THE LONDON ADVISER.
[]HOUSES.
1. HOUSES and lodgings in London are let either furniſhed or unfurniſhed, and their prices are according to their ſize, their ſituation, and their man⯑ner of fitting up. In the central parts of London and Weſtminſter, ſuch as the neighbourhood of St. James's, Charing-Croſs, the ſquares, Covent-Garden, the thea⯑tres, St. Paul's Church-yard, Cheapſide, the Royal Ex⯑change, &c. they are high rented; in more diſtant parts they are cheaper, and in by-ſtreets, courts, lanes, alleys, and ſuch obſcure places, cheaper ſtill.
A private houſe 24 feet in front, and about ſeventy deep, two or three rooms on a floor, unfurniſhed, in the beſt ſtreets, will let from 100 guineas a-year to 150; ſuch a houſe, in other places, may be had from 80 to 100 guineas: unfurniſhed lodgings in ſuch houſes are ſeldom to be met with.
In leſs central places, but in good ſtreets, unfurniſh⯑ed houſes of twenty feet in front, two rooms and a light cloſet on a floor, may be had for ſixty or ſeventy guineas a-year; and houſes of eighteen feet in front for forty or thirty guineas, according to the ſituation and conveniencies. Unfurniſhed lodgings in ſuch houſes let proportionably. The firſt floor generally goes at half the net rent of the houſe without taxes; the parlour floor, or ſecond floor, at one fourth.
[2]2. Houſes about twenty-one feet in front will let from four guineas a week furniſhed to eight guineas, according to the ſeaſon of the year and the time they are engaged for. The deareſt ſeaſon is from Chriſtmas to June, when families are in town and the parliament ſitting; the cheapeſt, when families are out of town, and the parliament prorogued. In the winter ſeaſon, ſuch a houſe as I have mentioned, taken for four or five months, may poſſibly be had for ſeven guineas a-week. Thus taken, the tenant pays no taxes, the goods are delivered on inventory, and whatever is deſtroyed is paid for. Furniſhed lodgings, that is, the firſt floor with a ſervant's room, &c. in ſuch a houſe, will let for from two guineas a-week to three and a half, in pro⯑portion to the goodneſs of the furniture, the conveni⯑encies wanted, the trouble given, the time they are engaged for, and the ſeaſon of the year.
Houſes of fifty guineas a-year rent will let furniſhed for from two guineas weekly to five, and the firſt floor furniſhed will let for, from one guinea a week to two guineas; ſecond floors two thirds of the rent of firſt floors, and parlour floors at the price of ſecond floors.
3. It is generally eſtimated, that in lodging-houſes the rent of the firſt floor furniſhed, with other conve⯑niencies, ſuch as kitchen, cellars, garret, &c. ſhall pay the rent and taxes of the whole houſe unfurniſhed.
4. Shops, when let ſeparate, will fetch from 20 l. a-year to 60 l. free of taxes, according to their ſize, ſitu⯑ation, trade of the ſtreet, and ſhew of window.
5. Landlords have now got into a method of making tenants pay guineas for rent inſtead of pounds, and alſo land-tax and repairs; but all theſe outgoings ſhould be conſidered when the agreement is made, as well as the taxes on the houſe, for in ſome pariſhes the poor-rates and land-tax are lower than in others. Perſons who have money may often get the remnant of a leaſe cheap, provided they will pay down a certain ſum of money for ſuch leaſe; for there are always diſtreſſed houſe-keepers in London, trying to procure money by every poſſible means; for which reaſon, ſuch as pur⯑chaſe a leaſe ſhould examine the covenants of that leaſe, and the ſtate of the building, and particularly take care [3] that the rent and taxes are paid up to the time they take poſſeſſion of it, and alſo the ground-rent, by ſee⯑ing the receipts; otherwiſe the tenant may have the arrears of ſuch rent or taxes to pay, and the ſeller of the leaſe may not be found, or, if found, not able to repay.
6. The general conditions of a leaſe are, to leave ſuch fixtures at the end of the term as are given in with the leaſe on ſchedule, and to leave it in ſuch a ſtate as it was in when taken, the wear from time only excepted; to pay the rent half-yearly, under a forfei⯑ture of the leaſe, but with a liberty of aſſigning it dur⯑ing the term.
7. If a tenant purchaſes or takes a leaſe of another tenant, during its term, by aſſignment, he is no longer bound for the rent than whilſt it is in his poſſeſſion; he may aſſign it to another, and, this done, is no longer anſwerable for the rent; but the firſt tenant, aſſigning it without the conſent of his landlord, is held bound for the rent during the whole term, if the occupier does not pay it.
[4]8. TABLE, ſhewing how many Years Purchaſe an An⯑nuity or Leaſe is worth, ſo as to make 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8 per cent. of Money. Y. M. D. Years, Months, Days.
Y. P. | 4 per cent. | 5 per cent. | 6 per cent. | 7 per cent. | 8 per cent. |
Y. M. D. | Y. M. D. | Y. M. D. | Y. M. D. | Y. M. D. | |
1 | 0 11 15 | 0 11 12 | 0 11 9 | 0 11 6 | 0 11 3 |
2 | 1 10 18 | 1 10 9 | 1 10 0 | 1 9 21 | 1 9 18 |
3 | 2 9 9 | 2 8 18 | 2 8 3 | 2 7 15 | 2 6 27 |
4 | 3 7 15 | 3 6 15 | 3 5 18 | 3 5 8 | 3 3 21 |
5 | 4 5 12 | 4 4 0 | 4 2 15 | 4 1 6 | 3 11 24 |
6 | 5 2 27 | 5 0 27 | 4 11 0 | 4 9 6 | 4 7 15 |
7 | 6 0 0 | 5 9 12 | 5 7 0 | 5 4 21 | 5 2 1 [...] |
8 | 6 8 24 | 6 5 15 | 6 2 15 | 5 11 18 | 5 9 0 |
9 | 7 5 6 | 7 1 9 | 6 9 18 | 6 6 6 | 6 3 0 |
10 | 8 1 9 | 7 8 18 | 7 4 9 | 7 0 9 | 6 8 17 |
11 | 8 9 3 | 8 3 18 | 7 10 18 | 7 5 27 | 7 1 18 |
12 | 9 4 0 | 8 10 9 | 8 4 18 | 7 11 9 | 7 6 12 |
13 | 9 11 24 | 9 4 21 | 8 10 6 | 8 4 9 | 7 10 24 |
14 | 10 6 21 | 9 10 21 | 9 3 15 | 8 8 27 | 8 2 27 |
15 | 11 1 12 | 10 4 15 | 9 8 15 | 9 1 9 | 8 6 21 |
16 | 11 7 24 | 10 10 0 | 10 1 6 | 9 5 9 | 8 10 6 |
17 | 12 2 0 | 11 3 6 | 10 5 21 | 9 9 6 | 9 1 15 |
18 | 12 7 27 | 11 8 6 | 10 9 27 | 10 0 21 | 9 4 15 |
19 | 13 1 18 | 12 1 0 | 11 1 27 | 10 4 0 | 9 7 6 |
20 | 13 7 3 | 12 5 15 | 11 5 18 | 10 7 3 | 9 9 24 |
21 | 14 0 9 | 12 9 24 | 11 9 3 | 10 10 0 | 10 0 0 |
22 | 14 5 12 | 13 1 27 | 12 0 12 | 11 0 21 | 10 2 12 |
23 | 14 10 6 | 13 5 24 | 12 3 18 | 11 3 9 | 10 4 12 |
24 | 15 2 27 | 13 9 15 | 12 6 15 | 11 5 18 | 10 6 9 |
25 | 15 7 12 | 14 1 3 | 12 9 9 | 11 7 24 | 10 8 3 |
26 | 15 11 21 | 14 4 1 [...] | 13 0 0 | 11 9 27 | 10 9 21 |
27 | 16 3 27 | 14 7 21 | 13 2 1 [...] | 11 11 21 | 10 11 [...] |
28 | 16 7 27 | 14 10 21 | 13 4 24 | 12 1 18 | 11 0 18 |
29 | 16 11 21 | 15 1 18 | 13 7 6 | 12 3 9 | 11 3 27 |
30 | 17 3 15 | 15 4 12 | 13 9 6 | 12 4 27 | 11 3 [...] |
31 | 7 7 0 | 15 7 3 | 13 11 3 | 12 6 12 | 11 4 6 |
E [...] | [...]3 4 0 | 25 0 0 | 20 0 0 | 16 18 0 | 14 3 [...] |
Note, F. S. or the Fee Simple, is the Perpetuity.
[5]9. In purchaſing a leaſe of a tenant, it is often ex⯑pected that the purchaſer ſhould alſo buy the fixtures at a fair appraiſement; in doing this, he ſhould exa⯑mine the leaſe, and ſee that he does not give money for thoſe fixtures which belong to the houſe; for land⯑lords will often fit up a houſe with every neceſſary fix⯑ture, and put the tenant to no expence in this matter. But if the fixtures have been put up by the tenant, he has a liberty to remove or ſell all ſuch as are not fixed to the freehold.
Fixtures removeable are locks, bells, ciſterns, grates fixed, coppers, dreſſers, ſhelves, counters, &c. Paper paſted to the wall, buildings erected, new windows, chimney-pieces, &c. or things to beautify the houſe, &c. and fixed to the freehold, muſt go with the houſe, at the end of the term, and cannot be removed.
When goods or fixtures are appraiſed, the ſeller and the buyer each appoints one appraiſer, and the price is fixed between them; if they cannot agree, a third is called in by the other two, and his deciſion is final.— If ſix or eight hours is taken up in this buſineſs, each appraiſer expects a guinea for his trouble; if a few fix⯑tures only are to be appraiſed, the appraiſer will expect only half-a-guinea. However, if you employ him in removing your furniture, repairing it, &c. and you make a prior agreement with him, he will probably not charge you for the appraiſing of a few fixtures. Be careful to have an honeſt man for an appraiſer, for his voice has been known to have been bought over on the other ſide. When goods are appraiſed to a buyer, a greater value is put upon them than they would fetch at a ſale; and if immediately ſold, they would not fetch the appraiſed price by thirty per⯑cent.
10. In taking a houſe of its owner, take care that it is in thorough repair, and give a rent accordingly.
11. It is very dangerous to take unfurniſhed lodg⯑ings in London; for ſhould the tenant of the houſe not pay his rent, your goods will be liable to be ſeized for it; ſo will your carriage and horſes ſtanding at livery, for the rent of the ſtables, if that rent is in arrear.— To avoid this, enquire into the circumſtances of the [6] houſe-keeper, and if you cannot get the landlord of the houſe to give you an agreement in writing, that he will not ſeize your goods for any arrears that may become due by his tenant, aſk to ſee the landlord's receipt for the laſt half-year, before you pay your own rent.
12. Such houſe-keepers who have troubleſome lodg⯑ers, may remove them, if they will not quit otherwiſe, by raiſing the rent weekly upon them; and if they re⯑fuſe to pay, ſuing them for the ſame; if the lodgings are furniſhed, and they do not pay, an opportunity may be taken, when the lodger and all perſons be⯑longing to him are out of the apartments, to lock the door, and keep him from re-entering; if any thing is owing, any effects of the lodger may be detained.
13. If a tenant of an unfurniſhed houſe gives notice to his landlord to quit, and does not quit at the time given in ſuch notice; or if he will not quit the pre⯑miſes on a legal notice from his landlord, but holds poſſeſſion beyond his term, if the landlord has ac⯑quainted him in writing that he expects double rent for his ſo doing, he is obliged to pay double the rent firſt agreed on. 11 Geo. 2. c. 19. ſ. 18. 4 Geo. 2. c. 28. ſ. 1.
If a tenant cannot be removed by any of theſe means, he muſt be ejected out by a courſe of law.
Notice of warning muſt be in writing, directed to the tenant.
14. It is a late determination of the courts, that if it be neceſſary to give a tenant at will half-a-year's notice to quit, the ſaid notice muſt be given half-a-year be⯑fore the expiration of his year; that is to ſay, his year and the notice muſt expire at the ſame time; for if the [...]enant enters upon another year, he may keep poſſeſ⯑ſion the whole of that year, and no ejectment to put him out before will ſtand good.
15. For every dwelling-houſe inhabited, rented from 5 l. to 20 l. the occupier muſt pay 6 d. in the pound, 18 Geo. 3. c. 26.19 Geo. 3. c. 59.
At 20 l. and upwards to any ſum under 40 l. 9 d. in the pound. Ibid.
All at 40 l. and upwards, 1 s. in the pound. Ibid.
[7]The offices, yards, gardens, coach-houſes, brew-houſes, wood-houſes, waſh-houſes, &c. provided they all ſtand within the compaſs of one acre, belonging to the dwelling-houſe, muſt be valued with the dwelling-houſe, and ſhall be charged with the ſame duties. Ibid
Shops and warehouſes, if attached to the dwelling-houſes, ſhall alſo be liable to be reckoned in with the rent, except the warehouſes of wharfingers. Ibid.
But no warehouſe that is a diſtinct building ſhall be liable. Ibid.
No houſe ſhall be deemed inhabited, where only one perſon is leſt in charge of it. Ibid.
Where houſes are let out in tenements, the landlords ſhall pay the duty. Ibid.
Halls and offices that pay other taxes are liable to this. Ibid.
Penalties for refuſing or neglect, to be ſued for in the courts of Weſtminſter, and the proſecutor ſhall have full coſts if he recovers.
SHOPS.
16. Every occupier of a houſe, part of which ſhall be uſed as a ſhop, publickly kept open for carrying on trade, or ſelling any goods by retail; and every build⯑ing or place uſed as a ſhop only ſhall pay a yearly duty as under.
l. | l. | s. | d. | |
Yearly rent of | 5 and under | 10 | 4 in the pound. | |
10 | 15 | 8 | ||
15 | 20 | 1 | 0 | |
20 | 25 | 1 | 3 | |
25 | 30 | 1 | 9 | |
30 & upwards | 2 |
25 Geo. 3. c. 30. ſ. 1.
To be paid by the occupier only, notwithſtanding any agreement with the landlord to the contrary. Ibid. ſ. 5.
The rent of the houſe to be aſcertained by the aſ⯑ſeſſment of the houſe-tax of 19 Geo. 3. c. 59. Ibid. ſ. 6.
[8]No warehouſe for lodging goods, diſtinct from the public ſhop, or adjoining to it, if uſed only as a whole⯑ſale ſhop, ſhall be charged with the duty. Ibid. ſ. 7.
Nor ſhall bakers or venders of flour, meal, bran or rubbles, be liable to this duty. Ibid. ſ. 8.
Where houſes are divided into different apartments amongſt ſeveral occupiers, the ſame ſhall be aſſeſſed as one houſe, and the duty paid by the landlord. Ibid. ſ. 9.
The duties ſhall be aſſeſſed, levied and collected in ſuch manner, and with ſuch allowances, and under ſuch forfeitures, and according to ſuch rules as are pre⯑ſcribed for aſſeſſing, collecting, and levying the win⯑dow-tax. Ibid. ſ. 10. See Windows.
Aſſeſſors are to eſtimate the rent of ſuch houſes, and may examine the pariſh rate-books for that purpoſe.— And perſons refuſing them ſhall forfeit 40 s. Ibid. ſ. 20, 28.
Houſes not to be aſſeſſed at any leſs value yearly than as they ſtand rated to other public taxes. Ibid. ſ. 29.
Perſons overcharged may appeal to the commiſſion⯑ers (without expence) and from them to any juſtice of the King's-Bench in England and Wales Ib. ſ. 32, 35.
Penalties not exceeding 20 l. to be recovered before a juſtice; upwards of that ſum in a court of law. Ibid. ſ. 36, 37.
Perſons aggrieved by a juſtice, may appeal to the quarter-ſeſſions. Ibid. ſ. 38.
Perſons ſummoned by a juſtice to attend as a wit⯑neſs, and not attending, forfeit 40 s. Ibid.
All proſecutions to be commenced within one year of the offence; and perſons ſued for any thing done in virtue of their office, may plead the general iſſue, and if acquitted ſhall have treble coſts. Ibid. ſ 42.
17. Perſons who have no furniture, and to whom it may be inconvenient to purchaſe it, may hire it of bro⯑kers, at the rate of from 15 l. to 30 l. for every hun⯑dred pounds worth of goods, according to the time it is wanted. If hired for one year, they will expect 30 l. per cent. if two years, about 25 l. per cent. if [9] for three or four years, about 20 l. per cent. and ſo on in proportion; at 30l. per cent. if taken for four or five years, upholders will lend new furniture, and make it up to the taſte of the borrower.
18. But if houſe-keepers can make ſhift and furniſh a houſe by degrees, they may for ready money, if they are acquainted with the value of things, purchaſe ar⯑ticles at ſales, frequently at leſs than half their firſt coſt, and often at a third, provided they attend ſuch reſpectable ſales, as are advertiſed ſome days before in all the newſpapers.
19. If you mean to purchaſe any thing of conſequence at an auction, ſuch as an eſtate, a houſe, &c. it is ad⯑viſeable to take ſome intelligent perſon with you, as a witneſs of the tranſaction; you may aſk the auctioneer what queſtions you pleaſe concerning it, and whatever he aſſures you on the ſubject, he is obliged to make good, or the purchaſe is void.
The principal auctioneers in London, whoſe terms generally, for ſelling goods ſeven and an half per cent. paying all expences except the King's duty, which is 6 d. in the pound, are,
- Mr. Alderman Skinner and Co. Alderſgate-ſtreet.
- Mr. Chriſtie, Pall-Mall.
- Mr. Robins, Covent-Garden.
- Mr. Anſel, Spring-Gardens.
- Mr. Spurrier, Copthall-court, Throgmorton-ſtreet.
- Mr. Denew, Charles-ſtreet, Berkley-ſquare.
- Mr. Ridgeway, Fe [...]church-ſtreet.
- Mr. Barford, Leiceſter-ſquare.
- Meſſ. Tatterſall, Hyde-Park Corner.
- Mr. Langhorn, Barbican.
- Mr. Aldridge, St. Martin's-lane.
- Mr. Hopkins, Holborn.
- Mr. Mackenzie, Park-ſtreet, Groſvenor-ſquare.
- Meſſrs. Leigh and Sotheby, York-ſtreet, Covent-garden.
- Mr. Patterſon, King-ſtreet, ditto.
- Meſſ. Egerton, Whitehall.
- Mr. Elderton, Bow-church yard.
But there are a variety of leſſer ones, perhaps equally reſpectable.
INSURANCE-OFFICES FROM FIRE.
20. When your houſe is furniſhed, the next pre⯑caution to be taken is, to inſure it from fire: this may be done at ſeveral public inſurance-offices, and at a very ſmall annual premium. The landlord generally inſures the building.
1. The Sun-Fire Office, near the Royal Exchange, and in Craig's-court, Charing-croſs, has been eſteemed the moſt eligible, becauſe the proprietors act liberally to the inſur⯑ed, and pay the amount of any loſs with little trouble to the ſupplicant. They expect you to give in the beſt eſtimate you can of the loſs ſuſtained, ſwear to the amount, and then they immediately pay; they uſed to deduct three per cent. on the payment, but have lately altered their plan, and pay now the full ſum inſured, if the goods loſt amount to that ſum. The clerks ex⯑pect ſome ſmall fees to the amount of a few guineas.
The Sun-Fire Office, beſides 7 s. 6d. for the policy and mark, has the following annual premiums:—
Sums inſured. | Common Inſurance. | Hazardous Inſurances. | Double Hazar Inſurance. |
Any ſum Not exceeding 200 l. | 4s. per annum. | 6s. per annum. | 10s. per ann. |
From 200l. to 1000l. | 2s. per cent. per annum. | 3s. per cent. per annum. | 5s. per cent. per ann. |
From 1000l. to 2000l. | 2s. 6d. do. do. | 4s. do. do. | 7s. 6d. do. do |
From 2000l. to 3000l. | 3s. 6d. do. do. | 5s. do. do. |
[11]The common inſurances comprehend all brick and ſtone buildings not occupied by hazardous trades or goods; hazardous inſurances are on timber-buildings and goods, and merchandizes in them called hazard⯑ous; as diſtillers, chemiſts, apothecaries, colour-men, tallow-chandlers, oil-men, inn-holders, &c. The double-hazardous are thatched, timber, or plaſter build⯑ings. If there is any part of the building wood or plaſter on the outſide, hazardous inſurance muſt be paid.
2. The London Aſſurance, Birchin-lane, eſtabliſhed by a royal charter, aſſures houſes and other buildings, goods, wares and merchandiſe, being the property of the aſſured, on commiſſion or in truſt, houſehold goods, furniture, wearing apparel, and printed books, (except writings, books of accompts, notes, bills, bonds, money, jewels, pictures, gun-powder, cattle, hay, ſtraw, and corn [...]nthraſhed,) from loſs or damage by fire, upon the fol⯑lowing terms and conditions:
Sum aſſured. | Com. Inſur. | Hazard. Inſ. | Doub. Haz. In. |
Any ſum Not exceeding 1000l. | 2s. percent. per annum. | 3s. percent. per annum. | 5s. per cent. per ann. |
From 1000l. to 2000l. | 2s. 6d. do. do. | 4s. do. do. | 7s. 6d. do. do. |
From 2000l. to 3000l. | 2s. 6d. do. do. | 5s. do. do. |
All brick or ſtone buildings, covered with ſlate, tile or lead, wherein no hazardous goods are depoſited, nor any hazardous trades carried on, will be aſſured at the premiums under common inſurance; ſo will all goods [...]nd wares in ſuch buildings.
Timber or plaſter buildings covered with ſlate, tile or lead, wherein no hazardous goods are depoſited, [...]or any hazardous trades carried on, are conſidered as hazardous inſurances: ſo are all goods and wares not hazardous, if depoſited in ſuch buildings; and all ha⯑zardous trades, ſuch as apothecaries, bread and biſ⯑cuit bakers, colourmen, coopers, ſhip and tallow [...]handlers, inn-holders, malſters, ſail-makers and ſtable [...]eepers, though carried on in brick or ſtone buildings, [...]overed with ſlate, tile or lead; alſo all hazardous [12] goods, ſuch as hemp, flax, tow, pitch, tallow, tar and turpentine, depoſited in brick or ſtone buildings, co⯑vered with ſlate, tile or lead, wherein no hazardous trades are carried on.
Timber or plaſter buildings, covered with ſlate, tile or lead, wherein hazardous goods are depoſited, or any hazardous trades carried on; alſo thatched buildings, wherein are no hazardous goods or trades carried on, and ſhip-carpenters and boat-builders are conſidered as doubly hazardous; alſo hazardous goods depoſited in hazardous buildings, in which hazardous trades are carried on; alſo goods in thatched buildings, glaſs, china and earthen wares.
Chemiſts, diſtillers, ſugar-bakers, and others whoſe trades are attended with extraordinary hazard, from the nature thereof, or other dangerous circumſtances, and alſo deal yards, will be aſſured by ſpecial agree⯑ment.
Dwelling-houſes, out-houſes, and other buildings, goods, wares and merchandiſe, may be aſſured in one policy, provided the ſum aſſured on each be particular⯑ly mentioned.
Perſons aſſuring for ſeven years will be allowed one year's premium, and the like abatement will be made out of the duty payable to government.
Aſſurances on buildings and goods are deemed diſ⯑tinct and ſeparate adventures, ſo that the premium on buildings is not advanced by reaſon of aſſuring goods therein, nor the premium on goods by reaſon of aſſur⯑ing the buildings wherein they are kept.
No loſs or damage happening to plate will be paid, unleſs it be expreſsly mentioned to be aſſured, and in adjuſting loſſes thereon, the ſame ſhall not be valued at more than 6 s. per ounce; and in adjuſting loſſes on houſes, no wainſcot, ſculpture or carved work ſhall be valued at more than 3s. per yard.
This Office allows all reaſonable charges attending the removal of goods in caſe of fire, and pays the loſs of the aſſured, if the goods ſhall be deſtroyed, loſt, or damaged by ſuch removal, without any deduction.
3. The Hand-in-Hand Office, oppoſite St. Sepulchre's church, Snow-hill, inſures for ſeven years at 10 s. de⯑poſit, [13] and 2 s. premium per cent. on brick or ſtone, and double that ſum for timber-houſes, the ſum not exceeding 1500 l. and for any ſum from 1500 l. to 2000 l. 4 s. per cent. on brick or ſtone, and double on timber-houſes, for any term of years not exceeding ſeven. But a ſum not exceeding 2000 l. is not to be inſured on any building, without the approbation of a general court; and the office inſures only three-fourths of the value of each houſe. This office inſures houſes only, on the plan of the Union-Office. See the Union-Office.
4. The Union-Office, Maiden-lane, Cheapſide, is formed on the ſame model as that of the Hand-in-Hand, excepting that, inſtead of houſes, this Office only inſures goods and merchandiſe, not exceeding the ſum of 6000 l. in any one houſe, warehouſe, yard, &c. at the following rates.
Beſides the parliamentary ſtamp-duties, (and the charge of the policy and mark, which is 9 s. 6 d.) for every 100 l. inſured for ſeven years, ſhall be paid a certain premium, and a depoſit as follows:—
Sums aſſured. | Com. Inſ. | Half Haz. | Haz. | H. & H. H. | Dou. Ha [...]. |
Pr. Dep. | Pr. Dep. | Pr. D. | Pr. Dep. | Pr. Dep. | |
Any ſum not ex⯑ceeding 1000l. | s. d. s. d. | s. d. s. d. | s. s. | s. d. s. d. | s. d. s. d |
2 0 10 0 | 2 6 12 6 | 3 15 | [...] 9 20 0 | 5 0 [...] 0 | |
1000l. to 2000l. | 2 6 12 6 | 3 0 15 0 | 4 20 | 5 6 27 6 | 7 6 37 6 |
2000l. to 3000l. | 2 6 12 6 | 3 6 17 6 | 5 25 | 6 6 32 6 | 8 0 40 0 |
Above 3000l. | 3 0 15 0 | 4 0 20 0 | 5 25 | 7 [...] 35 [...] |
Common Inſurances are in houſes built on all ſides with brick or ſtone, and covered with ſtate, tiles or lead, and in which no hazardous trades are carried on.
Hazardous inſurances are goods, not uſually deemed hazardous, in timber or plaſter buildings; and hazar⯑dous goods or trades, ſuch as pitch, tar, tallow, hemp, ſlax, roſin, &c. apothecaries, coopers, bread or biſ⯑cuit bakers, ſhip and tallow chandlers, ſail and rope-makers, colourmen, inn-holders, &c. in brick or ſtone buildings.
Double-hazardous inſurances are, hazardous goods and trades, in timber or plaſter buildings: and alſo [14] chemiſts, ſhip-carpenters, boat-builders, china, glaſs and earthen ware, hay and ſtraw, &c.
Particular caſes, and other inſurances more hazar⯑dous ſtill, are ſubject to the orders and diſcretion of the directors.
The inſurance takes place from the time the charge is paid, and the deed ſubſcribed by the inſurer. If any alteration is made on the premiſes where the goods, &c. are inſured, notice muſt be given at the office, and ſuch alteration approved by the directors, or the poli⯑cy is void.
The depoſit-money is returned on the expiration of the policy; that is, at the end of the ſeven years, with a proportionable dividend of profits (after deduction of loſſes and incidental charges only).
Every member or inſurer ſhall pay a due proportion of all loſſes and charges; and if ſuch proportion ſhall at any time, beyond the depoſit-money, be more than equal to the ſum at firſt depoſited, then any member or inſurer, who by inſurance becomes a member, ſhall be at liberty to quit the ſociety, paying his proportion due at that time.
Any member may transfer his policy; and the exe⯑cutors or adminiſtrators of every member dying, ſhall, within three months, give notice at the office, and have ſuch transfer or draft indorſed upon his policy, in which caſe, the aſſignee, executor, or adminiſtrator, ſhall be entitled to the ſame benefit the original inſurer was; that is, if the directors think proper: if not, they ſhall only have the proportionable profits up to the time of transfer or death.
Members may attend general meetings, which are held twice a year, and may at any time ſee the orders and proceedings of the directions, books of accounts, &c.
5. The Weſtminſter Fire-Office, Bedford-ſtreet, Co⯑vent-garden, inſures houſes only, and on the following terms:—
Every perſon inſuring for one year ſhall pay for ſuch inſurance, for every hundred pounds. two ſhillings for brick, and four ſhillings for timber buildings, exclu⯑ſive of all preſent and future Parliamentary impoſiti⯑ons, [15] provided the premiſes are ſituate within ten miles from the office.
Perſons inſuring for ſeven years become proprietors of the office; and in conſideration of their payment for the whole term in advance, will be allowed one year's inſurance in ſeven. They are to pay a pre⯑mium at the rate of two ſhillings per cent. and a depo⯑ſit of ten ſhillings per cent. on brick, and double thoſe ſums on timber buildings within five miles from the office.
All ſeptennial inſurers ſhall contribute to making good the loſſes in proportion to their inſurance; but none to be charged above ten ſhillings per cent. for brick, and double for timber houſes, &c. which if any loſs ſhall ever require, any member, firſt paying his ſaid ſhare, and remitting the depoſit-money, may ſur⯑render his policy, and be diſcharged.
The depoſit-money to be returned to every inſurer at the expiration of his policy, together with the yearly dividends of profit, except what ſhall be neceſſary to defray incident charges and loſſes by fire, which ſhall be firſt deducted out of the ſame.
Houſes and buildings having the fronts and back fronts built with brick or ſtone, and having alſo ſuffi⯑cient brick party-walls, are to be deemed brick; and others not ſo built, to be deemed timber.
All buildings inſured to be viewed by the ſurveyor of the office, who is to determine their quality, whe⯑ther brick or timber.
Every policy to be charged four-pence, and every mark to fix on the houſe one ſhilling and four-pence.
This office inſures to the full value on all houſes.
Gilding, car [...]ing, and hiſtory painting, are not in⯑cluded in the inſurance; nor will more than 75 l. be allowed for any marble chimney-piece; nor more than 75 l. for an ornamental [...]eling; nor more than two ſhillings and ſix pence per foot running for ſtucco cor⯑mices and entablature; nor more than ſixpence per yard running for papering.
[16]6 The Phoenix Company, or New Fire-Office, in [...]ombard-ſtreet, inſures houſes, goods, and merchan⯑diſe, to any amount, on the following terms:—
Sums inſured. | Com. Inſur. | Hazard. Inſ. | Very Haz. Inſ. |
Any ſum | |||
Not exceeding 100l. | 2s. per annum. | 3s. per annum. | 5s. per annum. |
From 200l. to 1000l. | 2s. percent. per annum. | 3s. percent. per annum. | 5s. percent. per annum. |
From 1000l. to 2000l.* | 2s. 6d. do. do. | 4s. do. do. | 7s. 6d. do. do. |
From 2000l. to 3000l.* | 2s. 6d. do. do. | 5s. do. do. |
Buildings and goods are here conſidered as ſeparate riſks, and therefore the premium or money paid annu⯑ally will not increaſe, as ſet forth in the above table, unleſs the property inſured is in one riſk, and ſhall exceed 1000l.
Large ſums may be inſured by ſpecial agreement.
The price of the policy and mark is 8 s. 6 d.
On death the policy may be continued to the heir, provided the policy is brought to the office to be in⯑dorſed. Perſons changing their habitations may have their policies indorſed, which keeps them in force.
This office, in caſe of loſs, pays the full value for chimney-pieces, carving, ſtucco-work, and other de⯑corations.
Perſons inſuring for ſeven years will be charged for ſix years only, and if they inſure for a number of years more or leſs than ſeven, will be allowed a rea⯑ſonable diſcount, both in the premium and inſurance tax.
7. The Royal Exchange Aſſurance Office, over the Ex⯑change, eſtabliſhed by royal charter, inſures from loſs or damage by fire, houſes and other buildings, houſe-hold furniture, wearing apparel, printed books, goods, wares and merchandiſes, being the property of the aſ⯑ſured or on commiſſion, (except all manner of writing books of accompts, notes, bills, bonds, tallies, ready money, and gun-powder) upon the following terms and conditions: [17]
Sums aſſured. | Com. Aſſur. | Hazard. Aſſur. | Doub. Haz. Aſ. |
Any ſum above 100l. not exceeding 1000l. | 2s. per cent. per ann. | 3s. percent. per annum. | 5s. percent. per annum. |
From 1000l. to 2000l. | [...]s. 6d. do. do. | 4s. do. do. | 7s. 6d. do. do. |
From 2000l. to 3000l. | [...]s. 6d. do. do. | 5s. do. do. |
Any larger ſums may be aſſured by ſpecial agree⯑ment.
Aſſurances on jewels, plate, medals, watches, prints not in trade, pictures, drawings, and ſtatuary-work; alſo aſſurances to chemiſts, diſtillers, and ſugar-refiners; or any other aſſurances more than ordinarily hazardous, by reaſon of the trade, nature of the goods, narrowneſs of the place, or other dangerous circumſtances, muſt be particularly ſpecified, and may be made by ſpecial agreement.
Any number of dwelling-houſes, and the out-houſes thereunto belonging, together with the goods therein, may be aſſured in one policy, provided the ſum to be aſſured on each is particularly mentioned.
Aſſurances on buildings and goods are deemed diſ⯑tinct and ſeparate adventures, ſo that the premium on goods is not advanced by reaſon of any aſſurance on the building wherein the goods are kept, nor the pre⯑mium on the building by reaſon of any aſſurance on the goods.
For accommodation of ſuch perſons as are deſirous of being aſſured for more than one year. a diſcount of 5 l. per cent. per annum, on the yearly premium will be allowed for all years except the firſt, and perſons ſo aſſured are not ſubject to any calls or contribution to make good loſſes.
Every perſon upon application to be aſſured with this Company, is to depoſit 2 s. and 6 d. for the mark, and 6 s. for the Policy, on ſums not exceeding 1000 l. and 11 s. for the Policy, on ſums exceeding 1000 l. [18] which money is to be returned, if the aſſurance pro⯑poſed is not agreed to. No Policy is to be of any force till the premium for one year is paid.
In adjuſting loſſes, no plate is to be valued at more than ſix ſhillings per ounce, except by ſpecial agree⯑ment.
Perſons aſſured by this corporation do not depend upon an uncertain fund or contribution, nor are they ſubject to any covenants or calls to make good loſſes which may happen to themſelves or others; the capital ſtock of this corporation being an unqueſtionable ſe⯑curity to the aſſured, in caſe of loſs or damage by fire. And in caſe of diſpute, the aſſureds have a more ready and effectual method of recovery, than can be had a⯑gainſt any ſocieties who do not act under a common ſeal.
This corporation will, in caſe of fire, allow all rea⯑ſonable charges attending the removal of goods, and pay the ſufferer's loſs, whether the goods are deſtroyed, loſt, or damaged by ſuch removal, without any deduction.
9 As an addition to the expence of inſurance, go⯑vernment has laid a tax of 1 s. 6 d. on every 100 l. inſured, which muſt be paid at the time you pay your inſurance, which is always a year in advance.
10. It is cuſtomary for theſe offices to have inſert⯑ed in the body of the policy the particular articles you inſure, and how much upon each; as for example: Cloaths 50 l. books 30 l. furniture 150 l. plate 70 l. &c. and though you were to inſure to the amount of 1000 l. they never pay more than you can make ap⯑pear you have loſt. If inſuring as above, you have loſt 100 l. of cloaths, they will pay no more than 50 l. the ſum inſured, and the ſame in other articles. It is folly, therefore, to inſure beyond the value of your real property. If your property increaſes at any [...] ⯑ture time, and you wiſh to inſure more, you can have a new policy for 6 s. 6 d.
11. In caſe of removal, the ſame policy will do, with the addition of an indorſement, for which they charge one ſhilling.
12. All theſe offices pay for the removal of goods, in caſe of an adjoining fire.
Cautions againſt Fire.
[19]13. To guard againſt fire, every maſter or miſtreſs of a family ſhould be particularly attentive, that ſer⯑vants put every fire out before they go to bed, and that they put out the candles in their own room; for if a fire does not begin in your own houſe, as watchmen are always about to give notice, there is ſufficient time to eſcape. But if families ſhould be ſo unfortunate as to be ſurpriſed by fire, and cannot eſcape at the door, they ſhould by all means endeavour to be cool, and not be too much alarmed—fear overcomes reaſon, and will prevent ſtudying our ſafety. If there be no way out at the top of the houſe; from the firſt floor win⯑dows, or even from the ſecond, a perſon might eſcape by tying the blankets and ſheets together, faſtening one end to a chair, with the window half down, and throwing the other end out, and lowering himſelf down by the blankets, &c. the window will prevent the chair following you.
14. The law enjoins, that the pariſh-officers ſhall pay as a reward to the turn-cock, whoſe water firſt reaches the place where any fire breaks out, a ſum not exceeding ten ſhillings; to the firſt engine brought complete, a ſum not exceeding thirty ſhillings; to the ſecond a ſum not exceeding twenty ſhillings; and to the third a ſum not exceeding ten ſhillings: and to make perſons careful of fire, whenever a chimney takes fire, and the houſe is not burnt, or wherever any miſ⯑chief is done to a houſe by fire beginning in a chim⯑ney, and the pariſh-officers pay the rewards as above, the tenant or lodger, whoſe chimney is thus ſet on fire, ſhall re-pay the church-wardens the ſaid ſums, or ſuch part of them as a juſtice ſhall direct, if the matter is referred to him. 14 Geo. 3. c. 78.
15. But as a preſervative againſt fires, every pa⯑riſh is furniſhed with long ladders: theſe are kept at certain places, and every family ſhould know where they are kept, and write it down, and fix the writing [...]n ſome conſpicuous part of the houſe, as alſo in what [...]tuation the fire-plugs are; by doing this, people can [...]lways have recourſe to them.
[20]16. If families have any thing to preſerve more than ordinary; for example, ſhop-books, books of account, writings, bank-notes, caſh, &c. as theſe things take but little room, it would be adviſeable for thoſe who have no other ſecure place, to put them every night into a bag, and place them in their chamber by their cloaths; they can thus be readily carried off.
17. Some families have ſtone-cloſets, others have iron cheſts, but the above method would be almoſt equally as ſecure.
18. Tradeſmen would do well to keep duplicates of their books, and lodge one ſet in the houſe of a friend; the occurrences of a week might be tranſcribed at the week's end.
19. Thoſe who have bank-notes ſhould always en⯑ter the number, date and ſum of each note, in a book, as ſoon as received, in which caſe, if deſtroyed, on giving the bank ſecurity to re-pay the money, in caſe the note ever appears againſt them, they will give the loſer the caſh. If they receive them of bankers, and can remember where they received them, and on whoſe account, ſuch bankers will furniſh them with the particulars, as they always enter them in their books.
20. If a neighbouring houſe is on fire, preſerve your temper, be cool and wary; don't be in haſte to open your doors and let in the rabble, be they as impatient as they may; for in fires, thieves are always ready to plunder a houſe, and you may loſe more that way than any other. The inſurance-offices always retain in their ſervice a number of men to attend at fires; theſe may be known by their dreſs and badge; and if you admit any into your houſe to aſſiſt you in removing your property, let theſe be the only people. The maſter of the houſe ſhould ſtand at the door himſelf for that purpoſe, and the goods, as removed, ſhould be carried to the houſe of ſome friend in the neighbourhood, on the oppoſite ſide of the ſtreet.
21. The taxes of a houſe in London are nearly half the rent, and are as follow:
1. Land-tax, a tax on the ground, paid by the te⯑nant, half-yearly, but generally allowed by the land⯑lord in the rent, if no agreement to the contrary.— [21] This is generally four ſhillings in the pound, but in ſome pariſhes leſs than others.
2. A houſe-tax paid to Government, by the tenant, of ſix-pence, nine-pence, or one ſhilling in the pound according to the rent. The rent, in this tax, is rated to the full. See Houſes, 15.
3. If the houſe has a retail-ſhop belonging to it, it pays an additional tax of from four ſhillings to two ſhillings in the pound, according to the rent of the houſe. This to be paid alſo by the tenant. See Houſes, 16.
4. The poor's-rate is another tax, but a parochial one, paid by the tenant to the overſeers of the pariſh, for the maintenance of the poor. This is collected every half-year, and the aſſeſſment is from one to ſix ſhillings in the pound, or more, according to the num⯑ber of poor in the pariſh. This aſſeſſment is made by the pariſh officers, and ratified by a bench of juſtices. The book, with this ratification, and the ſums each houſe-keeper is to pay, is brought round to every houſe, when the money is collected, and each inhabi⯑tant may ſee how much others pay, then or at any other time, on paying ſix-pence or a ſhilling. The rent of each houſe is generally eſtimated in the pariſh-book at two-thirds of the real rent paid; and if any perſon finds that he pays more in proportion than the reſt of the pariſh, he may obtain redreſs, by an appli⯑cation to the quarter-ſeſſions, at a very little expence.
Any perſon occupying any houſe, &c. out of which any other perſon aſſeſſed has removed, or which, at the making the rate was empty, every perſon ſo removing, and the perſon ſo coming into and occupying the ſame, ſhall pay to ſuch rate in proportion to the time he oc⯑cupied the ſame. In caſe of diſpute, the proportion to be aſcertained by two juſtices. 17 Geo. 2. c. 38. ſ. 12.
5. Another tax is the window-tax, paid by the te⯑nant to Government, and collected half-yearly.
[22]This is aſſeſſed in the following manner:—
s. | d. | |
Every houſe pays in the firſt place, per an. | 3 | 0 each |
And alſo for 7 windows, and no more, | 0 | 2 |
8 | 0 | 6 |
9 | 0 | 8 |
10 | 0 | 10 |
11 | 1 | 0 |
12 | 1 | 2 |
13 | 1 | 4 |
14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, | 1 | 6 |
20 | 1 | 7 |
21 | 1 | 8 |
22 | 1 | 9 |
23 | 1 | 10 |
24 | 1 | 11 |
25, and upwards, | 2 | 0 |
Windows of out-houſes are to be reckoned into the number.
Windows lighting two rooms to be reckoned as two.
Two or more windows, not twelve inches apart from each other, are reckoned but as one.
No windows deemed ſtopped, unleſs with ſtones, brick, or plaſter.
Opening a window, without notice to the aſſeſſor, forfeits twenty ſhillings.
Glaſs doors, and lights over doors, do not pay ac⯑cording to this act.
6. But, in addition to the above, windows pay a ſecond duty, in lieu of the duty on tea taken off; this is as follows:—
L. | s. | d. | |
Every houſe under 7 windows, per ann. | 0 | 3 | 0 |
7 | 0 | 6 | 0 |
8 | 0 | 8 | 0 |
9 | 0 | 10 | 6 |
10 | 0 | 13 | 0 |
11 | 0 | 15 | 6 |
12 | 0 | 18 | 0 |
13 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
14 | 1 | 5 | 0 |
[23]After this, 5 s. a window for the reſt, to the num⯑ber of 50.
L. | s. | d. | |
50 windows pay per ann. | 6 | 10 | 0 |
After this, 2 s. 6 d. a window for the reſt, to 100.
100 to 109 per ann. | 12 | 0 | 0 |
109 to 120 | 13 | 0 | 0 |
120 to 130 | 14 | 0 | 0 |
130 to 140 | 15 | 0 | 0 |
140 to 150 | 16 | 0 | 0 |
150 to 160 | 17 | 0 | 0 |
160 to 170 | 18 | 0 | 0 |
170 to 180 | 19 | 0 | 0 |
180, upwards | 20 | 0 | 0 |
Perſons are to pay only for two houſes, and thoſe containing the greateſt number of windows.
Glaſs-doors, and lights over doors, are here conſi⯑dered as windows.
7. The next tax is the church-wardens rate, for re⯑pairing the church. The county-rate is generally col⯑lected with it. This is only collected occaſionally, and may be from three-pence in the pound to two or three ſhillings, according to the exigencies required.
8. Another rate or aſſeſſment is the paving-tax, for repairing, cleaning, and lighting the ſtreets. This is one ſhilling and ſix-pence in the pound, of two-thirds of the rent or value.
9. Another is for watching them, but this is a trifle.
10. There is a further call on every houſeholder for Eaſter-offerings, for the rector or vicar of the pariſh; this is four-pence a-head for every one in each family capable of receiving the ſacrament, paid once a year, at Eaſter. But this ſeldom is collected; it is generally leſt to each family to give what they pleaſe; but it is always expected that they give ſomething; perhaps a few ſhillings.
Once or twice a year the church-wardens generally bring round a book, to make a collection for the lectu⯑rer or afternoon preacher. At this time a houſe⯑keeper generally gives a few ſhillings, but this is op⯑tional.
[24]In ſome pariſhes, twenty or thirty ſhillings a year, more or leſs, are paid by houſe-keepers, in proportion to their rent, in lieu of tithes.
11. A further expence to the inhabitants is the river water, with which each houſe is ſerved, from about twenty-four to thirty ſhillings a year, according to the time of ſerving, whether every day or three times a week.
1. The London-bridge water-works ſupply the city, and the greateſt part of its liberties, with Thames wa⯑ter, at the rate of from twenty-four to thirty ſhillings (paid half-yearly) according to the diſtance from Lon⯑don-bridge. The pipes of this Company ſpread all over the city to Tower-hill, Snow-hill, Shore-ditch, and St. Dunſtan's-church, Fleet-ſtreet. Office at Lon⯑don-bridge.
2. The York-building water-works, (office in Vil⯑liers-ſtreet, attendance from three in the afternoon till ſeven) ſupplies Weſtminſter, and the weſt end of the town, as far as Holborn, with Thames water, and will convey the water, if deſired, to the upper-ſtories of a houſe, the ſecond or third ſtory, according to their ſituation. The higher the houſe ſtands from the water ſide, the leſs height can they convey the water. The prices of the water is the ſame with the London-bridge water-works; only, if the water is to be conveyed to the ſecond or third ſtory, more money is paid annu⯑ally, from thirty ſhillings to five pounds. The Thames water is reckoned ſofter than that of the new river.— If a fire happens in the night, application for water from this Company, and that of London-bridge, muſt be made at the reſpective offices, and it will be ſome time, half an hour or more, before they can get their engines to work.
3. The New-River Company (office in Dorſet-ſtreet, Fleet-ſtreet) ſupplies all London on the north ſide of the Thames, from Mile-end turnpike to Hyde-park corner, with water brought twenty miles from London, to a reſervoir at Iſlington. The terms of this Company are rather higher than thoſe of other water-companies, but the water is generally clearer and better. They ſerve families from twenty-four ſhillings a year to five [25] pounds, according to the quantity of water they re⯑quire, which is ſettled by the collector of the diſtrict, whoſe name may be known, by applying at the office, in Dorſet-ſtreet. This collector alſo will furniſh fa⯑milies with the names of the turn-cocks in his diſtrict, printed on paper, to whom application is to be made in caſes of fire; and in the collector's receipts will be found the place to apply to, in want of water and o⯑ther complaints. This Company conveys the water to upper ſtories of houſes, without any additional ex⯑pence than the lead pipes, which are the property of, and muſt be fixed by, the tenant; the nearer a houſe ſtands to the Thames ſide, that is, the lower it is from the reſervoirs, the higher in the houſes the water can be conveyed. In the New River Water-works, the water runs from an eminence; in the London-bridge and York Company, it is forced up by fire; of courſe, the higher it is conveyed, the more money annually is required.
4. There are other water-works, thoſe of Chelſea, Hampſtead, Bayſwater, Shadwell, Lambeth, &c. that ſupply other parts of the town, and the Borough of Southwark, with ſoft water, and on nearly the ſame terms. Thrale's water-works, that ſupply part of Southwark, ſerve ſo low as 20 s. a-year.
5. The lead pipes from the main, that is, from the middle of the ſtreet, are conſidered as belonging to the houſe, and muſt be paid for, and kept in repair by the tenant; other repairs and expences are paid by the ſe⯑veral companies.
6. Attendance is always given at the reſpective offi⯑ces from morning till night, and complaints immediate⯑ly redreſſed. It is proper to ſend to theſe offices im⯑mediately on a fire breaking out, eſpecially thoſe that ſupply the Thames water.
7. It is adviſeable for every houſe-keeper, on firſt coming to London, to apply to the offices for the names of the turn-cocks, and where they live; and al⯑ſo to fire-offices, for the places where the fire-engines are; alſo to the veſtry-clerks of the different pariſh⯑es, for the places where the ladders are kept, and from year to year, who are the conſtables and other [26] pariſh-officers, and to write theſe down and ſtick them up in the kitchen, or other part of the houſe, that the earlieſt application, in caſe of fire, may be made for every neceſſary aſſiſtance.
8. In froſty weather, to ſecure water to the houſe is the care and buſineſs of the tenant. For this pur⯑poſe, freſh horſe-dung ſhould be laid over the pave⯑ment under which the lead pipes paſs, and ſome ſhould be wound round the pipe as it croſſes the area. Dung can be had at any of the ſtables for a trifle, and the ex⯑pence of fetching it in a cart is not much.
BAKERS, BREAD AND MILK.
1. EVERY peck loaf ſhall weigh 17 lb. 6 oz. averdupois weight; every half peck 8 lb. 11 oz. and every quartern loaf 4 lb. 5 oz. and an half; to be weighed within twenty-four hours after baking or being ſold, under the penalty of from 1 s. to 5 s. for every ounce deficient, at the diſcretion of the magiſ⯑trate, the bread to be taken and weighed in his pre⯑ſence; for every deficiency of weight under one ounce, the penalty is from 6 d. to 2 s. 6 d. 31 Geo. 2. c. 39. 3 Geo. 3. c. 11.
2. Bread made for ſale ſhall be fairly marked; wheaten-bread with a large Roman W, and houſehold-bread with an H, to aſcertain under what denomina⯑tion it was made, under a penalty not exceeding 20 s. nor under 5 s. Ibid.
3. Any baker or other perſon demanding or taking a higher price for bread, than what the ſame ſhall be ſet at by the aſſize, or refuſing to ſell to any perſon any of the ſorts allowed or ordered to be made; when he ſhall have more than is neceſſary for the immediate uſe of his family or cuſtomers, forfeits not exceeding 40 s. nor leſs than 10 s. Ibid.
4. If a certain weight of wheaten-bread coſts 8 d. the ſame weight of ſtandard wheaten (to be marked S. W.) ſhall be ſold for 7 d. and the ſame weight of [27] houſehold-bread ſhall be ſold for 6 d. on penalty of from 10 s. to 40 s. Ibid.
Bread inferior to wheaten is not to be ſold at a higher price than houſehold-bread is ſet at, on penalty of 20 s. Ibid. Applications to a magiſtrate.
5. Bakers' men, who carry the bread round to their cuſtomers, will ſometimes, if families run up a bill, ſell a loaf or two by the way, and put the money into their own pockets, telling their maſters, that they left them at ſuch houſes. The maſter, of courſe, charges the cuſtomer for bread he never had; and, when the bill comes to be paid, it perhaps occaſions a diſpute, and the buyer finds himſelf obliged to pay for it after all. To avoid this, the beſt method is, never to run a bill with a baker, but pay for the bread as it is left; or, if this be inconvenient, order the bill in every Monday morning, while the occurrences of the week are in the memory: theſe bills, examined and filed, will prevent your being cheated. Bakers, like milk-women, will ſometimes leave tallies, on which they daily chalk what is left, but a mark is eaſily added, while the ſervant is inattentive, which robs you of the price of a loaf, or a pint of milk. Theſe marks are ſometimes made on the door-poſt, oftener without the door than within; of courſe an addition can be made unknown to your ſervant, as the baker or milk-woman paſſes the door; or they may be wholly rubbed out, by wanton boys or others, as is frequently the caſe; and when the ſcore is gone, the baker or milk-woman may charge what they pleaſe; and as they can ſell a loaf or a pint of milk to thoſe who pay ready money, and ſe⯑crete that money; to conceal this fraud from their maſ⯑ters, they will ſcore it up to their cuſtomers on credit.
6. With reſpect to milk, though ſold at 3 d. a quart, it is always mixed with water. There are cows that are driven into the ſtreets, about the weſt end of the town, from which you may have your milk, and ſee it milked, at 4 d. a quart, but the milk of theſe is not very good, as the cows are driven about all the day; yet it is better than what is brought by milk-women.
BUTCHERS AND MEAT.
[28]1. IT is by no means adviſeable to deal with one butcher, unleſs you can agree to have all your meat, viz. beef, mutton, veal, lamb and pork, weigh⯑ed in, at one and the ſame price, all the year round; which ſome butchers will do at 5 d. a pound, and occaſionally give you, at the ſame price, a quarter of houſe-lamb. If you enter into ſuch an agreement, take care to have a bill of the weight always ſent home with the meat, and order it to be weighed by your own people.
If you make no ſuch agreement, and deal regularly with one butcher, you will frequently be charged for a joint you never had; and for half a pound, or a quarter of a pound more than the joint weighs: and you will always pay a halfpenny, or a farthing more per pound, than was you to go to market and cheapen it yourſelf. In buying a joint at market, of ſeven pounds and an half, you may often deduct the half pound, but when ſent home by a butcher who credits you, never. This conduct in a family will occaſion a great ſaving at the year's end. If you pay your butcher but once a quarter, be ſure to have a bill of the weight and price ſent in with your meat, and a re⯑gular bill of the week's meat every Monday morning. In this caſe you will ſee what you are about, and not be liable to be impoſed upon.
2. Good meat ſhould not look lean, dry, or ſhrivel⯑led; the fleſhy part ſhould be of a bright red, and the fat of a clear white. When the fleſh looks pale, and the fat yellow, the meat is not good. Cow beef is worth a penny a pound leſs than ox beef, except it be the meat of a maiden heiſer. In a buttock you may know it by the udder.
3. The average price of beef is from 4d. a pound to 5d. The prime boiling parts are the rump, buttock edge-bone, briſkit, thick and thin flank; roaſting pie⯑ces, the ſurloin and ribs.
[29]Butchers make a difference in price between pieces of beef to roaſt and boil; if you take a piece of each, they will ſell prime beef for 4d. halfpenny; if a boil⯑ling piece alone 4d. if roaſting alone 5d.
If you want rump-ſteaks in any quantity, it is cheap⯑er to give 7d. a pound without bone than 4d. halfpenny for the whole rump. A buttock is the cheapeſt joint, as it is free from bone; for if you wiſh it, the butcher will ſell it you without the marrow-bone, which is worth its weight for the marrow.
In buying a buttock of beef, be careful you do not buy the mouſe-buttock for the prime one. The differ⯑ence is eaſily known; the prime buttock is firſt cut off the leg, and is the thickeſt; the mouſe-buttock is thin⯑ner, and cut off the legs between the buttock and the leg bone, is coarſe meat, and not worth ſo much by one penny a pound.
A bullock's tongue will ſell from 2s. to 4s. 6d. ac⯑cording to its ſize and goodneſs. A good tongue ſhould look plump, clear and bright, not of a blackiſh hue.
4. The fleſh of mutton ſhould be of a bright red, and its fat of a clear white; and unleſs it is very fat it is worth little. Ewe mutton is not worth ſo much as weather by a penny in the pound; mutton five years old, if it can be got, is the moſt delicious; its natural gravy is brown. A leg of ewe mutton may be known by the udder on its ſkirt. The average price of prime weather mutton is 4d. halfpenny per pound, though it will ſell often for 5d. halfpenny.
5. The average price of veal is 6d. though it will often ſell for 8d. particularly the fillet. Large veal is ſeldom good. Veal ſhould be fat and very white, like rabbit or chicken, not red, or look as if it was much blown up.
6. The average price of graſs lamb is 6d. a pound, that of pig-pork the ſame, though pork chops will of⯑ten ſell for 7d. or 8d.
Houſe lamb at Chriſtmas is dear, and if fine and ſat will ſell for 7s. 6d. a quarter, the leg 5s. At other times it may be bought ſo low as 3s. 6d. a quarter.
7. If your butcher ſends you any tainted meat, he may be fined, by complaining to a magiſtrate; but the [30] readieſt and leaſt troubleſome method of redreſs, is [...] put up with a trifling loſs, and deal with ſuch a butche no more.
8. The beſt markets in town are, St. James's, New port, Clare-market, Newgate, Honey-lane, and Leaden hall, for meat; for vegetables, Covent-Garden and Leaden-hall; for freſh butter, Leaden-hall, particular⯑ly for Epping butter and cream cheeſe.
POULTRY.
1. POULTRY of all ſorts may be purchaſed cheape [...] of the higlers at the ſeveral markets, than at the Poulterer's ſhops; but of the higlers you muſt take care what you buy: fowls and chickens ſhould be fat plump and white, particularly white legged. Chicken may be known by their ſize, and fowls are young, if they have no ſpurs.
By the ſame marks you may judge of turkeys. A large cock-turkey at Chriſtmas cannot be bought for leſs than 6s. or 7s. at other times 5s.; a hen turkey from 4s. to 5s. 6d. Fat crammed chickens, about ten weeks old, on or about Lady-day, are worth about 3s. 6d. each, and a fine fowl at Midſummer is worth 3s. 6d. at other times chicken may be bought of higlers for 3s. or 4s. a couple, and fowls at the ſame price.
Ducks and geeſe ſhould look white, very plump, and broad over the breaſt. A fat gooſe, weight about 10 lb. on Michaelmas-day, is worth 5 s. at other times about 3 s. 6 d. A green gooſe in May is worth 4 s. The price of ducks is from 3 s. a couple to 5 s. Wild ducks, in froſty weather, may be bought in Fleet-market for 2 s. 6 d. a couple; at other times they are worth 2 s. each. If they ſmell fiſhy they are of little value; to know this, take one of the pen-feathers from the wing, and put it down the throat; if it ſmells fiſhy in draw⯑ing it out, the bird will taſte ſo. Dove-houſe pidge⯑ons, in May or June, may be bought for 3 s. 6 d. or 4 s. a dozen. In winter time, poulterers will aſk 1 s. 6 d. a piece. Larks, in hard weather, may be [31] had for 1 s. 6 d. a dozen. They are beſt ſoon after harveſt. Guinea fowls are beſt in Spring, when they get fat without feeding. At this time they are worth from 7 s. to 10 s. each; at other times they are worth little: theſe laſt can be bought only of the poulterers, of whom quails alſo may be had after harveſt, at 2 s. 6d. each. Woodcocks are from 2 s. to 4 s. each, accord⯑ing to the plenty or ſcarcity.
2. Eggs are from three a groat to eight, according to the time of the year; they are deareſt in winter: but ſuch as wiſh for new-laid eggs may frequently get them at the livery-ſtables, for one penny or three-half⯑pence each.
FISH.
FISH is generally deareſt and beſt, when in ſea⯑ſon.
1. Fiſh-mongers charge a price for fiſh according to their cuſtomers; to deal with one man regularly, and pay him once or twice a year, is as bad as dealing with butchers in the ſame way. A fiſh-monger near the ſquares will charge 2 s. 6 d. for a mackrell, which may be bought for half the money at Charing-croſs; and for one-third of the money from thoſe who cry them about.
To ſuch as live convenient, Billingſgate is the place to buy ſea-fiſh at, whether you want little or much.— Market-days there are Mondays, Wedneſdays, and Fridays; but market-days are the deareſt days.— You may often buy them freſh, and forty per cent. cheaper, on the intermediate days. By purchaſing at Billingſgate, you may buy at one-third of the price which fiſh-mongers charge, and if you lay out a few ſhillings, it will pay for a perſon to carry them home: fiſh-mongers, at this market, purchaſe at break of day; and, when the market is not glutted, they will, at thoſe times, buy up all the largeſt fiſh, but there is always ſuf⯑ficient leſt to ſerve private families. There is an act of parliament to oblige fiſh-mongers to ſell brill, bret, or [...]mall turbot, not exceeding 16 inches from eye to tail, [32] for 6 d. a pound, under a penalty of 20 s. to the in⯑former; for aſking more or refuſing to weigh or mea⯑ſure it, any perſon may ſeize the fiſh-monger, and deliver him to a conſtable, to carry him before a juſ⯑tice, who will not only fine him, but make him return the money. 33 Geo. 2. c. 27. But when turbit is in ſeaſon, as in May and June, one of 6 lb. weight may be bought at Billingſgate for 3 s. 6 d. or 4 s. other fiſh in proportion.
3. Mackrell, in June and July, are in great plenty, and may be bought at Billingſgate by the quarter of a hundred, for 2 d. or 3 d. a piece. Mackrell and her⯑rings, if freſh, will look bright, their gills red, and their eyes clear. Mackrell are reckoned cheap at 4 d. or 5 d. each. If fiſh is firm, not flabby or ſlimy, the gills ruddy or bleeding, and the eyes bright, you may depend on it it is freſh; but if otherwiſe, not ſo. Sal⯑mon, when cut, ſhould look red and bleeding freſh.— But, put your noſe to the gills, and you will ſoon find if it is ſtale.
Thames ſalmon is always double the price of other ſalmon; not that it is better taſted, but being later out of the water, it can be crimped, which gives it a firm⯑neſs. The price of ſea-ſalmon is from 9 d. to 3 s. a pound.
Lobſters and crabs ſhould always be bought alive.— Thoſe of the middling ſize are always the beſt. No overgrown animal food is delicious.
The average price of ſoals is about 1 s. a pound, though they are not ſold by the pound, but the pair. Herrings are bought for about 1 s. a dozen; whitings 2 s. a dozen; haddocks according to their ſize, for about 6 d. a pound. Large cod, at the deareſt time, may be purchaſed for about 1 s. or 1 s. 3 d. a pound; at the cheapeſt for one-third of the money. Skate at about 6 d. a pound, and barrel cod, in Lent, for about 6 d. a pound. If a family could diſpenſe with a quan⯑tity of ſalt fiſh, dried cod may be bought at the dry fiſh-mongers, in Thames-ſtreet, in winter, for about 5 s. for 28 lb. and barrel cod, or pickled ſalmon by the kit, at a very reaſonable price. The price of a barrel of the beſt oyſters, Colcheſter or Milton, is [33] 3s. 6 d. Dutch eels 4 d. or 6 d. a pound. Smelts from 2 s. a hundred to 5 s. Prawns from 1 s. 6 d. to 3 s. a hundred.
Freſh-water fiſh is in price as follows: Eels, jack, carp and perch, 1 s. a pound; trout and tench 1 s. 6 d. gudgeons 6 d. or 9 d. a dozen; flounders from 9 d. to 3 d. a piece, according to their ſize. Freſh-water fiſh are kept by fiſh-mongers, in ciſterns, and ſhould be bought alive.
Small turbots are eaſily diſtinguiſhed from Dutch plaice; for plaice have many yellow ſpots on their back, turbots have none.
Haddock may be known from ſmall cod, by two black ſpots, one on each ſhoulder. Small cod is a bad fiſh, but the haddock is a good one.
Half a kit of pickled ſalmon, neat weight about 16 lb. may be purchaſed at the dry fiſh-mongers, in Thames-ſtreet, in ſummer time, May, June, July, &c. for 9 s. and in September, &c. when it is equally good, for 5 s. In winter-time it will keep a long while.
BUTTER AND CHEESE.
1. FOR freſh butter, Leadenhall market is the beſt and cheapeſt in London. The beſt freſh lump butter, in ſummer, may be bought for 9 d. halfpenny or 10 d. a pound; in winter for 11 d. or 12 d. Ep⯑ping butter, which is the fineſt in flavour, may be there bought for 2 d. a pound more than lump butter. Butter-ſhops ſell this for 1 s. 6 d. a pound.
2. In winter time, Cambridge and Dorſetſhire ſalt but⯑ter arrives freſh in London twice a week, and is with⯑in one penny or a halfpenny a pound as dear as freſh; but the beſt way for a family is to buy a half firkin, which weighs 28 lb. of the beſt Yorkſhire butter — This may be bought for 17 s. or 18 s. the half firkin, leſs than 8 d. a pound, and may be bought agreeable to the palate of the buyer; but when you taſte it, taſte a piece on the outſide, next the tub; if this is good, and free from any rankneſs, you may be certain the [34] middle is. But the middle ſhall often be ſweet, when the outſides are rank; and butter-men, knowing this, always give a taſte out of the middle. The Dorſetſhire butter, in tubs with broad hoops, weight about 80 lb. rather fetches the beſt price, but for keeping it is the beſt butter.
3. Bad butter is not to be mixed with good, on pain of forfeiting double the value. Buyers of butter ſhould ſet their mark on the tub, &c. and if the ſellers open the tubs, or put in other butter, after the tubs are thus marked, they are liable to a penalty of 10 s. for every hundred weight. Application to a magiſtrate. 13 & 14 Car. 2. c. 16. 4 and 5 W. & M. c. 7.
4. Every firkin of butter ſhall weigh 56 lb. without the caſk.
5. Cheeſe is always the better for keeping two or three years, provided it be kept dry. Families who like good old cheeſe ſhould buy it one year under ano⯑ther, as they do their wine, &c. Old cheeſe good for any thing can ſeldom be met with; and if it is, cheeſe-mongers aſk a large price for it. Cheeſe, a year and a half old, of the beſt dairies, (and the beſt is always the moſt delicious, and in the end the cheapeſt) can be bought from 4 d. halfpenny a pound to 6 d. In buy⯑ing of this, every houſe-keeper ſhould pleaſe his own palate. Though decayed cheeſe will pleaſe many pa⯑lates beſt, it may be bought a halfpenny, and ſome⯑times a penny a pound under the price of ſound cheeſe. Gloceſter cheeſe is generally a penny a pound under the price of Cheſhire.
6. In buying of bacon, the Wiltſhire is reckoned the beſt, and may be bought at capital ſhops for 6 d. halfpenny or 7 d. a pound, by the flitch: ſmall bacon, ſuch as weighs about 40 lb. the ſlitch, is the moſt deli⯑cate. In buying it, have the flitch cut through, and if the fat looks red, and the ſkin is thin, it will pro⯑bably turn out well, and boil firm; but if you make an agreement, the ſeller will change it, if you diſlike it. Ruſty bacon looks brown when cut, particularly at the inſide edge.
7. You may judge of hams by running a knife into the body of them, and ſmelling them. Yorkſhire [35] hams are ſold for about 7 d. a pound, and Weſtmore⯑land hams for 7 d. halfpenny. Weſtmoreland hams are the higheſt flavoured. Dried and pickled tongues may be bought from 3 s. 6 d. to 4 s. 6 d. a piece, ac⯑cording to the ſize, at the oil and pickle-ſhops.
Weights and Meaſures.
8. All weights and meaſures belonging to perſons dealing by weight and meaſure, within the city of Weſtminſter and its liberties, ſhall be ſealed and mark⯑ed by the proper officers; ſuch as are not ſo, may be deſtroyed by the jury of annoyance, and the owners ſhall be fined 40 s. 31 Geo. 2. c. 17.
9. The conſtable ſhall alſo ſearch for falſe weights and meaſures, and deſtroy ſuch as he finds. 22 C. 2. c. 8.
Whoever ſhall ſell by any other than a ſtamped weight, meaſure or yard, or keep any ſuch whereby any thing is bought or ſold, ſhall forfeit 5 s. on con⯑viction before a juſtice, on oath of one witneſs. 16 C. c. 19.
10. If you buy of a barrow-woman, always pur⯑chaſe by your own weights and ſcales, or you will be cheated.
VEGETABLES.
PERSONS uſed to the country will not reliſh the vegetables and fruits generally ſold in London; ſuch perſons as wiſh for delicates of this kind; namely, young peas and beans, half-grown cucumbers, &c. and fruit with the bloom on, muſt not purchaſe the gene⯑ral run of the market, but either apply to a fruiterer in Covent-garden, or ſome of the gardeners there, a day or two before they are wanted; and then, by pay⯑ing a little extra price, they may have ſuch things as they wiſh for.
BREWERS AND BEER.
[36]1. SMALL beer may be bought of different qualitie and prices, from 10 s. a barrel to 16 s. each bar⯑rel 36 gallons; 14 s. a barrel is the general run; an [...] brewers, if applied to for the purpoſe, will lay in th [...] quantity a family may uſe throughout the year, in th [...] winter, and engage it ſhall keep good and freſh th [...] year round; if it turns four, they will take it back an [...] change it for ſuch as is not ſo; this is the beſt method of having good beer.
2. The only caution neceſſary on this head, is to tak [...] care that the barrels are full, and that you have you [...] quantity for your money, as it often works out and i [...] ſpilt in the carriage.
3. The ſervants of all theſe tradeſmen expect, and will call on you at Chriſtmas for a Chriſtmas-box, (which is a bad cuſtom and ought to be aboliſhed) as will the ſcavengers, duſt-men, poſt-man, watch-man, and beadle of the pariſh. To the watch-man it may not be a ſhilling ill diſpoſed of, as it may make him more at⯑tentive to ſee that your out-ſide ſhutters are faſt, keep noiſy women and others from your door, &c. but drink-money to others, or the ſervants of thoſe who will give nothing to yours, is money in my opinion ill beſtowed.
WINE.
1. MERCHANTS ſelling wines, who ſhall adulte⯑rate the ſame, or utter any adulterated wines, are liable to the penalty of 100 l. and retailers of mixed adulterated wine forfeit 50 l. 12 Car. 2. c. 25. 1 W. & M. c. 84. And yet this is conſtantly done.
2. Two hundred and thirty-one cubical inches ſhall be a wine gallon; 63 gallons a hogſhead, 126 gallons a butt or pipe, and 252 gallons a tun. 5 Ann. c. 27, 231.
[37]3. Private families, not dealing in foreign wine, muſt have a permit, as with ſpirits, with every quantity ſent to them above three gallons, ſpecifying the kind of wine, quantity, where bought, and the time allowed for con⯑veying it, otherwiſe it is liable to be ſeized; but if your wine merchant omits to ſend ſuch permit with the wine, the loſs will be his. 26 Geo. 3. c. 59.
4. Private families, wiſhing to remove wine exceed⯑ing three gallons from one place to another, muſt ap⯑ply to the exciſeman of their diſtrict (by a note in writing) from whence ſuch wines are to be removed, and on proving to the ſatisfaction of the collector or ſuperviſor of the ſaid diſtrict that the duties of the ſaid wines have been paid, (for which purpoſe it will be neceſſary to keep the permits and produce them) and at the ſame time ſpecifying the quantity of each ſort of foreign wine to be removed; ſaying whether it be French red wine or French white wine, or foreign white wine not French, or foreign red wine not French; alſo the number and contents of caſks, bottles, or veſſels containing the ſame; and likewiſe whether it is to be removed by water or by land, and by what mode of con⯑veyance. Doing this, the ſuperviſor &c. ſhall grant a permit to remove the ſame without fee or reward, but limiting and expreſſing in that permit, the time within which it ſhall be removed, and delivered at the place where it is to be ſent. Wine ſent without ſuch permit is liable to be ſeized, as alſo the machine conveying it, and the horſes &c. drawing ſuch machine. Ibid.
5. And in caſe ſuch wine permitted to be removed, is not ſent away and actually delivered within the time expreſſed and limited in the permit, it ſhall be deemed to be removed without a permit, unleſs pro⯑ved to the ſatisfaction of the commiſſioners of exciſe that ſuch wine, through unavoidable accidents, could not have been ſo delivered.
6. And ſhould any wine be ſeized, in conſequence of it's not being removed and delivered in time, the ſame ſhall be reſtored to the owner or perſon who had charge of it by the officer who ſeized it, if ſuch perſon ſhall enter into recognizance before a juſtice of the peace, reſiding near the place where it was ſeized, with [38] one ſufficient ſurety, engaging to prove within one month, to the ſatisfaction of the commiſſioners of exciſe, that ſuch wine, through unavoidable accident, could not have been ſo delivered; in which caſe the juſtice ſhall indorſe the permit and allow further time for the removal.
7. Where any permit is granted for the removal of wine, and the wine not ſent away in conſequence of it, the permit muſt be returned within the time limited for the removal of the wine, to the officer who granted it, on pain of forfeiting treble the value of the wine ſo de⯑ſigned to be removed, according to the beſt price it will fell for in London.
8. Forging a juſtice's certificate of a recognizance and indorſement, as before ſpecified, is a penalty of 500 l.
9. Licenſed auctioneers may ſell wine by auction, with leave of the commiſſioners of exciſe, on their proving, that all the duties for ſuch wine have been paid.
COALS AND OTHER FUEL.
1. THE price of coals in London is from 32 s. a chaldron to 50 s. In long froſts, they have ri⯑ſen ſo high as 5 l. but, on an average, they may be bought in ſummer time at 33 s. or 34 s. a chaldron.— Houſe-keepers ſhould endeavour to lay them in at the cheapeſt time: there are advertiſing coal-merchants, who, for ready money, will ſell 39 buſhels for two or three ſhillings under the price that others ſell 38 buſhels for; but in dealing with theſe, and indeed with other ſellers, it is prudent to ſee the coals at the wharf, be⯑fore they are ſent in; and when they are ſent in, to take care you have your meaſure, otherwiſe you may have your year's coals that will not burn, or pay a larger price for them than you expected. Good coals are generally large, black and ſhining: the Pontops are the beſt. If you truſt to your coal-merchant, with re⯑ſpect to the meaſurement, it will however be neceſſary [39] that the number of ſacks are counted when the coals are ſhot. Advertiſing coal-ſellers go often by fictitious names, to avoid the penalties for ſhort meaſure: it is proper, therefore, to be on your guard, particularly againſt thoſe.
2. By the ſeveral coal-acts paſſed this year, 1786, for the cities of London and Weſtminſter, and the Bo⯑rough of Southwark, coal-meters are appointed to meaſure coals when firſt carted, and re-meaſure them afterwards, if the buyer requeſts it: the coal-meters office for the city of London and its liberties, is in Earl-ſtreet, Blackfriar's-bridge; that for Weſtminſter and its liberties at the bottom of Northumberland-ſtreet, in the Strand; and thoſe for the Borough of Southwark and its diſtricts at Marigold-ſtairs, Surry-ſide of Blackfriar's-bridge, and at the Sun and Hat-Block, in the Maize, Tooley-ſtreet. Theſe offices are open all day, to hear complaints and give redreſs.
3. Coals, when taken out of the barge, and ſold as wharf-meaſure, are to be meaſured in the preſence of a coal-meter. The ſeller to pay 4 d. a chaldron for meaſuring, which the buyer is to re-pay, on a ticket of ſuch meaſurement being produced by the carman, under the penalty of 10 s. for the carter not delivering ſuch ticket. But when brought in, if the buyer de⯑clares himſelf diſſatisfied with the meaſure, the driver of the cart ſhall not depart, till a coal-meter can be procured from the above offices to re-meaſure them, on pain of his forfeiting 20 s. and the owner of the cart 5 l.
4. The carman ſhall be paid 2 s. 6 d. an hour for the time he waits, and the meaſurer ſhall be paid 6 d. for meaſuring each chaldron, by the buyer; but if, on re-meaſuring, they are found deficient, the ſeller ſhall pay the expences of re-meaſuring, and alſo forfeit 5 l. a buſhel for every buſhel deficient, and forfeit the chaldron of coals to the poor; the meter ſhall forfeit 5 l. a buſhel, and the coal-porter that meaſured them 2 s. 6 d. a buſhel.
5. But to ſave the half-crown an hour paid for waiting, it is beſt to appoint a meter to attend at the time you expect the coals. If families would keep a [40] buſhel-meaſure, and one may be bought for 7 s. 6 d. a ſack or two of the coals might be meaſured without much trouble.
6. A labouring coal-meter, delivering tickets for coals which he was not preſent at the meaſuring of, ſhall forfeit 40s. and be incapacitated, and the principal ſhall forfeit 5 l. if the 40s. penalty is not paid by the labour⯑ing meter in one month.
7. A carter fraudulently delivering, or ſuffering coals to be taken from his cart, ſhall forfeit 40 s. or be whipped and impriſoned from one to three months.
8. To puniſh offences, application muſt be made to a magiſtrate.
9. All contracts for coals, not being leſs than five chaldrons, ſhall be for pool-meaſure, including the in⯑grain or addition of one chaldron in twenty, though the term of pool-meaſure ſhall not be mentioned in the contract; that is, nine buſhels or three ſacks ſhall be given in with every five chaldrons, (though ſellers now, if you buy but one chaldron, will profeſs to give you 38 buſhels). 19 Geo. 2. c. 35.
10. Wharfingers bribing a coal-meter ſhall forfeit 50 l.
11. Sacks ſhall be, when empty, four feet long, and two feet wide; and none other ſhall be uſed, on pain of the wharfinger's forfeiting 5 l. and the coal-meter 40 s.
12. Scotch coal is always in large pieces, and is bought by the [...]wt. at about 40 s. a ton. This burns free, and to a white aſh, of courſe clean burning, but is not ſo durable as Newcaſtle coals.
13. Charcoal is ſold retail at 1 s. 4 d. a buſhel, or 3 s. a ſack, that is three buſhels; but if had from the country, by the load, which is 60 ſacks, it may be bought for 2 s. 6 d. a ſack.
14. Billet-wood may be bought at the wharfs for 40 s. or two guineas a load, delivered home any where on the ſtones; a load conſiſts of 300 pieces or billets.
Billet-wood, (except beech-wood) ſhall be three feet four inches long, and meaſure ſeven inches in circumference, in the ſmalleſt girth, on pain of for⯑feiting them to the poor. 9 Ann. c. 18.
[41]15. All faggots to be ſold, ſhall contain in compaſs, beſides the knot of the bond, 24 inches of aſſize; and every faggot-ſtick, within the bond, ſhall be three feet long, except one ſtick of one foot in length, to harden the binding. 43 Eliz. c. 14.
CANDLES.
1. THE average price of dipped candles are 8 s. 4 d. a dozen; of mould candles, 9 s. 4 d. But there are tallow-chandlers, that, on taking a box of candles half one and half the other, will ſell the whole at 8 s. 4 d. and for ready money will allow five per cent. diſcount.
2. To be white they ſhould be one year old; but if they are older, they will gutter.
3. The beſt wax-candles are to be bought for 2 s. 10 d. a pound. There are people who advertiſe them at 2 s. 6 d. but ſuch are mixed with tallow.
4. Train-oil, for out-door lamps, is 3 s. a gallon; and ſpermaceti-oil for chambers 4 s. a gallon: to be bought of the oil-men.—Note, One lamp burns about a halfpenny worth of ſpermaceti-oil in an hour.
HAIR-DRESSERS
MAY be had at all prices, from 7 s. a month to one guinea, attendance daily; and frequently thoſe at 7 s. will dreſs better, and more expeditiouſly, than others who demand a larger price.
TAYLORS.
ADvertiſing taylors always make up your cloaths ſcanty, piece them, and make them of inferior materials; of courſe they can afford them cheaper.
[42]2. No perſon ſhall uſe or wear on any cloaths (velvet excepted) any buttons or button-holes covered of the ſtuff that the cloaths are made of, on pain of 40 s. a dozen, on conviction, on the oath of one witneſs, in one month after the offence, half to the informer.— But perſons aggrieved may appeal to the next quarter-ſeſſions, giving eight day's notice. 7 Geo. ſt. 1. c. 12.
3. No perſon ſhall uſe or wear, in any apparel, any foreign printed or dyed callicoe, except ſuch as is dyed all blue, on pain of forfeiting 5 l. to the informer, nor uſe any in houſehold-furniture, on pain of 20 l. 7 G. ſt. 1. c. 7.
SHOE-MAKERS.
BEST beſpoke ſhoes, if not bound, and the heels not ſtitched, may be had for 8 s. a pair; if bound and ſtitched, 8 s. 6 d. Beſt made boots, from 27 s. to a guinea and a half a pair.
Women's beſpoke calimanco ſhoes from 5 s. 6 d. to 6 s. 6 d. a pair; Morocco leather 7 s. 6 d. ſattin 10 s. 6 d. though ſome will charge 15 s.
LEATHER-BREECHES MAKERS.
THE beſt makers, according to their cuſtomers, charge from 1 l. 11 s. 6 d. to two guineas a pair. Thoſe who make for leſs money, make them of bad ſkins, rough and full of ſhot-holes, which, when brought home, the eye will not perceive.
STAY-MAKERS
CHARGE from one guinea and a half, for women's ſtays, to two guineas and a half, according to their cuſtomers.
LAUNDRESSES,
[48]IN London, charge as reaſonably for waſhing, as in the country; and families who put out their linen would do well to employ a laundreſs living a little way out of town. Such perſons are to be found, who will ſend for the linen once a week, and bring it home again; for where there are good conveniencies for drying, the linen muſt certainly be better got up. See Pawn-brokers.
MARKETING TABLES.
A TABLE to ſhew if ſo much per YARD, OUNCE, &c. how much for any Number of the ſame.
1 | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | 8. | 9. | 10. | 11. | 12. |
f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. |
1 | 0 2 | 0 3 | 1 0 | 1 1 | 1 2 | 1 3 | 2 0 | 2 1 | 2 2 | 2 3 | 3 0 |
2 | 1 0 | 1 2 | 2 0 | 2 2 | 3 0 | 3 2 | 4 0 | 4 2 | 5 0 | 5 2 | 6 0 |
3 | 1 2 | 2 1 | 3 0 | 3 3 | 4 2 | 5 1 | 6 0 | 6 3 | 7 2 | 8 1 | 9 0 |
1 | 13. | 14. | 15. | 16. | 17. | 18. | 19. | 20. | 28. |
f. | d. f. | d. f. | d. f. | s. d. f. | s. d. f. | s. d. f. | s. d. f. | s. d. f. | s. d. f. |
1 | 3 1 | 3 2 | 3 3 | 0 4 0 | 0 4 1 | 0 4 2 | 0 4 3 | 0 5 0 | 0 7 0 |
2 | 6 2 | 7 0 | 7 2 | 0 8 0 | 0 8 2 | 0 9 0 | 0 9 2 | 0 10 0 | 1 2 0 |
3 | 9 3 | 10 2 | 11 1 | 1 0 0 | 1 0 3 | 1 1 2 | 1 2 1 | 1 3 0 | 1 9 0 |
[44]
1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6 *. | 13. | 14. | 15. | 16. | 17. | 18. | 19. | 20. | 28. | 112. |
d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | s. d. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. |
1 | 0 2 | 0 3 | 0 4 | 0 5 | 0 6 | 1 1 | 1 2 | 1 3 | 1 4 | 1 5 | 1 6 | 1 7 | 0 1 8 | 0 2 4 | 0 9 4 |
2 | 0 4 | 0 6 | 0 8 | 0 10 | 1 0 | 2 2 | 2 4 | 2 6 | 2 8 | 2 10 | 3 0 | 3 2 | 0 3 4 | 0 4 8 | 0 18 8 |
3 | 0 6 | 0 9 | 1 0 | 1 3 | 1 6 | 3 3 | 3 6 | 3 9 | 4 0 | 4 3 | 4 6 | 4 9 | 0 5 0 | 0 7 0 | 1 8 0 |
4 | 0 8 | 1 0 | 1 4 | 1 8 | 2 0 | 4 4 | 4 8 | 5 0 | 5 4 | 5 8 | 6 0 | 6 4 | 0 6 8 | 0 9 4 | 1 17 4 |
5 | 0 10 | 1 3 | 1 8 | 2 1 | 2 6 | 5 5 | 5 10 | 6 3 | 6 8 | 7 1 | 7 6 | 7 11 | 0 8 4 | 0 11 8 | 2 6 8 |
6 | 1 0 | 1 6 | 2 0 | 2 6 | 3 0 | 6 6 | 7 0 | 7 6 | 8 0 | 8 6 | 9 0 | 9 6 | 0 10 0 | 0 14 0 | 2 16 0 |
7 | 1 2 | 1 9 | 2 4 | 2 11 | 3 6 | 7 7 | 8 2 | 8 9 | 9 4 | 9 11 | 10 6 | 11 1 | 0 11 8 | 0 16 4 | 3 5 4 |
8 | 1 4 | 2 0 | 2 8 | 3 4 | 4 0 | 8 8 | 9 4 | 10 0 | 10 8 | 11 4 | 12 0 | 12 8 | 0 13 4 | 0 18 8 | 3 14 8 |
9 | 1 6 | 2 3 | 3 0 | 3 9 | 4 6 | 9 9 | 10 6 | 11 3 | 12 0 | 12 9 | 13 6 | 14 3 | 0 15 0 | 1 1 0 | 4 4 0 |
10 | 1 8 | 2 6 | 3 4 | 4 2 | 5 0 | 10 10 | 11 8 | 12 6 | 13 4 | 14 2 | 15 0 | 15 10 | 0 16 8 | 1 3 4 | 4 13 4 |
11 | 1 10 | 2 9 | 3 8 | 4 7 | 5 6 | 11 11 | 12 10 | 13 9 | 14 8 | 15 7 | 16 6 | 17 5 | 0 18 4 | 1 5 8 | 5 2 8 |
12 | 2 0 | 3 0 | 4 0 | 5 0 | 6 0 | 13 0 | 14 0 | 15 0 | 16 0 | 17 0 | 18 0 | 19 0 | 1 0 0 | 1 8 0 | 5 12 0 |
[45]A TABLE to ſhew, if ſo much per pound, how much per ſtone, &c.—The Stone 8 lb.
Lb. | Stone. | Quarter. | Cwt. |
d. f. | s. d. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. |
0 1 | 0 2 | 0 0 7 | 0 2 4 |
0 2 | 0 4 | 0 1 2 | 0 4 8 |
0 3 | 0 6 | 0 1 9 | 0 7 0 |
1 0 | 0 8 | 0 2 4 | 0 9 4 |
2 0 | 1 4 | 0 4 8 | 0 18 8 |
3 0 | 2 0 | 0 7 0 | 1 8 0 |
4 0 | 2 8 | 0 9 4 | 1 17 4 |
5 0 | 3 4 | 0 11 8 | 2 6 8 |
6 0 | 4 0 | 0 14 0 | 2 16 0 |
7 0 | 4 8 | 0 16 4 | 3 5 4 |
8 0 | 5 4 | 0 18 8 | 3 14 8 |
9 0 | 6 0 | 1 1 0 | 4 4 0 |
10 0 | 6 8 | 1 3 4 | 4 13 4 |
11 0 | 7 4 | 1 5 8 | 5 2 8 |
12 0 | 8 0 | 1 8 0 | 5 12 0 |
By Addition and Multiplication, you may make theſe an⯑ſwer any Price from 1 s. to 5 l. and upwards.
[46]A TABLE to ſhew, if ſo much per 12 lb. how muc [...] per quarter, ſtone, &c.—The Stone 14 lb.
Sh. | Quarter. | Stone. | Half St. | Lb. |
s. | l. s. d. | s. d. f | s. d. f. | d. f. |
1 | 0 0 3 | 0 1 2 | 0 0 3 | |
2 | 0 0 6 | 0 3 0 | 0 1 2 | |
3 | 0 0 9 | 0 4 2 | 0 2 1 | 0 1 |
4 | 0 1 0 | 0 6 0 | 0 3 0 | 0 1 |
5 | 0 1 3 | 0 7 2 | 0 3 3 | 0 2 |
6 | 0 1 6 | 0 9 0 | 0 4 2 | 0 2 |
7 | 0 1 9 | 0 10 2 | 0 5 1 | 0 3 |
8 | 0 2 0 | 1 0 0 | 0 6 0 | 0 3 |
9 | 0 2 3 | 1 1 2 | 0 6 3 | 1 0 |
10 | 0 2 6 | 1 3 0 | 0 7 2 | 1 0 |
20 | 0 5 0 | 2 6 0 | 1 3 0 | 2 0 |
30 | 0 7 6 | 3 9 0 | 1 10 2 | 3 0 |
40 | 0 10 0 | 5 0 0 | 2 6 0 | 4 2 |
50 | 0 12 6 | 6 3 0 | 3 1 2 | 5 1 |
60 | 0 15 0 | 7 6 0 | 3 9 0 | 6 1 |
70 | 0 17 6 | 8 9 0 | 4 4 2 | 7 2 |
80 | 1 0 0 | 10 0 0 | 5 0 0 | 8 2 |
90 | 1 2 6 | 11 3 0 | 5 7 2 | 9 2 |
100 | 1 5 0 | 12 6 0 | 6 3 0 | 10 2 |
Fractions are here unneceſſary.
SERVANTS.
[47]1. IN the choice of ſervants, a houſe-keeper cannot be too particular. London is ſo much the ſink of vice, that the lower claſs of people are very much corrupted. Thoſe brought from the country are ſoon infected with the diſſolute manners of town-ſervants, and become equally bad with them. To expect at⯑tachment from a ſervant is idle, and betrays an igno⯑rance of the world. Servants will now and then af⯑fect it, in order to gain the confidence of their em⯑ployers, and thus forward their own intereſt; but, if we ſuppoſe them in our intereſt, it is becauſe we do not thoroughly know them. Economy in a family, ſer⯑vants do not like. The more extravagant a maſter or miſtreſs is, the better they live, and the more they can purloin; and ſhould, what they call, a generous maſter or miſtreſs fail in the world, owing to a waſte or an in⯑attention to domeſtic concerns, they will cry to their fellow-ſervants, "It is a pity! he was a good-natured generous man!—Come, let us go look for another place!" This being conſidered, we are to expect no⯑thing from them but a performance of their duty, keep them whilſt they do it, and diſcharge them when they neglect it.
2. The firſt thing, then, is to endeavour to get good ones, if we do not bring them out of the country with us. There are, in different parts of the town, regiſter-offices, or places where ſervants of all denominations attend at certain hours, and where a maſter may ſee them, at the expence of one ſhilling, and hire them; or, by ſending a ſhilling to the keepers of ſuch offices, and a deſcription of the ſervant wanted, they will ſend you one, day after day, till you are ſuited; but as it is the refuſe of ſervants in general that apply to theſe offices, you muſt not take the recommendation of the office-keeper, who is paid alſo by the ſervant for pro⯑curing the place; nor any written character; for ſuch [...]hings in London are procured from friends, and often [...]orged; nay ſervants of bad character will often go fur⯑ther, [48] they will refer you to perſons ſeemingly of cre⯑dit, who perhaps know little of them. It is proper therefore, that the maſter or miſtreſs ſhould apply for the character themſelves, make ſome enquiry concern⯑ing the perſon they apply to, and aſk all thoſe queſti⯑ons they think neceſſary. There are few ſervant-maids in London, or indeed in the country, but what are whores; it is perhaps an uncharitable ſuppoſition, but it is nevertheleſs true. To expect, therefore, to meet with an innocent virtuous girl, is next to impoſſible; it is ſufficient if ſhe is orderly, and conducts herſelf with decorum. If a houſe-keeper cannot get a ſervant recommended by a friend, or ſome tradeſman with whom he deals, ſuch as the baker, butcher, poulterer, green-grocer, tallow-chandler, publican, or the like, I would recommend papers deſcribing the ſervant want⯑ed, and where to apply, being ſent or left at the chandler's ſhops in the neighbourhood, which ſeldom fails of ſucceſs; others will have recourſe to advertiſe⯑ments in the public newſpapers, an inſertion for which, once, coſts 3 s. 6 d. If this mode is adopted, the beſt paper to advertiſe in is the Daily Advertiſer in Fleet-ſtreet, which is taken in by almoſt all the publi⯑cans in London. Such an advertiſement will bring you ſcores of ſervants; and here you muſt be very careful in your choice, and particular as to charac⯑ter; for an advertiſement will bring with the good a number of diſreputable people.
3. The general wages of ſervants are as follow:— Steward, valet, butler, 30 l. a-year; women-cooks, 1 [...] l. lady's-maids, from 12 l. to 20 l. inferior women ſervants, from 7 l. to 9 l. foot-men 14 l. and a livery: women-ſervants to provide their own tea and ſugar.— Board-wages of an upper ſervant 10 s. 6 d. a week, with fire and candle, and 7 s. a week to an under-ſer⯑vant.
4. They generally agree for a month's wages, or a month's warning, which is a bad method; as there are few ſervants, when warning is given, but will be very impertinent and untractable, it is far the beſt, when you mean to part with them, to get rid of them at once, be it ever ſo inconvenient: by enquiry an honeſt chair⯑woman, [49] to ſupply the place of a woman-ſervant, may be procured for 1 s. a day. If ſuch are hired to waſh, their wages are larger: 1 s. 6 d. with tea and a dram twice a day, and ſtrong beer at dinner and ſup⯑per; but for this they ſlave hard, will begin work at two in the morning, and continue it till nine the next evening. If ſuch a perſon is wanted, employ none of your own ſervant's recommending, but apply for their character to thoſe houſe-keepers who have employed them, and on whom you can better rely.
5. Women cooks, and ſervants of all work, when they hire themſelves, will endeavour to get the kitch⯑en-ſtuff allowed them as a perquiſite; if you would not be robbed, never comply with this; nor allow your coachman the old wheels; for as the one will, to ſerve herſelf, ſtrip your meat of its fat, melt more but⯑ter than neceſſary, and convey the ends of candles, &c. into the greaſe-pot, to increaſe its weight; ſo will the other often injure the wheels, if they are likely to laſt too long.
6. If you deliver into the cuſtody of ſervants, plate, china, linen, &c. to keep; and tell them, before wit⯑neſs, they muſt be reſponſible for it; if they loſe any part of it, the law will oblige them, as far as they are able, to make it good; but not elſe: to enable them, therefore, to pay for any thing miſſing, it is adviſe⯑able to keep part of their wages in hand. As they are hired by the year, they ſhould always be paid one half year under another, reſerving half-a-year in hand. As to breaking of china, &c. you cannot compel a ſervant to pay for it, unleſs it was ſo agreed on the hiring, or done deſignedly.
7. To avoid diſputes reſpecting wages, it is prudent to have the agreement in writing, and a receipt for what you pay; for (ſorry am I to ſay it) this claſs of people make as little ceremony of taking a falſe oath, where there is no proof to the contrary, as of telling a lie.
Diſputes with ſervants, about wages under [...]0 l. and other things, if they cannot amicably be ſettled, ſhould be referred to a neighbouring magiſtrate, who is autho⯑riſed to hear the complaint and redreſs it; the expence [50] but trifling; but the wages of coachmen, grooms, and the like, magiſtrates can take no cognizance of.
8. Where ſervants are hired for a year, they cannot be put away before the expiration of that term, with⯑out ſome reaſonable cauſe to be allowed by one juſtice; nor after the end of the term, without a quarter's warn⯑ing given before witneſs; if a maſter diſcharges a ſer⯑vant otherwiſe, he is liable to a penalty of 40 s.— 5 Eliz. c. 4.
If a ſervant refuſe to ſerve his term, he may be com⯑mitted till he give ſecurity to ſerve the time; or he may be ſent to the houſe of correction, and puniſhed there as a diſorderly perſon. 5 Eliz. c. 4. 7 Jac. c. 4.
A yearly ſervant is not to be diſcharged by reaſon of ſickneſs, or any other diſability by the act of God; not may his wages for thoſe cauſes be abated. Dalt. 129. All hiring without ſtipulation of time is, ſtrictly ſpeak⯑ing, hiring for a year, and the law ſo conſtrues it.
Both maſter and ſervant may however part by mu⯑tual conſent, and then the allowance of the cauſe by a juſtice of peace is not neceſſary. A maſter's detaining wages, or not allowing ſufficient meat, drink, &c. is good cauſe for a ſervant's departure; but it muſt be al⯑lowed by a juſtice. Dalt.
If a ſervant, hired for a term, quits his ſervice be⯑fore the end of his term, he loſes all his wages; but if the maſter puts him away, he ſhall be paid to the time he ſerved.
A woman-ſervant who marries is obliged to ſerve out her time; and if both man and wife agree to ſerve, they muſt perform the agreement. Dalt. 92.
If a ſervant be retained for a year, according to the ſtatute 5 Eliz. c. 4, and the maſter die within that time, the executor muſt pay the wages; but not ſo if the retainer was not for a year.
A ſervant hired at a month's wages, or a month's warning, cannot quit his place, nor be diſcharged, a day before the expiration of the month, without the whole month's wages be paid, unleſs by the authority of a juſtice, for ſome reaſonable complaint. If a ſer⯑vant, after warning given, is inſolent, or refuſes to do his duty, a magiſtrate, on complaint, will commit him [51] to priſon, for the time he has to ſerve; but the maſter will be ordered to pay him his wages whilſt there.
9. If a ſervant or workman aſſault his maſter or miſtreſs, or any other having charge over them, he may be bound to his good behaviour, or be committed for a year, or leſs, at the diſcretion of two magiſtrates. 5 Eliz. c. 4. ſ. 21.
10. If any ſervant ſhall purloin, or make away with his maſter's goods, to the value of 40 s. it is felony.— 12 Ann. c. 7.
11. Should a woman with child procure herſelf to be retained with a maſter for a term, who knows no⯑thing thereof, this is good cauſe to diſcharge her from her ſervice; if ſhe prove with child during her ſervice it is the ſame; but if he does not diſcharge her before a magiſtrate, when he knows of it, and keeps her on, he muſt provide for her till her delivery, and one month after, and then ſhe is to be ſent to her place of ſettle⯑ment. Dalt.
12. A ſervant ſetting fire careleſsly to a houſe, is liable to pay, on the oath of one witneſs, a hundred pounds to the ſufferer, or be committed to hard labour for 18 months. 14 Geo. 3. c. 78.
13. By the 25th of Geo. 3. c. 43, every perſon keeping one male-ſervant, ſhall pay annually for him
£. 1 | 5 | |
Keeping 2 men-ſervants ſhall pay | 1 | 5 each. |
3 or 4 ditto, | 1 | 10 ditto. |
5, 6, and 7, | 1 | 15 ditto. |
8, 9, and 10, | 2 | 0 ditto. |
11 and upwards, | 3 | 0 ditto. |
Every man aged 21 and upwards, and a batchelor, ſhall pay an additional one pound five ſhillings for eve⯑ry male ſervant he keeps. Ibid. ſ. 3.
Theſe duties are to extend to ſervants of the follow⯑ing deſcriptions, viz. maitre d'hotel, houſe ſteward, maſter of the horſe, groom of the chamber, valet de chambre, butler, under butler, clerk of the kitchen, confectioner, cook, houſe porter, footman, running footman, coachman, groom, poſtilion, ſtable boy, help⯑ers in ſtables, gardeners not being day labourers, park-keepers, gamekeeper, huntſman, whipper-in, waiters [52] at taverns, coffeehouſes, inns, alehouſes, or any other houſes licenſed to ſell wine, beer, ale, or other liquors, by retail, (other than occaſional waiters) or by what⯑ever name or names male ſervants acting in any of ſaid capacities ſhall be called. Ibid. ſ. 4.
Every perſon keeping a woman ſervant, ſhall pay annually, for one, 2s. 6d. for two, 5s. each, for three or more, 10s. each. Ibid.
A batchelor in all caſes pays double theſe duties. Ib.
Servants employed bona fide for the purpoſes of huſ⯑bandry, farming, dairy, or manufacture, or of any trade by which the maſter or miſtreſs gain a livelihood, ex⯑cepted. Ibid. ſ. 6.
Such perſons as ſhall have living in their houſes two or more lawful children, or grand-children, under 14 years of age, ſhall be allowed one woman ſervant duty free; ſuch as have four children ſhall be allowed two women ſervants, and ſuch as have ſix, three women ſervants. Thus, he who has four children pays but 2s. 6d. for the third ſervant, if he keeps three; if he has four ſervants, he pays 5s. each for two. Ib. ſ. 13.
Female ſervants under the age of 14, or above 60, are not to be aſſeſſed; pariſh certificates of the age to be produced. Ibid. ſ. 14.
No duty is to be paid for any ſervant employed for the purpoſe of huſbandry, manufactures or trade.
Pariſh apprentices impoſed on maſters or miſtreſſes to the number of two, ſhall be allowed, unleſs they are employed as livery ſervants, or in the capacity of other ſervants. Ibid. ſ. 8.
Coachmen, grooms, poſtilions, or helpers, let out to hire by way of job, ſhall be paid for by thoſe who em⯑ploy them. Gardeners alſo, who ſhall contract for keeping any garden in order, ſhall be paid for by thoſe who employ them. Ibid. ſ. 7.
Every officer of horſe under the rank and not receiv⯑ing the pay of a field-officer, is to be allowed one man ſervant, whether ſuch ſervant is a private ſoldier in his regiment or not. Ibid. ſ. 11.
Every officer without diſtinction in the land ſervice, of every deſcription, including marines, who employs ſome ſoldier of the regiment or company to which he [53] belongs as a ſervant, and every officer in the navy un⯑der the rank of a maſter and commander, in actual ſer⯑vice, who employs one ſailor as a ſervant, that is actu⯑ally born upon the books of the ſhip to which ſuch officer belongs, are for ſuch ſervants exempt from this duty. Ibid.
Diſabled officers on half-pay are to be allowed one ſervant on application to the commiſſioners and proof given. Ibid. ſ. 12.
The window and houſe-tax collectors to collect theſe duties, and the duties to be paid quarterly. Ibid.
Aſſeſſors ſhall give or leave notice in writing yearly, at the dwelling-houſes of all maſters and miſtreſſes within their diſtrict, requiring them to prepare and produce, within 14 days from ſuch notice, ſeparate liſts in writing of all their men and women ſervants, their chriſtian and ſirnames, and the capacity in which they are employed, ſuch liſt to contain the greateſt number of ſervants, male and female, retained by ſuch maſter or miſtreſs, at any one time in the year, ending on the 5th of April preceding ſuch notice, to be ſigned by the maſter or miſtreſs, and to be delivered to the aſſeſſors who is to call for it; and if ſuch liſt be refuſed or ne⯑glected to be delivered, then the aſſeſſors are to pro⯑ceed to make out, from the information they can get, an aſſeſſment of their own, from which there ſhall be no appeal, unleſs the perſon to aſſeſſed ſhall prove that they were not at home from the time of notice to the day for the delivery of the liſts to the aſſeſſors, or ſhall aſſign ſome other ſubſtantial cauſe ſatisfactory to the commiſſioners, Ibid. ſ. 26.
All maſters or miſtreſſes muſt accompany their liſts with a declaration, whether they mean to pay for any, and how many ſervants, in any other place or pariſh, and to ſpecify in what place or places. S. 28.
As this is an annual tax, if a perſon keeps at any one time two ſervants, for example, and enters theſe two, that is, aſſerts in his written notice that he had two before the 5th of April, ſhould one of theſe ſer⯑vants quit his ſervice a month afterwards, he muſt pay for the two, till 5th April following.
[54]If aſſeſſors diſcover any deficiency in the liſts deli⯑vered to them, they may ſurcharge or add to thoſe liſts S. 29.
Perſons refuſing or neglecting to furniſh the liſts and declarations required as above, forfeit 10 l. S. 32.
All ſervants omitted in the ſaid liſts, and added in the ſurcharge, are to be rated double; one half of which ſhall go to the aſſeſſor or ſurveyor ſo ſurcharging them, S. 33.
Every perſon having a lodger in his houſe keeping a ſervant or ſervants, muſt on a week's notice deliver liſts ſimilar to thoſe required of houſekeepers, with the addition of the chriſtian and ſirname of the lodger, as well as of his ſervants, under the penalty of 10 l. Ib. ſ. 34.
Appeals for redreſs muſt be made to the commiſſion⯑ers; and perſons diſſatisfied with their deciſions may reſort to a judge of the court of King's-Bench, as in the act on Windows, which ſee. S. 35, 39.
14. If you never deal with tradeſmen upon credit, ſhould your ſervants to whom you give money to pur⯑chaſe things, put the money in their pockets, and order them to be ſet down to you, you are not obliged to pay for them; but if you ſometimes ſend money, and ſome⯑times deal upon credit, though you ſhould ſend the money for any article, if your ſervant does not pay it, you will be obliged to pay it again; for your tradeſman cannot be ſuppoſed to know whether the money was ſent or not.
15. If you would avoid being robbed, never ſuffer your ſervants to take acquaintances down into the kit⯑chen with them. Many inſtances have occurred where villains have made acquaintance with incautious ſer⯑vants, purpoſely to find a method of breaking into the houſe, and learning what there is worth coming for.
16. To ſave trouble to the maſter and ſervants, where many are not kept, it is a good method to have in your ſitting room, near the bell, a paper poſted, with the ne⯑ceſſary articles on it, in diviſions, that are chiefly want⯑ed, ſuch as, Coals, Candles, Beer, Water, Broom, Lay the Cloth, Go to the Door, &c. with a pin, to [55] which a line is fixed with a lead going down into the kitchen to a ſimilar paper fixed there; then, by fixing this pin in a hole in either of the diviſions above, the weight will drop or riſe to the ſame diviſion below. Do this before you ring your bell, and order your ſer⯑vant to look at the index; ſhe will then know what is wanted before ſhe comes, and bring it with her. The expence of this index is trifling.
17. It may alſo in ſome families be worth while to have a line from the parlour to the ſtreet door, to open it without going out of the parlour. This, where there is but one ſervant, ſaves a great deal of trouble.
[56]A TABLE to ſhew, if ſo much per Year, how much per Month.
Per Year. | Per Month. | Per Week. | Per Day. | |
£. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. f. | l. s. d. f. | |
1 | is | 0 1 8 | 0 0 4 2 | 0 0 0 3 |
2 | 0 3 4 | 0 0 9 1 | 0 0 1 1 | |
3 | 0 5 0 | 0 1 1 3 | 0 0 2 0 | |
4 | 0 6 8 | 0 1 6 2 | 0 0 2 3 | |
5 | 0 8 4 | 0 1 11 0 | 0 0 3 1 | |
6 | 0 10 0 | 0 2 3 2 | 0 0 4 0 | |
7 | 0 11 8 | 0 2 8 2 | 0 0 4 3 | |
8 | 0 13 4 | 0 3 1 2 | 0 0 5 1 | |
9 | 0 15 0 | 0 3 5 2 | 0 0 6 2 | |
10 | 0 16 8 | 0 3 10 0 | 0 0 6 0 | |
20 | 1 13 4 | 0 7 8 0 | 0 1 1 0 | |
30 | 2 10 0 | 0 11 6 0 | 0 1 7 0 | |
40 | 3 6 8 | 0 15 4 0 | 0 2 2 2 | |
50 | 4 3 4 | 0 19 2 0 | 0 2 8 1 | |
60 | 5 0 0 | 1 3 0 0 | 0 3 3 2 | |
70 | 5 16 8 | 1 6 10 0 | 0 3 10 2 | |
80 | 6 13 4 | 1 10 8 0 | 0 4 4 0 | |
90 | 7 10 0 | 1 14 6 0 | 0 4 11 1 | |
100 | 8 6 8 | 1 18 4 0 | 0 5 5 0 | |
200 | 16 13 4 | 3 16 8 0 | 0 10 11 3 | |
300 | 25 0 0 | 5 15 0 0 | 0 16 5 3 | |
400 | 33 6 8 | 7 13 4 0 | 1 1 11 2 | |
500 | 41 13 4 | 9 11 8 0 | 1 7 4 1 | |
600 | 50 0 0 | 11 10 0 0 | 1 12 10 0 | |
700 | 58 6 8 | 13 8 4 0 | 1 18 4 2 | |
800 | 66 13 4 | 15 6 8 0 | 2 3 10 1 | |
900 | 75 0 0 | 17 5 0 0 | 2 9 3 0 | |
1000 | 83 6 8 | 19 3 4 0 | 2 14 9 2 |
[57]A TABLE to ſhew, if ſo much per Day, how much per Week, &c.
Per Day. | Per Week. | Per Month. | Per Year. | |
l. s. d. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. | |
0 0 1 | is | 0 0 7 | 0 2 4 | 1 10 5 |
0 0 2 | 0 1 2 | 0 4 8 | 3 0 10 | |
0 0 3 | 0 1 9 | 0 7 0 | 4 11 3 | |
0 0 4 | 0 2 4 | 0 9 4 | 6 1 8 | |
0 0 5 | 0 2 11 | 0 11 8 | 7 12 1 | |
0 0 6 | 0 3 6 | 0 14 0 | 9 2 6 | |
0 0 7 | 0 4 1 | 0 16 4 | 10 12 1 | |
0 0 8 | 0 4 8 | 0 18 8 | 12 3 4 | |
0 0 9 | 0 5 3 | 1 1 0 | 13 13 9 | |
0 0 10 | 0 5 10 | 1 3 4 | 15 4 4 | |
0 0 11 | 0 6 5 | 1 5 4 | 16 14 7 | |
0 1 0 | 0 7 0 | 1 8 0 | 18 5 0 | |
0 2 0 | 0 14 0 | 2 16 0 | 36 10 0 | |
0 3 0 | 1 1 0 | 4 4 0 | 54 15 0 | |
0 4 0 | 1 8 0 | 5 12 0 | 73 0 0 | |
0 5 0 | 1 15 0 | 7 0 0 | 91 5 0 | |
0 6 0 | 2 2 0 | 8 8 0 | 109 10 0 | |
0 7 0 | 2 9 0 | 9 16 0 | 127 15 0 | |
0 8 0 | 2 16 0 | 11 4 0 | 146 0 0 | |
0 9 0 | 3 3 0 | 12 12 0 | 164 5 0 | |
0 10 0 | 3 10 0 | 14 0 0 | 182 10 0 | |
1 0 0 | 7 0 0 | 28 0 0 | 365 0 0 |
PARISH-OFFICERS, JURYMEN, AND MILITIA
[58]Pariſh-Officers.
1. EVERY ſubſtantial houſe-keeper, living in the pariſh, is liable to be choſen church-warden, a a veſtry in Eaſter-week, except peers, members of par⯑liament, the clergy, counſellors, attornies, apotheca⯑ries who have ſerved ſeven years, freemen of the cor⯑poration of ſurgeons in London, diſſenting teachers and preachers, and private men perſonally ſerving for themſelves in the militia, during the time of ſuch ſer⯑vice. 6 W. c. 4. 18 Geo. 2. c. 15. 1 W. ſeſſ. 1. c. 18. 10 & 11 W. c. 22. 2 Geo. 3. c. 20. 2 Roll's Abr. 272. No woman can ſerve. E. 10 Ann. Vin. Tit. Poor. A.
2. All perſons who have proſecuted a felon to con⯑viction, ſhall be exempted from the office of church-warden or overſeer in the pariſh where the offence was committed; and the judge's certificate of having done this may be once aſſigned over; and the aſſignee ſhall have the ſame privilege. 10 & 11 W. c. 23. This is called a Tyburn ticket.
3. In moſt pariſhes, ſuch as object to ſerve the office may get off for a fine of about 10 l. as they may from that of overſeer or conſtable.
4. Every ſubſtantial houſekeeper is alſo liable to be choſen overſeer for the poor, except the peers, the cler⯑gy, freemen of the corporation of ſurgeons in London, perſons proſecuting a felon to conviction (in the pariſh where the felony was committed) or his aſſignee, and a private militia-man during the time he ſerves.
5. Every male houſekeeper reſident in the pariſh is liable to ſerve the office of conſtable, except the clergy, counſellors, and captains of the king's guard, members of parliament and their ſervants, juſtices of peace, phyſicians and ſurgeons, apothecaries, aldermen of London, proſecutors of felons, militia-men, idiots, poor, old and rich perſons. Perſons unwilling to act may appoint a deputy.
[59]6. Conſtables of London are obliged to place the king's arms and the arms of the city over their doors, and if they reſide in alleys, at the end of each alley to⯑ward the ſtreet, to teſtify that a conſtable lives there.
7. Perſons refuſing to ſerve the office of conſtable in Weſtminſter forfeit 81. and no perſon is to ſerve more than once in ſeven years. 29 Geo. 2. c. 25.
8. Conſtables in the city of London miſbehaving, ſhall forfeit 20 s. the Lord Mayor or two city magi⯑ſtrates may hear complaints. 10 Geo. 2. c. 22.
Jury-men.
9. In the courts of London and city of Weſtmin⯑ſter, jurors ſhall be houſeholders within the city, and have lands, tenements, or perſonal eſtates, to the va⯑lue of 100 l. 3 Geo. 2. c. 25.
Leaſeholders in the county of Middleſex, where the improved rent or value ſhall amount to 50 l. a-year, over and above the ground-rent or other reſervations, ſhall be liable to ſerve on juries. 4 Geo. 2. c. 7.
In towns corporate, trials of felons ſhall be by men worth 40 l. in goods, though they have no freehold. 23 Hen. 8. c. 23.
10. Perſons under 21 years of age, old men above 70, perſons continually ſick or diſeaſed at the time of ſummons, or not dwelling in the county; ſurgeons, freemen of the company in London; apothecaries free of the company, clergymen, diſſenting teachers, and quakers, are by ſeveral acts exempt from ſerving,
11. Conſtables are to return liſts of proper perſons qualified to ſerve on juries, under the penalty of 5 l. If they wilfully omit perſons properly qualified, they forfeit 20 s. 3 Geo. 2. c. 25. Theſe liſts to be fixed on the pariſh church-doors and chapels, twenty days before Michaelmas, on two or more Sundays, and a du⯑plicate left with the church-warden or overſeer, to be peruſed by the pariſhioners, without fee. 3 Geo. 2. c. 25.
12. And if any perſon not qualified finds his name mentioned in ſuch liſt, and the perſon required to make ſuch liſt ſhall refuſe to eraſe it, or think it doubt⯑ful, whether it ſhould be omitted or not, the juſtices [60] at the ſeſſions, to which the liſts ſhall be returned, or ſatisfaction from the oath of the party complaining, o [...] other proof that he is not qualified, may order hi [...] name to be ſtruck out. Ibid.
13. Every ſummons of a juror ſhall be made by the ſheriff or his officer, ſix days before he is to attend▪ ſhewing the perſon ſo ſummoned the warrant, under the ſeal of the office; and if ſuch juror be abſent from home, notice of the ſummons ſhall be left in writing, 7 & 8 W. c. 32.
14. No perſons ſhall be returned as jurors, at the county of Middleſex, at any ſeſſions of niſi prius, who hath been returned in the two terms or vacations next before, on pain of the ſheriff being fined 5 l. 4 G. 2. c. 7.
15. The inhabitants of the city and liberty of Weſt⯑minſter ſhall be exempted from ſerving on any jury, at the ſeſſions for Middleſex, by reaſon of their attend⯑ance at Weſtminſter-hall. 7 & 8 W. c. 32.
16. Special jury-men are allowed one guinea for their attendance. 24 Geo. 2. c. 18.
17. If a jury-man be called, and (being preſent) re⯑fuſe to appear, or, having appeared, withdraw himſelf before he be ſworn, the court may fine him at diſcre⯑tion. 35 H. 8. c. 6.
A jury-man ſummoned and not appearing, and ſer⯑ving in any court of record in the city of London, af⯑ter being openly called three times, ſhall (without rea⯑ſonable excuſe) on oath, be fined from 20 s. to 40 s. 29 Geo. 2. c. 19.
18. If a jury-man eats or drinks after the evidence given, before the verdict is given in, without leave of the court, he is fineable. 1 Inſt. 227.
19. No juror ſhall caſt lot for his verdict, on pain of being fined, and the verdict ſet aſide. 3 Keb. 805▪ 2 Jones, 83.
Militia.
20. Conſtables are to give in proper liſts of perſons fit to ſerve in the militia, without partiality, on pain of forfeiting from 40 s. to 5 l. and one month's im⯑priſonment. 2 Geo. 3. c. 20.
[61]21. Perſons endeavouring to prevail on any conſta⯑ble or other officer, by gratuity or otherwiſe, to leave out of a liſt any name that ought to be returned, forfeit for every offence 50 l.; and any perſon refuſing to tell his chriſtian name and ſirname, or that of any man lodging within his or her houſe, to the officer autho⯑rized to demand the ſame, forfeits 10 l. Ibid.
22. All men from eighteen to forty-five years of age are to be returned. Ibid.
23. Perſons exempted from ſerving and providing ſubſtitutes, are peers of the realm, commiſſioned offi⯑cers in his Majeſty's ſervice, non-commiſſioned officers and private men ſerving his Majeſty, commiſſioned of⯑ficers ſerving, or who have ſerved four years in the militia, members of either of the univerſities, clergy⯑men, licenſed teachers of any ſeparate congregations, conſtables or other ſuch pariſh officers, articled clerks, apprentices, ſeamen or ſea-faring men, perſons muſter⯑ing and doing duty in any of his Majeſty's dock-yards, perſons free of the watermen's company. perſons em⯑ployed and muſtered at the Tower of London, Wool⯑wich Warren, and at the Gun wharfs; at the ſeveral royal docks, or at the powder mills or magazines, or houſes under the direction of the Board of Ordnance, and poor men who have three children born in wed⯑lock. Ibid.
24. Perſons returned and deſcribed in the liſt as ap⯑prentices being fraudulently bound out, in order to co⯑ver them from ſerving, are liable on conviction to ſerve immediately for the pariſh ſuch liſt was returned for, or upon the firſt vacancy, if there be none at that time, that ſhall happen therein; and the maſter ſhall forfeit 10 l. Ibid.
25. Perſons balloted, that refuſe to ſerve or find a ſubſtitute, ſhall forfeit 10 l. and at the end of three years be liable to ſerve again in perſon or by ſubſti⯑tute. Ibid.
26. No perſon having ſerved perſonally or by ſubſti⯑tute three years, ſhall be liable to ſerve again, till by rotation it comes to his turn. 2 G. 3. ſ. 20.
VESTRIES.
[62]1. THE church-wardens rate muſt be made with the conſent of the major part of the pariſhioners, houſe-keepers, or occupiers of land. In order to which public notice of a veſtry ought to be given the Sunday before, either in the church, after divine ſervice is end⯑ed, or at the church-door, as the pariſhioners come out, both of the calling of the ſaid meeting, and alſo of the time and place of its aſſembling. And it is uſu⯑al, that for half an hour before it begins, one of the church-bells be tolled, to give the pariſhioners notice when they are met. Par. L. 54.
2. The major part of them that appear, ſhall bind the pariſh. But in large populous pariſhes, a cuſtom has obtained of yearly chuſing a certain number of the moſt reſpectable men to repreſent all the reſt, who are called a ſelect veſtry. Such a veſtry exiſts at Mary-le⯑bone, St. George's, Hanover-ſquare, St. Mary Hill, &c. and no pariſhioner who does not pay to the church-rates has a vote, except the parſon or vicar.
3. If any perſon finds himſelf aggrieved at the irre⯑gularity of the church-wardens aſſeſſment for the re⯑pairs of the church, his appeal muſt be to the eccleſiaſ⯑tical judge. Degge 172.
4. And if any refuſe to pay the rates, they are to be ſued for in the eccleſiaſtical courts. Degge 171. A Quakers may be proſecuted before the juſtices of the peace. Burn.
5. The poor's-rate is made by the church-wardens and overſeers, and allowed by the juſtices. 43 Eliz. c. 2.
6. Any inhabitant may inſpect the poor's-rate book, at all ſeaſonable times, paying 1 s. and the church-war⯑dens ſhall give copies on demand, being paid 8 d. for every 24 names, on pain of 20 l. to the party grieved. 17 Geo. 2. c. 3.
7. Parties aggrieved by an aſſeſſment may, by giving notice to the church-wardens, appeal to the next ſeſſi⯑ons of the peace, 17 Geo. 2. c. 38.
[63]8. The goods of any perſon aſſeſſed, and refuſing to pay, may be diſtrained by a juſtice's warrant; but the mode is to ſummon the party firſt, before a magiſtrate, to ſhew cauſe why he will not pay. Ibid.
9. The veſtry clerk and beadles are choſen by the veſtry, and all complaints againſt them muſt there be made.
10. There is always a veſtry held in or about Eaſ⯑ter week, for chuſing pariſh-officers; and at other times it may be known when veſtries meet, by enquir⯑ing of the veſtry-clerk, who is their regiſter and ſecre⯑tary, or of the beadle, who is their meſſenger.
PAWN-BROKERS
ARE uſeful men in their way, but they are properly under certain reſtrictions.
1. Whoever ſhall pawn goods or property they are entruſted with, without the conſent of the owner, ſhall, on conviction of one witneſs, or on confeſſion, forfeit 20 s. or be committed to hard labour for four⯑teen days; and if the money is not paid within three days of the expiration of the fourteen days, on appli⯑cation of the proſecutor, the juſtice ſhall order the of⯑fender to be publickly whipped; the ſaid 20 s. to be applied towards making ſatisfaction to the party in⯑jured.
2. And any pawn-broker knowingly taking in, as a pledge, any linen or apparel entruſted to any one, to waſh, mend, or make up, ſhall, on the oath of one wit⯑neſs, forfeit double the ſum given or lent on the ſame to the poor; and the owner, proving his property, on the oath of one witneſs, ſhall have them again; and a ſearch-warrant may be procured, to ſearch any pawn-brokers houſe for this purpoſe. 30 Geo. 2. c. 24.
ASSURANCES FOR LIVES.
[64]1. THE terms of the Laudable Society for the bene fit of widows; office at No. 1, Surry-ſtreet Strand, open every day except holidays.
This Society conſiſted, at Lady-day, 1785, of 45 [...] members, each of whom pays five guineas per annum by half-yearly payments; this ſum amounts to
L. 2409 | 15 | 0 |
They have a capital ſtock of 45,450 l. in the four per cents. the intereſt of which is
1818 | 0 | 0 | |
4227 | 15 | 0 |
There were at Lady-day 165 widows, to whom were paid penſions to the amount of
L. 3723 | 15 | 0 | ||||
One year's expences, | 253 | 6 | 0 | |||
3977 | 1 | 0 | ||||
Which leaves a clear yearly income of | 250 | 13 | 11 |
But as at laſt Michaelmas there were ſeven widows more added to the liſt, amounting to 240 l. a year, i [...] reduces the clear income of the Society to 10 l. 13 s. 11 d.
The widow of each member, during her widow⯑hood, is entitled to an annuity payable half-yearly at Lady-day and Michaelmas, as follows:—
If her huſband has been a member | Years. | Day. | L. | per annum |
3 and | 1 | 10 | ||
7 | 1 | 20 | ||
13 | 1 | 30 | ||
20 | 1 | 40 |
The general price of admiſſion is 5 l. 5 s. paid down, and 5 l. 5 s. a year, paid quarterly, during the life of the huſband.
No victualler can be admitted, nor any one who has not had the ſmall pox; and every member now ad⯑mitted muſt pay two guineas on admiſſion, for every year, above two, that his age exceeds that of his wife; if above five years, three guineas for each year; and no perſon ſhall be admitted a member who ſhall be more than ten years older than his wiſe.
[65]To become a member, the perſon, or ſome friend for him, muſt enter his name at the office above, with his age, place of abode, title or profeſſion; the age of his wife, with her chriſtian and ſirname before mar⯑riage, and pay 7 s. 6 d. and when the perſon is ap⯑proved, he will have the proper affidavit, &c. ſent to him to be ſigned. If he is not approved, the 7 s. 6 d. will be returned.
Each member, in default of paying his half-yearly payment, at Lady-day and Michaelmas, or within 14 days after each day, ſhall forfeit to the joint ſtock, for the firſt half-year's neglect 5 s. 3 d. for 28 days after every Lady-day or Michaelmas 10 s. 6 d. after two ſuc⯑ceſſive half-year's negligence 21 s. and in caſe he is in arrears two ſucceſſive half years, and does not pay his arrears, together with his forfeits, within 28 days after the ſecond of the two ſucceſſive half-years, he ſhall be then excluded from the Society, and his widow have no advantage therefrom.
Widows of members guilty of ſuicide ſhall receive no benefit from the Society.
As an encouragement to widows to marry again, if her ſecond huſband ſhall, within one month after the ſecond marriage, pay to the joint ſtock half-a-year's annuity, which the widow was entitled to, then the woman, if ſhe ſurvives her huſband, ſhall be entitled to the ſame annuity as ſhe enjoyed before her ſecond marriage.
In fifteen truſtees of this Society, choſen by the general body, the capital ſtock, divided into three parts, is veſted. Each part in the name of five truſ⯑tees.
2. The Royal Exchange Aſſurance Office, whoſe office is over the Change (where attendance is daily given from eleven to two, and from five to ſeven, Saturday in the afternoon excepted) aſſures lives on the follow⯑ing terms:—
On ſingle lives, this corporation will pay 100 l. for the following premiums, paid yearly, for one year, ſeven years, or the whole life of the perſon aſſured, according to his age at the time of aſſuring. From the age of ten to fourteen, the premium is the ſame.
[66]
Age. | For one Year. | 7 Years. | Whole Life. |
l. s. d. | l. s. d. | l. s. d. | |
14 | 1 9 6 | 1 10 6 | 2 12 0 |
15 | 1 10 0 | 1 12 6 | 2 13 0 |
16 | 1 11 6 | 1 15 0 | 2 14 6 |
17 | 1 14 0 | 1 17 0 | 2 16 0 |
18 | 1 17 0 | 1 19 0 | 2 17 6 |
19 | 1 19 6 | 2 0 6 | 2 19 0 |
20 | 2 2 6 | 2 3 0 | 3 0 0 |
21 | 2 4 6 | 2 5 0 | 3 1 6 |
22 | 2 5 0 | 2 5 6 | 3 2 6 |
23 | 2 6 0 | 2 6 6 | 3 4 0 |
24 | 2 6 6 | 2 7 0 | 3 5 0 |
25 | 2 7 0 | 2 7 6 | 3 6 6 |
26 | 2 8 0 | 2 8 6 | 3 7 6 |
27 | 2 8 6 | 2 9 0 | 3 9 0 |
28 | 2 9 0 | 2 10 0 | 3 10 6 |
29 | 2 10 0 | 2 10 6 | 3 12 0 |
30 | 2 11 0 | 2 11 6 | 3 13 6 |
31 | 2 11 6 | 2 12 6 | 3 15 6 |
32 | 2 12 6 | 2 13 0 | 3 17 0 |
33 | 2 13 6 | 2 14 0 | 3 19 0 |
34 | 2 14 0 | 2 15 0 | 4 0 6 |
35 | 2 15 0 | 2 16 0 | 4 2 6 |
36 | 2 16 0 | 2 17 0 | 4 4 6 |
37 | 2 17 0 | 2 18 0 | 4 7 0 |
38 | 2 18 0 | 2 19 0 | 4 9 0 |
39 | 2 19 0 | 3 0 0 | 4 11 6 |
40 | 3 1 0 | 3 2 0 | 4 14 0 |
41 | 3 3 0 | 3 3 6 | 4 16 6 |
42 | 3 5 0 | 3 5 6 | 4 19 0 |
43 | 3 6 6 | 4 7 0 | 5 2 0 |
44 | 3 8 0 | 3 9 0 | 5 5 0 |
45 | 3 9 6 | 3 11 0 | 5 7 6 |
46 | 3 11 0 | 3 13 6 | 5 10 6 |
47 | 3 12 6 | 3 16 0 | 5 14 0 |
48 | 3 14 6 | 3 19 0 | 5 17 6 |
49 | 3 17 0 | 4 2 0 | 6 1 0 |
50 | 4 1 0 | 4 5 0 | 6 5 0 |
51 | 4 4 0 | 4 7 6 | 6 9 0 |
52 | 4 6 6 | 4 10 6 | 6 13 0 |
53 | 4 9 0 | 4 13 6 | 6 17 6 |
54 | 4 12 0 | 4 17 0 | 7 2 0 |
55 | 4 14 6 | 5 0 0 | 7 7 0 |
56 | 4 18 0 | 5 4 0 | 7 12 0 |
57 | 5 1 0 | 5 8 0 | 7 18 0 |
58 | 5 5 0 | 5 12 0 | 8 3 0 |
59 | 5 9 0 | 5 16 6 | 8 9 0 |
60 | 5 13 0 | 6 1 0 | 8 16 0 |
61 | 5 17 6 | ||
62 | 6 1 0 | ||
63 | 6 6 0 | ||
64 | 6 10 0 | ||
65 | 6 16 6 | ||
66 | 7 3 0 |
[67]They will alſo pay 100 l. on the death of one perſon named out of two, for the following premiums, ſet a⯑gainſt the reſpective ages aſſured.
If one is aged, | And the other aged, | The annual Sum to be paid is, |
l. s. d. | ||
10 | 10 | 2 0 0 |
20 | 2 1 0 | |
30 | 1 19 6 | |
40 | 1 18 6 | |
50 | 1 17 6 | |
60 | 1 16 0 | |
70 | 1 14 6 | |
80 | 1 12 6 | |
20 | 10 | 2 10 6 |
20 | 2 11 0 | |
30 | 2 9 6 | |
40 | 2 8 0 | |
50 | 2 6 6 | |
60 | 2 4 6 | |
70 | 2 2 0 | |
80 | 1 19 0 | |
30 | 10 | 3 3 0 |
20 | 3 4 0 | |
30 | 3 2 6 | |
40 | 2 19 6 | |
50 | 2 16 6 | |
60 | 2 13 6 | |
70 | 2 11 0 | |
80 | 2 6 6 | |
40 | 10 | 4 2 0 |
20 | 4 3 0 | |
30 | 4 1 0 | |
40 | 3 17 0 | |
50 | 3 13 0 | |
60 | 3 8 6 | |
70 | 3 3 0 | |
80 | 2 18 0 | |
50 | 10 | 5 12 0 |
20 | 5 13 0 | |
30 | 5 10 6 | |
40 | 5 7 6 | |
50 | 5 2 0 | |
60 | 4 13 6 | |
70 | 4 5 0 | |
80 | 3 16 0 | |
60 | 10 | 8 1 6 |
20 | 8 3 6 | |
30 | 8 1 0 | |
40 | 7 17 6 | |
50 | 7 13 0 | |
60 | 7 1 6 | |
70 | 6 4 0 | |
80 | 5 7 6 |
[68]
If one is aged, | And the other aged, | The annual Sum to be paid is, |
l. s. d. | ||
10 | 10 | 3 19 0 |
15 | 4 4 6 | |
20 | 4 10 0 | |
25 | 4 15 0 | |
30 | 5 2 0 | |
35 | 5 9 6 | |
40 | 6 0 0 | |
45 | 6 12 6 | |
50 | 7 9 0 | |
55 | 8 9 6 | |
60 | 9 17 0 | |
15 | 15 | 4 10 0 |
20 | 4 16 0 | |
25 | 5 1 0 | |
30 | 5 7 0 | |
35 | 5 14 6 | |
40 | 6 5 0 | |
45 | 6 17 0 | |
50 | 7 13 6 | |
55 | 8 14 0 | |
60 | 10 1 6 | |
20 | 20 | 5 2 0 |
25 | 5 7 0 | |
30 | 5 13 0 | |
35 | 6 0 0 | |
40 | 6 10 0 | |
45 | 7 3 0 | |
50 | 7 19 0 | |
55 | 8 19 6 | |
60 | 10 7 0 | |
25 | 25 | 5 11 6 |
30 | 5 17 6 | |
35 | 6 4 6 | |
40 | 6 14 6 | |
45 | 7 6 6 | |
50 | 8 2 6 | |
55 | 9 3 0 | |
60 | 10 10 0 | |
30 | 30 | 6 2 6 |
35 | 6 10 0 | |
40 | 6 19 0 | |
45 | 7 11 0 | |
50 | 8 7 0 | |
55 | 9 7 0 | |
60 | 10 14 0 | |
35 | 35 | 6 16 6 |
40 | 7 5 6 | |
45 | 7 17 0 | |
50 | 8 12 6 | |
55 | 9 12 0 | |
60 | 10 19 0 | |
40 | 40 | 7 14 0 |
45 | 8 5 6 | |
50 | 9 0 0 | |
55 | 9 19 6 | |
60 | 11 5 6 | |
45 | 45 | 8 16 0 |
50 | 9 10 0 | |
55 | 10 8 6 | |
60 | 11 14 0 | |
50 | 50 | 10 3 6 |
55 | 11 1 6 | |
60 | 12 6 0 | |
55 | 55 | 11 17 6 |
60 | 13 1 0 | |
60 | 60 | 14 3 0 |
[69]The conditions of the policy and agreement are, that the aſſurance ſhall be void, if the perſon whoſe life is aſſured ſhall depart the kingdom of Great Bri⯑tain, or enter into the army or navy, without the pre⯑vious conſent of the company, or ſhall die by ſuicide, duelling, or the hand of juſtice.—This corporation does not grant any annuities on lives.
3. The terms of aſſurance at the Amicable Society, Ser⯑jeant's-inn, Fleet-ſtreet, are as follow:—
July 25, 1706, Queen Anne incorporated William, then Lord Biſhop of Oxon, Sir Thomas Aleyn, Bart. and others, and every other perſon who ſhould be then after admitted a ſubſcriber, (not exceeding 2000 in the whole) by the name of the Amicable Society, with power to purchaſe and alien lands, not exceeding the yearly value of 2000 l. to acquire any goods and chat⯑tels whatſoever, to ſue, and be ſued, and to have a com⯑mon ſeal.
Every perſon afterwards admitted, is to be eſteemed a member of the corporation, and is to pay on his and her own life 6 l. 4 s. per annum, in ſuch manner as the directors of the ſaid corporation, for the time be⯑ing, ſhall think fit; on whoſe deceaſe the nominee, &c. is to be entitled to an equal ſhare of 10,000 l. when there are 2000 ſubſcribers, or of a ſum in proportion, if the Society ſhall conſiſt of a leſſer number.
Twelve perſons were appointed directors, with power for any ſeven, or more of them, to hold courts; and the major part of them aſſembled were to manage the affairs of the corporation according to the charter, and to the by-laws to be made by the major part of the members in a general court, which court may not con⯑ſiſt of leſs than twenty members; and for a ſucceſſion of directors, twelve members (living within the bills of mortality) were to be choſen yearly, within forty days after Lady-day, to be directors for one year, and until others ſhould be choſen in their places; and one of the members of the corporation was appointed re⯑giſter, to be ſucceeded, from time to time, by another member.
January 16, 1729, George II. granted additional [70] powers and authorities as were not contained in the original charter.
No perſon can be admitted a member under the age of twelve, or above the age of forty-five years, (except in exchange) and perſons above the age of forty-three are required to procure authentic certificates of their ages.
Perſons in London, or within fifteen miles thereof, muſt appear before a court of directors, and there vo⯑luntarily make oath, "That he or ſhe is in a good ſtate of health, and hath no diſtemper, which, accord⯑ing to the beſt of his or her knowledge, judgement or belief, may tend to the ſhortening of his or her days."
Perſons living above fifteen miles from London, and not appearing before a court of directors, may be ad⯑mitted members (after they are upon enquiry other⯑wiſe approved of) by certificates and affidavits.
Not more than three numbers or ſhares can be had upon any one life.
Every perſon, on admiſſion, is to pay a premium of 7 l. 10 s. for each number or ſhare, together with 7 s. 6 d. for the policy.
A dividend of 1 l. 4 s. is allowed to each member, out of the profits of the corporation, whereby the char⯑ter payment of 6 l. 4 s. is reduced to 5 l. per annum, which 5 l. is to be paid quarterly, under certain pe⯑nalties for every ſhare.
The death of every member muſt be proved by cer⯑tificate of burial; together with an affidavit of his or her death, and identity.
If a member dies out of England, ſecurity muſt be given to indemnify the corporation, before any claim is paid.
Any perſon above the age of forty-five, if in good health, may be admitted in exchange for a member who is older than himſelf.
By a reſolution of the general court, the 10th day of May, 1770, the claims are not to be leſs than 150 l. upon each number or ſhare; but they have been con⯑ſiderably larger, as will appear by the following ac⯑count: [71]
L. | s. | d. | |
1773 | 259 | 2 | 9 |
1774 | 206 | 15 | 10 |
1775 | 179 | 13 | 10 |
1776 | 194 | 7 | 9 |
1777 | 155 | 9 | 4 |
1778 | 207 | 12 | 1 |
1779 | 207 | 7 | 11 |
1780 | 193 | 0 | 0 |
1781 | 222 | 0 | 0 |
1782 | 200 | 0 | 0 |
1783 | 188 | 10 | 0 |
1784 | 185 | 0 | 0 |
N. B. Upon application to become a member, each perſon is required to leave in writing. at the office, his or her name, place of abode, profeſſion and age; and likewiſe the names of at leaſt two perſons of repute liv⯑ing within the cities of London or Weſtminſter, to whom ſuch perſon is, and for ſome time paſt hath been well known, in order that ſatisfactory enquiries may be made as to his or her ſtate of health; but thoſe who live at a diſtance from London are required (if they can) to give the names of at leaſt two reputable perſons living in London or Weſtminſter, to whom they are well known; but if they have no ſuch ac⯑quaintances in London or Weſtminſter, they muſt give ſuch as live near their places of abode, and who know them well; and if upon enquiry they are approved of, they may then be admitted members by certificates and affidavits, the forms of which are to be had at the office.
*⁎* Perſons in the Army or Navy, whoſe buſineſs requires them to reſide in foreign parts, tavern-keepers and inn-keepers, and thoſe whoſe occupations or em⯑ployments are attended with danger or injury to their conſtitutions, are not admitted members.
As this ſociety is confined to a certain number, per⯑ [...]ons muſt frequently wait ſome time before they can be admitted.
4. Blackfriar's Aſſurance-Office, at Blackfriar's-bridge, where attendance is daily given from nine till three.
Aſſurances may be made for any ſum from 20 l. [...] 2000 l. for any certain time, or for the whole con⯑ [...]nuance of the life, on payment of a groſs ſum, or an [...]nnual premium proportionable to the hazard of the [...]ge at which the life begins to be aſſured, and to the [...]me the aſſurance is to continue, on the following [...]rms:—
[72]TABLE of PREMIUMS for aſſuring 100 l. upon the Li [...] of any healthy Perſon, from Eight to Sixty-Seve [...]
Age. | One Year. | Seven Years at an annual pay⯑ment of | For the whole Life at an an⯑nual payment of |
8 | 1 9 2 | 1 10 7 | 2 2 10 |
9 | 1 9 3 | 1 10 8 | 2 2 11 |
10 | 1 9 6 | 1 10 8 | 2 3 2 |
11 | 1 9 7 | 1 11 1 | 2 3 6 |
12 | 1 9 10 | 1 11 5 | 2 3 11 |
13 | 1 10 1 | 1 21 7 | 2 4 6 |
14 | 1 10 3 | 1 11 9 | 2 5 5 |
15 | 1 11 0 | 1 12 7 | 2 6 6 |
16 | 1 11 3 | 1 12 11 | 2 7 9 |
17 | 1 11 9 | 1 13 8 | 2 8 11 |
18 | 1 12 5 | 1 14 3 | 2 10 2 |
19 | 1 13 4 | 1 15 1 | 2 12 6 |
20 | 1 13 11 | 1 16 0 | 2 12 10 |
21 | 1 14 7 | 1 16 9 | 2 14 3 |
22 | 1 15 4 | 1 17 7 | 2 15 9 |
23 | 1 16 0 | 1 18 5 | 2 16 5 |
24 | 1 16 9 | 1 19 3 | 2 18 11 |
25 | 1 17 7 | 2 — 2 | 3 — 6 |
26 | 1 18 5 | 2 1 3 | 3 2 2 |
27 | 1 19 4 | 2 2 3 | 3 4 0 |
28 | 2 — 4 | 2 3 6 | 3 5 6 |
29 | 2 1 3 | 2 4 7 | 3 7 2 |
30 | 2 2 6 | 2 6 0 | 3 8 11 |
31 | 2 3 7 | 2 7 5 | 3 10 8 |
32 | 2 4 10 | 2 8 10 | 3 12 6 |
33 | 2 6 3 | 2 10 6 | 3 14 2 |
34 | 2 7 9 | 2 12 3 | 3 16 0 |
35 | 2 8 7 | 2 14 2 | 3 17 9 |
36 | 2 11 3 | 2 16 3 | 3 19 9 |
37 | 2 13 1 | 2 18 3 | 4 1 9 |
38 | 2 14 11 | 3 — 6 | 4 3 10 |
39 | 2 17 0 | 3 2 9 | 4 5 10 |
40 | 2 19 2 | 3 5 1 | 4 7 11 |
41 | 3 1 5 | 3 7 8 | 4 10 2 |
42 | 3 3 7 | 3 10 3 | 4 12 6 |
43 | 3 6 1 | 3 13 1 | 4 14 11 |
44 | 3 8 6 | 3 16 0 | 4 17 5 |
[73]A TABLE of PREMIUMS for aſſuring the ſum of One Hundred Pounds upon the Life of any healthy Per⯑ſon, from the age of Eight to Sixty-Seven, conti⯑nued.
Age. | One Year. | Seven Years at an annual pay⯑ment of | For the whole Life at an an⯑nual payment of |
45 | 3 11 0 | 3 18 6 | 5 — 0 |
46 | 3 13 6 | 4 1 3 | 5 2 4 |
47 | 3 16 2 | 4 4 1 | 5 4 10 |
48 | 3 18 10 | 4 6 10 | 5 7 5 |
49 | 4 1 8 | 4 10 0 | 5 10 2 |
50 | 4 4 8 | 4 13 2 | 5 12 11 |
51 | 4 7 8 | 4 16 8 | 5 15 9 |
52 | 4 10 9 | 5 0 0 | 5 18 8 |
43 | 4 14 0 | 5 4 0 | 6 1 9 |
54 | 4 17 4 | 5 7 1 | 6 5 3 |
55 | 5 — 9 | 5 11 7 | 6 9 3 |
56 | 5 4 3 | 5 16 0 | 6 12 10 |
57 | 5 8 0 | 6 — 6 | 6 18 11 |
58 | 5 11 6 | 6 5 3 | 7 4 6 |
59 | 5 15 2 | 6 10 8 | 7 10 9 |
60 | 5 19 1 | 6 16 10 | 7 17 7 |
61 | 6 3 1 | 7 2 7 | 8 5 3 |
62 | 6 7 5 | 7 9 1 | 8 13 8 |
63 | 6 11 8 | 7 16 1 | 9 2 10 |
64 | 6 16 3 | 8 4 11 | 9 12 11 |
65 | 7 — 11 | 8 13 0 | 10 3 9 |
66 | 7 6 0 | 9 2 1 | 10 15 3 |
67 | 7 10 10 | 9 12 0 | 11 7 0 |
[74]An addition of twenty-two per cent. computed up⯑on the premium, is charged upon military perſons; and the ſmall addition of eleven per cent. upon per⯑ſons not having had the ſmall-pox.
The court of directors have a diſcretionary power of fixing the premium, when any peculiar hazard attends the life upon which the aſſurance is made.
Perſons preferring the payment of a groſs ſum or ſingle premium upon an aſſurance for any certain term, are chargeable in a due proportion to the annual premium for ſuch term.
Every perſon making any aſſurance with the ſociety pays five ſhillings in the name of entrance-money; and if the ſum aſſured exceed one hundred pounds, the en⯑trance-money is charged after the rate of five ſhillings for every hundred pounds.
Alſo, every perſon propoſing any aſſurance, is re⯑quired to make a depoſit of five ſhillings, and in caſe the ſum propoſed to be aſſured ſhall exceed one hun⯑dred pounds, the depoſit will be increaſed after the rate of two ſhillings and ſixpence for every hundred; which depoſit, if the party afterwards, or neglects to com⯑plete the ſame, for the ſpace of twenty-eight days, is forfeited to the uſe of the ſociety; but if the court of directors refuſe making ſuch aſſurance, the money de⯑poſited is returned.
Every policy becomes void, upon the party, whoſe life is aſſured, going beyond the limits of Europe, (without leave of the directors) or dying upon the ſeas, or dying by their own hands, or the hands of juſtice.
[75]TABLE of Annual Premiums payable during the joint continuance of the Lives of the Expectant and Poſ⯑ſeſſor for inſuring One Hundred Pounds *, if the Life in Expectation ſhall ſurvive the Life in Poſſeſſion.
Age of Poſſ. | Age of Exp. | Premium. |
l. s. d. | ||
10 | 20 | 1 12 10 |
20 | 10 | 2 2 7 |
10 | 30 | 1 12 10 |
30 | 10 | 2 17 9 |
10 | 40 | 1 13 3 |
40 | 10 | 3 17 5 |
10 | 50 | 1 12 10 |
50 | 10 | 5 2 7 |
10 | 60 | 1 11 7 |
60 | 10 | 6 14 7 |
10 | 70 | 1 9 3 |
70 | 10 | 9 10 6 |
20 | 20 | 2 2 7 |
20 | 30 | 2 2 7 |
30 | 20 | 2 16 10 |
20 | 40 | 2 2 0 |
40 | 20 | 3 16 5 |
20 | 50 | 2 1 6 |
50 | 20 | 5 2 0 |
20 | 60 | 1 19 7 |
60 | 20 | 6 16 10 |
20 | 70 | 1 16 0 |
70 | 20 | 9 8 0 |
20 | 30 | 2 14 8 |
30 | 40 | 2 14 0 |
40 | 30 | 3 12 7 |
30 | 50 | 2 12 5 |
50 | 30 | 4 17 3 |
30 | 60 | 2 10 0 |
60 | 30 | 6 12 6 |
30 | 70 | 2 5 0 |
70 | 30 | 9 6 10 |
40 | 40 | 3 8 7 |
40 | 50 | 3 5 3 |
50 | 40 | 4 11 0 |
40 | 60 | 3 1 6 |
60 | 40 | 6 6 10 |
40 | 70 | 2 15 0 |
70 | 40 | 9 1 0 |
50 | 50 | 4 5 7 |
50 | 60 | 3 18 6 |
60 | 50 | 5 19 8 |
50 | 70 | 3 9 7 |
70 | 50 | 8 15 7 |
60 | 60 | 5 10 0 |
60 | 70 | 4 14 0 |
70 | 60 | 8 5 7 |
70 | 70 | 7 6 10 |
[76]A TABLE of ANNUAL PREMIUMS payable during the continuance of two joint Lives, for aſſuring One Hundred Pounds, to be paid when either of the Lives ſhall drop.
Age | Age | l. s. d. |
10 | 20 | 3 15 8 |
30 | 4 10 6 | |
40 | 5 10 10 | |
50 | 6 13 4 | |
60 | 8 10 7 | |
70 | 10 19 8 | |
15 | 20 | 4 — 2 |
30 | 4 15 3 | |
40 | 5 15 3 | |
50 | 7 1 2 | |
60 | 8 14 3 | |
70 | 11 3 5 | |
20 | 30 | 4 18 10 |
40 | 5 18 3 | |
50 | 7 3 0 | |
60 | 8 16 7 | |
70 | 11 3 6 | |
25 | 30 | 5 2 7 |
40 | 6 1 6 | |
50 | 7 5 3 | |
60 | 8 19 5 | |
70 | 11 7 6 | |
30 | 40 | 6 6 3 |
50 | 7 9 8 | |
60 | 9 2 6 | |
70 | 11 12 0 | |
35 | 40 | 6 11 7 |
50 | 7 19 [...] | |
60 | 9 5 6 | |
70 | 11 16 0 | |
40 | 50 | 7 16 5 |
60 | 9 8 6 | |
70 | 11 16 0 | |
45 | 50 | 8 3 8 |
45 | 60 | 9 14 7 |
70 | 12 — 6 | |
50 | 60 | 9 18 [...] |
70 | 12 5 0 | |
55 | 60 | 10 4 1 |
70 | 12 10 0 | |
60 | 70 | 13 — 0 |
65 | 70 | 13 16 0 |
N. B. From the above ſpecimen, which ſhews the premium for every tenth year, the reader will eaſi⯑ly judge of the proportional premium for any in⯑termediate age.
Every perſon deſiring to make aſſurance with the ſo⯑ciety, muſt ſign a declaration by himſelf or agent, ſet⯑ting forth the age, ſtate of health, profeſſion, occupa⯑tion, and other circumſtances of the perſons whoſe lives are propoſed to be aſſured: and alſo, in caſe ſuch aſſurance is made upon the life of another perſon, that the intereſt which he has in ſuch life is equal to the ſum aſſured. This declaration is the baſis of the con⯑tract between the ſociety and the perſon deſirous to make ſuch aſſurance: and if any artful, falſe, or frau⯑dulent repreſentation ſhall be uſed therein, all claim, on account of any policy ſo obtained, ſhall ceaſe, de⯑termine, and be void, and the monies which ſhall [77] have been paid upon account of ſuch aſſurance, ſhall be forfeited to the uſe of the ſociety.
Every perſon making aſſurance with the ſociety be⯑comes a member, and enters into a covenant that he will conform to, obſerve, and keep the ſtatutes, bye-laws, rules, orders, and ordinances of the ſociety.— But no member has a right to vote at a general court, who is not aſſured in the ſum of 100 l. or upwards, upon a life or lives, for the whole continuance there⯑of.
The buſineſs of the ſociety is conducted and carried on by fifteen directors, annually choſen out of thoſe members, who are aſſured with the ſociety in the ſum of 300 l. or upwards, upon a life or lives, for the whole continuance thereof.
Four general courts are held every year, on the firſt Thurſday of March, June, September and December, or as often as nine members qualified to vote ſhall think proper, at which times the accounts and ſtate of the ſociety are laid before the perſons preſent.
If at any time it ſhall appear to a General Court of the Society, that the premiums received, and to be received, will not be ſufficient to pay the claims, then the General Court are to direct a call to be made upon the ſeveral members of the Society, in proportion to the ſums by them aſſured, for making good the defi⯑ciency; for which call credit is to be given, and the call afterwards to be repaid; with intereſt, at the rate of 3 per cent.
If a call ſhould at any time be requiſite, (which is highly improbable) the members aſſured for a ſingle year will be rated towards ſuch call in the proportion of one ſixth part, and the members aſſured for a number of years certain, in the proportion of two third parts of the ſum charged upon the members aſſured for the whole continuance of life, for every 100 l. by them reſpectively aſſured.
As often as it ſhall appear to a General Court, that the ſtock of the Society is more than ſufficient to pay the claims liable to be made, then the General Court is to declare a dividend of the ſurplus, or of ſuch part thereof as ſhall be judged convenient, amongſt the [78] members of the ſociety liable to contribute towards a call in proportion to the ſums in which they are aſſu⯑red, and to the number of years of their ſtanding in the ſociety.
The court of directors are impowered to aſſure either a groſs ſum, or an annuity, to be paid to children after they ſhall have attained an age aſſigned.
The court of directors are impowered to aſſure an⯑nuities for a life or lives, on the payment of a groſs ſum.
So as the amount of any annuity or annuities to be granted upon any one life do not exceed one hundred pounds:
And towards ſecuring the payment of the ſeveral annuities, a fund is reſerved of two-thirds of the ſums originally paid for the purchaſe.
There are two or three other ſocieties for aſſurance on lives, that pay annuities to widows and children, but they are not ſufficiently eſtabliſhed to put any great dependence on them, of courſe they are not here no⯑ticed.
GENERAL POST-OFFICE, LOMBARD-STREET.
1. ALL letters and newſpapers muſt be put into the receiving-houſes in different parts of the town, before five in the evening, or they cannot be forward⯑ed by that day's poſt. After five theſe offices are ſhut. Bell-men then go about the ſtreets till ſix, who carry ſuch letters as they collect, to the General Poſt-Office in Lombard-ſtreet, for which they expect one penny each letter. If a letter be carried by your own ſer⯑vant, this penny may be ſaved: the General Poſt-Of⯑fice will take them in any time before ſeven. After ſeven, till eight, a letter will be taken in for 6 d. ex⯑traordinary.
2. All perſons about the Poſt-Office ſhall take an oath not to embezzle or delay any letters, nor to open any, except by an expreſs warrant from one of the ſe⯑cretaries of ſtate, for that purpoſe; or except in ſuch [79] caſes where the parties to whom they are addreſſed re⯑fuſe payment for the ſame; or except ſuch letters are returned for want of true directions; or when the party to whom the ſame is directed cannot be found.— 9 Ann. c. 10.
- From any poſt-office in England, to any place not exceeding one ſtage from ſuch office, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 2
- From any poſt-office in England, to any place above one, and not exceeding two ſtages from ſuch office, and not paſſing through London, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 3
- From any poſt-office in England, to any place above two ſtages, and not exceeding 80 miles, and not paſſing through London, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 4
- From any poſt-office in England, to any place above 80, and not exceeding 150 miles, and not paſſing through London, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 5
- From any poſt-office in England, to any place above 150 miles, not paſſing through London, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 6
- Between London and Edinburgh, Dumfries or Cockburnſpeth, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 7
- From any poſt-office in Scotland, to any place not exceeding one ſtage from ſuch office, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 2
- From any poſt-office in Scotland, to any place in the ſame kingdom above one ſtage, and not exceeding 50 miles, and not paſſing through Edinburgh, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 3
- From any poſt-office in Scotland, to any place in the ſame kingdom above 50, and not exceeding 80 miles, and not paſſing through Edinburgh, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 4
- From any poſt-office in Scotland, to any place in the ſame kingdom above 80, and not exceeding 150 miles, and not paſſing through Edinburgh, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 5
- From any poſt-office in Scotland, to any place above 150 miles, and not paſſing through Edin⯑burgh, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 6
- Between Port-Patrick in Scotland, and Donagha⯑dee in Ireland, by packet-boats, over and above all other rates, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 2
- [80]Letters to and from any part of England and any part of Scotland, not paſſing through London, Edinburgh, Dumfries or Cockburnſpeth, are not chargeable, if ſingle, higher than Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 7
- Letters to and from Glaſgow, or the intermediate places by Carliſle, are not to pay a higher rate of poſtage, than if ſent through Edinburgh.
- Between London and Dublin, by way of Holy-head. Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 6
- Between London and Donaghadee, by way of Carliſle and Port-Patrick, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 12
- Between Great Britain and the Iſle of Man, by packet-boats, over and above all other rates, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 2
- For the port of every letter or packet of letters in any part of his Majeſty's dominions directed to, or coming from, on board of any ſhip, over and above the rates before mentioned, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 1
- For every letter or packet coming from on ſhip⯑board for the town where landed, or the deli⯑very thereof, one penny, with the penny paid to the maſter, mariner, or paſſenger bringing the ſame, being for every ſuch letter or pac⯑ket, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 2
- For letters conveyed by packet-boats, between London and any port in his Majeſty's Weſt-India iſlands, or North-America, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 12
- For letters conveyed by packet-boats from any port in the Weſt-India iſlands, or his Majeſty's dominions in North-America, to any other port thereof, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 4
- For the inland conveyance of letters in the ſaid dominions between any office and any place, not exceeding 60 Engliſh miles, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 4
- For any diſtance above 60 Engliſh miles, and not exceeding 100 miles, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 6
- [81]For any diſtance above 100, and not exceeding 200 Engliſh miles, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 8
- And ſo in proportion, the poſtage increaſing two-pence a ſingle letter, for any diſtance above eve⯑ry 100 miles.
- Letters from London to any part of Holland, France or Flanders, pay no foreign poſtage.
- From any part of Holland, France or Flanders, to London, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 10
- Between London and any part of Spain or Portu⯑gal, through France, or by Liſbon, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 18
- Between London and any part of Italy, Sicily, Turkey and Switzerland, through France, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 15
- Between London and any part of Italy, Sicily, Turkey, Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Ruſſia, and all parts of the North, through Holland and Flanders, Poſtage of a Single Letter. d. 12
5. Letters and packets from any part of Great Bri⯑tain or Ireland, for any of the places under the title Foreign Letters, before mentioned, and for North-Ame⯑rica, are, beſides the ſaid foreign rates and packet-poſtage to North-America, to pay at the office where they are put in, the full port to London, without which they cannot be forwarded; therefore, all per⯑ſons are to take particular notice thereof, to prevent the neceſſity of their letters being opened and returned for the poſtage.
6. All merchants accompts, not exceeding one ſheet of paper, and all bills of exchange, invoices, and bills of lading, to or from any of the foreign parts or pla⯑ces before mentioned, and the covers of letters to or from Turkey, not exceeding one quarter of a ſheet of paper, are allowed to paſs without payment of the fo⯑reign poſtage, but are to pay the full inland port to and from London.
7. All double, treble, and other letters and packets whatever (except by the penny-poſt) pay in proportion to the reſpective rates of ſingle letters before ſpecified; but no letter or packet to and from places within the king⯑dom [82] of Great Britain, together with the contents thereof, ſhall be charged more than as a treble letter, unleſs the ſame ſhall weigh an ounce, when it is to be rated as four ſingle letters, and ſo in proportion for every quarter of an ounce above that weight, reckon⯑ing each quarter as a ſingle letter.
8. Letters to all parts of Europe are diſpatched from London every Tueſday and Friday, except thoſe to Portugal, which are forwarded by the Liſbon mails on Tueſdays only.
9. Letters to the Weſt-Indies and to North-Ame⯑rica are diſpatched from London the firſt Wedneſday in every month.
10. No letter, under one ounce, to be charged high⯑er than as a treble letter.
11. All maſters of veſſels bringing letters from a⯑broad, ſhall deliver the ſame (except in the caſe of quarentine) at the poſt-office where they break bulk, for which the poſt-maſter ſhall receive 1 d. extra for each letter. 5 Geo. 3. c. 25, ſ. 3, 4.
12. Bills of exchange, written on the ſame piece of paper with a letter, and ſeveral letters to ſeveral per⯑ſons, written on the ſame piece of paper, ſhall pay as ſo many diſtinct letters. 26 G. c. 21. ſ. 51.
13. Writs, and other proceedings at law, incloſed or written on the ſame piece of paper with a letter, ſhall pay as ſo many diſtinct letters. 26 G. 2. c. 13. ſ. 6.
14. But merchants accompts not exceeding one ſheet, bills of exchange, invoices, bills of lading (ſent or brought over ſea; 6 G. c. 21. ſ. 52), ſhall be allow⯑ed without rate in the price of the letters. 9 Ann. c. 10. ſ. 13.
15. But patterns or ſamples of goods, or pieces of any thing, though not paper, incloſed in a letter, of affixed thereto, if under an ounce weight, ſhall pay as a double letter. 26 G. 2. c. 13. ſ. 7.
16. No letters or packets ſhall be exempted from poſtage, except ſuch as ſhall be ſent to the king; and ſuch as not exceeding the weight of two ounces, ſhall be ſent during the ſitting of parliament, or within 40 days before or after any ſummons or prorogation, [83] which ſhall be ſigned on the outſide thereof, by any member, and by whom the whole ſuperſcription ſhall be written; and alſo the name of the poſt-town from which the ſame is intended to be ſent, and the day, month and year, when the ſame ſhall be put into the poſt-office (the day of the month to be in words at length)—or directed to any member at the place where he ſhall actually be at the time of the delivery thereof, or at his uſual place of reſidence in London, or at the lobby of the houſe of parliament of which he is a member; or to the offices of the Treaſury, Admiralty, War-office, General Poſt-office, ſecretaries of ſtate, paymaſter-general of the forces, clerk of the parlia⯑ments, clerk of the Houſe of Commons; or upon his Majeſty's ſervice (indorſed by the proper officer).— 4 Geo. 3. c. 24. ſ. 1, 4. 5 Geo. 3. c. 25. ſ. 26. 25 Geo. 3.
17. Counterfeiting the ſuperſcription of any letters to evade the poſtage, is tranſportation for ſeven years. 25 Geo. 3.
18. Printed votes or proceedings in parliament, or printed newſpapers ſent without cover, or in covers open at the ends, ſigned on the outſide by any member of parliament, or directed to a member at any place, whereof he ſhall have given notice to the Poſtmaſter-General, ſhall be exempted from poſtage in England; 4 G. 3. c. 24. ſ. 5. and ſhall paſs from Great Britain and Ireland at the rate of 1 d. only for each printed vote, proceeding in parliament, or newſpaper. 25 Geo. 3.
19. If any perſon entruſted to take in letters and re⯑ceive the poſtage thereof, ſhould embezzle the money, burn or deſtroy the letters, or advance the rates and not duly account for ſuch advanced rates, he ſhall be guilty of felony. 5 Geo. 3. c. 25. ſ. 19.
20. All ſums not exceeding 5 l. due for poſtage may [...]e recovered before juſtices of the peace, in the ſame manner as ſmall tithes. 9 An. c. 10. ſ. 30.
21. All ſums overcharged for letters will be returned [...] the Poſt-Office, Lombard-ſtreet. If on good terms with your poſtman, he will get this done for you; on [84] this account it may not be impolitic to give him a ſhil⯑ling at Chriſtmas.
22. Any complaint made of miſconduct to the Secre⯑tary of the Poſt-Office, by letter or otherwiſe, will be immediately attended to.
23. No one is obliged to receive a letter from the poſtman, though directed to him, unleſs he thinks pro⯑per.
THE PENNY-POST
1. HAS five principal offices; viz. the chief Penny-poſt office in Throgmorton-ſtreet; the Weſt⯑minſter, in Coventry-ſtreet; St. Clements, in Black⯑moor-ſtreet, Clare-market; the Hermitage, in Queen-ſtreet, Little Tower-hill; the Southwark, St. Saviour's Church-yard, Borough.
2. Letters to be ſent out of town muſt be put into theſe offices before ten at night, to be forwarded by the firſt delivery the next day.
3. To prevent the frequent delays of Penny-poſt let⯑ters, the public are requeſted to be particularly careful to ſend them to the Penny-poſt receiving-houſes, from whence they are collected every four hours, and deli⯑vered four times a day to all parts of London; for when they are put by miſtake into the General Poſt-office, or the receiving-houſes for general-poſt letters, they cannot be collected till late in the evening, and beſides the delay thereby, the penny which ought to have been paid with them muſt of neceſſity be charged to the per⯑ſons they are directed to.
4. Letters are much accelerated by being put in at any of the five principal offices, inſtead of the receiv⯑ing-houſes, from whence they muſt be collected and ſent to thoſe offices.
5. For the port of every letter or packet, paſſing or repaſſing within the cities of London or Weſtminſter, the Borough of Southwark and their ſuburbs, (which letter or packet is not to exceed the weight of 4 ounces▪ [85] unleſs coming from or paſſing to the General-Poſt) one penny upon putting in the ſame, as alſo a penny upon the delivery of ſuch as are directed to any place beyond the ſaid cities, borough, or ſuburbs, within the diſtrict of the penny-poſt delivery.
6. The triangular ſtamp on all Penny-poſt letters ſhews the day they are brought to one of theſe princi⯑pal offices; and the round ſtamp the hour they are gi⯑ven to the letter carriers.
7. This poſt carries parcels under four ounces to moſt places within ten miles of London.
8. To expedite the delivery, it is adviſeable to write on the outſide, the day of the week, and the hour the letter is put into the office.
9. If you ſend any thing of value by the poſt, it is proper that the perſon who delivers it at the office ſhould be able to prove the contents; but the office has given the following directions concerning this mat⯑ter. Unleſs letters containing things of value be left open, to be ſo carried to one of the five principal offi⯑ces above-mentioned, there to be ſeen and entered, the letter-carrier will no ways be made anſwerable for their miſcarriage.
10. Thoſe who ſend bank-notes by the poſt, are ad⯑viſed by the poſt-office to cut them in two pieces, ob⯑liquely, ſo as to have the words on the left, as below, in one piece, and thoſe on the right in the other, and ſend them at two different times, one half at one time and one at another, as a ſecurity, in caſe the mail is robbed.
No. 5515.
I promiſe to pay to Mr. Abraham Newland, or bearer, on demand, the ſum of TEN Pounds. L. TEN.
In caſe of loſs the Bank will pay the money, on producing one half of the note.
11. With reſpect to the Penny-poſt. the public are de⯑ſired to be very diſtinct in their directions, particularly to lodgers, by mentioning their landlord's ſign and [86] name, for want of which many cannot be delivered. And as a check on the letter-carrier, thoſe that he re⯑turns after three days enquiry will be ſent to the writer gratis, if their reſidence can be diſcovered.
12. Nothing above four ounces will be conveyed by the penny-poſt, except paſſing to or from the general poſt-office.
13. Thoſe who wiſh to find perſons in London, not having their directions, may often find them out by enquiring at the poſt-office among the letter-carriers, at the time the letters are delivered to them.
MAIL COACHES.
THE following (excluſive of thoſe on the croſs poſt roads) are the Mail Coaches already eſtabliſhed.
1. To Bath and Briſtol, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly
2. To Bath and Briſtol, through Andover and Devi⯑zes, from ditto, ditto.
3. To Carliſle, by way of Mancheſter, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
4. To Cheſter and Holyhead, from ditto.
5. To Dover, from the George and Blue Boar, Hol⯑born, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly, to York Houſe, Dover.
6. To Exeter, through Saliſbury, Blandford, and Dorcheſter, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly.
7. To Exeter, through Marlborough, Devizes, Froom, Wells, Bridgewater and Taunton, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
8. To Glouceſter, Swanſea, and Carmarthen, from the Angel Inn, behind St. Clement's Church, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly.
9. To Hereford, [...]recknock, Carmarthen, and Milford Haven, from ditto, ditto.
[87]10. To Liverpool, through Coventry and Litchfield, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
11. To Mancheſter, through Derby, from ditto.
12. To Nottingham and Leeds, from the Bull and Mouth, in Bull and Mouth Street.
13. To Norwich and Yarmouth, through Newmarket and Thetford, from the White Horſe, Fetter-lane.
14. To Norwich, through Colcheſter and Ipſwich, from ditto.
15. To Portſmouth, from the Angel Inn, behind St. Clement's Church.
16. To Shrewſbury, and to Birmingham, Kidderminſter, and Bewdley, from the Bull and Mouth, Bull and Mouth Street.
17. To Southampton and Poole, from the Bell and Crown, Holborn, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly.
18. To Windſor, from the Three Cups, Bread-ſtreet, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly.
19. To Worceſter and Ludlow, from the George and Blue Boar, Holborn, and the Glouceſter Coffee-houſe, Piccadilly.
Theſe coaches ſet off every night at eight o'clock, with a guard, and go at the rate of ſeven miles an hour, with a pair of horſes. The fare for each paſſenger about 4 d. a mile, 14 lb. of luggage allowed.
STAGE COACHES
1. GO from different parts of London to all parts of the kingdom, almoſt every day. The places they ſet out from, and the days they go, may be found in a book printed for that purpoſe. This book alſo gives an account of the Waggons and Hoys.
The general run of ſtage-coaches is 3 d. halfpenny per mile each inſide paſſenger, who is allowed 14 lb. of luggage, all above is paid extra for.
2. Moſt of theſe coaches have a guard, and go as expe⯑ditiouſly as the mail coaches. The proprietors of ſtage coaches and waggons now advertiſe, that they will pay [88] for no luggage worth more than 5 l. unleſs firſt mad acquainted with its value, and paid for accordingly This is idle, for if they take in the parcel without ex⯑ceptions, and it is loſt, and the contents can be proved they will be obliged to make it good. See CAUTION [...] 3, 4.
HORSES AND CARRIAGES.
1. FOR every ſaddle-horſe, mare or gelding, uſe for riding or drawing any carriage for which a exciſe-duty is payable, ſhall be paid annually 10 s. [...] Geo. 3. c. 31.
2. Horſes belonging to non-commiſſioned office: and ſoldiers of cavalry, alſo horſes belonging to dealer kept for ſale only, and all horſes let to hire by poſt maſters for travelling poſt, are exempted from th [...] duty. Ibid.
3. For every coach, chariot, chaiſe, &c. with fo [...] wheels, kept by any perſon for his own uſe, or to b [...] let out for hire, (except hackney-coaches) ſhall be pa [...] the yearly ſum of ſeven pounds; and for every chaiſ [...] chair, gig, whiſkey, &c. having two or three wheel drawn by one or more horſes, the annual ſum [...] 3 l. 10 s. Ibid.
4. Aſſeſſors ſhall give notice in writing to pe [...] keeping horſes and carriages, to produce, in [...] days after ſuch notice, liſts of the numbers kept [...] them, on pain of forfeiting 10 l. to be recovered [...] ſore two juſtices; and in caſe ſuch liſts are not [...] ⯑vered when called for, the aſſeſſor ſhall, from the [...]e [...] information he can obtain, make an aſſeſſment on ſ [...] perſon ſo refuſing, which ſhall be final, unleſs th [...] perſon aſſeſſed ſhall prove a ſufficient excuſe before th [...] commiſſioners; and in caſe the liſt delivered to the a⯑ſeſſors ſhall be deficient, they may ſurcharge the ſame and the perſons giving in ſuch defective liſts ſhall [...] double duty for all deficient, one-half of which the [...] ⯑ſeſſor [89] or ſurveyor ſhall have for ſurcharging the ſame. Ibid.
5. Houſeholders ſhall deliver liſts of lodgers who keep horſes or carriages, containing the names of ſuch lodgers, on pain of forfeiting 10 l. to be recovered before two juſtices. Ibid.
6. Perſons over-rated may appeal to the commiſ⯑ſioners, but they muſt then deliver their liſts upon oath. Ibid.
7. Surveyor or aſſeſſor making a falſe ſurcharge, ſhall be fined as in the window-act, from 40 s. to 5 l. Ibid.
8. The annual payment of the duty to take place always from the 5th of April in each year; ſo that if a perſon has a horſe and carriage on the 6th of April, and ſells it the 7th, he muſt pay a whole year's tax, it being an annual tax. Ibid.
9. By the cuſtom of London, if a horſe ſtands at an inn, till he eat out his value, the inn-keeper may take him as his own, upon the reaſonable appraiſement of four of his neighbours; provided the horſe was never out of his poſſeſſion from the time the debt com⯑menced. A horſe cannot be detained on his coming again, for what was due before. Bac. Abr. Inn. D. Strange, 556.
HACKNEY COACHES.
1. HACKNEY coaches are not to ſtand nearer to each other than twelve yards, leaving a paſſage for carriages between them; nor within twelve yards of any croſs ſtreet, on pain of the coachman's forfeit⯑ing 10 s.
2. No more than the following number of coaches ſhall ſtand in the places ſpecified, on pain of the coach⯑man's forfeiting 10 s. for each offence: Eight coaches ſhall ſtand in Cornhill; viz. Seven between the end of Gracechurch-ſtreet and Finch-lane, and one be⯑tween the end of Freeman's-court and Finch-lane.
[90]In Leadenhall-ſtreet, three coaches between the weſt end of the India-houſe and the paſſage leading to the green-market, Leaden-hall.
In Cheapſide, between the end of Bucklerſbury and the end of Ironmonger-lane, three coaches.
In King-ſtreet, Guildhall, five coaches, viz. Three beginning at the end of Trump-ſtreet, towards Catea⯑ton-ſtreet, and two on the other ſide of Trump-ſtreet, towards Cheapſide.
In Aldermanbury, four coaches, viz. Two in the broad part, near the church, and two at the eaſt end of the church.
Two coaches only in that part of Fleet-ſtreet between Temple-bar and Chancery-lane, and not more than one coach between the ſaid lane and the weſt end of Dun⯑ſtan's-church.
An ADMEASUREMENT of the moſt common ONE SHILLING and EIGHTEEN-PENNY FARES, to be taken by HACKNEY COACHMEN for their HIRE, in and about the Cities of LONDON and WESTMINSTER, and Places adjoining, meaſured from the reſpective Stands.
ONE SHILLING FARES, The diſtance not exceeding One Mile and Two Fur⯑longs, or One Mile and a Quarter. | |||
M. | F. | P. | |
From Weſtminſter-hall gate, to the firſt coach at St. Clement's, Strand, | 1 | 1 | 29 |
From ditto to the end of St. James's-ſtreet, Piccadilly, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From the center of the Horſe-Guards to Wa⯑ter-lane, Fleet-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 20 |
From ditto to the end of Engine-ſtreet, Pic⯑cadilly, | 1 | 1 | 2 [...] |
From the Golden-croſs, Charing-croſs, to Hamilton-ſtreet, Piccadilly, | 1 | 1 | 22 |
From ditto to the Old Bailey, on Ludgate-hill, | 1 | 1 | 31 |
From the Strand, Catharine-ſtreet end, to Bow-church yard, Cheapſide, | 1 | 1 | 32 |
From the weſt ſide of Temple-bar to Derby-ſtreet, Parliament-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 21 |
From ditto to Birchen-lane, Cornhill, | 1 | 1 | 33 |
From the firſt coach, Bridge-ſtreet, Fleet-ſtreet, to Cree-church-lane, Leadenhall-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From ditto to oppoſite Craig's-court, Cha⯑ring-croſs, | 1 | 1 | 25 |
From the firſt coach, St. Paul's church-yard, to Hungerford-market, Strand, | 1 | 1 | 32 |
From ditto to oppoſite the Blue Boar, White-chapel, | 1 | 1 | 28 |
From Gutter-lane end, Cheapſide, to South⯑ampton-ſtreet, Holborn, | 1 | 1 | 28 |
From ditto to Church-lane, Whitechapel-road, | 1 | 1 | 22 |
From the center of the Royal Exchange, Corn⯑hill, to Greyhound-lane, Whitechapel, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From ditto to oppoſite Palſgrave-Head-court, Strand, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From ditto to oppoſite Gray's-Inn gate, Hol⯑born, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From the firſt coach near the Three Nuns, Whitechapel, to the firſt White Horſe Lane, Mile-End Road, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From ditto to the end of Avemary-lane, Lud⯑gate-hill, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From the end of Hatton-garden, Holborn, to Lime-ſtreet, Leadenhall-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 30 |
From ditto to the end of Dean-ſtreet, Ox⯑ford-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 27 |
From the end of Southampton-buildings, Hol⯑born, to Johnſon's-court, Charing-croſs, | 1 | 1 | 31 |
From ditto to the centre of the Royal Ex⯑change, Cornhill, | 1 | 1 | 29 |
From the end of Red Lion-ſtreet, Holborn, to the center of the Horſe-guards, Whitehall, | 1 | 1 | 33 |
From the Vine-tavern, Holborn, to Bow-church-yard, Cheapſide, | 1 | 1 | 30 |
From ditto to the end of Shepherd-ſtreet, Oxford-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 29 |
From the end of Rathbone-Place, Oxford-road, to the end of Paddington-road, | 1 | 1 | 26 |
From ditto to the end of Shoe-lane, Holborn, | 1 | 1 | 31 |
From the end of Bond-ſtreet, Oxford-road, to the end of Little Queen-ſtreet, Holborn, | 1 | 1 | 27 |
From the end of Park-ſtreet, Oxford ſtreet, to the end of Denmark-ſtreet, St. Giles's, | 1 | 1 | 28 |
From the Golden Lion, Piccadilly, to Chan⯑dos-ſtreet, St. Martin's-lane, | 1 | 1 | 32 |
From ditto to the Mews-gate, Charing-croſs, | 1 | 1 | 30 |
From the end of St. James's-ſtreet, Piccadilly, to Somerſet coffee-houſe, Strand, | 1 | 1 | 28 |
From ditto to the Ordnance-office, St. Mar⯑garet's-ſtreet, Weſtminſter, | 1 | 1 | 34 |
From the coach next the Haymarket, Picca⯑dilly, to Vine-ſtreet, Milbank-ſtreet, | 1 | 1 | 31 |
From the firſt coach, Tower-hill, to the Bell Savage, Ludgate-hill, | 1 | 1 | 28 |
From Cateaton-ſtreet end, King-ſtreet, to Sur⯑ry-ſtreet, Strand, | 1 | 1 | 32 |
From ditto to oppoſite Featherſtone-build⯑ings, Holborn, | 1 | 1 | 27 |
From oppoſite the Cloſe, Clerkenwell green, to the Manſion-houſe, | 1 | 1 | 23 |
From oppoſite Buckingham-gate, to the gate of Northumberland-houſe, Strand, | 1 | 1 | 25 |
From ditto to the end of Turk's-row, in Bur⯑ton's-row, Chelſea, | 1 | 1 | 21 |
EIGHTEEN-PENNY FARES. The diſtance not exceeding Two Miles. | |||
From Weſtminſter-hall gate to Watling-ſtreet, St. Paul's church-yard, | 1 | 7 | 32 |
From ditto to oppoſite the Horſe-guards, at Knightſbridge, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From the center of the Horſe-guards to Mer⯑cer's chapel, Cheapſide, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From ditto to the end of Bear-court, Knightſ⯑bridge, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From the Golden Croſs, Charing-croſs, to Smith's Manufactory, Knightſbridge, | 1 | 7 | 4 |
From the Golden-Croſs, Charing-Croſs, to Bank-ſtreet, Corn-hill, | 1 | 7 | 27 |
From the Strand, Catharine-ſtreet end, to Poor Jury-ſtreet, Aldgate, | 1 | 7 | 30 |
From the weſt ſide of Temple-bar to Groſve⯑nor Houſe, Milbank-row, Weſtminſter, | 1 | 6 | 13 |
From ditto to the Red Lion and Spread Eagle, Whitechapel, | 1 | 7 | 16 |
From the firſt coach Bridge-ſtreet, Fleet-ſtreet, to the New-road, Whitechapel-road, | 1 | 7 | 21 |
From ditto to the turning to Queen-ſquare, Weſtminſter, | 1 | 7 | 33 |
From the firſt coach St. Paul's Church-yard, to St. James's Palace-gate, | 1 | 6 | 25 |
From ditto to the Lond. Hoſpital, Whitechapel, | 1 | 7 | 34 |
From Cheapſide, Gutter-lane end, to the end of Poland-ſtreet, Oxford-ſtreet, | 1 | 7 | 34 |
From ditto to the end of Mutton-lane, Mile-end road, | 1 | 7 | 20 |
From the center of the Royal Exchange, Corn⯑hill, to the Roſe and Crown. Mile-end road, | 1 | 7 | 36 |
From ditto to the end of St. Martin's-lane, | 1 | 7 | 21 |
From ditto to the end of Denmark-ſtreet, St. Giles's, | 1 | 7 | 21 |
From the firſt coach near the Three Nuns, Whitechapel, to the road leading to Bow-common, | 1 | 6 | 25 |
From ditto to Somerſet-houſe, | 1 | 7 | 33 |
From the end of Hatton-garden, Holborn, to the end of Garden-ſtreet, Whitechapel-road, | 1 | 7 | 25 |
From ditto to the end of Duke-ſtreet, Ox⯑ford-ſtreet, | 1 | 7 | 31 |
From the end of Southampton-buildings, Hol⯑born, to the end of Dartmouth-ſtreet, Tot⯑hill-ſtreet, Weſtminſter, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From ditto to the Red Lion and Spread Eagle, Whitechapel, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From the end of Red Lion-ſtreet, Holborn, to the King's-head, Lambeth-marſh, | 1 | 7 | 33 |
From the Vine-tavern, Holborn, to the end of Poor Jury-ſtreet, Aldgate, | 1 | 7 | 30 |
From the Vine-tavern, Holborn, to Tyburn-turnpike, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From the end of Rathbone-Place, Oxford-road, to the end of Bigg's-lane, in the road to Bayſwater, | 1 | 7 | 16 |
From ditto to the end of the Old Jury, Poultry, | 1 | 7 | 21 |
From the end of Bond-ſtreet, Oxford-road, to the end of Cow-lane, Snow-hill, | 1 | 7 | 26 |
From the end of Park-ſtreet, Oxford-road, to Gray's-inn gate, Holborn, | 1 | 7 | 25 |
From the Golden Lion, Piccadilly, to Palſ⯑grave Head-court, Temple-bar, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From ditto to the end of Wood-ſtreet, Mil⯑bank-ſtreet, Weſtminſter, | 1 | 7 | 33 |
From the end of St. James's-ſtreet, Piccadilly, to the firſt coach in St. Paul's church-yard, | 1 | 7 | 28 |
From the firſt coach, Tower-hill, to the cen⯑ter of Exeter-Change, Strand, | 1 | 7 | 31 |
From Cateaton-ſtreet end, King-ſtreet, to the end of Suffolk-ſtreet, Cockſpur-ſtreet, | 1 | 7 | 25 |
From do. to the Boar & Caſtle, Oxford-ſtreet, | 1 | 7 | 15 |
From oppoſite the cloſe, Clerkenwell-green, to the Talbot-inn, Whitechapel, | 1 | 7 | 29 |
From oppoſite Buckingham-gate to the end of Eſſex-ſtreet, Strand, | 1 | 7 | 22 |
From ditto to the Magpye, China-row, Chelſea, | 1 | 7 | 27 |
N. B. Theſe diſtances are meaſured from one ſpecific point of ground to another, as above; but, upon a queſtion, there will be added the call of the coach, together with any other neceſſary departure from the right line.
From the 1ſt of Auguſt, 1786, coachmen will be en⯑titled to the following rates:—
L. | s. | d. | |
For one mile and a quarter, or under, | 0 | 1 | 0 |
For two miles of ground, | 0 | 1 | 6 |
For every further diſtance within half-a-mile beyond the firſt two miles, | 0 | 0 | 6 |
By Time. | |||
For any time not exceeding three quarters of an hour, | 0 | 1 | 0 |
For any time not exceeding one hour, | 0 | 1 | 6 |
For any time not exceeding twenty minutes, from the end of the firſt hour, | 0 | 0 | 6 |
For a day's work, reckoning twelve hours to the day, | 0 | 14 | 6 |
3. Coachmen, if left to themſelves, can charge only for the neareſt way, go which way they will, unleſs the neareſt road is ſtopped.
4. Coachmen may chuſe whether they will be paid for the time or the ground; the ground they go is to be meaſured from the ſtand from whence they are called.
5. If a coach is on the ſtand, the driver is obliged to go with his fare at any hour, not exceeding ten miles from London, under the penalty of 40 s.
6. No coachman need take in more than four; but if he takes five without making terms, he can take no more than his uſual fare.
7. If he is inſolent, he will be fined from 10 s. to 40 s. but generally 40 s.
8. Every coachman is obliged to have a check ſtring, which he is to hold in his hand as he drives, and to en⯑ter the coach, ſo as to ſtop him without calling, or for⯑feit 5 s.
9. Coachmen are obliged to trot their horſes, except up hill.
10. If a coachman takes more than his fare, he for⯑feits 10 s.
11. If a coach breaks down with you, you may re⯑fuſe to pay the fare.
12. If you think, when paying him, he aſks too much, tender what he aſks, and bid him, at his peril, take more than his fare; then take his number, which is fixed on the coach-door, and, on application to a juſtice of peace, or to the commiſſioners of the Hack⯑ney-coach office, who ſit every Friday, at twelve, at the office in Somerſet-place, you may obtain redreſs. The latter is the beſt place to appl [...] to, as the coach-office is acquainted with the meaſur [...] of all the ſtreets: and when you have made your complaint, if he has [96] taken more than his fare, they will ſummon him to meet you there on the next day of ſitting, and on your ſwearing to the offence, he will be fined, and the com⯑miſſioners will give you half the penalty; if he has taken no more than his fare you will be told ſo, when you call again, and that he is not ſummoned; but this is not attended with any expence. Note, Half the pe⯑nalties are given to the informer.
s. | d. | ||
13. | For the firſt mile, | 1 | 0 |
For every half-mile afterwards, | 0 | 6 | |
If paid by the hours, the firſt hour is, | 1 | 6 | |
Every hour they wait afterwards, | 1 | 0 |
14. Chairmen may chuſe whether they will be paid for the ground or the time.
15. If a chair is on the ſtand, the men are obliged to go any where on the ſtones, or forfeit 40 s. They are not obliged to carry goods on wooden horſes, but will on the chair fares; however bargain with them firſt.
16. If they take more than their fare, the penalty is 40 s.
17. If they inſult you, the penalty is 40 s.
18. Act as with coachmen, take the number of the chair, which is fixed juſt under the the top, near the hinge, and complain at the hackney-coach office, as above: if they are fined, half the fine will be given to you. No expence to you if they are not fined.
19. At the hackney-coach office they are well ac⯑quainted with the meaſure of all the ſtreets; but [...] there is any doubt, they will have the ground meaſur⯑ed: in this caſe they expect the complainant to dep [...] ſix or eight ſhillings. If on meaſuring the ground the chairman is ſound right, the complainant pays the ex⯑pence of meaſuring; if wrong, they pay the expence, and are fined.
20. Any one may meaſure the ground they go accu⯑rately enough to aſcertain the fare by a good map of London, and a pair of compaſſes.
PORTERS.
[97]AT the weſt end of the town there are no regula⯑tions among porters; chairmen are chiefly em⯑ployed in carrying goods and going of errands. See CHAIRMEN, No. 18. Chairmen are very unreaſonable in their demands, they will not go a hundred yards with a letter for leſs than ſixpence, and if they go a mile they expect a ſhilling. But in the city they are under very good regulations.
The city porters are divided into brotherhoods, and conſiſt of four ſorts, viz. Ticket Porters, Fellowſhip Porters, Tackle Porters, and Companies Porters.
1. Ticket Porters are all freemen, and their buſineſs is to land and ſhip off goods, exported or imported, to all parts of America, &c. alſo to houſe all merchants goods, metals, &c. go of meſſages, &c. They give a hundred pounds ſecurity for their fidelity and honeſty, and ſuch as employ them need only take notice of the names ſtamped on the ticket that hangs to their girdle, and on complaint made to their Governor at Founders Hall, Lothbury, ſatisfaction will be made to ſuch as they have injured.
2. Fellowſhip Porters are employed alſo as ticket porters. Their chief Governor is the Alderman of Billingſgate Ward, to whom complaint is to be made.
3. Tackle Porters, or ſuch ticket porters as are fur⯑niſhed with weights, ſcales, &c. and their buſineſs is to weigh goods, &c.
4. The Companies Porters land and ſhip off all goods and merchandiſe exported and imported to and from all ports near the weſt ſide of the Sound in the Baltic, Holland, France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Turkey, and all towards and beyond the Cape of Good Hope.
Rates taken by Porters.
- Sugar, the hogſhead, 3 d.—for weighing, 4 d.
- — [...]ierce, or barrel, 2 d.—for weighing, 3 d.
- — butt, 6 d.—for weighing, 8 d.
- Cotton, wool, the bag, 3 d.—the ſame for weighing.
- Ginger, the bag, 1 d.—the ſame for weighing.
- [98]Melaſſes, the hogſhead, 3 d.—for weighing, 4 d.
- Logwood, the ton, 1 s.—the ſame for weighing.
- Fuſtick, the ton, 1 s.—the ſame for weighing.
- Young Fuſtick, the ton, 1 s. 6 d.—the ſame for weighing.
- Lignum Rhodium, the ton, 1 s.—the ſame for weighing.
- Lignum Vitae, the ton, 1 s.—the ſame for weighing.
- Tobacco, the hogſhead, 2 d.—the ſame for weighing.
- — the bundle, 1 d.—the ſame for weighing.
- Daniſh or Swediſh iron, the ton, 1 s.—the ſame for weighing.
- Narva and Riga Hemp, the bundle, 6 d.—the ſame for weighing.
CARMEN AND CARTS.
1. IF the empty cart of any carman ſhall be ſet or found ſtanding in any other place of the city or liberties thereof, than thoſe appointed for the ſtanding thereof (unleſs while loading or unloading goods into or from the ſame), or if the number of carts, in the pla⯑ces already or hereafter to be appointed, ſhall, at any time, be found to exceed the number allowed by the court of Lord Mayor and Aldermen, or by the ſeſſions in London, for the ſtanding thereof, the owner of eve⯑ry cart offending ſhall, for the firſt offence, forfeit 5 s. for the ſecond 10 s. and for the third and every other offence, 20 s. And the beadles and conſtables, or any of the inhabitants of this city, on ſeeing any carts ſtand⯑ing in any places in the city or liberties thereof not ap⯑pointed for their ſtands, or a greater number of carts at any ſtand than what are or ſhall be allowed of in that behalf, may take any ſuch cart, and the horſes thereunto belonging, or any or either of them, to the Greenyard, and ſhall there have the ſame impounded and kept, until the owner thereof ſhall have paid the penalty incurred, and the charges of impounding and detaining every ſuch cart or horſes.
2. No driver of any cart ſhall hereafter come into Thames-ſtreet by St. Magnus Church, eaſtward, with [99] his or their empty cart, before ſuch time as he or they ſhall be hired to come into the ſame ſtreet, for lading or carrying goods, but that the lanes and paſſages here⯑after mentioned ſhall be uſed only for ſuch empty carts to paſs and take their way through into the ſaid Thames-ſtreet, and no other, that is to ſay, the lane leading down to Tower-dock, Bear-lane, Harp-lane, Botolph-lane, Pudding-lane, St. Michael's-lane, Lawrence Poult⯑ney-lane, Buſh-lane, Trinity-lane, and all other lanes weſtward, except the lanes and paſſages herein after limited for loaded carts to paſs through from the ſaid Thames-ſtreet, under the penalty of 5 s. for the firſt offence, and for the ſecond and every other offence 10 s.
3. The commiſſioners of the hackney-coach office are empowered to puniſh the miſbehaviour of carmen. See HACKNEY-COACHES, No. 11.
Rates to be paid for Cartage.
Note, An addition of one ſeventh part of the follow⯑ing charges is allowed ſince to be taken, over and above the undermentioned rates.
Every parcel of dry goods, ſuch as indigo, argol, cheeſe and all other goods (not hazardous) of the like bulk or weight, whether in one or many caſks above 19 cwt. not exceeding 25 cwt. to be deemed a load.
Ditto above 15, not exceeding 19 cwt. a ſmall load.
Ditto, not exceeding 15 cwt. an half load.
Each of the parcels of Grocery next hereafter mention⯑ed are to be deemed as follows:
For or as a full load. Two hogſheads of ſugar, light or heavy. Three tierces of ditto, not exceeding 25 cwt. One butt and one caroteel, currants. Fifty baſ⯑kets malaga, or Denta raiſins. Thirty frails or pieces of Alexeias. Twenty barrels Belvideras or Leporas.— Twenty barrels or eighty tapneſs ſigs. One butt and a ſmall caſk Smyrna's. Five barrels of rice. Three bales of annifeed. Six barrels of almonds.
For or as a ſmall load. One butt currants or Smyrna's. One butt and one role currants. Two quarter barrels, [100] or fifty jars of raiſins of the ſun. Three puncheons of prunes.
One hogſhead of ſugar, or any parcel of grocery not exceeding 15 cwt. to be deemed an half load.
Pot or pearl aſhes weighing from 19 cwt. to 25 cwt. to be deemed a load.
One ditto, not leſs than 15 cwt. a ſmall load.
Two hogſheads of tallow, a load.
Fiſh oil, 10 barrels to be a load.
From any of the keys below the bridge to any part of lower Thames-ſtreet, up Fiſh-ſtreet hill to the Monument, up Pudding-lane, Botolph-lane, St. Mary's hill, St. Dunſtan's hill, or any of the lanes leading from Thames-ſtreet, Pudding-lane, Botolph-lane, and that part of upper Thames-ſtreet, from the bridge foot to St. Martin's-lane, St. Miles's-lane, and Old Swan.
For every load, as abovementioned, 2 s.—For every ſmall or half load, 1 s. 6 d.
From any of the wharfs between the Tower and London-Bridge, to Dyers-hall, Cold-harbour, Steel-yard, Doublehood-warehouſe, Lawrence Poultney-lane, Three Cranes, Queenhith, Queen-ſtreet hill, Cellege-hill, Dowgate-hill, that part of Fiſh-ſtreet hill above the Monument, or any of the lanes as high as both Eaſtcheaps, leading from Lower Thames-ſtreet to Tower-ſtreet. Mark-lane, Lime-ſtreet, Billiter-lane, Leadenhall-ſtreet, Duke's-place, St. Mary Ax, Bi⯑ſhopgate-ſtreet within, Cornhill, Finch-lane, Lombard-ſtreet, Birchin-lane, Abchurch-lane, Clement's-lane, Gracechurch-ſtreet, both Eaſtcheaps, Philpot-lane, Rood-lane, and places of the like diſtance.
For a load, 2 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s.—For an half load, 1 s. 6 d.
From the keys to Broad-ſtreet, Threadneedle-ſtreet, Lothbury, Bartholomew-lane, London-wall, Coleman-ſtreet, Baſinghall-ſtreet, Old-jewry, St. Lawrence-lane, Ironmonger-lane, Milk-ſtreet, Aldermanbury, Wood-ſtreet, Cheapſide, Poultry, St. Martin's-le-grand, New⯑gate-ſtreet, Pater-noſter-row, St. Paul's-Church-yard, Doctors-commons, Old-change, Friday-ſtreet, Bread-ſtreet, Bow-lane, Watling-ſtreet, Baſing-lane, Bread-ſtreet-hill, Trinity-lane, Old-fiſh-ſtreet, or any part of [101] Thames-ſtreet from Queenhith to Puddle-dock, or places of the like diſtance within the gates, and alſo to Biſhopgate without, not exceeding the London Workhouſe, Aldgate High-ſtreet within Whitechapel bars, Houndſditch, and the Minories.
For a load, 3 s.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.— For an half load, 1 s. 6 d.
From the keys to all places between the Gates and Bars (the above-mentioned articles otherwiſe aſcertain⯑ed before excepted.)
For a load, 3 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 10 d.— For an half load, 2 s. 6 d.—For Yorkſhire packs, to all places within the Gates, per pack, 2 s. 6 d.—For ditto, to all places between the Gates and Bars, per pack, 3 s. —For Spaniſh wool, to any place within the Gates, per bag, 4 d.—And from all other warehouſes to Black-well-hall, and all Inns within the Gates, per bag, 3 d. For ditto to all places between the Gates and Bars, per bag, 5 d.—N. B. To carry nine bags of Spaniſh wool in a load, and no more.
Several kinds of goods, next herein after mentioned, being either not weighable, hazardous, or cumberſome, are to be carried at the rates next herein after ſpecified, viz.
Eaſt India goods, weighable, as tea, coffee, &c. to any of the company's warehouſes in Fenchurch-ſtreet, Lime-ſtreet, the Exchange, &c. 2 s. 2 d. per ton, and 2 d. per C. the over-weight.
All pieces of Arrack, containing about 150 gallons, at 2 s. 2 d. each, or a greater quantity in two or more ſmaller caſks, 2 s. 6 d.
Hamburgh, Amſterdam, Rotterdam, Scotch and Iriſh linens in cheſts, vats, bales, and packings of various weights and ſizes, from 6 d. to 3 s. per cheſt, bale, &c.
Tobacco to the reſpective merchants warehouſes, per hogſhead, 1 s.—And from all warehouſes to the water ſide, per hogſhead, 8 d.—Smyrna cotton per bag, ſacks of goats hair, wool, or of galls, or ſilk nuts, or ſpunges, or colloquintida, or bales of cotton yarn, or cheſts of drugs, or piſtachia, each 4 d.—Cyprus cotton, per bag, 9 d.—Turkey ſilk, per bale, 6 d.— bales of carpets, [102] each 1 s.—fangotts or ſacks of mohair yarn, or Fangott of ſilk, each 3 d.
For Cartage of Wine, Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c.
Two pipes, two butts, or four hogſheads of wine; two pipes, two ſmall butts, one great butt, four hogſ⯑heads, or any quantity of oil, whether in one or more caſks above 200, not exceeding 300 gallons, to be ac⯑counted a load.
One pipe and one hogſhead, or three hogſheads of wine, three hogſheads or any quantity of oil above 150, and not exceeding 200 gallons, to be eſteemed a ſmall load.
One pipe, one butt, or two hogſheads of wine; one ſmall butt, two hogſheads, or any quantity of oil not exceeding 150 gallons, to be deemed an half load.
From any of the keys below the bridge, to any part of Lower Thames-ſtreet, or any part of Upper Thames-ſtreet, as far as the Three Cranes, or to any of the lanes or hills leading from or to the above places, to Tower-ſtreet, Mark-lane, Mincing-lane, Seething-lane, Crutched-friars, Poor Jewry-lane, Fenchurch-ſtreet, Lime-ſtreet, Billiter-lane, Leadenhall-ſtreet, Duke's-place, St. Mary Ax, Biſhopſgate-ſtreet within, Corn⯑hill, Finch-lane, Lombard-ſtreet, and any of the lanes leading from thence, Cannon-ſtreet, Walbrook, Budge⯑row, Gracechurch-ſtreet, both Eaſtcheaps, Philpot-lane, Rood-lane, and places of the like diſtance.
For a load, 2 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s.—For an half load, 1 s. 6 d.
From the keys to Broad-ſtreet, Threadneedle-ſtreet, [...]othbury, Bartholomew-lane, Coleman-ſtreet, Old-jewry, St. Lawrence lane, Ironmonger-lane, Milk-ſtreet, Aldermanbury, Wood-ſtreet, Cheapſide, Bow-lane, Bucklerſbury, Poultry, the back of the Exchange, Friday-ſtreet, Bread-ſtreet, Baſing-lane, Bread-ſtreet-hill, Trinity-lane, Old Fiſh-ſtreet-hill, and part of Thames-ſtreet weſtward of the Three Cranes, and places of the like diſtance.
For a load. 3 s.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 2 s.
From the keys to London-wall, St. Martin's-le-grand, St. Paul's Church-yard, Doctors-commons, Pater-noſ⯑ter- [...]w, Newgate-ſtreet, Blow-bladder-ſtreet, Bull [103] and Mouth-ſtreet, Foſter-lane, and places; of the like diſtance within the gates; as alſo to Biſhopſgate with⯑out, Aldgate High-ſtreet within Whitechappel bars, Houndſditch, and the Minories.
For a load, 3 s.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 2 s.
From the keys to Ludgate hill, Fleet-market, Old-bailey, Snow-hill, Holborn-bridge, Smithfield, Alderſ⯑gate-ſtreet, Barbican, Redcroſs-ſtreet, Fore-ſtreet, and places of the like diſtance.
For a load, 3 s. 6 d—For a ſmall load, 3 s.—For an half load, 2 s.
From the keys to Fleet-ſtreet, Temple-bar, Fetter-lane, Holborn-hill, and places of the like diſtance.
For a load 4 s.—For a ſmall load, 3 s.—For an half load, 2 s. 6 d.
N. B. One piece and one puncheon of brandy, or two pucheons of rum, to be accounted a load.
One piece of brandy, or any quantity of rum above 150, not exceeding 200 gallons, to be eſteemed a ſmall load.
One pipe or one puncheon of brandy, one puncheon or any quantity of rum not exceeding 50 gallons, to be eſteemed a half load.
For cartage of goods from the wharfs, &c. weſtward of the bridge, the ſame parcels of goods to be account⯑ed a load—a ſmall load—an half load—as from the kays below the bridge.
From any of the wharfs, between London Bridge and Puddle-dock to any part of Upper Thames-ſtreet, or any of the halls or lanes leading directly out of it.
For a load 2 s—For a ſmall load, 1 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 1 s. 6 d.
From any of the wharfs between London-bridge and Queenhithe, or any the warehouſes in or adjoining to that part of Upper Thames ſtreet, to all places above excepted within the gates.
For a load, 2 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s.—For an half load, 1 s. 6 d.
To all places between the Gates and Bars.
For a load, 3 s. 4 d.—F [...]r a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 2 s. 2 d.
[104]From any of the wharfs between Queenhithe and Puddle-dock, or any of the warehouſes in or adjoin⯑ing to that part of Thames ſtreet, to Old Fiſh ſtreet, Carter-lane, Doctors-commons, Baſing-lane, St. Paul's Church-yard, Newgate ſtreet, Cornhill, and all places within the the gates, weſtward of the ſtreets leading from Biſhopſgate to London Bridge up the hill.
For a load, 2 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s.—For an half load, 1 s. 6 d.
To Little Eaſtcheap, Tower-ſtreet, Fenchurch-ſtreet, Lower Thames-ſtreet, Crutched-friars, and all places within the gates, eaſtward of the ſtreets leading from Biſhopſgate to London Bridge, as alſo to Ludgate-hill, Old-bailey, Fleet-market, Holborn-bridge, Snow-hill, Smithfield, Alderſgate-ſtreet, Barbican, and all other places weſtward of Cripplegate within the bars
For a load, 3 s.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 2 s.
To Fore-ſtreet, Whitecroſs-ſtreet, Biſhopſgate-ſtreet without, Houndſditch, and all other places eaſtward of Cripplegate within the bars.
For a load, 3 s 6d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 10 d.—For an half load, 2 s. 2 d.
For the cartage of goods from London to the city of Weſtminſter, the Borough of Southwark, and the other outparts and Suburbs of London, and all places adjacent, from the kays.
One hogſhead of ſugar, or any parcel of grocery not exceeding 15 hundred weight, to be deemed half a load.
Pot or pearl aſhes, weighing from 19 to 25 hundred weight, one load.
One caſk, not leſs than 15 hundred weight, half a load.
Two hogſheads of tallow, one load.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. as follows, viz.
Two pipes, two butts, or four hogſheads of wine; one piece and one puncheon, two puncheons or pipes of brandy, two puncheons of rum; two pipes, two ſmall butts, one great butt, four hogſheads, or any quantity of oil, whether in one or more caſks, above 200, not exceeding 300 gallons, to be accounted a load.
[105]One pipe and one hogſhead, or three hogſheads of wine, one pipe or one puncheon of brandy; three hogſheads or any quantity of oil, rum, &c. above 150, not exceeding 200 gallons, to be eſteemed a ſmall load.
One pipe, one butt, or two hogſheads of wine; one pipe or one puncheon of brandy; one puncheon of rum; one pipe, one ſmall butt, two hogſheads, or any quantity of oil not exceeding 150 gallons, an half load.
Fiſh oil, ten barrels to be (and not hazardous) a load.
From any of the keys below the bridge, or from Cannon-ſtreet, Lombard-ſtreet, Leadenhall-ſtreet, and places of the like diſtance, not exceeding Cornhill, Biſhopſgate-ſtreet within, Walbrook, Budge-row, Queen-ſtreet hill, and Queenhithe, to any part of the High-ſtreet in the Borough of Southwark as far as St. George's church, to any of the wharfs in Tooley-ſtreet not exceeding Symond's wharf, and places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods and grocery, as above mentioned, 2 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 2 s. — For an half load of ditto, 1 s. 6 d.
Wine, Olive Oil, Rum, &c. from and to the above mentioned places.
For a load, 3 s.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 2 s.
From any of the above-mentioned keys and above-mentioned places to the Bank-ſide, Gravel-lane, Dead⯑man's-place, Blackman-ſtreet, Kent-ſtreet, White-ſtreet, Long-lane, Bermondſey-ſtreet, St. Saviour's-dock, or Dock-head, Shad-Thames, Black's-fields, or any of the wharfs in Tooley-ſtreet below Symond's-wharf, and all places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods and grocery, as above-mentioned, 3 s.—For every ſmall load of ditto, 2 s. 6 d. —For an half load of ditto, 2 s.
Wine, Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the above men⯑tioned places.
For a load, 4 s.—For a ſmall load, 3 s.—For an half load, 2 s. 6 d.
[106]The bridge and bridge-yard toll to be paid by the merchants.
From any of the kays below the bridge, any of the hills or lanes leading from Lower Thames-ſtreet, from Tower-ſtreet, Fenchurch-ſtreet, Leadenhall-ſtreet, Gracechurch-ſtreet, Biſhopſgate-ſtreet within, and all places adjacent on the eaſt ſide of the ſtreets leading from Biſhopſgate to the bridge, to Chancery-lane, the Strand from Temple-bar as far as the New Church, the Butcher-row, and places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods or grocery, 4 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 3 s.—For an half load, 2 s.
Wine, Olive, Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. from and to the above places.
For a load, 4 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 3 s. 6 d.— For an half load, 3 s.
To that part of the Strand beyond the New Church, St. Martin's-lane, Long-acre, Drury-lane, Covent-gar⯑den, Seven-dials, Monmouth-ſtreet, Lincoln's-inn-fields, Clare-market, High-holborn, St. Giles's, as far as the church, Gray's-inn-lane, Red-lion-ſtreet, Bloomſ⯑bury, and places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For a load of dry goods or grocery, 5 s.—For a ſmall load, 4 s.—For an half load, 3 s.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the above places.
For a load, 5 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 4 s. 6 d.— For an half load, 4 s.
To Charing-croſs, Whitehall, or any part of Weſt⯑minſter as far as Buckingham-gate, St. James's-ſtreet, Piccadilly to the end of Dover-ſtreet, Old Bond-ſtreet, Conduit-ſtreet, Newport-market, Soho, Oxford-road to the end of Great Swallow-ſtreet, and places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For a load of dry goods or grocery, 6 s.—For a ſmall load, 4 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 4 s.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the above places.
For a load, 7 s.—For a ſmall load, 5 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 4 s. 6 d.
To Groſvenor-ſquare, May-fair, Berkeley-ſquare, [107] Hanover-ſquare, New Bond-ſtreet, Cavendiſh-ſquare, and places of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods or grocery, 7 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 5 s. 6 d.—For an half load of ditto, 4 s. 6 d.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the afore⯑ſaid places.
For a load, 8 s.—For a ſmall load, 6 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 5 s.
From the keys to Goodman's-fields, Eaſt Smithfield, the Hermitage, Whitechapel without the bars as far as George-yard, not exceeding Dirty-lane, and places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods or grocery, 3 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load of ditto, 2 s.
Pot or Pearl Aſhes, weight as before deſcribed.
For a load, 3 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.— For an half load, 2 s.
Fiſh oil, for a load, 3 s.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the afore⯑ſaid places.
For a load, 3 s.—For a ſmall load, 2 s. 6 d.—For an half load, 2 s.
To Whitechapel, Church-lane, Field-gate, Night⯑ingale-lane, Virginia-ſtreet, Wellcloſe-ſquare, and places of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods or grocery, 3 s. 6 d.— For a ſmall load of ditto, 2 s. 10 d.—For an half load of ditto, 2 s. 3 d.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the afore⯑ſaid places.
For a load, 4 s.—For a ſmall load, 3 s.—For an half load, 2 s. 6 d.
To Ratcliff-highway, Wapping, Old Gravel-lane, Cock-hill, Shadwell, and places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For a load of dry goods or grocery, 4 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 3 s.—For an half load of ditto, 2 s. 6 d.
[108]Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the above places.
For a load, 5 s.—For a ſmall load, 4 s.—For an half load, 3 s. 6 d.
To Ratcliff-croſs, Stephney-cauſeway, Limehouſe, Bell-wharf, Shadwell-dock, and all places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For a load of dry goods or grocery, 5 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto 4 s.—For an half load of ditto, 3 s. 6 d.
Wine, Brandy, Rum, Olive Oil, &c. to the above places.
For a load, 6 s.—For a ſmall load, 5 s.—For an half load, 4 s.
From the keys to Spitalfields, Shoreditch, Moor⯑fields, Windmill-hill, Chiſwell-ſtreet, and places adja⯑cent of the like diſtance,
For a load of dry goods and grocery, 4 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 3 s.—For an half load of ditto, 2 s. 6 d.
Wine, Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the above places.
For a load, 4 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 3 s. 6 d.— For an half load, 2 s. 6 d.
To Old-ſtreet, that part of Whitecroſs-ſtreet out of the freedom of the city, Golden-lane, Goſwell-ſtreet, St. John-ſtreet beyond the bars, Clerkenwell, Leather-lane, Saffron-hill, Hockley in the Hole, and all places adjacent of the like diſtance.
For every load of dry goods or grocery, 4 s.—For a ſmall load of ditto, 3 s.—For an half load of ditto, 2 s. 6 d.
Wine, Olive Oil, Brandy, Rum, &c. to the afore⯑mentioned places.
For a load, 4 s. 6 d.—For a ſmall load, 3 s. 6 d.— For an half load, 2 s. 6 d.
And as to all other places and goods not before par⯑ticularly mentioned, the ſame are to be carried and paid for in the manner following; that is to ſay,
All goods, wares, and merchandizes whatſoever, weighing 14 cwt. or under, ſhall be deemed half a load; and from 14 cwt. to 26 cwt. ſhall be deemed a load from any part of the city; and the rates for car⯑rying thereof ſhall be as follows:
[109]For any way not exceeding half a mile, for half a load, 1 s. 6 d. not above a load, 2 s. 6 d.
For any way to the extenſion of a mile, for half a load, 2 s. not exceeding a load, 3 s.
For any way to the extenſion of one mile and a half, for half a load, 2 s. 6 d. and not exceeding a load, 3 s. 6 d.
For any way to the extenſion of two miles, for half a load, 3 s. and not exceeding a load, 4 s.
For any way within two miles and an half, for half a load, 3 s. 6 d. and not exceeding a load, 5 s.
For any way within three miles, for half a load, 4 s. and not exceeding a load, 5 s.
For any way within three miles and an half, for half a load, 4 s. 6 d. and not exceeding a load, 5 s. 6 d.
For any way within four miles, for half a load, 5 s. and not exceeding a load, 6 s.
And ſo after the ſame rate, to the extent of ground limited by act of parliament.
And for all merchandizes and commodities that can⯑not be divided, weighing above 26 cwt. the carman ſhall, over and above the rates above mentioned, re⯑ceive and be paid after the rate of 2 d. per cwt. for every cwt. exceeding 26 cwt. and ſo in proportion for leſs than a cwt.
4. If any diſpute ariſe between the employer and the carman about the diſtance of ground that goods have been carried, or the weight of the goods, either party is to apply to the Lord Mayor, or any juſtice of the peace of the city; and the ground ſhall be meaſur⯑ed by ſome perſon to be appointed for that purpoſe by the Lord Mayor, and any ſuch juſtice to whom ſuch application ſhall be made. And if a diſpute ariſes con⯑cerning the weight of the goods carried, the ſame ſhall be weighed, if it can conveniently be done, and the party in default ſhall pay all ſuch expences as ſhall be aſcertained to be reaſonable by the magiſtrate before whom the parties ſhall have been heard.
5. Any perſon may chuſe what cart he pleaſes to em⯑ploy in his work (except ſuch as ſtand for wharf-work, tackle-work, and crane-work, which are to ſtand in order, and to be taken in turn). And that every car⯑man [110] who ſtands with his empty cart next to any goods that are to be laden, being firſt in turn, ſhall, on the firſt demand, load the ſame without any delay, or bar⯑gaining for any other pay than is hereby appointed. And if the firſt, or any other cart, ſhall refuſe to work, or delay to load any goods, upon requeſt made for that purpoſe, every perſon ſo refuſing or delaying ſhall for⯑feit for every ſuch offence the ſum of 10 s. and the driver of the next cart in order, who will carry the goods, ſhall be at liberty to take the ſame: and if any carman ſhall refuſe ſo to do, he or they ſo refuſing ſhall forfeit and pay, for every time he or they ſhall ſo of⯑fend, the ſum of 10 s. And if any employer ſhall re⯑fuſe to employ the next cart in order at wharf-work, tackle-work, and crane-work, he ſhall forfeit and loſe the ſum of 10 s.
6. All the wharfs between London-Bridge and the Temple to be uſed in turn-keeping, as the cuſtom is below bridge.
7. The carman who is firſt in the morning at any of the ſaid wharfs ſhall have the firſt load, he having his horſe in the cart, and giving attendance for his la⯑bour; and if abſent, then to take the other whoſe turn is next; and whoſoever refuſeth to load, ſhall forfeit and pay, for every time he ſhall ſo offend, 10 s.
8. No carman ſhall come to any of the wharfs be⯑tween the Bridge and Tower-wharf before four in the morning in ſummer, and ſeven in winter, unleſs a mer⯑chant has extraordinary occaſion for his coming ſooner, under the penalty of 5 s.
9. No owner or driver of any cart for hire in Lon⯑don, &c. ſhall demand or take for his fare, for the car⯑riage of any goods within the diſtance preſcribed by the act of parliament, more money than by the above rates are limited for the ſame, or as ſhall be appointed by any ſubſequent rules made in purſuance of the ſaid act of parliament. And if any ſuch owner or driver of any cart or car ſhall miſbehave himſelf therein, or ſhall refuſe to come with his car when called to be hir⯑ed, or to take in loading into his car or cart, or ſhall utter any abuſive language, or offer any inſult to his employer or employers, their ſervants or agents, he or [111] they ſo offending in any of the caſes aforeſaid, ſhall forfeit, for every time he offends, 20 s.
10. The driver of every cart within the diſtance be⯑fore mentioned, ſhall aſſiſt in loading and unloading the goods, wares and merchandiſes into and out of the ſame; and if he ſhall refuſe ſo to do, his employers may retain out of his fare what any other perſon ſhall be reaſonably paid for aſſiſting in his ſtead to load or unload the ſame, and the ſum of 2 s. 6 d. beſides, by way of penalty; and in caſe of any difference about the ſame, ſome juſtice of peace within the ſaid limits ſhall aſcertain the ſum to be ſo paid.
11. Every owner of a cart, which ſhall be worked for hire within the diſtances before mentioned, ſhall have his name placed in full length, painted in large capital letters, not leſs than three inches long, and broad in proportion, on ſome conſpicuous part of the front of his cart or car; and ſhall from time to time take care to continue and keep the ſame there, ſo as always to appear plain and legible. And on the alteration of the property of any cart, the new owner is, in like man⯑ner, to cauſe his name to be forthwith put and kept thereon. And if any owner ſhall omit to have his name on his cart, in manner aforeſaid, or any one ſhall drive for hire a cart in London, &c. without the real owner's name in manner aforeſaid thereon, or if any one ſhall wilfully obliterate or alter the figure or num⯑ber of any cart, or the name of any carman, which ſhall have been painted on his cart or car, every perſon on being convicted thereof before the Lord Mayor or any juſtice of the peace in London, ſhall, for every ſuch offence, forfeit 20 s.
12. All carts, during the time of loading and un⯑loading thereof, within the ſtreets of the city of Lon⯑don, and the liberties thereof, ſhall ſtand ſideways the long way of the ſtreet, and not croſs the ſame, and as cloſe to the ſide of the ſtreet where they are loading and unloading as they can, ſo as paſſengers and coaches, and other carts may paſs by, if the ſtreet is of ſufficient width to allow two carriages to paſs to⯑gether therein (except where the ſituation of the place, or the package of the goods, makes it neceſſary [112] to load or ſtrike directly.) And if any carman ſhall ſtand in any ſtreet with his cart, not being loading o [...] unloading goods, every ſuch carman ſhall draw away immediately at the requeſt of any perſon, to let ſuch perſon or any carriage paſs by, if the ſtreet will allow thereof, under the penalty that every one offending in the premiſſes ſhall, for every time he or they ſhall ſo offend therein, in any of the caſes in this order men⯑tioned, forfeit 10 s.
13. No perſon under the age of 16 years ſhall be employed to drive or manage horſes in carts, under the penalty of 20 s. to be paid by the owners of every ſuch cart or car, every time any perſon under the age of 16 ſhall be convicted before any juſtice in London, of driving any horſe in any cart in London.
14. Every cart ſhall be allowed to contain in length, between the tug-hole and the fore-ear breadth, ſix feet ſix inches, and no more; and in breadth, between the two raves in the body of the cart, four feet ten inches of aſſize, and no more; and in length, from the fore-ear breadth to the end of the cart, ſeven feet and one inch, and no more. And if any cart ſhall at any time be worked in London of greater length or breadth, the ſame may be ſeized and ſent to the green-yard, and the owner thereof ſhall, for every ſuch offence, forfeit 20 s.
15. If the driver of any cart ſhall leave his cart in the ſtreet or common paſſage of the city by night, he ſhall forfeit for every time 5 s. beſides making ſuch re⯑compence to the party who ſhall ſuſtain damage there⯑by, as any juſtice of the peace in London ſhall direct.
16. If the driver of any cart ſhall feed his horſes in the ſtreet, ſave with oats out of a bag, or with ſuch hay as he ſhall hold in his hands, or in a baſket, or leave his cart and horſes in the ſtreet, without ſome perſon to look after the ſame, the owner of every cart ſhall, for every ſuch offence, forfeit 5 s.
17. If the driver of any cart or car ſhall ſuffer the horſes in his cart to trot in the ſtreet, or ſhall drive them in a ſpeedier courſe than his cart is uſually drove when loaded, he ſhall forfeit, for every ſuch offence. 10 s.
[113]18. If the driver of any cart for hire in London, or the liberties thereof, ſhall not, from time to time, lead his thill-horſe by the head, with an halter not longer than five feet, he ſhall forfeit and pay, for every time he ſhall offend, 5 s.
19. The driver of every empty cart in London ſhall, from time to time, give way to a loaded carriage, and to a coach, &c. under the penalty of 20 s. for every offence.
20. The driver of any cart who ſhall wilfully miſ⯑behave himſelf, or who ſhall deſignedly hinder or in⯑terrupt the free paſſage of any of his Majeſty's ſubjects, or their coaches or other carriages, in any of the pub⯑lic ſtreets or paſſages in the city of London, or the li⯑berties thereof, during the time he is not loading nor unloading his cart, ſhall, on being convicted thereof before any juſtice of the peace in London, forfeit and pay, for every time he ſhall ſo offend, the ſum of 20 s.
21. If any one ſhall refuſe to pay the owner or dri⯑ver of the cart employed the money juſtly due for his fare, or ſhall in any wiſe abuſe the carman, or miſbe⯑have towards him, the Lord Mayor, or any juſtice in London, on application of the carman to him, ſhall cauſe the parties to come before him, and examine, from time to time, into the matter complained of, and thereupon make ſuch order of payment of the [...] and recompenſing the carman for his loſs of time, and for any injury he ſhall have ſuſtained, and any expen⯑ces he ſhall have been at, as ſhall be juſt; and the par⯑ty found in default ſhall thereupon forthwith pay the money ordered to be paid by ſuch magiſtrate, under the penalty of 5 l.
22. If any one ſhall cauſe the driver of any cart to wait above half an hour for the loading of any goods into the ſame, or unloading of goods thereout (the car⯑man being willing to help to load or unload the ſame) he or they ſo offending ſhall pay for the ſame forth⯑with to the carman, after the rate of 6 d. for every half hour, from the expiration of the firſt half hour, which the cart ſhall be detained.
23. No carman ſhall be compellable to carry any load of goods above three miles from the city and li⯑berties [114] thereof, after two of the clock in the after⯑noon, from Michaelmas to Lady-day, or after four from Lady-day to Michaelmas.
24. In caſe the owner of any cart worked in Lon⯑don for hire ſhall not deliver up, to be brought before a magiſtrate, any driver thereof, charged with any of⯑fence againſt any of the rules or orders aforeſaid, with⯑in ſeven days after complaint made to any magiſtrate againſt any ſuch driver, and notice thereof given or left at the uſual place of abode of the owner of any ſuch cart, then the owner of every ſuch cart ſhall be liable to anſwer and pay the penalty incurred by any ſuch driver; and if the driver ſhall be afterwards found, and ſhall not make ſatisfaction forthwith to his maſter, for what he ſhall have paid for any ſuch dri⯑ver's miſbehaviour, neglect or default, every ſuch dri⯑ver ſhall forfeit 5 l. for every ſuch default.
25. The Lord Mayor of the city, or any juſtice of the peace of the ſaid city, before whom any offender ſhall be brought, and be convicted, may leſſen, miti⯑gate, or remit, any of the ſaid penalties, ſo as not to remit above one-half of the penalty inflicted for the offence.
26. All penalties by theſe orders, or any of them inflicted, ſhall be levied by diſtreſs and ſale of the of⯑fender's goods, by warrant under the hand and ſeal of the juſtices of the peace. One moiety of all penalties and forfeitures is to be paid to the perſon who ſhall proſecute to conviction any perſon who ſhall break the ſaid orders, and the other moiety to the overſeers of the poor, if there ſhall be any, of the pariſh or place in which the offence ſhall be ſo committed, or the of⯑fender ſhall have been apprehended.
27. Magiſtrates of the city of London are to ſettle the rates of carrying goods between London and Weſt⯑minſter. 30 Geo. 2. c. 22.
ON WALKING LONDON STREETS.
[115]1. IN walking through London, you may always find your way, if, before you ſet out, you will con⯑ſult a map of London, and attend to the names of the ſtreets and courts, which are always painted on a board againſt the houſes, at the corner of each ſtreet or court.
2. If you wiſh to walk ſafe, never paſs under any goods, &c. that are drawing up to the top of a houſe by a crane, nor paſs a houſe where the bricklayers are at work, leſt any thing ſhould fall on your head; it is adviſeable, on ſuch occaſions, to croſs the way: and if you would ſave your clothes, never paſs under a lamp, whilſt the lamp-lighter is triming it, nor go near any rails, &c. freſh painted; or conteſt the way with a baker, barber, chimney-ſweeper, barrow-woman, &c.
3. If the wall or houſes are on your right hand, keep the wall and you will have no interruption, every one will give way.
4. But don't diſpute the wall with a cart or carriage, leſt you ſhould be cruſhed.
5. Never ſtop in a crowd, or to look at the windows of a print-ſhop or ſhew-glaſs, if you would not have your pocket picked.
6. Do not walk under a pent-houſe, leſt perſons watering flower-pots, or other ſlops, ſhould drop upon your head.
7. Be careful, if you meet a porter carrying a load upon his head, that you do not get a blow that may be fatal.
8. If you walk with an umbrella, and meet a ſimilar machine, lower yours in time, leſt you either break it, or get entangled with the other.
9 One ſide of the way is generally ſhady; it is not neceſſary perhaps to recommend croſſing to the ſhady ſide in ſultry weather, or keeping to windward when the duſt flies.
10. In wet weather look where you ſtep; if you would not be ſplaſhed, don't tread on a looſe ſtone.
[116]11. Don't haſtily croſs a ſtreet when a coach is com⯑ing up, leſt your foot ſhould ſlip and you be run over.
12. In froſty weather it is adviſeable to walk in the coach-ways, which are not ſo ſlippery as the foot-paths; and to bind a piece of cloth-liſt round one of your ſhoes, it will ſave you many a fall.
13. It is very dangerous walking in a thick fog, as you cannot ſee the danger before you; people who walk in London ſhould always look before them, both above and below.
14. It would be prudent for the men to have their coat-pockets open in the lining within; this will often prevent them from being picked. At leaſt every one ſhould attend to his pocket at night, or as he paſſes a crowd.
WATERMEN's RATES.
Oars. | Scull. | Comp. | |||
s. | d. | s. | d. | d. | |
FROM London to Graveſend, | 6 | 0 | — | — | 9 |
— Grays, | 5 | 0 | — | — | 8 |
From London to Greenhithe, | 4 | 0 | — | — | 8 |
— Purfleet, | 4 | 6 | — | — | 8 |
From London-Bridge to Erith, | 4 | 0 | — | — | 8 |
From London to Woolwich, | 3 | 0 | — | — | 5 |
— Blackwall, | 2 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 4 |
— Greenwich, | 2 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
— Deptford, | 1 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
— Limehouſe, | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | — |
— Wapping Dock, | 0 | 8 | 0 | 4 | — |
— Rotherhithe Church, | 0 | 6 | 0 | 3 | — |
From St. Olaves to ditto, | 0 | 8 | 0 | 4 | — |
Billingſgate to St. Olaves or St. Swiny, | 0 | 6 | 0 | 3 | — |
Acroſs the water, | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | — |
London Bridge to Somerſet-ſtairs, or oppoſite, | 0 | 6 | 0 | 3 | — |
— to Weſtminſter, | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | — |
[117]
s. | d. | s. | d. | s. | d. | |
Below Somerſet-ſtairs to Weſtminſter Bridge, | 0 | 8 | 0 | 4 | — | — |
London Bridge, or below Somerſet-ſtairs to Lambeth or Vauxhall, | 1 | 6 | 0 | 9 | — | — |
Whitehall or Weſtminſter Bridge to ditto, | 0 | 8 | 0 | 4 | — | — |
Somerſet-ſtairs and above to Vauxhall, | 1 | 0 | 0 | 6 | — | — |
Blackfryars Bridge to Lambeth, | 0 | 8 | 0 | 4 | — | — |
London to Wandſworth, | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
— Barnelms, | 2 | 6 | — | — | 0 | 5 |
— Mortlake, | 3 | 0 | — | — | 0 | 6 |
— Brentford, | 3 | 6 | — | — | 0 | 6 |
— Iſleworth, | 4 | 0 | — | — | 0 | 8 |
— Richmond, | 5 | 6 | — | — | 0 | 8 |
— Teddington, | 5 | 0 | — | — | 0 | 9 |
— Kingſton, | 6 | 0 | — | — | 0 | 9 |
— Hampton-Court, | 6 | 0 | — | — | 1 | 0 |
— Town, | 7 | 0 | — | — | 1 | 0 |
— Wey-Bridge or Cheſter, | 10 | 0 | — | — | 1 | 0 |
— Staines, | 12 | 0 | — | — | 1 | 0 |
— Windſor, | 14 | 0 | — | — | 2 | 0 |
2. No more than ſix perſons to be taken in for one fare.
3. If a waterman plys you, he is obliged to carry you; but as his number is on his boat and out of ſight, don't tell him where you are going till you are in the boat; if he refuſes to carry you after this, he forfeits 20 s. to the waterman's company. If he takes more than his fare, or inſults you, the penalty is 40 s. Any complaint to be made at Waterman's Hall, near London Bridge: here you attend twice, once to ſum⯑mon him, and again to have the complaint heard. The beſt method is to have him before the Lord Mayor, who will fine him, or perhaps commit him to priſon, according to the offence. As he will be found out by his number, which is painted on the ſide of the boat within, be ſure to examine this, and remember it.
4. No waterman, if you take the boat to yourſelf, can take any other perſon in without your leave, or on pain of being fined.
5. No waterman ſhall uſe his boat on the Thames on Sundays, without a licence from a juſtice, under the [118] penalty of 5 s. 11 & 12 W. c. 21. except ferrymen b [...] ⯑tween Vauxhall and Limehouſe.
6. No tilt-boat, row-barge, or wherry, to take at o [...] time more than thirty-ſeven paſſengers, and three mo [...] by the way; nor in any other boat or wherry mo [...] than eight, and two more by the way; nor in any fe [...] ⯑ry-boat or wherry, allowed to work on Sundays, an [...] more than eight paſſengers, on pain of forfeiting f [...] the firſt offence 5 l. for the ſecond offence 10 l. an [...] for the third offence to be disfranchiſed for twelv [...] months from working on the river, and from enjoyin [...] the privileges of the company: and in caſe any perſo [...] ſhall be drowned, where a greater number of paſſenge [...] is taken in than is allowed, the watermen ſhall [...] deemed guilty of felony, and tranſported as felons.
7. Any waterman or wherryman, who wilfully o [...] negligently loſe their tide from Billingſgate to Grave ſend, or from thence to Billingſgate, by putting aſhor [...] for other paſſengers, or by waiting or loitering by th [...] way, ſo that the firſt paſſengers ſhall be ſet on ſhor [...] two miles ſhort of the place to which they are bound ſuch paſſengers ſhall be diſcharged from paying an [...] thing for their paſſage.
8. Any waterman who ſets up a ſail between Lam⯑beth and London-bridge, upon complaining, as befor [...] mentioned, forfeits, for each offence, 5 s.
POST-HORSES, as far as relates to Travellers.
1. EVERY perſon letting horſes for travelling poſt, ſhall take, for the King, three halfpence for every mile each horſe is to travel; for which he ſhall deliver a ticket to the traveller, ſpecifying the number of horſes employed, and the miles they are to go, ſign⯑ed by the maſter of the houſe: if hired by the day, the words, "for a day," and the amount of the duty paid, to be on the ticket, which is 1 s. 9 d. for each horſe. 25 Geo. 3. c. 51.
[119]2. Travellers are to deliver ſuch tickets at the firſt turnpike they paſs through, or pay 1 s. 9 d. for each horſe; if the horſe and carriage be hired for the day, the turnpike keeper ſhall give the traveller a ticket in exchange, with the words "received day-ticket" on it, which ticket ſhall be ſhewn at every gate the traveller paſſes through that day, or he ſhall pay 1 s. 9 d. for each horſe, which the toll gatherer ſhall have to his own uſe. Ibid.
3. If the horſes, &c. be hired for two or more days, no duty is paid for them, but the innkeeper, &c. muſt deliver the traveller a certificate, with the words ‘hir⯑ed for two or more days’ on it, and ſigned with his name, the day of the month, and place of his abode; and the perſon travelling in ſuch carriage, or the driver, ſhall deliver ſuch certificate at the firſt turnpike, for which the gate-keeper ſhall give a check ticket in re⯑turn, with the words on it, "certificate delivered." This ticket to be ſhewn at every turnpike gate through which the carriage paſſes, or the traveller ſhall pay 1 s. 9 d. for each horſe, which the gate-keeper ſhall have for himſelf. Penalty on perſons iſſuing falſe or erroneous certificates to evade the duty, 20 l. Ibid.
4. No traveller ſhall pay for more miles than ſpeci⯑fied on the ticket. Filling up tickets falſely ſubjects the filler to a penalty of 10 l. Ibid.
5. Horſes hired for leſs time than two days, are deemed hired for the day. Ibid. ſ. 25.
6. No perſon at whoſe houſe any traveller ſhall change horſes, ſhall let them otherwiſe than by the mile or ſtage, on pain of 10 l. Ibid.
7. Where innkeepers, &c. cannot furniſh horſes to travellers, and they go on with the ſame horſes, they ſhall nevertheleſs give the traveller a freſh ticket, pro⯑perly filled up, and receive the duty thereon. Ibid.
8. All horſes hired by a mile or ſtage ſhall be deem⯑ed hired to travel poſt. Ibid. ſ. 42.
9. Poſtmaſters ſhall furniſh horſes to travel poſt, and ſhall charge 3 d. a mile for each horſe riding poſt *, and [120] 4 d. a mile for the perſon riding as guide, and ſhall not charge for any bundle of goods not exceeding eighty pounds weight, to be laid on the horſe rid by the guide, and ſhall not be obliged to carry above that weight, 9 Ann. c. 10. ſ. 14.
10. If any poſt-maſter doth not or cannot furniſh perſons riding poſt with horſes in half an hour after demand, ſuch perſons may furniſh themſelves elſewhere, and the poſtmaſter ſhall forfeit 5 l. half to the king, and half to him that ſhall ſue, with full coſts. Ibid. ſ. 20, 21, 28.
11. The price of poſt-chaiſes in London is generally 1 s. a mile, excluſive of the duty, and they generally charge a mile or two more, the firſt ſtage, than the ground meaſures, under a pretence of the ground on the ſtones. By the day a poſt-chaiſe may be hired for to go fifteen or eighteen miles, and back, for a guinea, independent of the duty; if let for more than one day they will ſometimes take leſs, perhaps 18 s. or even leſs, if taken for a longer time.
12. The hire of a one-horſe chaiſe, with the horſe, is half-a-guinea, including the duty; without a horſe, 3 s. 6 d. or 4 s. The hire of a ſaddle-horſe, including the duty, 6 s. or 7 s. according to the diſtance he is to go.
13. The hire of two chairmen by the week, is 24s. and they are always at your command.
CONVENIENCES IN LONDON.
A Man may live like a gentleman in London at a very eaſy rate, and have every indulgence he can wiſh for.
1. If he does not keep a carriage, he may hire one by the month, or week, or even by the day. A genteel coach, with glaſs windows, may be hired for the day, of thoſe who keep hackney-coaches, if beſpoke, at the price of a hackney-coach, and if you have a great-coat [121] and hat for the coachman to put on, it will be equally the ſame as if he was your own ſervant.
2. Hackney-chairs may be had at a moment's notice, paying them either for the time or ground they go, ac⯑cording to the cuſtomary rates, or by the week; and if you have two great coats and hats to lend the men for the time, they may be always well equipped. For la⯑dies, a lady's chair ſhould be kept in the hall, it pays no duty. Theſe chairmen in conſtant pay will call three or four times a day for orders, and will go on meſ⯑ſages alſo.
3. Good wine may be had of the wine-merchants, red or white, at 26 s. a dozen, or 2 s. 3 d. a bottle; other wines in proportion. Good bottled beer or cy⯑der can always be bought.
4. There are bookſellers who lend books to read by the quarter. The principal Circulating Libraries in town are,
- Hookham, in Bond-ſtreet. Here are moſt foreign books.
- Bell, oppoſite Catherine-ſtreet in the Strand.
- Noble, Middle-row, Holborn.
- Vernon, Birchin-lane.
- Boozey, King-ſtreet, Cheapſide.
- Deſbrow, St. Martin's Court, St. Martin's-lane.
At theſe libraries you may have new publications, if volumes, to read at 3 d. a volume, have the reading of all new books, and that of their whole library, of which they have catalogues at 6 d. each, for 12 s. a year, or 4 s. a quarter, and have two books at a time, and change them every day; but at B [...]ll's, for one guinea a year, you may read all the new pamphlets and books of any value.
5. The Library of the Britiſh Muſeum, in Great Ruſſel-ſtreet, Bloomſbury, is open to the public from eleven to three, where the books may be read, and any part of them copied, in a good reading-room, with fires in winter, without any expence. Apply for ad⯑miſſion to any of the truſtees, by giving in your name, and if approved of, you will receive an anſwer for that purpoſe at the next committee-day.
[122]6. The Library at Sion-College, by London-wall, is a public one, but confined to the clergy of the city of London only.
7. The London Library, Ludgate-hill, is an inſtitu⯑tion of late date, but likely to be a very valuable one. It conſiſts at preſent of 140 ſubſcribers, twelve of whom are a committee, and ſit once a week, on Tueſ⯑days, to determine on the purchaſe of books, &c. which any ſubſcriber may recommend to their conſi⯑deration. They do not buy all the traſh that is pub⯑liſhed, but books of character, and ſuch as are worth reading, French or Engliſh, with the foreign Reviews, &c. it being the deſign of this Library to contain all thoſe great works of ſcience which it is difficult for in⯑dividuals to procure, and every other work of taſte and entertainment.
Any perſon paying one guinea entrance, and one guinea per annum, becomes a member of the ſociety, and has an intereſt in the property of the whole.
Any perſon paying ten guineas si a member for life.
The Library is opened every day, Sundays ex⯑cepted, from March 25, to September 29, from eleven to four, and from five to eight; and from Sep⯑tember 29 to March 25, from eleven to four only; du⯑ring which time the members may conſult any books, or ſend for them to their own houſes. A reading-room and a fire in winter.
Every member may have two books at a time, in his or her poſſeſſion; the time of keeping which is regu⯑lated by the committee, as follows:—A folio ſix weeks, a quarto one month, and an octavo a week; keeping them beyond the time is a forfeit of a trifle to the fund.
If any books be loſt or damaged, that book, or the ſet, if it belongs to a ſet, muſt be re-placed by the per⯑ſon to whom it was delivered.
Subſcribers to this Library will have the pleaſure of reading clean books, which is ſeldom the caſe at cir⯑culating libraries.
8. The French bookſellers are,
- Becket, in Pall-mall;
- Elmſley, oppoſite Southampton-ſtreet, Strand;
- Hookham, in Bond-ſtreet.
[123]9. Law-books, in great variety, are to be found at Brooke's, in Bell-yard, Temple-bar, where copies of private acts of parliament may be met with which cannot be had at other places.
10. Perſons fond of whiſt will find, on enquiry among their friends, a number of card-clubs in diffe⯑rent parts of London, that meet on an evening, where, if properly introduced, they may be admitted; as alſo to many reſpectable billiard-tables: there are three at No. 30, Charing-croſs.
11. If he is fond of diſcuſſion, by ſubſcribing two guineas a year, he may be admitted as a member of the Arts and Sciences, whoſe aſſembly-room is in the Adel⯑phi, (but he muſt be ballotted in) where there is a ge⯑neral meeting every Wedneſday evening, from the firſt Wedneſday in October to the laſt in June, and where gentlemen give their opinion publicly, on the various inventions and improvements in huſbandry, &c. that are brought before them. A member muſt be propoſed by three ſubſcribers, one Wedneſday, and ballotted for the next: two-thirds of thoſe who ballot muſt be in his favour. Twenty guineas conſtitutes a member for life: each member is entitled to a volume of the Tranſactions.
12. When the parliament is ſitting. 2 s. 6 d. will admit a perſon into the gallery to hear the debates.
13. But there are debating ſocieties, where a man may be amuſed for an hour or two, occaſionally: but as the price of admiſſion is but 6 d. the company is in general none of the beſt; and of courſe, what is there heard to a ſenſible man will not prove the moſt inte⯑reſting or entertaining.
14. If a man is fond of muſic, he may ſubſcribe to a variety of concerts, as ſet forth under the head of AMUSEMENTS; and in fine weather he may be agree⯑ably entertained between ten and twelve every morn⯑ing at the Horſe-Guards in St. James's Park, where the wind-muſic of the Guards play many good pieces. Muſical inſtruments may be hired by the week; the price of a Spine [...] is 5 s. a month, of a Piano Forte or Harpſichord 10 s. other inſtruments in proportion.
[124]15. For his health there are hot-baths, at 3 s. 6 d. a time, and cold-baths at 1 s. in many parts of the town; and for his recreation, in ſummer, there are bathing-baſons of fine water—one at the Dog and Duck, in St. George's-fields—and another at Peerleſs-pool, Old ſtreet; the ſubſcription but one guinea for the ſeaſon.
A LIST of the NEWS-PAPERS publiſhed in LONDON.
DAILY MORNING PAPERS.
THE Daily Advertiſer, price two-pence halfpenny; a paper calculated for advertiſements of all kinds, being taken in by all the public houſes in London. Publiſhed near Temple-bar, Fleet-ſtreet. This paper has not the debates in Parliament, nor contains any letters or matter of entertainment.
The Morning Poſt, price three-pence, in ſavour of Adminiſtration. Publiſhed in Blake-court, Catherine-ſtreet, Strand. This paper is very extenſive in its circulation, and is received in all the faſhionable circles.
The Herald, an Oppoſition paper, price three-pence. Publiſhed in Catherine-ſtreet, Strand.
The General Advertiſer, ditto, price three-pence.— Publiſhed near St. Dunſtan's-church, Fleet-ſtreet.
The Morning Chronicle, price three-pence. Publiſhed in Dorſet-ſtreet, Saliſbury-ſquare, Fleet-ſtreet.
The Public Ledger, price three-pence. Publiſhed by Blythe, Paternoſter-row. This paper is chiefly circu⯑lated below bridge, among the ſhipping.
The Gazetteer, an oppoſition paper, price 3 d. pub⯑liſhed in Ave-Maria-lane.
The Public Advertiſer, price 3 d. publiſhed in Pater⯑noſter-row.
The Univerſal Regiſter, price 3 d. publiſhed in Print⯑ing-houſe-ſquare, Blackfriars.
EVENING PAPERS, three Times a Week.
[125]- The St. James's Chronicle, price 3 d. publiſhed Tueſday, Thurſday, and Saturday, at four in the afternoon, by Baldwin, in Fleet-ſtreet, near Fleet-market.
- The General Evening Poſt, price 3 d. publiſhed ditto, by Bew, Pater-noſter-row.
- The London Chronicle, price 3 d. publiſhed ditto, by Wilkie. St. Paul's Church-yard.
- The Engliſh Chronicle, an oppoſition paper, price 3 d. publiſhed ditto, oppoſite Norfolk-ſtreet in the Strand.
- The London Evening Poſt, an oppoſition paper, price 3 d. publiſhed ditto, in the Old Bailey.
- The Middleſex Journal, price 3 d. publiſhed ditto, by Ayre, Bridges-ſtreet, Covent-Garden.
- The London Pacquet, price 3 d. publiſhed Monday, Wedneſday, and Friday, at four o'clock afternoon, by Blythe, Pater-noſter-row.
- Lloyd's Evening Poſt, price 3 d. publiſhed ditto, by Bla⯑don, Pater-noſter-row.
MORNING PAPERS publiſhed on Sunday only.
- The Sunday Monitor, price 3 d. publiſhed by Johnſon, Ludgate-hill
- The Sunday Recorder, price 3 d. publiſhed by Pope, Ludgate-hill.
- The Sunday Gazette, price 3 d. publiſhed by Ayr [...], Bridges-ſtreet, Covent-Garden.
Note, Theſe papers contain the week's news, and are circulated only in London. Advertiſements in theſe papers are 5 s. 6 d. for 18 lines, and 2 d. a line after⯑wards.
The following are publiſhed on Friday evening only, and are circulated through the country as well as Lon⯑don, and contain the week's news.
- Baldwin's Journal, price 3 d. publiſhed by Baldwin in Fleet-ſtreet.
- Say's Craftſman, price 3 d. publiſhed in Ave-Maria-lane.
- Britiſh Spy, [...]bliſhed at Redmain's, Creed-lane.
- Owen's Chronicle, ditto.
- [126] Bingley's Journal, publiſhed at Ayre's, Bridges-ſtreet, Covent-Garden.
- Miller's Mercury, ditto.
Beſides the above, there is a paper called The Gazette, publiſhed by Government, in Warwick-lane, price 3 d. a ſheet, for as many ſheets as it contains. This con⯑tains only foreign news, and very little of it. An ad⯑vertiſement in this paper is 12 s. 6 d. for about 112 words; if it exceeds that number, and under 212, the price is 10 s. more, and ſo in proportion.
Of the ſeveral morning papers thoſe moſt in circu⯑lation are, the Daily Advertiſer, Gazetteer, and Ledger, chiefly in the city; and the Morning Poſt, Morning Chronicle, and Herald, at the weſt end of the town, among the gentry.
The evening papers are circulated chiefly in the country, and thoſe moſt in circulation are the St. James's Chronicle, and the General Evening Poſt. The Ga⯑zette travels throughout all Europe.
There is alſo a French paper, circulated much abroad, and publiſhed in London twice a week, Tueſday and Friday, price 4 d. by Cox in Great Queen-ſtreet, Lin⯑colns-inn-fields, where ſhort advertiſements of 18 lines are taken in.
The ſeveral news-papers are brought to your door regularly by news-carriers, for the prices above-men⯑ioned, of which the ſtate has three halfpence each.
Advertiſements in the front of the morning papers are inſerted, if not above 18 lines in length, for 5s. 6d. in other parts of the paper for 3s. 6d. In the evening papers the price is 4 s. each time. The price increaſes in proportion to the length, generally about a penny or three halfpence a line. Out of every advertiſement Government has 2s. 6d. An advertiſement in the Ga⯑zette, let it be ever ſo ſhort, is 10s 6d.
Letters, or eſſays, ſet up in the larger letter of news⯑papers, are generally paid for according to their length, at the rate of one guinea a column.
ON GOING TO PUBLICK WORSHIP.
[127]I Believe, in this degenerate age, the beſt method of inducing people to attend the ſervice of the church, is to point out to them the penalties they are liable to for non-attendance, and to ſhew them how much they lie at the mercy of an ill-natured neighbour or a mer⯑cenary informer.
1. All perſons, having no lawful or reaſonable ex⯑cuſe for being abſent, ſhall reſort to their pariſh church or chapel, or, upon reaſonable let thereof, to ſome uſual place where divine ſervice ſhall be performed, according to the liturgy and practice of the church of England, upon every Sunday and holiday, on pain of puniſhment by the cenſures of the church, or of for⯑feiting 1 s. for every offence to the poor, to be levied by the churchwardens by diſtreſs. 1 Eliz. c. 2. Ex⯑cept Diſſenters tolerated. 1 W. c. 18. Proſecution to be in one month after default. 3 J. c. 4.
2. And he who is abſent from his own pariſh church ſhall be put to prove, where he went to church. 1 Haw 13.
3. Every perſon above the age of ſixteen years, who ſhall not repair to ſome church, chapel, or uſual place of common prayer, on conviction, ſhall fofeit 20 l. a month, one third to him who ſhall ſue. 23 Eliz. c. 1.
4. And this penalty of 20 l. a month diſpenſeth not with the forfeiture of 12 d. a Sunday. 1 Haw. 13.
5. And every offender in not repairing to divine ſervice, having been once convicted (and not conform⯑ing) ſhall pay 20 l. a month into the Exchequer, in the term of Eaſter or Michaelmas, next after ſuch convic⯑tion, and alſo ſhall, without any other indictment or conviction, for every month after ſuch conviction, ſo long as he ſhall not conform, pay as much as ſhall then remain unpaid, after ſuch rate of 20 l. a month; and, in default of any part of ſuch payments, the King may by proceſs ſeize all the goods and two parts of the land of ſuch offender. 29 Eliz. c. 6. 3 J. c. 4.
6. Or the King may refuſe the 20 l. a month, though [128] duly tendered, and ſeize two parts of the lands at his option. 3 Jac. c. 4.
7. But copyhold lands are not within the ſtatute, 1 Haw. 14.
8. And every perſon who ſhall uſually on Sundays have in his ho [...]ſe divine ſervice as eſtabliſhed by law, and be thereat himſelf uſually preſent, and ſhall four times a year go to the pariſh church, or other common church or chapel, ſhall not incur any penalty for not repairing to church. 23 Eliz c. 1.
9. But this ſhall not extend to [...]alified Proteſtant diſſenters, who reſort to ſome place of religious wor⯑ſhip allowed by the act of toleration. 1 W c. 18.
10. Every perſon who ſhall retain in [...] ſervice, or ſhall relieve, keep, or harbour in his ho [...]ſe, any ſer⯑vant, ſojourner, or ſtranger, who ſhall n [...] repair to church, but ſhall forbear for a month together, not ha⯑ving reaſonable excuſe, ſhall forfeit 10 l. for every month he ſhall continue in his houſe ſuch perſon ſo for⯑bearing. 3 J. c. 4.
11. No recuſant convict (that is a perſon once con⯑victed and not conforming) ſhall practice law or phy⯑ſic, nor ſhall be judge or miniſter of any court, or have any military office by ſea or land, and ſhall forfeit for every offence 100 l. 3 J. c. 5.
12. And the church-wardens and conſtables ſhall (on pain of 20 l.) preſent at the quarter-ſeſſions, once a year, the monthly abſence from church of all re [...]uſants, and the names and ages of their children above nine years of age, and the names of their ſervants. And if the party preſented ſhall be indicted and convicted, ſuch church-warden or conſtable ſhall have a reward of 40s. to be levied on the recuſant's goods. 3 J. c. 4.
13. It is difficult for new comers in to any pariſh to obtain a pew in the pariſh church: but churches are ſeldom ſo full but they may find a ſeat in the pew, of others. Indeed the pew openers, for a ſhilling now and then given them, will ſea [...] a perſon commodiouſly.
14. But at the private chapels about town, a pew to hold ſix may be rented for about 5 l. or 6 l. a year, or one perſon may be ſeated agreeable to his wiſhes for [129] 20 s. a year, and at theſe places there are generally ce⯑lebrated preachers.
15. In order to obtain a pew in any of the pariſh churches, application muſt be made to the church-war⯑dens for the time being.
NUSANCES.
1. IF the driver of any cart, car, dray or waggon, ſhall ride upon any carriage in a ſtreet or high⯑way, not having ſome perſon on foot or horſeback to guide the ſame (ſuch carriages excepted, as are con⯑ducted by ſome perſon holding the reins of the horſes drawing the ſame); or if the driver of ſuch carriage ſhall, by negligence or wilful miſbehaviour, cauſe any hurt or damage to any perſon or carriage, in ſuch ſtreet or highway, or ſhall wilfully be at ſuch a diſtance, or in ſuch a ſituation, whilſt it ſhall be paſſing on the highway, that he cannot have the government of his horſes, or ſhall wilfully or negligently obſtruct the free paſſage of any other carriage; or if the driver of any empty or unloaded waggon, cart or carriage, ſhall re⯑fuſe to make way for any coach, chariot, chaiſe, load⯑ed waggon, cart or loaded carriage; or if any perſon ſhall drive any coach, poſt-chaiſe, or carriage let for hire, or waggon, wain or cart, not having the owner's name, as required, painted thereon, or ſhall refuſe to diſcover the chriſtian and ſirname of the owner, every ſuch offender ſhall forfeit a ſum not exceeding 10 s. (or not exceeding 20 s. if the driver of the ſaid car⯑riage be the owner); and in default of payment, the offender ſhall be committed to the houſe of correction, for a time not exceeding one month, unleſs ſuch for⯑feiture be ſooner paid. And any perſon may appre⯑hend ſuch driver, without a warrant, and deliver him to a conſtable, to be conveyed before a magiſtrate; and if ſuch driver ſhall refuſe to tell his name, the juſtice may commit him for a time not exceeding three months, and may proceed againſt him for the penalty nevertheleſs. 13 Geo. 3. c. 84.
[130]2. Drivers of hackney-coaches are to give way to gentlemen's carriages, under the penalty of 10 s.— 1 Geo. 1. c. 57.
3. The penalty may be recovered before a juſtice, Ibid.
4. Aſſaulting in the ſtreet or highway, with intent to ſpoil people's clothes, and ſo ſpoiling them, is fe⯑lony and tranſportation. 6 Geo. c. 23.
5. A perſon may juſtify an aſſault in defence of his perſon, his wife, his maſter, parent or child, within age, and even a wounding in defence of his perſon, but not of his poſſeſſion. 3 Salk. 46.
6. A perſon may juſtify an aſſault of another who menaces him, or aſſaults him, and attempts to beat him from his lawful water-courſe or highway. Pult. 48.
7. Likewiſe, if a perſon comes into my houſe, and will not go out, I may juſtify laying hold of him and turning him out. Nelſ. Aſſault.
8. Where a man is aſſaulted, and hath not witneſſes to prove the ſame, the party aſſaulted may bring an in⯑formation in the Crown-office, in which caſe, the of⯑fence being indicted at the ſuit of the king, the party grieved may be admitted an evidence. 4 & 5 W. & M. c. 18.
But by this mode of proceſs, the party grieved can only puniſh the offender corporally, he cannot recover damages
9. If a man ſtrikes you, the moſt ſummary method of puniſhing him, is to have a warrant for him, and take him before a magiſtrate, where he muſt make ſa⯑tisfaction, or be bound over to the ſeſſions.
10. No words whatever can amount to an aſſault, but any injury done to the perſon of a man, in an an⯑gry inſolent manner, be it ever ſo ſmall, is actionable; for example, ſpitting in his face, joſtling him, treading on his toes, or any way touching him in anger. Ibid. Even offering to ſtrike, or threatening with any ſtaff or weapon, is an aſſault in law. Lamb libel.
11. Where a man is threatened to be beaten, or can ſwear that he goes in fear of his life, he may, before a juſtice, bind his advetſary over to keep the peace.— 1 Haw. 126. Crom. 118.
[131]12. Porters, chairmen, chimney-ſweepers, barbers, butchers, bakers, &c. joſtling people in the ſtreets, and throwing down children and infirm people, if known, may be taken before a magiſtrate by a war⯑rant, and puniſhed, by obliging them to ſatisfy the in⯑jured party, or be committed. If not known, they may be found out by following them home.
13. The conſtable of the diſtrict, on the information in writing, of two inhabitants paying ſcot and lot, of any body keeping a bawdy-houſe, gaming-houſe, or any other diſorderly houſe in ſuch pariſh, muſt go forthwith, with ſuch inhabitants, before a juſtice, and on their making oath that they believe the ſame to be true, &c. and entering into a recognizance of 20 l. each, to produce evidence againſt ſuch perſon for ſuch offence, the conſtable muſt enter into a recognizance of 30 l. to proſecute, on pain of forfeiting 20 l. to ſuch inhabitant as gave him the notice. He ſhall be paid all expences attending the ſame by the overſeers of the poor. 28 Geo. 2.
14. Perſons appearing and acting as the maſter and miſtreſs of ſuch a houſe, ſhall be deemed the keeper. Ibid.
15. Every perſon ſhall apprehend, or cauſe to be apprehended, ſuch beggars as he ſhall ſee come to his houſe to beg, and ſhall cauſe them to be carried to the next conſtable, on pain of forfeiting 10 s. If the con⯑ſtable does not take charge of them he forfeits 5 l.— 1 Jac. 1. c. 7. 39 Eliz. c 4.
16. Perſons affecting infirmities, to excite compaſ⯑ſion, and begging, may be indicted and fined. Co. Lit. 127.
17. Night-walkers of ill fame may be taken up by a conſtable, impriſoned in the watch-houſe, and taken the next morning before a magiſtrate; 5 Edw. 3. c. 14. and ſhall be bound to their good behaviour. Hawk. P. C. 132.
But though they may arreſt night-walkers by the 5th Edw. 3. c. 14. yet it has been held, that it is not law⯑ful for a conſtable to take up any woman upon bare ſuſpicion of being of ill fame, unleſs ſhe be guilty of a breach of the peace, or ſome unlawful act, or be found by him miſdoing. 2 Hale's Pil. 89.
[132]18. If conſtables do not do their duty, magiſtrates, on complaint, will puniſh them.
19. All nuſances, not otherwiſe puniſhable, if pub⯑lic, are indictable at the quarter-ſeſſions; if private, are actionable.
20. Public nuſances are noiſes, ſuch as blowing of horns, &c. and offenſive trades. Private nuſances are pidgeons, pigs, foul drains, privies, overflowing ciſ⯑terns, rotten water-pipes, decayed vegetables thrown out in foot-ways, obſtructions in foot-ways, flower-pots dropping on people's heads, &c. &c. Stoppage of ſtreets, by coaches ſtanding at places of entertainment, &c. &c. are public nuſances, and indictable. In ſmells, it is not neceſſary that they ſhould be unwhole⯑ſome, to make them a nuſance, ſo that they render the enjoyment of life and property uncomfortable.
21. A maſter is indictable for a nuſance done by his ſervant. Ld. Raymond, 264.
22. Furniture or other things, if leſt an unreaſon able time on footways, ſo as to obſtruct the paſſage may be ſhoved into the ſtreet.
23. Barrows ſtanding before the door, if not remo⯑ved when directed, may be overthrown.
24. Pidgeons, or poultry, if kept in the neighbour⯑hood, and treſpaſs on your premiſes, may be ſhot.
25. Strange dogs coming on your premiſes may b [...] killed.
26. Pigs, if they treſpaſs on your premiſes, may b [...] pounded in your own premiſes; in which caſe th [...] owner muſt be made acquainted with it, and muſt ei⯑ther pay the damage or replevy them.
27. The owner of a maſtiff going in the ſtreet un⯑muzzled, (which is a nuſance from his ferocity) may be indicted. Burn, Dog.
28. If a maſtiſſ falls on another dog, the owner o [...] that dog cannot juſtify the killing him, unleſs there w [...] no other way to ſave his dog. 1 Saund. 84. 3 Salk.
29. Deſerted children left at people's doors ſhould b [...] taken to the pariſh officers, who are bound to provid [...] for them; if they refuſe to receive them, apply to [...] magiſtrate, who will give an order for that purpoſe and the perſon that deſerts them is liable to be puniſh⯑ed. [133] Cro. Eliz. 217. Owen. 98. He or ſhe ſhould be delivered into the charge of a conſtable.
30. Throwing things out of a window on a perſon's head is actionable.
31. Ballad-ſingers may be taken up by any man, as idle diſorderly perſons, and the apprehender will be entitled to 10 s. by order of a juſtice, for every vagrant ſo brought before him. And if they eſcape from the perſon apprehending them, they ſhall be puniſhed as rogues and vagabonds. Beggars may be committed to hard labour for a month, and rogues ſhall be whipped and impriſoned. 7 Jac. c. 4.
31. Coaches or carts obſtructing a footway, or a way to a man's door, the driver of them, by having him before a magiſtrate, may be fined 10 s. 13 Geo. 3. c. 78. And any perſon may apprehend ſuch offender, without a warrant, and deliver him to a conſtable. 30 Geo. 2. c. 22.
32. A proper number of conſtables, beadles, and watchmen, are to be appointed yearly, on the 1ſt day of October, by the court of Common Council for the city of London and it's liberties, and the aldermen and common-council of wards are to make aſſeſſments on the inhabitants to bear the charge thereof. 10 G. 2.
33. Perſons aggrieved by ſuch aſſeſſment may appeal to the Lord Mayor, &c. 11 Geo. 1. c. 18.
3 [...]. Any neglect of duty to be complained of to the ſitting Alderman.
35. Theſe conſtables are to watch the city, from the 10th of September to the 10th of March, frome nine o'clock in the evening to ſeven in the morning, and the reſt of the year from ten o'clock at night till five in the morning; and are to uſe their beſt endeavours to prevent fires, robberies, and diſorders; they are to go twice, or oftener, each night about their ward.
36. In the pariſhes of St. James, Weſtminſter, St. Martin in the fields, St. Paul, Covent-Garden, St. Margaret, St. John, St. Anne, Weſtminſter, and St. Andrew, Holborn; veſtries are authorized to appoint beadles and watchmen, to watch the pariſhes by night, as in the city; and the houſekeepers in their ſaid pariſhes are to defray the charges, ſo as the aſſeſſ⯑ment [134] yearly does not exceed 4 d. in the pound. 8 G. 2. c. 15. 9 G. 2. c. 8, 13, 17, and 19. 10 G. 2. c. 25. If theſe men are remiſs in their duty, complain to the veſtries, and when theſe meet, may be learned of the veſtry-clerks.
37. A power of paving, lighting and cleanſing the ſtreets of London is given, in a variety of paving acts, to the veſtries of the ſeveral pariſhes, which veſtries appoint a committee of the inhabitants to carry the ſame into execution.
1. Houſeholders making complaints of bad pave⯑ments, &c. in writing to the ſurveyor appointed by the committee, he ſhall give an order to the pavier or o⯑ther perſon contracting to do the buſineſs, to repair it, and if he does not in the appointed time, he ſhall for⯑feit 20 s. a day for every day's neglect, half to the com⯑plainant.
2. Perſons removing lamp-irons, or breaking up pavements, except in caſes of fires, without the conſent of the committee, ſhall forfeit from 10 s. to 40 s.
3. The committee may order houſes to be numbered, and perſons defacing them ſhall forfeit 5 s.
4. Perſons breaking the public lamps deſignedly, ſhall make good the damage and forfeit 20 s. half to the apprehender and half to the contracter, or be com⯑mitted from ſeven days to one month, at the diſcretion of the juſtice. Perſons accidentally breaking them ſhall make them good.
5. The committee may order ſigns to be fixed flat on the houſes, and the water to be conveyed from the roof in trunks down the houſe; if not done, may em⯑ploy people to do it, and charge the owner with the expence.
6. Perſons placing obſtructions or filth in the ſtreets, ſuch as coal-aſhes, dirt, rubbiſh, &c. or any ſtall-boards, baſket-wares, or merchandiſe of any kind; perſons waſhing barrels in the carriage or footways, or placing any carriage ſo as to obſtruct, except during the time of waſhing ſuch carriage, where they uſed to be waſhed before the act took place, and not removing the ſame immediately on the complaint of any one, or placing any carriage in the croſſing of the foot-ways [135] for loading or unloading, and continuing ſo longer than neceſſary; or any materials for building, unleſs inclo⯑ſed with boards, ſhall forfeit from 5 s. to 10 s. And any of the committee may ſeize ſuch obſtructions, re⯑move and retain them, till the penalty and expences are paid, and if not claimed or paid in five days, may ſell the ſame, pay ſuch expences, and return the overplus to the owner.
7. Any one may apprehend a perſon without a war⯑rant, whom they ſee laying any filth or rubbiſh in the ſtreets, and take him before a juſtice, who ſhall fine him as above, or commit him on the oath of the ap⯑prehender, for a time not leſs than ſeven days, or more than one month, to hard labour, unleſs the fine is ſooner paid.
8. No board or hoards, to repair houſes, ſhall be erected without the conſent of the ſurveyor of the com⯑mittee.
9. No perſon ſhall drive or draw any wheel-barrow or other carriage on the foot-ways, nor lead or ride any horſe, aſs, &c. on them.
10. No ſcavenger ſhall leave any rubbiſh or dirt in the ſtreets, &c. and no other perſon than a ſcavenger of the committee ſhall go about to carry away dirt, &c. If any one does, he may be apprehended and taken before a magiſtrate, who ſhall fine him from 5 s. to 20 s. half to the apprehender; and in caſe any perſon ſo carrying the duſt cannot be apprehended, the owner of the cart that carried it ſhall pay the fine. Owners may however carry away their own duſt, &c.
11. No night-ſoil ſhall be moved before twelve, and after four in ſummer, and five in winter, on pain of commitment to hard labour, for a term from ten days to one month. The apprehender ſhall be rewarded by the committee, from 10 s. to 20 s.
12. Scavengers ſhall attend once a week in every ſtreet, to cleanſe it, giving notice to the ſurveyor of the day; and the ſurveyor ſhall attend to ſee it pro⯑perly done, and ſhall, at the deſire of the inhabitant, look and ſee that the duſt, &c. is carried clean off, on pain of the ſcavenger forfeiting from 5 s. to 20 s. for every neglect, half to the inhabitant complaining.
[136]13. No bow-window or projection beyond the line of the ſtreet ſhall be added to any houſe, without leave of the committee. If it be, they may pull it down.
38. All perſons within the weekly bills are to ſweep the ſtreets before their doors every Wedneſday and Sa⯑turday, on pain of forfeiting 3 s. 4 d. and perſons lay⯑ing dirt, aſhes, &c. before their houſes, incur a forfei⯑ture of 5 s. 2 W. c. 2. Complaints to be made to a magi⯑ſtrate. Ibid. Snow, ice, decayed vegetables, &c. ly⯑ing before doors, are equally puniſhable as dirt or aſhes.
39. The Lord Mayor or any alderman may preſent upon view any offence of the above kind in the city of London, and aſſeſs fines not exceeding 20 s. to be paid to the chamberlain for the uſe of the city, &c. 1 G. 1. c. 48.
40. Chairmen carrying empty chairs ſhall not go on the foot pavement. Complaint to be made to the hack⯑ney-coach office, Somerſet-place.
41. It ſhall not be lawful for any perſon to make▪ ſell or fire ſquibs, rockets, ſerpents, or other fire-works, or permit the ſame to be fired from his houſe, into any public ſtreet or road, or to throw or fire, or be aiding in the ſame, in any public ſtreet, houſe, ſhop, &c. and ſuch offence ſhall be deemed a common nuſance. 9 & 10 W. c. 7.
Makers or ſellers of fire-works ſhall, on conviction, on the oath of two witneſſes, forfeit 5 l. half to the poor and half to the proſecutor. Ibid. And whoever caſts or fires them, or permits them to be fired from his premiſes, into any public ſtreet or road, or any other houſe or place, or aiding in the firing and caſting, ſhall forfeit 20 s. in like manner, or be committed for a time, not exceeding a month. Ibid. But this ſhall not ex⯑tend to the officers of the ordnance or artillery com⯑panies.
42. If any publican do ſuffer any perſon to continue drinking at his houſe, (except ſuch as ſhall be invited by any traveller, and ſhall accompany him only during his neceſſary abode there, and except labouring and handicraftſmen in cities, &c. upon the uſual working days, for one hour at dinner time, to take their diet in [137] an alehouſe, and except labourers and workmen, which for the following of their work by the day or by the great, ſhall for the time of their continuance on work in the neighbourhood, lodge and victual in any public houſe, and except for any urgent and neceſſary occa⯑ſions, to be allowed by two juſtices) he ſhall, on con⯑viction thereof before a magiſtrate, on the oath of one witneſs, forfeit 10 s. to the poor, and ſuch alehouſe-keeper ſhall be diſabled, for the ſpace of three years, to keep any ſuch alehouſe. 1 Jac. c. 9. 1 Car. c. 4. 21 Jac. c. 7.
If any alehouſe-keeper ſhall be convicted of being drunk, on the oath of one witneſs, he ſhall be diſabled to keep any ſuch alehouſe for the ſpace of three years. 7 Jac. c. 10. 1 Car. c. 4.
If any publican ſhall knowingly ſuffer any gaming in his houſe or ground, with cards, dice, draughts, ſhuffle-boards, Miſſiſſippi, or billiard-tables, ſkittles, nine-pins, or with any other implement of gaming, by any journeymen, labourers, ſervants, or apprentices, he ſhall, on the oath of one witneſs, before a juſtice, with⯑in ſix days of the offence, forfeit for the firſt time 40s. and for every other offence 10 l. one fourth to the in⯑former. 30 Geo. 2. c. 24. And the perſons ſo gam⯑ing, on complaint to a juſtice, ſhall be apprehended, and forfeit from 5 s. to 20 s. one fourth to the inform⯑er, or be committed to hard labour for a time, not ex⯑ceeding a month, unleſs the penalty is ſooner paid. Ibid.
Now as all alehouſe-keepers offend in one or other of the above points, if you are annoyed by ſuch ale⯑houſe, or by any perſons tippling there, you have only to ſend the maſter of ſuch houſe a copy of the above abſtract of the law, with notice, that if you are offend⯑ed in like manner again, you will inform againſt him, and the nuſance will in all likelihood ceaſe.
43. All open lewdneſs, groſsly ſcandalous, is puniſh⯑able by fine, impriſonment, &c. upon indictment at common law. 1 Haw. 7.
A wife may be indicted together with her huſband, and condemned to the pillory with him, for keeping a bawdy-houſe. 1 Haw. 2.
[138]44. Common ſcolds may be indicted. 1 Haw. 198.
45. Every perſon who ſhall be drunk, and thereof convicted before one juſtice, on the oath of one wit⯑neſs, ſhall forfeit to the poor 5 s. for the firſt offence, or be ſet in the ſtocks for ſix hours; for the ſecond offence ſhall be bound in 10 l. with two ſureties, not to commit the ſame again: the offence to be proſecuted in ſix months. 4 J. c. 5. 21 J. c. 7.
46. Drovers inhumanly treating cattle in their way to or from market, and thus, or by negligence, occa⯑ſioning miſchief, ſhall be taken by a conſtable, on com⯑plaint to him, before a magiſtrate, who, on the oath of one perſon, ſhall fine him from 5 s. to 20 s. at his diſ⯑cretion, to be paid to the informer, and, in default of payment, he ſhall be committed for a month, and pub⯑licly whipped: proſecution in twenty-four days. 14 Geo. 3. c. 87.
47. Milk and mackrell are allowed to be cried about the ſtreets on Sundays, before nine in the morning and after four in the afternoon, but at no other time of the day, on pain of forfeiting the things ſo cried. Alſo, no other perſon ſhall cry, or expoſe to ſale, any fruit, herbs, wares, &c. on any part of the Lord's day, on pain of forfeiting them. 10 & 11 W. c. 24.
48. If any perſon ſhall curſe or ſwear, and be con⯑victed on the oath of one witneſs, before one juſtice, within eight days of the offence, he ſhall forfeit as fol⯑lows: Every day-labourer, common ſoldier, or ſeaman, 1 s. every other perſon under the degree of a gentle⯑man, 2 s. and every gentleman 5 s. for the firſt offence, to the poor, and all charges; double the ſums for the ſecond, after conviction, and treble for every offence after a ſecond conviction, or be committed to hard la⯑bour for ten days. Soldiers and ſeamen, inſtead of being committed, ſhall be ſet in the ſtocks one hour for a ſingle offence, and two hours for more offences than one. 19 Geo. 2. c. 21.
ROTATION OFFICES.
[139]THERE are ſeveral Rotation Offices in London, where two or more magiſtrates ſit daily, in the morning, from ten to three, to hear complaints, but where the fees of office muſt be paid. They are in the following ſtreets:
- For Weſtmiſter and the County of Middleſex:
- Bow-Street, Covent-Garden;
- Litchfield-Street;
- Clerkenwell;
- Hyde-Street, Bloomſbury;
- St. Martin's-Street, Leiceſter-fields.
- For the City.
- Guildhall;
- The Manſion-houſe.
- For Southwark.
- Union-Hall, Union-ſtreet, Borough.
- For the Tower Diſtrict, and below.
- Tower-Hill.
The expences of hearing at theſe offices is ſeldom above a few ſhillings.
STAMPS USED ON SUNDRY OCCASIONS.
1. Gloves.
WITH every pair of gloves or mittens ſold above the price of 4 d. and not exceeding 10 d. muſt be given a ſtamp of 1 d. for which the buyer is to pay. 25 Geo. 3. c. 55.
All above 10 d. and not exceeding 1 s. 4 d. a ſtamp of 2 d. Ibid.
Above 1 s. 4 d. a ſtamp of 4 d. Ibid.
[140]The penalty of ſelling without theſe ſtamps, 5 l. Ibid.
Tickets to be placed, as the commiſſioners ſhall di⯑rect, on the inſide of the right-hand glove of each pair. Uſing a ticket twice forfeits 20 l. Ibid.
Buyer or ſeller may inform againſt each other. Half the penalty, if ſued for in ſix months, to go to the in⯑former; if after ſix months, the whole to the king. Ibid.
Any neighbouring juſtice may determine the penal⯑ties, and mitigate them to half; and compel payment, or commit the offender for three months, if the penalty is not ſooner paid. Ibid.
2. Hats.
To every man's hat of 4 s. value, or under, the ſel⯑ler muſt affix a three-penny ſtamp. 24 Geo. 3. c. 6.
Above 4 s. and not exceeding 7 s. a ſix-penny ſtamp. Ibid.
Above 7 s. and not exceeding 12 s. a ſhilling ſtamp. Ibid.
Above 12 s. value, a two ſhilling ſtamp. Ibid.
Stamp-tickets to be ſtuck in the inſide of the crown of each hat; the penalty to buyer or ſeller is 10l. Ibid.
3. Apprentices.
Indentures (except pariſh-ones) muſt be on a 6 s. ſtamp, and the maſter or miſtreſs muſt pay to the Stamp-office, within one month, 6 d. in the pound for every apprentice-fee (paid in money or value) under 51 l. and 1 s. above 50 l. or the indentures are void, and the maſter forfeits 50 l. and treble the apprentice-fee. 8 Ann. c. 9.
The full ſum given muſt be ſet down in the inden⯑tures, or the penalty is double the amount of the pre⯑mium.
If double duty is paid within two years after the end of the apprenticeſhip, and before any information is lodged, the maſter ſhall be exempt from the penalties.
If apprentices behave ill, redreſs may be had by ap⯑plying [141] to a magiſtrate. 5 Eliz. c. 4. 20 Geo. 2. c. 19.
4. Inventories of Goods.
All inventories or catalogues of furniture, with re⯑ference to any agreement, muſt be written on a half crown ſtamp.
5. Notes and Bills of Exchange.
1. Bills of exchange, promiſſory-notes, and drafts, under the value of 10 l. muſt be written on a three-penny ſtamp, or they are not valid. 23 Geo. 3. c. 49.
For 10 l. and under 50l. on a ſix-penny ſtamp. Ibid.
Fifty, pounds, and upwards, on a ſhilling ſtamp. Ibid.
Bank-notes are excepted. Ibid.
2. Drafts on bankers, if not payable to bearer and on demand, and the perſon drawing ſuch draft does not reſide within ten miles of ſuch banker, muſt be on a three-penny ſtamp, if the ſum drawn for be under 10 l.; a ſixpenny ſtamp, if for 10 l. and under 50 l.; if 50 l. and upwards, on a ſhilling ſtamp. Ibid. 24 G. 3. c. 7.
But if your banker will pay it, as all will, and the perſon you pay it to will take it, you may date it at a place within the ten miles.
3. Bills of exchange, and notes under 40 s. value, are exempted from the ſtamp-duty. 24 Geo. 3. c. 7.
4. Perſons drawing bills or notes, that ought to be ſtamped on unſtamped paper, are liable to pay 5l. if proſecuted within twelve months. Ibid.
5. The perſon drawing any bill of exchange or draft, or giving any promiſſory-note, muſt pay the price of the ſtamp. Ibid.
6. Notes of hand or inland bills of exchange, under 5 l. muſt be ſigned by one witneſs, and they muſt be payable within 21 days of the date, and the chriſ⯑tian and ſirname of the perſon to whom they are made payable, with his place of abode, muſt be added in the notes, or ſuch notes are of no value, and the perſon [142] who iſſues them is liable to pay from 5 l. to 20 l. or, in default of payment, to ſuffer three months impriſon⯑ment. 17 Geo. 3. c. 30. This law, if not continued, will expire in 1787.
The following is a proper note of hand under 5 l.
Twenty-one days after date, I promiſe to pay to Mr. James Webb, of Devizes, or order, the ſum of four pounds fifteen ſhillings, value received.
The indorſer, on paying ſuch a note away, muſt write on the back, "Pay the contents to A. B. or his order," and ſign it, or be liable to the ſame penalties, Ibid.
6. Receipts.
1. Receipts for any ſum amounting to 40 s. and un⯑der 20 l. muſt be written on a two-penny ſtamp; for 20 l. and upwards on a four-penny ſtamp, or they are of no value; except bankers' receipts, or receipts on the back of any ſtamped note of hand or bill or ex⯑change, or worded as a letter, acknowledging the ar⯑rival of any remittance, or any receipt indorſed or con⯑tained on the body of a ſtamped deed; or any re⯑ceipt given for any dividend on ſtock, or for any pay or penſion paid by government. 23 Geo. 3. c. 49.
Receipts in which the ſum mentioned ſhall be in full or as a ſatisfaction of all demands, and all general ac⯑knowledgements of debts or demands being diſcharged ſhall be deemed and taken to be receipts for above the ſum of 20 l. and muſt be on a four-penny ſtamp. Ib [...]
2. The perſon requiring the receipt ſhall pay th [...] price of the ſtamp. Ibid.
3. Unſtamped receipts for a ſum under 40 s. may b [...] produced as evidence of payment, for 40 s. but for n [...] full diſcharge, even though the words "in full of al [...] demands," be inſerted in it. So may receipts unde [...] 20 l. on two-penny ſtamps, for the ſum expreſſed, bu [...] not as a receipt in full, unleſs written on a four-penny ſtamp. Ibid.
[143]4. The whole ſum for which any receipt ſhall be given, ſhall be, bona fide, inſerted in ſuch receipt; and every per⯑ſon who ſhall give, or accept any receipt or acquittance, in which a leſs ſum ſhall be expreſſed therein than the ſum actually received, with an intent to evade the du⯑ty, or ſhall ſeparate or divide the ſums into divers re⯑ceipts, in order to evade the ſtamp, or ſhall be guilty of, or concerned in, any fraudulent contrivance or de⯑vice whatever, with intent to evade the duty, ſhall forfeit 20 l. half to the king and half to the ſuer. Ib.
5. Any perſon who ſhall write or ſign, or cauſe to be written or ſigned, any receipt not ſtamped, where it ought to be ſtamped, ſhall forfeit 5 l. if convicted before any neighbouring juſtice. 24 Geo. 3. c. 17.
6. Receipts for legacies, or ſhares of perſonal eſtates, not exceeding 20 l. muſt be on a five ſhilling ſtamp; if exceeding 20 l. and under 100 l. on a ten ſhilling ſtamp; for 100 l. on a forty ſhilling ſtamp; and an additional 20 s. for every further hundred pounds. 20 Geo. 3. c. 28.
Wives, children, and grand-children, pay but half theſe legacy duties; nor do they pay any part of the 20s. for every additional or further hundred pounds. Ibid.
7. Agreements and Bonds.
1. Agreements (except where the matter of agreement ſhall not exceed 20 l. and alſo except thoſe for leaſe at rack-rent of meſſuages under five pounds, thoſe for hire of a labourer, artificer, manufacturer, or menial ſervant, and thoſe relating to the ſale of goods, &c.) muſt be on a ſix-ſhilling ſtamp. 23 Geo. 3. c. 58.
2. Bonds (except ſuch as are given for ſecurity of money) letter of attorney, leaſe, and releaſe, muſt be on a ſix-ſhilling ſtamp. Ibid.
Bonds given as a ſecurity for the payment of money, if not above 100 l. muſt be on a five ſhillings ſtamp; if above 100 l. and under 500l. on a ten-ſhillings ſtamp; if above 500l. on a fifteen-ſhillings ſtamp.
[144]TABLE, ſhewing the Intereſt of Money at 5 per Cent
12 Mon. | 3 Mon. | 1 Mon. | 1 Week. | 1 Day. | |
l. | l. s. | s. d. | s. d. | d. f. | d. f. |
1 | 0 1 | 0 3 | 0 1 | 0 1 | 0 0 |
2 | 0 2 | 0 6 | 0 2 | 0 2 | 0 0 |
3 | 0 3 | 0 9 | 0 3 | 0 3 | 0 0 |
4 | 0 4 | 1 0 | 0 4 | 1 0 | 0 0 |
5 | 0 5 | 1 3 | 0 5 | 1 1 | 0 0 |
6 | 0 6 | 1 6 | 0 6 | 1 2 | 0 0 |
7 | 0 7 | 1 9 | 0 7 | 1 3 | 0 1 |
8 | 0 8 | 2 0 | 0 8 | 2 0 | 0 1 |
9 | 0 9 | 2 3 | 0 9 | 2 1 | 0 1 |
10 | 0 10 | 2 6 | 0 10 | 2 2 | 0 1 |
20 | 1 0 | 5 0 | 1 8 | 5 0 | 0 3 |
30 | 1 10 | 7 6 | 2 6 | 7 2 | 1 0 |
40 | 2 0 | 10 0 | 3 4 | 10 0 | 1 2 |
50 | 2 10 | 12 6 | 4 2 | 12 2 | 1 3 |
Note. The intereſt for one day is ſtated ſo nearly as to make fractions unneceſſary:—for the intereſt of 100 l. at 3.3 and a half, 4, and 5 per cent. for any number o [...] days. See the next table page, 145.
[145]A TABLE ſhewing the Intereſt of 100 l. from 100 Days to one Day, at different Intereſts.
Days. | 3 per Cent. | 3 1-h. p. C. | 4 per Cent. | 5 per Cent. |
l. s. d. f. | l. s. d. f. | l. s. d. f. | l. s. d. f. | |
100 | 0 16 5 1 | 0 19 2 0 | 1 1 11 0 | 1 7 4 0 |
90 | 0 14 9 2 | 0 17 3 0 | 0 19 8 2 | 1 4 7 0 |
80 | 0 13 1 3 | 0 15 4 0 | 0 17 6 1 | 1 1 11 0 |
70 | 0 11 6 0 | 0 13 5 0 | 0 15 4 0 | 0 19 2 0 |
60 | 0 9 10 1 | 0 11 6 0 | 0 13 1 1 | 0 16 5 0 |
50 | 0 8 2 2 | 0 9 7 0 | 0 10 11 2 | 0 13 8 0 |
40 | 0 6 6 3 | 0 7 8 0 | 0 8 9 0 | 0 10 11 0 |
30 | 0 4 11 0 | 0 5 9 0 | 0 6 6 3 | 0 8 2 0 |
20 | 0 3 3 2 | 0 3 10 0 | 0 4 4 2 | 0 5 5 0 |
10 | 0 1 7 3 | 0 1 11 0 | 0 2 2 1 | 0 2 8 0 |
9 | 0 1 5 3 | 0 1 8 2 | 0 1 11 2 | 0 2 5 0 |
8 | 0 1 3 3 | 0 1 6 1 | 0 1 9 0 | 0 2 2 0 |
7 | 0 1 1 3 | 0 1 4 0 | 0 1 6 1 | 0 1 11 0 |
6 | 0 0 11 3 | 0 1 1 3 | 0 1 3 3 | 0 1 7 0 |
5 | 0 0 9 3 | 0 0 11 2 | 0 1 1 0 | 0 1 4 0 |
4 | 0 0 7 3 | 0 0 9 0 | 0 0 10 2 | 0 1 1 0 |
3 | 0 0 5 3 | 0 0 6 3 | 0 0 7 3 | 0 0 9 0 |
2 | 0 0 3 3 | 0 0 4 2 | 0 0 5 1 | 0 0 6 0 |
1 | 0 0 1 3 | 0 0 2 1 | 0 0 2 2 | 0 0 3 1 |
Months | ||||
3 | 0 15 0 0 | 0 17 6 0 | 1 0 0 0 | 1 5 0 0 |
6 | 1 10 0 0 | 1 15 0 0 | 2 0 0 0 | 2 10 0 0 |
9 | 2 5 0 0 | 2 12 6 0 | 3 0 0 0 | 3 15 0 0 |
12 | 3 0 0 0 | 3 10 0 0 | 4 0 0 0 | 5 0 0 0 |
The intereſt of 4 and a half may be known by ad⯑ding that of 3 per cent. and half 3 per cent. together.
Sundry CAUTIONS againſt ROBBERIES, FRAUDS, IMPOSITIONS and INSULTS.
[146]1. PERSONS travelling to or from London ſhould be careful not to take too much money with them. Bank poſt-bills, made payable to the holder or order, is the ſafeſt conveyance; for theſe are of no va⯑lue till indorſed by the perſon they are made payable to; and if loſt, as the bank does not pay them till ſeven days after ſight, there is time to give notice of the loſs.
2. Trunks, &c. ſhould not be faſtened behind car⯑riages, unleſs with chains, or unleſs ſervants ride be⯑hind, and will attend to them till they are ten or twelve miles from the metropolis; for there are thieves fre⯑quently waiting at the outſkirts of the town, particular⯑ly in the evening, to cut ſuch luggage from behind.
3. If trunks, boxes, or packages are to be ſent by coaches or waggons into the country, it is prudent to let ſome perſon be preſent at the packing up, as a wit⯑neſs of the contents, and to take a liſt of what the trunk, &c. contains. This perſon ſhould then take it to the warehouſe of the coach or waggon himſelf, and deliver it to the book-keeper, ſee it booked, and pay for the booking, which is 2 d. In this caſe, if it be loſt, you will be able to prove the contents, and reco⯑ver the value from the owner of the coach or waggon. See STAGE-COACHES, 2.
4. But let your ſervant be very careful not to leave the trunk, &c. with any perſon ſtanding at the door of the inn, or in the inn-yard; but to enquire for the book-keeper, and not part with his load till he can de⯑liver it into the cuſtody of the book-keeper, and ſee it booked. On this account the porter ſhould be able to read writing, to know what he is about. Rogues are very often about inn-yards, to caſe ſuch meſſengers of their loads.
5. Such perſons as you ſend with parcels from one part of the town to another, ſhould be cautioned not to be led into a public houſe by the way, to drink with any ſuppoſed countryman, nor to ſuffer any good-na⯑tured [147] perſon in the ſtreet, to give them a hand and help them on the way with their bundle or load; for there are many of theſe obliging people in London ſtreets, that when they get poſſeſſion of the bundle, &c. will run away with it.
6. If you hire a baſket-woman at market, or a porter to carry any thing for you home, which you may have bought, tell ſuch perſon where they are to carry it, and make them walk before you all the way. Your eye will then be upon them, and if they ſlip away from you it will he your own fault. If it be inconvenient to attend them, employ no ſuch perſon but whom you know, or is known to the perſon with whom you deal. But if you buy of a ſhop-keeper, they will always ſend the goods home.
7. Never ſtop in a crowd in the ſtreets, to ſee what occaſions it: if you do, it is two to one but you either loſe your watch or your pocket-handkerchief. There are fellows who create diſturbances for this purpoſe.
8. Never carry any bank-notes or bills about you, without firſt entering, in ſome book at home, the num⯑ber and date, and particulars of ſuch notes, that in caſe you loſe them, or your pocket is picked of your book, you ſtand ſome chance of recovering them, or ſtop the payment.
9. Alſo enter, in ſome book at home, the number, maker's name, &c. and deſcription of your watch, and whatever elſe of value you carry about you, that you may know how to deſcribe it, if loſt.
10. Never part with ſuch articles out of your hands, to perſons you are unacquainted with.
11. If you would walk ſafe, you would always avoid crowds, ſtopping to look at the pictures in a print-ſhop, &c. See p. 115, No. 5, 14.
12. If by chance you ſhould drop any thing of va⯑lue in the ſtreet, whilſt you are looking for it, you will have many aſk you what you have loſt, and offer to aſſiſt you in the ſearch. Tell them it is nothing of any conſequence: if you acquaint them, you are likely never to find it, as they will probably find it for you and keep it.
[148]13. Give directions to your ſervants, on no condi⯑tion to deliver any thing from your houſe to a ſtranger, under a pretence of your having ſent for it; for in⯑ſtance, a great coat or any other thing: there are al⯑ways villains ready to take advantage of their igno⯑rance.
14. For the ſame reaſon, never let them take in a parcel for you, under an idea that it came by ſuch a carriage, if they are to pay any thing for it; for ſuch packages have been ſound to contain nothing but brick⯑bats, &c. In ſhort, never let them pay any thing without your knowledge or order ſo to do, to any one. Perſons bringing things will often take the money be⯑fore hand, and aſk for it again at the houſe they carry it to.
15. Before you get into a hackney-coach or chair, always take the number, as, if you leave any thing therein, you may then, by ſummoning the coachman, or chairman, to the Hackney-coach office, probably re⯑cover it. They may ſay they never ſaw it, and poſ⯑ſibly their next fare might find it and take it: poſſibly ſo. This is a lie, for they always look, when they ſet down a fare, before they ſhut the door. To be truly ſafe in this matter, every one ſhould look round the coach or chair before they quit it.
16. Thieves have lately made a practice of knock⯑ing at doors in an evening, under a pretence of deli⯑vering a letter, and, when the door is open, if in a retired place, have ruſhed in, in numbers, and robbed the family. To avoid this, a chain ſhould be always put acroſs the door within, (ſo as to admit the door to open a little way) before duſk, and the door not open⯑ed to a ſtranger, but the letter, if any, taken in.
17. If you do not ſit in your front-parlour in an evening, take care the windows are faſtened down, for men have been known to enter a houſe this way, ſecrete themſelves till the family is aſleep, and then rob the houſe; or they have robbed that room only, while the family have been backwards, and decamped the ſame way.
18. If the houſe next door to you is empty, be cau⯑ [...]ous and faſten your back-doors, and inſide-ſhutters of [149] the upper windows; for villains will now and then ſe⯑crete themſelves in ſuch empty houſes, and, in the night, get into the adjoining houſe, by the back-doors or windows, or from the leads. Your garret-windows therefore ſhould always be ſecured, and trap-doors opening to the leads well bolted.
19. Before you come out of any play-houſe, or place of public entertainment, take care to ſecure your watch and your pockets, for pick-pockets are always about at ſuch places.
20. Never ſuffer any beggars to be begging at your door, particularly if you live in any retired place, for, under a pretence of begging, if they ſee no one in the way, they will be ſure to rob you of ſomething.
21. Do not ſuffer yourſelf to be impoſed on by beg⯑gars in the ſtreets, for they have all their arts, and will affect diſtreſs to excite your humanity; if you have any thing to give, it would be beſt beſtowed to poor diſ⯑treſſed families; it is a miſtaken charity to give to beg⯑gars in the ſtreets, whom the laws have provided for.
22. Auctions in great thorough-fares, in the day-time, where men ſtand at the door and invite paſſen⯑gers, are great impoſitions. Slight ill-made goods are made up for ſuch auctions, and if you buy, it is ten to one but you are cheated, and give twice the value of the article purchaſed. Never buy at an auction, but where the auctioneer is known to be a reputable man. At auctions of linen-drapery, they will put, perhaps, ſufficient painted muſlin for a gown, and a piece of dowlas, worth 7 d. a yard, and ſell the two at one price per yard; from an opinion that there may not be above thirty yards of dowlas, you bid accordingly, but, when meaſured, there ſhall be ſixty, of courſe you are deceived and cheated.
23. For the ſame reaſon, never buy at a pawn-brokers ſuch articles as they diſplay at their windows; for a notion of buying things cheap, has drawn many to buy at theſe places; and this has led the pawn-bro⯑kers to get things made up purpoſely for ſale, in a ſlight manner. Half the things at their windows are new, and ſold as ſecond-hand.
[150]24. Indeed, in purchaſing, it will be always ſound beſt to purchaſe of, and employ people of credit, though you pay rather a greater price, for they have a cha⯑racter at ſtake, and will uſe you well, in hopes of hav⯑ing your cuſtom in future; but if you buy in general of thoſe who underſell the fair trader, and advertiſe things at a very low price, depend upon it, unleſs you are a very good judge of the articles you buy, and take eſpecial care, you will be taken in.
25. People in diſtreſs are always wanting to borrow money, and hold out advantageous terms in advertiſe⯑ments to lenders. Be ever on your guard in this mat⯑ter, and alſo againſt thoſe who publicly, by adver⯑tiſement, offer to raiſe money on ſecurities. They will get the ſecurities into their hands, ſuch as bonds, notes, &c. and will frequently ſhuffle you out of them. To theſe the public have given the denomination of ſwindlers. If you are in trade, be cautious how you are taken in by cuſtomers you are a ſtranger to. There are a number of people in town, who live by getting goods on credit, and taking in the incautious ſhop-keeper.
26. Be very circumſpect and cautious of having any thing to do with notes of hand or accepted drafts, drawn by people you are unacquainted with, for it is by ſuch modes that the unwary are duped and robbed of their property.
27. If you keep an open ſhop, never ſuffer a ſtran⯑ger to leave a parcel in your ſhop, (under a pretence of having further to go, and wiſhing it to be taken care of till his return) unleſs you know the contents of the parcel. Men have been known to leave contraband goods, in this manner, and go and inform againſt the ſhop-keeper, in order to get the penalty. In like manner, a ſack of unroaſted coffee has been left at a grocer's, and he has been exchequered in conſequence of it.
28. Never ſtep in between perſons quarrelling in the ſtreet, unleſs you chuſe to have your pocket picked. Theſe are often ſham-quarrels, to collect people toge⯑ther for the opportunity of plundering them.
[151]29. Any one may arreſt a felon, even without a warrant.
30. Where perſons, by fraud in gaming, win above 10 l. they ſhall forfeit five times the value, and ſuffer ſuch corporal puniſhment as in caſes of wilful perjury. 9 Ann. c. 14.
31. Shop-keepers ſhould be on their guard againſt perſons coming in and looking over a great quantity of goods, without purchaſing. Sharpers often, making a genteel appearance, will take an opportunity, on theſe occaſions, when the ſhop-keeper's back is turned, to pilſer and purloin.
32. In return, buyers ſhould always be careful that they are not impoſed on by ſhop-keepers, for they will often ſurvey you from head to foot, and aſk a price ac⯑cording to their cuſtomer. They will often aſk 10 s. for an article at a coach-ſide, which they will ſell for, to a perſon on foot, for half the money.
33. Shop-keepers who have the reputation of ſel⯑ling cheap, will evidently do ſo, in ſome ſmall articles, the price of which every buyer is acquainted with; but they take care to bring up the lee-way, as the ſea⯑man's phraſe is, and make you pay handſomely in other things. In ſhort, every tradeſman muſt live, and there are ſuch numbers of the ſame profeſſion in Lon⯑don, that they are obliged to make uſe of a variety of artifices to get cuſtom; and the buyer, with all his cle⯑verneſs and care, ſhall not often be able to avoid being taken in.
34. It often happens, that if a parcel is ſent in from the country, by a waggon, and ordered to be left till called for, and you ſend for it, that they will tell you no ſuch thing is brought, and then the porter of the inn will bring it, in order to get a ſhilling or two: in this caſe give him nothing, but before you give him to un⯑derſtand ſo, take poſſeſſion of it, otherwiſe he will take it back again: ſhould this fellow, by way of re⯑venge, if any game is ſent you, and not ordered to be delivered, not bring it, and it ſpoils, and the maſter of the waggon does not diſcharge him, ſummon the maſ⯑ter to the Court of Conſcience, for the value of the thing ſpoilt, and you will be never ſerved ſo again. [152] Porters of inns are in general very exorbitant in their demands, and very inſolent. If they aſk too much for bringing a thing, never pay it, but tell them they may take it back again, and you will ſend for it.
35. Perſons would do well to be careful of their hats in public companies; for want of ſuch care, many a perſon has brought home an old hat for a new one. There are well-looking men who will take an oppor⯑tunity to exchange with you. I knew a gentleman who always preſerved his hat, by paſting a paper [...]n the inſide the crown, on which he wrote his name, and the words Stolen from over it. Canes and great coats are at times in ſimilar danger.
See TAYLORS, page 41, and WALKING LONDON STREETS, page 115 *.
There is a Society of Tradeſmen, &c. inſtituted in 1767, for the protection of their property againſt the inroads of felons, forgers, cheats, &c. and to ſave the charges of proſecutions, rewards and advertiſements, which are paid out of the public ſtock, raiſed annually at five ſhillings each member; which ſubſcription, tho' ſmall, has not only been found ſufficient for the pur⯑poſes intended, but has enabled the Society to veſt a ſum in the funds, beſides leaving a conſiderable balance in the treaſurer's hands.
The intent of this Society, is to prevent, as far as poſſible, the loſſes which tradeſmen and others frequent⯑ly ſuffer from the depredations of thoſe miſcreants, who get their infamous livelihoods by robbing, plundering, and defrauding the honeſt and induſtrious part of man⯑kind; [153] and to purſue the moſt vigorous and effectual methods to bring ſuch offenders to juſtice; as they fre⯑quently eſcape the puniſhment their crimes deſerve, through the inability, timidity, avarice, or indolence of thoſe they injure, which encourages them to con⯑tinue their mal-practices; although ſuch perſons ought in duty to themſelves and the public in general, to uſe their utmoſt endeavours to put a ſtop to the career of ſuch villains, as otherwiſe they are, in ſome meaſure, by their omiſſion, the cauſe of the next robbery or fraud they commit.
The ſecretary, who is a Mr. J. Leigh, of Shepherd's-court, Upper Brook-ſtreet, Groſvenor-ſquare, is im⯑powered to receive ſubſcriptions.
Where there are two or more partners in trade, if five ſhillings only be ſubſcribed, they are intitled to the benefit of this Society, when goods, the joint property of the partners, are ſtolen or obtained from them by fraud; but not in caſes of robbery on the highway, or other robberies of their ſeparate private property, un⯑leſs each partner ſubſcribes five ſhillings.
When any of the Society is robbed or defrauded, he is immediately to apply to one of the committee whoſe names are given in a printed liſt, and who will take ſuch ſteps to purſue, advertiſe, or otherwiſe, as ſhall be thought proper on the occaſion.
COURTS OF CONSCIENCE
ARE eſtabliſhed in different parts of the town, for the recovery of debts under 40 s.
1. There is one in Vine-ſtreet, Piccadilly, for the pariſhes of St. James's, St. Anne's, and St. George's, Hanover-ſquare. Day of hearing Thurſday, after⯑noon.
2. There is another in Caſtle-ſtreet, Leiceſter-fields, for the pariſhes of St. Paul's Covent-garden, St. Mary Le Strand, St. Clement's, St. Martin's, St. Margaret's, St. John's Weſtminſter, and the Duchy of Lancaſter. Day of hearing, Thurſday, in the afternoon.
[154]The above offices are open every day, from nine to one, to iſſue ſummonſes. See No. 13, below.
3. One in Fullwood's-rents, Holborn, for the hun⯑dred of Oſſulton, in the county of Middleſex, within ten miles of London, St. Giles's in the Fields, St. An⯑drew's Holborn, Marybone, Pancras, St. John's Clerk⯑enwell, and all thoſe out of the city, which the courts of Vine-ſtreet and Caſtle-ſtreet do not comprehend. The office open from nine to three, to iſſue ſummon⯑ſes. See No. 14, below.
4. One at Guildhall, for the city of London and its liberties. Days of hearing are Wedneſdays and Satur⯑days, at eleven in the morning.
5. One at St. Margaret's-hill, in the Borough, for Southwark. See No. 10, below.
6. One in Wellcloſe-ſquare, for the Tower-hamlet, the pariſh of White-chapel, and places lying that way. The proceedings and coſts much the ſame as at other courts.
7. No perſons ſhall act as a commiſſioner of the Courts of Conſcience in London, Weſtminſter, South⯑wark, or the county of Middleſex, unleſs they are houſeholders within the diſtrict, city or liberty they act for; and they ſhall alſo be poſſeſſed of a real eſtate of 20 l. a year, or a perſonal one of the value of 500l on pain of forfeiting 20 l. Action to be brought with⯑in ſix months. 25 Geo. 3. c. 45.
8. Perſons committed for debt, by theſe courts, ſhal not be impriſoned longer than twenty days, for a deb not exceeding 20 s. nor more than forty days for a deb not exceeding 40 s. and, at the expiration of the time ſhall be diſcharged without fee or reward. Ibid.
9. In the city of London, the expence of taking out a ſummons is 8 d. and the hearing, which muſt take place the next day of ſitting, is attended only with the expence of 4 d.
10. At St. Margaret's-hill, the days of hearing are Tueſdays and Fridays, in the afternoon, and the expence 4 d. The ſummons, if a common one, is 6 d. if [...] ſpecial one, 10 d. The difference between a com⯑mon and a ſpecial ſummons is this: the party need no [...] attend the firſt day of hearing, after the ſervice o [...] [155] a common ſummons, but he muſt of a ſpecial one. An execution is 2 s. and 8 d. is paid on receiving the debt.
11. When the party has been ſerved with an order, if he does not attend, the court adjudges the debt due to the plaintiff, and an execution is taken out, which ſeizes either the goods or the perſon of the debtor, and unleſs the money is then paid, and the coſts, he is car⯑ried to priſon.
12. The ſummonſes for the Borough diſtrict are ta⯑ken out at No. 2, Maze-pond, behind Guy's hoſpital.
13. At the courts in Vine-ſtreet, and Caſtle-ſtreet, the price of a ſummons is 8 d. of an order 2 s. 2 d. of a hearing, after the delivery of a ſummons, 2 s. 2 d. of a hearing after the ſerving of an order, 1 s. 3 d. the coſt of an execution is 2 s. 6 d. and the plaintiff's re⯑ceiving his money 8 d. All the coſts, except the laſt 8 d. the defendant is obliged to re-pay.
14. The day of hearing at the court at Fullwood's Rents is Thurſday; the Judge of this court is the County Clerk, who acts by deputy. The coſt of a ſummons is 1 s. 4 d. of an order 2 s. of a hearing 2 s. of an execution 3 s. 4 d. Theſe the defendants pay in the end, and the plaintiff can receive his money with⯑out a fee.
15. The determinations of the Courts of Conſcience are final, but they generally indulge the debtor with time to pay the money, if he requeſts it. They will ſuffer him to pay it at a ſhilling or ſix-pence a week; this money muſt be regularly paid into the court, or an attachment againſt the party iſſues; and when the time elapſes in which the whole debt is paid, the plaintiff applies to the court for his money, and receives it on paying a few pence.
16. The plaintiffs and defendants in theſe courts are in general people ſo very low, that a gentleman would ſooner loſe 40 s. than attend them. If he is a defend⯑ant, it is beſt to get ſome perſon to attend for him; if plaintiff, and can prove his demand, he may even then get ſome perſon to apply for him; but if he cannot prove his debt otherwiſe than by his own oath, he ſhould attend himſelf, for if he has no other proof, the plaintiff's oath is always ſufficient. Of courſe, it is [156] better in theſe courts to be plaintiff than defendant, for if the plaintiff ſwears to his debt, no oath of the defen⯑dant will avail him.
17. In order to recover in theſe courts, the debt muſt be under 40 s. (at leaſt the claim muſt), and both parties muſt reſide in London. The ſummons muſt be taken out in that court in whoſe diſtrict the defendant lives.
18. No oath is required on taking out the ſummons, nor is it neceſſary to ſpell the defendant's name right, or know his chriſtian name; all that is required is to know where he is to be found, that the ſummons may be left at his place of reſidence; if the party will not attend by a ſummons, it is neceſſary to get the chriſtian name of the defendant, in order to obtain an order, and if he is a houſekeeper this is readily got at, by applying to the veſtry-clerk of the pariſh where he lives, and examining the poors-rate book.
THE MARSHALSEA COURT.
WITHIN twelve miles of London, the power of the Marſhalſea court in the Borough extends. Here by applying to any of the marſhalſea-court at⯑tornies, who live in Clifford's-inn Fleet-ſtreet, you may recover any ſum above 40 s. and not exceeding 4 l. very ſpeedily. A writ taken out in this court coſts 7s. 6d. with which the defendant is ſerved, and as the return day is every Friday, the cauſe cannot be put off. It will come to a hearing in the courſe of a week or two, and the hearing in this court ſeldom exceeds a few pounds. If your debt is 40 l. you may proſecute in this court, by ſuing for four pounds and upwards, and the perſon ſued muſt pay your whole demand.— The coſts in this court are paid always in advance, as the proceſs goes on.
THE VERGE OF THE COURT
[157]IS that ground about White-hall and St. James's, which belongs to the crown, and which is privi⯑leged from arreſts. This privileged place includes Charing-croſs, on the north ſide of the way, from the' corner of St. Martin's-lane to Hedge-lane, and both the King's meuſes. On the ſouth ſide, from the ſtreet leading into Spring-gardens, to the public houſe beyond the Treaſury, and all Spring-gardens; on the oppoſite ſide of the way, from Northumberland-houſe to the end of Privy-garden in Parliament-ſtreet, taking in all Scot⯑land-yard, Whitehall, and Privy-garden. It further includes all the parks, the ſtable-yard St. James's, Cleveland-court, and all Hyde-park, except the mere croſſing from the Green-park to Hyde-park. Moſt houſes in the Verge let lodgings, and I knew an artful fellow once that eluded all his creditors, by reſiding there; if he wanted to go out of it, he took water at Whitehall-ſtairs, which place is privileged, and as no writ can be ſerved on the water, without a water-bailiff's warrant, which cannot be immediately procu⯑red, he would land ſafely in the city, or on the Surry ſide: for a Middleſex writ loſes its force in the city, and in Surry, unleſs backed by a city or Surry magiſ⯑trate, which requires time and preparation to get done; ſo that, if he landed in Surry, he might take his horſe and ride to the land's-end, or he would occaſionally walk through the parks, and order his horſe to wait for him on the oppoſite ſide. By this means, he con⯑ſtantly eluded the ſheriff's officers, who could not be in every place, or eternally watching him.
1. To prevent this, in ſome meaſure, the Board of Green Cloth, who has the controul of the verge, will, on application to them, at St. James's-palace, ſummon the debtor to meet the plaintiff, before them; and the gentlemen there preſiding will examine into the nature of the complaint, enquire of the perſon then ſummoned what proſpect he has of paying the debt; and if his propoſals of diſcharging it by inſtalments, [158] or in a limited period, be approved, they will ſuffer him to continue in the Verge, but if they find him diſ⯑poſed to act fraudulently, they will tell him that the Verge ſhall not ſhelter him; and if he does not imme⯑diately quit it, they will order him to be arreſted by their own officer; but, let the caſe be as it will, they always give him notice to quit the place, and give him a reaſonable time to do it in; but if he can make in⯑tereſt with any of the gentlemen of the Board, he meets with favour there, as a man does in all ſituations of life.
2. A ſheriff's-officer arreſting a man in the Verge, will be puniſhed by an application to the Board of Green Cloth, and the perſon arreſted will be diſchar⯑ged. The Board, or thoſe who diſcharge the office of that Board, ſit two or three times a week. Mr. Bray, attorney, Great Ruſſel-ſtreet, Bloomſbury, is clerk of the Verge.
3. The Tower is alſo a privileged place.
HOTELS.
THESE are taverns or inns, under a new name, ſo called from the hotels in Paris, where you may be rather better accommodated than at the inns in and about London, but at a much greater expence. The inns, and many coffee-houſes (for all the coffee-houſes are now lodging-houſes and taverns) will let you a lodging at one ſhilling or eighteen-pence a night, where⯑as theſe hotels charge 2 s. 6 d. or 5 s. a night, accord⯑ing to the goodneſs of the apartment; and 5 s. a day for the uſe of a parlour or dining-room. Two ſhillings a day for fire, 1 s. a-head for breakfaſt, and for your dinner according to what you order, as dear as at the moſt expenſive tavern. Here indeed a gentleman may take his family for a few days, till he can procure a lodging, which he cannot do at a coffee-houſe, nor ſo well at an inn, for want of proper accommodations. And the ſervants of all theſe houſes are very extrava⯑gant [159] in their expectations, which you muſt accordingly gratify, if you wiſh to be well attended.—Hair-dreſſers at theſe hotels charge 1 s. each time of dreſſing, out of which the maſter of the hotel has a profit; whereas, at inns and coffee-houſes they will dreſs for 6 d.
Foreigners and ſtrangers ſhould be aware how they employ taylors, or other tradeſmen, recommended by maſters of hotels, for they have a feeling in every thing. They expect the perſons they recommend to give them poundage, that is, ſo much in every pound they take; of courſe the tradeſman charges his cuſto⯑mer accordingly.
AMUSEMENTS, and PLACES worth a Stranger's No⯑tice, in LONDON.
1. THE Muſeum, Great Ruſſel-ſtreet, Bloomſbury, a repoſitory of curioſities of every kind; no⯑thing is here paid in order to obtain admiſſion. All that is neceſſary is, to apply at the office belonging to the houſe, (a few days before-hand) for tickets, giving in the names of the company, and their rank in life, and you will obtain an admiſſion-ticket, a day or two after, to ſee the place, at a certain hour and day, na⯑med in that ticket.
The Tower, and herein the armory, artillery, the crown and regalia, the King's menagerie for wild beaſts, &c. and the grotto work. The expence for one perſon, for the whole, is 3 s. 10 d. if in company 2 s. 10 d. each.
The monument, erected in memory of the fire of London, 1666, on Fiſh-ſtreet hill, that overlooks Lon⯑don.
St. Paul's Church. This may be ſeen gratis, at prayer time, viz. eleven in the morning, and three in the afternoon; but thoſe who deſire to ſee other parts, and go up to the top, muſt pay for ſo doing, 2 d. each part; in the whole, 1 s. 2 d. each perſon.
[160]Weſtminſter-abbey. Always open. But the wax-work, exhibiting the figures reſembling life, of Queen Elizabeth, the Earl of Chatham, and other great per⯑ſonages; as alſo the tombs of the kings, muſt be paid for, 6 d. each. The man who ſhews them will aſk for a few halfpence for himſelf, but this is optional.
The church of St. Stephen, Walbrook, near the Manſion-houſe; well worth viewing.
The Royal Exchange, Cornhill. This is crouded with merchants, from one to four every day, except Sundays, Mondays, and Saturdays.
The Bank of England, Cornhill. Open every day except holidays.
The Manſion-houſe, Cornhill; the reſidence of the Lord Mayor.
Guildhall, King-ſtreet, Cheapſide, where the buſi⯑neſs of the city is done.
The Eaſt-India Houſe, Leadenhall-ſtreet. This is beſt ſeen when a meeting of the proprietors is called by advertiſements, to determine on any Eaſt-India buſi⯑neſs.
The Cuſtom-houſe, Thames-ſtreet, and the long room there; open every day, and crowded all the morning, except on holidays.
The Exciſe-office, in Broad-ſtreet, near the Royal Exchange.
The Navy-office, in Crutched-friars.
Somerſet-place, Strand.
Weſtminſter-hall, where are held the courts of juſ⯑tice, in term time.
The Three Bridges, London, Black friars, and Weſt⯑minſter, and the ſhipping below London bridge.
The Horſe-guards, in the Park. The beſt time to view this is in fine weather, between ten and twelve in the morning, when guard is mounted, and the muſic is playing.
The Parliament-houſe, Weſtminſter.
The Hoſpitals, particularly St. Bartholomew's, New⯑gate-ſtreet; Guy's, in the Borough; and the Found⯑ling, in Lamb's Conduit-ſtreet.
The Squares, particularly Groſvenor-ſquare, and Lincoln's-inn fields.
[161]The Inns of Court, the reſidence of the Lawyers, particularly the Temple, in Fleet-ſtreet, Lincoln's-inn, and Gray's-inn, in Holborn.
The Queen's Palace, in St. James's-Park, and the Paintings there, called the Cartoons.
St. James's-palace, &c. and the chapel-royal there, on Sundays, at one o'clock; where, in the winter ſea⯑ſon, the King and the Royal Family attend, and may be ſeen. The court at St. James's, in winter and ſpring, is open at three o'clock, Sundays and Thurſ⯑days, where any well-dreſſed perſon is admitted; but the beſt time to go there is on the Queen's birth-day, January 18, or the King's birth-day, June 4.
Sir Aſhton Lever's Muſeum, Leiceſter-ſquare (a collection of animals, ſtuffed, &c.) Admittance, 2 s. 6 d. This is going to be removed.
ENTERTAINMENTS and EXHIBITIONS in Town.
2. Winter Seaſon.
The two Theatres, Drury-lane and Covent-garden are open for dramatic pieces, every evening, from the [...] end of September to near the end of June. Admit⯑tance 5 s. 3 s. 2 s. and 1 s. The Royal Family may be often ſeen here.
On Wedneſdays and Fridays, in Lent, at theſe theatres, are generally concerts of ſacred muſic, called Oratorios. Admittance 10 s. 6 d. 5 s. and 3 s. 6 d.— A renter's ſhare of either houſe, for twenty-one years, can often be purchaſed for about 300 l. which will ad⯑mit the buyer at all times, before the curtain, any where, and entitle him to 2 s. on each night's perform⯑ance, which amounts to about 18 l. a year.
The Opera-houſe, in the Hay-market, for Italian operas, is open from October to June, twice a week, Tueſdays and Saturdays. Sixty performances; the ſubſcription-price for one perſon, for the ſixty nights, twenty guineas, or half-a-guinea a night, in the pit or boxes. Admittance into the galleries, each perſon, 5 s. and 3 s. 6 d. A renter's-ſhare can be purchaſed often here, which, if for twenty-one years, may be bought for about 250 l. and will entitle the purchaſer [162] to 20 l. a year, and free admiſſion to any part of the houſe, at all times; rehearſals, operas, maſquerades, &c. Sometimes the admiſſion-ticket is to be bought, without the annuity, for about eighty guineas.
At this Opera-houſe are ſeveral maſquerades, in the winter. Admittance generally one guinea, refreſh⯑ments included.
The Pantheon, Oxford-road, a ſuperb room, is alſo open at this time, for concerts. Admittance 5 s. tea and coffee included; and occaſionally for maſqued balls. Admittance to theſe laſt as at the Opera-houſe.
At the end of the month of May, there are three or four grand concerts of ſacred muſic, from the compo⯑ſitions of Handel, in Weſtminſter-abbey, where all the eminent performers in the kingdom play and ſing, to the number of 700. This is under the patronage of the King and Queen, who are preſent, and moſt of the nobility. Admittance one guinea for each perfor⯑mance; the money given to charities. On the rehear⯑ſal-days, the admittance is but half-a-guinea; and every thing is the ſame as on the other days, except that the Royal Family are not preſent, the company not ſo well dreſſed, and not ſo numerous.
At Gallini's Rooms, in Hanover-ſquare, and at Wil⯑lis's Rooms, in King-ſtreet, St. James's, there are oc⯑caſional concerts and balls, where the firſt company is generally preſent. The entertainments here are chiefly by ſubſcription, for a number of nights; but a ſingle ticket for one night may often be procured of Mr. Hookham, bookſeller in Bond-ſtreet.
There is alſo a concert of ancient muſic, in Totten⯑ham-ſtreet, where the King and Royal Family attend. Subſcription for ſix nights, three guineas each.
At Freemaſon's-hall, in Great Queen-ſtreet, Lin⯑coln's-inn fields, which is a ſuperb room, there is in the winter months, from November to May, a concert of vocal and inſtrumental muſic, chiefly ſacred, with choral performers, every other Thurſday evening.— Subſcription four guineas for the winter, which ad⯑mits a gentleman and two ladies. Subſcribers muſt be ballotted for; and, as the ſubſcribers amount to 200, [163] which number crouds the room, perſons muſt wait a va⯑cancy for admiſſion.
In Eaſter week, Ranelagh-houſe always opens; a magnificent room, well frequented by the beſt compa⯑ny in an evening. Admittance 2 s. 6 d. each, coffee and tea included. This place is two miles from town.
At this time alſo opens a theatre for tumbling, rope-dancing, &c. at Sadler's-wells, Iſlington, and conti⯑nues all the ſummer. Admittance 3 s. 6 d. 2 s. and 1 s. Each perſon has allowed him for this money, a pint of wine or punch.
Alſo Aſtley's Amphitheatre, Weſtminſter-bridge, for horſemanſhip, tumbling, &c. &c. Admittance from 2 s. 6 d. to 6 d.
The Circus, St. George's-fields, for ſimilar amuſe⯑ments. Admittance ditto.
Jones's Amphitheatre, Union-ſtreet, White-chapel. Ditto, ditto.
Several curious exhibitions at Exeter Exchange, Strand.
In May, Vauxhall is reſorted to; a public garden, illuminated in the evening, with a concert of vocal and inſtrumental muſic: open all ſummer. Admittance 1 s. each. All kinds of refreſhments are here ſold; and the company ſeldom leave the place in fine weather, till two in the morning. This is two miles from town, but the road guarded.
In May and June, is an exhibition at the Royal Academy, in Somerſet-place, in the Strand, of the works of our moſt eminent painters and ſculptors.— Admittance 1 s.
At this ſeaſon, alſo, are one or two perſons who give lectures on experimental philoſophy, three times a week, at noon. The admittance generally one guinea for twelve lectures, or 2 s. 6 d. for one.
Whilſt the parliament is ſitting, the debates at the Houſe of Commons are worth attending to, from three to nine in the afternoon: 2 s. 6 d. will here gain ad⯑miſſion into the gallery.
The Houſe of Lords is always open to well-dreſſed people, at a time when any trial is before them; and at other times by favour of a member.
[164]There are alſo, in winter, debating ſocieties; at Coachmaker's-hall, Foſter-lane, Thurſday evening; at the Mitre-tavern, Fleet-ſtreet, ditto; and at the Weſtminſter-forum, Spring Garden; where certain queſ⯑tions, political, civil and moral, are diſcuſſed, and every one may give his opinion. Admittance 6 d. of courſe theſe places are crowded with low people; but what you hear is often entertaining.
Monſieur Texier's readings. This man is a French⯑man, and reads a French comedy with great humour: his houſe is much frequented by people of faſhion.— Liſle-ſtreet, Leiceſter-ſquare, at eight in the evening. Admittance 10 s. 6 d.
3. In Summer, and fine Weather,
The Theatre in the Hay-market is open, three times a week, for dramatic pieces. Admittance 5 s. 3 s. 2 s. and 1 s. Here renter's ſhares may now and then be purchaſed.
St. James's Park is crowded in week days, in May and June, between one and three, with people of faſhion, walking there for the air. And on Sundays, about the ſame hour, and in the evenings, all the ſum⯑mer, the walks are covered with the trading part of the people.
Kenſington Gardens, two miles from town, are much crowded in May and June, from twelve to three, with perſons of faſhion, &c. as is
Hyde Park in April and May, where perſons of diſ⯑tinction aſſemble on horſe-back and in carriages, from twelve to three.
There are a number of tea-gardens in the out-ſkirts of the town, where the common people reſort in crowds, in fine evenings, to drink tea, &c. ſuch as
- The Dog and Duck, St. George's-fields; and
- Bagnigge-wells, Clerkenwell; theſe two are much reſorted to by women of the town.
- Iſlington-ſpa, Iſlington;
- Riley's Gardens, Vauxhall; and
- Don Saltero's coffee-houſe, Chelſea, where there is a muſeum of curioſities, that may be ſeen by thoſe who ſpend a ſhilling, or leſs.
4. Beſides the above, the following are worth attending to.
[165]The Temple Gardens in Summer evenings, where genteel people walk.
The proceſſion of the King through the Park to the Parliament-houſe.
The Houſe of Lords when the King is there, and the Peers robed. Admiſſion is not difficult, by ap⯑plying to a peer.
The proceſſion on Lord Mayor's day, (November 9,) of the city, through the ſtreets, and up to Weſtminſter by water, and back, in their ſtate-barges.
The Lord Mayor's ball, on Eaſter Monday, and the feaſt and ball on November 9. Tickets are not difficult of attainment, by applying to any alderman or common-councilman. They are now and then to be purchaſed, by apylying to John the waiter, at the Rainbow coffee-houſe, Cornhill.
The parade of the judges to Weſtminſter-hall, and their etiquette in the hall, on the firſt days of each term.
The rehearſal of muſic, at St. Paul's church, in April, for the benefit of the ſons of the poor clergy.— Admittance what you pleaſe.
The meeting of 2000 charity-children, in St. Paul's church, in May, when they all ſing together. Admit⯑tance free.
The rowing of ſmall boats from London-bridge to Chelſea; a conteſt among young watermen for a coat and badge, Auguſt 1.
The Duke of Cumberland's ſailing match, on the Thames, for a ſilver cup, in ſummer.
The ſeveral reviews of the troops, in the courſe of the ſummer, where the King attends.
The feſtivity and gambols of the lower claſs of people rolling down Greenwich-park hill, Whitſun-Monday and Tueſday.
Occaſional floating through the atmoſphere in Bal⯑loons.
The criminal-law trials at the Old Bailey, every ſix weeks. Admittance 1 s. into the gallery. And the unhappy executions in Newgate-ſtreet at eight in the morning, in conſequence of them.
[166]Covent-Garden market, Tueſdays, Thurſdays, and Saturdays, for vegetables, at four o'clock in the morn⯑ing, in ſummer time.
Billinſgate market, for fiſh, near London Bridge, in ſummer, Mondays, Wedneſdays, and Fridays, at four o'clock.
Smithfield market, for cattle, in ſummer, at ſeven o'clock, Mondays, Wedneſdays, and Fridays, for hor⯑ſes, at two in the afternoon.
Corn market, in Mark-lane, Mondays, Wedneſdays and Fridays.
The Aſylum, for deſerted orphans, St. George's-fields, Sunday mornings, at eleven; and
The Magdalen-houſe, for penitent proſtitutes, ditto, Sunday evenings, at ſix; at theſe two places divine ſervice is much frequented by genteel people: any decent perſon may be admitted, who will throw a ſhilling or ſix pence into the plate at the door, for the benefit of the charities.
The ſteam-mills, for grinding corn, at Blackfriars Bridge.
Tapeſtry manufactory, near Soho-ſquare.
Taſſie's curious ſeal-compoſitions, Leiceſter-ſquare.
Wedgewood's earthen-ware manufactory, Greek-ſtreet, Soho.
5. Out of town, but near it.
Greenwich Hoſpital, for Seamen; ſix miles diſtant.
Chelſea Hoſpital, for Soldiers; two miles.
Woolwich Warren, artillery, eight miles; and the convicts there at work.
Kenſington-Palace Gardens, two miles.
The river Thames, up and down, towards Rich⯑mond, the banks are every where covered with elegant villas.
Richmond-Palace Gardens, particularly on a Sunday evening, are crouded with genteel people from Lon⯑don; twelve miles.
Richmond Hill, Surrey, a very beautiful proſpect; twelve miles.
Hampſtead and Highgate, two hills, covered with gentlemen's houſes, and commanding very beautiful proſpects; four miles.
Hampton-Court Palace, twelve miles; Middleſex.
[167]Windſor Caſtle, twenty-one miles; particularly in ſummer evenings, where the King and Royal Family walk ſome hours every day, (Friday excepted) on the Terrace, and a band of muſic plays; at which time the place is crouded with genteel company.
Wanſtead Houſe and Gardens, in Epping Foreſt, Eſſex; ſeven miles. The ſeat of Sir James Long.
Claremont, Eſher, Surrey; the ſeat of Lord Clive. Fifteen miles.
Pain's Hill, Cobham, ditto; the ſeat of Bond Hop⯑kins, Eſq twenty miles.
Oatlands, Walton, ditto; the ſeat of the Duke of Newcaſtle; eighteen miles.
The Ferme Ornée of Mrs. Southcote, near Chert⯑ſey; twenty miles.
Note, Theſe laſt four are not far from each other.
Sion-Houſe, Iſleworth, the ſeat of the Duke of Northumberland; nine miles.
Chiſwick, the ſeat of the Duke of Devonſhire; ſix miles.
Caen-Wood, Hampſtead, the ſeat of Lord Mans⯑field; four miles.
Hatfield Houſe, the ſeat of the Earl of Saliſbury; twenty miles.
An ESTIMATE of the Expences attending a Family con⯑ſiſting of a Man, his Wife, four Children and two Maid Servants, who conduct their domeſtic Arrangement with Oeconomy.
Weekly. | |||
l. | s. | d. | |
BREAD for eight perſons, 8 d. per week each, | 0 | 5 | 4 |
Butter, 7 lb. on an average, at 9 d. per lb. | 0 | 5 | 3 |
Cheeſe, 3 lb. and a half, at 5 d. per lb. | 0 | 1 | 5½ |
Roots, herbs, ſpices, and the decoraments of the table, | 0 | 3 | 6 |
Carry over, | 0 | 15 | 6½ |
[168]
Brought over, | 0 | 15 | 6½ |
Weekly. | |||
Meat, or fiſh, or fowl, 1 lb. each, at 6 d. per pound, on an average, | 1 | 8 | 0 |
Milk and cream, one day with another, 2 d. | 0 | 1 | 2 |
Eggs, 4 d. and flour, 1 s. 2 d. | 0 | 1 | 6 |
Small-beer, at 14 s. a barrel, 12 gallons, | 0 | 4 | 8 |
Tea, 2 s. and ſugar, 3 s. | 0 | 5 | 0 |
Candles, 4 lb. take the ſummer and winter together, at 9 d. | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Coals, two fires in winter, one only in ſum⯑mer; 3 buſhels for parlour fire, for 8 months, 4 ditto for the kitchen all the year, about 8 chaldron and a half, at 34 s. | 0 | 5 | 6 |
Soap, ſtarch, blue, and waſhing at home and abroad, | 0 | 5 | 0 |
Thread, needles, pins, tapes, and all ſorts of haberdaſhery, | 0 | 1 | 9 |
Sand, fullers earth, whitening, ſcowering pa⯑per, brick-duſt, ſmall-coal, &c. | 0 | 0 | 4 |
Repairs of furniture, table-linen, ſheets, and all other utenſils, | 0 | 2 | 0 |
3 | 13 | 5½ |
L. 3:13:5 halfpenny per week, is per an⯑num, | 189 | 18 | 8 |
Clothes for the maſter and miſtreſs, and hair⯑dreſſing, | 40 | 0 | 0 |
Ditto for the children, 6 l. each, | 24 | 0 | 0 |
Lying-inn expences, 12 l. ſuppoſe once in two years, | 6 | 0 | 0 |
Pocket expences for the maſter, including letters, 4 s. per week, | 10 | 8 | 0 |
Ditto for the miſtreſs and children, | 5 | 4 | 0 |
Phyſic, and occaſional illneſs, | 5 | 0 | 0 |
Schooling for the children, on an average, | 8 | 0 | 0 |
Wages of two maid-ſervants and taxes, | 14 | 10 | 0 |
Standing rent 50 l. taxes 16 l. | 66 | 0 | 0 |
Entertainments for friends, | 20 | 0 | 0 |
Sundries for wine, pleaſure, &c. ſuppoſe, for even money, | 10 | 19 | 4 |
400 | 0 | 0 |
[169]It is impoſſible to aſcertain the exact expence of every article, as ſome families may like to indulge in ſome one thing more than others; but what is ſaved in one article may be ſpent on another.
For every child, leſs than four, may be ſubtracted from the above 400l. according to the foregoing eſti⯑mate, and for every child, more than four, muſt be ad⯑ded, on an average, as follows:
Maintenance for each child, per annum, | L. 20 | 0 | 0 |
Clothes, | 6 | 0 | 0 |
26 | 0 | 0 |
If they keep but one maid-ſervant, by the foregoing eſtimate, ſubtract annually L. 25:5. If three are kept, add, on an average, 26l. as the taxes increaſe with the number: thus,
Maintenance of a ſervant, | L. 18 | 0 | 0 |
Wages and tax, | 7 | 5 | 0 |
25 | 5 | 0 |
The difference between a maid-ſervant and a man-ſervant, if out of livery, will be only the wages and tax, 5l. or 6l.; if in livery, the addition alſo of the livery, about 5 l.
2. The expence of keeping a Horſe in the ſtable in ſummer, and at ſtraw in the winter.
L. | s. | d. | |
A truſs of ſtraw, per week, | 0 | 0 | 9 |
Two truſtes and a half of hay, at L. 3:3 per load, | 0 | 4 | 4½ |
Three quarters of a peck of oats per day, at 18 s. per quarter. | 0 | 3 | 1½ |
Man to look after him, | 0 | 2 | 6 |
0 | 10 | 9 |
[170]
L. | s. | d. | |
Thirty-two weeks keep, at 10 s. 9d. per week, is, annually, | 17 | 4 | 0 |
Shoeing, 8 ſets while in uſe, at 2 s. 4 d. per ſet, | 0 | 18 | 8 |
Bleeding, &c. | 0 | 5 | 0 |
Fourteen weeks ſtraw-yard, at 2s. 6 d. | 1 | 15 | 0 |
Six weeks ſpring graſs, at 4 s. | 1 | 4 | 0 |
Taking to ſtraw-yard and back, | 0 | 5 | 0 |
Sadler, | 0 | 4 | 0 |
Rent of a ſtable, and duty of the horſe, | 3 | 10 | 0 |
Decline in value of the horſe, about | 3 | 0 | 0 |
28 | 5 | 8 |
3. The addition of a one-horſe Chaiſe will be as fol⯑lows:
Expence of the horſe, as above, | 28 | 5 | 8 |
Duty of the wheels, | 3 | 10 | 0 |
Wear and tear, with care, about | 5 | 5 | 0 |
Oil and greaſe, for even money, ſuppoſe | 0 | 9 | 4 |
Additional rent of a coach-houſe, | 1 | 10 | 0 |
38 | 10 | 0 |
4. Now, ſhould the perſon who looks after the horſe leave you unprovided, it would be attended with trou⯑ble and uneaſineſs, and as the man may poſſibly cheat you and ſtarve the beaſt, it would be better, if you can depend on a livery-ſtable keeper's giving him the corn you order, to keep him at livery. The following then would be the expence.
Thirty-two weeks hay and corn, (three ſeeds a-day) at 12s. 3 d. per week, | 19 | 12 | 0 |
Hoſtler, | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Shoeing, bleeding, ſtraw-yard, graſs, &c. va⯑lue of horſe and chaiſe, greaſe and duty, | 17 | 6 | 0 |
37 | 19 | 0 |
[171]5. The expence of keeping a four-wheeled carriage, and a pair of horſes, in your own ſtable.
Annually. | |||
l. | s. | d. | |
Seven loads and an half of hay: that is 5 truſſes a week, and 10 truſſes allowed for waſte, at 3 l. 10 s. a load, | 24 | 10 | 0 |
Two truſſes of ſtraw per week, or about 3 loads, at 25 s. | 3 | 15 | 0 |
Twenty quarters 2 buſhels of oats, at 9 buſhels to the quarter. This is allowing each horſe a peck a day, at 18 s. per quarter; (beans are not neceſſary, unleſs worked very hard), | 18 | 5 | 0 |
Rent of ſtable and coach-houſe, | 6 | 0 | 0 |
Duty of 2 horſes, 1 l. and of the carriage, 7 l. | 8 | 0 | 0 |
Blackſmith for ſhoeing, 18 ſets, at 2 s. 4 d. per ſet, | 4 | 4 | 0 |
Phyſic, &c. | 0 | 6 | 0 |
Oil and greaſe. 1 s. per week, | 2 | 12 | 0 |
Coachman's wages, 16 l. and duty, 1 l. 5 s. | 17 | 5 | 0 |
Board-wages, or board at home, much the ſame, | 18 | 0 | 0 |
Livery, about | 8 | 0 | 0 |
Wear and tear of carriage, and repairs of wheels and harneſs, and painting, once in 2 years, about | 20 | 0 | 0 |
Decline in value of horſes, about | 10 | 0 | 0 |
140 | 17 | 0 |
6. The ſame kept at livery, your own ſervant to ſee the horſes ſed with corn.
Hay and corn, four ſeeds each per day, | L. 72 | 18 | 0 |
Hoſtler, | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Other expences, as above, the ſame, | 88 | 7 | 0 |
163 | 7 | 0 |
[172]
l. | s. | d. | |
7. The price of a job for a pair of horſes and a coachman, is, per month, 14 l. though ſome will let them for 12 l. a month; 13 months, | 156 | 0 | 0 |
If the carriage is hired alſo, the addition will be 40 s. a month, | 26 | 0 | 0 |
Coachman will expect a preſent of | 3 | 3 | 0 |
Ditto great-coat and hat 3 l. and duty 1 l. 5 s. | 4 | 5 | 0 |
189 | 8 | 0 |
If a job-carriage is on the road, the coach-maſter will expect an addition of 2 s. a night, every night the horſes are out, to pay extra expences.
But I know ſome gentlemen who keep a job, and pay 100 l. a year only for coachman and horſes, giving the uſe of a ſtable, when in the country. This is the cheapeſt method of keeping a carriage. Thus,
Annually. | |||
Job-horſes and coachman, | 100 | 0 | 0 |
Preſent to coachman, | 3 | 3 | 0 |
Great-coat, hat, and duty, | 4 | 5 | 0 |
Duty of wheels, | 7 | 0 | 0 |
Oil and greaſe, | 2 | 12 | 0 |
Wear and tear of carriage, as before, | 20 | 0 | 0 |
137 | 0 | 0 |
By this eſtimate, the expences are leſs than keeping them in your own ſtable. To be ſure, you have none of the coachman's ſervice but that of driving, but then, on the other hand, you are not liable to loſe the uſe of your carriage by accidents attending the horſes. In⯑deed, to keep a chariot and pair of horſes properly, three horſes ſhould be kept for the purpoſe; and this advantage you have by hiring a job. If you will give the coachman his board, you may have all his time.
In the foregoing, and the following eſtimates, I have not pointed out, what a father of a family ought to lay by annually, as a proviſion for his wife and children. When he knows what his expences will be, his income will naturally tell him what he can ſave. Suffice it to ſay, that 75l. a year, put out to intereſt at five per [173] cent. will, in twenty years, produce 2500l. of courſe, double the ſum will produce 5000l. I have, in the courſe of this work, given the reader the terms of the different aſſurance-offices for life, where proviſion may be made for a family, or a future day, on eaſier terms.
The principal hay-markets in London are, Smith-field, White-chapel, and the Hay-market, Charing-croſs. Market-days are, Tueſdays, Thurſdays, and Saturdays.
The average-price of hay, in London, is 3 l. 5 s. a load: and that of ſtraw 1 l. 5 s. Good hay is ſome⯑times bought for 2 l. 5 s. and ſometimes it reaches 5 l. Straw will ſometimes be ſo low as 18 s. at other times 2 l. 2 s.
A load of hay is thirty-ſix truſſes, each truſs to weigh 56 lb. under a penalty; a load of ſtraw thirty-ſix truſ⯑ſes, each truſs to weigh 36 lb.
8. The following eſtimate is given more as a matter of curioſity than any thing elſe, to ſhew how much ſuch a family, as in No. 1. may ſave upon a different plan, and what the expences of houſekeeping amount to.
Annually. | |||
L. | s. | d. | |
Lodging and board for the man and his wife, in a decent family, in town or country, with a table equal to that in No. 1. | 60 | 0 | 0 |
Tea and ſugar once a day, breakfaſt being in⯑cluded in the board, 2 s. 6 d. a week, | 6 | 10 | 0 |
Waſhing abroad, | 6 | 10 | 0 |
Coals and candles, | 5 | 0 | 0 |
Shoes cleaning and hair-dreſſing, L. 1: 6 per quarter, | 5 | 4 | 0 |
To the ſervant of the family, | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Three children at boarding-ſchool, at 20 l. a year, the whole expences, | 60 | 0 | 0 |
Infant at nurſe, at 4 s. per week, | 10 | 8 | 0 |
Extra expences for ditto, | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Clothes for the maſter and miſtreſs, | 32 | 0 | 0 |
Ditto for four children, 6l. each, | 24 | 0 | 0 |
Carried over, | 211 | 13 | 0 |
[174]
Brought over, | 211 | 13 | 0 |
Pocket expences for the man and his wife, | 15 | 12 | 0 |
Apothecary, | 5 | 0 | 0 |
Entertainment for friends. None expected. | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Lying-in expences, as in No. 1. | 6 | 0 | 0 |
Sundries, for wine, pleaſure, &c. as in No. 1. | 10 | 19 | 4 |
249 | 4 | 4 | |
Saved by this mode of living, | 150 | 15 | 8 |
400 | 0 | 0 |
Now this 150 l. a-year ſaved would, in twenty years, ſave 5000 l. that is, 1000 l. for the widow, and 1000 l. for each of the children.
9. An eſtimate for a man and his wife, living com⯑fortably, with two ſervants.
L. | s. | d. | |
Houſe-rent and taxes, or lodging, per annum, | 60 | 0 | 0 |
Wages of two maid-ſervants and tax, | 14 | 10 | 0 |
Clothes and pocket-expences for the huſband, | 15 | 0 | 0 |
Ditto for the wife, | 12 | 0 | 0 |
Bread for four perſons, | 5 | 14 | 0 |
Butter, 3 lb. a week, at 10 d. | 6 | 10 | 0 |
Cheeſe, 2 lb. a week, | 2 | 3 | 4 |
Meat, or fiſh, 4 lb. a-day, at 5 d. | 30 | 8 | 4 |
Extra for poultry occaſionally, | 5 | 4 | 0 |
Vegetables, 2 s. 6 d. a week, | 6 | 10 | 0 |
Fruit, if they eat any, 1 s. a week, | 2 | 12 | 0 |
The decoraments of the table, as oil, &c. | 1 | 19 | 0 |
Tea and ſugar, 4 s. 6 d. a week, | 11 | 14 | 0 |
Small-beer, at 14 s. a barrel, about 14 gallons a week, | 13 | 13 | 0 |
Porter and ſtrong-beer, 7 d. a day, | 10 | 12 | 11 |
Milk and cream, 1 s. a week, | 2 | 12 | 0 |
Soap and ſtarch, &c. 1 s. 6 d. a week, | 3 | 18 | 0 |
Eggs and flour, | 2 | 7 | 8 |
Candles, 2 s. 6 d. a week, | 6 | 10 | 0 |
Carry over, | 213 | 18 | 3 |
[175]
Brought over, | 213 | 18 | 3 |
Coals and other firing, | 12 | 0 | 0 |
Shoes cleaning and hair-dreſſing, | 5 | 4 | 0 |
Repair of furniture, &c. | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Entertainment of friends, | 6 | 0 | 0 |
Sundries, for even money, | 10 | 17 | 9 |
250 | 0 | 0 |
10. A man and his wife, in town, with four chil⯑dren and one maid-ſervant, whoſe trade brings in clear but 200 l. annually, muſt conform as follows:
Weekly. | |||
Bread for ſeven perſons, | L. 0 | 4 | 1 |
Salt butter, 3 lb. at 7½d. | 0 | 2 | 10½ |
Cheeſe, 3 lb. at 5 d. | 0 | 1 | 3 |
Meat, 3 joints on an average *, | 0 | 7 | 6 |
Fiſh † and bacon, | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Vegetables, oil, vinegar, &c. | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Milk, | 0 | 1 | 2 |
Flour and eggs, | 0 | 1 | 6 |
Sand, whiting, &c. | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Small beer, | 0 | 1 | 3 |
Tea and ſugar, | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Candles, | 0 | 2 | 6 |
Haberdaſhery, as thread, pins, &c. | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Soap and ſtarch, &c. | 0 | 2 | 6 |
Powder, blacking, &c. | 0 | 0 | 3 |
1 | 13 | 0½ |
L. 1:13:0½ per week, is, per annum, | 85 | 18 | 2 |
Clothes and pocket-money for the man, | 8 | 0 | 0 |
Ditto for the woman, | 6 | 0 | 0 |
Ditto for the four children, | 16 | 0 | 0 |
Carry forward | 115 | 18 | 2 |
[176]
Brought over, | 115 | 18 | 2 |
Maid's wages, | 5 | 0 | 0 |
Boy to go on errands, 6 d. a day (not boarded) | 7 | 16 | 0 |
Coals, two fires in winter, one in ſummer, 5 chaldrons, at L. 1. 14:0 | 8 | 10 | 0 |
Day-ſchooling for the children, | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Entertainments for friends, | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Phyſic for the family, on an average, | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Expences of lying-in are chiefly defrayed by the preſents of goſſips, (ſuppoſe 5 l. extra once in two years,) | 2 | 10 | 0 |
Rent and taxes, excluſive of lodgers, (though many contrive to live rent free,) | 15 | 0 | 0 |
Repair of furniture, utenſils, &c. | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Expences of trade with cuſtomers, travelling charges, Chriſtmas-box money, pens, pa⯑per, letters, &c. ſuppoſe, for even money, | 4 | 5 | 10 |
170 | 0 | 0 | |
He may then lay by for the children, or lay out for other purpoſes, | 30 | 0 | 0 |
200 | 0 | 0 |
It is impoſſible to give eſtimates to ſuit every family, but it will be eaſy for any one to regulate his expences by theſe eſtimates, adding or deducting for a child or a ſervant, more or leſs, or for the difference of houſe-rent, certain indulgences, or the variation in the price of proviſions. If every miſtreſs keeps a weekly book, in the manner ſhe will find pointed out to her in the next page, and has an eye upon her ſervants, ſhould ſhe exceed her expences one week, ſhe may retrench them in another.
I muſt repeat here, that 15 or 20 per cent. may be ſaved in many articles, by buying them at the firſt hand, and paying ready money, where it conveniently can be done, beſides preventing things being charged a family never had. However, by no means ſhould a bill be run up, with either butcher, baker, chandler, green-grocer, or milkman.
[177]Such as wiſh to ſee eſtimates for families living in the country, may find them in a work publiſhed ſome years ſince, and which has gone through five editions, called, The Way to be rich and reſpectable; price 2 s.— Wherein is laid down a plan, whereby a gentleman, his wife, four children, and five ſervants, living in the country, with a few acres of land, may with frugality, ſave 2500 l. in twenty years, keep two of his children at a boarding-ſchool, drink wine every day at his table, keep a carriage and four horſes, and make an appear⯑ance equal to a man in London that ſpends 1000 l. a year, for half the money.
1786 | MAY. | L. | s. | d. | L. | s. | d. |
Brought over, | — | — | — | 59 | 13 | 7 | |
1. | Bread, | — | 1 | 6 | |||
Butter, 2 lb. | — | 1 | 6 | ||||
2. | Cheeſe, 12 lb. 5d. | — | 5 | — | |||
3. | Oil, 1 quart, | — | 2 | 6 | |||
Bread, | — | 1 | 6 | ||||
4. | Eggs, | — | — | 4 | |||
Flour, | — | — | 6 | ||||
5. | Letters, | — | — | 6 | |||
Butcher's bill, | — | 12 | 3 | ||||
6. | Bread, | — | 1 | — | |||
Milk, | — | 1 | 2 | ||||
7. | Candles, 12 lb. | — | 7 | 8 | |||
— | — | — | 1 | 15 | 5 | ||
8. | Bread, | — | 1 | — | |||
And ſo on the next week. |
[178]
1786. | Cyder, | Ale, | Port, | Liſbon, | Madeira, | Claret, |
Stock, in Bottles, | 78 | 140 | 69 | 47 | 55 | 24 |
Added, | 40 | 25 | 16 | |||
Total, | 78 | 180 | 94 | 47 | 71 | 24 |
Monday, May 1. | 1 | 2 | 1 | |||
Tueſday, 2. | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | ||
Wedneſday, 3. | 2 | 2 | 1 | |||
Thurſday, 4. | ||||||
Friday, 5. | ||||||
Saturday, 6. | ||||||
Sunday, 7. | ||||||
Dr [...]k, | 3 | 3 | 3 | [...] | 1 | 1 |
[...], | 7 [...] | 177 | [...] | [...] | 70 | 23 |
Note, The firſt line contains the ſtock in the cellar, in bottles.
The ſecond line contains the additions to the ſtock in the cou [...] of the week.
The third line the total amount of the week's ſtock.
As it is drank daily, ſet it down oppoſite the days, and caſt up what is drank in the week, and enter it in the line oppoſite Drank; then, deducting the bottles drank from the ſtock above, will leave the number of bottles in the cellar as in the laſt line.
[179]
MEATS. | Jan. | Feb. | Mar. | Apr. | May | June | July | Aug | Sept | Oct. | Nov | Dec. |
Beef, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Graſs Lamb, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||
Houſe ditto, | * | * | * | * | * | |||||||
Mutton, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Pork, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||
Veal, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Veniſon, Buck, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Ditto, Doe, | * | * | * |
Graſs Lamb is in much eſteem in April and May, when it firſt comes in.
POULTRY, &c. | Jan. | Feb. | Mar | Apr. | May | June | July | Aug | Sept | Oct. | Nov | Dec |
Capons, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Chickens, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Dotterels, | * | * | * | |||||||||
Ducklings, | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||||
Ducks, | * | * | * | |||||||||
Ditto wild, | * | * | * | * | * | |||||||
Fowls, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Geeſe, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Ditto, green, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Hares, | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||||
Larks, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Leverets, | * | * | * | * | * | |||||||
Partridges, | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||||
Pheaſants, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||
Pidgeons, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||
Plover, | * | * | * | |||||||||
Pullets, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
Rabbits, wild, | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||
Snipes, | * | * | * | * | * | |||||||
Teal, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Turkey Poults, | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
Turkeys, | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||||
Wheatears, | * | * | ||||||||||
Widgeons, | * | * | * | |||||||||
Woodcocks, | * | * | * | * | * |
Chickens are dear [...] and choice at Lady-day, Fowls at Midſummer.
[180]
FISH. | Jan. | Feb. | Mar | Apr. | May | June | July | Aug. | Sept | Oct. | Nov | Dec. |
Carp, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |
Chubb, | † | † | ||||||||||
Cockles, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Cod, | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||||
Codling, | † | |||||||||||
Crabs, | † | † | † | † | † | |||||||
Crawfiſh, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||
Dorees, | † | † | ||||||||||
Eels, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||
Flounders, | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||||
Gudgeons, | † | † | ||||||||||
Gurnet, | † | † | ||||||||||
Haddock, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Herrings, | † | † | † | † | † | |||||||
Holibut, | † | † | ||||||||||
Lampreys, | † | † | ||||||||||
Lobſters, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |
Mackrel, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Mullet, | † | † | † | † | † | |||||||
Muſcles, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Oyſte [...]s, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |||||
Perch, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Pike, | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||||
Plaice, | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||||
Prawns, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |||||
Salmon, | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||||
Skate, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |||||
Smelts, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |||
Soles, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||
Sturgeon, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Tench, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||
Thornback, | † | † | † | † | † | † | ||||||
Tront, | † | † | † | |||||||||
Ditto Salmon, | † | † | ||||||||||
Turbot, | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |||||
Whitings, | † | † | † |
[181] The moſt eminent PHYSICIANS in Town are,
- DR. William Pitcairn, Warwick-Court.
- Dr. Heberden, Pall-Mall.
- Dr. Brockleſby, Norfolk-ſtreet.
- Dr. Cadogan, George-ſtreet, Hanover-ſquare.
- Dr. Giſborne, Clifford-ſtreet, Burlington-Gardens.
- Dr. Warren, Sackville-ſtreet.
- Sir Clifton Wintringham, Dover-ſtreet.
- Dr. Turton, Adelphi.
- Sir Richard Jebb, Great George-ſtreet, Weſtminſter.
- Sir Lucas Pepys, Upper Brook-ſtreet.
- Sir George Baker, Jermyn-ſtreet.
- Dr. Watſon, Lincolns-inn-fields.
- Dr. Saunders, Spring-Gardens.
- Sir John Elliot, Cecil-ſtreet.
- Dr. Hugh Smith, Bridge-ſtreet, Blackfriars.
- Dr. Ford, Old Bond-ſtreet.
- Dr. George Fordyce, Eſſex-ſtreet.
- Dr. Bromfield, Gerard-ſtreet, St. Anne's.
- Dr. Lettſom, Baſinghall-ſtreet.
- Dr. Higgins, Greek-ſtreet, Soho.
- Dr. Hulme, Charterhouſe Square.
MEN-MIDWIVES.
- Dr. Ford, Old Bond-ſtreet.
- Dr. Denham, Old Burlington-ſtreet.
- Dr. Khron, Southampton-ſtreet, Covent Garden.
- Dr. MacLaurin, of the London Hoſpital, City Road.
- Dr. Garthſhore, St. Martin's lane, Weſtminſter.
- Dr. John Cooper, may be heard of at the Crown and Anchor, Strand.
- Dr. Oſborne, Percy ſtreet.
SURGEONS.
- Mr. Warner, Hatton-ſtreet, Holborn.
- Mr. Watſon, Rathbone Place.
- [182]Mr. Hunter, St. George's Hoſpital.
- Mr. Minors, Chancery-lane.
- Mr. Chafey, Bernor's-ſtreet.
- Mr. Wathen, Walbrook.
- Mr. Pinkſton, St. Alban's-ſtreet.
- Mr. Adair, Argyle-ſtreet.
- Mr. Pott, Hanover-ſquare.
- Mr. Grindall, Auſtin-friars.
- Mr. Triquet, Craven-ſtreet.
- Mr. Greening, Old Burlington ſtreet.
- Mr. Howard, Southampton-ſtreet, Covent-Gardon,
LIST of the BANKERS.
- ASGIL, Sir Charles, and Co. No. 70, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Barclay and Co. 56, ditto.
- Batſon and Co. 69, ditto.
- Biddulph and Co. Charing-croſs.
- Bland and Co. 62, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Boldero and Co. 5, Manſion-houſe ſtreet.
- Boldero, Kendal and Co. 77, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Caſtel and Co. 66, ditto.
- Child and Co. 1, Fleet-ſtreet.
- Couts and Co. near the Adelphi.
- Crofts and Co. 39, Pall-mall.
- Denne and Co. without Temple-bar.
- Dorriens and Co. 22, Finch-lane.
- Drummond and Co. Charing-croſs.
- Eſdaile, Sir James, and Sons, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Fuller, William, and Son, 24, ditto.
- Fuller, Richard, and Co. 84, Cornhill.
- Goſling and Co. 19, Fleet-ſtreet.
- Hallifax, Sir Thomas, and Co. 18, Birchin-lane.
- Hanbury and Co. 60, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Hankey and Co. 7, Fenchurch-ſtreet.
- Harriſon and Co. 17, Ironmonger-lane.
- Hercy and Co. New Bond-ſtreet.
- Herries, Sir Robert, and Co, 16. St. Jame's-ſtreet.
- [183]Hoare and Co. 37. Fleet-ſtreet.
- Hodſoll and Co. near Catherine-ſtreet, Strand.
- Jones and Co, 17, Watling-ſtreet.
- Ladbrooke and Co. Bank Buildings.
- Langſton and Co. 29, Clement's-lane.
- Lee and Co. 71, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Lefevre and Co. 29, Cornhill.
- Lemon, Sir William, and Co. 11, Manſionhouſe-ſtreet.
- London Exchange banking company, St. James's-ſtreet.
- Lowe and Co. 20, Birchin-lane.
- Mackworth, Sir Herb. and Co. 68, New Bond ſtreet.
- Martin and Co. 68, Lombard ſtreet.
- Mildred and Co. 2, White Hart Court, ditto.
- Moorhouſe and Co. 76, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Newnham and Co. 65, ditto.
- Pell and Co. 1, Bartholemew-lane.
- Preſcott's and Co. 62, Threadneedle ſtreet.
- Pybus and Co. 148, New Bond-ſtreet.
- Ranſom and Co. 57, Pall Mall.
- Raymond, Sir Charles, and Co. by the Manſion houſe.
- Smith, Payne, and Co. ditto.
- Smith, (Sam.) and Son, 12, Aldermanbury.
- Smith, Wright, and Co. 21, Lombard-Street.
- Staples and Co. 50, Cornhill.
- Taylor and Co. 60, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Walpole and Co. 28, ditto.
- Welch and Co. Freeman's Court, Cornhill.
- Whitehead and Co. 4. Baſinghall-ſtreet.
- Wikenden and Co. 20, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Wright and Son, Henrietta-ſtreet, Covent Garden.
A LIST of ſuch PUBLIC OFFICES as the People in general have occaſion to apply to.
- ADMIRALTY, Charing-croſs.
- African Company, Cannon-ſtreet.
- Bank, Cornhill.
- Chamberlain, Lord, Stable yard, St. James's.
- Chamberlain's office, city, Guildhall.
- [184]Charter Houſe, Smithfield.
- Chriſt's Hoſpital, Newgate-ſtreet.
- Cuſtom Houſe, Lower Thames-ſtreet.
- Exciſe Office, Broad-ſtreet, near the Exchange.
- Firſt Fruits Office, Temple.
- Greenwich Hoſpital Receiver's Office, Tower-hill.
- Hawkers and Pedlars, Somerſet Place.
- Herald's College, near St. Paul's.
- Houſe Tax, Charing-croſs.
- Impreſt Office, Scotland-yard.
- Lancaſter Duchy Court, Gray's-inn.
- Land Tax, Exciſe Office, Broad-ſtreet.
- Window Lights, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Navy Office, Crutched Friars
- Pay Office, Navy, Broad-ſtreet, city.
- Ditto, Army, Whitehall.
- Poſt Office, General, Lombard-ſtreet.
- Privy Seal, Whitehall.
- Queen Ann's Bounty, Dean's yard, Weſtminſter.
- Salt Office, York Buildings.
- Secretaries of State, Foreign, St. James's,
- — Home, Whitehall.
- Sick and Hurt Seamen, Tower hill.
- Signet Office, Whitehall.
- Stamp Office, Somerſet-place, or Lincoln's-inn.
- Society for Chriſtian Knowledge, Bartlet's Buildings, Holborn.
- — for Religious Knowledge among the Poor, Founder's-Hall, Lothbury.
- — for propagating the Goſpel, Queen Ann's Bounty-office, Dean's-yard, Weſtminſter.
- Tenths, Temple.
- Treaſury, Whitehall.
- Trinity Houſe, Water-lane, Tower-ſtreet.
- Turkey Company, Salters-hall.
- Victualling Office, Tower-hill.
- War Office, Whitehall.
- Widows and Children of Clergymen, No. 13, Paper Buildings, Temple.
- Works, Board of, Whitehall.
HOLIDAYS kept at the PUBLIC OFFICES.
[185]- Jan. 1, 6, 18, 25, 80.
- Feb. 2, 24.
- Mar. 25.
- Apr. 23, 25.
- May, 1, 29.
- June, 4, 11, 24, 29.
- July, 25.
- Aug. 1, 12, 24.
- Sept. 2, 21, 22, 29.
- Oct. 18, 25, 26, 28.
- Nov. 1, 4, 5, 9, 30.
- Dec. 21, 25, 26, 27, 28.
- Shrove Tueſday,
- Aſh Wedneſday,
- Good Friday,
- Eaſter Monday,
- —Tueſday,
- Eaſter Wedneſday,
- Holy Thurſday,
- Whit-Munday,
- —Tueſday,
- —Wedneſday.
Dividends are paid at the Bank from nine to eleven in the morning, and from one to three in the after⯑noon.
Transfers are made from eleven to one.
- Jan. 1, 6, 18, 25, 30.
- Feb. 2, 14, 24.
- Mar. 1, 25.
- Apr. 23, 25.
- May, 1, 29.
- June, 4, 10, 11, 24, 29.
- July, 15, 25.
- Aug. 1, 11, 12, 24.
- Sept. 2, 14, 18, 21, 22, 29.
- Oct. 25, 28.
- Nov. 1, 2, 4, 5, 17, 25, 30.
- Dec. 21, 25, 26, 27, 28.
- Shrove Tueſday,
- Aſh Wedneſday,
- Good Friday,
- Eaſter Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Holy Thurſday,
- Whit-Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Jan. 1, 6, 18, 25, 30.
- Feb. 2, 24.
- Mar. 25.
- Apr. 23, 25.
- May, 1, 29.
- June, 4, 10, 11, 24, 29.
- July, 25.
- Aug. 1, 11, 12, 24.
- Sept. 2, 18, 21, 22, 29.
- Oct. 18, 25, 28.
- Nov. 1, 4, 5, 9, 17, 25, 30.
- Dec. 21, 25, 26, 27, 28.
- Shrove Tueſday,
- Aſh Wedneſday,
- Good Friday,
- Eaſter Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Holy Thurſday,
- Whit-Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Jan. 1, 6, 18, 25, 30.
- Feb. 2, 14, 24.
- Mar. 1, 25.
- Apr. 23, 25.
- May, 1, 29.
- June, 4, 10, 11, 24, 29.
- July, 15, 25.
- Aug. 1, 11, 12, 24.
- Sept. 2, 14, 18, 21, 22, 29.
- Oct. 18, 25, 28.
- Nov. 1, 2, 4, 5, 9, 17, 30.
- Dec. 21, 25, 26, 27, 28.
- Shrove Tueſday,
- Aſh Wedneſday,
- Good Friday,
- Eaſter Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Holy Thurſday,
- Whit-Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Jan. 1, 6, 18, 25, 30.
- Feb. 2, 24.
- Mar. 25.
- Apr. 23, 25.
- May, 1, 29.
- June, 4, 10, 11, 24, 29.
- July, 25.
- Aug. 1, 12, 24.
- Sept. 2, 21, 22, 29.
- Oct. 18, 28.
- Nov. 1, 4, 5, 9, 30.
- Dec. 21, 25, 26, 27, 28.
- Good Friday,
- Eaſter Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Holy Thurſday,
- Whit-Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Jan. 1, 18, 25, 30.
- Feb. 2, 24.
- Mar. 1, 25.
- Apr. 23, 25.
- May, 1, 29.
- June, 4, 10, 11, 24, 29.
- July, 25.
- Aug. 1, 12, 24.
- Sept. 2, 18, 21, 22, 29.
- Oct. 18, 26, 28.
- Nov. 1, 4, 5, 9, 25, 30.
- Dec. 21, 25, 26, 27, 28.
- Shrove Tueſday,
- Aſh Wedneſday,
- Good Friday,
- Eaſter Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
- Holy Thurſday,
- Whit-Mon. Tueſ. & Wed.
Dividends at the South-Sea Houſe and India-Houſe are paid from nine to twelve in the morning.
Transfers are made there from twelve to one.
TABLES OF MEASURES AND WEIGHTS.
- 2 Pints make 1 Quart
- 4 Quarts 1 Gallon
- 8 Gallons 1 Firkin of Ale
- 9 Gallons 1 Firkin of Beer
- 2 Firkins 1 Kilderkin
- 2 Kilderkins 1 Barrel
- 3 Kilderkins 1 Hogſhead
- 3 Barrels 1 Butt
- 4 Gills make 1 Pint
- 2 Pints 1 Quart
- 4 Quarts 1 Gallon
- 18 Gallons 1 Rundlet
- 1 1-3d Rundlet 1 Barrel
- 1 1-3d Barrel 1 Tierce
- 11-2 Tierce or 63 Gall. 1 Hhd
- 1 1-3d Hhd. or 84 Gall. 1 Puncheon
- 1 1-half Punch. or 2 Hhds. 1 Pipe or Butt
- 2 Pipes 1 Tun
By this meaſure all brandies, ſpirits, mead, cyder, per⯑ry, and oil, are meaſured.
- 2 Quarts make 1 Pottle
- 2 Pottles 1 Gallon
- 2 Gallons 1 Peck
- 4 Pecks or 8 Gall. 1 Buſhel*
- 8 Buſhels 1 Quarter or Vat
- 5 Quarters of Wheat, Beans or Peaſe, 1 Load
- 10 Quarters of Oats 1 Load
- 2 Pints make 1 Quart
- 2 Quarts 1 Pottle
- 2 Pottles 1 Gallon
- 2 Gallons 1 Peck
- 4 Pecks 1 Buſhel
- 8 Buſhels 1 Quarter
- 5 Quarters 1 Wey or Load
- 5 Pecks 1 Buſhel of water meaſure
- 4 Buſhels 1 Coomb
- 10 Coombs 1 Wey
- 2 Weys 1 Laſt of corn
By this meaſure ſalt, lead-ore, oyſters, corn, and other dry goods are meaſured.
- 4 Pecks make 1 Buſhel
- 9 Buſhels 1 Vat or Strike
- 36 Buſhels 1 Chaldron
- 21 Chaldrons 1 Score
Note, In five chaldrons of coals the ſeller always gives nine buſhels over.
- 2 1-4th Inches make 1 Nail
- 4 Nails 1 Quarter of a Yard
- 4 Quarters 1 Yard
- 5 Quarters 1 Ell Engliſh
- 3 Quarters 1 Ell Flemiſh
- 6 Quarters 1 Ell French
Scotch and Iriſh linens are bought and ſold by the yard Engliſh; but all Dutch linens are bought by the ell Flemiſh, and fold by the ell Engliſh.
- 3 Barley-corns make 1 inch
- 3 Inches 1 Palm
- 3 Palms 1 Span
- 1 1-3d Palm, or 12 Inches, 1 Foot
- 1 1-2d Foot 1 Cubit
- 2 Cubits 1 Yard
- 1 Yard 2-3ds 1 Pace
- 1 Pace 1-5th 1 Fathom
- 2 Fathoms 3-4ths 1 Pole
- 16 Feet 1-half, or 5 Yards 1-half, 1 Pole
- 40 Poles 1 Furlong
- 8 Furlongs 1 Mile
- 3 Miles 1 League
- 20 Leagues 1 Degree
- 69 Miles 1-half 1 Degree
This treats of Length only.
- 144 ſquare Inches make 1 ſquare Foot
- 9 ſquare Feet 1 ſquare Yard
- 30 1-4th ſquare Yards 1 ſquare Pole
- 40 ſquare Poles 1 ſquare Rood
- 4 ſquare Roods 1 ſquare acre
- 640 ſquare Acres 1 ſquare Mile
This includes Length and Breadth.
- 1728 cubic Inches make 1 Foot
- 27 cubic Feet make 1 cu⯑bic Yard
This comprehends Length, Breadth, and Thickneſs.
- 16 Drachms make 1 ounce, marked oz.
- 16 Ounces 1 Pound, lb.
- 28 Pounds 1 Quarter of a Hundred, qr.
- 4 Quarters 1 Hundred, or 112 lb. cwt.
- 20 Hundred Weight 1 Ton, T.
Butter, Cheeſe, Fleſh, Grocery wares, and all goods that have waſte, are weighed by this.
- 4 Grains make 1 Carat
- 24 Grains 1 Pennyweight, marked dwt.
- 20 Pennyweight 1 Ounce, marked oz.
- 12 Ounces 1 Pound lb.
By this weight Jewels, Gold, Silver, Amber, &c. are weighed.—14 Ounces, 11 Pennyweights, and 15 Grains Troy, are equal to a Pound Avoirdupoize.
- 20 Grains make 1 Scruple, marked ℈
- 3 Scruples 1 Drachm ʒ
- 8 Drachms 1 Ounce ℥
- 12 Ounces 1 Pound, or Pi [...]t of Liquid, lb.
Apothecaries compound their medicines by this weight, but buy and ſell by Avoirdupoize weight.
- 7 Pounds make 1 Clove
- 2 Cloves 1 Stone
- 2 Stone 1 Todd
- 6 and half Todd 1 Wey
- 2 Weys 1 Sack
- 12 Sacks 1 Laſt
lb. | oz. | dr. | |
A peck loaf ſhould weigh | 17 | 6 | 1 |
A half-peck | 8 | 11 | 0 |
A quartern | 4 | 5 | 8 |
Note, A buſhel of flour is 56 lb.—When the quartern loaf wheaten is ſold for 8d. the ſeconds ſhall be ſold for 7 d. the houſhold for 6 d. and ſo in proportion.
- A Load of either contains 36 truſſes
- A Truſs of Hay 56 Pounds
- A Truſs of Straw 36 Pounds
- 60 Seconds make 1 Minute
- 60 Minutes 1 Hour
- 24 Hours 1 Day
- 7 Days 1 Week
- 4 Weeks 1 Month
- 13 Months, 1 day, 6 hours, or 365 days, 6 hours, makes 1 Year.
- [...]4 Sheets make 1 Quire
- [...]0 Quires 1 Ream
- 2 Reams 1 Bundle
- 5 Bundles 1 Bale
Note, A perfect Ream is twenty-one Quires and a half, without any outſide or damaged Sheets.
A ſtone of meat is 8lb.
A ſtone horſeman's weight, 14 lb.
Horſes in height are meaſured by hands, each hand four inches.