially during war, a large number of persons. In consequence of the frequent occurrence of accidents from the bursting of insufficient barrels, the legislature has most properly interfered, not to regulate their manufacture, but to prevent all persons from using or selling barrels that have not been regularly proved in a public proof-house. The first act for this purpose was passed in 1813; but it was soon after superseded by a fuller and more com- plete one, the 55 Geo. 3. c. 59. This statute imposes a fine of 201. on any person using, in any of the progressive stages of its manufacture, any barrel not duly proved; on any person delivering the same, except through a proof-house; and on any person receiving, for the purpose of making guns, &c. any barrels which have not passed through a proof-house. These penalties to be levied on con- viction before 2 justices with like penalties, to be similarly levied, on persons counterfeiting the proof-marks. FIRE-WORKS. By 9 & 10 Will. 3., all sorts of fire-works are declared to be a com- mon nuisance; and the making, causing to be made, giving, selling, or offering for sale, any squibs, rockets, serpents, or other fire-works, or any cases or implements for making the same, is made subject to a penalty of 51., to be recovered on conviction before a justice of the peace. Casting or firing any such fire-works, or permitting the same to be cast or fired, from any house or place, and casting or firing the same into any house, shop, street, high- way, or river, is subject to a penalty of 20s., to be recovered in like manner; and if not im- mediately paid, the party to be imprisoned and kept to hard labour for any time not exceed- ing a month. But the statute provides, that it shall be lawful for the master, licutenant, or commissioners of his Majesty's ordnance, or those authorized by them, to give orders for making any fire-works, to be used according to such orders. FIRKIN, a measure of capacity, equal to 9 ale gallons, or 71, Imperial gallons, or 2,538 cubic inches.-(See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) FIRLOT, a dry measure used in Scotland. The Linlithgow wheat firlot is to the Impe- rial bushel as .998 to 1; and the Linlithgow barley firlot is to the Imperial bushel as 1.456 is to 1. (See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) FISH (Ger. Fische; Du. Visschen; Da. and Sw. Fish; Fr. Poissons; It. Pesci; Sp. Pescadus; Port. Peixes; Rus. Rüb; Pol. Rybi; Lat. Pisces), a term used in natural his- tory to denote every variety of animal inhabiting seas, rivers, lakes, ponds, &c., that cannot Digitized by Google 680 FISH. exist for any considerable time out of the water. But in a commercial point of view, those fishes only are referred to, that are caught by man, and used either as food or for some other useful purpose. Of these, herring, salmon, cod, pilchard, mackarel, turbot, lobster, oyster, whale, &c., are among the most important.-(See the different articles under these titles.) The supply of fish in the seas round Britain is most abundant, or rather quite inexhausti- ble. " The coasts of Great Britain," says Sir John Boroughs, doe yield such a continued sea harvest of gain and benefit to all those that with diligence doe labour in the same, that no time or season of the yeare passeth away without some apparent meanes of profitable em- ployment, especially to such as apply themselves to fishing which, from the beginning of the year unto the latter end, continueth upon some part or other upon our coastes; and these in such infinite shoales and multitudes of fishes are offered to the takers, as may justly move admiration, not only to strangers, but to those that daily are employed amongst them." That this harvest," says Mr. Barrow, ripe for gathering at all seasons of the year-with- out the labour of tillage, without expense of seed or manure, without the payment of rent or taxes-is inexhaustible, the extraordinary fecundity of the most valuable kinds of fish would alone afford abundant proof. To enumerate the thousands and even millions of eggs, which are impregnated in the herring, the cod, the ling, and indeed in almost the whole of the escu- lent fish, would give but an inadequate idea of the prodigious multitudes in which they flock to our shores; the shoals themselves must be seen, in order to convey to the mind any just notion of their aggregate mass." (For an account of the shoals of herrings, see HERRING.) But, notwithstanding these statements, there has been, for these some years past, a grow- ing complaint of a scarcity of such fish as breed in the Channel and it is affirmed, in the report of the Commons' committee of 1833, on the Channel fisheries, that the fact of such scarcity existing has been completely established. The committee ascribe it to various causes, but principally to the destruction of the spawn or brood of fish, by fishing with trawl or drag nets with small meshes, near the shore, during the breeding season; a prac- tice prohibited by several statutes, which seem, however, to have fallen into disuse. The committee represent the fishermen as being generally in a very depressed state, and that the business is, for the most part, very unprofitable. We believe that this is the fact; but we do not know any period when the same might not have been said with quite as much truth as at present. Smith has remarked, that from the age of Theocritus downwards, fishermen have been proverbially poor-( Wealth of Nations, vol. i. p. 167.) and a library might be filled with the acts, reports, plans, tracts, &c. that have been printed in this country during the last 2 centuries, containing regulations, schemes, suggestions, &c. for the improvement of fisheries and fishermen. But it is not too much to say, that not one of these well meant endeavours, notwithstanding the enormous expense incurred in carrying some of them into effect, has been productive of any material advantage and we see no reason to think that the suggestions of the late committee, supposing they were to be acted upon, would have any better success. The injury done to the breeding grounds might, perhaps, be obviated but besides this, the committee lay much stress on the encroachments of the French and other foreign fisher- men, and on the licence given to import foreign-caught turbot, &c. duty free! We confess, it appears to us quite visionary to suppose that these circumstances can have much influ- ence. Our fishermen, living upon the very shores of the bays to which the French are said to resort, have advantages on their side sufficient, surely, to insure them a superiority, with- out the forcible expulsion, supposing that could be accomplished, of their foreign competi- tors. A man who does not succeed in a business carried on at his own door so well as one who resides 100 miles off, must look for the cause in his want of skill or industry; and should seek rather to improve himself than to discard his rivál. The proposition for exclud- ing turbot, &c. of foreign catch, is one that ought not to be listened to for a single moment. Such exclusion could not be of the slightest advantage to the British fishermen, unless it occasioned a rise in the price of the fish; and we need not say, that if the legislature be to interfere at all in the matter, its interference ought to have for its object the lowering, and not the raising of the prices. All that it is possible to do for the fishery, by relieving it from tithes and other burdens, and facilitating the disposal of the fish in the markets of this and other countries, ought to be done: but except in so far as its interests may be promoted in this way, and, perhaps, by some new regulations for preserving the brood, we do not see what more is to be done by legislative interference. It will be seen in our articles on the herring and whale fisheries, that the bounty system was attended with vast expense, without leading to any useful result. Except in London and a few sea-port towns, the consumption of fish in England is not great. The price in the metropolis, though it has been a good deal reduced of late years, is still very high. This has been pretty generally believed to be in no small degree owing to the salesmen of Billingsgate market being able, in a great measure, to regulate both the supply of the article and its price. The late committee, however, declare, that though they Digitized by Google FLAX. 681 have not minutely examined the subject, it does not appear that any improper monopoly or injurious regulations subsist either in the mode of supplying the market, or in the sale of the fish. Had any such existed, the recent establishment of the Hungerford market would have tended materially to counteract their influence. Mr. Barrow, in a valuable article on the fisheries, in the Supplement to the Encyclopsedia Britannica, has estimated the value of the entire annual produce of the foreign and domes- tic fisheries of Great Britain at 8,300,000L But it is admitted by every one who knows any thing of the subject, that this estimate is very greatly exaggerated. We doubt much, whether the entire value of the fisheries can be reckoned so high as 3,500,000L Regulations as to Importation.-Fresh fish, British taken, and imported in British ships; and fresh turbots and lobsters, however taken or imported; may be landed in the United Kingdom without re- port, entry, or warrant.-( & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. 0 2.) Fresh fish of every kind, of British taking, and imported in British ships ; and fresh lobsters and tur- bots, however taken, or in whatever ships imported and cured fish of every kind, of British taking and curing, imported in British ships ; shall be imported free of all duties, and shall not be deemed to be included in any charge of duty imposed by any act hereafter to be made on the importation of goods generally; provided that before any cured fish shall be entered free of duty, as being of such taking and curing, the master of the ship importing the same shall make and subscribe a declaration before the collector or comptroller, that such fish was actually caught, taken in British ships, and cured, wholly by his Majesty's subjects.-v 44. Fish of foreign taking or curing. or in foreign vessels, except turbots and lobsters, stockfish, live eels, anchovies, sturgeon, botargo, and caviare, prohibited to be imported on pain of forfeiture.— 58. [The following table exhibits the amount of dried and pickled fish exported from the United States, from 1803 to 1837 inclusive. Years. Dried Fish. Pickled Fish. Years. Dried Fish. Pickled Fish. 1803 $1,620,000 $560,000 1821 $758,778 $264,813 1801 2,400,000 640,000 1822 666,730 249,108 1805 2,058,000 348,000 1823 734,024 270,777 1806 2,150,000 366,000 1824 873,685 263,019 1807 1,896,000 302,000 1825 850,356 248,417 1808 623,000 98,000 1826 662,742 257,180 1809 1,123,000 282,000 1827 747,171 240,276 1810 913,000 214,000 1828 819,926 246,737 1811 757,000 305,000 1829 747,541 220,527 1812 592,000 146,000 1830 550,690 225,987 1813 210,000 81,000 1831 625,392 304,441 1814 128,000 50,000 1832 749,900 306,812 1815 494,000 218,000 1833 713,317 277,973 1816 935,000 221,000 1834 630,384 223,290 1817 1,003,000 325,000 1835 783,895 224,629 1818 1,031,000 317,000 1836 746,464 221,426 1819 1,052,000 409,000 1837 588,506 181,333 1820 960,000 538,000 Am. Ed.] (FLAG. Any of her Majesty's subjects hoisting the Union jack in their vessels, or any pendants, &c. usually worn in her Majesty's ships, or any flag, jack, pendant, or colours whatever in imitation of or resembling those of her Majesty, or any ensign or colours what- ever other than those prescribed by proclamation, 1st of January, 1801, shall forfeit for every such offence not more than 500L. (sic in orig.) - (4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 13. § 11.)-Sup.) FLAX (Ger. Flachs; Du. Vlasch; Fr. Lin It. and Sp. Lino: Rus. Len, Lon; Pol. Len; Lat. Linum), an important plant (Linum usitatissimum) that has been cultivated from the earliest ages in Great Britain and many other countries; its fibres being manufac- tured into thread, and its seed crushed for oil. Generally, however, we have been in the habit of importing a large portion of our supplies. The premium given by the legislature to force the cultivation of flax, have had very little effect; the fact being, as Mr. Loudon has stated, that its culture is found to be, on the whole, less profitable than that of corn. When allowed to ripen its seed, it is one of the most severe crops. The principal sorts of flax imported into this country are, Petersburgh, Narva, Riga, Revel, Pernau, Liebau, Memel, Oberland, and Dutch flax. The Petersburgh and Narva flax are nearly of the same quality, the latter being but little inferior to the former. Both sorts come to us in bundles of 12, 9, and 6 heads. The Riga flax seems to deserve the preference of any imported from the Baltic. It is the growth of the provinces of Marienburg, Druania, Thiesenhausen, and Lithuania. The best Marienburg is called simply Marienburg (M), or Marlenburg clean the second quality, cut (GM); and the third, risten dreyband (RD) of the three other provinces, the first quality bears the name of rakitzer;-as Druania rakitzer (DR), Thiesenhausen rakitzer (TR), and Lithuania rukitzer (LR). The cut flax of these three provinces is the second quality and to the third quality belong the badstub and badstub cut (B and BG); the paternoster (PN) and hafs three band (HD). Badstub and paternoster are the refuse of the rakitzer flax. and the three band again the refuse of the former sorts, and consequently very ordinary. The Revel and Pernau consists of Marienburg, cut, risten, hafs three band, and three band. The Liebau and Memel growths are distinguished by the denomination of four and three band. These two sorts, as well as the Oberland flax, come from Konigsberg, Elbing, &c., and are little esteemed in the British markets. Flanders or Dutch flax is well-dressed, and of the finest quality. 86 Digitized by Google 682 FLAX-SEED, FLOTSAM, JETSAM, AND LAGAN. Flax is extensively cultivated in Egypt. Of late years, some of the Italian perts which used to be supplied from Russia, have been fully supplied on lower terms from Alexandria. The Phormium tenax, or New Zealand flax, is said to exceed every other species m strength of fibre and whiteness; qualities which (if it really possess them in the degree stated) must make it peculiarly well-fitted for being made into canvass and cordage. It has been obtained within these few years at second hand from Sydney and Van Diemen's Land; the imports from them having amounted, in 1831, to 15,725 cwt. Attempts are now making, but with what success remains to be seen, to raise it in this country. When flax is brought to the principal Russian ports whence it is shipped, it is classified according to its qualities, and made up in bundles by sworn inspectors (brackers) appointed by government, for the assortment of that and all other merchandise. These functionaries are said to perform their task with laudable impartiality and exactness. A ticket is attached to every bundle of assorted flax, containing the names of the inspector and owner, the sort of flax, and the period when it was selected or inspected.-(See HEMP.) Good flax should be of a fine bright colour, well separated from the tow, codilla, or coarser portion of the plant; and of a long, fine, and strong fibre. In purchasing flax, it is usual to employ agents wholly devoted to this peculiar business. Of 936,411 cwt. of flax and tow imported into Great Britain in 1831, 623.256 cwt. were brought from Russia; 128,231 cwt. from the Netherlands; 101,729 cwt. from Prussia; 55,324 cwt. from France; 1,415 cwt. from Italy; 15,275 cwt. from New South Wales, &c. Almost the whole of this quantity was retained for home consumption. The duty was re- cently reduced, and is now only 1d. a cwt. Flax, the produce or manufacture of Europe, not to be imported for home consumption, except in British ships, or in ships of the country of which it is the produce, or of the country from which it is imported, on pain of forfeiture of the goods and 100/. by the master of the ship.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 54.) We subjoin an account of the charges on the importation of the different sorts of flax from Peters- burgh and Riga. Charges at Petersburgh on 18 Head Flax, per ton. Charges here, per ton, taking the price at 45L L 8. d Circa, 16 bobbins = 63 poods = 1 ton. Insurance, 12. 6d. per cent. and policy, during the sem- Rou. cop. mer, for best risks 069 Duty, 540 enp. per bercovitz 34 2 Sound dues 066 Quarantine duty, I per cent. 0 34 Freight, say 52a 6d. per tom in full 2 If 6 Additional duty, 10 per cent. 3 40 Customs 0 9 Landing charges 110 R. 37 76 Discount, 3-4 per cent. (being sold at 9 months' credit) I 13 , Custom-house charges, 4 per cent. 1 51 6 40 Brokerage, 1-2 per cent. 046 Receiving and weighing, 40 cop. per bobbin Bracking, I roub. per bereovitz 6 30 L 5 15 8 Binding, 75 cop. per ditto 4 72 1 Lighterage and attendance to Cronstadt, 8 roub. per 60 Loss by tare, 2 per cent. IS 0 poods 8 40 Liss Mats 8 0 Brokerage, 60 cop. per ton 0 60 9 Head Flax. 26 bobbins = 63 poods = I tom. Rev. cm. Fixed charges R. 73 69 Fixed charges at Petersburgh amount to SO 35 Brokerage, 1-8 per cent. The other charges same as on 12 head the charges of im- Commission and extra charges, 3 per cent. port may be called the same as on 12 head also, the dif Stamps 1-4 per cent. 1.2 per cent. ference being only on the value; which makes the in Brokerage on bills. 1-4 per cent. surance, discount, and brokerage, of less amount. The are charges varying according to the prices paid. increase of fixed charges at Petersburgh is owing to the Riga flax is bought at so much per shippound. 61-6 shippound larger number of bobbins to the ton. 6 Head Flax. - ton. 47 bobbins - 63 poods = I tom. Ru. cop. The charges of importation are the same, or nearly so, as on Pe. Fixed charges, per ton 91 a tersburgh flax. Other charges, vide supra. FLAX-SEED, OR LINSEED (Fr. Lin, Graine de Lin; Ger. Liensaat; Du. Lyn- zaad; It. Linseme; Sp. Linaza; Port. Linhaca; Pol. Siemie, Iniane; Rus. Semja len- janoe; Lat. Lini semen), the seed of flax. It contains a great deal of oil, which it yields by expression; and is cultivated either that it may be used in sowing, or sent to the crush- ing mills to be converted into oil. As the quality of the crop depends much on the seed employed, a good deal of care is requisite in selecting the best. Generally speaking, it should be chosen of a bright, brown- ish colour, oily to the feel, heavy, and quite fresh. Dutch seed is in the highest estimation for sowing; it not only ripens sooner than any other that is imported, but produces larger crops, and of the quality that best suits our principal manufactures. American seed pro- duces fine flax, but the proceed is not 80 large as from Dutch seed. British flax-seed is sometimes used instead of Dutch; but the risk of the crop misgiving is so much greater, " that those only who are ignorant of the consequences, or who are compelled from necessity, are chargeable with this act of ill-judged parsimony."-(Loudon's Ency. of Agriculture.) Crushing seed is principally imported from Russia, but considerable quantities are also brought from Italy and Egypt. Of 2,759,103 bushels of linseed imported in 1831, 2,210,702 were brought from Russia, 172,099 from Prussia, 106,294 from the United States, 105,448 from Italy, 98,847 from Egypt, 53,738 from the Netherlands, &c. The duty is 18. a quarter; and the price, in December, 1833, varied from 45s. to 54s. a quarter. FLOTSAM, JETSAM, AND LAGAN. In order to constitute a legal wreck, the goods must come to land. If they continue at sea, the law distinguishes them by the foregoing uncouth and barbarous appellations : flotsam is when goods continue floating on the surface of the waves; jetsam is when they are sunk under the surface of the water and lagun Digitized by Google FLOUR. 683 when they are sunk, but tied to a cork or buoy to be found again.- (Blackstone, book i. c. 8.) Foreign liquors, brought or coming into Great Britain or Ireland, as derelict, flotsam, &c., are to pay the same duties and receive the same drawbacks as similar liquors regularly imported. FLOUR (Ger. Feines mehl, Semmelmehl; Du. Bloem; Fleur de farine It. Fiore; Sp. Flor), the meal of wheat corn, finely ground and sifted. There are three qualities of flour, denominated first, seconds, and thirds, of which the first is the purest.- - (See CORN Laws AND Coan TRADE.) [For the first table which follows, with the accompanying remarks, we are indebted to Mr. Hazard's valuable journal, entitled " United States Commercial and Statistical Register." See the number of October 9th, 1839. The second table is taken from the Philadelphia Commercial List of March 9th, 1839. Exports of Flour and Wheat from 1790 to 1838. Average Average Years. Bushels of wheat Inspection of Value of flour price of Barrels of flour price of Quantity of flour Exports of flour at different exported. wheat in flour each exported at ave. places. rage prices in shipped to Eng- flour from exported. year at Phi- land. Barrels. Canada. England. ladelphia. Philadelphia. Barrels. 1790 1,124,458 53. 2 254,107 724,623 $5.56 1791 1,018,339 47.2 321,578 619,681 5 22 3,234,735 - - 1792 853,790 41.9 439,074 824,464 5 25 4,328,436 - - 1793 1,450,575 47.10 422,075 1,074,639 5.90 6,340,370 - - 10,900 1794 698,797 50.8 300,751 846,010 6 90 5,837,469 - - 13,700 1795 141,273 72.11 227,471 687,369 10 60 7,286,111 - - 18,000 1796 31,226 76.3 196,955 725,194 12 50 9,064,955 - - 4,300 1797 15,655 52.2 138,062 515,633 8 91 4,594,290 - - 14,000 1798 15,021 50.4 100,475 567,558 8 20 4,653,975 - - 9,500 1799 10,056 66.11 - - 519,265 9 66 5,016,099 - - |14,400 1800 26,853 110. 3 325,818 653,052 9 86 6,439,092 172,815 20,000 1801 239,929 115.11 342,605 1,102,444 10 40 11,465,417 479,720 38,000 1802 280,281 67.9 426,012 1,156,248 6 90 7,978,111 208,744 28,200 1803 686,415 57. 1 325,955 1,311,853 6 73 8,828,771 203,127 15,432 1804 127,024 60. 5 394,961 810,008 8.23 6,666,365 7,140 14,067 1805 18,041 87. 1 459,372 777,513 9 70 7,541,876 36,752 18,590 1806 86,784 76. 9 474,521 782,724 7 30 5,713,885 127,619 10,997 1807 776,814 73. 1 709,559 1,249,819 7 17 8,961,202 323,968 20,442 1808 87,330 78.11 406,411 263,813 5 69 1,501,095 2,922 42,462 1809 393,889 94. 5 591,975 846,247 6 91 5,847,566 159,741 19,476 1810 325,924 103. 3 527,267 798,431 9 37 7,481,298 92,136 12,519 1811 216,833 92. 5 767,501 1,445,012 9 95 14,377,869 38,183 10,340 1812 53,832 122. 8 1,215,697 1,443,492 9 83 14,189,526 28,429 37,625 1813 288,535 106. 6 1,220,832 1,260,942 8 92 11,247,602 - - 517 1814 - - 72. 1 708,448 193,274 8 60 1,662,156 - - 1,217 1815 17,634 63. 8 1,146,011 862,739 8 71 7,514,456 104,885 1,920 1816 62,321 76.2 1,121,461 729,053 9 78 7,130,138 5,572 1,135 1817 96,407 94. 0 1,336,792 1,479,198 11 69 17,291,824 706,601 38,047 1818 196,808 83. 8 1,205,105 1,157,697 9 96 11,530,662 389,530 30,543 1819 82,065 72.3 1,407,791 750,660 7 11 5,337,192 51,847 12,085 1820 22,137 65.10 1,877,109 1,177,036 4 72 5,555,609 171,772 45,369 1821 25,821 54. 5 1,707,350 1,056,119 4 78 5,048,248 94,541 22,635 1822 4,418 43. 3 1,599,976 827,865 6 58 5,447,351 12,096 47,247 1823 4,272 51. 9 1,557,724 756,702 6 82 5,160,708 4,252 46,250 1824 20,373 62. 0 1,714,400 996,792 5 62 5,601,971 70,873 41,901 1825 17,990 66.6 1,882,611 813,906 5 10 4,150,920 27,272 40,003 1826 45,166 56.11 2,031,555 857,820 4 65 3,988,863 18,355 33,640 1827 22,182 56. 9 2,088,459 868,496 5 23 4,542,234 53,129 54,023 1828 8,906 60. 5 2,206,078 860,809 5 60 4,820,530 23,258 35,720 1829 4,007 66. 2,220,219 837,385 6 33 5,300,647 221,176 11,783 1830 45,289 64.3 2,851,876 1,227,434 4 83 5,928,506 326,182 71,749 1831 408,910 66.4 3,058,393 1,806,529 5 67 10,243,019 879,430 1832 88,304 58.8 2,615,050 864,919 5 72 4,947,337 95,958 31,419 1833 32,421 52.11 2,815,606 955,768 5 63 5,380,974 22,207 51,435 1834 36,948 46. 5 2,915,814 835,352 5 17 4,318,770 19,687 26,812 1835 47,762 39. 4 2,856,448 779,396 5 88 4,582,848 5,376 16,976 1836 2,062 48.6 2,512,416 505,400 7 99 4,038,146 161 1837 17,303 55.11 2,065,793 318,719 9 37 2,986,397 1838 6,291 63. 4 2,546,079 448,161 7 79 3,491,174 8,295 " The preceding table exhibits a general view of the flour and wheat trade of the United States, for forty-nine years. The first column shows the exports of wheat, which in 1790 amounted to 1,124,458 bushels, and in 1838 to only 6,291 bushels. The following state- ment shows the same divided into periods of ten years, and their annual average. Bushels. Bushels per ann. 1790 to 1799 - - 5,359,190 - 535,919 1800 to 1809 - - - - - - - - 2,723,360 - - - 272,336 1810 to 1819 - - - - - - - 1,340,359 - - 134.035 1820 to 1829 - - - - - - - 175,272 - - 17,527 1830 to 1838 - - - - - - - - 685,290 - - 76,143 Total bushels, 10,283,471 Being a yearly average of 209,666 bushels. Digitized by Google 684 FLOUR. The second column exhibits the annual average price of wheat in England as published in the London Gazette, and the following statement shows the average of each period often years from 1770 to 1838. d. 1770 to 1779 - 45. 0 1780 to 1789 - - - - - - - - - 45.9 1790 to 1799 - - - - - - - - 55.11 1800 to 1809 - - - - - - - - - - - - 82. 2 1810 to 1819 - - - - - - - - - 88.8 1820 to 1829 - - - - - 58. 5 1830 to 1838 - - 55. Making the annual average price 61s. 6d. In the third column is the inspection of flour in the different places in the United States, as far as it can be obtained. From 1790 to 1793 inclusive is for Philadelphia only this was obtained from the books of the inspector for that period. From 1800 the amount of inspection is taken from the tables originally formed, with great labour, by a gentleman long engaged in the flour business, and published first in the Phils- delphia Price Current, and continued to the later dates in the Commercial List. It is to be regretted that complete returns from the whole United States could not be obtained, and in some instances these are estimates-so that they can only enable us to form some idea of the amount. From 1800 to 1811, we have no account of the inspections in Philadelphia or New York. From 1800 to 1803, we have only those in Baltimore, to which, from 1803 to 1811, the inspections in Alexandria are added. 1812 shows the inspections in Philadelphia, Baltimore and Alexandria. From 1813 to 1818 inclusive, we have the inspections of Phil- adelphia, New York, Baltimore and Alexandria. In the next year (1819), are added Rich- mond and Petersburg-and to these, in the next two years, Fredericksburg. From 1822 to 1829 inclusive, are embraced the inspections at New Orleans, to which in 1830 to 1836 inclusive, Falmouth is added. In 1837, Falmouth is deficient, as are Fredericksburg and Falmouth in 1838. The exports of flour from the United States in each of the forty-nine years, are shown in the next column-which we have divided into periods of ten years, as follows: Barrels. Per MR. 1790 to 1799 - - - - - - 7,104,436 - - - 710,443 1800 to 1809 - - - - - - - - 8,953,721 - - - 895,378 1810 to 1819 - - - - - - - - 10,120,498 - - 1,012,049 1820 to 1829 - - - - - - - - 9,052,930 - - - 905,293 1830 to 1838 - - - - - - - - 7,741,678 - - - 860,186 42,973,963 Annual average of the whole period 877,000 barrels. The average prices of flour are given each year for Philadelphia, in the next column, as published a few years since in the Price Current. The following shows the averages of periods of ten years. Philadelphia. 1790 to 1799 - - - - - - $7 87 1800 to 1809 - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7 89 1810 to 1819 - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9 39 1820 to 1829 - - - - - - - - - - - - 5 54 1830 to 1838 - - - - - - - - - - 6 45 In the next column is shown the amount of the Exports of flour each year calculated at the average Philadelphia prices. Then follow the quantities of flour exported to England from 1800 to 1838, being in the former 172,815 barrels, and the latter 8295. The largest quantity ever sent there appears to have been in 1831, viz., 879,430 barrels. In 1837, none was sent there. In the last four years large importations of wheat and flour took place. Wheat. Flour. Bushels. Dollars. Cwt. Dollars. 1834 - - - 238,709 - - - 198,647 - - - 39,397 - - - 69,976 1836 - - - 583,898 - - - 493,159 - - - 21,269 - - - 62,341 1837 - - 3,921,259 - - 4,154 329 - - - 30,709 - - - 122,651 1838 - - - 894,536 - - - 696,560 - - - 12,731 - - - 44,273 In the last column are given the exportations of flour from Canada, as published in the Montreal Gazette, from 1793 to 1830, the remaining years are from other British documents. During the period embraced in the preceding tables, there has been a successi- of important political and commercial changes, calculated to affect the prices of thos essential articles of subsistence. We notice a few of them derived from the tables r. published, and other sources. 1790, '91, '92. Peace and favourable seasons in England. 1793. War with France commenced lat February, 1793; favourable season. 1794 to 1801. War with France. 1794 to 1795. Deficient crops Digitized by Google FLOUR. 685 1796. Wheat was 71. per quarter. 1797. Suspension of specie payments by Bank of England. 1798. Seasons less unfavourable. 1799 and 1800. Bad seasons, crop short one fourth in 1799, and a scarcity of bread corn in 1800. 1801. Good crop, followed by peace in 1802. 1802 and 1803. Good sensons, average crops; war recommenced May 1803. 1804 and 1805. Scarcity in Spain; deficient crop in England in 1804; average crops in 1805, '6, and '7; 1803 to 1815; second war with France. 1808. Partially deficient crops; act of Parliament restricting neutral trade. 1808, 1809. Embargo in U. S. June 6; peace with Spain; great deficiency in England. 1810. Good crops in England; 1811 deficiency. 1812 and 1813. War between America and England; favourable crops in England, but currency depreciated. 1814. War between England and America nearly an average crop, but great import, and decrease of charges of production, consequent on peace banks in the United States suspend specie payments. 1815. Bonaparte surrendered himself to the English, July 15; peace between America and Eng- land full average crops in England. 1816. Bank of England partially resumes specie payments; peace great and general deficiency of crops. 1817, 1818. Not exceeding an average crop; the ports open from November 1818 to February 1819, leaving on hand 1,000,000 quarters of wheat; 1817 banks in the United States resumed specie pay- ments. 1819. Somewhat below an average crop. 1820. Bank of England resumed issuing gold. Exceeding an average crop. 1821, '22. Average crops ; 1823, scarcity. 1824. An average, and nearly an average in 1825. 1826 and 1827. Average crop. 1828. Scarcity; 1829, average crop. 1830. Full average crop, and 1831 nearly an average. 1832, '33 and '34. Above an average crop, and 1835 considerably above. 1836. Above, and 1837 below an average in 1835 a revolution in Spain. December 16, 1835, great fire in New York; war between Mexico and Texas, revolution at Lisbon. 1836, 1837. Crops in the United States short-importations of foreign flour, wheat, and potatoes. 1837. Great commercial embarrassments in the United States; suspension of specie payments by the banks of New York, May 10; by others soon after; extra meeting of Congress; troubles in Canada. 1838. Specie payments resumed in the United States. The following statement will show some facts respecting the early exports and prices of flour and wheat in Pennsylvania. Exports of Flour. Exports of Wheat. 1729 35,438 barrels at 11a. 6d. per cwL equal to D. 57 1729 74,800 bushels at 3a. 6d. or 47 cents. 1730 88,570 do. 10 6 do. do. 2 45 1730 37,643 do. 34 44 do. 1731 56,639 do. 8 0 do. do. 1 86 1731 53,326 do. 2 6 33 do. 1749 67,092 do. 16 6 do. do. 3 84 1749 45,775 do. 5 3 70 do. 1750 82,095 do. 12 6 do. do. 8 92 1750 86,745 do. 4 0 53 do. 1751 108,695 do. 18 0 do. do 2 80 1751 76,870 do. 8 10 51 do. 1771 252,744 do. 1771 51,689 1778 284,872 do. average 2 74 1772 92,012 1773 265,967 do. 1773 182,391 Upon comparing the preceding statement with the tables, it appears, that for the last eight years, the exports of wheat from the whole United States, were not as great as they were from Pennsylvania alone 100 years ago nor with only two exceptions, will they exceed, in the last 25 years, the exports from Pennsylvania 60 years ago. And the exports of flour for the last 3 years from the United States, are not double the amount of exports of that article from Pennsylvania 60 years ago while the average prices of both articles have increased probably three or four fold. Upon comparing the exports of flour in the table, we find the exports for the last few years less than they were 50 years ago; and that for several years, with a few exceptions, there has been a gradual diminution in the quantity of exports of this article. On the other hand, viewing the inspections from the same districts of the United States, we find that they average nearly alike for the last 10 years, rather diminishing, however, than increasing in quantity. It appears to us important that more attention should be paid by the states, if not by the general government, to the inspections of flour, as a means of ascertaining more nearly than can now be done, the actual consumption of the country. It is true, that from the inspections we can form no very correct idea of the consumption, as vast quantities of the flour consumed, even in the cities, are not inspected, as is also nearly all that is consumed in the interior of the country. But, as a census is to be taken next year, may not some provision be made for ascertaining the number of mills and their operations during the present year ? also of the quantity of wheat grown ? The comparative price of flour has, by some political economists, been considered a good test of the value of money at different periods; if it be so, the preceding data enable us to furnish the following comparison. We have shown that prices in Pennsylvania, at different periods, from 1729 to 1751, averaged $2 74 per barrel, at which rate $1 would purchase 71 53-100 pounds and the average from 1790 to the present time, is $742, at which rate $1 would purchase only 26 41-100 pounds, the former being 1 40-100 cent per pound, and the latter 3 78-100 cents per pound; showing money to be less available now for the purchase of this most important article of subsistence in the proportion of nearly three to one. But on referring to the table, it will appear that the highest prices and greatest exports arose from demands for Europe," VoL. I.-3 M Digitized by Google Annual Inspection of Wheat and Rye Flour and kiln-dried Corn Meal, in the principal Flour Marts of the United States. Fredericks- New Fal- Philadelphia. New York. Baltimore. Alexandria. Georgetown. Richmond. Petersburg. burg. Orleans. mouth Albany 686 Years. Wheat Rye Corn meal. Wheat Rye Wheat Rye Corn meal. Corn meal. Wheat Rye Corn Wheat Rye Wheat Wheat Wheat Wheat Wheat Wheat flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. meal. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. flour. Bbls. Bbls. Hhds. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Hhds. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Hhds. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. Bbls. 1800 - - - - - - - - 325,818 6,948 93 3,240 1801 - - - - - - - - 342,605 13,827 50 3,554 1802 - - - - - - - - 426,012 1,896 159 2,048 1803 - - - - - - - - 325,955 2,426 123 1,260 1804 - - - - - - - 252,026 1,930 333 - 1,891 142,935 11 536 1805 - - - - - - - - 340,000 8,726 190 881 119,372 28 27 1806 - - - - - - - - 350,774 4,662 333 1,145 123,747 - 1,619 1807 - - - - - - - 490,200 4,512 79 - 2,591 219,359 - 51 1808 - - - - - - - - 258,197 1,288 - 511 148,214 3 1809 - - - - - 423,278 785 83 - - - 2,327 168,697 - 1810 - - - - - - 363,955 3,543 22 - - 2,460 163,312 - 1811 - - - - - - - - 530,052 20,014 - 8,647 237,449 2,069 533 1812 474,132 42,105 1,175 18,933 - - - - 552,699 21,130 - 6,178 188,866 379 1,079 1813 359,555 6,780 4,149 3,122 389,617 38,736 3,374 5,499 291,393 5,216 - 1,263 180,267 29 523 1814 243,570 2,158 956 147 205,683 7,591 18 403 156,165 1,108 - 128 103,030 - 1815 335,046 6,098 6,037 20,364 312,003 12,906 5,012 5,901 388,342 2,777 - 1,470 110,620 15 1816 296,392 20,446 6,809 14,671 271,541 22,902 7,486 7,064 394,976 7,677 - 202 158,552 11 1817 352,464 54,945 5,982 14,008 376,029 110,728 7.107 8,746 398,833 13,685 512 993 209,470 103 FLOUR. 1818 287,793 59,990 7,233 19,674 328,399 91,226 10,164 11,078 430,167 10,031 574 4,015 158,746 754 980 1819 246,330 26,866 8,619 14,654 218,452 30,674 7,457 6,163 465,657 2,900 648 1,769 176,931 2 300 81,743 - 159,500 59,173 1820 400,814 20,696 8,508 18,670 267,365 35,062 9,975 7,443 577,058 4,271 425 6,012 233,505 - - 107,372 - 152,924 56,593 81,478 1821 396,066 20,874 6,839 24,917 258,902 20,175 10,389 7,391 485,818 2,927 221 8,287 208,507 - 98 92,208 - 127,360 55,577 72,912 1822 271,397 26,100 7,567 19,268 342,825 26,154 7,364 9,769 429,377 6,735 226 3,222 171,577 374 15 68,197 - 102,424 38,553 55,467 120,159 1823 302,203 32,225 6,484 20,524 347,876 37,299 8,179 15,322 442,468 6,056 42 1,017 102,819 40 - 55,565 - 111,526 28,496 52,036 114,735 1824 301,333 34,327 7,936 37,336 360,511 27,872 9,236 26,608 544,890 5,770 20 6,471 133,024 411 - 69,284 - 99,128 54,072 51,268 100,920 Digitized by 1825 294,289 33,808 6,502 21,690 446,611 20,682 8,279 19,608 510,425 2,929 - 6,999 170,711 - - 52,964 - 173.203 37,818 56,044 140,546 1826 342,250 15,810 7,129 22,010 527,700 10,370 11,490 12,220 596,348 1,102 - 2,749 178,755 - - 78,920 - 113,786 30,000 34,707 129,094 1827 351,517 20,422 6,161 30,756 652,032 12,191 10,708 15,170 572,759 1,874 - 5,226 140,447 - - 66,044 - 121,664 17,900 35,000 131,096 1828 333,764 29,138 18 8,832 45,436 647,525 21,692 9,931 24,701 546,450 4,409 415 8,821 146,784 - I 79,815 - 149,147 50,000 100,000 152,593 1829 297,206 39,523 7,710 6,483 670,262 24,522 8,572 19,466 473,604 12,801 1,609 6,483 156,849 368 , 104,077 - 204,488 60,350 96,060 157,323 1830 473,876 21,712 7,498 19,949 870 585 15,192 79,336 133,700 46,406 1831 474,076 9,663 10,316 597,804 4,436 588 5,458 187,432 - - 139,713 I 251,024 72,000 Google 24,757 7,980 23,015 928,280 9,222 9,951 24,076 555,136 3,318 416 7,002 193,735 72 - 194,976 30 173,688 52,386 74,227 360,580 51,309 1832 384,844 Am. Ed.] 23,163 8,141 24,445 840,026 12,676 7,154 12,774 527,446 1,729 303 7,246 158,223 - - 152,772 8 176,730 68,915 55,207 210,887 40,000 1833 392,529 40,011 7,549 40,415 1,003,466 16,007 5,848 29,300 523,656 5,887 364 9,152 125,668 - - 108,230 - 243,995 55,319 44,084 262,739 55,320 1834 318,559 31,173 5,797 31,173 1,259,793 17,454 7,164 34,040 489,365 4,464 912 4,068 102,925 - - 119,685 13 156,788 50,171 46,868 320,660 50,000 1835 361,276 36,864 5,813 39,121 1,154,613 13,411 6,982 25,277 527,266 5,807 1,405 4,301 66,438 - - 110,840 15 204,151 44,937 53,222 285,705 48,000 1836 337,917 46,576 6,947 53,975 1,133,554 2,401 9,562 22,016 400,230 22,515 2,520 16,256 36,543 - - 108,513 374 129,131 27,527 26,810 287,191 25,000 1837 *214,339 31,601 6,082 30,259 $ 904.488 12,632 6,222 23,575 399,064 15,887 800 8,373 38,604 - - 61,618 - 140,984 23,350 18,491 264,356 1838 *292,763 40,111 9,108 53,426 1,183,871 24,260 8,110 27,068 430,247 1,303 5,458 36,426 185 300 43,058 1,587 137,708 27,628 307,610 - 60,768 15,495 - Flour inspected in another market is not subject to re-laspection in Philadelphia, by the present law. 1'From May 9th to the close of 1807. FOOT-FREIGHT. 687 FOOT, a measure of length, consisting of 12 inches.-(See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) FORESTALLING, the buying or contracting for any cattle, provision, or merchandise, on its way to the market, or dissuading persons from buying their goods there, or persuading them to raise the price, or spreading any false rumour with intent to enhance the value of any article. Several statutes had from time to time been passed, prohibiting forestalling under severe penalties. But as more enlarged views upon such subjects began to prevail, the impolicy of these statutes became obvious. They were consequently repealed in 1772. But forestalling is still punishable at common law by fine and imprisonment. It is doubtful, however, whether any jury would now convict an individual accused of such practices.- (Wealth of Nations, vol. ii. p. 409.) FRANKINCENSE. See ROSIN. FREIGHT, the sum paid by the merchant or other person hiring a ship, or part of a ship, for the use of such ship or part, during a specified voyage or for a specified time. The freight is most commonly fixed by the charterparty—(see CHARTERPARTY)-0 bill of lading- (see BILL OF LADING): but in the absence of any formal stipulations on the subject, it would be due according to the custom or usage of trade. In the case of a charterparty, if the stipulated payment be a gross sum for an entire ship, or an entire part of a ship, for the whole voyage, the gross sum will be payable although the merchant has not fully laden the ship. And if a certain sum be stipulated for every ton, or other portion of the ship's capacity, for the whole voyage, the payment must be according to the number of tons, &c. which the ship is proved capable of containing, without regard to the quantity actually put on board by the merchant. On the other hand, if the merchant have stipulated to pay a certain sum per cask or bale of goods, the payment must be, in the first place, according to the number of casks and bales shipped and delivered; and if he have further covenanted to furnish a complete lading, or a specific number of casks or bales, and failed to do so, he must make good the loss which the owners have sustained by his failure. If an entire ship be hired, and the burden thereof be expressed in the charterparty, and the merchant bind himself to pay a certain sum for every ton, &c. of goods which he shall lade on board, but does not bind himself to furnish a complete lading, the owners can only demand payment for the quantity of goods actually shipped. But if the merchant agree to load a full and complete cargo, though the ship be described as of less burden than she really is, the merchant must load a full cargo, according to the real burden of the ship, and he will be liable for freight according to what ought to be loaded. The delivery of goods at the place of destination is in general necessary to entitle the owner to freight; but with respect to living animals, whether men or cattle, which may frequently die during the voyage, without any fault or neglect of the persons belonging to the ship, it is ruled, that if there be no express agreement whether the freight is to be paid for the lading, or for the transporting them, freight shall be paid as well for the dead as for the living: if the agreement be to pay freight for the lading, then death certainly cannot deprive the owners of the freight; but if the agreement be to pay freight for transporting them, then no freight is due for those that die on the voyage because as to them the contract is not performed. These distinctions have been made in the civil law, and have been adopted into the modern systems of maritime law. Freight is most frequently contracted to be paid either by the whole voyage, or by the month, or other time. In the former case the owners take upon themselves the chance of the voyage being long or short: but in the latter the risk of the duration falls upon the merchant; and if no time be fixed for the commencement of the computation, it will begin from the day on which the ship breaks ground and commences her voyage, and will con- tinue during the whole course of the voyage, and during all unavoidable delays not occasioned by the act or neglect of the owners or master, or by such circumstances as occa- sion a suspension of the contract for a particular period. Thus, the freight will be payable for the time consumed in necessary repairs during a voyage, provided it do not appear that the ship was insufficient at the outset, or that there was any improper delay in repairing her. In the absence of an express contract to the contrary, the entire freight is not earned until the whole cargo be ready for delivery, or has been delivered to the consignee, according to the contract for its conveyance. If a consignee receive goods in pursuance of the usual bill of lading, by which it is expressed that he is to pay the freight, he by such receipt makes himself debtor for the freight and may be sued for it. But a person who is only an agent for the consignor, and who is known to the master to be acting in that character, does not make himself personally answerable for the freight by receiving the goods, although he also enters them in bis own name at the Custom-house. In some cases freight is to be paid, or rather an equivalent recompence made to the owners, although the goods have not been delivered at the place of destination, and though the contract for conveyance be not strictly performed. Thus, if part of the cargo be thrown overboard for the necessary preservation of the ship and the remainder of the goods, and the Digitized by Google 688 FREIGHT. ship afterwards reach the place of destination, the value of this part is to be answered to the merchant by way of general average, and the value of the freight thereof allowed to the owner. So, if the master be compelled by necessity to sell a part of the cargo for victuals or repairs, the owners must pay to the merchant the price which the goods would have fetched at the place of destination; and, therefore, are allowed to charge the merchant with the money that would have been due if they had been conveyed thither. When goods are deteriorated during the voyage, the merchant is entitled to a compen- sation, provided the deterioration has proceeded from the fault or neglect of the master or mariners; and of course he is not answerable for the freight, unless he accept the goods, except by way of deduction from the amount of the compensation. On the other hand, if the deterioration has proceeded from a principle of decay naturally inherent in the commodity itself, whether active in every situation, or in the confinement and closeness of a ship, or from the perils of the sea, or the act of God, the merchant must bear the loss and pay the freight; for the master and owners are in no fault, nor does their contract contain any insurance or warranty against such an event. In our West India trade, the freight of sugar and molasses is usually regulated by the weight of the casks at the port of delivery here, which, in fact, is in every instance less than the weight at the time of the shipment; and, therefore, the loss of freight occasioned by the leakage necessarily falls upon the owners of the ship by the nature of the contract. Different opinions have been entertained by Valin, Pothier, and other great authorities M to maritime law, with respect to the expediency of allowing the merchant to abandon his goods for freight in the event of their being damaged. This question has not been judicially decided in this country. The only point," says Lord Tenderden, " intended to be proposed by. me as doubtful, is the right to abandon for freight alone at the port of destination and in point of practice, I have been informed that this right is never claimed in this country."- (Law of Shipping, part iii. c. 7.) Freight being the return made for the conveyance of goods or passengers to a particular destination, no claim arises for its payment in the event of a total loss; and it is laid down by Lord Mansfield, that " in case of a total loss with salvage, the merchant may either take the part saved, or abandon." (Abbott, part iii. c. 7.) But after the merchant has made his election, he must abide by it. It often happens that a ship is hired by a charterparty to sail from one port to another, and thence back to the first- as, for example, from London to Leghorn, and from Leghorn back to London at a certain sum to be paid for every month or other period of the duration of the employment. Upon such a contract, if the whole be one entire voyage, and the ship sail in safety to Leghorn, and there deliver the goods of the merchant, and take others on board to be brought to London, but happen to be lost in her return thither, nothing is due for freight, although the merchant has had the benefit of the voyage to Leghorn: but, if the outward and homeward voyages be distinct, freight will be due for the proportion of the time employed in the outward voyage. "If," said Lord Mansfield, in a case of this sort, " there be one entire voyage out and in, and the ship be cast away on the homeward voyage, no freight is due; no wages are due, because the whole profit is lost; and by express agree- ment the parties may make the outward and homeward voyages one. Nothing is more common than two voyages: wherever there are two voyages, and one is performed, and the ship is lost on the homeward voyage, freight is due for the first." - (K. B. Trin. Term, 16 Geo. 3.) It frequently happens that the master or owner fails to complete his contract, either by not delivering the whole goods to the consignee or owner, or by delivering them at a place short of their original destination in these cases, if the owner or consignee of the goods derive any benefit from their conveyance, he is liable to the payment of freight according to the proportion of the voyage performed, or pro ratâ itineris peracti: and though contracts of this nature be frequently entire and indivisible, and the master or owner of the ship cannot, from their nature, sue thereon, and recover a rateable freight, or pro ratà itineris: yet be may do so upon a fresh implied contract, for as much as he deserves to have, unless there be an express clause in the original charterparty or contract to the contrary. A fresh implied contract is inferred from the owner's or consignee's acceptance of the goods. Many diffi- culties have, indeed, arisen in deciding as to what shall amount to an acceptance it is not, however, necessary actually to receive the goods; acceptance may be made by the express or implied directions, and with the consent, of the owner or consignee of the goods, but not otherwise. It sometimes happens that the owner of the ship, who is originally entitled to the freight, sells or otherwise disposes of his interest in the ship where a chartered ship is sold before the voyage, the vendee, and not the vendor, or party to whom he afterwards assigns the charterparty, is entitled to the freight. But where a ship has been sold during the voyage, the owner, with whom a covenant to pay freight has been made, is entitled to the freight, and not the vendee. A mortgagee who does not take possession, is not entitled to the freight. Digitized by Google FRUIT-FUNDS. 689 The time and manner of paying freight are frequently regulated by express stipulations in a charterparty, or other written contract; and when that is the case, they must be respected but if there be no express stipulation contrary to or inconsistent with the right of lien, the goods remain as security till the freight is paid; for the master is not bound to deliver them, or any part of them, without payment of the freight and other charges in respect thereof, but the master cannot detain the cargo on board the vessel till these payments be made, as the merchant would, in that case, have no opportunity of examining the condition of the goods. In England, the practice is, when the master is doubtful of payment, to send such goods as are not required to be landed at any particular wharf, to a public wharf, ordering the wharfinger not to part with them till the freight and other charges are paid. No right of lien for freight can exist, unless the freight be earned if the freighter or a stranger pre- vent the freight from becoming due, the ship owner or master's remedy is by action of damages. (For further information and details with respect to this subject, see the art. CHARTER- PARTY, in this Dictionary; Abbott (Lord Tenterden) on the Law of Shipping, part iii. c. 7.; Chitty's Commercial Law, vol. iii. c. 9.; Molloy de Jure Maritimo, book ii. c. 4.; &c.) [The American reader may have recourse with great advantage, for information on the subject of freight, to Kent's Commentary on American Law, Lecture 47th. - Am. Ed.] FRUIT (Ger. Obst, Früchte; Du. Ooft; Fr. Fruit; It. Frutta, Frutte, Sp. Fruta, Rus. Owoschtsch; Lat. Fructum). This appellation is bestowed by commercial men upon those species of fruit, such as oranges, lemons, almonds, raisins, currants, apples, &c., which constitute articles of importation from foreign countries. FULLER'S EARTH (Ger. Walkererde; Du. Voläarde; Fr. Terre à foulon It. Terra da purgatori; Sp. Tierra de batan; Rus. Schiffernaia; Lat. Terra fullonum), a species of clay of a greenish white, greenish grey, olive and oil green, and sometimes spotted colour. It is usually opaque, very soft, and feels greasy. It is used by fullers to take grease out of cloth before they apply the soap. The best is found in Buckinghamshire and Surrey. When good it has a greenish white, or greenish grey colour, falls into powder in water, appears to melt on the tongue like butter, communicates a milky hue to water, and deposits very little sand when mixed with boiling water. The remarkable detersive property on woollen cloth depends on the alumina, which should be at least one fifth of the whole, but not much more than one fourth, lest it become too tenacious. - (Thomson's Chemistry ; Jameson's Mineralogy.) Malcolm, in his Survey of Surrey, published in 1809, says that he took considerable pains in endeavouring to ascertain the consumption of fuller's earth, and that he found it to be about 6,300 tons a year for the entire kingdom, of which about 4,000 tons were furnished by Surrey. FUNDS (PUBLIC), the name given to the public funded debt due by government. The practice of borrowing money in order to defray a part of the war expenditure began, in this country, in the reign of William III. In the infancy of the practice, it was customary to borrow upon the security of some tax, or portion of a tax, set apart as a fund for discharg- ing the principal and interest of the sum borrowed. This discharge was, however, very rarely effected. The public exigencies still continuing, the loans were, in most cases, either continued, or the taxes were again mortgaged for fresh ones. At length the practice of borrowing for a fixed period, or, as it is commonly termed, upon terminable annuities, was almost entirely abandoned, and most loans were made upon interminable annuities, or until such time as it might be convenient for government to pay off the principal. In the beginning of the funding system, the term fund meant the taxes or funds appro- priated to the discharge of the principal and interest of loans; those who held government securities, and sold them to others, selling, of course, a corresponding claim upon some fund. But after the debt began to grow large, and the practice of borrowing upon inter- minable annuities had been introduced, the meaning attached to the term fund was gra- dually changed; and instead of signifying the security upon which loans were advanced, it has, for a long time, signified the principal of the loans themselves. Owing partly, perhaps, to the scarcity of disposable capital at the time, but far more to the supposed insecurity of the Revolutionary establishment, the rate of interest paid by government in the early part of the funding system was, comparatively, high. But as the country became richer, and the confidence of the public in the stability of government was increased, ministers were enabled to take measures for reducing the interest, first in 1716, and again in 1749. During the reigns of William III. and Anne, the interest stipulated for loans was very various. But in the reign of George II. a different practice was adopted. Instead- of varying the interest upon the loan according to the state of the money market at the time, the rate of interest was generally fixed at three or three and a half per cent. ; the necessary variation being made in the principal funded. Thus, suppose government were anxious to borrow, that they preferred borrowing in a 3 per cent. stock, and that they could not negociate a loan for less than 41 per cent.; they effected their object by giving the lender, in return for every 100L advanced, 1501. 3 per cent. stock that is, they bound the country to pay him or his 3 M 2 87 Digitized by Google 690 FUNDS. assignees 4l. 10s. a year in all time to come, or, otherwise, to extinguish the debt by a pay- ment of 150L In consequence of the prevalence of this practice, the principal of the debt now existing amounts to nearly two fifths more than the sum actually advanced by the lenders. Some advantages are, however, derivable, or supposed to be derivable, from this system. It renders the management of the debt, and its transfer, more simple and commodious than it would have been, had it consisted of a great number of funds bearing different rates of interest: and it is contended, that the greater field for speculation afforded to the dealers in stocks bearing a low rate of interest, has enabled government to borrow, by funding addi- tional capitals, for a considerably less payment on account of interest than would have been necessary had no such increase of capital been made. Were this a proper place for entering upon such discussions, it would be easy to show that the ad- vantages now referred to are really of very trifling importance; and that the method of funding by an increase of capital has been a most improvident one, and most injurious to the public interests. But it would be quite foreign from the objects of this work to enter into any examination of such questions: our readers will, however, find them fully investigated in an article in the 93d No. of the Edinburgh Review. Here we have merely to consider funded property, or government securities, as transferable or marketable commodities. It would be foreign to the object of this work to enter upon any examination of the com- parative advantages and disadvantages of the funding system. Perhaps, on the whole, the latter preponderate; though it is not to be denied that the former are very considerable. The purchase of funded property affords a ready method of investment; and as neither the Bank of England, nor any of the London private banks, allows interest upon deposits, it is plain that, were it not for the facilities given by the funds, individuals unable to employ their savings in some branch of business, would derive no advantage from them, unless they re- sorted to the hazardous expedient of lending upon private credit. In Scotland, where the public and private banks are universally in the habit of allowing interest upon deposits, the advantages of funded investments are not quite so obvious, though probably as great; for it may be doubted whether the banks could afford interest, or whether, indeed, they could be conducted at all, without the aid of the funds. An Account of the Total Number of Persons to whom a Half Year's Dividend was due at the last Half-yearly Payment thereof, on each Description of Public Stock, and on each Description of Terminable Annuities; distinguishing the Number respectively of those whose Dividends for the Half Year did not exceed 51., 10L., 501., 100L., 2001., 3001., 5001., 1,0001., 2,0001., 3,000/., 4,000!., 5,000L, and the Number of those whose Dividends exceed 5,0001.; distinguishing also, in those above 1,000L, the Dividends due to any Public Company, or to more than a single Name.- (Parl. Paper, No. 20%. Sess. 1833.) Not exceeding 51. 101. 501. 100Z. 200L 300L 5001. 1,000L 2,000L Joint Co. as Accts., 2,000L 8,0001. Co. & Joint Accts., 3,000L 4,000% Ca. & Joint Accts., 4,000L 2000/8 1 upwards. I Number to whom divi- dends were payable On 31. per cent. re- duced annuities 10,347 4,745 11,681 8,473 2,175 742 453 231 53 24 9 5 5 3 18 On 31. 10s. per cent. reduced annuities 7,019 4,362 10,173 2,909 1,561 411 251 112 15 21 5 4 nil I 5 26,849 On 3L 10s. per cent. 198 162 399 annuities, 1818 811 127 57 38 30 3 3 nil nil oil 1 3 1,52 On 41. per cent. annui- ties, 1826 1,601 993 2,044 512 312 92 59 15 4 I 2 I all nal ail 5,636 On long annuities 9,078 4,212 8,361 1,516 725 187 99 34 4 1 1 I I 1 mil 24,221 On annuities for terms of years 1,519 787 1,632 351 178 56 32 20 4 nil 2 nil nil mil 2 4,588 On 31. per cent. conso- 28,722 13,749 32,601 9,612 6,286 2,141 1,424 709 153 18 16 20 7 13 21 $5,555 lidated annuities On 31. per cent. annui- ties, 1726 120 74 180 40 27 4 2 nil nil all nil nil ail nil E 467 Or new 3/. 10a. per 1 26,981 14,698 29,370 6,648 3,129 765 431 204 28 20 4 1 2 4 9 62,194 cent. annuities On new 51. per cent. annuities 35 31 107 36 20 3 4 all I ail nil nil ail ail all 237 On annuities for terms of years 1,656 833 1,757 333 161 37 34 12 I all I 3 nil 1 8 4,538 Totals 87,176 44,648 98,305 25,641 14,701 4,495 2,927 1,367 266 151 40 35 15 24 60 279,751 Dividends payable 10th of October. t Dividends payable on 5th January. 1 The preceding account of the number of dividend warrants issued in the half year ending with the 5th of January, 1833, is a very important document. The large number (87,176) of holders of sums not producing above 5% of half yearly dividend, is principally to be ascribed to the circumstances already mentioned as peculiar to the banking system of the metropolis; and there can be little doubt that their number would be materially diminished. were the Scotch system adopted in its stead. It is evident from this account, that the num- ber of persons having a direct interest in the funds is much greater than it represents. The dividends on the funded property belonging to the Equitable and other insurance companies, the different banking companies, &c. are paid upon single warrants, as if they were due to so many private individuals; whereas they are, really, paid to these individuals only be cause they act as factors or trustees for a vast number more. It is consequently quite abound Digitized by Google FUNDS. 691 to pretend, as is sometimes done, that any interference with funded property would affect only 280,000 individuals out of a population of 25,000,000. Any attack upon the divi- dends would really be destructive, not merely of the interests of those to whom dividend warrants are issued, but of all who depend upon them: it would destroy our whole system of insurance and banking, and overspread the country with bankruptcy and ruin. Not only, therefore, is every proposal for an invasion of the property of the fundholders bottomed on injustice and robbery, but it would, were it acted upon, be little less ruinous to the commu- nity than to the peculiar class intended to be plundered. The following Table has been calculated, in order to show in which of the public funds money may be invested, so as to yield the greatest interest. It gives the prices, differing by 1 per cent. from 50 to 93 for 3 per cents. &c., at which they all must be, to yield the same interest; so that, supposing the 3 per cents. to be at 80, a sum invested in them, or in the 31, per cents., will yield the same interest, provided the latter be at 931 if the 31, per cents. be below this sum, it will of course be more advantageous, in so far at least as interest is concerned, to invest in them than in the 3 per cents.; while, if they be above 931, it will be less advantageous. To get the true value of the different funds at any particular period, in order to compare them accurately together, it is necessary to deduct from each the amount of interest accruing upon it from the payment of the last dividend.-(For further details, see antè, p. 87. and p. 247.) Table showing the Prices the different Funds must he at to produce an equal Interest; and also the annual Interest produced by 100l. Sterling invested at any of those Prices. 3 perCent. 3} per Cent. 4 per Cent. 5 per Cent. Interest. 3 perCent. st per Cent. 4 per Cent. 5 per Cent. Price. Price. Price. Price. Price. Price. Price. Price. Interest. £ £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d £ £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 50 5868 66 13 4 83 6 8 6 0 0 72 84 0 0 96 0 0 120 0 0 4 3 3 51 59 10 0 6800 8500 5 17 7 73 85 3 4 97 6 8 121 13 4 4 2 2 52 60 13 4 6968 86 13 4 5 15 4 74 8688 98 13 4 123 6 8 4 1 0 53 61 16 8 70 13 4 8868 5 13 2 75 87 10 0 100 0 0 125 0 0 4 0 0 54 6300 7200 9000 5 11 1 76 88 13 4 101 6 8 126 13 4 3 18 11 55 6434 7368 91 13 4 5 9 0 77 89 16 8 102 13 4 128 6 8 3 17 11 56 65 6 8 74 13 4 9368 5 7 1 78 9100 104 0 0 130 0 O 3 16 11 57 66 10 0 7600 9500 5 5 3 79 92 3 4 105 6 8 131 13 4 3 15 11 58 67 13 4 7768 96 13 4 5 3 5 80 9368 106 13 4 133 6 8 3 15 0 59 68 16 8 78 13 4 9868 5 1 8 81 94 10 0 108 0 0 135 0 0 3 14 0 60 7000 8000 100 0 0 5 0 0 82 95 13 4 109 6 8 136 13 4 3 18 2 61 71 3 4 8168 101 13 4 4 18 4 83 96 16 8 110 13 4 138 6 8 3 12 3 62 72 6 8 82 13 4 103 6 8 4 16 9 84 98 0 0 112 0 0 140 0 o 3 11 5 63 73 10 0 8400 105 0 0 415 2 85 9934 113 6 8 141 13 4 3 10 7 64 74 13 4 8568 106 13 4 4 8 86 100 6 8 114 13 4 143 6 8 3 9 9 65 75 16 8 86 13 4 108 6 8 4 12 3 87 101 10 0 116 0 0 14500 3811 66 77 0 0 8800 11000 4 10 10 88 102 13 4 117 6 8 146 13 4 3 8 2 67 78 3 4 8969 111 13 4 4 9 6 89 103 16 8 118 13 4 148 6 8 3 7 4 68 7968 90 13 4 113 6 8 4 8 2 90 105 0 0 120 0 0 150 0 0 3 6 8 69 80 10 0 9200 115 0 0 4 6 11 91 106 3 4 121 6 8 151 13 4 3 5 11 70 81 13 4 9368 116 13 4 4 5 8 92 107 6 8 122 13 4 153 6 8 3 5 2 71 82 16 8 94 13 4 118 6 8 446 93 108 10 0 124 0 0 155 0 0 3 4 6 The following is an account of the progress of the National Debt of Great Britain, from the Re- volution to the present time: Account of the Principal and Annual Charge of the Public Debt since the Revolution.* Principal, Interest Funded and and Manage- Unfunded. ment. Debt at the Revolution, in 1689 L. 664,263 L. 39,855 Excess of debt contracted during the reign of William III. above debt paid off 15,730,439 1,271,087 Debt at the accession of Queen Anne, in 1702 16,394,702 1,310.942 Debt contracted during Queen Anne's reign 37750,661 2,040,416 Debt at the accession of George I., in 1714 54,145,363 3,351,358 Debt paid off during the reign of George L, above debt contracted 2,053,125 1,133,897 Debt at the accession of George IL, in 1727 52,092,238 2,217,551 Debt contracted from the accession of George II. till the peace of Paris in 1763, three years after the accession of George III. $6,773,192 2,634,500 Debt in 1763 38,865,430 4,852,061 Paid during peace, from 1763 to 1775 10,281,795 380,480 Debt at the commencement of the American war, in 1775 128,583,635 4,471,571 Debt contracted during the American war 121,267,993 4,980,201 Debt at the conclusion of the American war, in 1784 $49,951,629 9,451,778 Paid during peace, from 1784 to 1793 10,501,380 243,277 Debt at the commencement of the French war, in 1793 239,350,148 9,208,495 Debt contracted during the French war 001,500,343 22,829,696 Total funded and unfunded debt on the 1st of February, 1817, when the English and frish ex- chequers were consolidated 840,850,491 32,088,191 Debt cancelled from the 1st of February, 1817, to 5th of January, 1896 53,211,675 2,994,674 Debt, and charge thereon, 5th of January, 1836 787,635,816 29,143,517 . This account has been made up partly from the table in Dr. Hamilton's work on the National Debt (3rd el. p. 100.); partly from the Parl. Paper, No. 165. Sees. 1834 and partly from the Annual I mance Book, for the year ending 5th January, 1836, pages 14. 99. & 104 Digitized by Google Account of the State of the Public Funded and Unfunded Debt of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Charge thereon, on the 5th of January, 1836 (Finance Accounts for 1836, p. 99, &c.) DEBT. CHARGE Capital of Unredeemed In Great Britain. In Ireland. Total Annual Charge. Debt. GREAT BRITAIN. £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Debt due to the South Sea Company, at 3 per cent. 3,662,784 8 6f Annual Interest on unredeemed capital 22,890,029 6 7 1,152,192 4 61 Old South Sea annuities - - - - 3,497,870 2 7 Long annuities, expire 1860 - - 1,294,307 18 7 73 19 3 New South Sea annuities - - - - 2,460,830 2 10 Annuities per 4 Geo. 4. c. 22, do. 1867 585,740 0 0 South Sea annuities, 1751 - - - - 523,100 0 0 Annuities per 10 Geo. 3 c. 24, and Debt due to the Bank of England - - - 11,015,100 0 0 3 Will. 4. c. 14. expire at various 1,347,788 2 6 Bank annuities created in 1726 - - 825,491 19 0 periods - - Consolidated annuities - - - - 356,768,258 4 61 Due to the Annuities to the trustees of the Water- Reduced annuities - - - - - 125,851,977 8 11 public loo Subscription Fund, per 59 Geo. 3. 9,000 0 0 creditor. c. 34, expire 5th of July, 1836 Total bearing interest at 3 per cent. - 504,605,412 6 41 Payable Life Annuities,per 48 Geo 3. at the Annuities at 3} per cent. anno 1818 10,861,103 19 7 Reduced 31 per cent. annuities - - - 63,436,850 2 0 - c. 142, and 10 Geo. 4, c. 24, 893,635 6 0 - - National and 3 Will. 4. c. 14 Tontines and other Debt English 20,356 4 81 New 31 per cent. annuities - - - 146,557,900 19 8 Office. Life annuities per New 5 per cent. annuities - - - - 438,240 13 4 various acts Irish 34,230 8 7 6,823 7 3 FUNDS. Great Britain - 725,899,508 0 114 Interest of funded debt - - - - 27,075,087 6 111 1,159,089 11 01 Interest on stock transferred to the Commissioners for the Reduction of the National debt, towards 12,430 13 31 IRELAND. the redemption of land tax, per 53 Geo. 3. c. 123 Irish consolidated annuities, at 3 per cent. - 2,570,402 6 3 Management - - - - - - 156,697 18 111 Irish reduced annuities, do. - - - 225,182 8 1 31 per cent. debentures and stock - - 14,243,856 16 10 Annual charge on account of public funded debt - 27,244,215 19 11 1,159,089 11 of 28,403,305 10 14 Reduced 31 per cent. annuities - - - 1,116,916 3 9 Interest on Exchequer bills (1835) - - - - - - - - - 740,211 1 10 Digitized by Google New 31 per cent. annuities - - - 11,856,570 7 3 Debt due to the Bank of Ireland, at 4 per cent. - 1,615,384 12 4 Total annual charge of funded and unfunded debt, New's per cent. annuities - - - 6,661 1 0 exclusive of 41,1162. 14s.10d., the annual charge on Debt due-to the Bank of Ireland, at 5 per cent. - 1,015,384 12 4 capitals and long annuities,standing in the name of - - - - - 29,143,516 11 118 the commissioners, on account of stock unclaimed Ireland - 32,650,358 7 10 10 years or upwards, and of unclaimed dividends; and also on account of donations and bequests Total United Kingdom - 758,549,866 8 of Exchequer bills outstanding, 5th Jan. 1836 - 29,088,950 0 0 The act of 10 Geo. 4. (abolishing the sinking funds) enacts, that the sum thenceforth annually applicable to the Total funded and unfunded debt, 5th Jan. 1826. 787,638,816 8 91 reduction of the national debt shall consist of the actual surplus revenue beyond the expenditure. In 1835, this surplus amounted to 1,620,9401. 4a. 111d. FUNDS. 693 The statement on page 691, shows that a reduction of 53,211,675L was effected in the principal of the national debt, and of 2,894,6741. in the annual charge on account thereof, between February, 1817, and January, 1836. The debt, at the last mentioned period, includes the stock created by the funding of the loan of 15,000,000L in 1835, for behoof of the slave proprietors. The diminution has been brought about partly by the application of surplus revenue to buy up stock, but more by the reduction of the interest on the 4 and 5 per cent. stocks existing in 1817, and by that paid on the unfunded debt. The total annual saving by the reduction of interest between 1822, when the first, and 1824, when the last, reduction was made (that of the 4 per cent. annuities, mentioned in former impressions of this work), has been 2,355,845/.; and considerable as this is, it would have been more than three times as great, but for the pernicious practice, previously pointed out, of funding large nominal capitals. We subjoin a brief notice of the different funds or stocks constituting the public debt, as it stood on the 5th of January, 1836. I. FUNDS BEARING INTEREST AT THREE PER CENT. 1. South Sea Debt and Annuities. - This portion of the debt, amounting, on the 5th of January, 1836, to 10,144,584/., is all that now remains of the capital of the once famous, or rather infamous, South Sea Company. The Company has, for a considerable time past, ceased to have any thing to do with trade: 80 that the functions of the directors are wholly restricted to the transfer of the Company's stock, and the payment of the dividends on it; both of which operations are performed at the South Sea House, and not at the Bank. The dividends on the old South Sea annuities are payable on the 5th of April and 10th of October; the dividends on the rest of the Company's stock are payable on the 5th of January and 5th of July. 2. Debt due to the Bank of England. This consists of the sum of 11,015,100Z. lent by the Bank to the public at 3 per cent. dividends payable on the 5th of April and 10th of October. This must not be confounded with the Bank capital of 10,914,750L, on which the stockholders divide. The dividend on the latter has been 8 per cent. since 1823.- (See antè, p. 86. and p. 89.) 3. Bank Annuities created in 1726. The civil list settled upon George I. was 700,000/. a year; but having fallen into arrear, this stock was created for the purpose of cancelling Exchequer bills that had been issued to defray the arrear. "The capital is irredeemable and being small, in comparison with the other public funde, and a stock in which little is done on speculation, the price is generally at least 1 per cent. lower than the 3 per cent. consols." (Cohen's edit. of Fairman on the Funds, p. 40.) 4. Three per Cent. Consols, or Consolidated Annuities.- This stock forms by much the largest portion of the public debt. It had its origin in 1751, when an act was passed, consolidating (hence the name) several separate stocks bearing an interest at 3 per cent. into one general stock. At the period when the consolidation took place, the principal of the funds blended together amounted to 9,137,821/.; but, by the funding of additional loans, and parts of loans, in this stock, it amounted, on the 5th of January, 1836, to the immense sum of 356,768,258L The consolidated annuities are distinguished from the 3 per cent. reduced annuities, by the circumstance of the interest upon them never having been varied, and by the dividends becoming due at different periods. The stock is, from its magnitude, and the proportionally great number of its holders, the soonest affected by all those circumstances which tend to elevate or depress the price of funded property and, on this account, it is the stock which speculators and jobbers most commonly select for their operations. Dividends pay- able on the 5th of January and 5th of July. 5. Three per Cent. Reduced Annuities. This fund was established in 1757. It con- sisted, as the name implies, of several funds which had previously been borrowed at a higher rate of interest; but by an act passed in 1749, it was declared that such holders of the funds in question as did not choose to accept in future of a reduced interest of 3 per cent. should be paid off,-an alternative which comparatively few embraced. The debts that were thus reduced and consolidated, amounted, at the establishment of the fund, to 17,571,574L By the addition of new loans, they now amount to 125,851,977L Dividends payable on the 5th of April and 10th of October. II. FUNDS BEARING MORE THAN THREE PER CENT. INTEREST. 1. Annuities at 31 per Cent., 1818. This stock was formed in 1818, partly by a sub- scription of 3 per cent. consolidated and 3 per cent. reduced annuities, and partly by a subscription of Exchequer bills. It was made redeemable at par any time after the 5th of April, 1829, upon 6 months' notice being given. Dividends payable on the 5th of April and 10th of October. The capital of this stock amounts to 10,861,104/. 2. Reduced 31 per Cent. Annuities.- This stock was created in 1824, by the transfer of a stock bearing interest at 4 per cent. (Old 4 per cents.) It is redeemable at pleasure. Digitized by Google 694 FUNDS. Dividends payable 5th of April and 10th of October. Amount on the 5th of January, 1836, 63,436,850L 3. New 31 per Cent. Annuities.- This stock was formed by the act 11 Geo. 3. C. 13. out of the stock known by the name of " New 4 per cents.," amounting on the 5th of Jm- uary, 1830, to 144,331,212L The holders of this 4 per cent. stock had their option either to subscribe it into the new 31 per cent. annuities, or into a new 5 per cent. stock, at the rate of 100L 4 per cents. for 70L 5 per cents. Dissentients to be paid off. Only 467,713L new 5 per cent. stock was created under this arrangement. The sum required to pay dis- sentients was 2,610,000L The new 3} per cent. stock thus created, amounted on the 5th of January, 1836, to 146,557,901L Dividends payable 5th of January and 5th of July. 4. New 5 per Cent. Amount, 5th of January, 1836, 438,241/- (See previous Article.) III. ANNUITIES. 1. Long Annuities.- - These annuities were created at different periods, but they all expire together in 1860. They were chiefly granted by way of premiums or douceurs to the subscribers to loans. Payable on the 5th of April and 10th of October. 2. Annuities per 4 Geo. c. 22. - This annuity is payable to the Bank of England, and is commonly known by the name of the " Dead weight" annuity. (See antè, p. 85.) It expires in 1867. It is equivalent to a perpetual annuity of 470,319L 10s. 3. Annuities per 48 Geo. 3., 10 Geo. 4. c. 24., and 3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 14.-These acts authorised the commissioners for the reduction of the national debt, to grant annuities for terms of years, and life annuities; accepting in payment either money or stock according to rates specified in Tables to be approved by the Lords of the Treasury. No annuities are granted on the life of any nominee under 15 years of age, nor in any case not approved by the commissioners. Annuities for terms of years not granted for any period less than ten years. These annuities are transferable, but not in parts or shares. Those for terms of years, payable 5th of January and 5th of July; and those for lives, 5th of April and 10th of October. The terminable and life annuities granted under the above acts, amounted, on the 5th of January, 1836, to 4,188,809/., being equal according to the calculations of Mr. Finlaison, to a corresponding perpetual annuity of 1,970,019L (Parl. Paper, No. 457. Seas. 1836.) Irish Debt. It seems unnecessary to enter into any details with respect to the public debt of Ireland. The various descriptions of stock of which it consists, and their amount, are specified above. The dividends on the Irish debt are paid at the Bank of Ireland; and, in order to accommodate the public, stock may be transferred, at the pleasure of the holders, from Ireland to Great Britain, and from the latter to the former. Exchequer Bills are bills of credit issued by authority of parliament. They are for vari- ous sums, and bear interest (generally from 1}d to 24d per diem, per 100L) according to the usual rate at the time. The advances of the Bank to Government are made upon Exchequer bills; and the daily transactions between the Bank and Government are principally carried on through their intervention. Notice of the time at which outstanding Exchequer bills are to be paid off is given by public advertisement. Bankers prefer vesting in Exchequer bills to any other species of stock, even though the interest be for the most part comparatively low because the capital may be received at the Treasury at the rate originally paid for it, and the holders being exempted from any risk of fluctuation. Ex- chequer bills were first issued in 1696, and have been annually issued ever since. The amount outstanding and unprovided for, on the 5th of January, 1836, was 29,088,950L India Stock and India Bonds are always quoted in the lists of the prices of the public funds. The stock on which the East India Company divide is 6,000,000/.; the dividend on which has been, since 1793, 10} per cent.; and is to remain at that rate during the continuance of the charter. India bonds are generally for 100Z. each, and bear at present of per cent. interest, payable 31st of March and 30th of September. In selling them, the interest due down to the day of sale is, with the premium, added to the amount of the bills; the total being the sum paid by the purchaser. The premium, which is, consequently, the only variable part of the price, is influenced by the circumstances which influence the price of stocks generally, - the number of bonds in circulation, &c. The price of stocks is influenced by a variety of circumstances. Whatever tends to shake or to increase the public confidence in the stability of government, tends, at the same time, to lower or increase the price of stocks. They are also affected by the state of the revenue; and, more than all, by the facility of obtaining supplies of disposable capital, and the interest which may be realised upon loans to responsible persons. From 1730 till the rebellion of 1745, the 3 per cents. were never under 89, and were once, in June, 1737, as high as 107. During the rebellion they sunk to 76; but in 1749 rose again to 100. In the interval between the peace of Paris, in 1763, and the breaking out of the American war, they averaged from 80 to 90; but towards the close of the war they sunk to 54. In 1792, they were, at one time, as high as 96. In 1797, the prospects of the country, owing to the Digitized by Google FUNDS. 695 successes of the French, the mutiny in the fleet, and other adverse circumstances, were by no means favourable; and, in consequence, the price of 3 per cent. sunk, on the 20th of Sep- tember, on the intelligence transpiring of an attempt to negociate with the French republic having failed, to 478, being the lowest price to which they have ever fallen. Prices of 3 per Cent. Consols, in February and August, each Year since 1820.-(Report of Bank Com- mittee.) Years. Price of Consols. Years. Price of Consols. 1820. February - - 681 per cent. 1826. February - - 77th per cent. August - - 671 - August - - 791 1821. February - - 73 - 1827. February - - 821 - August - - 76, - August - - 861 - 1822. February - - 784 - 1828. February - - 837 - August - - 80% - August - - 871 - 1823. February - - 73 - 1829. February - - 861 - August - - 821 - August - - 881- - 1824. February - - 921 - 1830. February - - 911 - August - - 931 - August - - 904 - 1825. February - - 931 - 1831. February - - 774 - August - - 871 - August - - 811 - The following is a statement of the prices of the different descriptions of British funds during the 6 days commencing with Saturday, the 14th of December, 1833. Description of Stock. Saturday. Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday. Friday. Bank stock, dividend 8 per cent. 210 11 210 11 2101 11½ 2101 114 2111 11 2111 11 3 per cent. reduced 871 871 into 871 t 874 871 + 871 8 3 per cent. consols for account 88f % 881 I 88% 88} 881- 881 891 31 per cent. annuities, 1818 - - - - - - - 964 3f per cent. reduced - - 96f 1 96f 1 961 1 961 96g t 96% 7 New 3f per cent. annuities New 4 per cent. annuities, 1826 103} t 1031 f 103} 103} t 1031 1 1031- 1/8 New 5 per cent. Long annuities,expi 5 Jan. 1860 167 15-16 - - 167 1676-16 161615-16 16 15-16 17 New annuities, Jan. and July South Sea stock, dividend 31 per cent. - - Do. old annuity, dividend 3 per cent. Do. new annuity, dividend 3 per cent. - 3 per cent. annuities, 1751 India bonds, 21 per cent. - 22s.24s.pm 22s.24s.pm 22s.21s.pm 20s.22s.pm 20s.21s.pm 21s.-s.pm Exchequer bills, 14d. 100L. - 43s.44s.pm 43s.44s.pm pm 41s.42s.pm 41s.42s.pm 41s.42s.pm Bank stock for account - 210 11 210 11 211 India stock, dividend 101 per cent. Agreements for the sale of stock are generally made at the Stock Exchange, which is frequented by a set of middlemen called jobbers, whose business is to accommodate the buyers and sellers of stock with the exact sums they want. A jobber is generally pos- sessed of considerable property in the funds; and he declares a price at which he will either sell or buy. Thus, he declares he is ready to buy 3 per cent. consols at 851, or to sell at 85} so that, in this way, a person willing to buy or sell any sum, however small, has never any difficulty in finding an individual with whom to deal. The jobber's profit is generally 1 per cent., for which he transacts both a sale and a purchase. He frequently confines himself entirely to this sort of business, and engages in no other description of stock speculation. We borrow the following details from Dr. Hamilton's valuable work on the National Debt :- " A bargain for the sale of stock, being agreed on, is carried into execution at the Transfer Office, at the Bank, or the South Sea House. For this purpose the seller makes out a note in writing, which contains the name and designation of the seller and purchaser, and the sum and description of the stock to be transferred. He delivers this to the proper clerk :* and then fills up a receipt, a printed form of which, with blanks is obtained at the office. The clerk in the mean time examines the seller's accounts, and if he find him possessed of the stock proposed to be sold, he makes out the transfer. This is signed in the books by the seller, who delivers the receipt to the clerk; and upon the pur- chaser's signing his acceptance in the book, the clerk signs the receipt as witness. It is then delivered to the purchaser upon payment of the money, and thus the business is completed. This business is generally transacted by brokers, who derive their authority from their employers by powers of attorney. Forms of these are obtained at the respective offices. Some authorise the broker to sell, others to accept a purchase, and others to receive the dividends. Some comprehend all these objects, and the two last are generally united. Powers of attorney authorising to sell must be deposited in the proper office for examination one day before selling: a stockholder acting personally, after granting a letter of attorney, revokes it by implication. " The person in whose name the stock is invested when the books are shut, previous to the payment of the dividends, receives the dividend for the half year preceding and, therefore, a purchaser during the currency of the half year has the benefit of the interest on stock he buys, from the last term of payment to the day of transfer. The price of stock, therefore, rises gradually, cateris paribus, from * The letters of the alphabet are placed round the room, and the seller must apply to the clerk who has bis station under the initial of his name. In all the offices, there are supervising clerks who join in witnessing the transfer. Digitized by Google 696 FUNDS. term to term; and when the dividend is paid, it undergoes a fall equal thereto. Thus, the 3 per cent. consols should be higher than 3 per cent. reduced by I per cent. from the 5th of April to the 5th of July, and from the 10th of October to the 5th of January; and should be as much lower from the 5th of January to the 5th of March, and from the 5th of July to the 10th of October; and this is nearly the case. Accidental circumstances may occasion a slight deviation. "The dividends on the different stocks being payable at different terms, it is in the power of the stock-holders to invest their property In such a manner as to draw their income quarterly. The business of speculating in the stocks is founded on the variation of the price of stock. which it probably tends in some measure to support. It consists in buying or selling stock according to the views entertained, by those who engage in this business, of the probability of the value rising or falling. This business is partly conducted by persons who have property in the funds. But a practice also prevails among those who have no such property, of contracting for the sale of stock on a future day at a price agreed on. For example, A. may agree to sell to B. 10,000/. of 3 per cent. stock, to be trans- ferred in 20 days, for 6,0001. A. has, in fact, no such stock; but if the price on the day appointed for the transfer be only 58, he may purchase as much as will enable him to fulfil his bargain for 5,800%, and thus gain 2001. by the transaction; on the other hand, if the price of that stock should rise to 62, he will lose 2001. The business is generally mettled without any actual purchase of stock, or transfer; A. paying to B. or receiving from him the difference between the price of stock on the day of settle- ment, and the price agreed on. This practice, which amounts to nothing else than a wager concerning the price of stock, is not sanctioned by law yet it is carried on to a great extent: and as neither party can be compelled by law to implement these burgains, their sense of honour, and the disgrace attending a breach of con- tract, are the principles by which the business is supported. In the language of the Stock Exchange, the buyer is called a Bull, and the seller a Bear, and the person who refuses to pay his loss is called a Lame Duck; and the names of these defaulters are exhibited in the Stock Exchange, where they dare not appear afterwards. These bargains are usually made for certain days fixed by a committee of the Stock Exchange, called settling days, of which there are about 8 in the year; viz. one in each of the months of January, February. April, May, July, August, October, and November; and they are always on Tuesday, Wed- nesday, Thursday, or Friday, being the days on which the commissioners for the reduction of the Ba- tional debt make purchases. The settling days in January and July are always the first days of the opening of the Bank books for public transfer; and these days are notified at the Bank when the con- sols are shut to prepare for the dividend The price at which stock is sold to be transferred on the next settling day, is called the price on account. Sometimes, instead of closing the account on the set- tling day, the stock is carried on to a future day, on such terms as the parties agree on. This is called a continuation. All the business, however, which is done in the stocks for time, is not of a gambling nature. In a place of so extensive commerce as London, opulent merchants, who possess property in the funds, and are unwilling to part with it, have frequently occasion to raise money for a short time. Their resource in this case is to sell for money, and buy for account; and although the money raised in this manner costs more than the legal interest, it affords an important accommodation, and it may be ren- dered strictly legal and recoverable."-(" ed. pp. 314-317.) (FUNDS (AMERICAN).-The subjoined statement will not, we hope, be uninteresting. It gives a view of the most prominent facts with respect to the public funds of the principal American States exhibiting, amongst other particulars, their respective amounts, the pe- riods when they are redesmable, and their price in London in January, 1839.-( Wetten- hall's List, 25th January, 1839. [See article STOCKS.-Am. Ed.] Account specifying the separate Debts of each State, and the Periods when the same are redeem- able, &c. Price in Price is Redeemable. Amount Funds. in Dollars. Loadon, Funds. Redeemable. Amount London, Jan. 25. in Dollars. Jan. 25. Alabama 5 per cent. 1852 500,000 Incorporated Banks. Do. Sterling do. 1858-59-66 2,000,000 92 United States, 8 per ct. 1866 35,000,000 L 25. Do. do. 1863 3,500,000 83 Louisiana Stite, 10 do. 1870 2,000,000 Indiana, do. 11-61-66 1,600,000 Bank of Louisiana, 8 do. 1870 4,000,000 Do. 6 per cent. 1851 200,000 Do. of N. Orleans, do. 1870 450,000 Illinois, do. 1876 5,000,000 93 N. O. Canal & B. Co. do. 1870 4,000,000 Kentucky, do. 1868 200,000 Do. City Bank, do. 1870 1,000,000 Louisiana, Strig. 6 per ct. 1848 1,800,000 Mississippi Planters, 10 do. 1670 3,000,000 Do. do. 1843 833,334 Tennessee, 9 per cent. 1870 2,000,000 Do. do. 1844-47-50-52 7,000,000 96 1-2 to Florida, 6 per cent. 1858-60-63-84 1,000,000 Do. do. 1853 150,000 Do. do. 1860 500,000 Do. 6 per cent. 1867 102 Baltimore City, 5 per ct. 1850 Maryland, 4 1-2 per cent. 1847 Camden & Amboy Rail- Do. 5 per cent. 1859 750,000 way, do. 1864 L 210,000 Do. 6 per cent. 1870 3,000,000 100 Delaware & Raritan Canal Massachosetts, 5 per cent. 1857 1,000,000 Bonds, 6 per cent. 1864 L 225,000 Do. Sterling do. 1868 300,000 103 Amer. Life, 7 1-2 per cent. Mississippi, do. 1858 500,000 In. & Trust Co. 2,000,000 Do. Sterling do. 1850 98 Do. Certificates, 5 per ct. 1864 Do. 6 per cent. 1861-68-71 1,500,000 N. Y. Life & Trust, do. 1848-50 New York, 5 per cent. 1855 3,194.270 98 Do. do 1848-50 Do. do. 1858 877,000 Do. City, do. 1-60-56-51 92 Do. do. 1860 150,000 New Orieans City, 6 do. 1864 250,000 Ohio, 6 per cent. 1850 4,000 000 Do. 5 per cent. 1863 Do. do. 1836 400,000 99 to 1-2 Philadelphia City, do. 1863 175,000 Pennsylvania, 5 per cent. 1839-40-41 1,296,000 Do. & Reading Railway 1863 2,000,000 102 10a. Do. do. 1846 300.000 Philadelphia City, 6 per ct. 1963 Do. do. 1850 1,000,000 90 Do. Country, do. 1860 Do. do. 1853 2,000.000 92 3.4 Phil. & Reading, 5 per ct. Do. do. 1854 3,202,500 92 to 92 1-2 R. R. Bonds 1860 L 210,000 86 et div. Do. do. 1856 2,733,162 93 Harrisburgh & Lancaster, Do. do. 1858 3,070,661 93 ex div. 5 er cent. 82,000 90 Do. do. 1860 2,648,680 95 1-2 Richmond Railway Bda., Do. do. 1862 2281,400 6 per cent. 99 Do. do. 1865 1,700,000 95 to 96 1860 Lehigh Coal & Nav. Bds., South Carolina, do. 1866 L. 200,000 95 5 per cent. 1858 L 200,000 Tennessee, 6 per cent. 1868 Morris Canal & Banking Virginia, do. 1857 400,000 93 Comp. 6 per cent. 1846 4,100,000 Do. 5 per cent. 1845-51-52-54 2,000,000 Do. Notes do. 3,000,000 The dividends on the above Pennsylvania loans are payable half yearly, on the 1st days of February and August, at the Bank of Post- sylvania, Philadelphia, excepting the loan of 28th of March, 1831, for 120,000 dollars, which is payable at the same bank on the 1st January and July, each year.-Sup.) Digitized by Google FURS, FUR TRADE. 697 FURS, in commerce, the skins of different animals, covered, for the most part, with thick fine hair, the inner side being converted by a peculiar process into a sort of leather. Furs, previously to their undergoing this process, are denominated peltry. Beaver fur, from its extensive use in the hat manufacture, is a very important commercial article. That made use of in this country is almost entirely brought from North America. It is gradually becoming scarcer and dearer, being now obtainable only in considerable quan- tities from the most northerly and inaccessible districts. The fur of the middle-aged or young animal, called cub beaver, is most esteemed. It is the finest, most glossy, and takes the best dye. Fitch, or the fur of the fitchet or polecat, is principally imported from Ger- many it is soft and warm, but the unpleasant smell which adheres to it depresses its value. Marten and mink (a diminutive species of otter) are principally imported from the United States and Canada. The fur of the musquash or musk rat (a diminutive species of beaver) is imported in vast quantities from our possessions in North America which also supply us with considerable quantities of otter skins. Nutria skins are principally brought from Buenos Ayres. The more valuable furs, as ermine, sable, &c., come principally from Russia. FUR TRADE. We are indebted for the following details with respect to the fur trade to one of the most extensive and intelligent fur merchants of London. " Though practically engaged in the fur trade, I fear I shall be able to say little with regard to it not already known to you; but were I to write on the subject, I should divide the trade into 2, or rather 3 classes. The 1st class would comprise articles of necessity; among which I should principally number an immense variety of lamb skins, varying so widely from each other in size, quality, colour, and value, that, to most persons, they would appear as the produce of SO many different species of ani- mals. These lamb skins are produced in all parts of the globe, and are every where consumed but they form, in particular, an essential part of the dress of thousands among the lower classes in Rus- sia, Poland, East Prussia, Hungary, Bohemia, and Saxony. In Russia and other cold climates, the skins of various other animals may be considered as articles of actual necessity. "2. The 2d class would in a measure form part of the first, as it also comprises furs which through habit and fashion have now become articles of necessity. I should here enumerate all those different skins commonly called hatting furs. Few who are not acquainted with this branch of the fur trade can form an idea of its extent. It spreads, of course, over all parts of the globe where hats are worn, and requires very superior judgment and considerable capital to conduct it successfully. The furs now used for hat making are beaver, musquash, otter, nutria, hare, and rabbit; but each of these may be subdivided in 20 different sorts or classes. " Neutria, or nutria, is comparatively a new article. It began first to be imported in large quanti- ties about 1810, from the Spanish possessions in South America.-(See NUTRIA.) The skin is used for different purposes, being either dressed as a peltry, or cut (shorn) as a hatting fur; and if well manufactured and prepared, it bears some resemblance to beaver fur, and is used for similar purposes. Under the 3d and last class I should bring all those furs, which, though continually sold, and used in immense quantities, must still be considered mere articles of fashion, as their value varies ac- cording to the whims and fancies of different nations. There are, however, exceptions among these and many furs may be considered as standard articles, since they are always used, though their price is much influenced by changes of fashion. This class comprises an endless variety of furs, as under it may be brought the skins of most ani- mals in existence almost all of them appearing occasionally in the trade. " Furs being entirely the produce of nature, which can neither be cultivated nor Increased, their value is not influenced by fashion alone, but depends materially on the larger or smaller supplies re- ceived. The weather has great influence on the quality and quantity of furs imported from all quar- ters of the globe; and this circumstance renders the fur trade more difficult, perhaps, and precarious than any other. The quality, and consequently the price. of many furs will differ every year. It would be completely impossible to state the value of the different articles of furs, the trade being the most fluctuating imaginable. I have often seen the same articles rise and fall 100, 200, and 300 per cent. in the course of a twelvemonth ; nay, in several instances, in the space of 1 month only. " Among the furs which always rank very high (though, like all the rest, they change in value,) may be specified the Siberian sable, and the black and silver fox. These articles are at all times compara- tively very scarce and command high prices. " The chief supplies of peltries are received from Russia (particularly the Asiatic part of that em- pire), and from North America. But many other countries produce very beautiful and useful furs ; and though we are most indebted to Asia and America, Europe furnishes a very considerable quan- tity. Africa and Australia are of little importance to the fur trade, as, from their situation, they fur- nish but few articles, and consume still less. From the former we draw leopard and tiger skins (the most beautiful of that species), while the only production of the latter is the kangaroo; this, how- ever, is never used as a fur, being chiefly consumed by leather dressers and tanners for the sake of its pelt. " Besides numerous private traders, there are several fur companies of very long standing, who in various countries do a great amount of business. Among these, the Hudson's Bay Company (in Lon- don) deserves to be mentioned first, not only from the extent of their business, but because it is one of the oldest chartered companies in England. The American Fur Company (in New York) stands next. They chiefly trade to London, whither they send the produce of the United States and other parts of North America. The 3d company is the Russian American (in Moscow). They trade to the Russian possessions on the western coast of North America, whence they draw their supplies, which are chiefly consumed in Russia. The 4th and last company of any consequence is the Danish Greenland Company (in Copenha- gen). They do but a very limited business; exposing their goods for sale once a year in Copen- hagen. The principal consumption of the furs which I should bring under the head of the 3d class, is in China, Turkey, and Russia, and among the more civilised countries of Europe, particularly in Eng- land. Germany consumes a considerable quantity. The consumption of America is comparatively little. In Africa, none but the Egyptians wear fur. In Australia, none is consumed. " Hatting furs are used throughout Europe (with the exception of Turkey and Greece), and in Ame- rica but by far the principal trade in these articles is carried on in London and New York. VoL. I.-3 N 88 Digitized by Google 698 FUR TRADE. " Most of the companies sell their goods by public sale, and the principal fur fairs are helds Kiachta (on the borders of China); Nishnei Novogorod, between Moscow and Casan, in Russia; and twice a year at Leipsic.-[See FAIRS.] It is a remarkable feature of the fur trade, that almost every country or town which produces: and exports furs, imports and consumes the fur of some other place, frequently the most distant. 11 is but seldom that an article is consumed in the country where it is produced, though that country may consume furs to a very great extent." The following details with respect to the North American fur trade may not be unin- teresting:- This trade was first practised by the early French settlers at Quebec and Montreal; and consisted then, as now, in bartering fire-arms, ammunition, cloth, spirits, and other articles in demand among the Indians, for beaver and other skins. In 1670, Charles H. established the Hudson's Bay Company, to which he assigned the exclusive privilege of trading with the Indians in and about the vast inlet known by the name of Hudson's Bay. The Com- pany founded establishments at Forts Churchill and Albany, Nelson River, and other places on the west coast of the bay. But the trade they carried on, though said to be a profitable one, was of very limited extent; and their conduct on various occasions shows how thoroughly they were " possessed with that spirit of jealousy which prevails in some degree in all knots and societies of men endued with peculiar privileges."-(European Settle- ments, vol. ii. p. 268.) Mr. Burke has, in the same place, expressed his astonishment that the trade has not been thrown open. But as the Company's charter was never confirmed by any act of parliament, all British subjects are lawfully entitled to trade with those re- gions; though, from the difficulties attached to the trade, the protection required in carrying it on, and the undisguised hostility which private traders have experienced from the agents of the Company, the latter have been allowed to monopolise it with but little opposition. In 1783-4, the principal traders engaged in the fur trade of Canada formed themselves into an association known by the name of the North-West Company, having their chief esta- blishment at Montreal. This new company prosecuted the trade with great enterprise and very considerable success. The course of their proceedings in their adventurous under- takings has been minutely described by Mr. Mackenzie, one of the agents of the company, in his Voyage from Montreal, through the Continent of America. This gentleman in- forms us, that some of those engaged in this trade are employed at the astonishing distance of upwards of 4,000 miles north-west of Montreal! A very numerous caravan, if we may so call it, sets out every year for Le Grand Portage, on Lake Superior, where they meet those who have wintered in the remoter establishments, from whom they receive the fors collected in the course of the season, and whom they, at the same time, furnish with fresh supplies of the various articles required in the trade. Fort Chepeywan, on the Lake of the Hills. in lon. 110° 26' W., used to be one of the most distant stations of the servants of the North-West Company; but many of the Indians who traded with the fort came from dis- tricts contiguous to, and sometimes even beyond, the Rocky Mountains. The competition and success of the North-West Company seem to have roused the dor- mant energies of the Hudson's Bay Company. The conflicting interests and pretensions of the two associations were naturally productive of much jealousy and ill-will. Under the auspices of the late Earl of Selkirk, who was for a considerable period at the head of the Hudson's Bay Company, a colony was projected and founded on the Red River, which runs into Lake Winnipec. The North-West Company regarded this establishment as an en- croachment upon their peculiar rights; and the animosities thence arising led to the most violent proceedings on the part of the servants of both companies. At length, however, the more moderate individuals of each party began to perceive that their interests were not materially different; and the rival companies, wearied and impoverished by their dissen- sions, ultimately united under the name of the Hudson's Bay Fur Company, which at present engrosses most of the fur trade of British America. The most important part of the trade is still carried on from Montreal in the way described by Mr. Mackenzie. According to Mr. Bliss, the number and value of the furs and peltries exported from British America to all parts, in 1831, were- No. £ 8. d. £ S. d. No. £ s. d. £ a. d. Beaver - 126,914 at 1 5 0 - - 158,680 0 0 Racoon - 325 at 0 1 6 - - 21 7 6 Bear - 3,850 - 1 0 0 - - 3,850 3 0 Tails - 2,290 0 10 - . 114 10 0 Deer - 645 0 3 0 - - 96 15 0 Weasel - 34 - 0 06 - - 0 17 0 Fox - 8,765 0 10 0 - - 4,382 10 0 Wolverine 1,744 - 0 30 261 12 0 - - Lynx - 58,010 - 0 8 0 - - 23,204 0 0 Wolf - 5,947 - 0 80 - - 2,378 16 0 Minx - 9,298 0 2 0 - - 929 16 0 Musk rat - 375,731 - 0 0 6 - - 9,393 5 6 £203,316 0 Undescribed from Halifax and St. John's estimated at the average annual value of - 15,000 0 0 Exported to the United States by inland trade - - - - - 16,146 0 - 234,402 0 Sterling - £211,016 2 - - (Statistics of Trade and Industry of British America, p. 29.) According to Mr. M'Gregor, the value of the furs annually exported from British America, amounted, at an average of the 5 years ending with 1832, to about 210,000Γ. sterling a year.-(Britisk North Amt- rica, 2d edit. vol. ii. p. 594.) FUSTIAN-GALACZ. 699 The North American Fur Company, the leading directors of which reside in the city of New York, have long enjoyed the principal part of the Indian trade of the great lakes and the Upper Mississippi. But, with the exception of the musk rat, most of the fur-clad ani- mals are exterminated in the vicinity of the lakes. The skins of racoons are of little value; and the beaver is now scarce on this side the Rocky Mountains. The further north the furs are taken, the better is their quality. Account of the principal Furs imported in 1831, the Countries whence they were brought, and the Quantity furnished by each country. Countries. Bear. Beaver. Fitch. Marten. Minx. Musquash. Nutria. Other. Prussia - - - - 2,168 Germany - - - 115 186,499 21,139 688 7,028 Netherlands - - - 53 24,418 517 - - - - 44 France - - - - - 30,620 27,676 - - 762 2,000 British N. Ame- rican colonies 3,994 93,199 - - 112,038 30,742 737,740 - - 21,636 United States - 13,480 7,459 - - 50,083 70,120 27,000 52,130 1,401 Buenos Ayres - - - - - - - - - - - 429,966 All other places 128 118 - - 2,354 2,011 157 9,971 117 Total - 17,602 100,944 243,705 214,107 103,561 772,693 494,067 23,198 Of these imports, the beaver, fitch, and marten were mostly retained for home consumption. A large number of bear and otter skins were re-exported to Germany; and no fewer than 592,117 mus- quash skins were exported, in 1631, to the United States.-(Purl. Paper, No. 550. Sess. 1833.) The imports of ermine are inconsiderable, having only amounted, at an average of 1831 and 1832, to 2, 197 skins a year. The duty on furs produced, in 1832, 34,0791. : and that on skins, not being furs, 18,0931. 13s. 6d. China is one of the best markets for furs. The Americans began, with their characteristic activity, to send furs to Canton very soon after their fing had appeared in the Eastern seas in 1784; and they still prosecute the trade to a considerable extent, though it has rapidly declined within the last 3 or 4 years. The Americans procure the fure intended for the China markets, partly from the American Fur Company already alluded to, and partly from Canada; but they have also been in the habit of sending out ships to the north-west coast of America, which, having purchased large quantities of skins from the natives, carrying them direct to Canton. Recently, however, this trade has been ma- terially diminished, in consequence, it is said, of the regulations of the Russian government, who do not permit the American traders to cruise so far north as they did formerly. FUSTIAN (Ger. Barchent; Du. Fustein; Fr. Futaine; It. Fustagno, Frustagno; Sp. Fustan; Rus. Bumasea; Pol. Barchan), a kind of cotton stuff, wealed or ribbed on one side. FUSTIC (Ger. Gelbholz, Fustick; Du. Geelhout; Fr. Bois jaune de Brésil; It. Legno giallo de Brasilio; Sp. Palo del Brasilamarillo), the wood of a species of mulberry (Morus tinctoria), growing in most parts of South America, in the United States, and the West India islands. It is a large and handsome tree; and the timber, though, like most other dye woods, brittle, or at least easily splintered, is hard and strong. It is very exten- sively used as an ingredient in the dyeing of yellow, and is largely imported for that pur- pose. Of 6,335 tons of fustic imported into Great Britain in 1831, 1,683 tons were brought from the British West Indies, 1,354 ditto from Cuba and the foreign West Indies, 1,013 ditto from the United States, 990 ditto from Mexico, 510 ditto from Colombia, 705 ditto from Brazil. Fustic from Cuba fetches full 35 per cent. more in the London market than that of Jamaica or Colombia. At present, the price of the former varies from 10/. to 12/. a ton, while the latter varies from 8/. to 91. a ton. The consumption amounts to about 6,000 tons a year. Zante, or young fustic, is really a species of sumach (Rhus cotinus Lin.), and is quite distinct from the morus tinctoria, or old fustic; the latter being a large American tree, while the former is a small European shrub. It grows in Italy and the south of France, but is principally exported from Patras in the Morea. It imparts a beautiful bright yellow dye to cottons, &c. which, when proper mordants are used, is very permanent. It is con- veniently stowed amongst a cargo of dry goods, as it may be cut into pieces of any length without injury. Only a small quantity of this species of sumach is imported. Its price fluctuates considerably. In August, 1833, it was worth, in the London market, from 9/. to 11/. a ton. G. (GALACZ, a town of Moldavia, on the left bank of the Danube, between the confluence of the Sereth and the Pruth with that river, in lat. 45° 25' N., long. 28° E. It is ill built and dirty population supposed to amount to 12,000. The trade of the town is chiefly car- ried on by Greek merchants, but, within the last few years, some foreign houses have formed establishments in it. Though at a considerable distance inland, Galacz may be said to be the port of the Danube; and, were the political jealousies, and other obstacles, that have hitherto so much obstructed the navigation of this great river, once removed, it would, no Digitized by Google 700 GALACZ. doubt, become a first-rate emporium. The treaty of Adrianople, by rescuing the provinces of Moldavia and Wallachia from Turkish despotism and misrule, will contribute not a little to this desirable result. Recently, indeed, Galacz has been rapidly rising in importance. Steam vessels have been established on the Danube, from Presburg to Galacz, and thence, by the Black Sea, to Constantinople and Trebizond. The advantages of which the free navigation of the Danube cannot fail to be productive to all the countries that it traverses, and especially to Hungary, of which it is the natural outlet, seem to warrant the belief that its vast capacities, as a commercial highway, will be daily more and more developed. Entrance to Galact.-Of the three principal mouths of the river, the Soulineh (middle) mouth, in lat. 45° 10' 30" N., long. 29° 41' 20" E., is the only one accessible by vessels of considerable burden. The depth of water on the bar, at its entrance, varies from 10 to 13 and 14 feet, according to the season of the year, and the direction of the wind. From the bar to Galacz and Brailoff, still higher up, there is nowhere less than 18 feet water, and in many places from 60 to 70 feet. Vessels of 300 tons lie close to the quays of Galacz. The shores at the mouth of the river being low, and bordered with reeds and shoals, vessels Intending to enter the river generally make the small rocky islet of Phidonisi, or Ser- pent's Isle,* in lat. 45° 15' 15" N., long. 30° 10' 30" E., whence the Soulineh mouth bears W. by S., distant 23 miles. At the entrance to it, on the south shore, is a wooden tower, but (though the con- trary be sometimes stated) no lighthouse. Lighters are generally stationed without the bar, into which large ships discharge a part of their cargoes; and pilots may generally be obtained from them or other vessels. As the current is sometimes very strong, and difficult to stem, the establishment of steam tugs at the mouth of the river would obviate the principal difficulties incident to its navigation. Frost usually sets in on the Danube in the month of December, and continues till the month of March; in 1833, however, there was no frost. Freights in the ports of the Danube are always from 20 to 25 per cent. higher than in Odessa ; premiums of insurance, on the contrary, are not higher than at the latter, except on such vessels as, on account of their size, are obliged to discharge at the river's mouth. Money, Weights, and Measures.-These are principally Turkish, for which see CONSTANTINOPLE; but Russian and Austrian coins are in general circulation. Exports and Imports.-Moldavia and Wallachia are very productive provinces, being fruitful both of corn and cattle. From 60,000 to 80,000 head of cattle are annually fattened for sale in the two prin- cipalities. A pair of good oxen commonly cost from 70 to 80 roubles. Numerous herds are annually sent into Austria, particularly from Moldavia. Now that the principalities are subjected to regular governments, and that a market has been opened for their products, there can be little doubt that they will rapidly improve. The principal articles of export from Galacz are wheat, of which the quantity might be indefinitely increased, tallow, hides, live cattle, salt, butter, wool, dtc. and to these might be added timber, flax and hemp, caviar, &c. But, if the navigation be improved, which it seems all but certain will be the case, Brailoff and Galacz will become dépòts for the products of Hungary and Transylvania. The imports consist of coffee, sugar, and other colonial products, raw and manufac- tured cotton, iron and hardware, oil and olives, rice, soap, spices, &c. ; at present, however, they are quite inconsiderable, compared to what they would be were civilization considerably extended in the countries adjacent to the lower Danube, and still more 80 were it to become the great highway for the conveyance of foreign products to Hungary. Subjoined is a- Statement of the Quantities and Value of the Merchandise imported into, and Exported from, the Port of Galacz in (Consular Return.) Imports. Exports. Articles. Quantities. Value. Articles. Quantities. Fatur. L L Almonds cwts. 3,000 9,000 Butter cwts. 17,500 45,000 Carobs 7,500 3,937 Cattle, oxen No. 6,000 38,250 Cloth, American lbs. 9,905 9,187 cows - 3,800 24.335 Coffee - 226,400 21,000 horses - 3,600 22,950 Cotton, raw - 70,750 9,375 sheep - 10,000 3,750 twist packets 3,500 6,562 Hkles, OX - 15,009 26,250 manufactures - 22,500 Salt cwts. 300,000 136,000 Figs cwts. 3,750 5,625 Tallow 20,000 98,009 Incense lbs. 56,600 4,880 Wheat kilos.) 30,000 112,500 Iron, English cwts. 7,500 14,625 Wines galls. 166,606 5,685 Oil 5,000 33,750 Wool lbs. 424,500 16,875 Olives - 8,750 19,687 Miscellansous 7,500 Pepper lbs. 56,600 4,500 Raisins cwts. 8,750 13,125 t Of 2 chetwerts each. Rice - 8,750 19,697 Ram - 750 3,937 Soap lbs. 254,700 10,125 Sugar cwts. 2,500 16,875 Tin - 25 6,625 Wax 375 6,750 Wines 500 2,250 Miscellaneous 11,250 Total 254,252 Total 527,985 Shipping.-M. Hagemeister gives the following return of the shipping which entered the Danabe, by the Soulineh mouth, in the following years, with their destination :- Years. Ismail. Reni, Galacz Brailoff Tarkish Park. 1830 84 35 193 57 $1 1831 164 IS 180 30 1832 156 17 451 01 8 1833 32 5 202 m 1834 37 2 166 * This island was famous in antiquity for its temple in honour of Achifies, to whom it was secred. It was called Leuce, or the White Island, from the myriads of sea-fowl by which it was usually covered. There seems to be no good foundation for the modern notion of its being infested with ser- pents. It is singular, however, seeing that it is now annually passed by numbers of European ships, that it should not have been visited by any traveller. It may be expected to contain some remains of antiquity.-(See Clarke's Travels in Russia, Turkey, &e. 8vo. edit. vol. ii. p. 394-401.) Digitized by Google GALACZ. 701 In 1835, 202 vessels arrived at Galacz; of which 6 were British, 45 Russian, 17 Austrian, 60 Greek, 49 Turkish, 17 Ionian, 4 Bardinian, 2 Samian, 1 Wallachian, I Belgian. Duties.-An ad valorem duty of 3 per cent. is levied on all articles of merchandise imported into, or exported from, the principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia. Government reserves to itself the power of prohibiting the exportation of any article, but it has to give a month's previous notice of any such prohibition. Galacz in a free port; that is, a port at which all commodities may be landed, warehoused, re-ex- ported, and consumed in the town, free of duty. Quarantine regulations are strictly enforced at Galacz, unless performed previously to entering the river. Isfnail and Reni, ports of the Russian province of Bessarabia, are situated on the Danube, and are both, but especially Ismail, a good deal nearer its mouth than Galacz; but they are much less con- siderable in point of commercial importance. Having little importation, their trade is confined almost entirely to the exportation of corn, and even in this respect they are very inferior to Galacz and Brai- loff. They are subject to the Russian duties and regulations. We have gleaned these particulars from a variety of works, but principally from the valuable Report, by M. De Hagemeister, on the Commerce of the Black Sea, Eng. Trans., pp. 63-95., &c. Purdy's Suiling Directions to the Black Sea, p. 193, &c. Months of the Danube.-There is a great discrepancy in the statements of ancient authors as to the number of channels by which the Danube poured its waters into the Euxine. (Cellarii Notitia Orbis Antiqui, lib. ii. cap. 8.) A similar discrepancy exists at this moment; some authorities affirming that it has four. others five, and others six or seven mouths. But, as stated above, there are only three of any considerable ningnitude, viz. the Kilia mouth on the north, and successively the Soulineh mouth, and the Edrillis mouth. But besides these, there are other channels of inferior importance, of which two, at least, are still more to the south than the Edrillis mouth. In antiquity, the most southerly channel was the deepest, and best suited for the purposes of navigation, and was thence called Sacrum. (See Cellarius, nt suprà.) It is not, however, to be wondered at, that in the course of so many ages, very great changes should have taken place in the channels of the river. It seems probable that the Ostium Sacrum, or southern channel of the ancients, may have run between Carsum, now Hirchova, and the lake Halmyris, now Rassein, which communicates with the Euxine at Kara Kerman, formerly Istropolis, and at a point still more to the south. At any rate, there certainly was a channel in the route now pointed out (D'Anville, Abrégé de la Geographie Ancienne, tom. 1. p. 307.): and as it is a good deal more to the south than the Edrillis mouth, with which the Ostium Sacrum has been com- monly identified, it would seem to have the best claim to the distinction of being synonymous with the latter. This channel is, in fact, still partially open, and it has been recently stated that the Aus- trian government is seriously entertaining R project for making it navigable. There can be no doubt that if this could be effected, it would be of much importance to the trade with Hungary and the coun- tries on the upper part of the river, by materially shortening the river navigation, and facilitating the ansit of ships and goods to and from the Black Sen. Steam Narigation of the Danube.-A regular line of steam-boats for the transportation of passengers and merchandise, is established on the Danube from Presburg (Hungary) to Galacz, by am Austrian company, entitled, First Company for Navigation by Steam on the Danube." Three hoats are running on this line, viz. The Pannonia (36-horse power), from Presburg to Pesth. The Francis 1st (60-horse power), from Pesth to Moldavia. The Argo (50-horse power), from Orsova to Galacz. " The passengers and merchandise change boats at each of the stations indicated above. " At the height of Orsova, rocks which are strewed in the bed of the Danube, for the extent of about a league, not permitting steam-boats to pass, goods are transported by flat-bottomed boats, which, conducted by skilful boatmen, glide through the rocks, and pass them without accident.* Passengers disembark, and make by land, a circuit which occupies twenty hours. This part of the journey is at their expense. An agent of the company at Orsova arranges with them, on reasonable terms, for the price. This crossing over will, however, be shortened by the repairs about to be made on an ancient Roman causeway running nearly parallel with the bed of the river. The necessity of previous arrangements with the Turkish government has, for the present, pre- vented the company from removing this obstacle. It has, however, expended large sums in removing rocks from other points, in removing sand banks, and in clearing the bed of the river. A fourth steam-boat, 'The Maria Dorothea,' of 70-horse power, is expected before the winter (1834), to extend the line from Galacz to Constantinople. During winter this boat is intended for temporary service between Smyrna and Constantinople, until the return of spring and the opening of the navigation on the Danube. Two other boats are held in reserve, to be used in case of accident or repairs to any of the four regular boats." According to the regulations published by the company, the prices for the extreme points of the line are as follow :- Passengers. one place. two places. On merchandise, the above rates only apply to such, the value of which does not exceed 70 florins for every 100 lbs. weight. From Presburg to Galicz (descending) 48 flor. 77 flor. Merchandise, the value of which is more consi terable. must be From Moldavia to Presburg (ascending) 14 do. 21 do. declared, and will pay according to value, at the following rates, for Children of 10 years half price. transport from Vienna 10 Galacz Passengers are allowed, free of charge, 90 pounds of luggage. Per 100 lbs. with- Insurance per Price of transport Insurance on each Merchandise. out insurance. 100 florins. Merchandise. per 100 lbs. with- 100 florins of Iron and scythes 5 florins 20 kr. out insurance. value. Furniture and bulky articles 9 do. 45 kr. From Pesth to Moldavia 1 florin 15 kr. 22 kr. Other articles, comprising those From Moldavia to Peath 1 do. 30 22 do. called of Leipsic 6 do. 30 do. This last Table gives Vienna as one of the extreme points of the line because, in fact, the great * The rapids in this place have received the name of the Iron Gate." All vessels ascending the river have to be towed up against the stream; and the water is frequently too shallow to permit the descent of any but the smallest class of flat-bottomed boats. The Romans under Trajan had, with equal industry and sagacity, formed a road or path along the river's edge for facilitating the operation of towing, of which the remains are still extant, with an inscription commemorative of the completion of the works. It has been proposed to overcome the difficulties in the way of the navigation, by renovating the old Roman road, and deepening the channel contiguous to it. But it rarely happens that attempts to improve the navigation in the bed of a river. under any thing like similar circum- stances, are even tolerably successful; and provided it could be accomplished, there can be no doubt that the proposal for cutting R lateral canal sufficiently large to admit the steam-boats and other craft navigating the river, is by far the most likely means of obviating the difficulties in question. At all events, it is to be hoped that something effectual may be speedily accomplished in reference to this important #ubject-(For some details with respect to the Iron Gate," and the navigation of the Danube, from Presburg to Roustchuk, see Mr. Quin's Voyage Down the Danube, vol. i. passim.) 3 X 2 Digitized by Google 702 GALANGAL-GALLIPOLI object of the company is the establishment of a direct communication between the capitals of the Austrian states and of the Ottoman empire. Its first intention was to make Vienna the point of departure for its steam-boats but the sinuesi- ties of the Danube, between it and Presburg, interposed a serious obstacle. Eighteen or twenty hours are necessary to pass the distance between these two towns by the river whereas, by land, is is performed in five or six hours. The company has, therefore, determined to erect, either at Presburg, or at Raab, a vast entrept which will be connected with Vienna by a rail-road, upon which steam cars shall transport all mer- chandise coming from the north and middle of Germany, on its way to the east, by the Danube. The office of the company is at Vienna: its charter is for 15 years. It is privileged by government gratuitously to draw from the imperial coal mines of Moldavia the coal required for the consumption of its boats. Its capital consists of 1,120 shares, each of 500 florins. The dividend, in 1834, was fixed at 7 per cent. From the day on which the first steam-boat of the company shall have entered the Black Sea, it de- clares that the enterprise no longer belongs solely to the Austrian States, but that it belongs to Europe. "It is announced, that the company contemplates extending its line of steam-boats from Constan- tinople to Trebizond. This extension will depend on the results which will have been obtained by the experiment between Galacz and Constantinople." The above statement was published more than a year ago, and we regret that we have no recent information to communicate respecting the state of this important undertaking. The Russian govern- ment, to whom the treaty of Adrianople gave possession of the mouths of the Danube, has, it is said, refused to permit any steam-boats to pass in and out of the river without payment of toll. But the power of Russia to impose this toll, conformably with existing treaties, has been questioned; and till this dispute be adjusted, the undertaking will necessarily suffer. Junction of the Danube and the Rhine.-A project has been for some time on foot in Bavaria, that would add greatly to the importance of the free navigation of the Danube. This is for cutting a canal from Wurtzbourg, where the Mayne, which flows into the Rhine, ceases to be navigable, to the Danube, between Donauwerth and Ingoldstadt. Were this accomplished, an internal communication by water would be established throughout all the vast countries stretching from the shores of the Netherlands to the Black Sea; so that produce shipped at Rotterdam, or at Galacz, might be conveyed from one to the other in the same vessel The cost of the canal in question is estimated at 8,000,000 florins, and a company has been formed for its construction. The Bavarian government, which is a liberal patron of every undertaking likely to promote the public prosperity, has, we believe, engaged to subscribe a fourth of the sum required. But we have not learned what progress has been made in the under- taking, which is truly of European importance.-Sup.) GALANGAL (Ger. Galgant; Du. and Fr. Galanga; Rus. Kalgan; Lat. Galanga; Arab. Kusttulk; Chin. Laundon), the root of the galanga, brought from China and the East Indies in pieces about an inch long, and hardly 1 an inch thick. A larger root of the same kind (Greater Galangal), an inch or more in thickness, is to be rejected. It has an aromatic smell, not very grateful; and an unpleasant, bitterish, extremely hot, biting taste. It should be chosen full and plump, of a bright colour, very firm and sound 12 cwt. are allowed to a ton.-(Lewis's Mat. Med.; Milburn's Orient. Com.) GALBANUM (Fr. Galbanum; Ger. Mutterharz; It. Galbano; Lat. Galbanum, Arab. Barzud), a species of gum resin obtained from a perennial plant (Galbamum officinale) growing in Africa, near the Cape of Good Hope, and Syria and Persia. It is brought to this country from the Levant in cases or chests containing from 100 to 300 lbs. each. The best is in ductile masses, composed of distinct whitish tears agglutinated together by a pale brown or yellowish substance. It is generally much mixed with stalks, seeds, and other impurities. The separate tears are considered as the best. When the colour is dark brown or blackish, it is to be rejected. It has a strong peculiar odour, and 8 bitterish, warm, acrid taste.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) (GALLIPOLI. Account of the Quantity of Oil exported from Gallipoli in British and Neapolitan Bottoms, in 1833 and 1831, together with an estimate of the Value of the same formed on the Quotations in the Giornale delle Due Sicilie. 1833. Quantity. Value. In Prime Cost. Cash Charges and Duty. Total. In Salms. Imperial Tons. Ducats. Sterling. Ducats. Sterling. Dueats. Starling In British vessels 18,899 2,625 451,316 L. 77,545 132,293 L. 22,731 583,609 L 100.876 In Neapolitan do. 6,801 944 162,407 27,905 36,725 6,310 199,132 34,815 Total 25,700 3,569 613,723 105,450 169,018 29,041 732,741 134,491 1834. In British vemels 26,879 3,733 671.975 116,865 189,153 32,722 360,128 149.587 In Neapolitan do. 33,648 4,673 841,200 146,308 181,699 31,599 1,022,899 177,907 Total 60,527 8,406 1,513,175 263,173 368.852 64,321 1,883.027 327,494 Statement of the Number, Tonnage, and Crews of Vessels, distinguishing the Countries to which they belonged, which entered inwards and cleared outwards, at the Port of Gallipoli, in 1835. Entered. Cleared. Flags. Vessels. Tons. Crews. Vessels. Tons. Crews. British 12 1,317 81 12 1,317 81 Hanoverian I 88 5 1 88 5 Neapolitan 82 12,834 898 82 12,834 998 Total 95 14,239 984 95 14,239 964 Sup.) GALLON-GARNETS. 703 GALLON, a measure of capacity, both for dry and liquid articles, containing 4 quarts. By 5 Geo. 4. c. 74., " the Imperial gallon shall be the standard measure of capacity, and shall contain 10 lbs. avoirdupois weight of distilled water, weighed in air at the temperature of 62° of Fahrenheit's thermometer, the barometer being at 30 inches, or 277.274 cubic inches; and all other measures of capacity to be used, as well for wine, beer, ale, spirits, and all sorts of liquids, as for dry goods, not measured by heaped measure, shall be derived, computed, and ascertained from such gallon; and all measures shall be taken in parts, or multiples, or certain proportions, of the said Imperial standard gallon." The old English gallon, wine measure, contained 231 cubic inches; and the old English gallon, ale measure, contained 282 cubic inches. Hence the Imperial gallon is about ! larger than the old wine gallon, and about 10 less than the old ale gallon. By the 6 Geo. 4. c. 58. § 6. it is enacted, that from and after the 5th of January, 1826, whenever any gallon measure is mentioned in any act of parliament relative to the excise, it shall be taken and deemed to be a gallon Imperial standard measure.-(See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) GALLS, OR GALL-NUTS, (Fr. Galles, Noix de galle; Ger. Gallapfel, Gallus; It. Galle, Galluze; Lat. Galæ; Arab. Afis; Hind. Majouphal; Pers. Mazu), are ex- crescences produced by the attacks of a small insect, which deposits its eggs in the tender shoots of a species of oak (Quercus infectoria Lin.), abundant in Asia Minor, Syria, Persia, &c. Galls are inodorous, and have a nauseously bitter and astringent taste. They are nearly spherical, and vary in magnitude from the size of a pea to that of a hazel nut. When good, they are of a black or deep olive colour; their surface is tubercular, and almost prickly; they are heavy, brittle, and break with a flinty fracture. They are known in commerce by the names of white, green, and blue. The white galls are those which have not been gathered till after the insect has eaten its way out of the nidus and made its escape. They are not 80 heavy as the others, are of a lighter colour, and do not fetch so high a price. The green and blue galls are gathered before the insect has escaped; they are heavier and darker than the former, and are said to afford about one third more of colouring matter. Galls are of great importance in the arts, being very extensively used in dyeing, and the manufac- ture of ink, of which they form one of the principal ingredients. They are the most powerful of all the vegetable astringents and are frequently used with great effect in medicine. The ancients reckoned the gall-nuts of Syria superior to every other, and they still retain their pre- eminence. They are principally exported from Aleppo, Tripoli, Mmyrna, and Said; those brought from the first come chiefly from Mosul, on the western bank of the Tigris, about ten days' journey from Aleppo. The real Mosul galls are unquestionably the best of any but all that are gathered in the surrounding country are sold under this name. Those from Caramania are of a very inferior quality. The galls met with in India are carried thither from Persia by Arabian merchants. It is not unusual to dye the whitish gall-nuts blue, in order to increase their value. The fraud is, however, detected by the deeper blue tinge that is thus imparted to them; and by their being perfo- rated, and lighter than the genuine blue galls. The price of galls in bond varies in the London market from 65s. to 85a. a cwt. The duty is 5a. a cwt.-(Rees's Cyclopedia; Bancroft on Colours; Ainslie's Mat. Indica, &c.) GAMBOGE (Fr. Gomme gutte; Ger. Gummigutt; It. Gomma gutta; Lat. Gummi guttæ, Cambogia; Arab. Ossararewund; Siamese and Cambojan, Rong), a concrete vege- table juice, or gum resin, the produce of the Garcinia Cambogia, a forest tree of the genus which affords the mangostein, the most exquisite fruit of the East. The districts which yield gamboge lie on the east side of the Gulf of Siam, between the latitudes of 10° and 12° north, comprising a portion of Siam and the kingdom of Camboja, whence its English name. It is obtained by making incisions in the bark of the tree, from which it exudes, and is collected in vessels placed to receive it. In these it assumes a firm consist- ence; and being formed into orbicular masses, or more frequently cylindrical rolls, it is at once fit for the market. It is of a bright yellow colour, opaque, brittle, breaks vitreous, has no smell, and very little taste. Specific gravity 1.22. When taken internally, it operates as a most violent cathartic. It forms a beautiful yellow pigment; for which purpose it is principally used. The Dutch began to import it about the middle of the seventeenth cen- tury. The greater part of the gamboge of commerce first finds its way to Bangkok, the Siamese capital, or to Saigon, the capital of lower Cochin China; from these it is carried by junks to Singapore, whence it is shipped for Europe. Its price at Singapore varies, ac- cording to quality, from 30 to 80 dollars per picul. Dark coloured pieces should be rejected. -(Crawford's Embassy to Siam, p. 425.; Thomson's Chemistry.) GARNET, GARNETS (Fr. Grenats; Ger. Granaten, Granatstein; It. Granati; Lat. Granati; Rus. Granatnoi kamen; Sp. Granadas). There are two species of garnet, the precious and the common. The colour of the first is red; and hence the name of the mineral, from its supposed resemblance to the flower of the pomegranate; passes from Co- lumbine red, to cherry and brown red; commonly crystallised. External lustre glistening, internal shining, vitreous; transparent, sometimes only translucent; specific gravity 4.08 to 4-34. The colour of the common garnet is of various shades of brown and green. Differ- ent colours often appear in the same mass: translucent; black varieties nearly opaque: specific gravity from 3.66 to 3:75.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) The finest varieties come from India, and some good specimens have been received from Greenland. When large Digitized by Google 704 GAS COMPANIES. and free from flaws, garnets are worth from 21. to 51. or 6l., and even more; but stones of this value are of rare occurrence, and always in demand.-(Mawe on Diamonds, 4. 2d ed. p. 113.) GAS COMPANIES, the term usually applied to designate the companies or associations established in most large towns for lighting the streets and houses with gas. Every one must have remarked that most species of coal, when ignited, give out large quantities of gas, which burns with much brilliancy, yielding a great quantity of light as well as of heat. Dr. Clayton seems to have been the first who attempted, about 1736, to apply this gas to the purposes of artificial illumination: but his experiments were upon a very limited scale, and no further attention was paid to the subject till more than half a cen- tury afterwards. At length, however, Mr. Murdoch, of Soho, instituted a series of judicious experiments on the extrication of gas from coal and, by his ingenuity and sagacity, suc- ceeded in establishing one of the most capital improvements ever made in the arts. Mr. Murdoch found that the gas might be collected in reservoirs, purified, conveyed by pipes to a great distance from the furnace where it was generated; and that it affords, by its slow combustion, when allowed to escape through small orifices, a beautiful and steady light. This great discovery, which places Mr. Murdoch in the first rank among the benefactors of mankind, was first brought into practice at Redruth, in Cornwall. In 1802, it was applied to light Mr. Murdoch's manufactory at Soho; in 1805, it was adopted by Messrs. Phillips and Lee, of Manchester, in the lighting of their great cotton mill and is now employed in the lighting of the streets, theatres, and other public buildings, factories, &c. of all the considerable towns of the empire; and also in most considerable towns of the Continent and America. Gas light is indebted, for its rapid diffusion, not more to its peculiar softness, clearness, and unvarying intensity, than to its comparative cheapness. According to Dr. Thomson (Sup. to Ency. Brit. art. Gas Lights), if we value the quantity of light given by 1 lb. of tallow in candles at 1s., an equal quantity of light from coal gas will not cost more than 21d, being less than a fourth part of the cost of the former. Oil and other substances have been used in furnishing gas for the purpose of illumina- tion, but none of them has answered so well as coal. Most of the oil gas establishments have been abandoned. The construction of gas works on a large scale, and the carrying of pipes through the streets and into houses, &c., is very expensive, and requires a large outlay of capital. Hence most of the gas lights in the different towns are supplied by joint stock companies. Many of them have turned out to be very profitable concerns. The subjoined Table contains a statement of the most important particulars connected with the principal gas companies; viz. the number of shares in each, the nominal amount of each share, the sums actually paid up, the market price of shares, the dividend payable on them, &c.-(From the Share List of Mr. Charles Edmonds, Broker, of Change Alley Cornhill, 12th of October, 1833.) Number Amount of Shares. Names of Companies of Paid up. Price Dividend Dividends Shares. per Share. per Annum. payable. £ £ S. £ S. 12,000 Gas Light and Coke Chart. Company 50 50 0 50 0 6 per cent. May, Nov. 5,000 Ditto, New (London) - - 50 10 0 10 0 6 per cent. May, Nov. 1,000 City (London) - - - 100 100 0 195 0 10 per cent. Mar. Sept. 1,000 Ditto, New (London) 10 per cent. Mar. Sept. - - 100 60 0 120 0 10,000 Imperial (London) - - 50 50 0 48 15 5 per cent. April. Oct. 76,500/. Ditto debentures - - - 100 100 0 100 0 4 per cent. Jan. July. 9,000 Phœnix, or South London - - 50 39 0 43 0 6 per cent. Feb. Aug. 5,000 British (London) - - - 40 16 0 21 12 11. per share. April, Oct. 5,000 Ditto (Country) - - - 20 19 0 22 0 11. per share. April, Oct. Ditto debentures - - , 100 - - 103 0 5 per cent. Jan. July. 2,000 Independent - - - 30 30 0 45 0 6 per cent. Mar. Sept. 4,000 Equitable - - - - 50 25 0 24 0 4 per cent. April, Oct. 8,200 General United Gas Light Company 50 44 0 44 0 5 per cent. Mar. Sept. 4,000 Imperial Continental - 100 51 5 36 0 per sh. Feb. Aug. 600 Bradford - - - - 25 20 0 45 0 10 per cent. May. 600 Brentford - - - - 50 50 0 25 0 2,500 Bath - - - - 20 16 0 33 15 10 per cent. Feb. Aug 600 Barnsley 10 0 10 0 Mar. Sept. - - - - 10 704 Birmingham - - - 50 50 0 110 0 10 per cent. Mar. Sept. 2,400 Birmingham and Staffordshire - 50 50 0 100 0 41. per sh. April, Oct. 1,500 Brighton - - - - 20 20 0 14 0 750 Brighton New - - - 20 18 0 12 0 Brighton General - - - 20 18 0 31 per cent. 1,312 Blackburn - - - - 10 10 0 12 0 5 per cent. 4,250 Bristol - - = - 20 - - 41 10 10 per cent Feb. Aug. 240 Canterbury - - - - 50 - 60 0 5 per cent. Jan. July. 300 Cheltenham - - - 50 50 0 75 0 70 per cent. 800 Coventry - - - 25 - 20 0 5 per cent. 200 Derby - - - - 50 50 0 55 0 5 per cent. 180 Dover - - - - 50 - - 51 0 5 per cent. 600 Dudley - - - - 20 - - 22 0 6 per cent. 240 [Exeter - - - - 50 - - 70 0 51. Digitized by Google GENEVA. 705 Number Amount Names of Companies. Paid up. Price Dividend Dividends of of Shares. Shares. per Share. per Annum. payable. 780 Great Yarmouth - - - 20 18 0 13 0 31 per cent. July, Jan. Guilford - - - - 25 25 0 23 0 11. 600 Halifax - - - - 25 21 0 36 0 1,200 Ipswich - - - - 10 - - 12 0 12s. Mar. Sept. 800 Isle of Thanet - - - 25 20 0 22 0 5 per cent. Jan. July. 160 Kidderminster - - - 50 - - 53 0 5 per cent. 201 Leeds - - - 100 100 0 195 0 10L. Leicester - - - - 50 50 0 65 0 31. 10s. January. 220 Lewis - - - - 25 25 0 23 0 4 per cent. January. 500 Liverpool - - - - 100 100 0 450 0 221. Feb. Aug. 200 Maidstone - - 50 50 0 100 0 9 per cent. Mar. Sept. 200 Newcastle-under-Line - - 25 320 Newport, Isle of Wight - - 50 - - 18 0 17. 542 Northampton - 20 19 0 26 10 320 Nottingham - - - 50 50 0 96 0 8 per cent. 120 Oxford - - - - 150 130 0 3,200 Paisley - - - - 50 600 Poplar - - - 50 - - 27 0 600 Portsea Island - - - 50 53 0 47 0 5 per cent. Jan. July. 2,500 Portable - - - 100 20 0 18 10 dis. 10,000 Plymouth - - - - 50 70 0 51. July. 1,000 Ratcliff - - - - 100 60 0 46 0 4 per cent. Mar. Sept. 480 Rochdale - - - - 25 15 0 par 240 Rochester - - - - 50 50 0 58 0 31. 1,600 Sheffield - - - - 25 18 5 58 0 10 per cent. 1,000 Shrewsbury - - - 10 - 12 10 12s. January. 144 Stockton - - - 55 - - 294 Warwick - - - - 50 - - 50 0 5 per cent. March. 400 Wakefield - - - - 25 - - - 21. 10s. 100 Warrington - - - 20 - - 29 0 10 per cent. 1,000 Wigan - - - 10 - 240 Woolwich - - - 50 30 0 - 10 per cent. 550 Wolverhampton - - - 20 20 0 20 0 600 Worcester - - 20 - - 16 0 4 per cent. [Gas works for lighting have been introduced into the United States at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Wilmington (Del.), Baltimore, Pittsburg, Louisville, New Orleans, and Mobile; and are all of them conducted by joint stock companies,-by one company only in each place, excepting in New York and Philadelphia, where there are two. With the exception, also, of that in Pittsburg and the two in Philadelphia, they are conducted under the usual organization of joint stock corporations. In the three cases just mentioned, the general features are the same. The stock is held by individuals; and the management is confided to trustees. These trustees are, in the Northern Liberties, annually chosen, one half by the municipal authorities, and one half by the proprietors; but, in the city of Philadelphia proper and Pittsburg, they are chosen by the former exclusively. In all these works, the municipal authorities have granted the pri- vilege of laying down pipes, reserving to themselves the right of redemption at the original cost, for the benefit of the corporations respectively. These works have no legislative charters. The success which has attended the works in Philadelphia is attributable, in a great mea- sure, to the strict regulations adopted, to prevent the leakage of the gas in the minute rami- fications of the pipes conducting it through the buildings that are lighted.-Am. Ed.] GENEVA (Du. Genever; Fr. Genièvre; Ger. Gaud, Genever; It. Acqua di Ginepro Lat. Juniperi aqua; Sp. Agua de Enebro), a spirit obtained by distillation from grain, rectified, with the addition of juniper berries. The latter give to the spirit that peculiar flavour by which it is distinguished, and are also said to render it diuretic. Geneva is a corruption of genièvre, the French term for the juniper berry. By far the best geneva is made in Holland, where its manufacture is carried on to a very great extent. The distilleries of Schiedam have long been famous, and are at present in a very prosperous condition. Schiedam geneva is made solely of spirit obtained from rye and barley, flavoured with juniper berries. It becomes milder, and acquires, as it gets old, an oily flavour disliked by the Hollanders; hence nearly the whole of the " Schiedam" is exported, principally to the East Indies. There are no fewer than 300 distilleries in Schie- dam, 100 in other parts of Holland, and not more than 40 in Belgium. The entire annual produce of the distillery in Holland is estimated at 2,000,000 ankers, or 20,500,000 wine gallons, of which about two thirds are exported.- (Cloet, Description Gèographique des Pays Bas, p. 92.) In nothing, perhaps, has the destructive effect of heavy taxation been so strongly exhibited, as in the trade of geneva. It appears from the Parl. Paper, No. 248, Sess. 1826, that during the 10 years ending with 1786, when the duty on geneva was about 10s. the wine gallon, the average annual con- sumption in Great Britain amounted to about 80,362 gallons. But in 1786, Mr. Pitt reduced the duties to 5s. a gallon; and the effect of this wise and politic measure was such, that in the next decennial period the average imports for home consumption amounted to 444,891 gallons From 1796 to 1806, 89 Digitized by Google 706 GENOA. the duties fluctuated from 7s. 6d. to 14s.; but as the taste for geneva had been formed, and as the to- ties on other spirits had been increased in about the same proportion, the consumption went on increas- ing, having been, at an average of the 10 years, as high as 724,351 gallons a year. This was the mi- mum of consumption. Mr. Vansittart soon after began his inauspicious career, and immediately raised the duty from 14s. to 20s. 8d.; the consequence of this increase being, that in the 10 years ending with 1816, the average consumption amounted to only 272,898 gallons. Since then the duties have continued stationary, being at this moment 22s. 6d. the Imperial gallon, on an article which may be bought in bond for 2s. 3d. or 2s. 6d.: The duties on rum and British spirits having been materially reduced during the last 10 years, the consumption of geneva has gone on progressively diminishing, till it now amounts, as appears from the subjoined official statement, to no more than 22,300 gallons; being only one thirty- fourth part of what it amounted to during the 10 years ending with 1806: In Ireland, the effects of this felo de se system have been more injurious than appears from this Table. During the 4 years ending with 1803, the books of the Irish Custom-house show that there were, at an average, 82,828 gallons of geneva entered for home consumption, producing, at the then duty of 7s. 3rd., 39,9231. a year; whereas, notwithstanding the vast increase of population, the con- sumption of geneva in Ireland, in 1832, was only 1,402 gallons, and the revenue only 1,577L To make any lengthened commentary on such statements would be useless. Our policy, if we may apply this term to so revolting a display of short-sighted rapacity, has had no other effect than to lessen the public revenue and enjoyments of the people, to injure our trade with Holland, and to foster and promote the ruinous and destructive practice of smuggling. The exorbitant duties on ge- neva, brandy, and tobacco, have led to the formation of the coast guard and the preventive water guard, costing together between 400,000L. and 500,000/. a year; and yet, notwithstanding this enor- mous outlay, and notwithstanding the innumerable penalties and punishments to which he is exposed, the trade of the smuggler is not put down, but is, on the contrary, in a peculiarly flourishing condition; and 80 it will continue, in despite of every thing that can be done for its suppression, till these duties be adequately reduced. We believe our gin manufacturers have nothing to apprehend from a reduction of the duties on ge- neva to 10s. a gallon. The lower classes, who are the great consumers, prefer English gin to every other stimulant and now that the duties on juniper berries-(see BERRIES)-are reduced, its quality may be materially improved. But nothing would have so much influence in this respect as the admis- sion of geneva at a moderate duty. It would also have the beneficial effect of putting an end to the manufacture of the spurious compounds sold under its name. The regulations as to the importation, &c. of geneva are similar to those affecting BRANDY; which see. An Account of the Number of Gallons (Imperial Measure) of Geneva entered for Home Consumption in Great Britain and Ireland, the Rates of Duty on the same, and the entire Nett Produce of the Duty, each Year since 1814. Quantities retained for Home Rates of Duty per Consumption. Nett Produce of Duty (Customs and Excise.) Imperial Gallon (Customs Years. and Exche). Great United Britain. Ireland. Great Britain. Kingdom. Ireland. United Kingdom. Gt. Britain. Ireland. Imp. Gall. Imp. Gall. Imp. Gall. £ S. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 1814 149,302 6,072 155,374 168,559 13 3 5,581 18 5 174,141 II 8 1261 17 3} 1815 124,508 4,446 128,954 139,768 13 3 4,029 8 11 143,798 22 1816 103,973 1,305 105,278 116,967 12 11 1,359 15 8 118,327 8 7 1817 105,483 2,174 107,657 118,837 19 10 2,012 16 0 120,850 15 10 1818 113,255 3,032 116,287 127,503 18 11 2,772 3 3 130,275 2 2 1819 102,523 3,124 105,647 114,799 13 7 2,795 2 9 117,594 16 4 1271 1820 105,067 3,383 108,450 114,903 15 2 2,943 17 11 117,847 13 1 1821 89,443 3,324 92,767 100,965 15 9 2,010 2 10 103,905 18 7 1822 88,670 2,917 91,587 99,981 16 2 2,523 14 3 102,505 10 5 1823 82,784 8,164 90,948 93,442 0 0 7,020 14 5 100,462 14 5 1 2 8 1824 19,605 412 90,017 101,089 12 3 472 7 11 101,562 0 2 1825 83,709 1,000 84,709 94,463 2 1 1,145 17 11 95,609 0 0 1826 67,079 2,081 69,160 75,553 5 10 2,337 10 11 77,890 16 9 1 2 6 1 2 6 1827 50,760 1,908 52,668 57,204 11 11 2,147 12 6 59,352 4 5 1828 43,037 2,223 45,260 48,433 9 I 2,500 11 10 50,934 0 11 1829 35,301 1,845 37,146 39,647 17 2 2,075 12 6 41,723 9 8 1830 29,006 1,793 30,799 32,650 0 0 2,018 0 0 34,669 0 0 1831 22,510 1,388 23,898 25,332 0 0 1,562 0 0 26,894 0 0 1832 20,899 1,402 22,301 23,514 0 0 1,577 0 0 25,091 0 0 GENOA, a maritime city of Italy, once the capital of the famous republic of that name, now of a province of the kingdom of Sardinia. It is situated at the bottom of the extensive gulf to which it gives its name; the light-house being in lat. 44° 24' 40" N., lon. 8° 52' 56" E. Population 80,000. Genoa is one of the finest cities of Europe. In general, the streets are inconveniently narrow; but some of the principal ones are moderately wide, and consist almost entirely of public buildings, and private palaces erected during the period of her prosperity. Being built on a rising ground, in the form of an amphitheatre, the appear- ance of the town from the sea is most magnificent, and justifies the epithet given to her of " la superba." Port.-The harbour is simicircular, the diameter being about 1,000 fathoms. It is artificial, being formed by two gigantic moles having opposite directions. That on the east side, called the old mole (molo necchio), projects from the centre of the city W. by S. It is about 260 fathoms in length. and has a battery near its middle. The new mole (molo nuovo), on the opposite side of the port, adjoins the southern extremity of the suburb of S. Pietro 'Arena, projecting about 210 fathoms from shore in an E. S. E. direction. The mole beads bear from each other N. E. by E. and S. W. by W., the dis- tance between them, forming the entrance to the harbour. being about 350 fathoms. The light-house is without the port, on the west side, near the extremity of a point of land, and contiguous to the bot- tom of the new mole. It is a lofty square tower; and as it stands on a high rock, and is painted white, it is visible in clear weather at a great distance. There is also a harbour light at the extremily of the new mole. There is no difficulty in entering the harbour the ground is clean, and there if plenty of water, particularly on the side next the new mole; care, however, must be taken, in coming Digitized by Google GENOA. 707 from the west, to give the light-house point a good offing. Moderate sized merchantmen commonly anchor inside the old mole, contiguous to the porto franco, or bonded warehouses, having a hawser made fast to the mole, and an anchor ahead. Men of war and the largest class of merchantmen may anchor inside the new mole, but they must not come too near the shore. Ships sometimes anchor without the harbour in from 10 to 25 fathous, the light-house bearing N. t W., distant 2 or 3 miles. The S. W. winds occasion a heavy swell but the bottom is clay and holds well. Within the town are two rather shallow basins designed for gallies and small trading vessels. There is also an arsenal. Money.-Accounts were formerly kept at Genoa in lire of 20 soldi, each soldo containing 12 denari; and money was divided into banco and fuori di banco. But since the 1st of January, 1827, the ancient method of reckoning has ceased, and accounts are now kept in lire Italiane, divided into cents. The weight and fineness of the new coins are precisely the same as those of France: so that the par of ex- change = 21.75 lire per pound sterling, if estimated in silver; and 25-20, if estimated in gold. 6 old lire di banco are equal to 5 new lire very nearly.-(Manuel de Nelkenbrecher.) Sales of merchandise con- tinue, however, to be, for the most part, made in the old currency. The prices given in a subsequent part of this article are in it. The Bank of Genoa, or of St. George, was one of the most ancient and celebrated banks of circulation and deposit in Europe. Until 1746, when the bank was pillaged by the Austrians, it was customary to make all bills of exchange drawn upon Genoa payable in banco; but since then they have generally been made payable in money fuori di banco. In 1800, when the French were besieged in Genoa by the Austrians, they took the treasure of the bank to pay their troops. The establishment has never re- covered from this blow some warehouses, and a part of the town's revenue, were assigned to it, but they yield a very poor dividend. It is no longer used as a place of deposit for money. Weights and Measures.-The pound is of two sorts the peso sottile = 4,8911 English grains, and the pcso grosso. The latter is 10 per cent. heavier than the former hence the cantaro of 100 lbs. peso mottile = 69-89 lbs. avoirdupois; and the cantaro of 100 lbs. peso grosso = 76-875 lbs. avoirdupois. The latter is used for weighing bulky commodities; the former is used in the weighing of gold and silver, and of all commodities of small bulk. Corn is measured by the mina of 8 quarte or 96 gembette 1 mina - 3f Winchester bushels nearly. Salt is sold by the mondino of 8 mine. Of liquid measure, 100 pinte - 1 barilla. 2 barilla = 1 mezzarola - 394 English wine gallons. The barilla of oil - 17 English gallons. Of long measures, the palmo = 9-725 English inches. The canna is of 3 sorts the canna piccola, used by tradesmen and manufacturers, = 9 palme, or 87.5 English inches the canna grossa, used by merchants, = 12 palmi = 1167 English inches; and the canna used at the Custom-house = 10 palmi - 97.25 English inches. The braccio - 21 palmi. Navigation, &c.-In 1831, there entered the different ports of the Bardinian states, 3,704 ships but the greater number of these must have been small coasting vessels, as their aggregate burden did not ex- ceed 331,217 tons. If we deduct about a third for Sardinia, by far the largest proportion of the remain- der must have entered and cleared out at Genoa.-Archires du Commerce, tom. 11. p. 39.)-In 1832, 84 British ships of the burden of 13,478 tons, arrived at Genoa.*-(Pari. Paper, No. 756. Sess. 1833.) Trade, &e. Genoa is the entrepôt of a large extent of country and her commerce, though inferior to what it once was, is very considerable, and has latterly been increasing. She is a free port; that is, a port where goods may be warehoused and exported free of duty. The exports consist partly of the raw products of the adjacent country, such as olive oil (an article of great value and importance), rice, fruits, cheese, rage, steel, argol, &c.; partly of the products of her manufacturing industry, such as silks, damasks, and velvets (for the production of which she has been long famous), thrown silk, paper, soap, works in marble, alabaster, coral, &c. the printed cottons of Switzerland, and the other products of that country and of the western parts of Lombardy, intended for the south of Europe and the Levant; and partly of the various foreign products brought by sea, and placed in porto franco. The imports principally consist of cotton and woollen stuffs; cotton wool, mostly from Egypt; corn from the Black Sea, Sicily, and Barbary sugar, salted fish, spices, coffee, cochineal, indigo, hides, iron, and naval stores from the Baltic; hardware and tin plates from England wool, tobacco, lead (principally from Spain), wax, &c. Corn, barilla, Gallipoli oil, cotton, valonia, sponge, galls, and other products of the countries adjoining the Black Sea, Sicily, the Levant, &c., may in general be had here, though not in so great abundance as at Leghorn. The various duties and Custom-house fees formerly charged on the transit of goods through Genoa and the Sardinian territories have recently been abolished. This will have a very beneficial influence on the trade of this port, particularly as regards the importation of raw cotton for Switzerland and Milan, as well as of the different descrip- tions of colonial produce. Statement of the Quantities of some of the Principal Articles of Colonial and other Raw Produce imported into Genoa in 1830, 1831, 1832, with the Stocks on Hand on the 1st of January, 1832 and 1533. Stock, Stock, Stock, Stock, Articles imported. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1st Jan. 1st Jan. Articles imported. 1830. 1831. 1832. let Jan. 1st Jan. 1.32. 1833. 1932 1833. Cocoa, all quals. bags 13,500 8,500 5,200 3,400 1,550 Spices, Pepper, lbs. 2,050,00 900,000 1,500,000 36,000 Coffer, dito tons 1,996 1,330 2,930 110 680 Piniento - 132,000 145,000 150,000 96,000 Cotton, ditto bales 8,370 13,700 10,600 4,150 1,650 Cassia lignea, ca. 790 550 820 40 Cochineal lbs. 15.200 29,000 75,000 35,000 64,000 ditto mats 1,100 Frah, Codfish. quint. 36,900 31,900 54,100 750 Sugars, loaves, casks 310 175 85 30 45 St ckfish I 20.00 15,900 22,000 1,800 crushed - 2,7:0 2,080 2 850 150 310 Pilchards, hhds. 2,330 3,050 5,200 Havannah, bxs. 8,200 13,500 15,10 2,10 4,500 Herris & bris. 5,100 450 690 Brazil cases 6,410 6,100 4.00 N80 1,040 Hides, dried and dry ditto bags 4 900 6,400 11,300 2,100 2,500 enited numb. 118,400 68,500 86,400 5,000 3,200 E. India - 2,600 12.200 24,000 Indigo, Rengal case 570 660 640 390 180 Porto Rico, cake. 4,570 2,400 4,500 490 470 Spanish serone 545 275 761 1,070 1,120 Tin plates boxes 4,950 2,800 6,500 650 1,700 Lead PIP 24,500 23,500 21,400 16,200 17,000 * We are not sure that this is the correct reading, the title to the account being drawn up in so slovenly a way, that it is not easy to say whether it means that 84 ships arrrived and 84 departed, or that 42 arrived and 42 departed. Digitized by Google 708 GENTIAN-GIBRALTAR. Statement of the Principal Articles of Raw Produce exported from Genoa, with their Prices there on the 1st of January, 1833. in Porto franco (Bond), in Italian Money, Weights, and Measures, and free on Board in English Money, Weights, and Measures.-(From the Circular of Grants, Balfer, and Co.) Genoa Rates Price in English Genor Rates Price is English in Money, and in Money. and Exports. Weights, free on Exports. Porto franco. Porto franco. Weights, free board. board. the L.d. Lid Almonds, sweet, Sicily, liv. 64 to 0 100 $ 8 10 cwt. Oil,Genoa, superfine liv. :04 to 106 bri. Argol, white - 46 - 48 150 1158 - fine - 86 90 - 16 236 red garbled - 42 - 44 112 3 - middling - 76 - so - - Barilla, Sicilian - 14 - 0 - 0 10 4 - Gallipoli, Sicily, Brimstone, rough - 71-2 - 8 - 577 ton and Levant - 61 - 62 - 29 - roll - 13 - 14 - 983 - Opium - 15 - 16 Cantharides - 7 - 7 -2 I 0610 lb. Paper, Floretta, 14lbs.- 7 - 71-4 p.rm. 0 Cheese, Parmeran - 150 - 160 150 0 0 11-8 - Modia, 14 lbs - 5 - 31-4 0 Cotton, Mako - 106 - 109 - 0079 - Almasso, 16 lbs. - 818 - 91-4 sheets 0 abouts Cream of tartar sols 10 - 11 1 19 7 cwt. Quickstlver sols 42 - 0 lb. 020M Emence of bergamot liv. 81.2-9 - 089 lb. Rice, Lombardy liv. 20 - 21 150lb lemon - 7 - 0 - 0 - Safflower, new sols 36 - 0 orange - 43-4 - 5 - 0 4 11 - Saffron liv. 35 - 36 - 184- - Galls, Turkey, blue sols 25 - 96 - 6 13 1 cwt. Soap, white - 46 - 49 150lb. 15 CWL in sorts - 11 - 12 - 315 - marbled - 44 46 113 - - Gum Arabic, picked - 34 - 44 - 1138 - Shumac, Sicily - 22 - 0 225lb. 010 - in sorts - 16 - 90 - 518 - Sponges, fine and so- Hemp, Bologna, dressed, perfine 4 6 lb. lb. - - 1st liv. 75 - 76 150 54 7 ton Steel, Milan, No. 00 - 29 31 150lb. CWL 2d - 70 - 71 - 50 10 5 - No. 0 - 29 31 126 - - garden - 48 - 0 - 34 3 1 - No. 1&2- - 27 - 0 - 0 19 - cordage, 1st - 38 40 2893 - Tallow - 60 52 115 - - - - 2d - 36 - 37 - 267 - Valonia - 10 - 18 0 12 , - - Piedmont, 1st - 36 - 87 - 2667 - Liquorice paste, Calabria 56 - 67 100 2 18 10 cwt. Grain, wheat, Black Sicilian - 44 - 45 - 236 - Sea, soft - 20 - 23 mina quart. Linesed - 14 - 0 150 19 2 qr. ditto, hard - 23 - 17 Madder roots, Cyprus, Beans, Alexan- and Smyrea sols 71-8 8 1 818 cwt. dria, new - IS - 0 - 136 - Tripoli - 71-8-8 - 212 - old - 11 - 0 0 19 10 - - Manna in flakes - 60 - 80 - 038 lb. Corn, Indian - 14 - 18 - 6 - in sorts, Geraci - 29 - 30 - 01 4 - Tares.-Those of usage are,-on cotton, fish, tallow, and valonia, Per cent. 4 per cent. hemp, I per cent.; wood, 116 for 100 lbs. almonds, Sugar in chests from Rio de Janeiro, losse taking 318 wax, and galls, 104 for 100 lbs. ginger, 112 for 100 lbs. sugar in bags, ditto 3-4 arrobas . loaves, 2 per cent.; raw silk, 1 ounce per lb. Alum, argol, an- chests from Permambuco 4-6 equal to chovies, barilla, brandy. flour, iron, lead, saltpetre, figa, hides, pep- chests from Bahia 6-10 CWL Eng. per, juniper berries, pumice stone, rage, raisins, rice, cream of tartar, boxes from Havanmah and Cuba taking assences, quicksilver, shumac, steel, and soap, have no tare; for all muscovado in casks from Cuba and Porto Rico diffe. other articles sold by weight, 106 lbs. are given for every 100 lbs. Importations from other quarters where the tares allowed are a The loss of weight OD importations from the place of growth, partly a par with those of Gemos, generally reader full weight; Havarman arising from difference of tare, varies as follows box sugars from the United States render I to 2 per ccal. more thes full weight. GENTIAN (Ger. Enzian; Fr. Gentiane; It. Genziana; Sp. Jenciana ; Rus. Enzian; Lat. Gentiana), the roots of two alpine plants, Gentiana lutea and Gentiana purpurea, found growing in Switzerland and Austria, the Apennines, the Pyrenees, and in North America. Those brought to this country come from Germany. They are in pieces of various lengths and thickness, twisted, wrinkled on the outside, and covered with a brown- ish grey cuticle. They have no particular odour; and the taste is intensely bitter, without being nauseous.-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) GHEE. See BUTTER. GIBRALTAR, a famous fortress near the southernmost extremity of Spain, and con- tiguous to the narrowest part of the strait, to which it gives its name, joining the Atlantic and Mediterranean, in lat. 36° 6' 30" N., lon. 5° 21' 12" W. It is situated on the west side of a rocky mountain or promontory, the Mons Calpe of the ancients, projecting into the sea, in a southerly direction, about 3 miles, being from & to 4 of a mile in width. The southernmost extremity of the rock is called Europa Point. Its northern side, fronting the isthmus which connects it with Spain, is almost perpendicular, and wholly inaccessible; the east and south sides are so rugged and precipitous as to render any attack upon them, even if they were not fortified, next to impossible so that it is only on the west side, front- ing the bay, where the rock declines to the sea and the town is built, that it can be attacked with the least chance of success. Here, however, the strength of the fortifications, and the magnitude of the batteries, are such, that the fortress seems to be impregnable, even though attacked by an enemy having the command of the sea. It was taken by the English in 1704, but the fortifications were then very inferior to what they are at present. Towards the end of the American war, it was attacked by a most formidable armament fitted out jointly by Spain and France; but the strength of the place, and the bravery of the garrison, defeated all the efforts of the combined powers. Population about 17,000, exclusive of the troops, which usually amount, in times of peace, to from 3,000 to 4,000. The bay of Gibraltar is spacious; and, being protected from all the more dangerous winds, affords a convenient station for ships. Two moles have been constructed at a vast expense, for the protection of the shipping. The old mole projects from the north end of the town, N. W. by N., 1,100 feet into the sea: the new molé is 11 mile more to the south, extending outwards about 700 feet; it has an elbow formed by the shore, and in winter large vessels anchor inside; the farthest out in from 5 to 6 fathoms. The plan on the opposite page gives a better idea of the position of Gibraltar, as well as of the Straits, than could be derived from any description. It is taken from Captain Smyth's beautiful chart of the Mediterranean. Digitized by Google GIBRALTAR. 709 Trade, Political Importance, &c.- Gibraltar is of considerable consequence as a com- mercial station. Being a free port, subject to no duties and few restrictions, it is a conve- nient entrepôt for the English and other foreign goods destined for the supply of the contiguous Spanish and African provinces. In this respect, however, it has greatly fallen off. This has been owing to a variety of causes partly, and principally perhaps, to the insecurity and apprehension occasioned by the fear of pestilential diseases, the place never having recovered from the effects of the dreadful contagion by which it was visited in 1804 partly to large quantities of those goods being now kept at Malta and Genoa, that were formerly kept at Gibraltar; and, more recently, to the making of Cadiz a free port. This measure has, however, been revoked; but, notwithstanding, it is not at all probable that Gibraltar will ever again be of much importance as a trading station. In 1831, the declared value of the various articles of British produce and manufacture exported to Gibraltar, was 367,2851.; the official value of the foreign and colonial products exported to it during the same year being 121,342L The trade with Gibraltar, or any British dependency in the Mediterranean, may be regulated by an order in council; and any goods imported or exported contrary to such order shall be forfeited, together with the ship importing or exporting the same.- (6 Geo. 4. c. 114. § 73.) 15 18 16 93 SPAIN 3 10 :9 15 GIERALTER: 40 Algocires 110 15 1 30 10 WASHINGTON 16 32 15 26 395 B 380 14 97 27 12 26 7 756 as 7 45 50 200 Current security 600 to 700 the 390 109 a. 600 548 415 r. 140 155 400 314 r. 300 clay 90 assued F 20 to 20 170 Flood to the West G 6 20 8 4 9 3D E 45 7 12 5 37 is AFRICA 10 12 Es 18 EQ 20 40 Nautie Miles 7 0 1 2 3 4 6 6 7 8 References to Plun.-A, - point and light-house of Tariffa, in lat. 36° 0 30" N., lon. 5° 35' 15" W. The light-house was erected in 1813, and the light revolves. B, Cabrita Point. C, Europa Point, the extremity of the rock of Gibraltar. D, town and fortress of Ceuta, on the African coast. E, Little Centa Bay. F. Point Leona. G, Point Cires. The soundings and the diriction of the currents are marked in the chart. Variation in the Straits, 22° 31'. VoL. L-3 0 710 GILD-GLASS. The real value of Gibraltar to Great Britain consists in its importance in a military and naval point of view; in its being, in fact, the key of the Mediterranean; and in its affording a convenient and secure station for the outfit, refreshment, repair, and accommodation of our ships of war and merchantmen. The revenue collected in the town amounts to from 30,000/. to 40,000/., which is about sufficient to defray the public civil expenditure of the place. The expense annually incurred in Great Britain on account of the garrison, in time of peace, amounts to about 200,000/. a small sum compared with the important political and commercial advantages it is the means of securing. Money.-The effective or hard dollar = 4s. 4d.; the current dollar being estimated at 1 hard dollars = 2s. 10&d. Reals and quartos of both hard and current dollars are the same,being, the former = 4/d, and the latter = 1 1-12d. Accounts are kept in current dollars (pesos), divided into 8 reals of 16 quartos each; 12 reals cur- rency make a cob or hard dollar, by which goods are bought and sold; and 3 of these reals are consi- dered equal to 5 Spanish reals vellon. Gibraltar draws on London in effective dollars of 12 reals, and London on Gibraltar in current dol- lars of 8 reals. The exchange of Gibraltar on Cadiz, and other cities of Spain, is in hard dollars at a percentage, which varies considerably, and mostly in favour of Gibraltar. Weights and Measures are those of England, excepting the arroba = 25 lbs. English: grain is sold by the fanega, 5 of which make 1 Winchester quarter; wine is sold by the gallon, 100 of which are equal to 109.4 English wine gallons.- (See Papers laid before Finance Committee; Edinburgh Gazetteer; Inglis's Spain in 1830, vol. ii. p. 169. &c. GILD, or GUILD, a company of merchants or manufacturers, whence the halls of such companies are denominated Gild or Guild Halls. GILL, a measure of capacity. See WEIGHTS and MEASURES. GIN. English geneva, or gin, is made of spirit obtained from oats, barley, or malt, rectified, or redistilled, with the addition of juniper berries, oil of turpentine, &c. All spirits manufactured in England, and most of the Scotch and Irish spirits imported into England, are subjected to the process of rectification. English gin is said to be one of the most wholesome spirits. (See SPIRITS.) GINGER (Ger. Ingwer; Du. Gember; Fr. Gingembre; It. Zenzero; Sp. Jenjibre, Agengibre; Rus. Inbir; Lat. Zingiber; Pers. Zungebeel ; Arab. Zingebeel), the roots of a plant (Amomum Zengiber), a native of the East Indies and China, but which was early carried to and succeeds very well in the West Indies. After the roots are dug, the best are selected, scraped, washed, and dried in the sun with great care. This is called white ginger; while the inferior roots, which are scalded in boiling water before being dried, are denomi- nated black ginger. Preserved ginger is made by scalding the green roots, or the roots taken up when they are young and full of sap, till they are tender: then peeling them in cold water, and putting them into a thin syrup, from which they are shifted into the jars in which they come to us, and a rich syrup poured over them. Dried ginger has a pungent aromatic odour, and a hot, biting taste. It is imported in hags, each containing about a cwt. The white brings the highest price, being more pungent and better flavoured. The external characters of goodness in both sorts of dried ginger are, soundness, or the being free from worm holes, heaviness, and firmness; the pieces that are small, light, and soft, or very friable and fibrous, should be rejected. The best preserved ginger is nearly translucent; it should be chosen of a bright yellow colour; rejecting that which is dark-coloured, fibrous, or (Milburn's Orient. Commerce; Thomson's Dispensatory.) The consumption of ginger is but trifling, not exceeding 5,000 cwt. a year. This is principally to be ascribed to the oppressive duties with which it is burdened, they being no less than 21. 13s. a cwt. on foreign ginger, and 11s. on that brought from a British possession. The revenue derived from it is about 3,250% a year; a sum which might be doubled by reducing the duties on all descriptions of gin- ger to 7s. a cwt. Of 5,315 cwt. of ginger imported in 1831, 3,551 came from the British West Indies, 849 from the East India Company's possessions and Ceylon, 807 from the Netherlands, and 106 from Western Africa. GINSENG (Du. Ginseng, Ginsem; Fr. Ginseng; Ger. Kraftwerzel, Ginseng: It. Ginseng; Sp. Jinseng; Chin. Yansam; Tart. Orhota), the root of a small plant (Panax quinquefolium Lin.), growing in China, Tartary, and several parts of North America. The latter is what we generally see in England, and is an article of trade to China, which is its only market. Large quantities were formerly exported from this country; but it is now carried direct to China by the Americans. It is sometimes exported crude, and some- times cured or clarified. Within these few years, it has been discovered in the Himalaya mountains. and small quantities have been thence sent to Canton; but the speculation has not succeeded. It is only about 30 yea S since it began to be sent from America to China. Previously to the present century, the Chinese drew their supplies from the wilds of Tar- tary, and the root brought an exorbitant price. Crude ginseng now sells in the Canton market at from 60 to 70 dollars per picul, and prepared at from 70 to 80 dollars. In 1832, there were sent from the United States to China, 407,067 lbs. of ginseng, valued at 99,303 dollars. - (Private information.) [The quantity of ginseng exported from the United States to China, in 1837, amounted to 212.899 pounds, valued at $108,548.-Am. Ed.] GLASS (Ger. and Du. Glis; Fr. Vitre, Verre; It. Vetro; Sp. Vidrio: Rus. Steklo; Lat. Vitrum), a transparent, brittle, factitious body. It is formed by mixing together some Digitized by Google GLASS. 711 sort of siliceous earth, as fine sand, or pounded flint, with an alkali, such as soda, potash or pearlash, and subjecting them to a strong heat. By this means they are melted into a transparent, soft, tenacious mass, that may, when hot, be formed into thin plates, bent and shaped in every possible way. When cool, it becomes brittle, and is denominated glass. Litharge, minium, borax, the black oxide of manganese, &c. are sometimes used in the manufacture of glass, according to the purposes to which it is to be applied. The kinds of glass, and their ingredients, are stated by Dr. Ure as follows - "There are 5 distinct kinds of glass at present manufactured - About 70 parts of good plate glass may be run off from these mate- 1. Flint glass, or glass of lead 2. Plate gives, or glass of pure soda: rials. 3. Crown glass, the brst window glass; 4. Broad glass, a coarse "3. Crown, or fine Window Glass-This is made of sand vitrified window glass; 5. Bottle or coarse green glass. by the impure barilla manufactured by incineration of sea weed on "1. Flint Glass, so named because of the siliceous ingredient was the Scotch and Irish shores. The most approved composition is- originally employed in the form of ground flints. It is now made of By Measure. By Weight. the following composition Fine sand purified 5 200 Purified Linn sand 10 parts. Best kelp ground 11 330 Litharge, or red lead 60 - "4. Broad Glass.-This is made of a mixture of scap-boilers' Purified pearlash 30 waste, kelp, and sand. The first ingredient consists of lime used for To correct the green colour derived from combustible matter, or rendering the alkali of the soap boiler caustic, the insoluble matter exide of iron, a little black oxide of manganese is added, and some- of his kelp or barilla, and a quantity of salt and water, all in a pasty times nitre and arenic. The fusion is accomplished usually in about state. The proportions necessarily vary. 2 of the was e, 1 of kelp, 30 hours. and 1 of sand, form a pretty good broad glass. They are mixed "2 Plate Glass.-Good carbonate of anda, procured by decom. together, dried, and fritted. posing common salt with pearlash, is employed as the flux. The "5. Bottle Glass is the coarsest kind. It is made of scappers' proportion of the materials - waste and river sand, in proportions which practice must determine Pure sand 43-0 according to the quantity of the waste somo soap-boilers extracting Dry subcarbonate of soda 25-5 more saline matter, and others less, from their kelps. Common Pure quicklime 4-0 and and lime, with a little common clay and sea salt, form a cheap Nitre 16 mixture for bottle glass." Broken plate glass 25-0-100-0. 1. Historical Notices with respect to Glass.-The manufacture of glass is one of the very highest beauty and utility. It is most probable that we are indebted for this wonderful art, as we are for the gift of letters, to the Phoenicians. According to Pliny (Hist. Nat. lib. xxxvi. c. 26.,) glass had been made for many ages, of sand found near the mouth of the small river Belus in Phoenicia. "The report," says he, "is, that the crew of a merchant ship laden with nitre (fossil alkali) having used some pieces of it to support the kettles placed on the fires they had made on the sand. were surprised to see pieces formed of a translucent substance, or glass. This was a sufficient hint for the manufacture. Ingenuity (astuta et ingeniosa solertia) was immediately at work, to improve the process thus happily suggested. Hence the magnetical stone came to be added, from an idea that it contained not only iron, but glass. They also used clear pebbles, shells, and fossil sand. Indian glass is said to be formed of native crystal, and is on that account superior to every other.* Phoenician glass is prepared with light dry wood, to which copper and nitre are added, the last being princi- pally brought from Ophir. It is occasionally tinged with different colours. Sometimes it is brought to the desired shape by being blown, sometimes by being ground on a lathe, and sometimes it is embossed like silver." Sidon, he adds, is famous for this manufacture. It was there that mirrors were first invented. In Pliny's time, glass was made in Italy, of fine sand on the shore between Cume and the Lucrine bay. Glass was manufactured at Rome into various articles of convenience and ornament. Pliny mentions that Nero gave 6,000 sesterces (50,000/. according to the ordinary method of reckoning) for two glass cups, each having two handles! These, however, must have been of an immense size and of exquisite workmanship; for glass was then in common use for drinking vessels, and was used even in the form of bottles in which to keep wine.-(Mart. Epig. lib. ii. 22. 40., and lib. iv. 86.) There is no authentic evidence of glass being used in windows previously to the third or fourth century; and then, and for long after, it was used only in churches and other public buildings. In this country, even so late as the latter part of the sixteenth century, glass was very rarely met with. In a survey of Alnwick Castle, made in 1573, it is stated- And, because throwe extreme winds, the glasse of the windowes of this and other my lord's castles and houses here in the country dooth decay and waste, yt were good the whole leights of everie windowe, at the departure of his lordshippe from lyinge at any of his said castels, and houses, and dowring the tyme of his lordship's absence, or others lyinge in them, were taken doune and lade up in safety: And at sooche time as ather his lordshippe or anie other sholde lye at anie of the said places, the same might then be set uppe of newe, with smale charges, whereas now the decaye thereof shall be verie costlie and chargeable to be repayred."-(North. Housh. Book, xvii.) Sir F. M. Eden thinks it probable that glass windows were not intro- duced into farmhouses in England much before the reign of James I. They are mentioned. in a lease in 1615, in a parish in Suffolk. In Scotland, however, as late as 1661, the win- dows of ordinary country houses were not glazed, and only the upper parts of even those in the king's palaces had glass; the lower ones having two wooden shutters, to open at pleasure, and admit the fresh air. From a passage in Harrison's Description of England, it may be inferred that glass was introduced into country houses in the reign of Henry VIII. He says,- If this be a correct description of the glass of India in the age of Pliny, it has since fallen off very much Indian glass being now about the very worst that is made. At present, the Hindoos manufacture it of fragments of broken glass, quartz sand, and impure soda,-an article found native in many parts of India, particularly in the south. The furnaces are so bad that they cannot melt our common bottle glass.-(Hamilton's Mysore. vol. iii. p. 370.) The glass of China is much better than that of India, though still very inferior to that of Europe. Digitized by Google 712 GLASS. " Of old time," (meaning, probably, the beginning of the century,) "our countrie houses stead of glasse did use much lattise, and that made either of wicker or fine rifts of oke in checkerwise. I read also that some of the better sort, in and before the time of the Saxons, did make panels of horne instead of glasse, and fix them in wooden calmes (casements); but as horne in windowes is now (1584) quite laid downe in everie place, so our lattises are also growne into disuse, because glasse is come to be 10 plentiful, and within verie little 80 good, cheape, if not better than the other." Glass is now introduced into the windows of almost every cottage of Great Britain and in this cold, damp climate, it ought rather to be considered as a necessary of life, than as the most elegant and useful of conveniences. What Dr. Johnson has said as to glass deserves to be quoted.- By some fortuitous liquefaction was mankind taught to produce a body at once in a high degree solid and transparent, which might admit the light of the sun, and exclude the violence of the wind; which might extend the sight of the philosopher to new ranges of existence, and charm him at one time with the unbounded extent of the material creation, and at another with the endless subordination of animal life; and, what is yet of more importance, might supply the decays of nature, and succour old age with subsidiary sight. Thus was the first artificer in glass employed, though without own knowledge or expectation. He was facilitating and prolonging the enjoy- ment of light, enlarging the avenues of science, and conferring the highest and most lasting pleasures; he was enabling the student to contemplate nature, and the beauty to behold herself."-(Rambler, No. 9.) Venice, for a long time, excelled all Europe in the manufacture of glass, but was subse- quently rivalled by France. The manufacture was early introduced into England; but it was not carried on to any extent previously to the 16th century. The first plates for looking- glasses and coach windows were made in 1673, at Lambeth, by Venetian artists under the protection of the Duke of Buckingham. The British Plate Company was incorporated in 1773, when it erected its extensive works at Ravenhead, near St. Helen's, in Lancashire. The manufacture was at first conducted by workmen from France, whence we had previously brought all our plate glass. But that which is now made at Ravenhead, at Liverpool, and London, is equal or superior to any imported from the Continent. It is difficult to form any precise estimate of the value of the glass annually produced in Great Britain. We believe, however, that it cannot amount to less than 2,000,000/; and that the workmen employed in the different departments of the manufacture exceed 50,000. 2. Duties on Glass.-The glass manufacture is subjected to the excise and it is difficult to say whether the regulations under which the duty is charged, or the du ty itself, be most oppressive. The wealth and population of the country have more than doubled since 1790; and we are well convinced that, had the glass manufacture not been interfered with, it would have increased in a still greater ratio. But instead of advancing, it has positively declined and is actually less at this moment than it was 40 years ago! So extraordinary a result is wholly to be ascribed to the exorbitant excess to which the duties have been carried. Instead, however, of submitting any remarks of our own in vindication of this view of the subject, we shall take the liberty of laying before the reader the fal- lowing extract from the speech delivered by Mr. Poulett Thompson, in the House of Commons, 20th of March, 1830,-a speech which combines, in a degree rarely exhibited, a familiar knowledge of prac- tical details and of sound scientific principles. That the administration of which the Right Hon. Gen- tleman is a distinguished member, has not yet proposed the repeal of this oppressive tax. is not, we are sure, owing to his colleagues differing in opinion with him as to its impolicy, but is wholly to be ascribed to other causes-to the res dura et regni novitas-the difficulty of finding a substitute, and the urgency of the claims for relief advanced by others. The gross duty on glass for the year 1828 amounted, in Great Britain (exclusive of Ireland). to 950,103L., and the nett duty to 586,7701.; the difference being either returned, or sacrificed in the col- lection. And here I would entreat the House to remark, that for the sake of such a sum as 500,000L, a charge of collection on nearly 1,000,000L. is incurred. The duty is 6d. per pound on flint, but equal to 7d. from the mode of its collection; in other words, upwards of 100 per cent.; the glass. when made, selling for 1s. to 1s. 2d. This duty, too, is very much reduced from what it was; and here the House will observe an admirable illustration of the effect of heavy duties on consumption, and com- sequently on revenue. In 1794, the last year on which the duty was 11. 1s. 5d. per cwt. for plate and flint, and other kinds in proportion, the quantities paying duty were as follow :- Flint and Plate. Broad. Crown. Bottle. Cwt. 67,615 - 20,607 - 83,940 - - - 297,476 The duties were successively raised to 9a. and at last, by Mr. Vansittart, in pursuit of his favourke theory, in 1813, to 41. 18s. ! and let us see the result. In 1816, the consumption had declined to Plate. Broad. Crown. Bottle. Cwt. 29,600 6,140 55,502 155,595 In 1825, government saw a part of their error, and reduced the duty by one half, still leaving h too high; but mark the effect. In 1828, the last year for which I have the returns, the consumption rose to Plate. Broad. Crown Bottle. Cwt. 68,134 6,956 90,603 224,864 Still, however, only about the same as in 1794. It appears, therefore, that notwithstanding the in- crease of population and general luxury. the consumption has been kept down by your improvident system, and is actually now less than it was 85 years ago. But here, again, the duty is far from being the greatest evil. Let any one turn to the act: he will find 32 clauses of regulations, penalties, and prohibitions: all vexations to the manufacturer, and all to be paid for by the public. 1 have said that the duty on flint glass is 6d. per pound the glass, when made, selling for 18. But the excise officer has the power of imposing the duty, either when the glass is in the pot, 3d. per pound, or after it has been turned out, at 6d. the glass when turned out, gaining 100 per cent. It is found more advas- tageous to the revenue to exact the duty on glass in the pot, at 3d.; and in this way the dnty is raised 'to 7d. Nor is this all. The manufacturer is driven by this method into the necessity of producing Digitized by Google GLASS. 713 frequently an article which he does not want. He makes the fine glass from the middle; the coarser from the top and bottom of the pot. He frequently wants only fine glass, and he would re-melt the flux of the coarser parts if he had not paid duty upon it; but of course he is unable to do so. All the glass manufacturers whom I have consulted, agree that the whole cost of the excise to the con- sumer, besides the duty, which is 100 per cent. is 25 per cent.; and besides there is great inconve- nience and oppression from the frauds that are daily taking place. And observe the effect which is produced upon your trade, both at home and abroad. A manufacturer who has lately travelled through France, the Netherlands, and Germany, has assured me that our manufacturers could advantageously cope with foreigners, were it not for the duties imposed by the government. Labour is as cheap in this country, our ingenuity is greater, and the materials are also as cheap; it is, then, the vexatious onerous duty alone that gives the foreign manufacturer the advantage over the English. But the effect of the duty goes further it operates to prevent all improvement in the article; because, to improve, experiments must be made but a man with a duty of 125 per cent. over his head, is not very likely to make many experiments. This argument applies especially with respect to colours. A manufacturer has assured me that he has never been able to produce a beautiful red, because the duties have prevented his trying the necessary ex- periments, without his incurring a great risk or loss. Thus a miserable duty, amounting to only 500,000Z., and upon which a charge of 10 per cent. is made for collecting, is allowed to impede our native industry, and to put a stop to all improvement, and be a source of endless oppression and fraud. I really cannot believe that the legislature will resist such an appeal as the manufacturers of this article could make to them, or refuse to relieve them from the gratuitous injury which is in- flicted on them." The following accounts show, better than any reasoning, the injurious influence of the existing duties.-Instead of increasing, as it certainly would have done, had it not been crushed by exorbitant duties, the glass manufacture has gone on progressively declining from the period when Mr. Thompson made the excellent speech now quoted, down to the present day. The falling off in the bottle glass department is particularly striking. The duties being so very high, the necessity of giving drawbacks on the glass exported opens a wide door to every species of fraud. If the duty must be kept up, it ought, at all events, to be reduced a half, and simplified as much as possible. This would materially relieve the manufacture and would not, we feel confident, occasion the smallest loss of revenue. It is monstrous, indeed, to see destructive duties tenaciously defended on the stale and stupid pretence of their being necessary to the preservation of the revenue, when, in point of fact, there is not a single instance in which they have been reduced, that the revenue has not increased. 1. Account of the Number of Glass-houses respectively employed in the Manufacture of Broad, Crown. Flint, Plate, and Common Bottle Glass, in each Year, from 1829 to 1832 inclusive, in the United Kingdom. Common Bottle Years. Broad Glass. Crown. Flint. Plate. Glass. 1829 2 28 54 3 42 1830 2 25 54 2 39 1831 2 24 55 2 36 1832 2 28 59 2 39 II. Account of the Quantities of Flint, Plate, Broad, Crown, and Bottle Glass, charged with the Duty in each Year, from 1829 to 1832, respectively, with the Rates of Excise Duty and Revenue accruing thereon. Rate Rate Rate Rate Rate Years. Flint of Plate. of Broad. of Crown. of Bottle of Glass. Duty. Glass. Gross Duty. Drawback. Revenue. Duty. Duty Duty. Duty. Cut. #. Crot. 8. Cwt. 3. Cur. 8. d. Card. 8. L s. d. L 3. d. L. 8. d. 1829 79,210 56 14,484 60 6,864 30 114,862 73 6 382,894 7 831,809 18 10 224,794 17 2 607,015 1 8 1830 72,912 13,301 4,845 96,565 340,793 725,597 1 3 182,678 4 8 542,918 16 7 1831 75,619 15,067 5,915 100,066 293,868 736,512 0 204,152 2 0 532,359 18 1 1832,75,771 12,270 5,304 103,902 1316,365 1748,097 3 11 189,565 7 8 558,531 16 3 III. Account of the Quantities of British-made Glass retained for Home Consumption, with the Imports of Foreign Glass entered for Home Consumption; the Amount of Customs Duty on the latter, and the Nett Revenue arising from British Glass, in each Year, from 1829 to 1832, both in- clusive. British. Foreign. Revenue on Years. Flint. Plate. Broad. Crown. Bottle. Plate. Crown. Bottle. F. reign Nett Revenue on Glass British Glass. Cut. Cut. Cut. Cut. Cut. Sq. Fret. Cut. Quarts. L. L. 8. d. 1829 49,004 14,299 6,864 97,134 209,862 1,763 152 764,778 16,708 610,307 1 8 1830 48,063 13,057 4,845 84,178 165,549 1,436 104 743,768 16,411 526,507 16 7 1831 48,887 14,796 5,915 83,527 143,989 863 104 693,454 15,841 516,518 18 1 1832 49,552 11,990 5,304 90,253 151,705 717 25 645,526 14,532 543,999 16 3 (Compiled from the Parl. Papers, Nos. 364. and 747. Sess. 1833.) 3. Regulations as to the Manufacture of Glass-The excise re- and mark the pots as they think fit; any attempt to obstruct the officers gulations with respe t to glass are numerous, complex. and enforced so employed incurs a penalty of 2001. the counterfeiting. altering, or under heavy penalties. We cin notice only a few of the leading re- effacing any marks made by the officers is visited with a penalty of gulatio a. All glass makers must take out a licence, renewable RD- 500. a penalty of 200L. being also imposed upon any one procuring nually. which costs 20L. for each glass-house; and they must make or conniving at its be ing done. Officers are entitled to take samples, entry at the nex' excise office of ail workhouses, furnaces, pots, pnt- not exceeding 4 ounces in all. out of each pot: paying for them. if chambers, annealing a ches, warehouses, &c. under a penalty of 2001. demanded, 1-2d. so ounce. The whole of the metal intended to be No pot is to be charged without EIVINE twelve hours' pres ious notice, nanufactured into common glass bottles is to be worked within 16 in writing, of the time of beginning. the neight of metal, and species hours next after the same shall be begun: and when the bottles are of glave, DU pain of -0/. If, after notice given and a gauge taken by deposited in the annea ing arches. manufacturers are again, in the the officer. any material or preparation be put into any pot. a penalty presence of the officer, 10 charge each pot with fresh materials, other of 50Γ. is incurred; but if the manufacture be of dint glass, the pe- than broken glass, not less than 50 lbs. weight and declarations are nalty is 2001. Manufacturers of flint glass are allowed 3 hours for to be delivered, in writing, of the number of such bottles, on penalty beginning to charge their pots after the time specified in their notices. of 1001. Entries of the quantities made are to be made in writing, upon oath, Manufacturers of glass bottles are to affix proper hooks or staples, and the duties paid monthly in London, and every 6 weeks in the with scales and weights, to be approved of, in writing, by the sur- country. Duty upon materials lost or spoiled is allowed for. upon veyor or supervisor. under a penalty of 50L the USIDE any false or due proof being ma le of the fact. Officers at all times, by day and insufficient scales or weights in the weighing of bottles, incurs & night, are to have access to workhouses, &c., to gauge the materials, penalty of 100/. 302 90 Digitized by Google 714 GLASS. Notices are not to be given for drawing out bottles, but only be- or any other heavy substance, other than flint ghm, or phial the tween 8 o'clock in the morning and 6 in the afternoon. broad glass, or crown glass, in any ca.k, box, or chest crating No crown glass, or German sheet glass, or broad or spread window flint glass, &c. packing or packed for exportation 00 drawteck. to glass, shall be made of greater thickness, excluding the centre or person so offending shall for each such offence forfeit 200L, al a bullion and the selvage or rim thereof, than one ninth part of an such glass, brick, stone, or other heavy substance contained there inch, unless notice shall have been given that it was intended to shall be forfeited. Gen. 3. c. 77. sect. 7.) manufacture the metal into plate glass, and the duty on plate glass be Any person altering or defacing any marks on any cask, box, b. paid thereon -(See the Statutes in Burn's Justice, Marriott's ed. vol. containing glass for exportation, expressing the weight and and ii. pp. 186-228.) such cask, &c., or the weight of the glass therein, or the tax If For an account of the duties on foreign glass imported into Great place of packing, or the number of the cask, & shall for as Britain, and the drawback, &c. allowed upon the exportation of Bri- offence forfeit 2001., with the glass-Sect. 8. tish-mide glass, see Tariff. The officers of excise are to brand or mark every cast, box, ke 4. Exportation of Glass.-It is enacted by stat. 6 Geo. 4. c. 117., of glass for exportation with the letters E. G. and if any cask, & that no flint glass shall be entitled to the drawback on exportation, of glass so brauded be not put on board within 12 hours after the if it be not of the specific gravity of 3,000, that of water being branding thereof, or if any cask, &c. 80 branded be found on had 1,000; and if it be not worth at least 11d. a pound for home con- after 12 months from the time when such glass was packed for ex- sumption at the time when it is entered for exportation. All flint portation, the same shall be forfeited. Any person obliterating, to glass entered for exportation, of less specific gravity than 3,000, or of facing, altering, &c. the aforesaid letters, to forfeit 200L-Sect. 9. less value than 11d. per pound, is forfeited, and may be seized by By 56 Geo. 3. C. 108. it is enacted, that no drawtack shall be paid any officer of excise.-Sects. 24, 25. for exportation of any ground or polished plate glass made in Great The exporter of glass is to make oath that he believes it to be en- Britain, unless such glass be exported in rectangular plates of the tirely of British manufacture, and that the duties imposed upon it by size of 6 inches in length by 4 inches in breadth at the least, and law have been paid. Persons wilfully taking a false oath in this unless each plate of such glass be free from stains and blivers, and matter are liable to the pains and penalties of perjury.-(55 Geo. 3. be perfect and fit for immediate use, as and for ground and polished c. 13. sect. 3.) plate glass ; and if any person shall pack or ship for exportation to Security by bond is to be given (usually for a larger sum and a drawback, any plate of plate glass as ground and polished plate glass greater quantity of goods than are intended to be exported), that made in Great Britain, which is not plate glass, or has not been glass, on the exportation of which a drawback is allowed. shall be ground and polished, or which shall be foreign glass, or of less & shipped within I month after the date of such security but if the mension or thickness throughout than aforesaid, or shall be stained, commissioners be satisfied that the shipment of the glass within the or blistered, or imperfect, or not immediately fit for use 25 ground specified time has been prevented by some unavoidable accident, and polished plate glass, or any other sort of glass with any ground they may grant further time, not exceeding 3 months, for the ship- 'and polished plate glass, the same, and all the glass therewith, shall ment thereof.-Sect. 7. be forfeited, and the person so offending shall forfeit for each such No drawback is to be allowed upon the exportation of used, old, package 100/. or second hand glass-Sect. 9. Any person packing for exportation on drawback any unground By stat. 54 Geo. 3. C. 97. sect. 6. it is enacted, that no drawback or unpolished plate glass of less or greater dimensions in thickens shall be allowed for any regular panes, squares, or rectangular figures and size than as last aforesaid, or any foul, imperfect, or - of spread glass or other window glass, any part of which shall con- chantable unground or unpolished plate glass, in any package, with sist of or include the bullion or thick centre part of the table from or amongst any other kind of glass, the same, and all the glass there- which such panes, squares, or rectangular figures shall have been with, shall be forfeited, and the person so offending shall forfeit for cut or taken, or any part of the said bullion, unless no side of any each such package Geo. 3. c. 108. sect. 4) such pases, &c. shall measure less than 8 inches nor shall any By 17 Geo. 3. c. 39. it is enacted, that if glass shipped for draw. drawback be allowed for any lozenges, any part whereof shall con- back be fraudulently unshipped or relanded, every person in any sist of or include the bullion or thick centre part of the table from wise concerned or assisting in the same shall, over and above all which such lozenges shall have been taken, or any part of the bul- other penalties, forfeit for every such offence 100/. and every per- lion, unless no side of any such lozenge shall measure less than 8 son knowingly entering any broken or waste glass for exportation inches; nor unless the distance between the two obtuse angles of upon a drawback shall, exclusive of all other pains and penalties, each such lozenge shall measure 8 inches at the least nor shall any forfeit 100L-Sect. 37. drawback be allowed for any lozenges not containing the bullion or By 6 Gen. 4.c. 117. it is enacted, that every person shipping or in thick centre part of the table from which such lozenges shall have tending to ship, or being about to ship, in Ireland, any plate class, been cut or taken, or any part of the bullion, unless the distance be broad glass, or crown glass, for exportation on drawback. or for the tween the two obtuse angles of every such lozenge shall measure removal thereof to Great Britain, shall give 24 hours' notice of such 3 1-2 inches at least and all window glass, any part whereof shall intention, and of the place of shipping, to the nearest collector of include or consist of the bullion or thick centre part of the table officer of excise and such collector and officer are required them from which the same shall have been cut or taken, and which shall upon to attend, and to cause all such glass to be weighed and - be of any other shape or of less dimensions than as aforesaid. shall sured and in case such glass has not been charged with the - be deemed to be waste glass; and if any person shall knowingly spective duties under the provisions of this act, and is about tale enter or ship for exportation, in order to obtain any drawback, any removed to Great Britain, it shall be lawful for such collector or panes, squares, or rectangular figures or lozenges of spread window officer, and he is required to charge all such glass with duty at the glass, commonly known by the name of broad glass. or other win- respective rates of duty made payable by this act on such sort or dow glass, not being spread glass as aforesaid, containing or includ- kind of glass respectively; and upon payment of such duty, it stall ing the bullion or thick part of the table from which such panes, be lawful for such collector or officer to grant a certificate of the squares, rectangular figures, or lozenges of spread glass or other win- payment of such duty, to accompany such glass upon such removal, dow glass respectively, which shall not be of the dimensions in that and to be produced at the port of entry in Great Britain; and in behalf aforesaid, such person shall, for every package containing case any such glass which shall have been duly charged with the any such glass so entered or shipped contrary to this act, forfeit 1002. respective duties payable by this act shall be entered for exportation By 52 Geo. 3. c. 77. sect. 6. it is enacted, that no glass whatsoever to foreign parts upon drawback. or be sent and removed to Great made in Great Britain. or made in Ireland, and imported into Great Britain, it shall be lawful for such collector or officer, upon proof Britain, shall be packed for exportation on drawback, in any that such duties have been paid, or have been charged and duly - package made with any void space in or between the component cured to be paid, to grant a certificate of the payment of such date, parts thereof, but all such glass shall be packed for exportation in or a certificate that such duty has been charged and is July secured casks, boxes, or chests only, and in which the exporter shall, pre- to be paid, to accompany such glass upon such exportation to foreign vious to the backing of such glass therein, have cut or sunk a suffi- parts or such removal to Great Britain, and to be there produced as cient number of circular cavities, each thereof not less than 1-4 of aforesaid; and if at any time any person shall export or are an inch, por more than I 1-2 inch in diameter, to receive the seal di- exportation from Ireland, upon drawback, or shall remove or send rected to be put on such package, and for the purpose of protecting from Ireland to be brought to Great Britain, or shall bring into Grat such seal from being destroyed. defaced, broken. or damaged and Britain, any plate glass, broad glass, or crown glass, unrecompanied where any such glass shall be packed for exportation in any cask. by such rtificate, containing such particulars as aforessid; or my box, or chest, each such cavity shall be cut and sunk, one part thereof person shall refuse to produce such certificate at the port of entry in on the edge of the lid or cover, and the other on the side of such Great Britain, or shall forge or counterfeit any certificate required in box or chest, on that each such seal may be conveniently placed by this act, or shall make use of or deliver any false or untrue certificate the proper officer of excise, part on the wood of such lid or cover, as and for a certificate required by this act all such glass respect- and the residue on the wood of the side of each such box or chest ively shall be forfeited, and may be seized by any officer of are and no drawback shall be paid for any glass not packed in a cask, and the person so offending shall forfeit 500/. provided always, that box. or chest as aforesaid, nor for any glass picked in any box or if any plate glass, broad glass, crown glass, which shall have been chest not having a sufficient number of such cavities : provided that previously sent to Ireland from Great Britain, on drawback, shall at nothing herein shall prohibit the packing of whole or half tables of any time afterwards be sent or removed to Great Britain, the rate of spread glass, or of crown glass, or any common bottles made of com- duty to be charge! thereon as aforesaid shall be equal and according mon bottle metal, in any crate or other package whatsoever. to the ra'e of drawback now payable thereon respectively when & Fraudulent Packing.-If any person shall place any brick, stone, ported to foreign parts.-Sect. 7. (We endeavoured to show under this head, in the Dictionary, that the duties on glass had been practically most injurious; that they were carried to an oppressive height; that the mode in which they were imposed operated to prevent improvements in the manufacture; that they were not fairly charged; that they occasioned a great deal of fraud and had re- duced the consumption of glass far below the limit to which it would otherwise have attain- ed. These conclusions have been corroborated to the fullest extent by the statements and reasonings in the elaborate and able Report of the Commissioners of Excise inquiry on Glass, These gentlemen, after examining minutely and carefully into the whole subject, conclude their report by urging the expediency of the repeal of the duty at the earliest possible pe- riod, and by expressing our conviction that no tax can combine more objections, or be more at variance with all sound principles of tuxation, than this duty on glass." But though all parts of this tax be vicious in principle, and highly objectionable in their practical results,1 are not all alike bad. The commissioners showed that the duty on flint glass was the most objectionable of any: and they distinctly stated, that, " unless some material change shall take place (in the amount and mode of charging the duty), the revenue from the manufacturer of flint glass Digitized by Google GLOVES. 715 must, in a great degree, be sacrificed, and the persons who carry on that manufacture, under the regulations and subject to the duties prescribed by law, must either be driven out of the trade, or left to carry it on at a ruinous loss. (13th Report, p. 56.) Such a representation, coming from such a quarter, could not be disregarded; and we are glad to have to state that the duty on flint glass has been abolished, and that in lieu thereof a duty of 6g. 8d. is to be charged on every 100 lbs. weight of the fluxed material or metal from which such glass is made. Instead of the late drawback, there is to be in future a drawback of 18s. 9d. on every 100 lbs. of flint glass exported. There are also some new regulations as to the drawback on German sheet glass, &c. (See Act 5 & 6 Will. 4. c. 77.) This alteration will, no doubt, be a material relief to the manufacturers of flint glass. Still, how- ever, it is not such as the trade and the public had a right to expect. The total gross produce of the glass duties in 1837, was, in England, 837,2781. in Scotland, 56,2001. and in Ireland, 10,3794.; making together, 903,8571. But from this has to be deducted, for drawbacks and other allowances, 293,7371., so that there only remains 610,1204 of nett revenue; and even this has to be still farther reduced by deducting from it the expenses of collection, which are very heavy. Now, surely, it cannot be said, that, for the sake of a paltry sum of less than 600,000/. a year. we must depress, and all but ruin, an important manufacture, capable of an indefinite extension, by burdening it with an unequal, vexatious, and most oppressive duty! Had the duties on glass produced 1,500,000L. or 2,000,0001. a year, their retention might have been excused from the impossibility of sacrificing, and the difficulty of replacing, 80 large an amount of revenue. But the sum which they yield might be easily dispensed with, and as they have been pronounced by the highest authorities to be, in all respects, most objectionable-to have every quality that a tax should not have, and not one that it should have-we do hope that they may be among the first to be repealed.-Sup.) [The glass consumed in the United States is for the most part of domestic production. This was valued, in 1831, at $3,000,000; but its value is now, doubtless, much greater. The most noted manufactories of it are at Boston and Pittsburg.-Am. Ed.] GLOVES (Ger. Handschuhe; Fr. Gants; It. Guanti; Sp. Guantes; Rus. Rukawizii, Pertschatki. Golizii), well known articles of dress used for covering the hands, usually made of leather, but frequently also of cotton, wool, silk, &c. The leather used in the manufacture of gloves is not, properly speaking, tanned, but prepared by a peculiar process that renders it soft and pliable. Some sorts of leather gloves admit of being washed, and others not. Woodstock and Worcester, but particularly the former, are celebrated for the manufacture of leather gloves of a superior quality in which a great number of women and girls, as well as men, are employed. The produce of the Worcester manufacture has been estimated at about 42,000 dozen pairs of oil leather, or beaver gloves; and 470,000 dozen pairs of kid and lamb-skin gloves; the value of the whole, when finished, being about 375,000/. Besides Worcester and Woodstock, London, Yeovil, Ludlow, and Leominster are the principal seats of the leather glove manufacture. Gloves are sometimes sewed by machinery but this is done only to improve the work by rendering the stitches more correctly equidistant, as it is not cheaper than manual labour. Limerick used to be famous for the manufacture of a sort of ladies' gloves, called chicken gloves. Large quantities of cotton gloves are made at Not- tingham and Leicester. Influence of Repeal of Prohibition of Importation.-The importation of leather gloves and mitts was formerly probibited, under the severest penalties. This prohibition had the effect, by preventing all competition and emulation with the foreigner, to check improvement, and to render British gloves at once inferior in quality and high in price. This system was, however, permitted to continue till 1825, when the prohibition was repealed, and gloves allowed to he imported on payment of duties, which, though high, are not prohibitory. This measure was vehemently opposed; and many predictions were made of the total ruin of the manufacture; but in this. as In every similar instance, experience has shown that the trade had not been really benefited but that, on the contrary, it had been injured by the prohibition. The wholesome competition to which the manufacturers now felt themselves, for the first time, exposed, made them exert all their energies; and it is admitted on all hands, that there has been a more rapid improvement in the manufacture during the last half dozen years than in the pre- vions half century. There is still, no doubt, a great deal of complaining of a decay of trade ainong the leather glove manufacturers but we are assured that, if there be any real foundation for their com- plaints, it is ascribable far more to the growing use of home-made cotton gloves than to the importa- tion of foreign leather gloves and had it not been for the improved fabric, and greater cheapness of British leather gloves, that has grown out of the new system, it is abundantly certain that cotton gloves would have gained still more rapidly on them. In point of fact, however, it does not appear that there has been any falling off in the leather glove trade. On the contrary, the fair inference seems to be that it has materially increased : at all events, there has been a very considerable increase in the number of skins brought from abroad to be used in the manufacture, and consequently in the number of pairs of gloves produced from such skins; and there is no reason for thinking that it is at all different with the other departments. Leather gloves must be imported in packages, containing each 100 dozen pairs at least, and in vessels of 70 tons burden or upwards, on penalty of forfeiture.-(7 Geo. 4. c. 48. 1 7.) Account of the Number of Dozen Pairs of Habit Gloves, Men's Gloves, and Women's Gloves and Mitts, imported into the United Kingdom; the Amount of Duty paid thereon during the Years 1828, 1829, and 1830; and the Rates of Duty. Women's Gloves Total Quantity Total Receipt Years. Habit Gloves. Men's Gloves. of Leather Gloves and Mitts. of Duty on Leither and Mitts imported. Gloves and Mitts. Doem. Pain. Dozen. Pairs. Down. Pairs. Dozen. Pa.rs. L. a. d. 1828 69,564 7 27,668 10 3,025 8 100,259 1 21,653 3 8 1829 45,679 5 23,635 6 2,781 6 72,096 5 15,510 15 8 1830 62,925 10 25,013 3 3,187 8 91,126 9 19,488 1 7 1831 - - - - - - 99,705 5 21,848 0 0 1832 - - - - - - 126,386 0 27,106 0 0 Rates of duty throughout the whole period 4s. per doz.pair. 5a. per doz.pair. 78. per doz.pair. Digitized by Google 716 GOLD-GOTTENBURGH Account of the number of Lamb and Kid Skins entered for Home Consumption in the Twelve Years ending with 1831, with an Estimate of the Quantity of Gloves which such Skins would produce, on the Supposition that from each 120 Skins there would be manufactured 18 Dozen Pain of Gloves. Years. Number of Number of Total Lamb Doz. Gloves Dos. Glows Number of Number of Total Lamb Lamb Skins. Kid Skins. and Kid. pr duced Years. Lamb Skins. Kid Skins. and Kid. produced each Year. each Yest. 1820 932,817 286,443 1,219,260 182,889 1826 1,743,778 575,533 2,319,311 347,886 1821 1,202,029 242,996 1,445,025 216,756 1827 2,749,397 640,863 3,390,860 508,536 1822 1,908,651 408,523 2,317,174 347,562 1828 2,917,476 901,639 3,822215 573.380 1823 1,974,143 497,444 2,471,587 370,728 1829 1,930,390 698,604 2,628,994 391.344 1824 2,201,295 681,995 2,833,290 421,980 1830 1,859,850 1,086,209 2,946,059 441,900 1825 2,098,553 771,522 2,870,075 430,506 1831 2,892,934 1,008,307 3,901,241 585,180 GOLD (Ger. Gold; Du. Goud; Da. and Sw. Guld; Fr. Or; It. and Sp. Oro; Port. Oiro, Ouro; Rus. Soloto; Pol. Zloto; Lat. Aurum; Arab. Tibr and Zeheb; Sans. Swarna; Malay, Más), the most precious of all the metals, seems to have been known from the earliest antiquity. It is of an orange red, or reddish yellow colour, and has no perceptible taste or smell. Its lustre is considerable, yielding only to that of platinum, steel, silver, and mercury. It is rather softer than silver. Its specific gravity is 19.3. No other substance is equal to it in ductility and malleability. It may be beaten out into leaves 80 thin, that one grain of gold will cover 56} square inches. These leaves are only 782003 of an inch thick. But the gold leaf with which silver wire is covered has only 1/2 of that thickness. An ounce of gold upon silver is capable of being extended more than 1,300 miles in length. Its tenacity is considerable, though in this respect it yields to iron, copper, platinum, and silver. From the experiments of Seckingen, it appears that a gold wire 0-078 inch in diameter, is capable of supporting a weight of 150.07 lbs. avoirdupois without breaking. It melts at 32° of Wedgwood's pyrometer. When melted, it assumes a bright bluish green colour. It expands in the act of fusion, and consequently contracts while becoming solid more than most metals; a'circumstance which renders it less proper for casting in moulds.- Thomson's Chemistry.) For the quantities of gold produced, and the places where it is produced, see PRECIOUS METALS. GOMUTI, OR EJOO, a species of palm (Borassus Gomutus,) growing in the Indian islands. A valuable product is obtained from this palm, resembling black horse hair; is found between the trunk and the branches, at the insertion of the latter, in a matted form, interspersed with long, hard, woody twigs of the same colour. When freed from the latter, it is manufactured by the natives into cordage. Its fibres are stronger and more durable, but less pliant, than those of the cocoa nut, or coir-(see Cora;) and is, therefore, fitter for cables and standing rigging, but less fit for running rigging. The native shipping of the Eastern islands of all kinds are chiefly equipped with cordage of the gomuti; and the largest European shipping in the Indies use cables of it. It undergoes no preparation but that of spinning and twisting; no material similar to our tar or pitch, indispensable to the preserva- tion of hempen cordage, being necessary with a substance that, in a remarkable degree, possesses the quality of resisting alternations of heat and moisture. The gomuti of Amboyna, and the other Spice islands, is the best. That of Java has a coarse ligneous fibre. Gomuti is generally sold in twisted shreds or yarns, often as low as 1 dollar a picul, and seldom more than 2. Were European ingenuity applied to the improvement of this material, there seems little doubt that it might be rendered more extensively useful.-Crawfurd's East. Archip. vol. iii. p. 425.) GOOD HOPE, CAPE OF. See CAPE Town. GOTTENBURGH, OR, more properly, GOTHABORG, on the south-west coast of Sweden, bordering the Cattegat, near the mouth of the river Götha, lat. 57° 42' 4" N., lon. 11° 57' 45" E. Population 21,000,* and increasing. Vessels do not come close to the city, but lie in the river or harbour at a short distance from the shore, goods being conveyed from and to them by lighters that navigate the canals by which the lower part of the town is in- tersected. The depth of water in the port is 17 feet, and there is no tide, bar, or shallow. A vessel entering the Götha must take a pilot on board, whose duty it is to meet her league west of Wingo beacon. After Stockholm, Gottenburgh has the most extensive com- merce of any town in Sweden. Iron and steel, the former excellent, but the latter inferior to that made in England, form the principal articles of export. They are brought from the rich mines of Wermeland, distant about 200 miles; being conveyed partly by the lake Wener, partly by the Tröllhætta canal—(see CANALS.)-and partly by the river Gotha. The exports of iron, in 1831, amounted in all to 21,639 tons, of which 15,400 tons were taken by the United States, and 4,511 tons by England. The original cost of iron is supposed to be in- creased about 5 per cent. by the expense of its conveyance to Gottenburgh and the shipping charges, inclusive of the export duty, are about 10 per cent. additional. The next great article of export is timber, particularly deals, which are also furnished by Wermeland. Of * This is the population as given in the Weimar Almanac for 1832; according to the Consul's report it is under 18,000. Digitized by Google GRACE, DAYS OF-GREECE. 717 these, the exports, in 1831, were 52,866 dozen, of which 40,600 dozen went to Great Britain, and the residue to France, Holland, &c. The other articles of export are, linen, sail-cloth, tar, copper, alum, glass, cobalt, manganese, linseed, oak bark, bones, juniper berries, cran- berries, rock moss for dyeing, &c. Grain is sometimes imported and sometimes exported. The principal articles of import are sugar, coffee, tobacco, cotton yarn and twist, salt, indigo, and dye woods, South Sea oil, rice, herrings, wine, spices, &c. In 1831, 529 ships, of the burden of 63,075 tons, entered Gottenburgh. Of these, 68 ships, carrying 16,770 tons, were American; and 41 ships, carrying 5,131 tons, British. The rest belonged, for the most part, to Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. About 80 vessels, of the burden of 14,000 tons, belong to the port; but the native shipping is decreasing. Herring Fishery.-Gottenburgh used, at no distant period, to be one of the principal seats of the herring fishery; but at present this branch of industry is quite extinct, and it has always been very capricious From 1556 to 1588, great quantities of herrings were taken; from 1558 to 1660, they left the coast during the next 15 years they were again abundant but from 1675 to 1747, they entirely dis- appeared. From 1747 to 1770, they were abundant, 186,614 barrels being taken in 1763, and 151,483 in 1768. From 1786 to 1799, the fishery was very good, from 110,000 to 190,000 barrels being annually ex- ported. In 1804, the export was 79,512 barrels. In 1808 and 1809, fish were very scarce; and in 1812 they entirely disappeared, and have not hitherto returned; so that Gottenburgh, instead of exporting, at present imports considerable supplies of herrings. The customs duties produced in 1831, 749,732 dollars banco, or 53,5521. Both iron and timber pay duties on exportation, but they are not very heavy. Custom-house Regulations and Port Charges.-On arriving in Banking, &c.-There are no public or private banking establish- port, no person is allowed to board or to leave a vessel till she be in ments at Gottenburgh for the issue of notes: but the national bank custody of the officers who, having inspected the manifest and pa- has two offices here which advance limited sums of money, at 5 per pers, send them to the Custom-house. An officer is appointed to cent. on the security of goods, and in discount of bills. Some of the superintend the unloading and also the loading. The public charges English insurance companies have agents here, who do a good deal of all sorts on a Swedish ship and on a foreign ship not privileged, of business. each of 300 tons burden, unloading and loading mixed cargoes at Sea Stores, Water, &c.-These may be had here of excellent Gottenburgh, would be, on the former 241. 5a. Td., on the latter 49/- quality and cheap. Beef, 11-2d. per lb., best rye bread 2 1-2d. per 5a. 7d. On a privileged foreign ship the charges are the same as on lb., and butter 6d. per lb. a Swedish ship. Freight to London, in 1832, from 10s. a ton; deals, per Peters- Warehousing System.-Goods may be bonded for any length of burgh standard hundred, 21. 10s. time, on paying 1-2 per cent. ad valorem for the first 2 years, and Money, Weights, Measures, Sec, same as at Stockholm, which see. 1-2 per cent. annually thereafter. In compiling this article, we have made use of the Consul's An- Commission, Credit, &c.-The usual rate of commission is 2 per swers, dated 19 h of January, 1833; Com's Travels in the North of cent. Goods are commonly sold on credit. Raw sugar at 9 months, Europe, vol. iv. pp. 267-275.; Oddy's European Commerce, p. 314.; with 3 months' interest to the seller. Other goods at 3, 4, and 6 and some valuable private communications. months. Commercial Policy.-But for the pervérse policy of its government, the trade of Gottenburgh, and of Sweden in general, would be far greater than it is. Its rich and exhaustless mines and forests furnish an ample supply of equivalents for whatever might be imported into the country but instead of al- lowing the energies of the nation to be employed in this safe and natural channel, government has attempted, by a system of prohibitions and heavy duties, to raise, coute qui coute, a manufacturing in- terest, and to make Sweden independent of foreigners In consequence, a good many cotton and woollen mills have been established in different parts of the country. It would, however, be absurd to imagine that they should ever be able to furnish products at so cheap a rate as they may be im- ported for from this and other countries enjoying superior facilities for the prosecution of manufac- turing industry. This forced system is, therefore, doubly injurious to Sweden ; first, by lessening the foreign demand for her peculiar products, and secondly, by diverting capital and industry into the least productive channels, forcing the inhabitants to pay an artificially enhanced price for some highly ne- cessary articles, and encouraging smuggling. But, pernicious as the system is, so great a proportion of the scanty capital of Sweden is now embarked under its regis, that the return to a better order of things will be a work of much difficulty. It need not surprise us to learn that the imposition in this country of oppressive discriminating duties on timber from the north of Europe had a material in- fluence in stimulating the Swedes to endeavour to dispense with foreign, that is, with British, ma- nufactured articles! GRACE, DAYS OF. See EXCHANGE. GRAPES (Ger. Trauben; Fr. Raisins; It. Grappoli, Grappi; Sp. Ubas, Racimos; Lat. Uvæ), a well known fruit, produced from the vine. France, Spain, Portugal, and Italy, as well as some parts of Germany and Hungary, produce grapes which yield wines of various qualities and flavour, many of them excellent. We import green grapes from Malaga and some other parts of Spain; they are brought packed in jars, and secured from damage by means of saw-dust, plentifully strewed between the layers of fruit. The grapes grown in Great Britain in the open air are much smaller, and by no means so luscious, as those of foreign countries; but those raised in hot-houses are quite equal, if not superior, to the former. Grapes are imported not only in their natural state, but dried and preserved, in which latter state they are denominated RAISINS; which see. (GREECE. Tariff of Port Charges in the Kingdom of Greece. Tonnage. Lighthouses (only where there is one). Dra. Lep. In the ports of Syra, Nauplia, Pireus, Marathonensis, Pylos, On vessels under 5 tons free. Calamata, Navarino, and Patras. - of from 5 to 20 tons 0 50 Drs. Lep. - - 21 50 I 00 On vessels under 5 tons free. - - 51 100 - 2 00 - of 20 - 0 9 - - 101 200 - 5 00 - above 20 0 18 - - 201 300 8 00 In the other ports :- - - 301 and above 9 00 On vemels under 5 tons free. When gunpowder remains on board, for every 2 1-4 lbs. per - of 20 - 0 6 month of 30 days 0 2 - above 20 0 9 When it is placed in the public magazine for the same Permit of Departure. quantity and time 0 3 On vessels under 5 tons free. Observations on the Tonnage Dwy. - of from 5 to 20 tons 0 50 1. Vessels arriving from abroad loaded, and which discharge their - - 21 50 - I 00 cargoes, and depart loaded, pay the whole duty. - - 51 100 - 2 00 2. Vessels arriving from abroad loaded, and which depart in bal- - - 101 200 - 3 00 last, pay two thirds of the daty, which is also exacted if they arrive - - 301 and above 5 00 in ballast, and depart loaded. Digitized by Google 718 GRINDSTONES. 3. Versels arriving from abroad in ballast, and departing without consequence of damage, is exampled from all charge during sight lading, or arriving and departing with cargo, and not discharging days. any of it, pay one third of the duty. 2 Every vensel entering a port from whatever cause. and destruct 4. Vencle arriving from and going to another port of the kingdom to another port, and the master of which shul inmediately trabe , pay but one half of the duty. declaration to the expla B of the port, that be has an a other 5. A vomel is considered as loaded, whether she be so fully or of loading or discharging his goods, may remain five days vilud partially. paying any duty except the right-house duty. He IS permitted to Exceptions. to receive or to deliver letters or money, unless otherwise provided 1. Every vessel forced to enter a port, either by a storm or in for by special ordinances. Statement of the Number of Vessels, their Tonnage and Crews, and the Invoice Value of their Cargoes; distinguishing also the Countries to which they belonged, which entered inwards and cleared outwards at the principal Ports within the Consulate of the Morea, viz. Patras and Nauplia, in the Year 1834.- (Consular Return.) PORT OF PATRAS. Inwards. Countries. Outwards. Invoice Invoice Ships. Tons. Crews. Value of Ships. Tons. Crews. Value of Cargoes. Cargnes. L. L British 31 4,542 272 30,077 29 4,238 253 117,555 Austrian 14 1,429 159 14 1429 159 Greek 141 7,968 1,692 135 7,621 1,619 Jerusalem 1 101 13 I 101 IS Ionian 219 3,151 1,104 62,148 212 3,130 1,101 13,261 Neapolitan 15 1 135 8 402 85 Papal 2 62 19 2 162 19 Sardinian 3 828 37 3 828 37 Total 426 18,842 3,431 92,223 404 17,911 3,286 130,816 PORT OF NAUPLIA. L. L. British 6 809 49 8,020 4 542 32 1,900 Austrian 11 1,907 6,198 4 680 740 French 2 978 Greek 201 47,152 708 22,656 Ionian 6 299 34 727 Samos 5 437 Turkish 2 31 Total 233 63,543 716 25,296 JV. B.-The value of the cargoes in the port of Nauplia is supposed to be 10 per cent. under the real value. The Post Office Register does not specify the vessels salling in ballast. In Patras the entries of the Ionian trade include vessels and boats. Statement of the Number and Tonnage of Vessels with the Value of their Cargoes, which entered and cleared at the Port of Syra in the Year 1835.-( Consular Return.) Entered. Cleared. Countries. Invoice Value Vemels. Tonnage. Invoice Value of Cargoes. Vessels. Tomage. of Carges. L. L British 58 8,392 196,977 58 8,389 Greek 989 58,802 233,161 2,293 67,348 381,951 French 10 1,477 6,514 10 1,477 Ionian 61 5,264 9,780 60 5,228 4,65 Russian 61 11,365 18,203 44 9,818 3,138 Austrian 68 14,733 34,459 63 13,446 3,900 Sardinian 17 3,246 5,112 17 3,946 55 Ottoman 164 3,477 10,929 86 2,066 13,219 American 1 240 197 1 240 Jerusalem 3 281 1,021 3 981 300 Total 1,422 107,267 445,343 2,635 111,489 496,572 Statement of the Number and Tonnage of British Vessels, with the Nature and Value of their Cargoes which entered and cleared at the Port of Syra, distinguishing the Countries to and from which they salled, in the Year 1835.-( Consular Return.) Entered. Cleared. Countries. Invoice Invoice Versals. Tonnage. Value of Nature of Cargoes. Vessels. Tonnage. Value of Nature of Cargon. Cargoes. Cargon. L L (27 from Liverpool, and 14 from Lon- Great Britain 47 6,866 122,028 don, with mixed cargnes; 6 from Cardiff, iron. Malta 5 878 3,044 Mixed cargoes. 2 274 { Mixed cargo, 1 = ballast. Trieste 1 133 In ballast. Athens 2 294 226 Mixed cargo, 1 in ballast. Original, or part of Constantinople 1 194 1,679 Wheat. 28 4,173 original carge. Smyrna 8 207 In ballast. 22 3,154 Do. do., 2 in beliest. Salonica 3 398 Ditto ditto. Patras I 136 In ballast. Zante 1 133 Dita Rhodes 1 64 Ditto. Total 58 8,392 126,977 58 8,389 Sup.) GRINDSTONES, flat circular stones of different diameters and thickness, mounted on spindles or axles, and made to revolve with different degrees of velocity, employed to polish Digitized by Google GUAIACUM, GUAYAQUIL. 719 steel articles, to give an edge to cutting instruments, &c. Grindstones not in constant use are commonly turned by winch handles; but at Sheffield and other places, where polished articles and cutlery are extensively manufactured, large numbers of grindstones being mounted in buildings appropriated to that purpose, called grind or blade mills, are turned by straps, acting on their axles, the moving power being either water or steam. The stone best suited to form grindstones is what is called a sharp-grit; it being chosen finer or coarser grained according to the purposes for which they are destined. The principal grindstone quarry in England is at Gateshead Fell, in the county of Durham; where they are produced in vast numbers, not only for home use, but for exportation to all parts of the world. But those principally in use at Sheffield are mostly quarried at Wickersley, in Yorkshire. They are classed in eight different sizes, called foots, according to their dimensions, as in the fol- lowing Table:- Denominations. Diameter. Thickness. No. in a Chaldron. Denominations. Diameter. Thickness. No. is a Chaldron. Inches. Inches. Inches. Inches. 1 Foot 10 2 36 5 Foots 35 5 5 2 Foots 14 21 27 6 Foots 42 6 3 3 Foots 20 4 18 7 Foots 50 6 11 4 Foots 28 4 9 8 Foots 56 8 1 A grindstone foot is 8 Inches: the size is found by adding the diameter and thickness together. Thus, a stone 56 inches diameter by 8 thick, making together 64 inches, is an 8-foot stone, of 8 inches each foot. Besides the above sizes, grindstones are made, when ordered, of any intermediate dimensions: many are made much larger than any of the above sizes; some as large as 76 inches diameter, and 14 or 15 inches thick, which are a great weight, a cubic foot weighing 1 CWL. 1 qr. 41bs.-(Rees's Cyclo- pedia; Bailey's Survey of Durham, p. 43.) Grinding is an unhealthy and dangerous employment. For some purposes, the stones are made to revolve with an extreme degree of velocity ; which makes them occasionally fly in pieces. But the greatest annoyance to which the grinder is exposed, is from his inhaling the minute particles of stone, and of iron and steel, that are always flying about, particularly in the process termed dry grinding. Contrivances have been suggested for obviating this serious inconvenience; but whether it be owing to their unsuitableness, or the carelessness of the workmen, none of them has succeeded in practice.- (Treatise on Iron and Steel, Lardner's Cyclopadia, p. 293.) GUAIACUM, OR LIGNUM VITE (Fr. Gayac, Bois saint; Ger. Pockhaln; It. Guajaco ; Lat. Guaiacum, Lignum vita; Sp. Guagaco), the wood of a tree, a native of Jamaica, Hayti, and the warmer parts of America. It is a dark-looking evergreen, growing to from 40 to 50 feet in height, and from 14 to 18 inches in diameter. The bark is hard, smooth, and brittle; the wood is externally yellowish, and internally of a blackish brown colour. Lignum vita is the weightiest timber with which we are acquainted, its specific gravity being 1.333. It is exceedingly hard, and difficult to work. It can hardly be split, but breaks into pieces like a stone, or crystallised metal. It is full of a resinous juice (guaiac), which prevents oil or water from working into it, and renders it proof against decay. Its weight and hardness make it the very best timber for stampers and mallets; and it is admirably adapted for the sheaves or pulleys of blocks, and for friction rollers or castors. It is extensively used by turners. The guaiac, or gum, spontaneously exudes from the tree, and concretes in very pure tears. It is imported in casks or mats; the former containing from 1 to 4 cwt., the latter generally less than 1 cwt. each. Its colour differs considerably, being partly brownish, partly reddish, and partly greenish; and it always becomes green when left exposed to the light in the open air. It has a certain degree of transparency, and breaks with a vitreous fracture. When pounded, it emits a pleasant balsamic smell, but has scarcely any taste, although when swallowed it excites a burning sensation in the throat. When heated, it melts, diffusing, at the same time, a pretty strong pungent odour. Its specific gravity is 1.229.-(See Veget. Sub., Lib. of Entert. Knowledge; Thomson's Chemistry, &c.) (GUAYAQUIL. a city and port of Colombia, on the western coast of South America. lat. 2° 11' 21" S., long. 79° 43' W. Population, according to Captain Hall, 20,000. The town is situated on the banks of the river of the same name, about 6 or 7 leagues from the Isla Verde, or 9 leagues from the Isla Puna, in the Gulf of Guayaquil, opposite to the mouth of the river. Ships bound for Guayaquil generally call at the Isla Puna, where ex- pert pilots may be had, who carry them up to the town by night or by day, according to the state of the tides. The town is old; but as the houses are of wood, and it has frequently suffered from fires, much of it is comparatively modern, and has a good appearance. There is a dry dock on the south bank of the river, where several ships of a superior construction have been built. Notwithstanding the revolutions to which it has been subject, Guayaquil has a considerable com- merce. Its principal article of export is cocoa, of which large quantities are shipped; and next to it are timber, tobacco, ceibo wool used in stuffing mattresses, &c. The principal articles of import are British manufactured cottons and hardware, silks, wine, flour, &c. We subjoin an account of the number and tonnage of the vessels, with the value of their cargoes, that entered and cleared out at Guayaquil, in 1835. Digitized by Google 720 GUERNSEY, GUMS. Statement of the Number and Tonnage of British Vessels, with the Nature and Value of their Cargoes, which entered and cleared at the Port of Guayaquil, distinguishing the Ports to and from which the saine sailed, in 1835. Inwards. Outwards. Ports. Value of Vessels. Tonnage. Cargoes. Nature of Cargoes. Vessels. Value of Tonnage. Cargoes. Nature of Cargoes. L. L. Valparaiso 5 770 13,446 2 British manufactures. 4 660 811 2 Cocoa. 2 ballast. I ditto and wine. 2 flour, wine, and specie. San Blas 1 210 Ballast. Matzatlan I 225 Ditto. Pta. Arena I 331 Ditto. Ste. Clena 1 212 200 Salt. Callao 1 115 5,608 British manufactures. 2 230 143 1 Timber. 1 Ballast. Malaga 1 223 15,220 Wine, lks, and British 1 223 7,124 Cocoa. manufactures. Cadiz 1 210 5,031 Ditto. Santander I 331 11,326 Ditto. Realejo 1 220 1,000 Ditto. Punta 1 212 Ballast. Total 11 2,086 34,475 11 2,086 25,436 Statement of the Number and Tonnage of Vessels, with the Value of their Cargoes, which entered inwards and cleared outwards at the Port of Guayaquil, distinguishing the Countries to which the same belonged, in the Year 1835.- (Consular Return.) Inwards. Outwards. Countries. Remarks. Vessels. Value of Tonnage. Cargoes. Vessels. Value of Tonnage. Cargoes. L. L. About third British 11 2,086 34,475 25,436 of the number Colombian 12 1,727 14,040 5,470 of vessels enter- United States 19 5,421 46,352 71,765 ed as Peruvian, French 4 1,027 4,208 7,825 and some enter- Sardinian 5 1,475 8,620 The same as 10,714 ed as Mexican, Hamburg 1 101 1,000 entered. 3,000 belong to this Danish 2 407 3,000 11,500 port, but were Mexican 13 1,582 16,834 22,376 put under three Chilian 11 1,716 25,680 12,225 colours for bet- Peruvian 45 5,888 67,470 40,088 ter protection during the **** Total 123 21,430 221,680 210,429 lution of 1834. For further particulars, see Ulloa, Voyage Historique de l'Amerique, tom. i. pp. 141-178.; Hall's Voyage to Chili, Peru, &e., vol. ii. pp. 101-138., &c.-Sup.) GUERNSEY. For the peculiar regulations to be observed in trading with Guernsey, Jersey, &c., see IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION. GUMS, RESINS, GUM-RESINS. In commerce, the term gum is not only applied to gums properly so called, but also to resins and gum-resins. But though these substances have many properties in common, they are yet sufficiently distinct. I. Gum is a thick transparent fluid that issues spontaneously from certain species of plants, particularly such as produce stone fruit, as plum and cherry trees. It is very adhe- sive, and gradually hardens by exposure to the atmosphere. It is usually obtained in small pieces, like tears, moderately hard, somewhat brittle while cold so that it can be reduced by pounding to a fine powder. When pure, it is colourless: but it has commonly a yel- lowish tinge; it is not destitute of lustre ; it has no smell; its taste is insipid; its specific gravity varies from 1-3161 to 1.4317; it readily dissolves in water, but is insoluble in alcohol. Gum is extensively used in the arts, particularly in calico printing, to give con- sistence to the colours, and to hinder them from spreading. It is also used in painting, in the manufacture of ink, in medicine, &c. The only important gums, in a commercial point of view, are gum Arabic and gum Senegal. 1. Gum Arabic (Fr. Gomme Arabique; It. Gomma Arabica; Ger. Arabische gummi; Arab. Tolh), the produce of the Acacia vera, a tree growing in Arabia, and in many parts of Africa. The gum exudes naturally from the trunk and branches, and hardens by expo- sure to the air. The more sickly the tree appears, the more gum it yields; and the hotter the weather, the more prolific it is. A wet winter and a cool or mild summer are unfa- vourable to gum."-(Jack-on's Morocco, p. 84.) It is in irregularly shaped pieces, hard, brittle, and serpi-transparent. When pure it is almost colourless, or of a pale yellowish hue; being insipid, inodorous, and dissolving completely in the mouth. Specific gravity 1.31 to 1.43. It is often mixed with gum Senegal. East India gum Arabic is, though a useful, a spurious article, not being the produce of the acacia vera, but of other species of plants. The best gum is either imported direct from Alexandria, Smyrna, Tripoli, Mogadore, Tan- giers, &c., or at second hand from them through Gibraltar, Malta, and the Italian ports. The price depends principally on its whiteness and solubility, increasing and diminishing, according as the article has more or less of these qualities.-(Thomson's Dispensatory, and private information.) Digitized by Google GUNPOWDER. 721 At an average of the 3 years ending with 1831, the gum Arabic entered for consumption amounted to 13,574 cwt. a year. Previously to last year (1832). the duty on gum Arabic from a British possession was 6s. a cwt., and from other parts 12.; but the duty on it and all other gums is now fixed at 6s. a cwt. without regard to origin. Of 7,784 cwt. of gum Arabic imported in 1830, Tripoli, Barbary, and Morocco furnished 2,063; Egypt, 579; Gibraltar, 1,587 Italy, 1.007; Malta, 367; the East Indies, 1,962, &c. The reduction of the duty on foreign gum will most probably occasion an increase of the imports from the Mediterranenn and Mogadore. The price of gum Arabic in bond in the London market was, in December, 1833,-East India, from 34s. to 65s. per cwt.; Turkey, from 100s. to 211s. per do.; and Barbary, from 50s. to 100s. per do. 2. Gum Senegal, principally brought from the island of that name on the coast of Africa, is obtained from various trees, but chiefly from two one called Vereck, which yields a white gum; the other called Nebuel, which yields a red gum; varieties of the acacia gummifera. Gum Arabic is very often mixed with gum Senegal. The latter is nearly as pure as the former, but it is usually in larger masses, of a darker colour, and more clammy and tena- cious. It is the sort of gum principally employed by calico printers. It was worth, in De- cember, 1833, duty (6s.) paid, from 75s. to 78s. a cwt.-(Thomson's Chemistry, Thomson's Dispensatory, Ainslie's Materia Indica, &c.) II. Resins, for the most part, exude spontaneously from trees, though they are often ob- tained by artificial wounds, and are not uncommonly, at first, combined with volatile oil, from which they are separated by distillation. They are solid substances, naturally brittle have a certain degree of transparency, and a colour most commonly inclining to yellow. Their taste is more or less acrid, and not unlike that of volatile oils; but they have no smell, unless they happen to contain some foreign body. They are all heavier than water, their specific gravity varying from I-0182 to 1.1862. They differ from gums in being insoluble in water, whether cold or hot; while they are, with a few exceptions, soluble in alcohol, especially when assisted by heat. When heated, they melt; and if the heat be increased, they take fire, burning with a strong yellow flame, and emitting a vast quantity of smoke. Common rosin furnishes a very perfect example of a resin, and it is from this substance that the whole genus have derived their name. Rosin is; indeed, frequently denominated resin. The principal resins are Animi, Elemi, Copal, Lac, Labdanum, Mastic, Rosin, Sandarach, Tacamahac, &c. ; which see, under their respective names.-(Thomson's Chemistry.) III. Gum-resins, a class of vegetable substances consisting of gum and resin. They differ from resins in this-that they never exude spontaneously from the plant, being obtained either by bruising the parts containing them, or expressing the juice, which is always in a state of emulsion, generally white, but sometimes of a different colour, or by making incisions in the plant, from which the juice flows. The juice, being exposed to the action of the sun, is condensed and inspissated, till it forms the gum-resin of commerce. Gum-resins are gene- rally opaque, or, at least, their transparency is inferior to that of resins. They are always solid, and most commonly brittle, and have, sometimes, a fatty appearance. When heated, they do not melt as resins do; neither are they so combustible. Heat, however, commonly softens them, and causes them to swell. They burn with a flame. They have almost always a strong smell, which, in several instances, is alliaceous. Their taste, also, is often acrid, and always much stronger than that of resins. They are usually heavier than resins. They are partially soluble in water, but the solution is always opaque, and usually milky. Alcohol partially dissolves them, the solution being transparent. The most common gum-resins are Aloes, Ammonia, Euphorbium, Galbanum, Gumboge, Myrrh, Olibanum, Sugapenum, Scammony, &c.; which see under their respective names. -(Loudon's Ency. of Agricult.; Thomson's Chemistry.) GUNPOWDER (Ger. Pulver, Schiesspulrer; Du. Buskruid; Da. Krudt, Pulver, Sw. Krut; Fr. Poudre; It. Polvere; Sp. and Port. Polvora; Rus. Poroch; Pol. Proch Lat. Pulvis pyrius). This well known inflammable powder is composed of nitre, sulphur, and charcoal, reduced to powder, and mixed intimately with each other. The proportion of the ingredients varies very considerably but good gunpowder may be composed of the fol- lowing proportions; viz. 76 parts of nitre, 15 of charcoal, and 9 of sulphur. These ingre- dients are first reduced to a fine powder separately, then mixed intimately, and formed into a thick paste with water. After this has dried a little, it is placed upon a kind of sieve full of holes, through which it is forced. By this process it is divided into grains, the size of which depends upon the size of the holes through which they have been squeezed. The powder, when dry, is put into barrels, which are made to turn round on their axis. By this motion the grains of gunpowder rub against each other, their asperities are worn off, and their surfaces are made smooth. The powder is then said to be glazed.-(Thumson's Chemistry.) Dr. Thomson, whose learning is equal to his science, has the following remarks with respect to the introduction of gunpowder into warlike operations :- The discoverer of this compound, and the person who first thought of applying it to the purposes of war, are un- known. It is certain, however, that it was used in the fourteenth century. From certain archives quoted by Wiegleb, it appears that cannons were employed in Germany before the year 1372. No traces of it can be found in any European author previously to the thir- VoL. I.-3 P 91 Digitized by Google 722 GUNNY-HAIR. teenth century but it seems to have been known to the Chinese long before that period. There is reason to believe that cannons were used in the battle of Cressy, which was fought in 1346. They seem even to have been used three years earlier, at the siege of Algesi- ras; but before this time they must have been known in Germany, as there is a piece of ordnance at Amberg, on which is inscribed the year 1303. Roger Bacon, who died in 1292, knew the properties of gunpowder; but it does not follow that he was acquainted with its application to fire-arms."-(Thomson's Chemistry.) For further particulars as to the intro- duction of cannon, see that article. The manufacture and sale of gunpowder is regulated by several statutes. By the 12 Geo. 3. c. 61. it is enacted, that no person shall use mills or other engines for making gunpowder, or manufacturing the same in any way, except in mills and other places which were actually in existence at the time of passing the act, or which, if erected afterwards, have been sanctioned by a licence, under pain of forfeiting the gunpowder, and 2s. a pound. It is further enacted, that no mill worked by pestle, and usually termed a pestle mill, shall be used in making gunpowder, under the above-mentioned penalty; and that no more than lbs. of gunpowder, or materials to be made into gunpowder, shall be made at any one time under a single pair of mill-stones, on pain of forfeiting all above 40 lbs., and 2s. for every pound nor shall more than 40 cwt. be dried in any one stove or place at any one time, under forfeiture of all above that quantity, and 2s. for every pound thereof. The powder mills erected at Battle, Crowhurst. Saddlescombe, and Brede, in Sussex, previously to 1772, are exempted from the above regulations so far as relates to the making of fine fowling powder. No dealer is to keep more than 200 lbs. of powder, nor any person not a dealer, more than 1bs., in the cities of London or Westminster, or within 3 miles thereof, or within any other city, borough, or market town, or 1 mile thereof, or within two miles of the king's palaces or magazines, or 1 a mile of any parish church, on pain of forfeiture, and 2s. per lb.; except in licensed mills, or to the amount of 300 lbs. for the use of collieries, within 200 yards of them. Not more than 25 barrels are to be carried by any land carriage, nor more than 200 barrels by water, unless going by sea or coastwise, each barrel not to contain more than 100lbs. All vessels, except his Majesty's, coming into the Thames, are to put on shore, at or below Black- wall, all the gunpowder they have on board exceeding 25 lbs. Vessels outward bound are not to receive on board more than 251bs. of gunpowder previously to their arrival at Blackwall. The Trinity House have authority to appoint searchers to inspect ships, and search for gunpowder. All the gun- powder found above 25 lbs., and the barrels containing it. and 2s. for every lb. above that quantity, are forfeited Any person obstructing an officer searching for concealed gunpowder is liable to a penalty of 10Z. The places of deposit for gunpowder are regulated by the 54 Geo. 3. c. 159. The exportation of gunpowder may be prohibited by order in council. Its importation is prohibited on pain of forfeiture, except by licence from his Majesty; such licence to be granted for furnishing his Majesty's stores only.-(6 Geo. 4. c. 107.) The act I Will. 4. c. 44. prohibits the manufacture and keeping of gunpowder in Ireland by any per- son who has not obtained a licence from the Lord Lieutenant; such licences may be suspended on notice from the chief secretary, and any one selling gunpowder during the suspension of such licence shall forfeit 500L. Gunpowder makers under this act are to return monthly accounts of their stock, &c. to the chief secretary. This act, which contains a variety of restrictive clauses, was limited to one year's duration, but has been prolonged. GUNNY (Hind. Tât; Ben. Güni), a strong coarse sackcloth manufactured in Bengal for making into bags, sacks, and packing generally, answering at once the two purposes for which canvass and bast are used in Europe. The material from which this article is manu- factured, is the fibre of two plants of the genus Corchorus; viz. Corchorus olitorius, and Corchorus capsularis (Bengali, pat) both, but particularly the first, extensively cultivated throughout Lower Bengal. Besides a large domestic consumption of gunny, the whole rice, paddy, wheat, pulses, sugar, and saltpetre of the country, as well as the pepper, coffee, and other foreign produce exported from Calcutta, are packed in bags or sacks made of this article. There is also a considerable exportation of manufactured bags, each commonly capable of containing two maunds, or about 160 lbs. weight, to Prince of Wales Island, Malacca, Singapore, Java, and Bombay. In 1828-29, the number exported from Calcutta was 2,205,206, of the value of 166,109 sicca rupees, or about 16,000Z. sterling, showing the price of each sack to be less than 2d.-( (Wallich; Roxburgh; Bell's Review of the External Commerce of Bengal.) GYPSUM, OR SULPHATE OF LIME, is found in various parts of the Continent, and in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire. When reduced to a powder, and formed into a paste with water, it is termed plaster of Paris, and is much used for forming casts, &c. It is also used for laying floors; and has been advantageously employed as a manure. H. HAIR, HUMAN (Ger. Haare, Menschen-haar; Du. Hair Fr. Cheveux; It. Capelli umani; Sp. Cabellos; Lat. Capilli). " Human hair makes a very considerable article in commerce, especially since the mode of perruques has obtained. Hair of the growth of the northern countries, as England, &c., is valued much beyond that of the more southern ones, as Italy, Spain, the southern parts of France, &c. Good hair is well fed, and neither too coarse nor too slender; the bigness rendering it less susceptible of the artificial curl, and disposing it rather to frizzle; and the smallness making its curl of too short duration. Its length should be about 25 inches; the more it falls short of this, the less value it bears."- (Ency. Brit.) HAIR OF BEASTS (Ger. Haare, Huhaare; Du. Huir; Fr. Poil; It. and Sp. Pelo; Lat. Digitized by Google HAIR-POWDER, HALIFAX. 723 Pelles). The hair of horses is extensively used in the manufacture of chairs, sofas, saddles, &c. while the hair or wool of beavers, hares, rabbits, &c. is much employed in the manu- facture of hats, &c. HAIR-POWDER (Ger. Puder; Fr. Poudre à poudrer; It. Polvere di cipri; Sp. Polvos de peluca), is used as an ornament for the hair, and generally made from starch pulverised, and sometimes perfumed. A tax of 11. 3s. 6d. a year is laid upon all persons who wear hair- powder. Different statutes prohibit the mixing of hair powder with starch or alabaster. And hair-powder makers are prohibited having alabaster in their custody. HALIFAX, the capital of Nova Scotia, on the south-east coast. of that province, lat. 44° 36' N., lon. 63° 28' W. It is situated on a peninsula on the west side of Chebucto Bay, and has one of the finest harbours in America. Population, exclusive of the military, about 18,000. The town is irregularly built, and most of the houses are of wood. The govern- ment-house is one of the most splendid edifices in North America. Halifax was founded in 1749. Port.-The best mark in sailing for Halifax is Sambro light-house, on a small island off the cape of the same name, on the west side of the entrance to the harbour, in lat. 44° 30', long. 63° 32'. The light, which is fixed, is 210 feet above the level of the sea; and a detachment of artillery, with two 24-pounders, is upon duty at the light-house, firing at regular intervals during the continuance of the dense fogs with which this part of the coast is very much infested.-(Coulier, Tubles des Principales Positions Géographiques, p. 78.) The course into the harbour for ships, after passing Sambro light, is between the main land on the west and Macnab's Island on the east. On a spit projecting from the latter, a light-house has recently been constructed; and when this is seen, ships may run in without fear. The harbour is defended by several pretty strong forts. Ships usually anchor abrenst of the town, where the harbour is rather more than a mile in width. After gradually narrowing to about t of that width, it suddenly expands into a noble sheet of water, called Bedford Basin, completely land- locked, with deep water throughout, and capable of accommodating the whole navy of Great Britain. The harbour is accessible at all times, and is rarely impeded by ice. There is an extensive royal dock- yard at Halifax; which during war is an important naval station, being particularly well calculated for the shelter, repair, and outfit of the fleets cruising on the American coast and in the West Indies. Mr. M'Gregor has severely, and, we believe, justly, censured the project for the removal of the dock- yard from Halifax to Bermuda. Trade, &c. of Halifar and Nova Scotia.-Halifax is the seat of a considerable fishery but the British colonists seem to be, for what reason it is not easy to say, both less enterprising and less successful fishers than the New Englanders. The principal trade of the town and the province is with the West Indies, Great Britain, and the United States. To the former they export dried and pickled fish, lumber, coals, grindstones, cattle, flour, butter, cheese, oats, potatoes, &c. They export the same articles to the southern ports of the United States, and gypsum to the eastern ports of New England. To Great Britain they send timber, deals; whale, cod, and seal oil furs, &c. The principal exports of timber are from Pictou on the St. Lawrence. The imports consist principally of colonial produce from the West Indies; all sorts of manufactured goods from Great Britain; and of flour, lumber, &c. from the United States, principally for exportation to the West Indies. The government packets sail regularly once a month from Halifax to Falmouth; but packet ships to Liverpool have recently been established, which are, in all respects, superior to the former. There are also regular packets from Halifax to Boston, New York, and the West Indies. A steam-boat plies constantly between Halifax and the little town of Dartmouth, on the opposite side of the harbour. In 1826 a company was formed for making a canal across the country from Halifax to the basin of Minas, which unites with the bottom of the Bay of Fundy. The navigation is formed, for the most part, by Shúbenacadie lake and river. The legislature gave 15,0001. to this undertaking but it has not hitherto been completed. The excavated part of the canal is 60 feet wide at top, 36 feet at bottom, and is intended to admit vessels drawing 8 feet water. It seems very questionable whether this canal will be profitable to the shareholders; but there can be no doubt that it would, if finished, be of considerable service to the trade of Halifax. There are two private banking companies at Halifax. Accounts are kept in pounds, shillings, and pence, the same as in England, and the weights and measures are also the same. About 100 large square-rigged vessels, and about the same number of large schooners, with several smaller craft, belong to Halifax. The total revenue of Nova Scotia for the year 1831, including balances and arrears, was 85,0181. the expenditure during the same year, exclusive of that incurred on account of the garrison, being 94,8761. We borrow from the valuable work of Mr. M'Gregor the following statement as to the trade of Nova Scotia in 1832 Produce of the Fisheries exported In the Year ending 5th of Produce of the Mines, exported. January, 1833. L 8. d. L 8. d. 160,640 cwt. dry fish, at 10a. 80,320 0 0 Coals, 12,020 chaldrons, at 25a. 15,025 0 0 37,154 barrels pickled fish, at 15e. 27,865 10 0 Ditto, from Cape Broton, 30,677 chaldrons 38,371 15 0 8,641 boxes smoked herrings, at 3a. 1,296 3 0 Gypsum, 45,508 tone, at 10s. 22,754 0 0 704 tuns oil, at 201. 14,080 0 0 Ditto, from Cape Breton, 628 1-8 tone 318 6 0 51,918 seal skins, at 1s. 6d. 3,893 17 0 Grindstones, 19,240, at 30s. - 28,360 0 0 Total 127,455 10 0 Total 105,329 0 0 Produce of Agriculture. Produce of the Forests. L 8. d. L. 8. d. Barley and oats, 3 478 bushels, at 2s. 347 16 0 Square timber, 38,191 tons, at 15a. 29,643 6 0 Potatoes and turnips, 64,712, at is. 6d. 4,853 12 0 Deals and inch boards, 9,984,000 24.280 0 0 Oatmeal, 7 barrels, at 20s. 7 0 0 Lathwood, 228 loads 228 0 0 Flax-seed, 10 bushels 8 10 0 Staves, 2,714,000 3,509 0 0 Horned cattle, horses, sheep, and swine, 926 Shingles, 3,042,000 2,2-1 10 0 value 4,630 0 0 Handspikes, 2,300 115 0 0 Butter, cheese, and lard, 86,724 lbs. value 4,286 4 0 Oars, poles, kc., 3,894 45 0 0 Cranberries, 496 gallous 24 6 0 Masts and spars, 642 200 0 0 Apples, 260 barreis 130 0 0 Honps, 229,150 114 1 3 Beef and pork, 434 barrels 1,302 0 0 Value of titiber shipped from Cape Bretom 1,972 0 0 Total 15,583 8 0 Total 62,447 16 3 The balance of exports consists of various articles, transhipped, principally West India produce, tea from China, &c. Digitized by Google 724 hams, HAMBURGH. Account of vessels entered inwards in the Port of Halifax and Nova Scotia generally, in the Year ending 5th of January 1833; and of those cleared outwards from the same. Inwards. Outwards. Countries. Ships. Tom. Men. Ships. Tom. Mrs. United Kingdom - - - 110 17,454 2,317 104 25,429 1,174 Bordeaux - - - - 2 254 16 Oporto - - 1 160 9 1 112 6 Guernsey and Jersey - - 3 379 # Cadiz - - - - - - - - 1 20 6 Smyrna - - - - 2 251 15 Memel - - - 4 992 41 British West Indies - - 259 27,023 1,563 202 27,430 1,7% Petersburgh - - - 1 227 12 British N. A. colonies - - 1,046 63,915 3,784 1,104 69,166 4,048 Azores and Madeira - - 2 187 12 4 350 19 Malaga and Gibraltar - 7 834 46 2 237 13 Foreign vessels from India or Europe - - - - - - 1 150 13 United States, British vessels 397 31,443 1,559 393 31,666 1,598 Ditto, foreign vessels 77 7,921 413 75 9,549 461 Brazil - - 6 1,381 98 10 1,584 82 Mauritius - - - - 1 187 10 Canton - - - - 1 504 48 Africa - - - - - - - - - - 1 90 7 Rio Janeiro - - - - 1 151 8 Havannah 191 II - - - - - - - - - . 2 Totals 1.950 163,385 9,973 1,995 166,647 9,162 (See M' Gregor's British America, 2d ed. vol. i. p. 481. 483, &c. Moorsom's Letters from Note Scotin, passim Papers laid before the Finance Committee, &c.) HAMS (Ger. Schinken; Du. Hammen; Fr. Jambons; It. Prosciutti; Sp. Jamones; Rus. Okorokü), the thighs of the hog salted and dried. York, Hants, Wilts, and Cumber- land, in England, and Dumfries and Galloway in Scotland, are the counties most famous for producing fine hams. Those of Ireland are comparatively coarse and without flavour.- (See BACON.) The hams of Portugal, Westphalia, and Virginia, are exquisitely flavoured, and are in high estimation. The imports of bacon and hams, principally the latter, amount to about 1,350 cwt. a year. The duty is very heavy, being no less than 28s. a cwt. [Much attention is paid in the United States to the curing of hams. Those from Virginia and New Jersey, especially the Burlington hams from the latter state, are little, if at all, inferior to the Westphalia. Large quantities of them are cured in Maryland and Ohio, and exported to the other states of the Union.-Am. Ed.] HAMBURGH, a free Hanseatic city, on the north bank of the river Elbe, about 70 miles from its mouth, in lat. 53° 32' 51" N., lon. 9° 58' 37" E. Population, 125,000. Hamburgh is the greatest commercial city of Germany, and, perhaps, of the Continent. She owes this distinction principally to her situation. The Elbe, which may be navigated by lighters as far as Prague, renders her the entrepôt of a vast extent of country. Advan- tage, too, has been taken of natural facilities that extend still further her internal navigation; a water communication having been established, by mcans of the Spree and of artificial cuts and sluices, between the Elbe and the Oder, and between the latter and the Vistula; so that a considerable part of the produce of Silesia destined for foreign markets, and some even of that of Poland, is conveyed to Hamburgh.- (See CANALS.) There is, also, a communi- cation by means of a canal with the Trave, and, consequently, with the Lubec and the Baltic, by which the necessity of resorting to the difficult and dangerous navigation of the Sound is obviated. Vessels drawing 14 feet of water come up to the town at all times; and vessels drawing 18 feet may come safely up with the spring tides. The largest vessels some- times load from and unload into lighters at Cuxhaven. The trade of Hamburgh embraces every article that Germany either sells to or buys from foreigners. The exports principally consist of linens, grain of all sorts, wool and woollen cloths, leather, flax, glass, iron, copper, smalts, rags, staves, wooden clocks and toys, Rhenish wines, spelter, &c. Most sorts of Baltic articles, such as grain, flax, iron, pitch and tar, wax, &c., may generally be bought as cheap at Hamburgh, allowing for difference of freight, as in the ports whence they were originally brought. The imports consist principally of sugar; coffee, which is the favourite article for speculative purchases; cotton wool. stuffs, and yarn; tobacco, hides, indigo, wine, brandy, rum, dye-woods, tea, pepper, &c. Being brought from many different places, there is a great variety of quality in the grain found at Hamburgh; but a large proportion of the wheat is inferior. Some of the barley is very good, and fit for malting. The oats are feed of various qualities. The customs revenue is found to amount, one year with another, to from 30,000/. to 35,000/. The rate may, perhaps- (see post), be taken, on imports and exports, at a rough average, at 5s. 3d. per cent., which would give, at a medium, 12,380,000L a year for the value of the trade in articles subjected to duties; and adding 2,000,000L for the trade in articles exempted from duties, we have 14,380,000L as the total Digitized by Google HAMBURGH. 725 annual value of the import and export trade of the port! And, as the largest portion of this immense trade is in our hands, it will be necessary that we should be a little fuller than ordinary in our details as to this great emporium. Money.Accounts are kept at Hamburgh in marcs, divided into 16 sols or schillings lubs, and the schillings into 12 pfenings lubs. Accounts are also kept, particularly in exchanges, in pounds, schillings, and pence Flemish. The pound consists of 21 crowns, 34 thalers, 71 marcs, 20 schillings Flemish, and 240 grotes Flemish. The monies in circulation at Hamburgh are divided into banco and current money. The former con- sists of the sums inscribed in the books of the bank opposite to the names of those who have deposited specie or bullion in the bank. Banco is intrinsically worth about 23 per cent. more than currency, but the agio is constantly varying.-(For an account of the Bank of Hamburg, see BANKS (FOREIGN).) Of the coins in circulation at Hamburgh, the rixdollar banco and the rixdollar current are the most common. The weight of the former is not uniform; but Dr. Kelly estimates it, at a medium, at 391'6 Eng. grains pure silver = 4s. 6ld. The current rixdollar = 318-3 grains = 3s. 81d. very nearly. The Hamburgh gold ducat = 9s. 4d. Taking the mean value of the rixdollar banco at 543d. sterling, it follows, that 17. sterling = 13 marcs 27 schillings banco, or 11. sterling == 35s. 1d. Flemish banco. No fixed par of exchange can, however, be established between London and Hamburgh, on account of the fluctuation of banco. 11. sterl. = 16 marcs 2 schillings Hamburgh currency, or 1 marc current= 148d. sterl.-(Kelly's Cambist, Hamburgh.) Weights and Measures.-The commercial weights are, 2 Loths = 1 Ounce. 14 Pounds = Lispound. 21 Centners = 1 Shippound. 16 Ounces = 1 Pound. 8 Lispounds = 1 Centner. 100 Hamburgh pounds = 1068 lbs. avoirdupois = 129.8 lbs. Troy = 48.43 kilogrammes= 98 lbs. of Am- sterdam. A stone of flax is lbs. A stone of wool or feathers is lbs. In estimating the carriage of goods, the shippound is reckoned at 380lbs. The measures for liquids are, 2 Oessels = 1 Quartier. 2 Stubgens = 1 Viertel. 6 Ahms or = 1 Fuder. 2 Quartiers = 1 Kanen. 4 Viertels = 1 Eimer. 24 Ankers 2 Kanens = 1 Stubgen. 5 Eimers = 1 Ahm or 4 Ankers. The ahm is equal to 381, and the fuder to 2291, English wine gallons. A fass of wine oxhoft tierces. The oxhoft or hogshead is of various dimensions. 1 oxhoft French wine = 62 to 64 stubgens; an oxhoft of brandy 60 stubgens. A pipe of Spanish wine = 96 to 100 stubgens. A tun of beer is 48 stubgens. A pipe of oil is 820 lbs. nett. Whale oil is sold per barrel of 6 steckan = 32 Eng. wine gallons. The dry measures are, 4 Spints = 1 Himtems. I 3 Fass = I Scheffel. 2 Wisps = 1 Last. 2 Himtems = 1 Fass. 10 Scheffels = 1 Wisp, 11 Last = 1 Stock. The Last = 11.2 Winchester quarters. A keel of coals yields from 8 to 9 lasts. The Hamburgh foot 11-289 English inches. The Rhineland foot, used by engineers and land sur- veyors, = 12:36 inches. The Brabant ell, most commonly used in the measurement of piece goods, = 27-585 inches. A ton in the lading of a ship is generally reckoned at 40 cubic feet. Of things that are sold by num- ber, a gross thousand = 1,200; a gross hundred = 120; a ring = 240; a common or small thousand = 1,000; a shock = 60; a steigs 20; a gross = 12 dozen. Exports.-We regret that no materials exist by which it is possible to give any account of the quantity and value of the different articles exported from Hamburgh.-(For some particulars as to the corn trade, see CORN LAWS AND CORN TRADE.) Linens are one of the most important articles of export. They are generally sold by the piece; but there are great differences in the dimensions of pieces of different denominations. The following Table is, therefore, of importance, as it exhibits the various descriptions of linen usually met with at Hamburgh, with the length and breadth of the different pieces. It also gives their cost on board, in sterling, on 1st January, 1836. Descriptions. Length. Width. Sold. Cost on Board, in Sterling. Yards. Yards. £ S. d. £ 8. d. £ S. d. 35 15 Platillas royales - - 16 per piece. 0 15 10 to 1 10 3 to 1 19 4 35 15 Brown Silesias - 0 12 6- 0 18 2- 1 4 2 - - Britannias 7 - 0 3 9 07 7 - 0 9 10 - - - 16 Ditto 7 9 - 0 7 7- 0 12 1 - 0 15 1 - - - 8 Dowlas - - - - 671 15 - 1 14 9- 25 4 2 12 11 16 Creas à la Morlaix - - 671 15 - 1 13 3 3 0 6 4 3 2 16 Listados - 43 9 - - - - 0 18 2- 17 3- 1 16 3 White sheetings - 50 - - 1 19 4- 28 5- 3 6 6 Plain lawns - - 81 15 - - 0 6 10 - 0 18 2- 1 10 3 Clear, figured, and worked lawns 81 15 - 0 7 7 0 9 1 - 0 13 7 1_6 Arabias - 211 - - - - 0 9 1 0 12 1- 0 18 2 wool Checks, No. 2. - 171 - - 0 4 6 — 05 4- 0 6 10 Striped and checked books 43 3 - per 3 pieces. 0 13 3 - 0 15 1- 0 18 11 Hessia rolls - 35 per piece. 0 9 1- 0 15 1 - 0 18 11 Linen for coarse bags 35 19 - - 0 9 1 - 0 15 1 - 1 5 8 - 16 Osnaburghs - - - - { double ells per 100 } 3 9 - 43 2- 4 10 9 Tecklenburghs - - - - - 3 0 6- 3 12 7- 3 15 7 - - - The Platillas and Britannias come principally from Silesia; the Creas from Lusatia, &c. Osna- burghs are made of flaxen, and Tecklenburghs of hempen, yarn. Linens are sold with a discount of 1 per cent. Imports.-We subjoin an account of the imports, consumption, exports, stock, and prices, of some of the principal articles imported into Hamburgh, during each of the ten years ending with the 1st of Jan. 1836. 3 P 2 Digitized by Google Table of the principal Imports, Stocks, Exports, Consumption, and Prices at the Port of Hamburgh, from 1826 to 1835, both inclusive. Stock, Import. Consumption Price in De- Stock, Jan. 1. and Export. Jan. 1. Import. Consumption Price in De- cember. Stock and Export. cember. Import. Consumption Price in De- Jan. 1. and Export. 726 cember. Hayti Lbs. Lbs. Lls. Br. & yel. Hav. Schillings. Lbs. Lbs. Lis. Grotes. Coffee 1826 - 8,000,000 25,000,000 Pieces. Pieces. Buenos Ayres. Sugar 1826 Pieces. Schillings. 1826 8,000,000 37,000,000 31,750,000 Hides 1-2 to 5.9 1826 1826 25,000,000 52,250,000 69,250,000 17,400 1-4 to 93-4 1827 13,250,000 50,000,000 39,250,000 4 4 1.2 1826 1827 8,000,000 85,000,000 17,400 81,000,000 82,630 81-4 93-4 68,030 81-2 to 10 1-2 1828 24,000,000 47,250,000 44,250,000 334 1-4 1827 1828 97,750,000 32,000 12,000,000 79.750,000 36,084 61-2 - 812 52,284 8 1-4 - 10 1-4 1829 27,000,000 39,000,000 42,000,000 34 3.9 1828 1829 77,250,000 15,800 30,000,000 93,250,000 16,640 53-4 - 734 25,290 81-2 - 10 1-2 1830 24,000,000 45,250,000 45,250,000 3 1-2 4 1829 1830 101,000,000 7,150 14,000,000 63,857 86,000,000 41-2 - 6 I-4 60,507 812- 10 1-4 1831 24,000,000 42,750,000 50,750,000 534- 6 1-4 1830 1831 29,000,000 109,250,000 10,500 106,212 117,250,000 89,112 16,000,000 3-4 6.1 47,250,000 5 1-2 5-9 1831 71-2- 1-2 1832 53,750,000 1832 21,000,000 109,750,000 27,600 127,522 100,750,000 108,522 1833 22,500,000 5 6 I-4 71-2-9 40,000,000 48,500,000 6 6 1-2 1832 1833 73,000,000 46,500 30,000,000 103,101 81,000,000 5 14- 61-2 129,201 71-4-9 1834 14,000,000 50,250,000 45,250,000 5 5 3-4 1833 1834 20,500 22,000,000 68,500,000 142,821 1835 75,500,000 6 71-2 133,821 7 83-4 19,000,000 42,750,000 47,750,000 5 1-4 6 1834 1835 $3,750,000 29,500 127,798 15,000,000 77,750,000 132,498 7 83-4 61-4 7 1-2 1835 24,800 122,674 118,474 61-4 71-2 In 10 years - - - 456,000,000 442,000,000 In 10 years - - 882,500,000 Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 861,500,000 In 10 years - - - 14,000,000 - Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 946,739 21,000,000 917,739 Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 29,000 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 - 27,750,000 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 76,500,000 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 . * 93,085 Carolina Lbs. Sumatra. Lbs. Lbs. Marcs. Lbs. Lis. Lbs. Fine blueBengal. Rice Schillings. Chs. ser. Chs. - 1826 - - 1,250,000 Pepper 1826 700,000 ser. Chs. ser. Marcs. 1826 1,250,000 4,875,000 4,750,000 14 to 18 1826 700,000 2,400,000 Indigo 1826 - 420 130 1,900,000 1827 1,375,000 6,000,000 4 5,786,000 13 15 1-2 1827 2,120,000 1826 420 130 1,200,000 5,416 320 5,086 240 7 to 812 2,070,000 1828 1,500,000 10,000,000 31-4 6,500,000 12 1-2- 16 1827 750 210 1828 1,250,000 1,160,000 4,047 842 4,052 457 6 71-2 1,160,000 3 1829 5,000,000 7,625,000 8,785,000 81-2- 13 1828 1,150,000 745 505 1829 1,250,000 6,781 345 6,511 435 53-4 - 7 1-2 1,150,000 3 1830 3,750,000 6,500,000 7,250,000 10 13 1-2 1829 1830 1,015 505 1,250,000 980,000 5,483 306 5,298 356 4.1-2 - 6 1,130,000 3.1 1831 3,000,000 11,000,000 10,000,000 11 13 1830 1831 1,100,000 1,630,000 1,200 455 5,864 672 6,269 607 334- 434 1832 1,930,000 3.1 4,000,000 5,250,000 8,250,000 13 15 1-2 1831 795 520 1832 800,000 1,500,000 4,695 536 4,915 546 31-2 412 1833 1,720,000 3-3 to 31-2 1,000,000 9,000,000 8,000,000 11 13 1-2 1832 1833 580,000 1,500,000 575 510 8,054 269 8,044 339 31-4 3-9 1,480,000 1834 2,000,000 31-2 - 3.5 8,000,000 8,250,000 10 12 1-2 1833 585 1,280,000 440 1834 5,303 245 600,000 5,158 310 334 43-4 1835 1,750,000 1,530,000 334 3.7 7,500,000 1834 7,000,000 12 13 1-2 730 375 HAMBURGH. 1835 350,000 988,000 4,715 490 4,770 445 314 1-4 1,088,000 41-4- 41-2 1835 675 420 5,699 438 5,904 508 33-4 - 1-2 In 10 years - - - 77,000,000 74,750,000 In 10 years - 15,408,000 Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 15,158,000 2,250,000 In 10 years . - # Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 56,477 4593 56,007 4243 250,000 Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 470 350 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 - - 7,250,000 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 - 1,112,000 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 3,692 413 Ord. Virg, Hogsheads, Hogsheads. Geo. Upland. Hogsheads. Schillings. Bales. Leeward. Tobacco Bales. 1826 Bales. 1,100 Schillings. Puncheons. Puncheons. Puncheons. Cotton 1820 Dollars. 1826 1,100 5,745 Rum 3,524 1826 3,724 234 to 3 1,000 Digitized by Google 1826 1827 5,745 25,068 22,213 63-4 to 83-4 900 5,378 1826 4,978 2.1 234 1,000 3,750 3,250 39 to 42 1828 1827 8,600 1,300 25,179 23,844 63-4 - 63-4 7,137 1827 5,637 2 24 1,600 4,096 4,096 38 42 1829 1828 9,935 2,800 29,518 29,513 6 7 1-2 3,361 1828 4,111 2 214 1,500 4,947 1829 4,747 32 37 1830 2,050 9,940 38,901 36,431 5 3,140 634 1829 3,640 2 21 1,700 1831 1830 5,158 4,558 26 32 1,550 12,410 21,288 25,453 6 7 5,166 1830 4,566 134 2 2,300 4,759 1832 1831 5,059 24 30 8,245 24,458 26,658 5 142 6 1-2 1831 2,000 1. 2,150 5,297 6,047 1.9 2 6,921 6,871 23 27 1832 1833 1,400 6,040 36,828 37,008 6 3,398 7 1832 3,948 23-4 29 2,050 5,593 6,643 24 - 28 1833 1834 850 3,982 6,865 22,700 26,670 7 81-2 1833 4,002 234 2-9 1,000 5,440 5,340 30 33 1834 1,985 1835 830 4,102 45,188 42,673 8 9 14 1834 3,712 3 31-2 1,100 3,239 3,429 30 34 1835 4,500 40,758 36,113 7 -10 1835 910 3,457 3,267 32 35 In 10 years 45,645 44,305 In 10 years Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 1,280 315,721 306,576 Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 In 10 years 48,360 47,200 9,145 Stock, Jan. 1. 1836 1,100 Annual average from 1826 to 1885 4,009 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 16,545 Annual average from 1826 to 1835 5,777 HAMBURGH. 727 Shipping.-The ships arriving at Humburgh in the undermentioned years (ending 30th of Septem- ber) have been as under:- From the 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1835. East Indies - - 12 8 13 8 8 17 21 10 Brazil - - 71 85 82 94 93 103 79 91 West Indies - - 115 84 102 129 113 130 149 131 United States - - 42 40 23 42 44 41 63 41 Mediterranean - 62 63 61 61 54 62 76 65 Spain - - - 15 20 20 24 20 49 36 45 Portugal - - - 18 16 28 16 13 17 29 36 France - - 86 61 65 47 107 124 105 149 Great Britain - - 529 587 710 652 672 950 926 1,062 Netherlands - - 342 595 375 290 387 500 599 614 Baltic - - - 292 338 443 385 385 583 645 580 Totals 1,584 1,697 1,922 1,748 1,896 2,576 2,738 2,815 Repair of Ships, Sea Stores, &c.-Materials and labour being cheap, Hamburgh may be regarded, in so far as respects expense, as a favourable place for careening and repairing ships; but, having no docks, these operations are inconveniently performed. All articles of provision may be obtained in great abundance and at moderate prices. An Account of the Prices of the principal Articles of Ships' Provision at Hamburgh in 1831, stated in Imperial Weights and Measures, and in Sterling Money. Butter (equal Pork. Beef. to Cork Seconds Eydam Ship Bread. Thirds) Flour. Cheese. Peas. Jamaica Rum. Per Barrel Per Barrel Per Bag of Per Barrel Per Per of 200 lbs. of 220 lbs. Per Cwt. 112 lbs. of 196 lbs. Per 1b. Imperial Imperial Nett. Nett. Nett. Nett. Quarter. Gallon. s.d. s.d. s.d. d. d. January 48 0 to 50 0 450to 00 610 to 70 0 13 6 to 14 6 270 to 28 0 4 to 41-2 340 to 37 0 3 1 to3 7 April 560-580 480-500 150-170 300-320 414-412 310-336 32-41 July 570-640 450-480 450-560 130-140 240-270 412-434 29-310 October none. 420-456 50 0 - 74 0 120-00 230-00 4 -41-4 290-336 26-34 December 590-600 420-450 540-680 11 6 - 12 0 00 4 - 5 290-340 23-33 Fuel-Coals. 19 marés current, or about 22s. 6d. per ton, British weight, in large quantities. Do. 23 marcs current, or about 27s. 6d. per ton, British weight, in small quantities, free on board. Fresh beef, 25s. 6d. to 30s. per cwt. Fresh pork, 4s. 2d. to 5s. 1d. per 14 lbs. N. B.-The prices include the cost of the packages of all the articles, excepting cheese and peas. In September and October no pork was to be had in a wholesale way. Freights.-The different ship agents engaged in the trade with Great Britain have published a Table of freights; but as they are, notwithstanding, materially influenced by the demand at the time, the season, &c., it seems unnecessary to insert it. Quarantine is enforced, when occasion requires, at Hamburgh, and is performed near Cuxhaven. Tariff-The customs duties at Hamburgh are as moderate as possible, being only 1/8 per cent. ad valorem on exports, and I per cent. on imports; but in truth they are not quite 80 much, being calcu- lated in money of one value and paid in money of less value. The duty is, in fact, estimated in banco marks, while it is paid in current marcs, which are more than 20 per cent. under the former; SO that in reality the import duty is only about 2-5ths per cent. A few years ago it was 11 per cent., but the competition of the Altona merchants, where there are no duties, obliged the authorities at Hamburgh to reduce these duties to the present level. There is no inspection of goods at the Cus- tom-house. The merchant makes oath to the nett weight of the article, and to its value at the cur- rent prices of the day, and on this the duty is assessed. The following articles are free from both import and export duties, viz.- 1. Linen, rags, flax yarn, hemp yarn, cotton yarn, raw sheep and lamb's wool. 2. Wheat, rye, oats, barley, buckwheat, and malt. 3. Unwrought copper and brass, plates of copper, raw zine, tinned and untinned iron plates. 4. Cash and coin, unwrought gold and silver, and scrapings of the precious metals. 5. Pamphlets and printed works. Articles free from Import Duty. 1. Timber, staves, and fire wood brought down the Elbe or in carriages into the city, the latter with the exception of that coming from the sea. 2. Merchandise coming by post, if the goods for the same individual do not exceed the value of 50 marcs banco. Articles free from Export Duty. 1. All articles manufactured in Hamburgh, and all foreign manufactures worked up in the city. 2. Small packages of 100 lbs. weight and under, provided their value do not exceed 100 marce banco. N. B.-An import duty of 4 schillings current is payable upon lemons and oranges, for the whole chest to 1,000; 2 schillings current for the 1 chest to 500 and for casks in the same proportion. The duties are the same whether the importation be effected by Hamburgh or by foreign ships. Exclusive of the above or customs duties, most articles of provision imported for the consumption of the town are subject to an excise duty. Stade Duties.-Besides the duties levied at Hamburgh, all articles passing up the Elbe to Hamburgh, whether for transit or not, pay duties to Hanover at Brunshausen, near S ade. These dutles are rated according to a tariff, and are computed from the ship's manifest, bills of lading, and cockets, which have all to be sent on shore for that purpose. On some articles, particularly those of British manufacture. these duties are very heavy, being frequently much larger than the Hamburgh duties They are particularly grievous, too, from heavy penalties being attached even to the slightest unin- tentional mistakes. It is really surprising, considering the source of this nuisance, that it should not have been abated long ago. It might, at all events. have been expected that British ships and goods would have been exempted from such a tax. We do hope that some portion of the public attention will be directed to this crying evil. With what face can we protest against the conduct of Prussia and other German states in throwing obstacles in the way of the free navigation of the Elbe, when we submit, without a murmur, to similar proceedings on the part of Hanover 1-(For further particu- lars, sec STADE.) Digitized by Google 728 HAMBURGH Transit Goods are totally exempted from duty. They are such only as arrive at Hamburgh direct, and which are neither sold nor exchanged while in the city. The liberty of transit is limited othe term of 3 months from the time of receiving the transit ticket but, upon application being made for a prolongation of the term previously to the expiration of the first 3 months, it is granted on pay- ment of 1/4 per cent. on the banco value of the goods; but under no circumstances is the term ex- tended beyond 6 months. If the goods be not then exported, they become liable to the ordinary duties. Navigation of the Elbe, Pilotage, &c.-The mouth of the Elbe is encumbered with sand banks. The channel leading to Cuxhaven is bounded on the north by the Vogel Sands and North Grounds, and on the south by the Schaarhorn Sands and Neuwerk Island. On the latter there are 2 light-houses and 2 beacons, and on the Schaarhorn is another beacon. The light-houses on Neuwerk Island are about 700 yards apart the most southerly, which is also the most elevated, being in lat. 53° 54' 57" N., lon. 8° 29' 40" E. It is 128 feet high, being twice the height of the other. The channel is, in some places, hardly I of a mile wide. The outer red buoy, in the middle of the channel, at its mouth, bears from Heligoland S. E. by S., distant nearly 20 miles. But the best mark in entering the Elbe is the floating light, or signal ship, moored 2 miles N. W. by N. of the red buoy, in 11 fathoms at low water. This vessel never leaves her station, unless compelled by ice in the winter season. By night she exhibits a lantern light, 38 feet above deck, and in foggy weather rings a bell every quarter of an hour. A second signal ship is stationed 51 miles S. E. by E. from the first, at the westernmost point of a sand bank dividing the fair way of the river. She is rigged like a galliot, to distinguish her by day from the first signal ship; and during night she exhibits two lights, one 18 feet above the other. The dis- tance from the outer red buoy to Cuxhaven is about 16 miles; thence to Glückstadt the course is east, 28 miles; from the latter to Stade the course is south-easterly, 9 miles; and then easterly to Ham- burgh, 18 miles. The channel throughout is marked with black and white buoys, which are numbered and specified in the charts. The black ones are to the left, in passing up the river, on the starboard or right-hand side, and the white on the larboard side: Every vessel coming from sea into the Elbe, and drawing 4 feet water, is directed to take a pilot on board, and must pay pilotage, though she do not take one. However well the signals, lights, beacons, and buoys, may be arranged, an experienced pilot is very necessary, in case of a fog in the night, or of a storm. To take in a pilot, a vessel must heave to by the pilot galliot, which lies, in good weather, near the red buoy, and in bad weather, N. N. E. from Neuwerk, and is known by having at the flag- staff an admiral's flag, and a long streamer flying at the top. If the pilot boat have no pilot on board, or if the weather be so bad that the pilot cannot leave her, she lowers her flag, and then the vessel coming in must sail, with the signal for a pilot hoisted, to Cuxhaven, and heave to there, where she is certain of getting one. There are no docks or quays at Hamburgh; and it is singular, considering the great trade of the port, that none have been constructed. Vessels moor in the river outside of piles driven into the ground a short distance from shore and in this situation they are not exposed to any danger unless the piles give way, which rarely happens. There is a sort of inner harbour, formed by an arm of the Elbe which runs into the city, where small craft lie and discharge their cargoes. Larger vessels load and unload from their moorings, by means of lighters. These carry the goods from and to the ware- houses which front the various small arms and channels of the river, and the canals carried from it into different parts of the city. The charges on account of lighterage are extremely moderate. Port Charges.-The charges of a public nature payable by vessels Pilotage earned-The above pilotage is earned if vessels are entering the port of Hamburgh, unloading and loading, are pilotage brought as far as Freyburgh or Gluckstadt, and when from stress of and lastage. The separate items of which are given in the follow. wind or weather, which seldom happens, the Hamburgh pilots take ing Table. vessels to Wittenbergh or Neumuhlen, they are to pay, without die- Pilotage and Lastage.-The Hamburgh pilots, generally speak- tinction- ing, take charge of vessels only from the Red Buoy to Freyburgh or Marcs currency. d. etg. Gluckstadt, the pilotage for which is regulated by law of the 18th To Wittenbergh 0 14 0 of February, 1750, as follows:- - Neumublen 8 21 0 Pilotage all the Way.-For pilotage the whole way from Cut- For each Foot Hamburgh haven to Hamburgh, there is no table of rates, for, generally speak- Measure which a Vessel ing, the Hamburgh pilots do not take vessels up beyond Borsch draws.* From Boesch to Hamburgh.-Vessels are generally piloted from Boesch to Hamburgh by Danish or Hanoverian pilots, to whom is customary to pay 3 mares. Harbour-master's Charges.-By a Custom-house order of the 16th During the Six Sum- mer Months, from 1st Mar. to 1st Sept. During the remaining Six Winter Months. of December, 1816, the Hamburgh harbour-master is not entitled to fees. Lastage and Custom-house Charges.-British and other foreign vessels pay the sime as Hamburgh vessels. For clearing in and clearing out, no separate charges are made; visiting the port is considered as one voyage, and the charges on vessels are paid as follows :- For vessels arrived with cargoes from the undermentioned places: Marks Currency. English viz. Money. For every s.d. s.d. Places. Commer- Sterling. Vessels coming northwards, and cial Last. colliers 20 30 24 36 All vessels, smacks, and kayen Mares. LLd drawing more than 4 feet The East Indies 30 036 water, and in ballast 20 24 36 West Indies, North and South America 28 035 Vessels laden with salt or corn, Portugal, Spain, and the Mediterranean 20 024 wheresoever they may come The rest of the European ports 18 019 from 30 48 36 53 Holland, East Friesland, the Weser, Eyder, Vessels which, besides salt, corn. and Jutland 0 12 001012 or ballast, have one third of For vessels under 20 commercial lasts* the cargo consisting of piece without distinction 04 00318 goods 40 60 48 70 Vessels arriving and departing in ballast, Vessels laden with herrings 20 30 24 36 of upwards of 20 commercial lasts 08 007 All vessels laden with wine, oil, vinegar, train oil, iron, lead, For all vessels laden with coals, wood, or tarf, no lastage is past, packages, or bags, and all provided they do not take return cargoes. vessels coming from foreign Half Lastage.-Vessels arriving in ballast and departing with parts, whether laden or not 40 60 48 70 cargo pay half the above lastage, according to their destination. All smacks going between Hol- N. B.-Exclusive of the above dues, which are all remarkably land, Friesland, and Ham- moderate, vessels coming to the port of Hamburgh are obliged to burgh with piece goods 40 60 48 70 pay certain dues to Hanover, called Stade or Brunshausen does. These are rated according to the number of the vessel's muls, and Half Pilotage only-N. B. In case the Hamburgh pilots enter a are over and above the Stade duties on the cargo.-(For the items, vessel only within the first buoy beyond the Rosshacken, Strangfly, see Stade.) or Cuxhaven, half the above mentioned pilotage is paid. Also half pilotage must be paid at all events, whether the vessel has taken a . It is difficult to determine the exact ratio of a last to 0 ton, but pilot from the pilot galliot or not. it may be taken at about 3 or 234 to 1. But in Hamburch all - sels are measured by the harbour-master; and it is upon his report @ Sixteen feet English are equal to 17 feet Hamburgh. that the lastage is calculated. Warehousing System-This has not been introduced at Hamburgh; nor, from the smallness of the duties, is it necessary, though it would seem that the time during which goods are allowed to be in Digitized by Google HAMBURGH. 729 transitu might be advantageously extended. The warehouse rent of a quarter of wheat may be about 14d. sterling per month, and of a ton of sugar, about 9d. ; but there are no fixed rates. Custom-house Regulations.-On passing Stade, the masters of vessels must send their papers, in- cluding the manifest, bills of lading, and cockets, on shore, that the amount of the Stade duties may be calculated. On the vessel's arrival at Hamburgh, the broker reports her to the Custom-house, and gives his guarantee for payment of the duties; he either delivers her papers, or undertakes to deliver them as soon as they can be got from Stade, and upon a receipt being produced for the Stade duties by the Hanoverian authorities at Hamburgh, the vessel is allowed to unload. On clearing, a manifest of the outward cargo, together with the consul's certificate of the regularity of the ship's papers, must be produced at the Custom-house by the broker, who obtains in return a clearance certificate, authorising the vessel to go to sea. Credit, Brokerage, &c.-Almost all goods are sold for ready money, with an allowance of 1 per cent. for discount. Sometimes, but not unfrequently, sales are made at 2 or 3 months' credit, and in such cases a higher price is obtained than for cash. Sometimes sugar is sold to the sugar baker at this credit. Brokers are positively forbidden to act as merchants or factors. They are licensed by the Senate, and must conform to the established regulations. Brokerage is paid wholly by the seller, and amounts to- Pepper is sold per lb. in schill. banco; discount, I per cent. good Five sixths per cent. on cotton, cotton twist, cocoa, cochineal, weight, 1-2 per cent. tare, if in single bales of 300 lbs., 3 lbs.; in copper, hides, indigo, manufactured goods, nankeens, sugar, and tea double bales, 6 lbs. One per cent. on annotto, camphire, cinnamon, cardamons®, Quercitron bark is sold per 100 lbs. in mares currency agio, 20 cassia*. cloves*, drugs not denominated*, deer skins, dye woods, per cent. discount, 2 per cent. good weight, I per cent. To de- ginger ap*, mace®, nutmegs*, pepper, pimento, potashes, Peru- termine the tare, the American tare is reduced to Hamburgh weight. vian bark, quereitron bark, rice*, saltpetre, sarsaparilla*, shellac*, Rice is sold per 100 lbs. in mares banco; discount, 1 per cent. tamarinds tobacco in leaves and tobacco stems of the growth of good weight, I per cent.; tare, real; and super-tare for tierces, 4 lbs.; the United States of America, whale oil*, vanelloes*. for 1-2 tierces, 2 lbs. " N. B. Tobacco stems of all other origin, segars, and other Rum is sold per 30 quarts in rixdoll. currency, agio uncertain. manufactured tobacco, pay 2 per cent. all other leaf and roll to- Sugar, raw and clayed, is sold per lb. in banco groats, with a re- bacco®, I 1-2 per cent. bate of 8 2-3ds per cent. discount 1 per cent., and sometimes 1 1-2 One and a half per cent. on wine, brandy, rum, and arrack, if per cent. Brazil or Havannah chest, good weight, 3-4 per cent. : sold in parcels amounting to 3,000 marcs banco and upwards. real tare; super-tare, 10 lbs. for Brazil, and 5 lbs. for Havannah "Two per cent. on ditto, for sales of and under 3,000 marcs banco. sugar, per chest. Muscovados in casks, good weight, 1 per cent. " In auction the selling broker is entitled to 1 1-2 per cent. and the thre, if the casks weigh upwards of 1,000 lbs., 18 per cent. if less, purchasing broker to 2 per cent., without regard to the amount." 20 per cent. Clayed sugars, good weight, I per cent. ; tare, 16 per All articles marked (*) pay the brokerage before-mentioned, if the cent. East India sugars, in bags, good weight, 3-4 per cent.; tare quantity sold amounts to 600 marcs banco, or higher: for smaller for white, 4 to 6 lbs. for brown. 6 to 7 lbs. lots of less than 600 marcs banco, and down to 150 mares banco, the Tea, per lb. in schill. currency, agio uncertain discount, 1 per brokerage is paid, with the addition of one half, and under 150 cent. good weight, 1-2 per cent. Tare of bohea, in chests of marcs banco, the double is allowed. All other merchandise pays 400 lbs., 70 lbs. of 150 to 180 lbs., 45 lbs. All black tea, 28 lbs., I 1-2 per cent. at least for sales not exceeding 150 marcs banco. tare: green, 24 lbs. For the regulation of the Stade duty, the nett It is, however, to be observed, that all augmentations, in propor- weight should likewise be mentioned in the bill of lading. tion to the amount sold, are only to be understood for sale by private Tobacco.-Lext tobacco is sold per lb. in schill. banco, agio uncer- contract. and not for those by auction and even not for such private tain; discount, I 1.2 per cent. good weight, I per cent. tare per sales, where a broker has made the purchase of a larger quantity of cask, 80 lbs. Brazil leaf in serons; tare 5 per cent. In rolls; goods above the said amount of 600 mares banco, and has afterwards canister. in baskets of about 100 lbs.; good weight, lb. per basket; divided it into smaller lots. tare, 14 lbs. if the basket is packed up in linen, and 12 lbs. if with- Conditions of Sale.-Imports.-Coflee is sold per pound in schill. out linen. Porto Rico rolls, good weight, 1 per cent. no tare, as banco discount, I per cent. good weight 1-2 per cent. Tare is as the rolls are weighed by themselves Brazil rolls, in serons of 400 follows: viz. on casks, real weight; on bags of 130 lbs. or less, 2 lbs. to 600 lbs, are sold per lb., in schillings banco good weight, 3-4 above 130 lbs. and not above 180 lbs., 3 lbs. above 180 lbs. and not per cent. tare, 8 lbs. per seron. Tobacco stems per 100 lbs., in exceeding 200 lbs., 4 lbs. On Mocha bales of about 300 Ibs., 14 lbs.; mares currency, agio uncertain; discount, 1 1-2 per cent. good if 600 lbs., 30 lbs. On Bourbon single bales, 2 lbs. on double, 4 lbs. weight, 1 per cent.; tare, if in ca-ks, real weight; if packed up Cotton is sold per lb. in schill. banco discount, 1 per cent. good with cords, 2 to 4 per cent. according to the thickness of the rope. weight, 1 per cent. tare on bales, West Indian and North American, As there is a great difference in the Stade duty for the different sorts 4 per cent.; on square bales, 6 per cent. on Bombay and Surat of tobacco, it is necessary that, on shipping leaf tobacco, there bales, 8 per cent. on Bourbon bales and Manilla serons, 6 per cent.; should be inserted in the bill of lading. Leaf Tobacco, omitting the on Caraccas and Guiana small serons, 10 per cent. For the regula- weight. With tobacco in rolls, only the number of packages con- tion of the Stade duty, all packages should be called bags, and not taining roll tobacco, and the nett weight, without mentioning the bales, in the bill of lading. number of rolls, should appear in the bill of lading. East India piece goods are sold per piece, in marcs banco; dis- Glass (window) is sold per chest, in mares currency, agio uncer- count, 1 P cent. For saving in the Stade duty, if more than 30 tain; other glass ware per piece, dozen, or hundred, in schillings or pieces are in a bale, the number of pieces should not be mentioned marcs currency, with uncertain agio discount, 1 per cent. in the bill of lading, but only the number of bales. Hares' wool is soid per 2 lbs., in marcs currency, agio uncertain Flour is sold per 100 lbs. in mares currency, uncertain agio; dis- discount, I per cent. count 1 per cent. good weight, 1 per cent. tare, 20 lbs. per barrel. Hare skins (German, grey) are sold per 100 pieces, in rixdoll. Fustic is sold per 100 lbs. in mares currency agio, 20 per cent. banco. Russian, grey. per 104 pieces, in rixdoll. banco. White, in discount, 1 per cent. good weight, 1 per cent. and frequently an marcs currency, agio uncertain discount, I per cent. allowance in weight is made, if the wood is not very solid. Iron is sold per 100 lbs., in schill. currency, agio uncertain; dis- Indigo IS sold per lb. in schill. banco discount, 1 per cent. : good count, 1 per cent. weight, 1-2 per cent. tare, if in sérons upwards of 120 lbs., 22 lbs.; Copper is sold per 100 lbs. in schill. banco discount, 1 per cent. in 1-2 serons less than 120 lbs., 20 lbs. in chests, real tare. The exchange business done at Hamburgh is very great ; for be- Logwood is sold like fustic.-N. B. To avoid a high Stade duty, sides the business of the place, most of the merchants in the inland the nett weight of all dye woods should be stated in the bills of towns have their bills negotiated there. lading. The usual charge for commission is, on sales 2 per cent. and 1 per cent. for del credere, if such guarantee be required ; on purchases, 2 per cent. Under particular agreements, the rates sometimes vary considerably from the above. Banking, Insurance, &c.-For an account of the Bank of Hamburgh, see BANKS (FOREIGN). All sorts of insurances are effected at Hamburgh. A municipal regulation compels the insurance of all houses within the city, the rate varying according to the number of fires, and the amount of loss. Marine insurance is principally effected by joint stock companies, of which there are several; their competition has reduced the premiums to the lowest level, and the business is not understood to be profitable. The high duties on policies of insurance in this country has led to the insuring of a good many English ships at Hamburgh. Life insurance is not prosecuted in Germany to any considerable extent but some of the English companies have agents here, who are said not to be very scru- pulous. Bankruptey.-Considering the vast number of merchants and a company which had lent their money improvidently on houses, trades' people at Hamburgh, bankruptcy does not seem to be of fre- &c. Much of the business transacted at Hamburgh being on com- quent occurrence. During the 3 years ending with 1821, the num- mission and for account of houses abroad, the failure of foreign mer- ber of declared bankrupts and the amount of their debts were as chants is a prevalent source of bankruptcy. Another source of under:- bankruptcy is losses on goods imported or exported on speculation, and occasionally losses in the funds, in which a good deal of gambling 1829. 1831. goes on here. Expensive living is not nearly so prevalent a source 1830. of bankruptcy here as in London and other places. Number Number Number The law of Hamburgh makes 3 classes of bankrupts;-the unfor- Amount of Amount of Amount of of Bank- of Bank- of Bank- tunate, the careless, and the fraudulent. The first class consists of Debts. Debts. Debts. those whose books show that misfortune alone has occasioned the rupts. rupts. rupla bankruptcy that the party has all along lived within bis probable income, and can account to his assignees completely for all his L. L. L. losses. Whoever is adjudged by the court to belong to this class 69 109,948 93 118,251 117 277,615 (which contains but few in number), is considered entirely free from his debts, and is not subject to be called upon hereafter. The But this account does not include the failures settled by private second and most numerous class, contains those termed "careless" compromise, and of which no public notice is taken. The increase bankrupts. These are persons who have entered into speculations in 1831 is owing, in a great measure, to the failure, for 111,000z., of exceeding their means, who have gone on for a considerable time 92 Digitized by Google 730 HANSEATIC LEAGUE. after they found their affairs in arrear, who have lived beyond their necessaries. Every 5 years the claim may be repeated. All cardons income, have not kept their box in in good order. and $0 forth. They bankrupts are disabled from holding offices of honour. The third are liab'e to be confined in prison for a period of 3 or 6 months; and, class contains the fraudulent" bankrupts, who are liable to be - provi they have not paid a dividend of 40 per cent., may be primented according to the extent of their frauds, for a limited penel called upon for payment of their debt after 5 years from their dia- or even for life, besides being rendered incapable of holding my charge. If a claim be made by any creditor after this lapse of time, office whatever. Should a bankrupt abscond, he is called upon by the bankrupt is obliged to pay whatever suni he is able for the be- public advertisement to appear by a certain day, in default of which nefit of his creditors. He must swear that he cannot pay any thing, or he is adjudged a fraudulent bankrupt, and his name is posted - as not above a certain sum, without depriving himself and his family of black board on the Exchange. Citizenship.-Foreigners cannot establish themselves as merchants, or carry on any business in their own names, at Hamburgh, without becoming burghers and to be manufacturers, they must also enter the guild or corporation peculiar to the trade they mean to follow. But to become a burgher one has only to comply with certain forms and pay certain fees. which do not, in all, exceed 10/. He then becomes, in the eye of the law, a Hamburgh subject; and enjoys all the rights and privileges of a native. General Remarks. - The trade of Hamburgh is, in a great measure, passive; that is, it depends more on the varying wants and policy of others than on its own. There is nothing of such vital importance as the free navigation of the Elbe to the prosperity of Hamburgh, and, indeed, of all the countries through which it flows. This, too, is a matter of paramount consequence as respects our interests; for the Elbe is the grand inlet by which British manufactures find their way into some of the richest and most extensive European countries. The principle that the navigation of the Elbe, the Rhine, the Weser, &c. should be quite free along their whole course, was distinctly laid down by the Congress of Vienna in 1815. But no general tariff of duties being then established, this declaration has hitherto had no practical effect. Prussia, who is endeavouring to bolster up a system of home manufactures, has laid heavy transit duties on articles passing by the Elbe, and has prevailed on Anhalt, and some of the smaller states, to follow her example. These duties amount, on some of the coarser sorts of British woollen goods, to no less than 60 per cent. ad valorem, and are, even when lightest, a great obstacle to trade. It is to be hoped that a just sense of their own real interests may, at no distant period, open the eyes of the German governments to the impolicy of such proceedings. It is in an especial manmer for the interest of Saxony, Austria, and England, that these duties should be abolished; and their influence in the diet, if properly exerted, might countervail that of Prussia. So long, however, as the Stade duties are kept up, it would be fully to imagine that much attention should be paid to our remonstrances against the Prussian duties. If we cannot prevail on Hanover to emancipate our commerce from oppressive restrictions and burdens, we need hardly expect to succeed with any other power. Were the Stade duties and those in the upper parts of the Elbe wholly abolished, we have little doubt that in a dozen years, the trade of Hamburgh would be nearly doubled an increase, which, however advantageous to her, would be far more advantageous to the extensive countries of which she is the grand emporium. In compiling this article we have made use of Oddy's European Commerce, pp. 412-439; Revders:'s European Commerce, pp. 302-320; the Dictionnaire de Commerce (Ency. Méthodique), tome 1. PP. 44-33; and of the Circulars of Berenberg, Gossler and Co., Anderson, Hober, and Co., and other eminent mer- chants. We have also been much indebted to Mr. Consul Canning's Answers to the Circular Queries. That functionary has replied to the various questions submitted to him in a way that does equal credit to his industry and Intelligence. From the circumstance of no official returns being published or ob- tainable at Hamburgh, the returns of imports given above must not be regarded as quite accurate, though the errors they involve cannot be material. They are principally taken from Berenberg and Co.'s Circular. [The commercial intercourse of the United States with Hamburgh is not at all equal to that which they carry on with Bremen, notwithstanding the larger population of the former city, and its advantages of situation on the Elbe, which is navigable from the sea up to it by merchant vessels of almost any burden. Hamburgh participates very little in the transportation of emigrants from Germany to this country. It receives from us only about 3000 hogsheads of tobacco yearly. A good deal of quercitron bark, of no great value however, is annually shipped to it from Philadelphia, either directly or by way of New York. The East India merchants of Salem, Massachusetts, send every year some of their ships, laden with teas and other goods, from Canton directly to Hamburgh, or to Cowes and a market, whence they proceed to Hamburgh, if advices from that port be favourable. Considerable quantities of Silesia linens, for which Hamburgh is the chief entrepôt in Germany, were some years ago exported to the United States, and then nearly all re-exported to South America and the West Indies. This trade is now conducted without the inter- vention of this country. The cargoes we now receive from the port of Hamburgh consist, like those from Bremen, of a variety of German manufactures imported from the interior, together with some hair-cloth made in the place itself, and used by our cabinet-makers. It is cheaper than the corresponding English article, and is of a tolerably good quality.- Am. Ed.] HANSEATIC LEAGUE, an association of the principal cities of the north of Ger- many, Prussia, &c., for the better carrying on of commerce, and for their mutual safety and defence. This confederacy, so celebrated in the early history of modern Europe, con- tributed in no ordinary degree to introduce the blessings of civilization and good government into the North. The extension and protection of commerce was, however, its main object Digitized by Google HANSEATIC LEAGUE. 731 and hence, a short account of it may not be deemed misplaced in a work of this descrip- tion. Origin and Progress of the Hanseutic League. - Hamburgh, founded by Charlemagne in the ninth, and Lubeck, founded about the middle of the twelfth century, were the earliest members of the League. The distance between them not being very considerable, and being alike interested in the repression of those disorders to which most parts of Europe, and particularly the coast of the Baltic, were a prey in the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries, they early formed an intimate political union, partly in the view of maintaining a safe intercourse by land with each other, and partly for the protection of navigation from the attacks of the pirates, with which every sea was at that time infested. There is no very distinct evidence as to the period when this alliance was consummated some ascribe its origin to the year 1169, others to the year 1200, and others to the year 1241. But the most probable opinion seems to be, that it would grow up by slow degrees, and be perfected according as the advantage derivable from it became more obvious. Such was the origin of the Hanseatic League, so called from the old Teutonic word hansa, signifying an association or confederacy. Adam of Bremen, who flourished in the eleventh century, is the earliest writer who has given any information with respect to the commerce of the countries lying round the Baltic. And from the errors into which he has fallen in describing the northern and eastern shores of that sea, it is evident they had been very little frequented and not at all known in his time. But from the beginning of the twelfth century, the progress of commerce and navi- gation in the north was exceedingly rapid. The countries which stretch along the bottom of the Baltic, from Holstein to Russia, and which had been occupied by barbarous tribes of Sclavonic origin, were then subjugated by the kings of Denmark, the dukes of Saxony, and other princes. The greater part of the inhabitants being exterminated, their place was filled by German colonists, who founded the towns of Stralsund, Rostock, Wismer, &c. Prussia and Poland were afterwards subjugated by the Christian princes and the Knights of the Teutonic Order. So that, in a comparatively short period, the foundations of civilisation and the arts were laid in countries whose barbarism had ever remained impervious to the Roman power. The cities that were established along the coast of the Baltic, and even in the interior of the countries bordering upon it, eagerly joined the Hanseatic confederation. They were indebted to the merchants of Lubeck for supplies of the commodities produced in more ci- vilised countries, and they looked up to them for protection against the barbarians by whom they were surrounded. The progress of the League was in consequence singularly rapid. Previously to the end of the thirteenth century, it embraced every considerable city in all those vast countries extending from Livonia to Holland, and was a match for the most power- ful monarchs. The Hanseatic confederacy was at its highest degree of power and splendour during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. It then comprised from 60 to 80 cities, which were distributed into 4 classes or circles. Lubeck was at the head of the first circle, and had under it Hamburgh, Bremen, Rostock, Wismar, &c. Cologne was at the head of the second circle, with 29 towns under it. Brunswick was at the head of the third circle, consisting of 13 towns. Dantzic was at the head of the fourth circle, having under it 8 towns in its vicinity, besides several that were more remote. The supreme authority of the League was vested in the deputies of the different towns assembled in congress. In it they discussed all their measures decided upon the sum that each city should contribute to the common fund and upon the questions that arose between the confederacy and other powers, as well as those that frequently arose between the different members of the confederacy. The place for the meeting of congress was not fixed, but it was most frequently held at Lubeck, which was considered as the capital of the League, and there its archives were kept. Some- times, however, congresses were held at Hamburgh, Cologne, and other towns. They met once every 3 years, or oftener if occasion required. The letters of convocation specified the principal subjects which would most probably be brought under discussion. Any one might be chosen for a deputy; and the congress consisted not of merchants only, but also of clergymen, lawyers, artists, &c. When the deliberations were concluded, the decrees were formally communicated to the magistrates of the cities at the head of each circle, by whom they were subsequently communicated to those below them and the most vigorous mea- sures were adopted for carrying them into effect. One of the burgomasters of Lubeck presided at the meetings of congress; and during the recess the magistrates of that city had the sole, or at all events the principal, direction of the affairs of the League. Besides the towns already mentioned, there were others that were denominated confed- erated cities, or allies. The latter neither contributed to the common fund of the League, nor sent deputies to Congress; even the members were not all on the same footing in respect to privileges: and the internal commotions by which it was frequently agitated, partly origi- nating in this cause, and partly in the discordant interests and conflicting pretensions of the different cities, materially impaired the power of the confederacy. But in despite of these Digitized by Google 732 HANSEATIC LEAGUE. disadvantages, the League succeeded for a lengthened period, not only in controlling its own refractory members, but in making itself respected and dreaded by others. It produced able generals and admirals, skilful politicians, and some of the most enterprising, successful, and wealthy merchants of modern times. As the power of the confederated cities was increased and consolidated, they became more ambitious. Instead of limiting their efforts to the mere advancement of commerce and their own protection, they endeavoured to acquire the monopoly of the trade of the North, and to exercise the same sort of dominion over the Baltic that the Venetians exercised over the Adriatic. For this purpose they succeeded in obtaining, partly in return for loans of money, and partly by force, various privileges and immunities form the northern sovereigns, which secured to them almost the whole foreign commerce of Scandinavia, Denmark, Prussia, Poland, Russia, &c. They exclusively carried on the herring fishery of the Sound, at the same time that they endeavoured to obstruct and hinder the navigation of foreign vessels in the Baltic. It should, however, be observed, that the immunities they enjoyed were mostly indispensable to the security of their commerce, in consequence of the barbarism that then prevailed; and notwithstanding their attempts at monopoly, there cannot be the shadow of a doubt that the progress of civilisation in the North was prodigiously accelerated by the influ- ence and ascendancy of the Hanseatic cities. They repressed piracy by sea and robbery by land, which must have broken out again had their power been overthrown before civilisation was fully established they accustomed the inhabitants to the principles, and set before them the example, of good government and subordination; they introduced amongst them conve- niences and enjoyments unknown by their ancestors, or despised by them, and inspired them with a taste for literature and science; they did for the people round the Baltic, what the Phoenicians had done in remoter ages for those round the Mediterranean, and deserve, equally with them, to be placed in the first rank amongst the benefactors of mankind. In order," as has been justly observed, to accomplish their purpose of rendering the Baltic a large field for the prosecution of commercial and industrious pursuits, it was neces- sary to instruct men, still barbarous, in the rudiments of industry, and to familiarise them in the principles of civilisation. These great principles were laid by the confederation, and at the close of the fifteenth century the Baltic and the neighbouring seas had, by its means, become frequented routes of communication between the North and the South. The people of the former were enabled to follow the progress of the latter in knowledge and industry. The forests of Sweden, Poland, &c. gave place to corn, hemp, and flax the mines were wrought, and in return the produce and manufactures of the South were imported. Towns and villages were erected in Scandinavia, where huts only were before seen: the skins of the bear and the wolf were exchanged for woollens, linens, and silks: learning was introduced; and printing was hardly invented before it was practised in Denmark, Sweden, &c."-(Cat- teau, Tableau de la Mer Baltique, tom. ii. p. 175.) The kings of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway were frequently engaged in hostflities with the Hanse towns. They regarded, and, it must be admitted, not without pretty good reason, the privileges acquired by the League, in their kingdoms, as so many usurpations. But their efforts to abolish these privileges served, for more than 2 centuries, only to augment and extend them. On the part of the League there was union, subordination, and money whereas the half- savage Scandinavian monarchies were full of divisions, factions, and troubles; revolution was immediately followed by revolution, and feudal anarchy was at its height. There was another circumstance, not less important, in favour of the Hanseatic cities. The popular governments established amongst them possessed the respect and confidence of the inhabitants, and were able to direct the public energies for the good of the state. The astonishing prosperity of the confederated cities was not wholly the effect of commerce. To the undisciplined armies of the princes of the North-armies composed of vassals without attachment to their lords-the cities opposed, besides the inferior nobles, whose services they liberally rewarded, citizens accustomed to danger, and resolved to defend their liberties and property. Their military operations were combined and directed by a council composed of men of tried talents and experience, devoted to their country, responsible to their fellow citizens, and enjoying their confidence. It was chiefly, however, on their marine forces that the cities depended. They employed their ships indifferently in war or commerce, so that their naval armaments were fitted out at comparatively small expense. Exclusive, too, of these favourable circumstances, the fortifications of the principal cities were looked upon as impregnable: and as their com- merce supplied them abundantly with all sorts of provisions, it need not excite our astonish- ment that Lubeck alone was able to carry on wars with the surrounding monarchs, and to terminate them with honour and advantage; and still less that the League should long have enjoyed a decided preponderance in the North."-(L'Art de vérifier les Dates, 3ᵐᵉ partie, tom. viii. p. 204.) The extirpation of piracy was one of the objects which had originally led to the formation of the League, and which it never ceased to prosecute. Owing, however, to the barbarism then 80 universally prevalent, and the countenance openly given by many princes and nobles HANSEATIC LEAGUE. 733 to those engaged in this infamous profession, it was not possible wholly to root it out. But the vigorous efforts of the League to abate the nuisance, though not entirely successful, served to render the navigation of the North Sea and the Baltic comparatively secure, and were of signal advantage to commerce. Nor was this the only mode in which the power of the confederacy was directly employed to promote the common interests of mankind. Their exertions to protect shipwrecked mariners from the atrocities to which they had been subject, and to procure the restitution of shipwrecked property to its legitimate owners,* though, most probably, like their exertions to repress piracy, a consequence of selfish considerations, were in no ordinary degree meritorious; and contributed not less to the advancement of civilisation than to the security of navigation. Factories belonging to the League.-In order to facilitate and extend their commercial transactions, the League established various factories in foreign countries; the principal of which were at Novogorod in Russia, London, Bruges in the Netherlands, and Bergen in Norway. Novogorod, situated at the confluence of the Volkof with the Imler Lake,"was, for a lengthened period, the most renowned emporium in the north-eastern parts of Europe. In the beginning of the eleventh century, the inhabitants obtained considerable privileges that laid the foundation of their liberty and prosperity. Their sovereigns were at first subordinate to the grand dukes or czars of Russia; but as the city and the contiguous territory increased in population and wealth, they gradually usurped an almost absolute independency. The power of these sovereigns over their subjects seems, at the same time, to have been exceed- ingly limited and, in effect, Novogorod ought rather to be considered as a republic under the jurisdiction of an elective magistrate, than as a state subject to a regular line of hereditary monarchs, possessed of extensive prerogatives. During the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries, Novogorod formed the grand entrepôt between the countries to the east of Poland and the Haneeatic cities. Its fairs were frequented by an immense concourse of people from all the surrounding countries, as well as by numbers of merchants from the Hanse towns, who engrossed the greater part of its foreign commerce, and who furnished its markets with the manufactures and products of distant countries. Novogorod is said to have contained, during its most flourishing period, towards the middle of the fifteenth century, upwards of 400,000 souls. This, however, is most probably an exaggeration. But its dominions were then very extensive; and its wealth and power seemed so great and well established, and the city itself so impregnable, as to give rise to a proverb, Who can resist the Gods and great Novogorod ? Quis contra Deos et magnam Novogordiam Coxe's Travels in the North of Europe, vol. ii. p. 80.) But its power and prosperity were far from being so firmly established as its eulogists, and those who had only visited its faire, appear to have supposed. In the latter part of the fif- teenth century, Ivan Vassilievitch, czar of Russia, having secured his dominions against the inroads of the Tartars, and extended his empire by the conquest of some of the neighbouring principalities, asserted his right to the principality of Novogorod, and supported his preten- sions by a formidable army. Had the inhabitants been animated by the spirit of unanimity and patriotism, they might have defied his efforts; but their dissensions facilitated their con- quest, and rendered them an easy prey. Having entered the city at the head of his troops, Ivan received from the citizens the charter of their liberties, which they either wanted courage or inclination to defend, and carried off an enormous bell to Moscow, that has been long re- garded with a sort of superstitious veneration as the palladium of the city. But notwith- standing the despotism to which Novogorod was subject, during the reigns of Ivan and his successors, it continued for a considerable period to be the largest as well as most commercial city in the Russian empire. The famous Richard Chancellour, who passed through Novo- gorod in 1554, in his way from the Court of the Czar, says, that next unto Moscow, the city of Novogorod is reputed the chiefest of Russia; for although it be in majestie inferior to it, yet in greatness it goeth beyond it. It is the chiefest and greatest mart town of all Mus- covy and albeit the emperor's seat is not there, but at Moscow, yet the commodiousness of the river falling into the Gulf of Finland, whereby it is well frequented by merchants, makes it more famous than Moscow itself." But the scourge of the destroyer soon after fell on this celebrated city. Ivan IV., having discovered, in 1570, a correspondence between soine of the principal citizens and the King of Poland, relative to a surrender of the city into his hands, punished them in the most in- human manner. The slaughter by which the bloodthirsty barbarian sought to satisfy his re- venge was alike extensive and indiscriminating. The crime of a few citizens was made a pretext for the massacre of 25,000 or 30,000. Novogorod never recovered from this dreadful blow. It still, however, continued to be a place of considerable trade, until the foundation of Petersburgh, which immediately became the seat of that commerce that had formerly centred * A series of resolutions were unanimously agreed to by the merchants frequenting the port of Wisby, one of the principal emporiums of the League, in 1287, providing for the restoration of ship- wrecked property to its original owners, and threatening to eject from the consodalitate mercatorum," any city that did not act conformably to the regulations laid down. VoL. I.-3 Digitized by Google 734 HANSEATIC LEAGUE. at Novogorod. The degradation of this ill-fated city is now complete. It is at present in inconsiderable place, with a population of about 7,000 or 8,000 and is remarkable only for its history and antiquities. The merchants of the Hanse towns, or Hansards, as they were then commonly termed, were established in London at a very early period, and their factory here was of considerable magnitude and importance. They enjoyed various privileges and immunities; they were permitted to govern themselves by their own laws and regulations; the custody of one of the gates of the city (Bishopsgate) was committed to their care; and the duties on various sorts of imported commodities were considerably reduced in their favour. These privileges neces- sarily excited the ill-will and animosity of the English merchants. The Hansards were every now and then accused of acting with bad faith; of introducing commodities as their own that were really the produce of others, in order to enable them to evade the duties with which they ought to have been charged; of capriciously extending the list of towns belonging to the association and obstructing the commerce of the English in the Baltic. Efforts were continually making to bring these disputes to a termination; but as they really grew out of the privileges granted to and claimed by the Hansards, this was found to be impossible. The latter were exposed to many indignities; and their factory, which was situated in Thames Street, was not unfrequently attacked. The League exerted themselves vigorously in de- fence of their privileges; and having declared war against England, they succeeded in ex- cluding our vessels from the Baltic, and acted with such energy, that Edward IV. was glad to come to an accommodation with them, on terms which were any thing but honourable to the English. In the treaty for this purpose, negotiated in 1474, the privileges of the mer- chants of the Hanse towns were renewed. and the king assigned to them, in absolute pro- perty, a large space of ground, with the buildings upon it, in Thames Street, denominated the Steel Yard, whence the Hanse merchants have been commonly denominated the Association of the Steel Yard; the property of their establishments at Boston and Lynn was also secured to them; the king engaged to allow no stranger to participate in their privileges; one of the articles bore that the Hanse merchants should be no longer subject to the judges of the English Admiralty Court, but that a particular tribunal should be formed for the easy and speedy settlement of all disputes that might arise between them and the English; and it was further agreed that the particular privileges awarded to the Hanse merchants should be pub- lished as often as the latter judged proper, in all the sea-port towns of England, and such Englishmen as infringed upon them should be punished. In return for these concessions the English acquired the liberty of freely trading in the Baltic, and especially in the port of Dantzic and in Prussia. In 1498, all direct commerce with the Netherlands being suspended, the trade fell into the hands of the Hanse merchants, whose commerce was in consequence very greatly extended. But, according as the spirit of commercial enterprise awakened in the nation, and as the benefits resulting from the prosecution of foreign trade came to be better known, the privileges of the Hanse merchants became more and more obnoxious. They were in consequence considerably modified in the reigns of Henry VII. and Henry VIII., and were at length wholly abolished in 1597.-(Anderson's Hist. Com. Anno 1474, &c.) The different individuals belonging to the factory in London, as well as those belonging to the other factories of the League, lived together at a common table, and were enjoined to observe the strictest celibacy. The direction of the factory in London was entrusted to an alderman, 2 assessors, and 9 councillors. The latter were sent by the cities forming the different classes into which the League was divided. The business of these functionaries was to devise means for extending and securing the privileges and commerce of the association; to watch over the operations of the merchants; and to adjust any disputes that might arise amongst the members of the confederacy, or between them and the English. The league endeavoured at all times to promote, as much as possible, the employment of their own ships. In pursuance of this object, they went so far, in 1447, as to forbid the importation of English merchandise into the confederated cities, except by their own vessels. But a regulation of this sort could not be carried into full effect; and was enforced or modified according as cir- cumstances were favourable or adverse to the pretensions of the League. Its very existence was, however, an insult to the English nation and the irritation produced by the occasional attempts to act upon it, contributed materially to the subversion of the privileges the Hanseatic merchants had acquired amongst us. By means of their factory at Bergen, and of the privileges which had been either granted to or usurped by them, the League enjoyed for a lengthened period the monopoly of the com- merce of Norway. But the principal factory of the League was at Bruges in the Netherlands. Bruges be came, at a very early period, one of the first commercial cities of Europe, and the centre of the most extensive trade carried on to the north of Italy. The art of navigation in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries was so imperfect, that a voyage from Italy to the Baltic and back again could not be performed in a single season; and hence, for the sake of their mutual convenience, the Italian and Hanseatic merchants determined on establishing a ma- gazine or store-house of their respective products in some intermediate situation. Bruges Digitized by Google HARBOUR. 735 was fixed upon for this purpose a distinction which it seems to have owed as much to the freedom enjoyed by the inhabitants, and the liberality of the government of the Low Coun- tries, as to the conveniency of its situation. In consequence of this preference, Bruges speedily rose to the very highest rank among commercial cities, and became a place of vast wealth. It was at once a staple for English wool, for the woollen and linen manufactures of the Netherlands, for the timber, hemp, and flax, pitch and tar, tallow, corn, fish, ashes, &c. of the North; and for the spices and Indian commodities, as well as their domestic ma- nufactures imported by the Italian merchants. The fairs of Bruges were the best frequented of any in Europe. Ludovico Guicciardini mentions, in his Description of the Low Coun- tries, that in the year 1318, no fewer than 5 Venetian galleases, vessels of very considerable burden, arrived in Bruges in order to dispose of their cargoes at the fair. The Hanseatic merchants were the principal purchasers of Indian commodities; they disposed of them in the ports of the Baltic, or carried them up the great rivers into the heart of Germany. The vivifying effects of this commerce were every where felt; the regular intercourse opened be- tween the nations in the north and south of Europe made them sensible of their mutual wants, and gave a wonderful stimulus to the spirit of industry. This was particularly the case with regard to the Netherlands. Manufactures of wool and flax had been established in that country as early as the age of Charlemagne; and the resort of foreigners to their markets, and the great additional vent that was thus opened for their manufactures, made them be carried on with a vigour and success that had been hitherto unknown. These cir- cumstances, combined with the free spirit of their institutions, and the moderation of the government, so greatly promoted every elegant and useful art, that the Netherlands early be- came the most civilised, best cultivated, richest, and most populous country of Europe. Decline of the Hanseatic League.-From the middle of the fifteenth century, the power of the confederacy, though still very formidable, began to decline. This was not owing to any misconduct on the part of its leaders, but to the progress of that improvement it had done so much to promote. The superiority enjoyed by the League resulted as much from the anarchy, confusion, and barbarism that prevailed throughout the kingdoms of the North, as from the good government and order that distinguished the towns. But a distinction of this sort could not be permanent. The civilisation which had been at first confined to the cities, gradually spread from them, as from so many centres, over the contiguous country. Feudal anarchy was every where superseded by a system of subordination; arts and indus- try were diffused and cultivated and the authority of government was at length firmly es- tablished. This change not only rendered the princes, over whom the League had so fre- quently triumphed, superior to it in power; but the inhabitants of the countries amongst which the confederated cities were scattered, having learned to entertain a just sense of the advantages derivable from commerce and navigation, could not brook the superiority of the association, or bear to see its members in possession of immunities of which they were de- prived and in addition to these circumstances, which must speedily have occasioned the dissolution of the League, the interests of the different cities of which it consisted became daily more and more opposed to each other. Lubeck, Hamburgh, Bremen, and the towns in their vicinity, were latterly the only ones that had any interest in its maintenance. The cities in Zealand and Holland joined it, chiefly because they would otherwise have been ex- cluded from the commerce of the Baltic; and those of Prussia, Poland, and Russia did the same, because, had they not belonged to it, they would have been shut out from all inter- course with strangers. When, however, the Zealanders and Hollanders became sufficiently powerful at sea to be able to vindicate their right to the free navigation of the Baltic by force of arms, they immediately seceded from the League; and no sooner had the ships of the Dutch, the English, &c. begun to trade directly with the Polish and Prussian Hanse towns, than these nations also embraced the first opportunity of withdrawing from it. The fall of this great confederacy was really, therefore, a consequence of the improved state of society, and of the development of the commercial spirit in the different nations of Europe. It was most serviceable so long as those for whom its merchants acted as factors and carriers were too barbarous, too much occupied with other matters, or destitute of the necessary capital and skill, to act in these capacities for themselves. When they were in a situation to do this, the functions of the Hanseatic merchants ceased as a matter of course; their confede- racy fell to pieces; and at the middle of the seventh century the cities of Lubeck, Hamburgh, and Bremen were all that continued to acknowledge the authority of the League. Even to this day they preserve the shadow of its power; being acknowledged in the act for the esta- blishment of the Germanic confederation, signed at Vienna, the 8th of June, 1815, as free Hanseatic cities.-(From an article in No. 13, of the Foreign Quarterly Review, contri- buted by the author of this work.) HARBOUR, HAVEN, OR PORT, a piece of water communicating with the sea, or with a navigable river or lake, having depth sufficient to float ships of considerable burden, where there is convenient anchorage, and where ships may lie, load, and unload, screened from the winds, and without the reach of the tide. Qualities of a good Harbour.- There is every variety in the form and quality of har- Digitized by Google 736 HARBOURS. bours. They are either natural or artificial but, however formed, a good harbour should have sufficient depth of water to admit the largest ships at all times of the tide it should be easy of access, without having too wide an entrance the bottom should be clean and good; and ships should be able to lie close alongside quaysor piers, that the expense and inconvenience of loading and unloading by means of lighters may be avoided. Ships lying in a harbour that is land-locked, and surrounded by high grounds or buildings, are, at once, without the reach of storms, tides, and currents; and may, in most cases, be easily protected from hostile attacks. Bar harbours are those that have bars or banks at their entrances, and do not, therefore, admit of the ingress or egress of large ships except at high water. These are most commonly river harbours; the sand and mud brought down by the stream, and driven back by the waves, naturally forming a bar or bank at their mouths. Best British Harbours. - Good harbours are of essential importance to a maritime nation; and immense sums have been expended in all countries ambitious of naval or commercial greatness in their improvement and formation. Portsmouth, Milford Haven, and the Cove of Cork are the finest harbours in the British islands, being surpassed by very few, if any, in the world. Of these, Portsmouth is entitled to the pre-eminence. This admirable har- bour is about as wide at its mouth as the Thames at Westminster Bridge, expanding within into a noble basin, almost sufficient to contain the whole navy of Great Britain. Its entrance is unobstructed by any bar or shallow; and it has, throughout, water adequate to float the largest men of war at the lowest tides. The anchorage ground is excellent, and it is entirely free from sunken rocks, sand banks, or any similar obstructions. The western side of the harbour is formed by the island of Portsea ; and on its south-western extremity, at the entrance to the harbour is situated the town of Portsmouth, and its large and important suburb Portsea. Here are docks and other establishments for the building, repair, and outfit of ships of war, constructed upon a very large scale, and furnished with every conveniency. The fortifications that protect this great naval dépôt, are superior, both as respects strength and extent, to any other in the kingdom. "Thus," to use the words of Dr. Campbell, it appears that Portsmouth derives from nature all the prerogatives the most fertile wits and most intelligent judges could devise or desire; and that these have been well seconded by art, without consideration of expense, which, in national improvements, is little to be regarded. Add to all this, the striking excellence of its situation, which is such as if Providence had expressly determined it for that use to which we see it applied, - the bridling the power of France, and, if I may so speak, the peculiar residence of Neptune." - (Survey of Great Britain, vol. i. p. 370.) Portsmouth harbour has the additional and important advantage of opening into the cele- brated road of Spithead, between the Hampshire coast and the Isle of Wight, forming a safe and convenient retreat for the largest fleets. Milford Haven deeply indents the southern part of Pembrokeshire.. It is of great extent, and has many subordinate bays, creeks, and roads. The water is deep and the anchorage ground excellent; and being completely land-locked, ships lie as safely as if they were in dock. Cork harbour has a striking resemblance to that of Portsmouth, but is of larger extent; it has, like it, a narrow entrance, leading into a capacious basin, affording a secure asylum for any number of ships. Plymouth, which, after Portsmouth, is the principal naval dépôt of England, has an admirable double harbour. The roadstead in Plymouth Sound has recently been much improved by the construction, at a vast expense, of a stupendous breakwater more than 1,700 yards in length. This artificial bulwark protects the ships lying inside from the effects of the heavy swell thrown into the Sound by southerly and south-easterly winds. London stands at the head of the river ports of Great Britain. Considering the limited course of the Thames, there is, probably, no river that is navigable for large ships at so great a distance from the sea, or whose mouth is less obstructed by banks. London is mainly indebted for the unrivalled magnitude of her commerce to her favourable situation on this noble river; which not only gives her all the advantages of an excellent port, accessible at all times to the largest ships, but renders her the emporium of the extensive, rich, and popu- lous country comprised in the basin of the Thames. The Mersey, now the second commercial river in the empire, is more incommoded by banks than the Thames and is in all respects inferior, as a channel of navigation, to the latter. Still, however, it gives to Liverpool very great advantages; and the new channel that has recently been discovered in the banks promises to be of much importance in facilitating the access to and from the port. Bristol and Hull are both river ports. Owing to the extraordinary rise of the tide in the Bristol Channel, the former is accessible to the largest ships. The Humber is a good deal impeded by banks; but it is also navigable as far as Hull, by very large vessels. The Tyne admits vessels of very considerable burden as far as Newcastle, which, next to London, is the most important port, for the extent of the shipping belonging to it, of any in the empire. Digitized by Google HARDWARE. 737 The shallowness of the Clyde from Greenock up to Glasgow has been a serious draw- back upon the commercial progress of the latter. Large sums have been expended in attempts to contract the course and to deepen the bed of the river; and they have been 80 far successful, that vessels of 150 tons burden may now, generally speaking, ascend to the city at all times of the tide. But there seems little probability of its ever becoming suitable for the navigation of ships of pretty large burden. Generally speaking, the harbours on the east coasts, both of Great Britain and Ireland, are, with the exception of the Thames, very inferior to those on the south and west coasts. Several harbours on the shores of Sussex, Kent, Lincoln, &c., that once admitted pretty large ships, are now completely choked up by sand. Large sums have been expended upon the ports of Yarmouth, Boston, Sunderland, Leith, Dundee, Aberdeen, &c. Dublin har- bour being naturally bad, and obstructed by a bar, a new harbour has been formed, at a great expense, at Kingstown, without the bar, in deep water. There has also been a large outlay upon the harbours of Donaghadee, Portpatrick, &c. For an account of the shipping belonging to the different ports of Great Britain and Ire- land, the reader is referred to the article SHIPS in this work. The charges on account of Docks, Pilotage, &c. are specified under these articles. Foreign Harbours and Ports.-The reader will find the principal foreign commercial harbours described in this work at considerable length under their respective titles. The principal French ports for the accommodation of men of war are Brest, Toulon, and Cher- bourg. The latter has been very greatly improved by the construction of a gigantic break- water, and the excavation of immense basins. Besides Cadiz, the principal ports for the Spanish navy are Ferrol and Carthagena. Cronstadt is the principal rendezvous of the Russian navy; Landscrona of that of Sweden; and the Helder of that of Holland. Law of England as to Harbours.-The anchorage, &c. of ships was regulated by several statutes. But most of these regulations have been repealed, modified, or re-enacted by the 54 Geo. 3. C. 149. This act authorises the Admiralty to provide for the moorings of his Majesty's ships; and prohibits any private ship from fastening thereto. It further authorizes the Admiralty to prohibit the breaming of any ship or vessel at any place or places on shore they may think fit and to point out the places where private ships shall deposit the gunpowder they may have on board exceeding 5 lbs.-(Φ 6.) It prohibite the use of any fire on board any ship or vessel that is being breamed in any port, harbour, or haven, between the hours of 11 in the evening and 5 in the morning, from the 1st of October to the 31st of March inclusive, and between the hours of 11 in the evening and 4 in the morning, from the 1st of April to the 30th of September inclusive: and it prohibits the melting or boiling of any pitch, tar, tallow, &c. within 250 yards of any of his Majesty's ships, or of his Majesty's dock-yards. By another section, the keeping of guns shotted, and the firing of the same in any port, is prohibited under a penalty of 5a. for every gun kept shotted, and 10s. for every gun discharged. 9.) The sweeping or creeping for anchors, &c. within the distance of 150 yards of any of his Majesty's ships of war, or of his Majesty's moorings, is prohibited under a penalty of 10l. for every offence.-(d 10.) The loading and unloading of ballast is also regulated by this statute; but for the provisions with respect to it,see BALLAST. HARDWARE (Ger. Kurze waaren; Du. Yzerkramery; Da. Isenkramvarer Sw. Jürnkram; Fr. Clinquaillerie, Quincaillerie; It. Chincaglio; Sp. Quinquilleria; Port. Quincalharia; Rus. Mjelotzchnue towarii), includes every kind of goods manufactured from metals, comprising iron, brass, steel, and copper articles of all descriptions. Birmingham and Sheffield are the principal seats of the British hardware manufactures; and from these, immense quantities of knives, razors, scissars, gilt and plated ware, fire-arms, &c. are sup- plied, as well for exportation to most parts of the world, as for home consumption. The hardware manufacture is one of the most important carried on in Great Britain and from the abundance of iron, tin, and copper ores in this country, and our inexhaustible coal mines, it is one which seems to be established on a very secure foundation. The late Mr. Stevenson, in his elaborate and excellent article on the statistics of England, in the Edin- burgh Encyclopædia, published in 1815, estimated the value of all the articles made of iron at 10,000,000L, and the persons employed in the trade at 200,000. Mr. Stevenson esti- mated the value of all the articles made of brass and copper at 3,000,000/., and the persons employed at 50,000: and he further estimated the value of steel, plated, and hardware arti- cles, including toys, at 4,000,000/., and the persons employed at 70,000. So that, assuming these estimates to be nearly correct, the total value of the goods produced from different sorts of metals in England and Wales, in 1815, must have amounted to the sum of 17,000,000L, and the persons employed to 320,000. There is reason to believe that this estimate, in 80 far, at least, as respects the value of the manufacture, was at the time rather too high; but at this moment it is most probably within the mark. There has been a very extraordinary augmentation of the quantity of bar and pig iron produced within the last 15 years and the rapid increase of Birmingham and Sheffield, as well as of the smaller seats of the hardware manufacture, shows that it has been increased in a corresponding proportion. We have been assured, by those well ac- quainted with most departments of the trade, that if to the iron and other hardware manu- factures of England be added those of Scotland, their total aggregate value cannot now be 2 Q z 93 Digitized by Google 738 HARPOONER. HATS. reckoned at less than 17,500,000/. a year, affording direct employment, in the various de- partments of the trade, for at least 360,000 persons. Fall of Prices.-Owing partly to the reduced cost of iron, but incomparably more to in- provements in manufacturing, a very extraordinary fall has taken place in the price of most hardware articles during the last 12 or 15 years. In some articles the fall exceeds 80 per cent. and there are few in which it does not exceed 30 per cent. In consequence, the poorest individuals are now able to supply themselves with an infinite variety of commo- dious and useful articles, which half a century ago, were either wholly unknown, or were too dear to be purchased by any but the richer classes. And those who reflect on the im- portance of the prevalence of habits of cleanliness and neatness will readily agree with us in thinking that the substitution of the convenient and beautiful hardware and earthenware household articles, that are now every where to be met with, for the wooden and horn arti- cles used by our ancestors, has been in no ordinary degree advantageous. But it is not in this respect only that the cheapness and improvement of hardware is essential. Many of the most powerful and indispensable tools and instruments used by the labourer come under this description and every one is aware how important it is that they should be at once cheap and efficient. Account of the real or declared Value of the different Articles of Hardware exported from Great Bri- tain to Foreign Countries, during the Year ended 5th of January, 1833. £ 8. d. Brass and copper manufuctures - - - - - - 916,226 4 9 Hardware and cutlery - - - - - - - - 1,433,297 17 5 Iron and steel, wrought and unwrought - - - - - 1,189,250 10 2 Mathematical and optical instruments - - - - - 16,430 18 5 Plate. plated ware, jewellery, and watches - - - - - 173,617 13 1 Tin and pewter wares (exclusive of unwrought tin) - - - 243,191 5 10 Total - - - - £3,972,014 x 8 The exports of the same articles during the year ended 5th of January, 1820, were as follows :- £ s. d. Brass and copper manufactures - - - - - - 653,859 13 5 Hardware and cutlery - - - - - - - 1,459,510 19 7 Iron and steel, wrought and unwrought (mathematical instruments not specified) 924,448 8 I Tin and pewter wares (exclusive of unwrought tin) - - - 187,811 10 7 Total - - - - £2,915,630 11 S Increase of the exports of 1832 over those of 1819 - - - - £1,056,382 18 0 The East Indies and China are by far the most important markets for our brass and copper manu- factures. The total exports of these articles, in 1631, amounted to 803,1241.; of which they took 348,0451., the United States 169,5631., and France 91,580L. Of the total exports of hardware and cutlery in 1831, amounting to 1,622,4291. the United States took no less than 998,469/.! The British possessions in North America and the West Indies were the next most important customers ; but the exports to them both did not amount to 190,000Γ. The United States, and the possessions now referred to, take the greatest quantity of iron and steel ; the exports to the former, in 1831, being 218,7071., and those to the latter 245,2231. The United States take nearly a half of our exports of plate and plated ware, &c. HARPOONER, the man that throws the harpoon in fishing for whales. By 35 Geo. 3. c. 92. § 34., no harpooner, line manager, or boat steerer, belonging to any ship or vessel fitted out for the Greenland or Southern whale fisheries, shall be impressed from the said service; but shall be privileged from being impressed so long as he shall belong to, and be employed on board, any ship or vessel whatever in the fisheries aforesaid. HATS (Ger. Hüte; Du. Hoeden; Fr. Chapeaux; It. Cappelli; Sp. Sombreros; Rus. Schlopü), coverings for the head in very general use in Great Britain and many other coun- tries, and known to every body. They are made of very various forms and sorts of mate- rial. They may, however, be divided into two great classes, viz. those made of fur, wool, silk, &c., and those made of straw; the former being principally worn by men, and the latter by women. HATS (Fur, WOOL, ETC.)-The manufacture of this description of hats, which is one of very considerable importance and value, was first noticed as belonging to England in the 14th century, in reference to the exportation of rabbit or coney skins from the Netherlands. About a century afterwards (1463), the importation of hats was prohibited. A duty of 10s. 6d. a hat was substituted for this absolute prohibition in 1816, and is still continued. The following instructive details with respect to the species of hats manufactured, their value, &c., have been obtained from the highest practical authority and may, we believe, be safely relied on:- 1. Stuff Hats.-This term is applied by the trade only to the best description of hats, or to those brought to the highest perfection in London. Since the introduction of "waterproofing." is is found unnecessary to use 80 valuable a material as beaver in the foundation or frame-work of the best hats. Instead of it, fine seasoned backs of English coney wool, red Vigonia wool, Dutch carroted coney wool, and a small quantity of fine Saxony lamb's wool, are employed with equal advantage. The covering, i.e. the "napping," of the best qualities is a mixture of check beaver, with white and Digitized by Google HATS. 739 brown stage beaver, or seasoned beaver, commonly called wooms." Inferior stuffs are napped with mixtures of stage beaver, nutria, hares' wool, and musquash. Of late years, hats have been much reduced in weight. This is principally owing to the new me- thod of waterproofing," which is effected in the bodies of the hats prior to their being napped. The elastic properties of the gums employed for this purpose, when dissolved in pure spirits of wine, give a body to the stuffs which allows a good deal of their weight to be dispensed with. Not 20 years ago, 96 ounces of stuff were worked up into 1 dozen ordinary sized hats for gentlemen; at present, from 33 to 34 ounces only are required to complete the same quantity. It is proper to ob- serve that the heavy duty on English spirits of wine is very injurious to the manufacture, as it causes the employment of inferior dissolvents, as naphtha and gas spirit, which injure the gums. The manufacture of the best hats employs in London nearly 1,000 makers and finishers, besides giving employment to nearly 3,000 men in Gloucestershire and Derbyshire, in body-making and ruf- fing. The gross returns amount to about 640,000Z. 2. Plated Hats.-Next to fine hats are those designated " plated," so called from the plate, or nap- ping, being of a distinct or superior nature to the foundation or body. The latter is generally formed of Kent, Spanish, or Shopshire wool; while the former consists of a mixture of fine beaver, hares' wool, musquash, nutria, and English back wool. From the cheapness of coal and the purity of the water in Lancashire, Cheshire, and Staffordshire, the whole of the plating trade is engrossed by them. The men employed in the 3 counties, including apprentices, do not exceed 3,000. The total amount of returns amount to about 1,080,000L., inclusive of bonnets, and children's fancy beaver hats. 3. Felt Hats and Cordies are the coarsest species, being made wholly of Kent, Shropshire, and Italian wools. Cordies are distinguished by a fine covering of camel or goat hair. A very large trade was at one time carried on in these articles: but since the introduction of caps, and the manufacture of infe- rior plates, the returns have sunk from 1,000,000L. to scarcely 150,000L.! Atherstone, Rudgeley, Bristol, and Newcastle-under-Line, are the principal places where they are manufactured. 4. Silk Hats, made from silk, plush, or shag, manufactured at Coventry, Banbury, and Spitalfields, form, at present, a very important branch of the hat trade. Many thousand dozens are exported to Italy, Gibraltar, the Cape, Sydney, and Van Diemen's Land. Little progress was made in this arti- cle for the first quarter of a century after its invention, in consequence of the hard appearance which the cane and willow frame-work necessarily gave the hats; but now that beaver hat bodies have been used, as well as those of lawn and muslin, this difficulty has been overcome, and silk hats have as soft an outline and as great a variety of shapes as beaver hats. London alone produces nearly 150,000 dozen silk hats annually and the quantity manufactured in Manchester, Liverpool, Birming- ham, and Glasgow, is estimated at upwards of 100,000 dozen more, making a total of above 250,000 dozen. Large quantities of the wool shells, used as the foundations or frame-work, are made in Ire- land by the aid of machinery. The workmen are distinct from beaver hatters and, owing to the competition of labourers, the trade has advanced in a greater ratio. This branch gives employment to about 3,000 men. 5. Machinery, as applied to Hats.-Mr. Williams, an American, introduced, a few years since, ma- chinery for the bowing, breaking up, and felting wools for hats. The opposition of the journeymen body-makers, who refused to assist in the necessary process termed busining, caused it to be laid aside it is now used only in the preparation of the shells required for silk hats, which, as already observed, are principally made in Ireland. Mr. Edward Ollerenshaw, of Manchester, began, in 1824, the finishing of hats by the aid of machi- nery, but the pertinacious opposition of the men prevented his accomplishing this desirable object. Lately, Mr. Johnson of Edinburgh obtained a patent for machinery calculated to effect very important improvements in the art of ruffing or covering the bodies of hats. But we understand that the oppo- sition of the workmen has, also, made him lay aside his invention. 6. Summary of Results. Hats. Value. Declared Value of Hats exported, 1832. L. & d. L. 8. d. Plated 1,080,000 0 0 All sorts, 62,854 dozen 170,188 0 0 Stuffs 640,000 0 0 Wools* 160,000 0 0 Official Value. Silk 540,000 0 0 Beaver and felts 114,963 0 0 All other 14,377 0 0 L. 2,420,000 0 0 Total number of men employed in the manufacture of beaver hats 17,000 Including felted caps for soldiers. Ditto, silk hats 3,000 HATS (STRAW).-It is most probable that the idea of plaiting straws was first suggested by the making of baskets of osiers and willow, alluded to by Virgil, in his Pastorals, as one of the pursuits of the agricultural population of Italy. We are ignorant of the period when the manufacture of straw plait first became of importance in that country but it ap- pears from Coryat's Crudities, published in 1611, that the most delicate strawen hats" were worn by both men and women in many places of Piedmont, many of them having at least an hundred seames." It is evident, therefore, that the art of straw plaiting must have arrived at great perfection upwards of two centuries since; but it does not appear to have been followed in England for more than 60 or 70 years, as it is within the remem- brance of some of the old inhabitants of the straw districts, now alive, that the wives and daughters of the farmers used to plait straw for making their own bonnets, before straw plaiting became established as a manufacture. In fact, the custom, among the women in England, of wearing bonnets at all, is comparatively modern : it is not yet 100 years since " hoods and pinners" were generally worn, and it was only the ladies of quality who wore small silk hats.-(See Mulcolm's Manners and Customs.) British Plait.-The straw plait district comprises the counties of Bedford, Hertford, and Bucking- ham, being the most favourable for the production of the wheat straw, which is the material chiefly used in England. The manufacture is also followed in some places in Essex and Suffolk, but very partially in other counties. During the late war, the importation of straw hats from Leghorn having in a great measure ceased, an extraordinary degree of encouragement was given to our domestic ma- nufacture, and a proportional degree of comfort was derived by the agricultural labourers in these places, by the wives and children of whom it was chiefly followed. This produced competition, and led to an improvement of the plat by splitting the straw, which had formerly been used entire-to a more careful selection of the straw itself-and also to improvements in finishing and bleaching. So successful was straw plaiting at this period, that h has been ascertained that women have earned as Digitized by Google 740 HATS. much as 22s. a week for their labour. (See Evidence on the Poor Laws, p. 277.) But at the conclusion of the war, Leghorn hats again came into the market; and from their superiority in fineness. colour, and durability, they speedily acquired a preference over our home manufacture, which consequently began to decline. Still the wages continued good, as the fashion of wearing Dunstable straw hats had gradually established itself over the country, which kept up the demand for them; and many in- dividuals abandoned the working of pillow lace (another domestic manufacture peculiar to Bedfordand Bucks, which in 1820 had fallen into decay owing to the application of machinery), and betook them- selves to straw plaiting, as a more profitable employment. With the view of improving the condition of the straw plaiters, who from their increased numbers were reduced to great distress, and enabling them to meet the foreign competition, the Society of Arts, in the years 1822 and 1827, held out pre- miums for the successful application of some of our native grasses or straw, other than the wheat straw in general use, and for improvements in plaiting, finishing, and bleaching. Many specimens were sent to the Society and, amongst other candidates, Mr. Parry, of London, in 1822, received the large silver medal for an imitation and description of the mode of plaiting the Leghorn hats. Mr. Cob- bett, also, who had contributed samples of plaiting, made from 15 different sorts of grass indigenous to England, received a similar reward. The publication of these contributions in the Society's Transac- tions was followed by the most beneficial results to the British manufacture. Our native grasses were not found to promise much success, owing to the brittleness of their stems and the unevenness of their colour; But Mr. Parry's communication was of especial importance, as the straw of Tuscany speedily became an article of import. He immediately set the example, by teaching and employing above 70 women and children to plait the straw by the Italian method; and it is peculiarly gratifying to observe, as an evidence of its success, that while the importation of Leghorn hats has, during the last few years, been on the decline, the unmanufactured material has been progressively on the increase. This straw, which is imported at a nominal duty of 1d. a cwt., is chiefly plaited in our straw districts; and the Tuscan plait, which pays a duty of 7s. per lb. has likewise been largely imported, and made up into bonnets in this country, of equal fineness and beauty to the genuine Leghorn hat. There is, perhaps, no manufacture more deserving of encouragement and sympathy than that of straw plait, as it is quite independent of machinery, and is a domestic and healthful employment, af- fording subsistence to great numbers of the families of agricultural labourers, who without this re- source would be reduced to parish relief. By the estimate of an intelligent individual, intimately acquainted with the manufacture, it is considered that every score (or 20 yards) of plait consumes a pound of straw in the state in which it is bought of the farmer; that, at an average, every plaiter makes 15 yards per diem; that in the counties of Hertford, Bedford, and Bucks, there are, at an ave- rage, 10,000 scores brought to market every day, to make which 13,300 persons (women and children) must be employed. In Essex and Suffolk, it is estimated that 2,000 scores are the daily produce, to make which about 3,000 persons are employed; and about 4,000 persons more must be employed to convert these quantities into bonnets. Including other places where the manufacture is carried on in England, there are, perhaps, in all, about 30,000 persons engaged in it. The earnings of the women and children vary from 3d. to 3s. 6d. per score, or from 1s. 6d. to 10s. per week. There are 7 descrip- tions of plait in general use viz. whole Dunstable (the first introduced), plaited with 7 entire straws; split straw, introduced about 30 years since ; patent Dunstable, or double 7, formed of 14 split straws, every 2 wetted and laid together, invented about 25 years since Devonshire, formed of split straws, invented about 16 years since; Luton plait (an imitation of whole Dunstable), formed of double 7, and coarser than patent Dunstable, invented about 10 years since; Bedford Leghorn, formed of 22 or dou- ble 11 straws, and plaited similarly to the Tuscan and Italian, formed of 11 split straws. But there are other varieties in fancy straw plait, not generally in demand for the home trade, but chiefly re- quired for exportation such as the backbone, of 7 straws; the lustre, of 17 straws; the wave of 22 straws and diamond, of 23 straws. There were other plaits, called rustic, of 4 coarse straws split; and pearl, of 4 small straws entire; but these are now superseded. The principal markets are Luton, Dunstable, and St. Alban's, where the plait is usually brought every morning by the plaiters, and bought by the dealers. But the advantages which followed the publication, by the Society of Arts, of the various attempts to improve the trade, were not confined to England. Messrs. J. & A. Muir, of Greenock, (who sub- sequently sent specimens to the Society, and received 2 different medals), were in consequence at- tracted to the manufacture, and in 1823, established straw plaiting, in imitation of Leghorn, in the Orkney Islands, with singular success, adopting rye straw, dwarfed by being grown on poor land, as the material best suited for the purpose. In the estimation of persons largely employed in the trade in London, hats manufactured in Orkney, are quite equal, both in colour and quality, to those of Leg- horn; indeed, some of the plait sent to the Society was so fine, as to be capable of making a hat of 80 rows in the brim, being equal to 10 or 11 rows in an inch; but we learn with regret that the preva- lence of mildew in that humid climate is so inauspicious to the bleaching of the straw, that it is equal to 50 per cent. on the value of the crop. To this circumstance, and to the low prices of Leghorn hats of late years, is to be ascribed the difficulty they have had, even with the protecting duty of 31. 8a. per dozen, in withstanding the competition of the foreign manufacturer. In their letter to the Society of Arts, of the 10th of February, 1826, Messrs. Muir stated,- We had last year about 5 acres of straw, which will produce about 12,000 score of plait,-suppose on the average of 3 score to the hat, will be 4,000 hats, not more. We think them one hundredth part of the consumption of the United Kingdom. These 4,000 hats may give to the manufacturer, including his profit, 5,000L For seed and straw 7 acres of land would be required, and in n anufacturing 500 persons would be constantly employed all the year. We suppose the consumption of Leghorn hats to be not less than 500,000L in the United Kingdom : now were these all made by our own industrious population, 700 acres of poor land would be required, and 50,000 persons would be employed in the manufacture. (Trans, of Soc. Arts.) The plaiters in Orkney were earning, in 1827, only from 2s. to 2s. 6d. per week, and since that period the trade, it is understood, has declined. Italian Plait.-In Italy, the manufacture is principally followed in the neighbourhood of Florence, Pisa, Sienna, and the Val Arno, in the Duchy of Tuscany; and it is also established at Venice and other places. There, as in England, it is purely a domestic manufacture, and the produce is collected by dealers who go round the country. There is no means of estimating, with any degree of accuracy, the number of individuals employed, as the government is entirely unprovided with statistical data, and is even opposed to any being collected. But supposing that England took about a third of the Italian manufacture (and it is believed that we have taken nearer a half), it would not appear that, even in the most prosperous times, more than 30,000 persons could have been engaged in it. The description of straw used, which is cultivated solely for the purposes of the manufacture, and not for the grain, is the triticum turgidum, a variety of bearded wheat, which seems to differ in no re- spect from the spring wheat grown in the vale of Evesham and other parts of England.-(Trans. of Soc. Arts.) After undergoing a certain preparatory process, the upper parts of the stems (being first sorted as to colour and thickness) are formed into a plait of generally 13 straws, which is afterwards knitted together the edges into a circular shape called a "flat," or hat. The fineness of the dats is determined by the number of rows of plait which compose them (counting from the bottom of the crown to the edge of the brim), and their relative fineness ranges from about No. 20 to 60, being the Digitized by Google HATS. 741 tows contained in the breadth of the brim, which is generally 8 inches. They are afterwards assorted into 1st, 2d, and 3d qualities, which are determined by the colour and texture; the most faultless being denominated the 1st, while the most defective is described as the 3d quality. These qualities are much influenced by the season of the year in which the straw is plaited. Spring is the most favoura- ble, not only for plaiting, but for bleaching and finishing. The dust and perspiration in summer, and the benumbed fingers of the workwomen in winter, when they are compelled to keep within their smoky buts, plaiting the cold and wet straw, are equally injurious to the colour of the hats, which no bleaching can improve. The flats are afterwards made up in cases of 10 or 20 dozen, assorted in progressive numbers or qualities, and the price of the middle or average number governs the whole. The Brozzi make bears the highest repute, and the Signa is considered secondary which names are given to the flats from the northern districts where they are plaited. Florence is the principal market, and the demand is chiefly from England, France, Germany, and America; but the kinds mostly re- quired are the lower numbers; the very finest hats, and particularly of late, being considered too ex- pensive for the buyers. The importation of Leghorn straw hats has very sensibly decreased of late years, owing to the change of fashion in favour of silk bonnets, and also the prevailing and increasing practice of English dealers, from the high duty on the manufactured article, importing the straw plats, and the straw itself for the purpose of being knitted, plaited, and finished in this country. This has been attended with serious consequences to the poor straw plaiters of Tuscany, many of whom have abandoned the trade and betaken themselves to other occupations, particularly to the working of red woollen caps for Greece and Turkey; immense quantities of which have been exported from Leghorn since the peace. With the view of counteracting the ruinous effects which our high duty entailed on their trade, the merchants and dealers in Tuscany, interested in the straw hat manufacture, petitioned their govern- ment, in 1830, to remonstrate with ours on the subject; but this remonstrance, if ever made, was not likely, from the condition of our own population, to be very favourably received. The following prices of different numbers and qualities of Leghorn hats are considered such as would encourage the work-people in Tuscany to produce good work:- First Quality. Second Quality. Third Quality. Tuscan. English. Tuscan. English. Tuscan. English. £ 8. d. £ 3. d. £ s. d. No. 30. 11 lire = 0 7 4 10 lire - 0 6 8 8 lire - 0 5 4 40. 21 - - 0 14 0 20 - - 0 13 4 18 - - 0 12 0 45. 26 - = 0 17 4 25 - = 0 16 8 23 - = 0 15 4 The straw for plaiting a No. 30. at 8 lire, costs 2 lire, about 1s. 4d. English; for bleaching and finish- ing, 1 lira = 8d.; the estimated loss of rows in a mass, that either go up into the crown in the process of finishing and pressing, or that must be taken from the brim to reduce it to London measure (22 inches), may be calculated at 1 lira more, or 8d. As it requires not less than 6 days for plaiting and knitting the hat, there therefore remains only 4 lire, or 2s. 8d. English, for u reek's work! Cheap as subsistence may be on the continent, surely this miserable pittance is not calculated to excite the envy of the poorest labourer in England. But the earnings of the straw plaiters solely depend on their abilities and industry. The straw is furnished to them to be plaited and knitted, and they are paid according to the number or fineness of the hat. Some of the Brozzi women have earned as much as 4 lire, or about 2s. 9d. to 3s. per day, when hats were at the highest, (calculating the time in which they can plait and knit a hat, at 8 days for a No. 30., and a fortnight for a No. 40.); and these chosen few still earn about 1s. 6d. per day but taking the whole plaiters, the following, in the opinion of a house largely interested in the trade in Italy, may be considered as a fair calculation of the average wages which have been paid during the last 15 years:- Women earned per diem, in the year 1817, 1s. 6d.; 1819-20, 8d.; 1823-5, 1s. 6d.; 1826-7, 6d. 1828-32, 5d. Men, for ironing the hats, 4s. a day; ditto, for pressing and washing, 1s. 6d. to 2s.; women, for picking straw, 1s. to 1s. 2d. The following statement shows the imports into England of Italian straw hats, straw plait, and un- manufactured straw, during the last 13 years : Hats or Bonnets of Straw. Plaiting of Straw. Unmanufactured Straw. Years. Consump- Nett Re- Imported. Exported. Consump- Nett Re- Imported. Nett Re- Imported. Exported. tion. renue. tion. venue. venue. No. No. No. L. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs. L. Lts. L. 1890 62,510 2.652 71,929 20,468 2 8 2 1821 141,412 2,633 120,068 34,365 44 30 26 1822 143,223 12,596 117,020 34,537 518 525 447 1823 129,902 19,950 121,651 35,360 4,254 3,034 2,579 1824 199,432 5,075 195,568 56,771 4,283 4,906 4,170 1825 327,040 9,281 247,447 69,047 14,037 11,850 10,073 629 82 1826 231,607 13,433 204,974 58,145 8,836 955 6,916 5,884 435 36 1827 253,853 12,334 255,640 72,468 3,928 904 3,947 3,350 787 79 1828 384,072 8,377 274,906 77,794 5,502 283 5,108 4,335 4,199 420 1829 160,195 27,030 234,254 66,393 6,282 487 3,340 2,834 6,050 605 1830 162,600 34,132 168,525 47,760 6,183 756 7,884 6,669 18,586 1,859 1831 84,066 24,980 93,947 26,644 23,354 2,102 16,450 13,287 22,344 2,232 1832 169,433 35,271 60,830 17,280 19,109 1,605 17,911 15,174 48,054 811 The duty, from 1820 to The duty on hats of less than 22 inches in The rate of duty, during the above period, 1825, was 20 per cent. ; diameter was, during the above period, 3L 8a. per domen; above 22 inches, 61. 16e. was 17a. per lb. from 1825 to 1832, 10 per cent. It is now Id. per cwt. We are indebted for this very excellent article on straw hats to Mr. Robert Slater, of Fore Street, London. [The value of Leghorn and other straw hats imported, chiefly from England, France, and Italy, into the United States, on the average of five years, ending on the 30th of September, 1838, amounted to $439,301, that of hats of fur, wool, and leather, imported almost wholly from the first mentioned country, amounting only to $16,834 and about $30,000 in value of the former description of hats are re-exported. Hats of domestic manufacture, to the value annually of $176,997, have been also exported, for the most part to France, South Ame- rica, Texas, and the West India Islands.-Am. Ed.] Digitized by Google 742 HAVANNAH. HAVANNAH, OR HAVANA, a large and flourishing city, situated on the north coast of the noble island of Cuba, of which it is the capital, the Morro castle being, according to Humboldt, in lat. 23° 8' 15" N., lon. 82° 22' 45" W. The population, exclusive of troops and strangers (which may amount to 25,000), is probably not far short of 115,000. In 1817, the resident population amounted to 83,598 viz. 37,885 whites, 9,010 free coloured, 12,361 free blacks, 2,543 coloured slaves, and 21,799 black slaves. The port of Havannah is the finest in the West Indies, and one of the best in the world. The entrance is narrow, but the water is deep, without bar or obstruction of any sort, and within it expands into a magnificent bay, capable of accommodating 1,000 large ships; vessels of the greatest draught of water coming close to the quays. The city lies along the entrance to, and on the west side of, the bay. The suburb Regla is on the opposite side. The Morro and Punta castles, the former on the east, and the latter on the west, side of the entrance of the harbour, are strongly fortified, as is the entire city ; the citadel is also a place of great strength; and fortifications have been erected on such of the neighbouring heights as com- mand the city or port. The arsenal and dock-yard lie toward the western angle of the bay, to the south of the city. In the city, the streets are narrow, inconvenient, and filthy; but in the suburbs, now as extensive as the city, they are wider and better laid out. Latterly, too, the police and cleanliness of all parts of the town have materially improved. From its position, which commands both inlets to the Gulf of Mexico, its great strength, and excel- lent harbour, Havannah is, in a political point of view, by far the most important maritime station in the West Indies. As a commercial city it also ranks in the first class; being, in this respect, second to none in the New World, New York only excepted. For a long period, Havannah engrossed almost the whole foreign trade of Cuba; but since the relaxation of the old colonial system, various ports, such, for instance, as Matanzas,* that were hardly known 30 years ago, have become places of great commercial importance. The rapid extension of the commerce of Havannah is, therefore, entirely to be ascribed to the freedom it now enjoys, and to the great increase of wealth and population in the city, and generally throughout the island. The advance of Cuba, during the last half century, has been very great ; though not more, perhaps, than might have been expected, from its natural advantages, at least since its ports were freely opened to foreigners. in 1809. It is at once the largest and the best situated of the West India islands. It is about 605 miles in length; but its breadth from north to south no where exceeds 117 miles, and is in many places much less. Its total area, exclusive of that of the numerous keys and islands attached to it, is about 31,500 square miles. The climate is, generally speaking, delightful; the refreshing sea breezes preventing the heat from ever becoming excessive, and fitting it for the growth of a vast va- riety of products. Hurricanes, which are 80 destructive in Jamaica and the Caribbee islands, are here comparatively rare, and when they do occur, far less violent. The soil is of very various qualities: There is a considerable extent of swampy marshes and rocks unfit for any sort of cultivation; but there is much soil that is very superior, and capable of affording the most luxuriant crops of sugar, coffee, maize, &c. The ancient policy, now fortunately abandoned, of restricting the trade of the island to 2 or 3 ports, caused all the population to congregate in their vicinity, neglecting the rest of the island, and allowing some of the finest land and best situations for planting, to remain unoccupied. But since a different and more liberal policy has been followed, population has begun to extend itself over all the most fertile districts, wherever they are to be met with. The first regular census of Cuba was taken in 1775, when the whole resident population amounted 170,370 souls. Since this period, the increase has been as follows :-1791, 272,140; 1817, 551,998 and 1827, 704,567; exclusive of strangers. W e subjoin a Classification of the Population of Cuba according to the Censuses of 1775 and 1827. 1775. 1827. Male. Female. Total. Male. Female. Total Whites 54,555 40,864 95,419 168,653 142,398 311,061 Free mulattoes 10,021 9,006 19,027 28,058 29,456 57,514 Free blacks 5,959 5,629 11,558 23,904 25,079 48,950 Slaves 28,774 15,562 44,336 183,290 103,652 286,942 Total 99,809 71,061 170,370 403,905 300,588 704,457 We readily discover, from this Table, that, in the term of 52 From To Per ct years, from 1775 to 1827, the increase of the different classes of the The free mulatto male population 10,021 28,055, or 12 population has been as follows :- The free mulatto female - 9,006 29,456,- From To The free black male - Per ct. 5,950 23.904,- The free black female I 5,629 25,056,- 345 The white male population increased 54,555 168,653, or 209 The slave (black and mulatto), male 28,774 183,290, 537 The white female - 40,864 142,598, 248 The slave (black and mulatto), female 15,562 103,662, - A very large part of the rapid increase of the black population is to be ascribed to the continuance of the slave trade which, unfortunately for the real interests of the island, has been prosecuted of late years to an extent, and with a vigour, unknown to any former period. From 1811 to 1525 there were imported into Cuba 185,000 African slaves: of which number 116,000 are said to have been en- tered at the Havannah Custom-bouse between 1811 and 1820! Since 1825, the imports of slaves are understood to have increased; and were believed, indeed, to be about as great in 1832 as ever, not- withstanding the trade was to have entirely ceased in 1820.-(Report of 1832 on West India Colonies, Minutes of Evidence, p. 64.) It is, besides, supposed that the slaves were under-rated In the census of 1827 80 that, perhaps, the entire population of the island is, at present, little, if at all, under 900,000. The planters of Cuba derive considerable assistance from free labourers, mostly of an Indian mixed breed, who work for moderate wages. They are not much employed in the fields, but in other branches of labour; and particularly in bringing the sugar from the interior to the shipping ports. In 1827, Matanzas had a population of 15,000 souls. During the same year, its imports were valued at 1,387,600 doll rs, and its exports at 1,717,347 dollars and 231 vessels entered, and 251 clear- ed from its port. We have looked into our latest Gazetteers, but to no purpose, for any notice of this place. Those. indeed, who know that the best of these publications sets down the population of Ha- vannah at 25,000, will probably think that this was very unnecessary labour. Digitized by Google HAVANNAH. 743 The articles principally exported from Cuba are, sugar of the But Havannah having ceased to be the only port for the exporta- linest quality, coffee, tobacco, been' wax, boney, molasses, &c. Of tion of sugar, as it was in former times, we must advert In the trade these, the first is decidedly the most important. The following of the other ports, to obtain a correct account of the whole exports statements show the astonishing increase that has taken place in the of sugar. The following are the Custom-bouse returns for 1827 exportation of this staple article: Exports of sugar from Havannah 99,354,137 lbs. - Account of the Exportation of Sugar from Havannah, from 1760 Santiago 6,032,673 - - to 1833. Nuevitas 375,275 - Lbs. - Matanzas Boxes, at 400 lbs. 30,361,*44* - 13,000 - From 1760 to 1767 5,200,000 Trinidad 10,361,337 - - 1786 1790 68,150 27,260,000 Holguin 361,450 - - 1790 - 1800 110,091 44,036,400 Jagua 12,500 - - 1800 - 1810 177,998 Mansanilla 71,199,200 120,800 - 1810 - 1820 207,696 83,078,400 1820 - 1825 250,384 100,153,600 Total 149,973,106 lbs. In 1826 271,013 108,406,500 But as the Custom-bouse reports are founded 1827 264,954 1-2 105,981,800 upon the assumption that a box of sugar weighs 1828 268,586 107,434,400 but 15 arrobas (376 lbs.), while its true weight 1829 260,857 104,342,800 is, after deducting the tare, at least 16 arrobas 1830 292,782 117,092,900 (400 Its.), they add to their amount one sixteenth 1831 276,330 110,532,000 (it should be one fifteenth), VIZ. 9,136,818 lbs. 1832 297,557 119,022,800 1833 284,925 113,970,000 Making a total of 156,158,924 lbs. This is, however, only the Custom-house report. A great deal of sugar has been smuggled out of the country. The exports from Santiago in 1827, as given above, are certainly much under their real amount ; for at that period, and for 3 or 4 years after, the customs officers connived with the planters to defraud the revenue, and carried their depredations to such an extent, that the duties became no- minal merely, and the official returns are in no degree to be depended upon. Subsequently, however, these officers were dismissed; and there is reason to think that the returns have since been more accurate. But smuggling is still extensively practised, particularly from the unlicensed ports. It appears from the subjoined account (No. III.), that there has been, since 1827, a great increase in the exports of sugar, the quantity shipped from the various licensed ports of the island, having amounted, in 1833, to 7,624,553 arrobas, 190,613,825 lbs. But to this we may safely add at least one fourth part for shipments from the unlicensed ports, and what was otherwise sent out of the country without any official notice so that the entire export of sugar from Cuba, at present, cannot be less than 250,000,000 lbs., or rather more than 110,000' tons! Next to sugar, coffee is the most valuable production of Cuba. Its cultivation has increased with unprecedented rapidity. In 1800, there were about 80 plantations in the island in 1817, there were 779; and in 1827, there were no fewer than 2,067, of at least 40,000 trees each! In 1801, the exporta- tion from Havannah was 1,250,000 lbs. in 1809, it amounted to 8,000,000 lbs.; from 1815 to 1820, It averaged annually 18,186,200 lbs. and, in 1827, it amounted to 35,837,175 lbs. The exports from the other ports have increased with equal rapidity. They amounted in 1827, to 14,202,406 lbs. making the total exportation for that year 50,039,581 lbs. The low prices seem to have checked the growth, or, at all events, to have diminished the exports of coffee from Cuba in 1828, 1829, and 1830; but since the last mentioned year, they have more than recovered their old level. The total exports in 1833 amounted, according to the Custom-house returns, to 2,566,359 arrobas, or 64,259,975 lbs.; but, as in the case of sugar, considerable additions must be made to this quantity to get the true export. In the Custom-bouse estimates, coffee bags are supposed uniformly to weigh 150 lbs., though it is well known that they frequently exceed that limit. The exports in 1833 were distributed as follows ; viz. from the Havannah, 47,333,100 lbs. Matanzas, 6,423,075 lbs. all other ports, 10,503,800 lbs. Tobacco differs much in quality but the cigars of Cuba are considered the finest in the world.- (See TOBACCO.) Formerly, the culture and sale of this important plant were monopolized by Govern- ment but since 1821 this monopoly has been wholly relinquished, there being no longer any restric- tions either on the growth or the sale of the article. The cultivator pays a duty, which, however, is to a great extent evaded, of I per cent. ad valorem upon his crop. In consequence of the freedom thus given to the business, the culture and exportation of tobacco are both rapidly extending so much so, that the exports of cigars, which amounted in 1826 to only 197,194 arrobas, had increased to 617,713 arrobas in 1833: Of 95,768 bhds. of molasses exported in 1833, 46,632 were from Havannah, and 31,620 from Matanzas. Wax and honey of excellent quality are largely produced in Cuba, and form considerable articles of trade. The principal imports consist of cornand grain of all sorts, chiefly from the United States and Spain; cotton, hardware, and earthenware goods from England; linens from Hamburgh, Bremen, the Nether- lands, Ireland, &c. ; silver and gold from Mexico and South America; indigo and cochineal from ditto; wines, spirits, liqueurs, fruits, &c., from France and Spain; lumber, dried fish, and salt provi- sions, from the United States, Newfoundland, &c. ; with every article, in short, that an opulent com- munity, in a tropical climate, without manufactures, requires. I. Classified Account of the Articles of all sorts, and their Value, imported into Cuba in 1831, 1832, and 1833. Articles. 1831. 1832. 1883. L. L. L. Liquids, viz-Wines, spirits, bear, oil, &c. 265,552 276,562 329,202 Provisions, viz.-Pork, beef, jerked beef, &c. 204,180 165,733 261,602 Spices, viz -Cinnamon, cloves, pepper, ac. 11,715 14,129 18,209 Fruits. viz-Olives, almonds, raisins, ac. 31,220 22,434 28,830 Agricultural, vis-Flour, rice, pess, beans, potatoes, ac. 597,590 572,373 726,543 Gruceries, viz-Lard, butter, cheese, candles, soap, ac. 264,104 21,260 212,206 Fish, viz-Herrings, cod, anchovies, ac. 56,205 64,577 63,135 Cottons and mercery 314,337 362,763 356,298 Woollens 50,039 52,770 62,143 Lineus 472,548 514,194 372,714 Leather goods 118,906 93,514 79.243 Silks 94,641 115,909 84.389 Wood, viz-Deals, hoops, casks, &c. 124,257 125,919 155,036 Hardware 117,870 133,662 162,261 Metals, viz-Copper, iron, lead, &c. 30,602 18,557 16,223 Gold coin 177,298 77,858 192,853 Silver coin 22,085 41,346 $11'706 Glass ware 19,583 20,560 16,156 Earthenware 31,211 27,817 19,169 Dye studio, as logwood, indigo, due. 49,518 31,894 50,621 Condage 382 10,596 30,518 Books and paper 34,100 42,889 43,348 Medicines 30,756 25,100 28,789 Perfumery 8,429 8,830 8,949 Jewe lery 7,417 6,084 8,131 All other articles 116,691 107,820 140,635 Total 3,249,446 2,976,130 3,866,396 The exports from Matanzas in 1833 were 57,746,400 lbs. Digitized by Google 744 HAVRE. II. Account of the Quantities of the principal Articles of Produce exported from the various licensed Ports of the Island of Cuba, from 1826 to 1833, both inclusive. Leaf Years. Sugar. Rum. Molasses. Coffee. Wax. Intacra Cign. Arrobas. Piper. Pipes. Arrobas. Arrobas. Arrulas. 1826 6,237.390 2,567 68,850 1,773,198 22,918 79,581 197.194 1827 6,578,924 8,457 74,053 2,001,553 0778 79,166 167.361 1828 5,967,066 2,864 86,891 1,281,088 21.404 70,031 2.0.335 1829 6,588,428 4,518 63,37 1,736,257 23,481 125,502 243.443 1830 7,868,881 5,593 66,219 1,798,598 35,741 160,358 407,152 1831 7,133,3-1 3,838 83,001 2,130,582 29,830 117,454 331,439 1532 7,583,413 3.429 100,178 2,048,690 30,203 76.430 448.123 1833 7,624,553 3,227 95,768 2,566,359 41,536 92,475 617,713 III. An Account of the Value of the Trade between Cuba and other Countries in 1833, as ascertained by the Customs' Returns. Countries. Imports. Exports. Countries. Imports. Experts. L L. L L Spain 836,193 565,317 Netherlands 42,417 55,681 South America 285,688 4099 Portugal 9.401 4,548 The Hanse Towns 196,325 313,356 Russia 10,971 207,335 The United States 929,481 913,934 Sweden and Denmark 7,138 15,167 Great Britain 338,577 189,787 Turkey 13,833 France 193,327 110.691 Foreign produce in ships of Italy 10,755 47,640 Cuba 99,495 265,425 But a considerable portion of the imports, especially of those from Spain, are not intended for consumption in Cuba, but are sent there merely en entrepôt, or till it be found convenient to ship them for other markets. IV. Account of the Number of Vessels that entered the Port of Havannah from Foreign Countries in 1831, 1832, and 1833, specifying the Countries to which such Vessels belonged, and their Tonnage. Flage. 1831. 1882. 1833. Ships. Tons. Ships. Tons. Ships, Tone. Spanish 334 41,758 1-2 325 38,636 3-4 379 46,247 American 496 85,105 1-3 489 84,957 1-2 509 91,624 Hanse Towns 25 4,226 34 6,344 26 4,500 Danish 8 1,078 12 2,313 10 1,729 French 19 3,975 18 4,067 48 10,162 1-2 Netherlands 8 1,067 23 26 4,764 8 1,477 English 54 6,408 1-4 69 12,558 1 46 9,067 1-8 Portuguese 8 142 4 548 5 494 Prussian 2 293 3-4 1 221 1-2 I 290 Sardinian 4 762 3-4 1 222 1-2 6 939 1-2 Swedish 1 280 1 280 6 1,061 1-2 Hanoverian 1 256 2 366 1-3 Tuscan 1 193 3-4 Mecklemburgh 1 159 Russian 1 176 Totals 953 145,092 1-4 982 155,362 1-2 1,048 168,296 Duties.-A customs duty is charged on most articles exported and ber of pieces, contents, quality, weight, and measure. All goods imported. In 1828, the duties on imports produced 4,194,495 dol. imported in vemels exceeding 80 tons burthen, except perishable lars being equal to an ad valorem duty of 18 13 per cent. on the im- provisions, bulky articles, and liquors, may be put in deposit for an ports of that year. The duties on exports during the same year pro- indefinite term. paying I per cent. inward and I per cent outward duced 1,114,641 dollars, equal to an ad valorem duty of IS 1-2 per duty on the value, each year. When entered for home consump- cout. on their amount. According to the tariff, the duties on most tion, they are liable to the corresponding duty. If sold in deposit, imported articles are fixed at either 24 or 30 per cent. ad valorem the exporter pays the outward duty. but all Spanish products imported from the peninsula in Spanish Tonnage Duties.-Spanish vessels, 6 reals per ton. Other nations, bottoms (except flour, which pays 1 1.8 dollar per tarrel), pay only 20 reals per ton: in case of arrival and departure in ballast, none; 6 1-4 per cent. duty and when imported in foreign bottoms, they arriving in distress, 4 reals per ton, but full duries if the cargo be pay 12 per cent. less than the duties on corresponding foreign articles. landed or taken in. These products make about a third part of the imports. Until Wharf Duties.-Spanish vewels. 6 reale per day. Other nations, lately, the export duty on sugar was much complained of. being so 19 reals per day for each 100 tons of their register measurement. high as 2 3-4 dollars a box but in the course of 1833 it was re- Monies.-One dollar = 8 reals plate = 20 reals vellon. One duced to little more than I dollar,-a reduction which has been of doubloon = 17 dollars. The merchants reckon 444 dollars = 100L, material consequence to the planters. Merchandise that has once or 1 dollar = 4s. 6d. very nearly. There is an export duty of 1 per paid the duties on importation, pays nothing on exportation. cent. on gold, and 2 per cent. on silver. Custom-house Regulations. -Every master of a vessel is bound to Weights and Meantres-One quintal = 100 lbs., or 4 arrobas of have, on his arrival, ready for delivery to the boarding officers of the 25 lbs. 100 lbs. Spanish = 101 3-4 lbs. English. or 46 kilogrammes. revenue, two manifests. containing a detailed statement of his cargo; 108 varas = 100 yards; 140 varas = 100 French ells or annes; St and, in the act of handing them over, is to write thereon the hour varas = 100 Brabant ells: 108 varas = 160 Hamburgh clis. 1 fanage when he so delivers them. taking care that they be countersigned by = 3 bushels nearly. or 100 lbs. Spanish. An arroba of wine or spirits the boarding officers Within 12 hours from that time he may = 4.1 English wine gallons nearly. make any alteration he pleases in the said manifests, or deliver in The Spanish authorities disgraced themselves by the countenance new ones corrected. After the expiration of these 18 hours, no which they gave to piratical banditi that infested many of the ports alteration will be permitted. Goods not manifested will be confis. of Cubi during the late contest between Spain and her revolted colo- cated without remedy and, if their value should not exceed 1,000 nica. and. on pretence of cruising against the Mexicans and Colom- dollars, masters of veasels will be liable to pay a penalty of double bians, committed all sorts of enormities. The con-merce of the the amount of such non-manifested goods if they do exceed that United States suffered an much from their attacks. that they were sum, and belong to the master, or come consigned to him, his ves- obliged to send a considerable equadron to attack the landitti in their sel, freight, and other emoluments, will be forfeited to the re- strongholds, and to obtain that redress they had in vain moght from venue. Goods over-manifested will pay duties as if they were on the government of the island but we are not sure that the nuisance board. Goods no' m nifested, but claimed in time by a consignee, is as yet entirely abated. will be delivered up to the latter: but the master, in this case, will lu compiling this article, we have consulted Humboldr's standard be subject to a fine equal in amount to that of such goods. Gold and work, the Essa: Politique sur l'Iste de Cula, Paris. 1896; and the silver, not manifested by either captain or consignee, are liable to a Supplement (Tableau Statutique) thereto, Paris, 1831; the excellent duty of 4 per cept. Goods falling hort of the quantity manifested, abstract of the Cundro Estamistico de Cuta. published at Havanmah when landed. and not being included in any invoice of a consignee, in 1829. in the Imerican Quarterly Review for June 1830; the But will render the mas'er liable to a penalty of 200 dollars for each ulin des Sciences Geograph ques, tom. XXII. p. 333.; Pointail's package so falling short. Every consignee is obliged to present his Notes on Mexico, pp. 279-29R (Eng. ed.): Papers published by invoice or note of goods, within 48 hours after the arrival of a ves- Board of Trade, part iii. PP- 648-652 and pricate curremention- sel; if not, such goods are liable to 2 per cent. extra duty. The tions from intelligent British merchants established at Havannah. same is the case, if such note do not contain a statement of the num- HAVRE, OR HAVRE DE GRACE, a commercial and strongly fortified sea-port town of France, on the English channel, near the mouth of the Seine, on its northern bank, in lat. 49° 29' 14" N., lon. 0° 6' 38" E. Population 24,000. Digitized by Google HAVRE. 745 Harbour.-The harbour of Havre consists of 2 basins, inclosed The Hoe, or southern passage, lies between the last mentioned bank within the walls of the town, affording accommodation for about and that of Amfar. In the great road there is from 6107 1-2 fathoms 450 ships. Cape de la Heve, forming the northern extremity of the water at ebb; and in the little, from 3 to 3 1-3. Large ships always Seine, lies N. N. W. from Havre. distant about 2 1-8 miles. It is lie in the former. The rise of the tide is from 22 to 27 feet and by elevated 390 feet above the level of the va. and is surmounted by 2 taking advantage of it. the largest class of merchantmen enter the light-houses 50 feet high. These, which are 325 feet apart, exhibit port. The water in the harbour does not begin perceptibly to sub- powerful fixed lights. There is also a brilliant harbour-light at the side till about 3 hours after high water,-a peculiarity ascribed to entrance to the port, on the extremity of the western jetty. Havre the current down the Seine, across the entrance to the harbour, being has 2 roadsteads. The great or outer road is about a league from sufficiently powerful to dam up for a while the water in the latter. the port, and rather more than 1-2 league W. S. W. from Cape de la Large fleets, taking advantage of this circumstance, are able to leave Here the little or inner road is about 1-2 league from the port, the port in a single tide, and get to sea, even though the wind should and about 3-4 of a male S. S. E. from Cape de la Heve They are be unfavourable.-(See Plan of Haure, published by Mr. Laurie; separated by the sand bank called Loclat; between which and the Annuaire du Commerce Maritime for 1833, p. 211.; Coulier our bank called Les Hauts de is Rade is the west passage to the port. Les Phares, p. 59, &c.) Trade, &c.-Havre being, in fact, the principal sea-port of Paris, most of the colonial and other fo- reign products destined for the consumption of that city are imported into it. It has also a considera- ble trade of its own. The principal articles of export are silk and woollen stuffs, lace, gloves, trinkets, perfumery, Burgundy, Champagne, and other wines, brandy. books, &c. Besides colonial products and spices, the imports principally consist of cotton, indigo, tobacco, hides, dye woods, iron, tin, dried fish, &c. Grain and flour are sometimes imported and sometimes exported. Monies, Weights, and Measures same as those of the rest of France.-(See BORDEAUX, and WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) It is estimated that the entire value of the different articles imported into Havre, in 1829, amounted to 250,000,000 francs, or about 10,000,000Γ. sterling. Of this sum, the cotton imported was estimated at 26,000,000 fr.; the sugars of the French colonies at 44,000,000 fr., and those of foreign countries at 8,000,000 fr.; coffee 14,000,000 fr.; indigo,2,000,000 fr.; tobacco 4,000,000 fr., &c. The customs dutles at Havre during the same year amounted to 25,876,535 fr., being nearly 11 per cent. upon the estimated value of the imports. There entered the port, in the same year, 1,481 French and other ships, coming from foreign countries and the colonies of France, and 2,995 coasting vessels, including those navigat- ing the river 62 ships entered en relàche and in ballast.-(Bulletin des Sciences Géographiques, tom. xvi. p. 390. and tom. xxiii. p. 370.) Arrivals.-In 1833, there entered the port, 44 ships from Martinique, 78 from Guadaloupe, 213 from the United States, 30 from Brazil, 1 from Peru and Chili, 23 from Hayti, 6 from Mexico, 11 from Monte- Video and Buenos Ayres, 2 from Colombia, 10 from the Havannah and St Iago, 1 from St. Thomas, 2 from Cayenne, 3 from Senegal, 4 from the Isle de Bourbon and the Mauritius, 6 from the East Indies, 2 from China, and 11 from the whale fishery in all, 447.-(Annuaire du Commerce Maritime, tom. 11. p. 345.) The total arrivals at Havre in 1833 were Ships. Tennage. Cream. French ships from foreign countries 250 44,964 2,535 French colonies 130 32,781 1,643 coasters 2,521 159,008 9,328 from the cod and whale fishery 14 4,940 484 Foreign vessels 496 125,029 Totals 3,410 366,717 In respect to the imports of cotton, Havre is to the other French Ports, what Liverpool is to the other ports of England. We subjoin an Account of the Imports of Cotton into France in 1833 and 1834, with the Stocks on Hand, &c., speci- fying in detail the Imports and Stocks of Havre and Marseilles. 1933. 1834. United Other Total in United Other Total in Brazil. States. Egypt. different Brazil. Sorts. Egypt. different Ports. States. Sorts. Ports. Stock, 1st Jan. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales Bales. Havre 16,270 649 181 17,000 29,832 3,340 828 34,000 Marseilles 1,150 750 1,300 3,200 3,911 350 6,632 4,107 15,000 Other Ports 950 850 1,800 1,400 100 - 1,500 3,000 18,370 549 750 2,331 22,000 35,143 3,790 6,632 6,435 52,000 Imports. Havre 181,611 22,410 - 6,283 810,304 184,057 14,258 3,134 201,447 Marseilles 21,470 2,187 37,280 16,012 76,889 19,667 2,822 20,243 11,519 64,251 Other Ports 14,239 726 4,285 19,250 18,074 792 5,108 23,974 217,320 25,263 37,280 96,580 306,443 221,798 17,872 20,243 19,761 276,674 Sold. Havre 168,049 19,619 5,636 193,304 194,180 15,698 3,662 213,440 Marseilles 18,709 1,777 31,398 13,905 65,089 23,078 3,172 23,375 13,626 63,251 Other Ports 13,789 626 3,635 18,050 18,874 742 5,358 24,974 200,547 22,022 31,398 22,476 276,443 236,132 19,512 23,375 22,646 301,665 United States. Brazil. Egypt. Other Sorts. Total. Stock, 1st Jan. 1835. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Bales. Havre 19,700 2,000 . 300 Marseilles 500 8,500 2,000 Other Ports 600 150 1,250 } 30,000 According to the American official accounts, there were shipped for France, during the year ended 30th of September, 1893, 76,832,449 lbs. of cotton, valued at 8,945,359 dollars. The exports to England during the same year were 238,241,746 lbs., valued at 26,254,970 dollars! -(Papers laid before Congress, 22d of April, 1934.) For the quantities of sugar and coffee imported into Havre in the years 1829, 1830, 1831, and 1832, see post. We avail ourselves of this opportunity to lay before our readers the following official state- ments as to the Foreign Trade and Navigation of France for 1833. On the next page will be found an account of the value of the different descriptions of goods (ex- clusive of coin and bullion) imported Into and exported from France in 1833, specifying the mode in which they were imported and exported the value of the imported goods entered for home con- sumption, with the duty thereon, and on the exports.-(Administration des Douanes, 1833, p. 4.) VoL. I.-3 N 94 1. SUMMARY OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS IN 1833. IMPORTS. 746 EXPORTS. Goods imported. Goods entered for Consumption. French and Foreign Goods. French Goods. Description of Merchandise. By Sea. By Sea. By Lan). Total. Duty. Duty received. By Land. Total. Value. Duty French Foreign French Foreign received. Ships. Ships. Ships. Ships. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. France. Francs. Live animals 128,052 247,026 9,388,192 9,763,270 9,635,756 1,719,765 1,426,929 368,401 7,284,732 9,080,062 8,994,864 76,976 Products and parts of animals 36,736,323 19,293,713 97,389,426 153,419,462 107,047,296 9,572,755 36,167,159 19,574,336 6,023,963 61,765,458 11,796,853 204,639 Fish 8,843,285 3,795,971 1,416,537 14,055,793 13,129,922 322,713 454,978 428,911 801,195 1,685,084 1,049,184 2,949 Animal substances belonging to medicine and perfumery 673,229 221,410 1,284,246 2,178,885 1,791,042 116,134 103,474 118,878 92,188 314,540 255,736 532 Hard substances fit for cutting, &c. (ivory, &c.) 2,272,994 731,093 290,305 3,294,392 2,862,932 172,707 222,487 126,350 84,144 432,981 92,826 2,217 Farinaceous articles 2,846,235 6,705,197 1,107,314 10,658,746 5,270,830 753,450 5,191,836 2,589,506 1,900,880 9,682,222 5,121,227 46,171 Fruits 3,736,643 14,872,003 3,916,600 22,525,246 19,550,622 1,954,029 2,112,646 6,090,919 1,673,715 9,877,280 8,417,318 54,898 Colonial products 75,369,628 17,721,425 45,147 93,236,200 70,011,211 45,448,572 6,860,955 9,643,505 7,653,804 24,158,264 2,491,063 2,794 Vegetable juices, (gums, &c.) 46,130,332 3,454,629 802,442 50,387,403 40,459,596 14,161,702 6,818,138 9,250,391 2,211,994 18,280.523 11,161,770 22,060 Vegetable matters suitable for medicine 2,581,597 494,547 403,345 3,479,489 1,607,258 225,171 540,847 1,107,647 382,696 2,031,190 819,675 1,102 Common wood 966,294 17,667,376 8,882,933 27,516,608 24,173,218 571,170 2,333,344 2,705,454 1,963,015 7,001,813 3,993,248 23,334 Fine wood 4,806,075 687,849 2,056 4,995,980 3,752,512 889,466 432,696 900,092 213,512 1,546,300 71,857 1,379 Fruits, stalks, and filaments, as cotton, flax, raw silk, &c. 18,433,310 64,172,467 830,388 83,436,165 67,366,854 8,258,953 2,407,502 2,810,048 6,574,269 11,791,819 2,139,870 5,134 Stuffs for tanning 1,401,585 2,950,644 930315 5,282,544 2,333,672 346,664 1,094,443 5,015,106 6,649,953 12,759,502 10,393,881 93,587 Various leguminous products 310,469 282,340 1,461,931 2,054,740 1,801,033 341,269 458,632 580,697 1,540,563 2,579,892 2,386,140 155,840 Stones and minerals 648,259 2,380,356 11,722,103 14,750,718 14,278,688 3,041,248 809,103 1,062,266 2,371,335 4,242,704 3,947,871 65,318 Metals 19,380,950 12,112,886 5,512,389 37,006,225 35,600,484 3,642,434 1,682,167 2,017,898 4,003,073 7,703,138 4,165,622 8,787 Chemical products 3,094,565 3,065,017 229,945 6,389,527 5,101,156 2,088,145 1,912,769 4,431,060 2,293,471 8,637,300 7,792,318 51,422 Prepared dye stuffs (indigo, cochineal, &c.) 32,447,699 1,077,093 86,457 33,611,249 HAVRE. 19,004,667 1,160,870 2,128,233 1,922.707 3,721,137 7,772,077 451,707 3,050 Colours 63,085 261,592 421,338 746,015 699,510 89,638 404,648 273,261 979,958 1,657,867 1,568,998 4,754 Different compounds (perfumery, soap, compound medicines, &c.) 672,908 341,211 141,569 1,155,688 63,613 20,935 9,535,226 9,792,522 6,559,071 25,886,819 25,149,851 25,102 Liquids (wines, brandy, &e.) 977,347 1,549,525 15,116 2,641,988 664,402 271,192 20,077,964 46,927,637 9,058,669 73,064,170 70,053,321 68,165 Glass and pottery 205,687 253,327 1,081,004 1,540,018 937,301 345,672 5,218,237 4,957,644 2,714,853 12,890,734 11,867,254 111,346 Thread 4,071,542 1,373,252 5,058,452 10,503,246 9,966,795 419,596 1,015,026 760,742 2,313,043 4,088,811 3,426,155 662 Wove goods and felt 8,416,871 9,133,543 57,810,327 75,360,741 19,811,003 3,096,312 83,934,573 143,630,146 108,583,520 336,148,239 261,316,685 43,255 Paper 186,464 344,331 426,705 957,400 818,085 67,374 4,703,352 2,792,202 4,209,530 11,705,084 11,233,215 29,822 Various prepared substances 3,251,926 3,774,002 15,402,086 22,428,014 13,378,013 0,538,880 41,900,994 30,581,875 27,049,570 99,532,439 89,266,545 151,084 Total value of goods F. 278,153,354 188,963,825 226,158,573 693,275,752 491,137,471 101,636,816 239,948,358 310,460,201 215,907,753 766,316,312 559,425,054 1,256,379 Digitized by Google II. TRANSIT AND WAREHOUSE TRADE OF FRANCE FOR 1833.-(Administration des Donanes, p. 301.) Entered in Warehouse in 1833. Taken from Warehouse in 1833. Places. Stock, Stock, 31st Dec. 1832. Imported. Change of Total. For For Re-exportation. Change of Total. 31st Dec. 1833. Warehouse. Consumption. Warehouse. Direct. Transit. By Sea. Transit. Francs. Farnes. France. Francs. Francs. France. Francs. France. Francs. Francs. Bordeaux Francs. Havre 20,644,775 45,678,397 2,184,679 1,193,476 69,701,327 30,973,640 10,893,556 1,858,107 7,830,792 51,556,095 18,145,232 25,094,744 125,541,513 Marseilles 2,488,052 2,226,034 155,350,393 94,922,987 9,968,749 6,292,539 7,697,980 118,882,255 36,468,138 35,634,680 130,504,028 560,369 4.558,305 171,257,382 79,328,107 36,939,969 6,056,870 10,229,582 132,554,528 38,702,854 Other ports 15,880,378 103,571,549 5,667,969 16,074,806 141,184,602 71,588,220 9,938,434 32,944,833 7,069,228 121,540,615 19,643,887 Totals F. 97,254,577 405,296,487 10,901,009 24,042,671 537,493,704 276,812,954 67,740,708 47,152,349 32,927,582 424,533,593 112,060,111 III. IMPORT TRADE OF FRANCE DURING THE YEAR 1833. / ccount of the Imports into France in 1833, specifying the Value of the Imports from each Country distinguishing between General and Special Commerce.-(Admin. des Douanes, 1833,p. General Commerce. Special Commerce. Countries from which imported. Materials of For Consumption. Materials of For Consumption. Manufacture. Total. Duties Coin and Raw. Manufactured. Manufacture. Total. Raw. Manufactured. received. Bullion imported. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Europe:-Russia Francs. 16,387,298 6,538,397 178,105 Francs. 23,103,800 Francs. Francs. 14,789,451 Sweden 76,899 4,612,713 121,344 4,004,154 76 4,081,129 19,523.508 1,301,088 3,786,043 6,000 202 Norway 101,063 18,459 9,183,046 39,176 9,323,285 3,804,704 920,755 9,260,148 Denmark 13,562 84,656 138,674 2,701,927 1,704 2,842,305 9,358,366 261,576 103,366 162,865 Prussia 2,564,712 1,580 7,072,007 2,897,192 10,522,093 20,491,292 2,669,658 217,452 6,679,925 Hanseatic Towns 2,244,780 3,581,533 6,144,252 1,234,060 12,506,238 1,183,463 8,561,775 1,434,791 3,549,311 2,100 Holland 1,048,513 2,013,188 157,948 2,956,234 511,256 4,755,772 5,480,678 879,173 1,613,438 Belgium 2,365,252 124,717 33,750,448 29,401,985 4,103,407 5,692,500 68,844,933 32,287,650 853,780 England (United Kingdom, Gibraltar, Malta, and Ionian Islands) 5,448,067 15,817,297 23,154,194 15,471,058 53,553,014 1,116,407 39,741,659 8,524,285 18,506,514 40,151,756 Portugal (including Madeira, Cape de Verde Islands, and the Azores) 463,707 1,152,019 654,996 4,963 3,446,930 22,417,151 1,811,978 695,623 3,724,508 115,264,800 Spain (including the Canary isles) 356,814 6,668 34,736,858 5,613,176 3,494,561 1,059,105 43,844,595 26,547,075 188,788 4,100 Austria (including the kingdom of Lombardy) 3,167,099 1,206,252 47,114,773 459,222 669,384 30,920,426 48,243,379 4,250,562 7,718,021 380,170 Sardinia (including island and continent) 239,911 204,771 44,394,656 4,876,892 4,695,244 19,366,052 68,637,600 291,636 58,412,144 Two Sicilies 15,538,726 758,885 12,552,624 426,709 74,709,755 2,148,534 15,127,867 9,439,608 8,067,699 3,996,897 Tuscany, Modena, Parma, Roman States, Lucca 1,369,535 67,479 5,856,418 9,504,713 438,122 3,244,123 9,538,663 1,326,984 208,500 4,998,103 Switzerland 289,231 1,777,219 9,131,614 20,592,145 7,064,553 1,029,464 1,444,244 31,168,003 7,905,362 831,551 Germany 1,299,775 2,722,576 15,180,549 11,927,713 8,211,856 1,103,268 4,974,733 28,367,138 3,726,388 12,780,142 Greece (including the islands in the Archipelago) 4,744,718 4,132,713 183,223 21,657,573 635,031 5,370 2,973,905 823,624 117,396 10,126,536 Turkey (including the islands in the Archipelago) 3,306 5,712 15,689,038 210,980 126,414 22,285 1,264,893 17,164,911 10,944,840 555,540 Africa:-Egypt 74,033 29,692 11,048,565 4,848,720 2,721 26,188 910,977 4,877,629 3,628,685 4,833,745 Algiers 2,651 7,627 1,591,307 3,638,963 49,141 137,945 585,917 1,778,393 697,562 1,829,400 States of Barbary 20,199 26,763 744,524 8,196,063 138,466 38,029 171,492 8,372,558 7,390,662 333,762 English possessions (Cape of Good Hope, Mauritius) 38,955 16,192 7,225 40,336 7,445,809 17,135 64,696 2,342,413 89,858 544,700 Other territories on the coast 24,766 817 193,860 115,441 118,186 141 25,309 312,187 323,556 Aria :-India-English possessions 15,482 141 22,865,725 339,179 287,428 80,347 HAVRE. 4,252,985 27,406,138 13,931,839 Dutch do 2,038,046 26,297 212,990 15,996,182 3,034 1,911,821 French do. 3,029,195 3,245,219 61,900 186,570 1,247,860 2,892 22,744 243,405 1,437,322 86 643,093 80,000 China 266,235 109,446 9,916 41 633 119,403 11,245 2,371,313 9,052 2,380,998 9,602 11,300 Cochin China, Philippines, &c. 479,610 28,804 518,016 2,383 143,217 1,822 4,265 America United States 5,012 209,008 1,471 86,105,445 215,491 1,915,580 98,742 15,550 11,058,187 99,079,212 70,413,153 Hayti 3,418,278 54,474 1,090,815 73,885,905 50,203 9,498,079 1,080,090 2,371,090 3,512,108 903,002 English possessions (Canada, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Antilles, Guiana) 1,179,499 2,048 37,029 2,684,549 141 319 2,362,421 37,489 37,029 28,350 Spanish possessions (Cuba, Porto Rico) 2,288 39,317 766,170 5,465,292 473,479 6,746 6,704,941 990,019 Danish possessions (St. Thomas) 1,955,341 3,587 2,938,947 271,295 666,027 12,904 2,980,894 120,209 950,226 Dutch possessions (St. Eustache, Curaçoa, &c.) 310,087 108,890 1,061 420,038 48 171,448 330,832 48 Swedish possessions (St. Barthélémy) 48 48 4 Brazil 2,660 6,752,351 2,660 28,049 2,720 2,258,222 Mexico 9,038,622 5,711,137 822,956 11,532 4,045,522 6,545,625 1,310,575 921,683 Digitized by 1,287,677 7,608 Columbia 5,340,807 1,617,768 961,146 5,722 2,584,636 802,207 181,600 5,552,035 338,684 Peru (Lower Peru) 1,366 1,142,257 374,957 217,332 228 592,517 218,165 276,669 44,622 573 - Bolivia (Upper Peru) 218,738 158,307 23 - 158,330 250 90,090 500,910 Chili 250 2,041,723 39,632 1,433 Rio de la Plata (Monte Video and Buenos Ayres) 2,082,788 1,530,735 33,849 1,434 1,566,018 4,652,242 422,737 5,778,700 1,597 French Colonies -Guadaloupe 22,497 4,676,336 4,491,666 4,241 3,753 4,499,660 228,694 178,195 163,134 Martinique 20,867,092 65,644 21,161,430 201,185 19,162,627 7,301 19,371,113 559,372 15,342,764 784,150 Bourbon 14,156,586 45,845 14,761,803 336,634 12,925,002 8,176 13,269,812 373,808 10,267,932 901,375 Google 15,664,683 139,745 Senegal 16,178,236 289,822 14,692,681 9,590 14,992,093 2,133,841 8,437,472 48,460 French Guiana (Cayenne) 1,888 3,679 2,139,408 1,776,856 15,051 3,969 1,795,876 89,275 847,276 69,700 St. Pierre, Miquelon, and French fisheries 1,304,461 6,003 2,157,740 853,621 925,807 5,703 1,785,131 2,799,443 776,380 48,020 Epaves et Sauvetages 4,894,517 2,638 7,696,598 2,761,528 4,841,092 1,544 7,604,164 7,633 124,097 7,000 115,351 250,335 489,783 108,951 114,688 201,184 424,823 97,242 Totals F. 439,627,795 150,597,185 747 103,050,772 693,275,752 344,524,041 111,914,600 34,698,830 491,137,471 101,636,816 190,506,830 IV. EXPORT TRADE OF FRANCE DURING THE YEAR 1833. Account of the Exports from France in 1833, specifying the Value of those sent to each Country: distinguishing between General and Special Commerce.-(Admin. des Douanes, 1833, p. 3.) General Commerce. 748 Special Commerce. Countries to which exported. Raw Products. Manufactured Total. Manufactured Raw Products. Duties Coin and Bullion Products. Products. Total. received. exported. Francs. Francs. France. Francs. Francs. Francs. France. Francs. Europe:-Russia 4,777,445 5,778,346 10,555,791 3,549,980 4,487,017 8,036,997 59,368 Sweden 1,027,176 340,642 1,367,818 671,403 280,021 951,424 7,372 Norway 1,178,457 660,460 1,838,917 951,002 653,065 1,604,067 5,129 Denm 1,791,002 677,369 2,468,371 1,402,873 547,425 1,950,298 6,725 Prussia 4,641,785 2,759,275 7,401,060 4,108,285 2,640,695 6,748,980 45,010 16,800 Hanseatic Towns 13,456,206 4,588,865 18,045,071 10,440,712 3,787,782 14,228,494 25,798 36,780 Holland 7,636,049 8,434,152 16,070,201 6,625,006 4,988,198 11,613,204 19,638 54,000 Belgium 23,414,858 28,933,300 52,348,168 16,520,928 27,642,733 43,163,661 167,720 31,598,920 England (United Kingdom, Gibraltar, Malta, and Ionian Islands) 70,741,571 45,454,287 116,195,858 32,048,623 36,864,509 67,913,132 304,995 5,807,700 Portugal (including Madeira, Cape de Verde Islands, and the Azores) 462,576 1,549,148 2,011,724 358,104 1,429,979 1,788,083 6,028 Spain (including the Canaries) 13,297,707 49,193,883 62,491,590 7,507,244 36,698,410 44,205,654 99,834 22,868,200 Austria (including Lombardy) 3,795,711 2,861,690 6,657,401 1,114.449 2,534,374 3,648,823 15,841 64,600 Sardinia (isle and continent) 16,646,068 33,041,054 49,687,122 6,368,898 23,824,810 30,193,708 71,480 14,183,200 Two Sicilies 3,448,420 7,478,725 10,927,145 1,212,905 5,966,668 7,179,373 8,693 4,736,600 Tuscany, Modena, Parma, Roman States, Lucca 3,435,622 8,255,607 11,691,229 1,615,221 6,914,401 8,529,622 15,197 1,410,100 Switzerland 24,249,743 33,941,756 58,191,499 9,827,353 22,465,763 32,293,146 87,171 12,929,784 Germany 8,197,410 33,748,360 41,945,770 6,379,999 31,443,415 37,823,414 63,218 1,067,677 Greece (including the islands in the Archipelago) 747,536 1,218,003 1,965,539 266,697 1,183,634 1,450,331 1,353 103,200 Turkey (including the islands in the Archipelago) 3,312,968 11,099,811 14,412,779 436,043 8,747,693 9,183,736 7,195 427,000 Africa:-Egypt 919,702 2,581,442 3,501,144 452,588 2,358,531 2,811,119 5,662 144,000 Algiers 8,079,225 11,986,177 20,065,402 4,327,666 11,192,650 15,520,316 20,072 619,420 States of Barbary 1,334,463 3,013,977 4,348,440 312,315 2,412,575 2,724,890 3,587 2,203,600 English possessions (Cape of Good Hope, Mauritius) 707,102 834,828 1,541,930 500,689 725,395 1,226,084 3,334 194,600 Other territories on the coast of Africa 150,609 290,969 441,578 121,795 107,455 229,250 732 HAVRE. Aria:-India-English possessions 1,448,209 3,756,903 5,205,112 1,287,533 3,174,771 4,462,304 10,283 85,000 Dutch do 505,299 497,308 1,002,607 380,402 459,266 839,668 2,272 347,200 French do. 65,998 72,501 138,499 63,922 71,115 China 135,037 2,416 74,115 76,731 1,576 60,715 62,291 57 Cochin China, Philippines, &c. 201,136 1,605,427 1,806,563 114,983 245,449 360,432 745 95,000 America -United States 17,568,925 117,396,336 134,965,261 13,718,725 94,265,428 107,984,153 114,860 178,800 Hayti 1,021,106 5,316,918 6,338,024 762,611 4,933,054 5,695,665 10,087 32,000 English possessions (Canada, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Antilles, Guiana) 151,482 57,812 209,294 130,626 25,063 155,689 574 Spanish possessions (Cuba, Porto Rico) 1,715,552 6,999,450 8,715,002 1,532,819 5,199,728 6,732,547 12,287 196,000 Danish do. (St. Thomas) 619,696 2,500,198 3,119,894 460,695 2,278,020 2,738,715 6,522 Dutch do. (St. Eustache, Curagoa, and Dutch Guiana) 28,852 28,852 28,852 28,852 2 Swedish do. (St. Barthélémy) 338 338 338 338 Brazil 5,576,263 12,616,120 18,192,383 4,171,447 8,610,557 12,782,004 16,818 Digitized by Google Mexico 1,375,986 13,650,684 15,026,670 Guatimala 943,862 10,461,734] 11,405,596 15,703 5,600 Columbia 64,467 112,797 177,264 63,041 90,868 153,909 481 Pern (Lower Peru) 164,162 491,295 655,457 122,750 459,744 582,494 1,302 Bolivia Chili (Upper Peru) 611,792 3,776,947 4,288,739 419,571 3,483,611 8,903,182 3,817 2,391 2,391 120 120 Rio de la Plata (Monte Video and Buenos Ayres) 342,786 2,189,328 2,532,114 248,502 1,689,289 1,937,791 3,572 French Colonies Guadaloupe 1,111,665 3,922,051 5,033,716 723,683 3,271,989 3,996,672 7,326 12,296,101 12,235,501 27,000 Martinique 3,815,930 8,480,171 8,761,172 8,474,329 4,144,322 8,293,966 12,438,288 4,109,280 8,289,585 12,398,865 Bourbon 2,593,277 4,427,284 7,020,561 2,268,886 4,348,041 6,616.927 512,350 Senegal 760,135 3,038,185 3,798,320 687,657 1,514,808 2,202,465 French Guiana (Cayenne) 522,357 1,760,254 2,272,611 465,681 1,730,864 2,196,545 St. Pierre, Miquelon, and French fisheries 2,094,551 2,709,432 4,803,083 2,092,337 2,707,949 4,500,286 Totals F. 263,829,652 502,486,660 766,316,012 154,053,027 404,772,027 559,425,054 1,256,379 99,945,191 HAVRE. 749 Note-General commerce, as applied to imports, means all articles imported by sea or land, without inquiring whether they are intended to be consumed, re-exported, or warehoused. Special commerce, as applied to imports, means such imported articles as have been admitted for home consumption, under payment of the customs duties. The same distinction obtains in relation to exports. General commerce, in this case, means all exported articles, without regard to their origin; while special commerce means such only as are pro- duced by the soil or manufactures of France. Account of the Quantities of the different Sorts of Cotton, Sugar, Coffee, Indigo, &c., imported into Havre, during 1835, 1831, 1833, 1832, and 1831, with the Stocks of Cotton, &c., existing on the 1st of January, 1836.-(Journal du Haure, 2d January, 1836.) Imports. Stocks 1st of Countries whence they came. 1835. 1834. 1833. 1832. 1831. January, 1836. Cotton. U.S. America bales 188,055 184,027 181,900 165,864 124,116 Brizil - 18,943 14,258 22,410 15,926 14,006 Other sorts - 7,511 3,134 6,283 2,438 2,379 214,509 201,419 210,593 184,228 137,501 18,800 Surar. Martinique and Guadaloups, hhds. 55,549 69,430 50,330 48,000 58,450 9,000 Doortion bags 27,520 37,836 22,570 29,696 26,270 H mush and St. Jago boxes 17 2 77 868 Brazil - 962 471 374 90 90 0 her sorts - 4,213 5,587 7 5,823 3,585 Coffee. M artinique and Guadaloupe, hhds, 971 1,859 1,832 2,148 1,032 Dito - 3,071 4,070 2,744 4,390 3,008 Ditto - 56 42 56 130 54 Bourbon bales 2,194 1,591 2,689 2,261 824 liv. Hayti, direct bags 74,030 49,719 26,810 42,926 9,734 Ditto casks 21 24 45 192 2,320,000 Various other sorts bags 39,133 73,218 72,541 73,161 29,565 Dit tcs. 60 306 809 492 136 Ditto hhds. 1,391 854 1,312 647 483 India East Indian chests 3,615 5,925 4,630 3,270 3,577 American serons 37 555 490 80 376 Cocoa packages 1,170 2.745 7,214 4,774 2,638 Tea chests 4,646 7.308 13,205 8,158 9,690 Hites No. 180,240 209,520 118,094 135,850 124,200 Summary Statement of the Commerce of France, during the Year 1833. IMPORTS. Merchandise Imported. Merchandise entered for Consumption. (General Commerce.) (Special Commerce.) Imports. By Sea. By Land. Total. Value. Duty received. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Material for manufacturing 303,280,562 136,347,233 439,627,795 344,524,041 41,831,677 Do. for consumption Raw 136,021,198 14,575,987 150,597,185 111,914,600 53.626,584 Wrought 27,815,419 75,235,353 103,050,772 34,698,830 6,178,555 Totals 467,117,179 226,158,573 693,275,752 491,137,471 101,636,816 EXPORTS. French Merchandise. French Merchandise. (General Commerce.) (Special Commerce.) Exports. By Sea. By Land. Total. Value. Duty received. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. Francs. R.W 205,328,084 58,501,568 263,829,652 154,653,027 878,877 Manufactured 345.080,475 157,406,185 502,486,660 404,772,027 427,502 Totals 550,408,559 215,907,753 766,316,312 559,425,054 1,256,379 NAVIGATION. Merchandise imported. French and Foreign Merchandise. (General Commerce) (General Commerce Ton- Ton- Arrivals Ships. Departures Ships. nage. French nage. French Colonies. Foreign. Total. Colonies. Foreign. Total. No. Tons Francs. France. Francs. No. Tens. Francs. France Pranes. French 3,561 358,157 64,095,215 214,018,139 278,153,354 French 3,675 318,840 42,629,864 197,318,494 239,948,358 Foreign 5.115 621,735 188,963,825 188,963,825 Foreign 4,580 461,028 310.460,201 310,460,201 Totals 8,676 980, 92 64,095,216 403,021,964 467,117,179 Totals 8,255 782,868 42,629,864 507,778,695 550,408,559 WAREHOUSE TRADE. Value of merchandise:- France. France. In warehouse on the 31st of December, 1832 97,254,577 direct 405,295,487) Entered during the year 1833 By importation transit 10,901,069 440,239,127 By change of warehouse 24,042,571) Total 537,492,704 For consumption 276,812,954 by sea 67,740.708 Withdrawn from warehouse during the year 1833 For re-exportation transit 47,152,349 424,533,593 By change of warehouse 32,827,582 In warehouse on the 31st of December, 1833 112,960,111 3 R 2 Digitized by Google 750 HAVRE. Summary Statement-continued TRANSIT TRADE. BOUNTIES, COIN, &c Value of Articles, which, passing through France Bountles:- :- Prance. in transitu, have been despatched in 1833. Value of exports, with bounty 99,260,916 Received for bounties 18,485,634 Exports. By French By Foreign Coin and bullion :- By Land. Total. Ships. Ships. The trade in coin and bullion is not taken into account in the above statement of imports and exports. France. France. Francs. Franci. Value of imports and exports of coin and imports 199,506,830 Raw prod. 25,662,961 1,011,950 20,358,112 47,033,023 bullion s exports 99,945,181 Manufac. 9,762,189 27,236,063 23,839,760 60,838,032 Seizures Amount of seizures on importation 1,171,580 Totals 35,425,150 28,248,033 44,197,872 107,871,055 Prices of Commodities, Duty paid and in Bond, Tares, Commercial Allowances, &c:-These important particulars may be learned by the inspection of the subjoined Price Current for the second week of September, 1836. The duties on the articles mentioned are also given; but it is most probable that some of these will, at no very distant period, be varied. But the other particulars embodied in it will always render it an important document. Havre Price Current, 15th of September, 1836. Duty paid. In Bond. Duty paid. in Bond. Fr. d. Fr. a. Fr. ct. Fr. ct. Fr.d.Pr.d. Fr.d.lr.d. Asbes, per 50 kil. Cotton, per 1-2 kil. Pot, New York 57 to 0 0 00600 Upland 1 to 1 110 16 do. 00.00 00.00 Alabama and Tennessee 10 47 136 Finland 50 00 00.00 Mobile - 18 70 11.19 560-00 00.00 Louisiana 12 77 11-16 Rumia Casan Pearl, American 570.00 00.00 Sea Island - 3 00.00 do. 00.00 00.00 Pernambuco 1 96 Duty on nett weight by French vessels from European ports, 9 fr. Bahia 90 ct. from elsewhere, 8 fr. 25 ct. By foreign vessels, 11 fr. 56 ct. Maranham - 00.00 BOBB. (See exceptions at Note A.) St. Domingo 35 1 45 184-134 Commercial and Custom-house tare, 12 per cent. Paita 1 45 00.00 Surat and Bengal 0 80 0 90 00.00 Bark (Jesuits), per 1-2 kil. Duty on nett weight: on long or short staple, by French vencle Lochsa nominal to 0 0 from the French colonica, 2 3-4 ct. from European parts, (Turkey Callyssaya, curled do. 135.80 excepted), 16 1-2 et. from the East Indies, 5 1-2 ct.; from other do. flat do. 135-80 countries, 11 ct. By foreign vemele (except from Turkey), 19 Duty on nett weight by French vessels from any port whatever, By French vessels from Turkey, 8 1-4 ct. by foreign vemels from 27 1-2 ct. From countries west of Cape Horn, 13 3-4 ct. By foreign Turkey, IS 3-4 cl.-(See exceptions at Note A) vessels, 55 ct. Custom-house tare: 6 per cent. on tales of 50 kil. and above, and Custom-house tare on chests, 18 per cent. on serons, 2 per cent. 8 per cent. on bales under 50 kil. Commercial tare: on cases, real; on serons of 70 kil. and up- Commercial tare on United States' cottons, 6 per cent. cords off; wards, 8 kil.; of 40 kil. and upwards, 6 kil. and of 20 kil. and up- on Brazil cottons, 4 per cent. on St. Domingo, in bales. 6 per cent.; wards, 4 kil. on Cumana and Caraccas, 7 kil. per seron above 40 kil.; and 6kik Bees' wax per 12 kil. per seron of 40 kil. and under. North American yellow 1901020 nominal Draft: 2 kil. on Sea Island and Bengal 3 kil. on all other de- New Orleans, do. I 80 1 90 nominal scriptions in bales exceeding 50 kil. and 1 1-8 kil upon bales under Russia 80 210 nominal 50 kil. Havannah 70 80 nominal Elephants' teeth, per 1-8 kil. 3501080 none Senegal 00.00 00.00 Duty on nett weight whole or in pieces of more than I kil. by Duty on gross weight: by French vessels from European ports, French vessels from Senegal, 13 34 et. from other African settle- 5 1.2 ct.; from elsewhere, 4 2-5 ct. By foreign veasels from any ments, 22 ct. from the East Indies, 19 1-4 from elsewhere, 30 port whatever, 8 1., ci.-(See exceptions at Note A.) 1-4 ct. By foreign vessels from any port whatever, 38 1-2 ct. Commercial tare real. Pieces of I kil. and under, double the above duties.-(See exceptions Cassia liques, per 1-2 kil. at Note A.) in mats nominal 0 to 72 Commercial and Custom-house tare: real. in chests nominal 0 72 75 Gums, Senegal, per 1.2 kil. 1 25 to 00 1201000 Dury on nett weight by French vemels from the East Indies, 18 E. India copal, scraped 2 25 00.00 cl.: from elsewhere, 33 2-3 ct. By foreign vessels from any port copal, soft, not scraped 0 50 0 55 00.00 briever, 55 ct.-(See exceptions at Note A) shellae, orange 19! 195 nominal Bustom-bouse are: on chests, 12 per cent.; on mats, 2 per cent. do. garnet 1 60 1 82 nominal Commercial tare: real. do. liver 1 45 1 55 nominal Cochineal, per 1.2 kil. Duty on Senegal, gross weight: by French vessels from Sepagal, silvery, from ord. to fine 00600 10 to 10 75 5 1-2 ct.; from European ports, 13 3-4 ct.; from elsewhere, !! a foxy. do. do. 00.00 10 0 10 25 By foreign vessels from any port whatever, 16 1.2 cl-(See excep- black, do. do 00.00 11 0 11 25 tions at Note A.) Duty on net! weight by French vessels from any port whatever, Commercial tare on casks, real on bags, 2 per cent. 82 1.2 By foreign vessels, do. 88 ct.-(See exceptions at Note A.) Duty on copal, nell weight by French vessels from the East In. Custom-house tare; in casks, 12 per cent.; in serons, 2 per cent. dies, 27 1-2 ct.; from European ports, 65 cl.; from elsewbere, 0 Commercial tare real. 1-2 ct. By foreign ressels from any port whatever, 68 sta-se exceptions at Note A.) Cocoa, Caraccas, per 1-2 kil. nominal 1 10 to 15 Commercial tare: real. Guayaquil none 0.50 Duty on shellac, nett weight: by French ressels from the East h- Brazil by French vessels 0 60 0 62 dies, 77-100 ct.; from elsewhere, 2 1-5 ct. By foreign vemels from Trinidad none 0 0 00 any port whatever, 327 200 cL-(See exceptions at Note A.) Duty on nett weight: by French veasels from the French colo- Commercial tare real. nies, 22 ct. from countries west of Cape Horn, 27 1-2 cl. from European ports, 52 1-4 cl.; from elsewhere, 30 1-4 cl. By foreign Hops, American 0 to 0 0 0 0 BOBE vessels from any port whatever, 57 3-4 ct.-(See exceptions at Duty on nett weight: by French vessels from any port whatever, Note A.) 33 fr. per 50 kil. By foreign vessels, 36 fr. 2 1-2 cL-(See exap- Custom-house tare on casks, 12 per cent. on bags, 3 per cent. tions at Note A.) Commercial tare: on casks, real on bags, 2 per cent. Commercial fare on bales, 8 per cent. Hides, per 1-2 kil. Coffee, per 1-2 kil. Buenos Ayres to 0 90 00600 St. Domingo, from ordinary 0 0 t 0 0 to Pernambuco and Bahia, salted 0 65 00.00 00.00 to fine Rio Janeiro 0 84 Cuba and Porto Rico .00.00 073 - 1 0 Carthagena and Caraccas 0 0 60 00.00 La Guayra 00.00 075-00 South American horse hides, 00.00 Rio 00.00 0 62 per 50 Java. Sumatra, and Padang 10-120 00.00 Duty on gross weight: by French venels from European ports, Mocha 40 45 00.00 5 1.2 ct.; from elsewhere, 2 3-4 ct. By foreign vessels from any Duty on nett weight: by French vessels from the East Indies 42 port " hatever, 8 1-4 cl--(See exceptions at Note A) 9-10 ct.: from European ports, 55 cl.; from elsewhere 52 1-4 ct. Five bull hides are admitted among 100 hides without allowance, By foreizn vessels from any port whatever, 57 3-4 ct.-(See excep- and I kil. is allowed for every bull hide above that number to the tions at Note A.) extent of 12; when more than 12 the allowance is conditional. Custom-house tare on casks, 12 per cent. on bags, 2 per cent. Horse hair, per 1.2 kil. Commercial tare: on casks real on bigs. 2 per cent. on Mocha Buenos Ayres, short 1 5 1 1 1 10 none coffee the tare runs from 4 1-2 to 12 1.2 kil. upon bales of 75 to 15 NOBE from mixed to long 200 kil. Duty on gross weight: by French and foreign vemels, 1 a- Copper. South American, per 1-2 kil. I to 1 12 none, nom. (See exceptions at Note A.) Russian and British 25 I 20 none, nom. Commercial lare: real. Duty on gross weight: by French vessels from European ports, Indigo, per 1-2 kil. 1 1-10 ct.: from elsewhere, 11.20 ct. By foreign veasels from any Rengal 001000 00600 port, white.. 1 13-20 ct.-(See exceptions at Note A.) superfine violet and blue 11 Commercial tare: real. do. violet and purple - - 00.00 Digitized by Google HAVRE. 751 Duty paid. In Bond. Duty paid. In Bond. Fr. a. Pr. d. Fr. ct. Fr. Fr. ct. Fr. of. Fr. a. FY. d. Indigo, fine violet and do. 10 0 10 25 00.00 Sugar, brown to yellow none 00.450 good and middl. violet 75 00.00 Brazil, white 00.00 42 0 0 do. red do. 10 0 00.00 brown to yellow 0 0 0 0 50 38 0 superfine red 10 0 00.00 Benares nom. by Fr. ves. 38 0 45 0 good do. 25 9 50 00.00 Manilla nom. by Fr. yes. 38 0 45 0 ordin. to fine copper 7 50 9 0 00.00 Duty on nett weight raw sugars not white, by French vessels Egyptian 60.80 00.00 from the East Indies, 44 fr.; from European ports, 52 fr. 25 ct; Madras, ordin. to fine 5 7 60 none from elsewbere, 75 ct. By foreign vessels, 35 fr. Raw sugars, Manilla, do. 5 0 80 00.00 white or clayed, without distinction of quality or mode of fabrica- Guatemala, flores 775 80 00.00 tion, by French vessels from the East Indies, 49 fr. 60 ct; from sobre salients 7 25 7 50 00.00 European ports, 57 fr. 75 ct; from chew here, 52 fr. 25 ct. By cortes 6 7 25 00-00 foreign vemels, 66 fr.-(See exceptions at Note A.) Caraccas 60.8% none Custom-house tare: on chests, 12 per cent. on single bags, 2 per Duty on nett weight: by French vemels from all places of growth cent. on double bags, 4 per cent. out of Europe, 27 1-2 ct. from European ports, 1 fr. 65 ct. from Commercial tare: Havannah and St. Jago, chests, 13 per cent. elsewhere, 110 By foreign vewels from any port whatever, 2 fr. Brazil, 17 per cent. on bigs under 75 kil, 6 kil. per bag do. on 75 20 ct-(See exceptions at Note A.) kil. and upwards, 6 kil. Custom-bouse tare: on chests, casks, and serons, real, or at the Tallow, Russia, per 50 kil. 61 0 to 62 0 none option of the importer, 12 per cent. on chests or casks, and 9 per Duty on gross weight: by French vessels from any port whatever, cent. on serons. 5 fr. 50 ct. By foreign vessels, 7 fr. 15 ct.-(See exceptions at Commercial tare: on casks or chests, real on serone of 100 to Note A.) 110 kil., 11 kil. on do. of 85 to 99 kil., 10 kil. on do. of 70 to 84 Commercial tare: 12 per cent. kil., 9 kil.; on do. of 50 to 89 kil., 7 kil. Allowance: 1 kil. per chest. Teas, imperial, per 1-2 kil. 5 15 to to 4 0 Gunpowder 6 0 6 35 4 25 27 Lac dye, per 1-2 kil. 2 0 to 5 40 0 to 0 0 Hywn 90 60 3 10 5 Duty on nett weight: by French vessels from the East Indies 27 Young hyson 3 80 3 90 00.00 1-2 ct. from elsewhere, 41 1-4 ct. By foreign vessels from any Hyson skin 3 20 65 70 port whatever, 56 cl.-(See exceptions at Note A.) Pekoe 40-6 0 50 Commercial and custom-house tare real. Souchong 30 1 60 1 nominal Pouchong 4 30 4 50 90 2 0 Land, German, per 50 kil. 35 50 to 35 87 Spanish and British 35 50 35 87 nominal Duty on nett weight: by French vensels from the East Indies, 82 Duty on gross weight: by French vemels from any port whatever, 1-2 ct.; from China 66 ct.; from elsewhere, 2 fr. 75 ct. By foreign 2 fr. 75 ct. By foreign vessels, 3 fr. 85 cL-(See exceptions at vessels from: any port whatever, 3 fr. 30 ct.-(See exceptions at Note A.) Note A.) Customi-house tare: real. Pepper, light, per 1-2 kil. to 0 to 0 0 Comunercial tare: on imperial, guppowder, young hyson, and Duty on nett weight: by French vessels from the East Indies, and pekoe, 10 kil. per chest; on hyson, and hyson skin, 9 kil. ; on son- from countries west of Cape Hora, 22 ct.; from elsewhere, 44 ct. chong, 13 kil.; on half chests and boxes, conventional. By foreign vessels from any port whatever, 57 3-4 cL-(See excep- Tin, Banca, per 1-2 kil. 74 76 00.00 tions at Note A.) British 1 70 72 none Custom-house tare on bags, 3 per cent. Peruvian 1 60 63 none Commercial tare: on single bags, 2 per cent. Duty on gross weight: by French vessels from the East Indies, Pimento, per 1-2 kil. 87 1.2 cL; from elsewbere, 1 fr. 10 ct. By foreign vemels from Jamaica French vessel 050 to 0 0 any port whatever, 2 fr. 20 ct. per 60 kil.-(See exceptions at Tobago none 00.00 Note A.) Duty by French versels from the East Indies and from countries Commercial tare: on casks real. west of Cape Horn, 24 3-4 ct; from elsewhere, 49 1-2 ct. By foreign Tortoise-shell, per 1.2 kil. 35 to 0 0 0 to 0 0 vessels, 63 1-4 ct Duty OD nett weight: by French versels from the East Indies, 55 Tares: as for pepper. ct; from China, 44 CL; from European ports, I fr. 10 ct. from Quercitron, per 50 kil. elsewhere, 82 1.2 ct. By foreign vessels fr. 65 cl.-(See excep- Philadelphia 16 to 16 12 0 to 0 0 tions a' Note A.) New York 14 75 15 0 0 0 0 0 Custom-bouse tare: on casks or cases, 12 per cent. Duty on gross weight by French vessels from European ports, Commercial tare on casks or cases, real. 3 fr. 85 CL; from other countries, 8 fr. 20 ct. By foreign vessels from any port whatever, 4 fr. 95 ct-(See exceptions at Note A.) Whalebone, per 1-2 kil. northern 2 80 30 nominal Commercial tare 12 per cent. southern 188 1 90 00.00 Quicksilver, per 1-2 kil. 4 30 to 4 40 nominal Duty on gross weight: by French vessels from any port whatever, Duty on gross weight by French vessels from any port what- 16 1-2 ct. By foreign vessels, 19 1-4 ct. ever, 11 ct. My foreign vessels, 1-10 ct-(See exceptions at Note 1.) Commercial tare: real. Commercial tare: redl. Allowance: X per cent. on southern bone. Rice, Carolina, 1835, per 50 kil. . 23 to 96 0 0 0 to 0 Woods, per 60 kil. Duty on gross weight: by French vessels from places of growth Logwood, Campeachy to 10 0 0 to 0 out of Europe, 1 fr. 37 1-2 ct.; by do. rom places of growth in Honduras 8 50 8 73 none Europe, 2 fr. 20 ct by do. from European ports, or from Pied- St. Domingo 7 25 7 50 00.00 mont by land, 3 fr. 30 ct. By foreign vessels from any port what- Fustic, Cuba 9 75 10 0 0 0.0 ever, or by land from any country whatever, Piedmont excepted, Santa Martha 19 0 22 50 0 0 4 fr. 25 ct-(See exceptions at Note A.) Pernambuco 92 0 125 0 0 0 Commercial tare 12 per cent. Duty on gross weight Brazil, by French vessels from European Saltpetre, crude, per 50 kil. nominal 41 to 41 50 ports, 4 fr. 40 ct. from elsen here, 2 fr. 75 ct. By foreign vessels, Nitrate of soda 0 0 0 0 34 0 0 0 6 fr 60 ct. Other dye-wonds, by French vemels from the French Duty on nett weight by French vessels from countri- out of colonies, 44 ct.; from European ports, I fr. 66 ct.; from elsewhere, Europe, 8 fr. 25 cl.; from elsewhere, 11 fr. By foreign vessels 82 ct. By foreign vessels, 3 fr. 30 ct.-(See exceptions at from any port whatever, 13 fr. 75 ct. Nitrate of soda by French Note A.) versels from countries out of Europe, 8 fr. 25 ct; from elsewhere, Allowance: 1 to 2 per cent. 11 fr. By foreign vessels, 13 fr. 7, ct. Explanatory Remarks. Custom-house tare 2 per cent. Commercial tare: 6 kil. per double bale of the customary form. The above duties include the sur-tax of 10 per cent.: the custom- house admits the real lare " henever the importer desires it. Sarsaparilla, per 1-2 kil. Note A.-7 be treaties of reciprocity entered into with the coun- Caraccis nominal 1 25 to 50 tries hereafter mentioned introduce the following deviations from the Mexion 00.00 0 95 1 0 above rates of duty. Honduras nominal 1 25 I 50 United States-The produce of the United States, except that of Duty on nett weight by French vessels from European ports, 56 the fisheries, direct from the United States, in United States vessels, ct.; from elsewhere, 41 1.4 ct. By foreign vessels from any port pays the same duty as if imported by French vessels from the United whatever, 3-4 ct.-(See exceptions at Note A) States. Custom house tare on bales, 2 per cent. Brazils and Mixica-The produce of the Brazils and Mexico, Commercial fare on bales, according to broker's estimation ; on imported direct in national vessels, er joys also the above privilege. naked bundles, the cords are deducted. England.-The produce of Africa, Asia, or America. imported Skins, deer, each 1 T5 to 6 0 0 to 0 0 from any country whatever in British vessels, of from any port of Duty per 50 kil. on gross weight: by French vessels from any the British dominions in Europe, either by French or foreign ves- port ha ever, 55 ct. By foreign vessels, 60 1-2 ct.-(See exceptions sels can only be admitted in bond for re exportation. at Note A.) The same regulation is app licable to all E. repeats produce (except Spelter, per 50 kil. 26 50 to 29 50 that of Great Britain and its possessions in Europe). when imported none Duty on gross weight: 5 1-2 ct. per 50 kil. without distinction of by British vessels from other ports than those of Great Britain or its fing or derivation. possessions in Europe. The weight of 50 kil. is equal to 110 4-5 lb. English, or 100 lb. Sugar, per 50 kil. English are equal to 45 35-100 kil., and the CWL equal to 50 Martinique and Gaud. bonne 4c 39 25 to 39 0 79-100 kil. Havannah, white none 50 0 53 0 Credit-4 1.2 months, except on coffee, pimento, pepper, quick- yellow none 00.00 silver, and clayed sugars, which are sold at 3 1-2 mouths, and wheat St. Jago, white none 00-560 at I-2 months. Trade between France and England.-Nothing can more strikingly illustrate the mise- rable effects of commercial restrictions, than the present state of the trade between Great Britain and France. Here we have two countries of vast wealth and population, near neigh- bours, and each possessing many important articles that the other wants, and yet the inter- course between them is inconsiderable. At a distant period this was not the case. Pre- Digitized by Google 752 HAVRE. NAVIGATION OF FRANCE, 1833. I. Account showing the Ships, with their Tonnage and Crews, that entered the different Ports of France in 1833, specifying those that entered each and distinguishing between French and Foreign Ships.-(Administration des Douanes for 1833, p. 396.) Navigation carried on jointly with the Foreigner. Navigation reserved to French Ships, Foreign Ships. Ports. Carrying the French Ships. Colonial Trade. Cod and Whale Flag of the Other Fishery. Coasting Trade. Countries whence they Flags. came. Ships. Tonn. Crew. Ships. Tonn. Sh. Tonn. Sh. Tonn. Crere. Sh. Tonn. Crew. Ships, Tennage Crese Bayonne 13 635 72 113 3,596 17 1,460 4 487 94 295 15,688 1,580 Bordeaux 159 30,113 1,974 205 34,450 94 14,329 67 17,086 1,005 35 4,545 459 2,472 134,199 13,949 Other ports 71 7 2 280 2,562 54.691 8,361 Rochelle 1 123 10 102 21,059 7 672 34 3,885 453 12,140 376,726 44,556 Nantes 96 12,990 858 90 14,778 34 5,618 62 15,835 945 9 1,039 174 2,668 105,465 9,542 Other ports 5 282 29 4 316 1 79 7 7,136 138,303 20,664 L'Orient 3 231 18 27 3,693 3 390 8,010 186,738 30,144 Brest 16 877 78 53 8,554 11,061 347,594 36,457 Saint Malo 125 4,983 686 115 9,167 5 601 3 580 36 53 7,469 2,478 3,668 114,425 15,781 Cherbourg 245 7,316 1,138 172 19,210 2 154 41 5,983 1,503 3,019 102,985 13,057 Rouen 112 10,235 783 97 6,984 12 966 2,525 146,696 13,261 Havre 250 44,934 2,535 470 121,369 25 3,660 130 32,721 1,645 14 4,940 424 2,521 159,093 9,328 Other ports 12 1,237 82 126 21,049 2 260 14 1,716 195 2,147 62,611 7,409 Abbeville 16 990 88 181 24,394 3 295 I 176 10 5 384 49 1,638 67,828 6,406 Boulogne 405 17,243 2,798 1,044 68.016 4 500 6 516 90 238 10,801 1,113 Dunkirk 145 10,350 1,079 1.4 12,165 76 6,709 24 4,959 258 90 5,081 1,060 980 57,543 5,191 Digne 40 1,113 163 11 198 651 19,715 2,537 Toulon 82 5,947 530 31 3,083 13 999 1,914 84,551 9.563 Marseilles 1,006 93,975 7,264 1,135 135,309 399 64,225 99 24,691 1,325 65 11,055 888 4,127 237,906 19,229 Other ports 16 721 83 3 109 4 130 3,295 145,740 13,333 Montpellier 171 11,277 1,083 167 9,205 14 1,876 10 1,516 161 1,332 78,225 7,395 Perpignan 91 2,730 427 26 922 1,177 39,486 5,673 Bastia 166 3,736 1,071 76 1,614 7 71 - 2,548 36,533 13,519 Totals 3,175 262,109 22,859 4,394 519,820 721 102,915 486 96,048 5,224 381 48,695 8,035 78,123 2,523,632 308,47 Totals. Ports. Ships. Tonnage. Ports. Ships, Tonnage. Ports. Ships. Tennore Bayonne 442 21,866 Cherbourg 3,479 135,648 Toulon 2,040 94,580 Bordeanx 3,032 234,712 Rouen 2,746 164,881 Marseilles 6,831 567,161 Other ports 2,565 55,042 Havre 3,410 366,717 Other ports 3,319 146,700 Rochelle 12,284 402,465 Other ports 2,301 86,873 Montpellier 1,694 102,099 Nantes 2,955 155,725 Abbeville 1,844 94,067 Perpignan 1,294 43,188 Other ports 7,146 138,980 Boulogue 1,695 97,076 Bastia 2,797 42,354 L'Orient 8,043 191 052 Dunkirk 1,459 96,807 Brest 11,129 167.025 Digne 702 21,026 General total 87,180 3,553,219 Saint Malo 3,969 137,225 (For Table II. see next page.) viously to the accession of William III., the import of wine only from France amounted to about 13,500 tuns a year, our imports of brandy and other articles being proportionally large. But Louis XIV. having espoused the cause of the exiled family of Stuart, the British govern- ment, not recollecting that the blow they aimed at the French would also smite their own subjects, imposed, in 1693, a discriminating duty of 8/. a tun on French wine, and in 1697 raised it to no less than 33/. a tun ! It is probable that this excess of duty would have been repealed as soon as the peculiar circumstances in which it originated had disappeared, had not the stipulations in the famous commercial treaty with Portugal, negotiated by Mr. Me- thuen, in 1703, given it permanence. But, according to this treaty, we bound ourselves for the future to charge one third higher duties on the wines of France imported into England, than on those of Portugal; the Portuguese, by way of compensation, binding themselves to admit our woollens into their markets in preference to those of other countries, at a fixed and invariable rate of duty. Though very generally regarded, at the time, as the highest effort of diplomatic skill and address, the Methuen treaty was, undoubtedly, founded on the narrowest and most contracted views of national interest and has, in consequence, proved, in no common degree, injurious to both parties, but especially to England. By binding ourselves to receive Portuguese wines for two thirds of the duty payable on those of France, we, in effect, give the Porta- guese growers a monopoly of the British market; at the same time that we excluded one of the principal equivalents that the French had to offer for our commodities, and provoked them to retaliate. This, indeed, was no difficult task. Unhappily, they were but too ready to embark in that course of vindictive policy of which we set them the example; so that prohibitions on the one side being immediately followed by counter-prohibitions on the other, the trade between the two countries was nearly annihilated ! But the indirect were still more injurious than the direct consequences of this wretched policy. It inspired both parties with feelings of jealousy and dislike, and kept them in the frowning attitude of mu- tual defiance. Each envied the other's prosperity, and being disposed to take fire at even fancied encroachments, the most frivolous pretexts were sufficient to engage them in contests that have filled the whole world with bloodshed and confusion. But had things been left to their natural course,-had an unfettered commercial intercourse been allowed to grow up between the two countries,-the one would have formed 80 near, so vast, and so profitable a market for the produce of the other, that they could not have remained long at war without occasioning the most extensively ruinous distress,-distress which no government would be Digitized by Google HAVRE. 753 П. Account showing the total Number of Ships, with their Tonnage and Crews, entered inwards in the different Ports of France in 1833, specifying the Countries whence they came, and distinguish- ing between French and Foreign Ships.-(Administration des Douanes for 1833, p. 398.) Ships entered. Foreign. Countries. French. Carrying the Flags of the Country hence Other Flags. they came. Ships. Tonnage. Crew. Ships. Tonnage. Crew. Ships. Tonnage Crew. Russia 76 11,902 649 42 11,058 541 137 23,611 1,228 Sweden 5 600 44 158 30,912 1,577 1 280 14 Norway 9 938 62 592 104,967 5,234 20 2,980 161 Denmark I 69 6 34 2,665 193 20 1,403 96 Prussia 3 327 21 153 32,054 1,398 46 5,364 312 Hanseatic Towns 37 3,180 246 56 5,470 343 21 2,490 148 Holland 16 1,003 & 74 7,419 485 60 5,798 355 Belgium 50 4,423 320 11 1,160 68 11 1,217 71 England (Gibraltar, Malta, &c.) 921 35,064 5,541 1,632 119,260 13,293 12 2,489 116 Portugal (Madeira, Cape de Verde Islands, Azores) 65 7,200 488 I 70 8 7 768 65 Spain (the Canaries) 516 35,077 3,093 536 17,771 4,112 57 9,084 590 Austria 7 907 60 94 23,906 1,112 17 3,510 215 Sardinia 699 37,535 3,996 415 19,526 2,929 22 1,637 205 Two Sicilies 72 10,719 1,001 171 35,378 2,208 15 1,881 141 Tuscany, Roman States, Lucca 130 5,634 878 96 5,280 654 127 12,682 1,189 Greece, and its islands in the Archipelago 3 389 31 20 5,009 402 2 364 28 Turkey, and its islands in the Archipelago 52 9,042 527 2 205 26 26 5,758 340 Egypt 30 6,057 302 1 250 12 Algiers 71 9,098 625 22 4,870 272 Other States of Barbary 114 11,933 859 64 9,148 627 Other territories in Africa 3 506 35 India, English possessions 24 8,019 460 3 824 41 Dutch do. 4 1,058 61 French do. 3 970 62 China 2 767 37 Cochin China, Philippines, &c. 3 715 25 United States 59 15,615 759 298 95,248 4,102 2 594 24 Hayti 41 8,648 496 English possessions in America 4 1,641 67 Spanish do. 48 11,013 644 3 321 32 10 2,006 113 Danish do. 6 1,018 71 I 250 12 1 256 11 Brazil 43 9,572 551 1 250 15 11 2,385 122 Mexico 17 3,709 234 4 865 37 Colombia 15 3,062 179 1 204 10 Peru (Lower Peru) 2 409 31 Chili 6 1,542 98 Rio de la Plata, Monte Video, Buenos Ayres 22 4,389 261 197 11 Martinique 114 28,523 1,505 Guadaloupe 159 39,165 2,017 Cayenne 23 4,485 289 Senegal 20 2,139 180 Bourbon 70 21,736 1,233 Total of French ships 3,561 358,157 28,080 Fishery, cod 369 43,938 7,629 whale 12 4,757 406 Coasting trade, in the same sea 56,608 1,937,512 239,863 from one sea to the other 1,363 189,767 11,314 interior navigation 20,152 396,353 57,301 Totals 82,065 2,930,484 344,503 4,394 519,820 38,811 721 102,915 6,554 willing to inflict on its subjects, and to which, though the government were willing, it is most probable no people would be disposed to submit. A free trade between England and France would give these two great nations one common interest. It would occasion not only a. vast increase of the industry, and of the comforts and enjoyments of the people of both countries, but would be the best attainable security against future hostilities. " We know," said Mr. Villiers, in his very able and instructive speech (15th of June, 1830), " that British enterprise will fetch the extremest points on earth in the business of exchange; but here are the shores of France nearer to England than those of Ireland itself-nay, Bordeaux is com- mercially nearer to London than it is to Paris; and, but for the lamentable perversion of the gifts and dispositions of nature, and of the ingenuity of man-the highways of commerce be- tween these countries-the seas which surround Great Britain and Ireland, and wash the shores of France, should literally swarm with vessels, engaged, not only in the interchange of material products, but in diffusing knowledge, and stimulating improvement; in creating everywhere new neighbourhoods; in consolidating international dependence; in short, in drawing daily more close the bonds of international peace and confidence, and thus advanc- ing, while they also served to confirm and secure, the peace, the civilisation, and the happi- ness of Europe."* The commercial treaty which Mr. Pitt negotiated with France in 1786, was the first at- tempt to introduce a better system into the trade between the two countries; and it is one of the few treaties of this description that have been bottomed on fair and liberal principles. But the Revolution in France, and the lengthened and bloody wars by which it was follow- ed, totally suppressed that mutually beneficial intercourse which had begun to grow up under Mr. Pitt's treaty and when peace was again restored in 1815, the French govern- ment unwisely resolved to continue the system of Napoleon, and to exclude most sorts of We regret to have to add, that this was one of the last public appearances made by Mr. Villiers. He died in December, 1832, at the early age of 31. His death was a national loss that will not easily be repaired. Few have ever entered upon public life with better dispositions, more enlarged and com- prehensive views, or a more sincere desire to promote the happiness of their species. 95 Digitized by Google 754 HAVRE. foreign products for which a substitute could be found at home ! But the wide-spread dis- tress that has resulted from this absurd policy, and the more general diffusion of sounder notions as to the real sources of public wealth, will, it may be confidently predicted, at no distant period, induce the government of France to adopt a less illiberal and irrational sys- tem.-(See BORDEAUX.) The equalisation of the wine duties in this country will accele- rate this desirable result. It shows the French that we are no longer influenced by the prejudices in which the discriminating system originated; and that we are ready to deal with them on the same fair and equal terms as with any one else. In this respect the mea- sure is entitled to the highest praise; and we have no doubt that it will be the harbinger of others of the same kind-of a reduction of the exorbitant duties on brandy, for example- both here and in France. The statesman who shall succeed in abolishing the restraints on the commerce of the two countries, will render the most essential service to them both; and not to them only, but to all the world, the furthest parts of which have been harassed by their wars. It admits of demonstration, that, under a free system, the trade with France would be incomparably more important and valuable than that with Russia, the United States, or any other country. And we trust, should another edition of this work be called for, that we shall have to congratulate the public on the opening of this broad and deep" channel of employment. The following Tables, prepared expressly for this work, give a pretty complete view of the trade with France. Brandy, madder, silk manufactures, flax, wine, gloves, &c. are the prin- cipal articles of import; for the raw and thrown silk comes, as already mentioned, almost wholly from Italy. Brass and copper manufactures are by far the most important of all the articles we send to France, at least through the regular channels. It will, probably, sur- prise some of our readers to learn that, in 1832, the real or declared value of the silk goods manufactured in this country and exported to France, amounted to no less than 75,187/.! This is an instructive commentary on the sinister auguries of those who predicted the ruin of our manufacture by French competition, in consequence of the subversion of the old mo- nopoly system in 1825. The most important of the other articles of export are cottons, woollens, sheep's wool, hardware and cutlery, horses, tin, &c. A glance' at the first of the following Tables will sufficiently explain the real causes of the depressed state of the French trade. The duty of 22s. 6d. a gallon on brandy is, probably, about the ne plus ultra of fiscal rapacity. The duties on wine, verdigris, gloves, &c. are all very much beyond the mark. Till they be adequately reduced, the trade with France can never be any thing but inconsiderable, compared, at least, with what it ought to be. 1. Account of the Imports into the United Kingdom from France, specifying the Quantity and Value of each Article, and the Amount of Customs Duty paid thereon, during the Year 1832; with the Customs Duty received on each Article, Amount of Cm- tome Daties re- Demominations. Quantities Official Value of Species of Imports. caived on each Imported. the Imports. Article in- ported. L L Annotto lbs. 9,441 944 12 Books cwt. 1,381 11,073 5,048 Boots, shoes and galoshes pairs 45,591 9,459 3,684 China and earthenware declared value L. 8,823 8,893 2,376 Clocks - L. 20,593 20,588 5,088 Cotton manufactures of Europe - L. 6,365 6,365 TIS Eggs number 56,661,243 17,391 19,341 Flax cwt. 31,512 55,658 131 Flowers, artificial declared value L 2,160 2,160 534 Glass bottles, common quarts 567,749 12,137 7,649 Hats. straw number 9,904 516 1,361 Leather gloves pairs 1,518,106 37,327 27,195 Linen, cambries pieces 44,652 21,719 12,196 Madder ewt. 39,690 84,685 8,096 Madder root - 33,394 246,059 2,321 Needlework and embroidery deglared value L 15,649 15,649 4,678 Oysters bushels 77,950 98,256 5,805 Prunes cwt. 3,823 3,004 6,121 Silk, raw lbs. 749,417 424,659 3,064 thrown - 145,285 175,822 48,500 waste - 257,016 25,701 115 Silk manufactures, vis.: Silk or satim - 74,723 148,458 40,908 Gause - 48,171 184,264 68,737 Crape - 15,510 33,346 12,201 Velvet 7,790 20,824 1,65 - Lace, millinery, &c. &c. declared value L.53,702 53,703 16,222 Skins, goat, undressed number 20,298 1,091 240 kid, dremed - 664,019 11,961 8,319 lamb, tanned or dressed I 5,069 51 95 Spirita, brandy proof gallows 2.647,372 1,799,947 Toys declared value L. 1,230 1,330 313 Verdigris lbs. 44,000 2,198 2,494 Wine, French gallous 297,157 28,922 65,997 Wool, sheep's lbs. 1,973 49 = Woollen manufactures declared value L 61,749 61,749 9,344 All other articles value $31,211 84,574 Total LI 9,462,894 Digitized by Google HAVRE. 755 II. Account of the Exports of British and Irish Produce and Manufactures from the United Kingdom to France, specifying the Quantity and Value of each Article, during the Year 1832. Official Value of Declared Value Quantities British and Irish of British and Species of Exports. Denominations. Produce and Ma- exported. Irish Produce nufactures ex- and Manufac- ported. tures exported. L. L. Apothecary wares cwt. 1,023 2,046 8,225 Apparel value 4,441 4,441 Beer and ale tuns 55 1-2 277 975 Books, printed cwt. 243 973 5,518 Brass and copper manufactures - 36,267 191,822 147,193 Cabinet and upholstery wares value 2,217 2,217 Cheese cwt. 160 192 558 Coals tons 41,006 40,867 11,119 Cotton manufactures yards 4,567,067 186,398 61,324 Ditto value 3,542 3,670 Earthenware of all sorts pieces 96,376 241 1,738 Glass of all sorts value 74 238 Hardware and cutlery lewt. 3,673 10,101 28,260 Horses number 529 5,290 25,995 Iron, pig tons 2,759 2,759 9,548 bar and bolt - 1,656 16,567 8,119 cast and wrought - 1,063 32,916 11,831 Lead and shot - 65 1-2 686 804 Leather and saddlery value 1,156 1,946 Linens yards 291,961 14,626 14,780 Litharge of lead cwt. 19 9 19 Machinery and mill-work value 4,528 4,528 Musical instruments - 1,742 1,742 Painters' colours and materials - 2,295 2,295 Plate of silver ounces 4,026 1,812 1,528 Silk goods manufactured in the United Kingdom value 87,803 75,187 Spermaceti cwt. 1,008 7,562 5,177 Stationery value 3,046 3,046 Steel, unwrought cwt. 1,851 2,638 3,263 Tin, unwrought - 8,508 31,055 29,472 Tin and pewter wares, and tin plates value 7,399 7,399 Whalebone cwt. 701 3,505 5,048 Wool, sheep's lbs. 736,482 26,303 38,541 Woollen manufactures value 45,320 43,187 All other articles - 106,062 105,860 Total L. 848,270 674,791 It would seem, from the subjoined accounts, as if the imports into Great Britain from France very much exceeded the exports, the official value of which amount to only 848,270L a year. Account of the Amount in Official and Real Value of all British Exports to France, in each Year since 1814; distinguishing those of British from Colonial Produce; also, an abstract of the Amount in Official Value of all Imports from France in each Year, as far as the same can be made up during that Time. Official Value of Exports from the United Kingdom. Declared Value of Official Value of Im- British and Irish Years. ports into the United Produce and Manu- Kingdom. British and Irish Foreign and Colonial factures exported Produce and Manu- Merchandise. Total Exports. from the United factures. Kingdom. £ 8. d. £ S. d. £ 8. d. £ 8. d. £ S. d. 1814 740,226 10 0 377,799 9 7 1,867,913 19 4 2,245,713 8 11 582,702 15 0 1815 754,372 8 11 214,823 15 9 1,228,856 5 3 1,443,680 1 0 298,291 10 1 1816 417,782 17 2 321,070 4 11 1,313,151 17 8 1,634,222 2 7 407,699 11 4 1817 527,865 13 6 596,753 7 0 1,054,261 9 9 1,651,014 16 9 1,003,486 12 7 1818 1,162,423 15 7 318,850 19 1 877,912 13 0 1,196,763 12 1 369,503 14 9 1819 642,011 14 2 248,078 0 9 734,779 9 10 982,857 10 7 299,493 6 8 1820 775,132 5 6 334,086 13 2 829,814 9 6 1,163,901 1 8 390,744 10 3 1821 865,616 12 9 382,404 2 4 1,037,100 15 5 1,419,504 17 9 438,265 18 5 1822 878,272 15 0 346,810 15 1 839,150 11 4 1,185,961 6 5 437,009 2 5 1823 1,115,800 7 0 241,837 12 11 743,574 16 4 985,411 9 3 349,636 4 1 1824 1,556,733 17 5 260,498 9 9 864,500 16 4 1,124,999 6 1 338,635 8 11 1825 1,835,984 12 0 279,212 3 7 892,402 18 1 1,171,615 1 8 360,709 10 1 1826 1,247,426 0 6 426,819 13 9 656,124 10 9 1,082,944 4 6 488,438 6 7 1827 2,625,747 11 10 416,726 0 8 133,503 12 6 550,229 13 2 446,951 0 9 1828 3,178,825 3 9 448,945 2 7 195,497 9 2 644,442 11 9 498,937 12 0 1829 2,086,993 10 10 509,921 1 3 337,896 11 6 847,817 12 9 491,388 3 11 1830 2,328,483 14 11 486,284 0 1 181,065 1 5 667,349 1 6 475,884 3 2 1831 3,056,154 12 4 635,927 13 5 256,081 19 7 392,009 13 0 602,688 0 0 1832 2,452,894 0 0 848,270 0 0 - - - - 674,791 0 0 But though the fact were so, it would not, as some appear to suppose, afford the shadow of a foundation for the statements of those who contend that the trade with France is a losing one. A man carries nothing but money to the baker's shop, or the butcher's and yet it is not said that he is injured by dealing with them, or that he should become baker or butcher for himself. We buy certain articles from France, because we find we can pro- cure them from her on more reasonable terms than from any other country for, were it otherwise, does any one suppose we should send a single ship to her ports Whether we carry on our intercourse with the French by sending them returns in bullion or ordinary products, is of no consequence whatever. We may be assured that bullion is not sent to another country, unless it be more valuable there than here that is, unless its exportation be for our advantage.-(See BALANCE OF TRADE.) In point of fact, however, we very rarely send any bullion to France ; and the proof of this is, that, since the peace, the exchange with Digitized by Google 756 HAWKERS AND PEDLARS. Paris has been oftener in our favour than against us. When the bills drawn by the French on us exceed those we draw on them, the balance is usually paid by bills on Holland and Hamburgh, where there is, at all times, an excess of British produce. It is idle, therefore, to attempt to revive the ridiculous cry as to the disadvantageousness of the French trade, be- cause the imports from France exceed the exports The imports into all commercial coun- tries uniformly exceed the exports and the facts brought forward as a ground of complaint against the French trade, is the strongest recommendation in its favour. Perhaps, however, it may be consolatory to those who are so alarmed at the excess of imports from France, to be told that it is to a great extent apparent only. As already observed, large quantities of silk and other produce from Italy, come to us through France, and are reckoned among the imports from that country, when they are in reality imports from Italy. Taking this cir- cumstance into account, it will be found that the discrepancy between the exports to and im- ports from France is immaterial. HAWKERS AND PEDLARS. It is not very easy to distinguish between hawkers and pedlars. Both are a sort of itinerant retail dealers, who carry about their wares from place to place; but the former are supposed to carry on business on a larger scale than the latter. They are subject to the same regulations. Regulations as to Hawkers and Pedlars.-The legislature has always looked with suspi- cion upon itinerant dealers; and has attempted, by obliging them to take out licenses, and placing them under a sort of surveillance, to lessen their numbers, and to hinder them from engaging in dishonest practices. But the resident dealer has so many advantages on his side, that these precautions seem to be in a great measure superfluous. It should also be recollected, that before shops were generally established in villages and remote districts, hawkers and pedlars rendered material services to country people and even now the compe- tition which they excite is certainly advantageous. By the 50 Geo. 3. c. 41., hawkers and pedlars are to pay an annual licence duty of 41.; and if they travel with a horse. ass, or other beast, bearing or drawing burden, they are subject to an additional duty of 41. for each beast so employed. The granting of licences, and management of the duties, are, by a late act, placed under the control of the commissioners of stamps. Hawkers and pedlars, unless householders or residents in the place, are not allowed to sell by auc- tion to the highest bidder penalty 504-half to the informer, the other half to the king. But nothing in the act extends to hinder any person from selling, or exposing to sale, any sort of goods, in any public market or fair; or to hinder a hawker or pedlar from selling in a hired room, where he is not a resident, provided such sale is not by auction. Every hawker, before he is licensed, must produce a certificate of good character and reputation, signed by the clergyman and two reputable inhabitants of the place where he usually resides. Every hawker must have inscribed, in Roman capitals; on the most conspicuous part of every pack, box, trunk, case, cart, or other vehicle, in which he shall carry his wares, and on every room and shop in which he shall trade, and likewise on every hand-bill which he shall distribute, the words LICENSED HAWKER." Penalty, in default, 10Z. Unlicensed persons, wrongfully using this designa- tion, forfeit 102. Hawkers dealing in smuggled goods, or in goods fraudulently or dishonestly procured, are punish- able by forfeiture of licence, and incapacity to obtain one in future, besides being liable to all the other penalties, forfeitures, &c. applicable to such illegal dealing. By stat. 6 Geo 4. c. 80. it is enacted, that any person or persons hawking, selling, or exposing to sale, any spirits on the streets, highways, &c., or in any boat or other vessel on the water, or in any place other than those allowed in this act, shall forfeit such spirits and 100L. for every such offence. Any person may detain a hawker of spirits, and give notice to a peace officer to carry the offender before a justice. Hawkers trading without licence are liable to a penalty of 10% So also, if they refuse to show their licence on the demand of any person to whom they offer goods for sale, or on the demand of any justice, mayor, constable, or other peace officer, or any officer of the customs or excise. By 5 Geo. 4. c. 83., hawkers trading without a licence are punishable as vagrants. To forge or counterfeit a hawker's licence incurs a penalty of 300L. To lend or hire a hawker's licence subjects lender and borrower to 40Z. each, and the license becomes forfeited. But the servant of a licensed hawker may travel with the licence of his master. Hawkers trading without a licence are liable to be seized and detained by any person who may give notice to a constable, in order to their being carried before a justice of peace. Constables refusing to assist in the execution of the act are liable to a penalty of 102. Nothing in the act extends to prohibit persons from selling fish, fruit, or victuals; nor to hinder the maker of any home manufacture from exposing his goods to sale in any market or fair in every city, borough, town corporate, and market town: nor any tinker, cooper, glazier, plumber, harness-mender, or other person, from going about and carrying the materials necessary to their business. A single act of selling, as a parcel of handkerchiefs to a particular person, is not sufficient to con- stitute a hawker within the meaning of the statute.-(Rez V. Little, B. 613.) By the 52 Geo. 3. c. 108., no person, being a trader in any goods, wares, or manufactures of Great Britain, and selling the same by wholesale, shall be deemed a hawker; and all such persons, or their agents, selling by wholesale only, shall go from house to house, to any of their customers who sell again by wholesale or retail, without being subject to any of the penalties contained in any act touching hawkers, pedlars, and petty chapmen. No person committed under these acts for non-payment of penalties can be detained in custody for a longer period than 3 months. Hawkers exposing their goods to sale in a market town, must do it in the market-place. Persons hawking tea without a licence are liable to a penalty. under 50 Geo. 3. c. 41.; and even though they had a licence, they would be liable to a penalty for selling tea in an unentered place.- (Chitty's edit. of Burn's Justice, vol. ii. p. 1113.) where he is resident, though he have not served any apprenticeship to the same, and, if prosecuted, ii. Any person duly licensed to trade as a hawker and pediar may set up any lawful trade in any place he may plead the general issue, and have double costs.-(See Chitty's edit. of Burn's Justice, vol. pp. 1102-1124.) Digitized by Google HAY, HEMP. 757 The hawkers' and pedlars' duty produced in 1832, 28,5421. gross revenue; the charges of collection are very heavy, amounting to between 5.0001. and 6 0001. Whatever, therefore, may be the other advantages of this tax, it cannot, certainly, be said to be very productive. [In the United States, as in Great Britain, there are prejudices against pedlars; which, here as there, have led to the enactment of legislative regulations concerning them. For a specimen of these the reader is referred to Purdon's Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania, under the head of Pedlars.-Am. Ed.] HAY (Ger. Hew; Du. Hovi; Fr. Foin; It. Fieno; Sp. Heno ; Lat. Fænum), any kind of grass cut and dried for the food of cattle. The business of hay-making is said to be better understood in Middlesex than in any other part of the kingdom. The great object is to preserve the green colour of the grass as much as possible, and to have it juicy, fresh, and free from all sort of mustiness. The sale of hay within the bills of mortality, and 30 miles of the cities of London and Westminster, is regulated by the act 36 Geo. 3. c. 88. It enacts, that all hay shall be sold by the load of 36 trusses, each truss weighing 56 lbs., except new hay, which is to weigh 601bs. till the 4th of September, and afterwards 56 lbs. only; 80 that till the 4th of September a load of hay weighs exactly a ton, but thereafter only 18 cwt. The clerk of the market is bound to keep a regular book for the inspection of the public, specifying the names of the seller, the buyer, the salesman, and the price of each load. Salesmen and factors are prohibited from dealing on their own account. There are three public markets in the metropolis for the sale of hay and straw; Whitechapel, Smithfield, and the Haymarket. An act (11 Geo. 4 c. 14.) has been obtained for the removal of the market from the Haymarket to the vicinity of the Regent's Park: but the removal has not yet taken place. Straw is sold by the load of 36 trusses, of 36 lbs. each, making in all 11 cwt. 64 lbs. It is affirmed, we know not with what foundation, that considerable frauds are perpetrated in the sale of hay and straw. HEMP (Ger. Hanf; Du. Hennip, Kennip; Da. Hamp Sw. Hampa; Fr. Chanvre; It. Canape; Sp. Canamo; Rus. Konapli, Konopel; Pol. Konope) a valuable plant (the Cannabis sativa of Linneus), supposed to be a native India, but long since naturalised and extensively cultivated in Italy, and many countries of Europe, particularly Russia and Poland, where it forms an article of primary commercial importance. It is also cultivated in different parts of America, though not in such quantities as to supersede its importation. It is stronger and coarser in the fibre than flax but its uses, culture, and management, are pretty much the same. When grown for seed, it is a very exhausting crop; but when pulled green, it is considered as a cleaner of the ground. In this country, its cultivation is not deemed profitable; so that, notwithstanding the encouragement it has received from government, and the excellent quality of English hemp, it is but little grown, except in some few districts of Suffolk and Lincolnshire. The quantity raised in Ireland is also inconsiderable.-(Lou- don's Encyc. of Agricult.) Exceedingly good huckaback is made from hemp, for towels and common tablecloths. Low-priced hempen cloths are a general wear for husbandmen, servants, and labouring manufacturers; the better sorts for working farmers and tradesmen in the country; and the finer ones, t wide, are preferred by some gentlemen for strength and warmth. They possess this advantage over Irish and other linens,- that their colour improves in wearing, while that of linen deteriorates. But the great consumption of hemp is in the manufacture of sailcloth and cordage, for which purposes it is peculiarly fitted by the strength of its fibre. English hemp, when properly prepared, is said to be stronger than that of every other country, Russia not excepted; and would, therefore, make the best cordage. It is, how- ever, but little used in that way, or in the making of sailcloth; being principally made into cloth for the uses already stated. Hemp has been cultivated in Bengal from the remotest antiquity, but not, as in Europe, for the pur- pose of being manufactured into cloth and cordage. In the Hindoo economy it serves as a substitute for malt; a favourite intoxicating liquor called banga, being produced from it! This, also, is the use to which it is applied in Egypt.-(Milburn's Orient. Commerce, &c.) The price of hemp fluctuated very much during the war. In consequence of difficulties in the way of its importation, it stood at a very high level from 1808 to 1814. This was the principal circumstance that originally brought iron cables into use; and the extent to which they are now introduced, has contributed materially to diminish the consumption and importation of hemp.-(Tooke on High and Low Prices, 2d ed. p. 345.) of 530,820 cwt. of undressed hemp imported in 1831, 506,803 were brought from Russia, 9,472 from the East Indies, 7,405 from Italy, 2,262 from the Philippine Islands, 2,248 from the United States, and some small quantities from a few other places. The duty on hemp was reduced in 1832, from 4a. 8d. to Id. per cwt.; a reduction which, considering the importance of cordage, and other articles made of hemp, cannot fail to be of very great advantage. We borrow the following particulars with respect to the hemp trade of Petersburgh, from the work of Mr. Borrisow on the commerce of that city :- Hemp forms a very important article of export from Petersburgh, and deserves particular notice. It is assorted, according to its quality, into clean hemp, or firsts; out-shot hemp, or seconds half-clean hemp, or thirds; and hemp codilla. Of the first 3 sorts, there are annually exported about 2,000,000 poods, the greatest part in English and American bottoms. It is brought to Petersburgh from the interior, beyond Moscow, by water and its quality depends very much on the country in which it is produced. That brought from Karatshev is the best; next to this, that produced in Belev; hemp from Gshatsk is considered inferior to the latter. As soon as the hemp is brought down in the spring, or in the course of the summer, it is selected and made up in bundles; both operations being performed by sworn selectors (brackers) and binders appointed by government for this purpose; and it is a well known fact, that this is done with great impartiality and exactness. A bundle of clean hemp weighs from 55 to 65 poods; ditto out-shot, 48 to 55 ditto; ditto half-clean, 40 to 45 ditto.-(1 pood - 36 lbs. avoirdupois.) VoL. L-3 Digitized by Google 758 HEMP. Binding of hemp is paid for at the rate of 2 roubles 50 copecks for clean, 2 roubles for out-shot, and 1 rouble 60 copecks for half-clean, per bundle; one half is paid by the seller, and the other half by the purchaser, and is charged accordingly by their agents. The expense of selecting hemp is 50 copecks per bercovitz (or 10 poods), and is the same for every sort. To every bundle of assorted hemp is attached a ticket with the names of the selector, binder, and owner, and the date and year. Every bundle has also affixed to it a piece of lead, stamped on one side with the name of the selector, and on the other with the sort of hemp and the time when it was selected. The external marks of good hemp are, its being of an equal green colour and free from spills but its good quality is proved by the strength of fibre, which should be fine, thin, and long. The first sort should be quite clean and free from spills; the out-shot is less so and the half-clean contains a still greater portion of spills, and is moreover of mixed qualities and colours. As a perfect knowledge of the qualities of hemp and flax can only be acquired by experience and attention, agents usually employ men constantly occupied in this business; by which means they are sure of getting goods of the best quality, and have the best chance of giving satisfaction to their prin- cipals; because, although the hemp is selected by sworn selectors, yet, owing to the quantity of business id the speed with which it must be executed, &c. there are often great differences in the same sor The charges are in this way somewhat increased; but this is trifling in comparison of the adva e gained. The part separated, or picked out in cleaning hemp, is called hemp codilla; it is general' made up in small bundles of I pood, which are again, when shipped, bound together in large bund d, each consisting of about 30 small ones. Particular care must be taken to ship hemp and flax in fine dry weather; if it get wet, it heats and is totally spoiled. For this reason every vessel taking in hemp or flax is furnished with mats to pre- vent its getting damp. Hemp, being light and bulky, is, when stowed, forced into the hold by means of winches, which renders the operation of loading rather slow. It may be taken as a general rule, that the prices of hemp are highest in the months of May, June, July, and the early part of August, the demand for this article being then greatest, and the exportation to North America being principally effected at this season. Again, the prices of hemp are lowest in the month of September ; the reason of which is, that the less opulent hemp-merchants return at the end of this month to their own country, in order to make new purchases for the ensuing year; and rather than be detained, sell the remainder of their stock some roubles below the market price. This causes a general decline ; although an unusual demand for the article happening at the same time, or political events or rumours, occasionally produce a contrary effect. Two large warehouses, called ambures, are built in Petersburgh for the special purpose of housing hemp, where the greatest order is observed. Account of the Total Export of Hemp from Petersburgh during the last Eight Years, specifying the Quantities exported in British, American, and other Foreign Ships. In British Ships. American. Other Foreign Ships. Grand Years. Total in Half- Total. Half- Total in Bri- Clean. Out-abot. Total. Clean. Out-shot. Foreign clean. tish Ships. clean. Ships. Pords Poods. Po ds. Poods. Poods. Poods. Poods. Poods. Poods. Ponds. 1825 1,098,952 101,633 154,637 1,355,232 336,158 104,144 146,911 99,945 350,130 2,011,514 1826 911,934 73,750 111,975 1,127,659 216,963 185,613 186,105 125,130 496,578 1,841,500 1827 1,011,931 36,959 166,301 1,215,191 288,700 166,963 114,155 128,699 409,817 1,913,711 1828 859,753 106,098 103,744 1,069,601 292,652 192,302 150,130 128,822 471,254 1,833,501 1829 324,719 213,452 95,563 633,731 139,567 38,947 94,937 108,311 212,185 1,015,496 1830 481,000 282,664 187,355 932,913 74,221 43,481 157,629 104,950 306,150 1,323,424 1831 682,976 202,611 210,919 1,096,506 277,881 21,481 81,498 57,109 160,088 1,534,475 1832 617,237 167,156 273,638 1,058,030 334,482 92,380 120,703 229,961 443,014 1,835,556 Sixty pouds of hemp and 40 poods of codilla make a last at Petersburgh; 63 poods make an English ton.-(pp. 47-52.) Riga hemp fetches a higher price than that of Petersburgh. It is divided into 3 sorts: viz. rein, rhine, or clean, out-shot, and pass hemp. The following are the prices of hemp, duty paid, as quoted in the London markets, December, 1833:- 8. d. £ s. d. Hemp, East India, d. p. - - - - 0 0 0 to 0 0 0 per ton. Petersburgh, clean - - 25 10 0 - 26 ) 0 - out-shot - - - 24 0 0 — 24 10 0 - half-clean - - 21 0 0 - 21 10 0 - Riga rhine - - - - 29 0 — 000 - We subjoin a statement of the various charges on the exportation of hemp from Petersburgh, and on its importation into this country. Clean Hemp.-1 bundle = 63 poods - 1 tom. Charges of importation per tom, taking the price at 40/. per a. ton. d. Rou. cop. Duty, 3 you. 60 cop. per bercovits 22 68 Insurance, say IL, and policy 0 10 6 2 If 6 Additional duty, 10 per cent. 2 87 Freight, 52a. 6d. per ton Quarantine duly, 1 per cent. 0 22 Customs and Russia dues 4138 0 10 0 Landing charges Sound dues 0 0 10 0 R. 25 17 Discount, 3 3-4 per cent. 040 Custom-house charges, 4 per cent. 1 I Brokerage Receiving, weighing, and shipping, 3 3-4 ron. per bundle 3 75 Per ton, L. 10 5 0 Bracking, 50 cop. per bereovitz 8 15 Binding, 40 cop. per ditto 2 52 Lighterage and attendance to Cro stadt, 8 rou. per bundle 8 0 In the above calculation, DO allowance is made for Jamage; Rebin 1.1.g 2 1-4 rou. per bundle, 1-2 charged I 12 which, if care be tiken to select a good vessel and an early senson, Brokerage, 60 cop. per ton 0 60 does not amount to much. The estimates are nearly the knoweet n°t of charge. The insurance, indeed, is sometimes as low 29 12a a per cent, and policy. That, however, is only in the very ear.inet R. 45 32 part of the season it rises to X. per ceat. in the autumn. Out-shot Hemp.-1 bundle = 63 poods = I ton. Rx. cap. Fixed charges 46 11 Brokerage, 1-2 per cent. Other charg 9 same. Commission and extra charges, 3 per cent. Half-clean Hemp.-1 1-8 bundle = 63 poods = I Inn. But - Stamps ou drafts, 14 per cent. 48 n 1-2 Brokerage, 1-4 per cent. per cent. Fixed charges Other charges same. Digitized by Google HEMP-SEED, HERRINGS AND HERRING FISHERY. 759 Hemp the produce or manufacture of Europe may not he Imported into the United Kingdom for home consumption, except in British ships, or in ships of the country of which it is the produce, or from which it is imported, under penalty of forfeiting the same and 1001. by the master of the ship.- & 4 Will. 4. c. 54. " 2. and 22.) HEMP (Manilla), commonly called Manilla white rope. Mr. Crawford given the following account of this article :- Of the wild banana, one kind (Musa textilis) grows in vast abundance in some of the most northerly of the spice islands. In the great island of Mindanao, in the Philippines, it fills exten- sive forests. From the fibrous bark or epidermis is manufactured a kind of cloth, in frequent use among the natives. It also affords the material of the most valuable cordage which the indigenous products of the Archipelago yield. This is known to our traders and navigators under the name of Manilla rope, and is equally applicable to cables, and to standing or running rigging."-(Ifist. of Archipelago, vol. i. p. 412.) HEMP (INDIAN), or SUNN. This consists of the fibre of the crotolaria juncea, a totally different plant from the cannabis sativa, which, as already stated, is never used by the Hindoos for cloth or cordage. Sunn is grown in various places of Hindostan. The strongest, whitest, and most durable species is produced at Comercolly. During those periods of the late war when the intercourse with the Baltic was interrupted, and hemp bore an enormous price, large quantities of sunn were imported; but the fibre being comparatively weak, the article was not found to answer, and the importation has since been discontinued.-(Milburn's Orient. Commerce; private information.) [Hemp is imported into the United States chiefly from Russia; the annual value, on an average of the three years ending September 30th, 1838, imported from that country, being $450,000, while the whole importation of it amounted to $603,934. The annual value of all articles manufactured from hemp, sail duck being the principal of these, imported during the same period, amounted to $681,117, of which, $549,967 were from Russia. An average quantity of these articles, to the value of about $100,000, was re-exported; for the most part to Cuba and the other West India islands, and to South America.-Am. Ed.] HEMP-SEED (Fr. Chenevis, Chenevi; Ger. Hanfsaat; It. Cannapuccia; Lat. Semen cannabinum, Rus. Konopljanoe Semja), the seed of hemp. The best hemp-seed is that which is brightest, and will not break when rubbed. It is used either as seed, or for crushing for oil, or as food for fowls. Being loaded with a duty of 21. per quarter, it is but little im- ported into this country. HERRINGS, AND HERRING FISHERY. The herring (Clupea harengus of Lin- næus) is a fish too well known to require any description. It is every where in high esteem, both when fresh and when salted. " Herrings are found from the highest northern latitudes yet known, as low as the northern coasts of France. They are met with in vast shoals on the coast of America as low as Carolina. In Chesapeake Bay is an annual inundation of those fish, which cover the shore in such quantities as to become a nuisance. We find them again in the seas of Kamtschatka; and probably they reach Japan. The great winter rendezvous of the herring is within the arctic circle: there they continue for many months, in order to recruit themselves after the fatigue of spawning; the seas within that space swarming with insect food in a far greater degree than those of our warmer latitudes. This mighty army begins to put itself in motion in spring. They begin to appear off the Shetland Isles in April and May. These are only the forerunners of the grand shoal, which comes in June; and their appearance is marked by certain signs, such as the numbers of birds, like gannets and others, which follow to prey on them; but when the main body approaches, its breadth and depth is such as to alter the appearance of the very ocean. It is divided into distinct columns of 5 or 6 miles in length, and 3 or 4 in breadth; and they drive the water before them, with a kind of rippling. Sometimes they sink for the space of 10 or 15 minutes, and then rise again to the surface; and in fine weather reflect a variety of splendid colours, like a field of the most precious gems. The first check this army meets in its march southward, is from the Shetland Isles, which divide it into two parts one wing takes to the east, the other to the western shores of Great Britain, and fill every bay and creek with their numbers: the former proceed towards Yarmouth, the great and ancient mart of herrings; they then pass through the British Chan- nel, and after that in a manner disappear. Those which take towards the west, after offering themselves to the Hebrides, where the great stationary fishery is, proceed to the north of Ireland, where they meet with a second interruption, and are obliged to make a second division the one takes to the western side, and is scarcely perceived, being soon lost in the immensity of the Atlantic; but the other, that passes into the Irish Sea, rejoices and feeds the inhabitants of most of the coasts that border on it. These brigades, as we may call them, which are thus separated from the greater columns, are often capricious in their motions, and do not show an invariable attachment to their haunts. This instinct of migration was given to the herrings, that they might deposit their spawn in warmer seas, that would mature and vivify it more assuredly than those of the frozen zone. It is not from defect of food that they set themselves in motion for they come to us full of fat, and on their return are almost universally observed to be lean and miserable. What their food is near the pole, we are not yet informed but in our seas they feed much on the oniscus marinus, a crustaceous insect, and sometimes on their own fry. They are full of roe in the end of June, and continue in perfection till the beginning of Digitized by Google 760 HERRINGS AND HERRING FISHERY. winter, when they deposit their spawn. The young herrings begin to approach the shores in July and August, and are then from 1 an inch to 2 inches long. Though we have no particular authority for it, yet, as very few young herrings are found in our seas during winter, it seems most certain that they must return to their parental haunts beneath the ice. Some of the old herrings continue on our coast the whole year."-(Pennant's British Zoology.) The herring was unknown to the ancients, being rarely, if ever, found within the Medi- terranean. The Dutch are said to have engaged in the fishery in 1164. The invention of pickling or salting herrings is ascribed to one Beukels, or Beukelson, of Biervliet, near Sluys, who died in 1397. The emperor Charles V. visited his grave, and ordered a magnificent tomb to be erected to his memory. Since this early period, the Dutch have uniformly main- tained their ascendency in the herring fishery but, owing to the Reformation, and the relaxed observance of Lent in Catholic countries, the demand for herrings upon the Conti- nent is now far less than in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Importance of the Herring Fiskery. Progress of it in Great Britain.-There is, perhaps, no branch of industry, the importance of which has been so much over-rated as that of the herring fishery. For more than two centuries, company after company has been formed for its prosecution, fishing villages have been built, piers constructed, Boards and regulations established, and vast sums expended is bounties, and yet the fishery remains in a very feeble and unhealthy state. The false estimates that have been long current with respect to the extent and value of the Dutch herring fishery, contributed more, perhaps, than any thing else, to the formation of exaggerated notions of the importance of this business. That the Hollanders prosecuted it to a greater extent, and with far greater success, than any other people, is, indeed, most true. There is not, however, the shadow of a ground for believing that they ever employed, as has often been stated, about 450,000 individuals in the fishery and the employments immediately subservient to it. We question whether they ever employed $0 many as 50,000. At the time when the Dutch carried on the fishery to the greatest extent, the entire population of the Seven United Provinces did not certainly exceed 2,400,000 and deducting a half for women, and from a half to two thirds of the remaining 1,200,000 for boys and old men, it would follow, accord- ing to the statement in question, that every able-bodied man in Holland must have been engaged in the herring fishery It is astonishing how such ridiculously exaggerated accounts ever obtained any circulation; and still more so, that they should have been referred to and quoted without, apparently, any doubt being ever entertained of their authenticity, down to our own times!* Had they been sifted ever 80 little, their falsehood would have been obvious; and we should have saved many hundreds of thousands of pounds that have been thrown away in attempting to rival that which never existed. It would be impossible, within the limits to which this article must be confined, to give any detailed account of the various attempts that have been made at different periods to encourage and bolster up the herring fishery. In 1749, in pursuance of a recommendation in his Majesty's speech at the opening of parliament, and of a report of a committee of the House of Commons, 500,000/. was subscribed for earrying on the fisheries, under a corporation called The Society of the Free British Fishery." The Prince of Wales was chosen governor of the Society, which was patronised by men of the first rank and fortune in the state. But this Society did not trust entirely to its own efforts for success. The duties were remitted upon the salt used in the fisheries; and besides this reasonable encouragement, a high tonnage bounty was granted upon every buss fitted out for the deep sea fishery. In conse- quence, many vessels were sent out, as Dr. Smith hastruly stated, not to catch herrings, but to catch the bounty and to such an extent was this abuse carried, that in 1759, when the tonnage bounty was 50s., the almost Incredible sum of 159/. 78. 6d. was paid as bounty upon every burrel of merchaniable herrings that was produced Wealth of Nations, vol. iii. p. 386. M' Culloch's ed.) But. notwithstanding this encouragement, such was the waste and mismanagement of the Company's affairs, that it was speedily destroyed. Dr. Smith says, that in 1794 hardly a vestige remained of its having ever been in existence. But, notwithstanding this ill success, a new company was formed, for nearly the same objects, in 1786, of which George III. was patron. It has had nearly the same fate. For a season or two, busees were fitted out by the society but if every herring caught had carried a ducat in its mouth. the expense of its capture would scarcely have been repaid. The bubble ended by the society for fishing in the deep sea becoming a kind of building society, for purchasing ground in situations where curers and fishermen find it convenient to settle, and selling or letting it in small lots to them, at such advance of price as yields something better than fishing profits.' (See an excellent article on the Herring Fishery, in the 11th Number of the Quarterly Journal of Agriculture.) In 1808, a fresh attempt was made for the improvement and extension of the fishery. The act 48 Geo. 3. established a distinct set of commissioners for the superintendence of all matters connected with the fishery, and authorised them to appoint a sufficient number of fishery officers. to be stationed at the different ports, whose duty it is to see that the various regulations with respect to the gutting, packing, &c. of the herrings, and the branding of the barrels, are duly carried into effect. In 1809, a bounty of 31. per ton was granted on all vessels employed in the deep sea herring fishery, of above 60 tons burden, but payable only on 100 tons and in 1820, a bounty of 20s. per ton, which, under certain specified circumstances, might be increased to 50s., was granted on all vessels of from 15 to 60 tons, fitted out for the shore herring fishery; and, exclusively of these bounties on the tonnage, a bounty of 2s. a barrel was allowed on all herrings cured gutted during the 6 years ending the 5th of April, 1515, and a bounty of 2s. 8d. a barrel on their exportation, whether cured gutted or angutted. During the 11 years ending the 5th of April, 1826, the bounty on herrings cured guited was 4s. a barrel. It is stated in the article already referred to, that the cost of a barrel of cured herrings is about 16s.; the half going to the fisherman for the green fish, the other half to the curer for barrel, salt, and labour. The bounty of 4s. a barrel was, therefore, equal to half the value of the herrings as sold by the fisher- man, and to one fourth of their value as sold by the curer! In consequence of this forced system, the fishery was rapidly increased. The following statement, extracted from the Report of the Commis- sioners of the Fishery Board, dated 1st October, 1830, shows the progress it has made since 1809:- They seem to have been first set forth in a treatise ascribed to Sir Walter Raleigh; and, which very singular, they were admitted by De Witt into his excellent work, the Interest of They have been implicitly adopted by Mr. Barrow, in the article Fisheries Supplement Encyclopadia Britannica. Digitized by Google HERRINGS AND HERRING FISHERY. 761 Abstract of the Total Quantity of White Herrings cured, branded for Bounty, and exported, in 80 far as the same have been brought under the Cognisance of the Officers of the Fishery, from the 1st of June, 1809, when the System hitherto in force for the Encouragement of the British Herring Fishery took place, to the 5th of April, 1830; distinguishing each Year, and the Herrings cured Gutted, from those cured Ungutted.-(Pari. Paper, No. 51. Sess. 1830; and Papers published by the Board of Trade, Part 1.) Total Total Quantity of Herrings Quantity of Total Quantity of Herrings cured. Periods. Herrings exported. branded for Gutted. Ungutted. Total. Bounty. Gutted. Unguited. Total. Barrels. Barrels. Barrels. Barreis. Barrels. Barrels. Barreis. Period extending from 1st of June, 1809, to 5th of April, 42,548 47,637$ 90,185} 34,701 11,063} 24,7841 35,848 1810 Year ending 5th of April, 1811 65,430 26,3974 91,8271 55,6621 18,880 19,253 38,133 1812 72,515} 39,004 111,519 58,430 27,564 35,256 62,820 1813 89,900 63,5571 153,488 70,0271 40,100} 69,625 109,725} 1814 52,9311 57,611 110,5421 38,1841 34,929 83,4741 118,4031 1815 105,3724 54,767 160,139 83,376 68,938 72,3674 141,305 1816 135,981 26,6701 162,6511 116,436 81,544} 26,143 107,688 1817 155,776 36,567 192,343 140,018} 115,480} 23,148 138,6281 1818 204,270} 23,420 227,691 183,089 148,147 14,192 162,339 1819 303,777 37,1164 340,894 270,0221 212,301 14,860} 227,162 1820 347,190} 35,301 382,4911 309,7001 244,096 9,420 253,516 1821 413,308 28,8574 442,1951 363,872 289,445} 5,360 294,8051 1S22 201,6261 24,8971 316,5421 263,2051 212,8901 2,0651 214,956 1823 225,037 23,832 248,869 203,110 169,459} 9851 170,445 1824 335,450 56,7404 392,190 299,631 238,505} 1,125 239,630+ 1825 303,397 44,2681 347,6654 270,8441 201,8524 134 202,0164 1826 340,118 39,1151 379,2331 291,4221 217,053± 20 217,0731 1827 259,171± 29,324 288,4951 223,606 165,741 695 166,406 1828 339,360 60,418 399,778 279,3174 210,766 893 211,659 1829 300.212} 55,737 355,979} 231,827 202,8131 3,062 205,8751 1830 280,933 48,6231 329,557 218,418 177,776 3,8781 181,654 1831 371,096 68,274 439,370 237,085 260,976 3,927 261,903 On looking at this Table, it is seen that the fishery made no progress under the new system till 1815, when the bounty was raised to 4s. This is a sufficient proof of the factitious and unnatural state of the business. Its extension, under the circumstances in question, Instead of affording any proof of its being in a really flourishing condition, was distinctly the reverse. Individuals without capital, but who obtained loans sufficient to enable them to acquire boats, barrels, salt, &c. on the credit of the bounty, entered in vast numbers into the trade. The market was most commonly glutted with fish ; and yet the temptation held out by the bounty caused it to be still further overloaded. Great injury was consequently done to those fish curers who possessed capital; and even the fishermen were injured by the system. Most of the boats employed in the fishery never touch the water but during 6 weeks, from the middle or end of July to the middle of September. They are owned and sailed, not by regular fishermen following that vocation only, but by tradesmen, small farmers, farm-servants, and other landsmen, who may have sufficient skill to manage 11 boat at that season, but who do not follow the sea except for the 6 weeks of the herring fishery, when they go upon a kind of gambling speculation, of earning a twelvemonth's income by 6 weeks' work."-(Quarterly Journal, No. 11. p. 653.) It has been often said, in vindication of the bounty system, that by extending the fishery it extended an important nursery for seamen; but the preceding statement shows that such has not been the effect. On the contrary, it has tended to depress the condition of the genuine fisherman, by bringing a host of interlopers into the field; and it has also been prejudicial to the little farmers and tradesmen. by with- drawing their attention from their peculiar business, that they may embark in what has hitherto been little less than a sort of lottery adventure. These consequences, and the increasing amount of the sum paid for bounties, at length induced the government to adopt a different system and by an act passed in 1825, the bounty of 2s. 8d. on exported herrings was made to cease in 1826, and 1s. was annually deducted from the bounty of 4s. a harrel paid on gutted herrings, till it ceased in 1830. Time has not yet been afforded to learn the full effect of this measure. We, however, have not the slightest doubt that it will be most advantageous. The fore- going Table shows, that though the quantity of herrings taken and exported in 1829 and 1830 fell off, there was R material increase in 1831. This is the more encouraging, as there can be little doubt that the supply will henceforth be proportioned to the real demand; while the genuine fishermen, and those curers who have capital of their own, will no longer be injured by the competition of landsmen, and of persons trading on capital furnished by government. The repeal of the salt laws, and of the duty on salt, which preceded the repeal of the bounty, must be of signal service to the fishery. It is true that salt used in the fisheries was exempted from the duty ; but, in order to prevent the revenue from being defrauded, so many regulations were enacted, and the difficulties and penalties to which the fishermen were in consequence subjected were 80 very great, that some of them chose rather to pay the duty upon the salt they made use of, than to under- take compliance with the regulations. It is much to be regretted, that when government repealed the bounty, it did not also abolish the " Fishery Board." and the officers and regulations it had appointed and enacted. So long as the bounty existed, it was quite proper that those who claimed it should be subjected to such regulations as government chose to enforce but now that it has been repealed, we see no reason whatever why the fishery should not be made perfectly free, and every one allowed to prepare his herrings as he thinks best. It is said, indeed, that were there no inspection of the fish, frauds of all sorts would be practised that the barrels would be ill made, and of a deficient size that the fish would not be pro- perly packed that the bottom and middle of the barrels would be filled with bad ones, and a few good ones only placed at the top; that there would not be a sufficiency of pickle, &c. But it is obvious that the reasons alleged in vindication of the official inspection kept up in the herring fishery, might be alleged in vindication of a similar inspection in almost every other branch of industry. It is, in point of fact, utterly useless. It is an attempt, on the part of government, to do that for their subjects, which they can do far better for themselves. Supposing the official inspection were put an end to, the merchants and others who buy herrings of the curers would themselves inspect the burrels: and while any attempt at fraud by the curers would thus be effectually obviated, they would be left at liberty to prepare their herrings in any way that they pleased. without being compelled, as at present, to follow 3 5 2 96 Digitized by Google 762 HIDES. only one system, or to prepare fish in the same way for the tables of the poor as for those of the rich. So far, indeed, is it from being true that the inspection system tends to put down trickery, that there is much reason to think that its effect is directly the reverse. The surveillance exercised by the officers is any thing but strict and the official brand is often affixed to barrels which, were it not for the undeserved confidence that is too frequently placed in it by the unwary, would lie on the curer's hands. It is rather a security against the detection of fraud, than against its existence. The grand object of the herring fishery Board" has been to enforce such a system of curing as would bring British herrings to a level with those of the Dutch. In this, however, they have com- pletely failed Dutch herrings generally fetching double, and sometimes even three times the price of British herrings in every market of Europe. Neither is this to be wondered at. The consumers of Dutch herrings are the inhabitants of the Netherlands and of the German towns, who use them rather as a luxury than as an article of food, and who do not grudge the price that is necessary to have them in the finest order. The consumers of British herrings, on the other hand, are the negroes of the West Indies, and the poor of Ireland and Scotland. Cheapness is the prime requisite in the estimation of such persons and nothing can be more entirely absurd, than that a public Board should endeavour to enforce the fish curers to adopt such a system in the preparation of herrings as must infallibly raise their price beyond the means of those by whom they are bought. Why should not the taste of the consumers be consulted as much in this as in any thing else It would not be more ridiculous to attempt to have all cheese made of the same richness and flavour as Stilton, than it is to attempt to bring up all herrings to the standard of the Dutch. We do, therefore, hope that a speedy end may be put to this system; and that our legislators and patriots will cease to torment themselves with schemes for the improvement of the fisheries. The very best thing they can do for them is to let them alone. It is not a business that requires any sort of adventitious encouragement. Every obstacle to the easy introduction of fish into London and other places ought certainly to be removed; but all direct interferences with the fishery are sure to be in the last degree pernicious. Of the 181,654 barrels of herrings exported from Great Britain in the year ending the 5th of April, 1830, 89,680 went to Ireland, 67,672 to places out of Europe, (chiefly the West Indies), and 24,302 to places in Europe other than Ireland. HIDES (Ger. Häute; Du. Huiden; Fr. Peaux; It. Cuoja; Sp. Pellejos, Pieles; Rus. Koshi), signify, generally, the skins of beasts; but the term is more particularly applied to those of large cattle, such as bullocks, cows, horses, &c. Hides are raw or green; that is, in the state in which they are taken off the carcase, or dressed with salt, alum, and saltpetre, to prevent them from putrefying; or they are cured or tanned. The hides of South Ame- rica are in the highest repute, and vast quantities of them are annually imported into Great Britain. Large quantities are also imported from various parts of the Continent; and from Morocco, the Cape of Good Hope, &c. His Majesty is authorised to prohibit, by proclamation or order in council published in the London Gazette, the importation of any hides or skins, horns or hoofs, or any other part of any cattle or beast, in order to prevent any contagious distemper from being brought into the kingdom.-(3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 52. 0 68.) An Account of the Weight of the Hides imported into the United Kingdom in each of the Seven Years ending with 1832, and the Revenue annually derived from the same; specifying the Coun- tries whence the Hides were imported, with the Quantities brought from each. Countries from which 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. imported. Untanned Hides. Cust. qrs.lbs. Cwt. qrs.lbs. Cwt. qrs.lbs. Cwt. qrs.lbs. Crot. grs.lls Cut. q7s.lla. Cut. qre Russia 5,426 1 7 14,792 3 2 14,484 2 21 17,189 0 6 22,345 6 10,262 22 8,771 0 16 Sweden and Norway 7 0 15 3 0 5 1 0 0 101 0 20 38 1.26 78 0 Denmark 9,232 3 3 12,919 0 14 12,338 3 6 4,994 11 2,476 6 9,142 0 7,256 0 Prussia 950 0 9 2,074 3 27 6,775 3 15 2,945 20 3,098 2 16 635 18 197 0 24 Germany 14,260 2 23 33,386 2.22 38,335 23 23,353 3 23 31,944 10 23,534 2 9 18,804 United Netherlands 12,747 3 24 21,518 0 27 27,289 3 2 19,102 2 23,966 I 4 19,468 15 11,845 3 11 France 422 0 8 182 0 Portugal, Madeira, and the Azores 283 7 13 19 119 0 15 Spain and the Canaries 2 22 30 2 9 006 Gibraltar 2,903 2 0 1,259 2 1,232 1 7 1,808 1 4 1,352 27 1,781 0 17 1,051 0 16 Italy 5 9 Turkey 1,058 2 13 342 0 2,250 0 12 4,784 0 4 2 Africa, viz. Morocco 10,805 1 6 668 0 17 3 2 4 64 0 13 60 0 0 Sierra Leone and coast to Cape of Good Hope 1,228 2 9 3,111 27 2,875 2 17 3,696 2 3,334 2 IS 3,502 16 3,575 2 2: Cape of Good Hope and Eastern coast 7,520 3 27 12,207 3 12,963 20 15,844 19,957 21 16,900 I 4 13,193 3 14 East Indies (including the Mauritius) 2,375 0 S 1,111 25 3,322 3 12 3,605 19 5,104 0 19 3,376 0 5 10,739 0 New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land 518 2 16 1,167 7 1,112 3 I 3,161 10 3,945 0 13 5,662 0 11 ,719 2 I South Sea Islands and Southern Fishery 3 3 18 4 0 0 15 3 12 5 2 15 28 2 12 British North Ameri- can colonies 2,492 0 1 1,092 2 20 1,548 22 973 3 24 1,052 2 6 615 S99 3 11 British West Indies 3,775 2 27 4,238 13 4,537 0 24 2,922 2 25 2,622 2 2,498 3 6 1,807 2 16 Foreign do. 173 11 62 15 201 3 23 13 2 15 86 S 50 39 U.S. of America 12,162 3 26 11,549 0 7 19,627 3 11 20,162 3 7 16,030 0 26 4,206 13 12,316 0 15 Mexico 2,474 24 73 0 26 67 2 2 3,946 2 153 12 1,428 1 2 Guatemala 1,326 2 4 446 0 8 49 0 8 239 03 Colombia 651 3 12 1,054 20 1,454 2 21 1,197 2 24 1,242 0 IS 259 03 259 1 20 Brazil 16,124 22 12,942 2 11 23,547 3 17 3,207 0 I 11,258 2 19 13,204 1 9 17,767 1 3 States of the Rio de la Plata 79,027 0 11 5,598 3 18 40,605 3 9 156,049 3 18 174,422 0 10 146,008 2 11 65,643 0 4 Chili 7,949 19 6,366 2 15 11,266 1 3 3,434 3 15 5,417 3 26 4,096 17 1,253 2 2 Peru 2,011 3 13 914 3 7 1,726 17 2,332 3 3,817 2 8 553 4 8 2,938 I 27 Guernsey, Jersey, Al- derney, and Man, foreign 130 9 284 15 134 2 7 10 22 504 I 6 452 12 Do. do. produce of 36 No. 118 2 14 37 3 27 810 302 0 0 and 98 No. and 182 No. 121 No. and 163 No. Total 194,243 3 24 152,434 0 15 225,975 3 15 286,416 3 13 339,773 0 24 271,477 3 2 186,982 3 3 and 36 No. and 98 No. and 182 No. and 121 No. and 163 No. Digitized by Google HOGSHEAD-HOPS. 763 An Account of the Weight of the Hides imported-continued. Countries from which 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. imported. No. of Lbs. of No. of Lbs. of No. of Lbs. of No. of Lbs. of No. of Lbs. of No. of Lbs. of No. of Lbs.of Tanned Hides. Rus. other Rus. other Rus. other Rus. other Rus. other Rus. other Rus. other Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Hides. Russia 1,542 1,506 7,620 8,095 1,096 3,219 1,686 Deumark - 825 50 20 Prussia 970 3,761 - 216 Germany 408 Netherlands 305 266 104 France 6,858 218 East Indies (including the Mauritius) 3,408 1 9,030 1,740 36,222 - 15,033 - 13,142 British North American colonies 27,914 35,519 - 33,752 British West Indies 7,559 U.S. of America - 1,119 24 Brazil 172 31 12,067 3,719 Chili - 12 Guerney, Jersey, Al- derney, and Man, foreign 53 Do. do. produce of 62,008 92,669 86,668 84,971 50,440 77,848 - 69,173 Total 1,950 62,313 1,506 103,808 7,621 103,876 8,199 91,515 1,096 115,745 3,219 140,487 1,686 120,038 The rates of duty on the hides imported during the above years were the same as those now charged ; for which, see TABIFF. Amount of Duty received on Foreign and Colonial Hides. 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. L. 3. d. L. 8. d. L a. d. L 8. d. L. 8. d. L. 8. d. L. 8. d. Untanned hides 24,491 14 6 26,319 19 3 34,841 15 0 37,379 = 5 42,538 18 6 32,814 9 S 24,242 2 9 Tanned do, 1.747 12 4 2,219 8 0 2,512 1 4 2,388 2 8 1,337 12 6 1,037 2 3 1,170 13 2 Total 26,239 6 10 28,539 7 3 37,353 16 4 39,767 14 1 43,876 11 0 33,851 11 11 25,412 15 11 Hides and skins paying duty by weight, may be delivered from the bonded warehouses, on the parties entering an average weight, due care being taken that the lockers actually retally and reweigh the hides and skins on delivery ; and in the case of delivery for exportation, to express In cart notes the exact number delivered from the warehouse, in order to enable the export officer on the quay to check the quantity and the merchant is to Indorse on the cocket and bill the total number and weight shipped, before the vessel is suffered to (Customs Order, 4th Dec. 1824.) [See IMPORTS AND Exrorts.-Am. Ed.] HOGSHEAD, a measure of capacity, containing 521 Imperial gallons. A hogshead is equal to t a pipe.-(See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.) HOLIDAYS, are understood to be those days, exclusive of Sundays, on which no regular public business is transacted at particular public offices. They are either fixed or variable. They are not the same for all public offices. Those kept at the Bank of England have recently been reduced a full half. The variable holidays are, Ash-Wednesday, Good Friday, Easter Monday and Tuesday, Holy Thursday, Whit Monday and Tuesday. It is enacted by stat. 6 Geo. 4.c. 106. 1 13., that no holidays shall be kept by the customs except Christ- mas-day and Good Friday, the King's birthday, and such days as may be appointed by proclamation for the purpose of a general fast. The 7 & 8 Geo. 4 c. 53. 0 16. enacts that no holidays shall be kept at the Excise, except Christmas- day and Good Friday, the birthdays of his Majesty and the Prince of Wales, the anniversaries of the Restoration of Charles II., and of his Majesty's coronation, and such days as may be appointed by proclamation for the celebration of a general fast, or such days as may be appointed as holidays by any warrant issued for that purpose by the Lords of the Treasury. HONEY (Du. Honig, Honing; Fr. Miel; Ger. Honig; It. Mele; Lat. Mel; Rus. Med; Sp. Miel), a vegetable juice collected by bees. " Its flavour varies according to the nature of the flowers from which it is collected. Thus, the honeys of Minorca, Narbonne, and England, are known by their flavours; and the honey prepared in different parts even of the same country differs. It is separated from the comb by dripping, and by expression: the first method affords the purest sort; the second separates a less pure honey; and a still inferior kind is obtained by heating the comb before it is pressed. When obtained from young hives, which have not swarmed, it is denominated virgin honey. It is sometimes adulterated with flour, which is detected by mixing it with tepid water: the honey dissolves, while the flour remains nearly unaltered."-(Thomson's Dispensatory.) By stat. 23 Eliz. c. 8. § 4., all vessels of honey are to be marked with the initial letters of the name of the owner, on pain of forfeiting 6s. 8d.; and contain, the barrel 32 gallons, the kilderkin 16 gallons, and the firkin 8 gallons, or forfeit 5s. for every gallon wanting and if any honey sold, be corrupted with any deceitful mixture, the seller shall forfeit the honey, &c. HOPS (Ger. Hopfen; Du. Hoppe ; Fr. Houblon; It. Luppoli, Bruscandoli, Sp. Oblon; Rus. Chmel; Lat. Humulus Lupulus). The hop is a perennial rooted plant, of which there are several varieties. It has an annual twining stem, which when supported on poles, or trees, will reach the height of from 12 to 20 feet or more. It is a native of Britain and most parts of Europe. When the hop was first used for preserving and improving beer, or Digitized by Google 764 HOPS. cultivated for that purpose, is not known-(see ALE) but its culture was introduced into this country from Flanders in the reign of Henry VIII. Hops are first mentioned in the Statute Book in 1552, in an act 5 & 6 Edward 6. c. 5.; and it would appear from an act passed in 1603 (1 Jac. I. C. 18.), that hops were at that time extensively cultivated in Eng- land. Walter Blithe, in his Improver Improved, published in 1649 (3d ed. 1653, p. 240.), has a chapter upon improvement by plantations of hops, in which there is this striking pas- sage. He observes that hops were then grown to be a national commodity but that it was not many years since the famous city of London petitioned the parliament of England against two nuisances; and these were, Newcastle coals, in regard to their stench, &c, and hops, in regard they would spoyl the taste of drink, and endanger the people: and had the parliament been no wiser than they, we had been in a measure pined, and in a great measure starved; which is just answerable to the principles of those men who cry down all devices, or ingenious discoveries, as projects, and thereby stifle and choak improvement." After the hope have been picked and dried, the brightest and finest are put into pockets or fine bagging, and the brown into coarse or heavy bagging. The former are chiefly used in the brewing of fine ales, and the latter by the porter brewers. A pocket of hops, if they be good in quality. well cured, and tight trodden, will weigh about 1jcwt.; and a bag of hope will, under the same conditions, weigh about 21 cwt. If the weight of either exceeds or falls much short of this medium, there is reason to suspect that the hops are of an inferior quality, or have been badly manufactured. The brighter the colour of hops, the greater is the estimation in which they are held. Farnham hops are reckoned best. The expense of farming hop plantations is very great, amounting in some instances to from 701. to 1001. an acre; and the produce is very uncertain, the crop being frequently insufficient to defray the expenses of cultivation. The hop growers are placed under the surveillance of the excise, a duty of 2d. per lb. being laid OB all hops produced in this country. A hop planter is obliged to give notice to the excise, on or before the 1st of August each year, of the number of acres he has in cultivation the situation and number of his oasts or kilns for drying; the place or places of bagging, which, with the storerooms or ware- rooms in which the packages are intended to be lodged, are entered by the officer. No hops can be removed from the rooms thus entered, before they have been weighed and marked by a revenue officer who marks, or ought to mark, its weight, and the name and residence of the grower, upon each bag, pocket. or package. Counterfeiting the officer's mark is prohibited under a penalty of 100L, and defacing it under a penalty of 201. A planter or grower knowingly putting hops of different quali- ties or value into the same bag or package, forfeits 201. And any person mixing with hops any drug. or other thing, to change or alter the colour or scent, shall forfeit 51. a cwt. on all the hops so changed or altered. The malicious cutting or destroying of hop plantations may be punished by transportation beyond the seas for life, or any term not less than 7 years, or by imprisonment and bard labour in a common gaol, for any term not exceeding 7 years.-(Loudon's Ency. of Agriculture; Stevenson's Surrey: Burn's Justice, &c.) The duty on hops of the growth of Great Britain, produced, in 1832, 941,771/.; of which sum the Rochester district paid 75,8611. 10s. 10d., the Sussex 86,4061. 13s. 8d., and the Canterbury 48.66% 18e. 2d. The number of acres occupied by hop plantations in that year were 47,101; of which there were in the Rochester district 12,330, in Sussex 8,514, in Hereford 11,939, and in Canterbury 7,802. During the same year there were 703,153 lbs. of British hops exported. Of foreign hops 11,167 lbs. were imported, and 50,113 lbs. exported.-(Parl. Paper, Nos. 96. 196. and 217. Sess. 1833.) Hops exported from Great Britain are, on being again imported, to be treated as foreign, whether originally so or not. [It was for a long time doubted whether the hop was a native of America; but the fact has been settled by the researches of our botanists, by whom it has been found growing spontaneously on the banks of the Ohio, Missouri, Mississippi, and other American rivers. Hops were early cultivated in the United States for the breweries, and as an article of commerce; and their cultivation is now extensively carried on in New York, Massachu- setts, New Hampshire, and Maine, to the North, and in Ohio and Indiana, to the West. In Pennsylvania they have almost ceased to be cultivated. The Legislature of Massachusetts was the first of the State governments to pass a law for the inspection of hops; and its example has been followed by nearly all the hop grow- ing States on the sca-board. By the inspection laws, no hops can be shipped from the State they are raised in, even to an adjoining State, without having been inspected. Hops are cultivated in yards or plantations, and are raised from cuttings of the female plant, in hills containing from 5 to 6 plants and they are supported by poles 15 to 20 feet in height. They ripen and are gathered about the first week in September, when they are dried in kilns. When 60 dried, they are obliged by the inspection law to remain 10 days previous to bagging; after which they are sent to the inspector's office for inspection, who assorts them into three qualities,-1st and 2d sort, and refuse. The average price of hops is 16 cents per pound. A difference of 2 cents per pound is usually made between the 1st and 2d sorts. Each bale of hops is marked by the inspectors with the year of its growth, its quality, and the inspector's name. The average weight of a bale of hops is 200 pounds. Such hops as grow on rich lands, along the river bottoms, are generally of a dark colour and strong flavour. Lands of this description often produce 2,000 pounds to the acre. On the uplands, they are of a paler colour, and finer flavour; although the produce per acre seldom exceeds 700 pounds. In this climate, hops rapidly lose their fine flavour, and are generally used the season they are raised. If kept over the summer, their quality depre- ciates to such an extent, that. they rarely command one half the price they did at first. Hops have been exported from the United States, principally to France and Germany. The high duties imposed on the importation of them into Great Britain prevents any from being sent to that country, unless after a failure of the crops there has occurred.-Am. Ed] Digitized by Google HORN, HORSE. 765 HORN (Du. Hoorn Fr. Corne; Ger. Horn; Lat. Cornu), a substance too well known to require any description. Horns are of very considerable importance in the arts, being applied to a great variety of useful purposes. They are very extensively used in the manu- facture of handles for knives, and in that of spoons, combs, lanterns, snuff-horns, &c. When divided into thin plates, horns are tolerably transparent, and were formerly used instead of glass in windows. Glue is sometimes made out of the refuse of horn. We annually import considerable quantities. At an average of 1831 and 1832, the entries of foreign horn for home consumption amounted to 15,766 cwt. HORSE (Ger. Pferd; Du. Paard; Da. Hest; Sw. Hdst; Fr. Cheval; It. Cavallo Sp. Caballo; Rus. Loschad; Pol. Kon; Lat. Equus; Gr. 'Inros), a domestic quadruped of the highest utility, being by far the most valuable acquisition made by man among the lower animals. There is a great variety of horses in Britain. The frequent introduction of foreign breeds, and their judicious mixture, having greatly improved the native stocks. Our race horses are the fleetest in the world our carriage and cavalry horses are amongst the handsomest and most active of those employed for these purposes; and our heavy draught horses are the most powerful, beautiful, and docile of any of the large breeds. Number and Value of Horses in Great Britain.-The number of horses used in Great Britain for different purposes is very great, although less so, perhaps, than has been generally supposed. Mr. Middleton (Survey of Middlesex, 2d ed. p. 639.) estimated the total number of horses in England and Wales, employed in husbandry, at 1,200,000, and those employed for other purposes at 600,000. Dr. Colquhoun, contrary to his usual practice, reduces this estimate to 1,500,000 for Great Britain and in this instance we are inclined to think his guess is pretty near the mark. The subjoined official statements give the numbers of the various descriptions of horses in England and Wales, which paid duty in 1814, when those used in husbandry were taxed; and the numbers, when summed up, amount to 1,204,307. But this account does not include stage coach, mail coach, and hackney coach horses, nor does it include those used in posting. Poor persons keeping only one horse were also exempted from the duty; as were all horses employed in the regular regiments of cavalry and artillery, and in the volunteer cavalry. In Mr. Middleton's estimate, already referred to, he calculated the number of post chaise, mail, stage, and hackney coach horses, at 100,000 and from the inquiries we have made, we are satisfied that if we estimate the number of such horses in Great Britain, at this moment, at 125,000, we shall be decidedly beyond the mark. On the whole, therefore, it may be fairly estimated that there are in Great Britain from 1,400,000 to 1,500,000 horses employed for various purposes of pleasure and utility. They may, probably, be worth at an average from 12/. to 15/., making their total value from 18,000,000Z. to 22,500,000/. sterling, exclusive of the young horses. Influence of Railroads on Horses.-The statements now made, show the dependence that ought to be placed on the estimates occasionally put forth by some of the promoters of railroads and steam car- riages. These gentlemen are pleased to tell us, that, by superseding the employment of horses in public conveyances, and in the regular carriage of goods, the adoption of their project will enable 1,000,000 horses to be dispensed with; and that, as each horse consumes as much food as 8 men, it will at once provide subsistence for 8,000,000 human beings! To dwell upon the absurdity of such a statement would be worse than useless; nor should we have thought of noticing it, but that it has found its way into a report of a committee of the House of Commons. It is sufficient to observe, that though all the stage and mail coaches, and all the public wagons, vans, &c. employed in the empire, were superseded by steam carriages, 100,000 horses would not certainly be rendered superfluous. The notion that 1 horse consumes as much as 8 men, at least if we suppose the men to be reasonably well fed, is too ridiculous to deserve notice. The facility with which horses may be stolen has led to the enactment of several regulations with respect to their sale, &c. The property of a horse cannot be conveyed away without the express con- sent of the owner. Hence, a boná fide purchaser gains no property in a horse that has been stolen, unless it be bought in a fair, or an open market. It is directed that the keeper of every fair or market shall appoint a certain open place for the sale of horses, and one or more persons to take toll there, and keep the place from 10 in the forenoon till sunset. The owner's property in the horse stolen is not altered by a sale in a legal fair unless it be openly ridden, led, walked, or kept standing for one hour at least, and has been registered, for which the buyer is to pay 1d. Sellers of horses in fairs or markets must be known to the toll-takers, or to some other creditable person known to them, who declares his knowledge of them, and enters the same in a book kept by the toll-taker for the purpose. Without these formalities, the sale is void. The owner of a horse stolen may, notwithstanding its legal sale, redeem it on payment or tender of the price any time within 6 months of the time of the theft.-(Burn's Justice of the Peace, Chitty's ed. vol, iii. p. 264.) In order to obviate the facility afforded by means of slaughtering houses for the disposal of stolen horses, it was enacted in 1786 (26 Geo. 3. c. 71.), that all persons keeping places for slaughtering horses, geldings, sheep, hogs, or other cattle not killed for butcher's meat. shall obtain a licence from the quarter sessions, first producing from the minister and churchwardens, or from the minister and 2 substantial householders, a certificate of their fitness to be entrusted with the management and car- rying on of such business. Persons slaughtering horses or cattle without licence are guilty of felony, and may be whipped and imprisoned, or transported. Persons licensed, are bound to affix over the door or gate of the place where their business is carried on, in legible characters, the words " Li- consed for slaughtering Horses, pursuant to an Act passed in the 26th Year of his Mujesty King Geo. III." The parishioners entitled to meet in vestry are authorised to choose annually, or oftener, inspectors, whose duty it is to take an account and description, &c. of every living horse, &c. that may be brought to such slaughtering houses to be killed, and of every dead horse that may be brought to be flayed. Persons bringing cattle are to be asked an account of themselves, and if it be not deemed satisfactory, Digitized by Google 766 HORSE DEALERS. they may be carried before a justice. This act does not extend to curriers, fellmongers, tanners, or persons killing aged or distempered cattle, for the purpose of using or curing their hides in their respect five businesses; but these, or any other persons, who shall knowingly or wilfully kill any sound or useful horse, &c., shall for every such offence forfeit not more than 201., and not less than 101. The stealing of horses or other cattle is a capital crime, punishable by death. The maliciously wounding, maiming, killing, &c. of horses and other cattle, is to be punished, at the discretion of the court, by transportation beyond seas for life, for any term not less than 7 years, or by imprisonment for any term not exceeding 4 years; and if a male, he may be once, twice, or thrice publicly or pri- vately whipped, should the court so direct.-(7 & 8 Geo. 4. C. 29. a 25. 7 & 8 Geo. 4. C. 30. è 16.) The duties begin to be charged as soon as horses are used for drawing or riding, and not previously. An Account of the Number of Horses charged with Duty in the Years ending the 5th of April, 1815, 1826, and 1633, the Rates of Duty, and the Produce of the Duties. 1814. 1825. 1832. Rates of Rates of Rates of No. of Duty for Amount of No. of Duty for Amount of No. of Duty for Amount of Horses used for riding or Horses. each Duty. Horses. each Duty. Horses. each Duty. drawing carriages, and Horse. Horse. Home. charged at progressive rates: L.s.d. L. a. d. L.s.d. L. 3. d. (Same) L. s. d. Persons keeping 1 161,123 2176 463,228 12 6 116,529 189 167,510 8 9 123,668 as 177,772 15 0 1825, 2 31,842 4146 150,453 9 0 27,418 273 64,775 0 6 31,073 do. 73,409 19 3 3 12,774 546 66,744 3 0 10,281 2123 26,559 2 3 10,740 do. 28,058 5 0 4 7,612 5 10 0 41,866 0 0 5,748 250 15,807 0 0 5,845 do. 16,073 15 0 - 5 3,670 5 11 6 20,460 5 0 3,190 2 15 9 8,892 2 6 3,210 do. 8,947 17 6 - 6 3,060 5 16 0 17,748 0 0 2,172 2.18 0 6,298 16 0 2,138 do. 6,200 4 0 - 7 3,372 5 19 6 20,147 14 0 2,279 2 19 9 6,808 10 3 2,204 do. 6,584 9 0 - 9 720 6 6 4,374 0 0 585 309 1,776 18 9 532 do. 1,615 19 0 - 10 to 12 2,079 670 13,201 13 0 1,486 336 4,718 0 1,354 do. 4,299 19 0 - 13 16 746 676 4,755 15 0 520 339 1,657 10 0 719 do. 2,291 16 - 17 51 6 8 0 326 8 0 34 340 108 16 0 51 do. 163 4 0 - 18 144 6 9 0 928 16 0 54 346 174 3 0 126 do. 406.7 0 19 38 6 10 0 247 0 0 133 350 432 5 0 76 do. 247 0 0 20 & upwards 1,348 6 12 0 8,896 16 0 1,018 360 3,359 8 0 1,142 do. 3,768 12 0 Total 228,579 813,378 11 6 171,447 309,178 2 0 182,878 329,839 2 0 Horses let to hire 1,454 2176 4,180 5 0 1,702 1 8 9 2,446 12 6 2,073 do. 2979 IS 9 Race horses 660 2 17 6 1,610 0 0 711 189 1,022 1 3 997 do. 1,433 3 9 Other horses and mules: Not wholly used in hus- bandry 177,025 1 0 185,876 5 0 Horses used bona fule in hus- bandry, 13 hands high and above 722,863 0 17 6 632,505 2 6 Do. for husbandry or other purposes of labour, under 13 hands 35,816 0 3 0 5,372 8 0 Horses belonging to small farmers, under 20L rent, keeping not more than 2 horses 38,010 0 3 0 5,701 10 0 Horses used for riding or drawing carriages, and not exceeding 13 hands 19,121 I 0 20,077 1 0 24,639 do. 25,870 19 0 Horses rode by farming bai- liffs 1,251 1 0 1,563 15 0 1,438 do. 1,797 10 0 Do. by butchers, where 1 only is kept 2,089 1 9 4,296 13 9 3,364 do. 4,535 15 0 Do. where 2 are kept solely for trade 1,085 0 10 6 569 12 6 1,213 do. 636 6 Horses not chargeable to any for the of the foregoing duties, and 2d horse not exempted 112,989 0 10 6 59,319 4 6 123,728 do, 64,957 40 Mules 410 0106 215 5 0 348 do. 182 14 0 Totals 1,204,307 310,805 340,678 Exemptions.-Besides the above account of the horses charged with duty, we have been favoured, by the Stamp Office, with an account of the numbers exempted from duty in 1832. This account is not, however, to be relied on inasmuch as very many of those whose horses are not liable to the duties never think of making any returns. By not attending to this circumstance, we inadvertently, in the former edition of this work, under-rated the number of horses engaged in certain departments of industry. The rates of duty payable at present (1834) on horses are the same as those specified in the above Table for 1825 and 1832. A horse bona fide kept and usually employed for the purpose of husbandry, on a farm of less value than 200/. a year, though occasionally used as a riding horse, is exempted from the duty. And husbandry horses, whatever may be the value of the farms on which they are kept, may be rode, free of duty, to and from any place to which a burden shall have been carried or brought back; to procure medical assistance, and to or from markets, places of public worship, elections of members of parliament, courts of justice, or meetings of commissioners of taxes. Brood mares, while kept for the sole purpose of breeding, are exempted from all duty. Horses may be let or lent for agricultural purposes without any increase of duty. Mules employed in carrying ore and coal are exempted from any duty.-(See the Statutes in Chit- ty's edition of Burn's Justice, vol. V. tit. Assessed Tares.) French Trade in Horses.-The horses of France are not, speaking generally, nearly so handsome, fleet, or powerful, as those of England. Latterly, however, the French have been making great efforts to improve the breed of horses, and have, in this view, been making large importations from England and other countries. At an average of the 5 years ending with 1827, the excess of horses imported into France, above those exported, amounted to about 13,000 a year.-(Bulletin des Sciences Géographiques, tom. xix. p. 5.) The imports from England have, in some late years, amounted to nearly 2,000 horses. HORSE DEALERS, persons whose business it is to buy and sell horses. Every person carrying on the business of a horse dealer is required to keep a book, in which be shall enter an account of the number of the horses kept by him for sale and for use, specifying the Digitized by Google HUNDRED WEIGHT. 767 duties to which the same are respectively liable; this book is to be open, at all reasonable times, to the inspection of the officers; and a true copy of the same is to be delivered quarterly to the assessor or assessors of the parish in which the party resides. Penalty for non-compliance. 504-(43 Geo. 3. c. 161.) Horse dealers are assessed, if they carry on their business in the metropolis, 251.; and if elsewhere, 121. 10s. Account specifying the Number of Horse Dealers in Great Britain, in 1831 ; distinguishing between those in the Metropolis and the Country ; with the Rates of Duty on each Class, and the Produce of the Duties.-(Papers published by the Board of Trade, vol. ii. p. 45.) Within the Cities of London and Westminster, Total Number of Horse St. Marylcbone, St. Pancras, and Weekly In any 0 ther Part of Great Britain. Dealers. Bills of Mortality. Number Rate of Amount of Number Rate of Amount of Number Amount of assessed. Charge. Duty. assessed. Charge. Duty. assessed. Duty. L. 8. d. L. a. d. L a. d. L a. d. L. 8. d. 74 25 0 0 1,850 0 0 963 18 10 0 12,037 10 0 1,037 13 887 10 0 HUNDRED WEIGHT, a weight of 112 lbs. avoirdupois, generally written cwt. END OF VOL. L Digitized by Google Digitized by Google the The THE THE the s 80- DIPUTACION PROVINCIAL DE BARCELONA 100 BIBLIOTECA CENTRAL Reg. 312746 Sig.a a 38 (038) Mac C Digitized