Pages
- Homepage
- Life of Henry Cort
- Cort's processes in iron manufacture
- Cort's patents
- Refutation of allegations of conspiracies against Cort
- Adam Jellicoe's death
- Henry Cort's birth
- A navy agent's business
- Early life of John Becher
- Attwick & Burges families
- "Cortship" of second wife
- Thomas Morgan
- Henry Cort's hoops contract
- 1856 Accolade
- Generosity of friends 1789-94
- James Watson
- Illness of Cort's son
- Main sources of information
- Contemporary sources
- Navy sources
- Chancery files
- Publications about Cort
- Assessment of Cort's character
- Images of Henry Cort
Impeach-tranferred to 05
- Parliamentary inquiry 1811-2
- The furore of the 1850s
- Society of Arts
- Cort's first marriage
- Henry Cort's children
- Cort family pensions
- Henry Cort's Hertfordshire property
- 1791 signatories
- Guiana and the Cort-Gladstone connection
- Cort's twilight years
- Memorials to Henry Cort
- Smelting of iron
- Fining before Cort
- Shropshire & Staffordshire ironmasters
- Cumbrians: Wilkinson etc
- Early works at Merthyr Tydfil
- The Crowley business
- London ironmongers
- Scottish iron
- Cort's promotion efforts 1783-6
- Later Merthyr connections
- Puddling after Henry Cort
- Gosport in Cort's day
- Gosport administration
- Gosport worthies
- The Amherst-Porter network
- James Hackman, murderer
- Samuel Marshall
- Samuel Jellicoe's legacy
- Links with Titchfield
- Links with Fareham
- Fact, error and conjecture
- 18th century politics
- Law in the 18th century
- 18th century finance
- Religion and sexual mores
- Calendar change of 1752
- Shelburne, Parry and associates
- John Becher's family
- The Becher-Thackeray lineage
- Thomas Lyttelton: a fantastic narrative
- Eighteenth-century London
- Abolition and the Corts
- The Burges will tangle
- Navy connections
- Navy agent's business
- Cort's clients
- Ships' pursers
- History of Adam Jellicoe
- Dundas & Trotter
- Cort's navy office associates
- Toulmin & other agents
- Sandwich & Middleton
- The Arethusa
- John Becher's war
- Thomas Morgan's war
- The 1782 Jamaica convoy
- Sinking of the Royal George
Rickman & Scott: two contrasting naval careers-Missing
- Visitors 2006-2009
- Developement of the site 2006-2009
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- Daniel Guion and family
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- Other publications
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18th century finance
For people like Henry Cort, in the upper strata of society, cash transactions were unusual.
The heart of commercial operations was the Bill of Exchange (a written request or order to pay a certain sum of money without conditions) and the Promissory Note (a promise to pay), both of which rested on assumptions of others' creditworthiness.
From Davidoff & Hall, Family fortunes: Men and women of the English Middle Class, 1780-1850 (Routledge 1994).
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How much is it worth?
Georgiana's father was only eleven when his own father died of alcoholism, leaving behind an estate worth £750,00 - roughly equivalent to £45 million today. It was one of the largest fortunes in England and included 100,000 acres in twenty-seven different counties, five substantial residences, and a sumptuous collection of plate, jewels and old master paintings. Lord Spencer had an income of £700 a week in an era when a gentleman could live off £300 a year.
From Amanda Foreman, Georgiana Duchess of Devonshire.
A footnote adds: "The usual method for estimating equivalent twentieth-century values is to multiply by sixty."
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This in a period when a top skilled craftsman might earn £4 per week, while a textile worker outside London earns 7s.6d. A common soldier's earnings are £14 per year, as against £600 for the richest merchants (some 1000 families, according to one source). A supper of bread, cheese & beer costs three (old) pence, a dentist charges 2s.6d to extract a tooth, a bottle of champagne sells for eight shillings. Expenses of installing new plant at Cyfarthfa around 1789: £50,000.
Alexander Trotter's starting salary as a Navy clerk is £50 per annum. As Paymaster he receives £500, later raised to £800. At the same time the salary of the Treasurer of the Navy is raised, from £2,000 to £4,000 per annum, "to discourage peculation".
Joseph Priestley when he came to the New Meeting in 1780 was offered a stipend of £100. This could not conceivably have covered the expenses of his comfortable middle-class establishment with costs augmented by his scientific work. Priestley was able to rely on his richer friends and relatives to support him.
From L Davidoff & C Hall, Family fortunes: Men and women of the English Middle Class, 1780-1850 (Routledge, 1994).
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As from 1733, a candidate for the Bench needed to have an income from land of over £100 a year.. a squire needed to have £500 a year, at the very least.
From Virgin, The Church in an Age of Negligence: Ecclesiastical Structure and Problems of Church Reform, 1700-1840 (Cambridge 1989).
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Debt
For as small a debt as £2 on the oath of a single creditor a small master or shopkeeper could be removed from his business and his family.
From Rule, Albion's People: English Society 1714-1815 (London 1992).
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A system of payment dependent on bills of exchange and promissory notes places great emphasis on trust. If the trust breaks down and a creditor demands realisation of money owed, his debtor is in difficulties. Simon Winchester's The Map That Changed The World tells how geological mapmaker William Smith goes to a debtor's prison following a suit for payment of debts of over £300 by one Charles Conolly.
Some people suffer by association with debt run up by someone else. Thus East India Company director Richard Becher has to resign his directorship, sell an estate in England and return to India because of involvement a newphew's business failure.
Cort's problem is effectively that he is called upon by Adam Jellicoe's most powerful creditor, The Crown, to pay to them the debt he originally owed to Adam.
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is not necessarily a debilitating experience, as both Henry Cort and Charles Gascoigne discover. In Gascoigne's case, his creditors continue to employ him. Cort is helped by his friends' generosity, as are others…
John Perry, an Ipswich draper, was twice declared bankrupt in the hard times of the 1820s and 1830s. He was supported by the powerful and wealthy members of his local Quaker congregation.
From John Rule, Albion's People: English Society 1714-1815.
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Poor Davies, the bankrupt Bookseller, is soliciting his Friends to collect a small sum for the repurchase of part of his household stuff. Several of them give him five guineas. It would be an honour to him, to owe part of his relief to Mrs. Montague.
From letter of Samuel Johnson to Elizabeth Montagu, 5 March 1778.
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I have myself subscribed £500 and have the satisfaction to find several persons who have offer'd upon this occasion their £50 and £100.
From letter of Thomas Pitt to Elizabeth Montagu concerning popular society figure Richard Berenger, March 1778.
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Such generosity helps Cort to escape from bankruptcy after a few months.
When sufficient creditors, (the proportion varied from 3/4 to 4/5, by number and value), were satisfied and had signed a request for a Certificate of Conformity (a statement that the bankrupt had satisfied all the legal requirements), the Commissioners could issue the certificate which effectively discharged him, although dividends might continue to be paid after that date.
From PRO information leaflet L005, Bankrupts and Insolvent Debtors: 1710-1869.
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Cort's certificate of conformity is registered on 14 April 1790.
Gambling debts
A few weeks after the demise of Cort and Jellicoe (is it just coincidence?) Samuel Homfray visits a gaming house in Cardiff and loses over £300 at "Lazarus". Small beer.
Mr. Homfray if you take my advice don't give any note for you have been most egregiously cheated. The cards were marked.
Words attributed to John Richards, "a young gentleman of unimpeachable character", at a gaming session in Cardiff on Saturday 6th October, 1789.
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According to Cowie (Hanoverian England 1714-1837), Lord Stavordale lost £12,000 in a single throw of dice in 1770, while Charles James Fox (at the age of sixteen) and his elder brother lost £32,000 at cards over three days and nights. At one point the Duchess of Devonshire is reckoned to have run up debts of £60,000 by borrowing, gambling and general extravagance: she is offered a generous loan by Thomas Coutts. As for the Prince of Wales...
The debts must have had a beginning, but they had no end. So far back as August 1784, the Prince admitted to a sum of £269,000, but the King was angered at the disclosure and the debts were allowed to accumulate. In 1787, after Fox had categorically denied that the Prince was privately married to Mrs Fitzherbert, Parliament voted £161,000 towards the payment of back debts, and £25,000 to the completion of Carlton House; but in April, 1795, when the Prince had consented to what was in reality a bigamous union with the Princess Caroline of Brunswick, Pitt stated in Parliament that the Prince owed a sum of £630,000.
From E.H. Coleridge, The Life of Thomas Coutts, Banker (London 1920).
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Do these figures put Cort's alleged debt of £27,500 into perspective?
On the fiddle
Your bank will use money you deposit to enrich itself (hopefully) by lending it for a profitable venture. For some types of current account, you will gain nothing from the bank's investment.
Bankers' ethics are applied by some enterprising individuals in the eighteenth century to make profits for themselves by judicious application of other people's money. One such is Alexander Trotter, Paymaster to the Navy under Treasurer Henry Dundas.
He admitted that he had made the bulk of his fortune by transferring public money from the Bank of England to his own credit at Coutts', making such payments to annuitants and others as became due, and investing the unclaimed balances into the Exchequer and Navy Bills and other Government Securities, and, generally, by lending it at interest.
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I made no secret of my financial transactions, which were known to ministers of state, and everybody whom it might concern, and when I was assailed in the press and denounced by the Managers of the Impeachment I received from such men as Sir George Rose, Sir Samuel Shepherd, and last but not least my relative, Thomas Coutts, the assurance of their unabated confidence and esteem.
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From E.H. Coleridge, The Life of Thomas Coutts, Banker.
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What Trotter avoids is a situation in which the money he has temporarily appropriated is needed for the purpose it was originally intended. This is the fate that befalls Adam Jellicoe with the money he has invested in Cort's business. Thomas Homfray, after returning from Merthyr to the West Midlands, likewise makes an unsound investment as treasurer of a canal company, leading it into financial difficulty. A similar situation develops with Queen Anne's Bounty from the activities of its treasurer John Paterson.
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