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CORT FAMILY PENSIONS Henry Cort's pension
There is probably truth in both these accounts. We can take it the pension was the Government's response to the 1791 petition, which requested a Government appointment for Cort. Pitt seems to have passed on the request to Dundas, who decided a pension was the best solution. The deduction, considered stingy by some, was probably intended to pay some of Cort's outstanding debt to the Crown. 1800 collection for widow
This is the only record I have found of this collection. Sir Robert Wigram was one the signatories of the 1791 petition. The ODNB lists several investments he made in the affairs of the East India Company and its associates, but I haven't yet found a reason for a special concern for Henry Cort's dependants. Widow's pension
I discovered the payment record by accident: the only one I have found for any pension paid to Henry Cort's family. 1812 collection
The inception of this collection is well chronicled, but this is the only record I have seen of what happened to it. "Mr Thompson of Chepstow" is well documented as a former clerk at Cyfarthfa. Richard Cort and his sisters
So much for the Government's response to the furore of the 1850s. The year quoted by Mott/Singer must be wrong. The Old DNB says the pension was granted in 1856. But their entry also says the unmarried sisters' original pensions had been granted on their mother's death in 1816. This is hardly credible, since her will was not proved until 1826. Pensions were evidently requested on behalf of three sisters, but granted to only two. It is likely that one had died in the interval between the request and the grant: though it could be that Palmerston ignored the claims of a widowed or married sister. There is also a query about the age, identity and marital status of the three sisters.
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The pages on this site are copied from the original site of Eric Alexander (henrycort.net) with his allowance. |