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2018 | OriginalPaper | Buchkapitel

The Social Acceptance of Paper Credit as Currency in Eighteenth-Century England: A Case Study of Glastonbury c. 1720–1742

verfasst von : Craig Muldrew

Erschienen in: Financing in Europe

Verlag: Springer International Publishing

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Abstract

The period from roughly 1700 until the rise of county banking saw one of the most acute long-term shortages of small change in the whole of the history of early modern England. The recoinage in 1774 produced only about £800,000 in silver against £18.2 million in gold. But, this was a period of increasing production and consumption, and it is a puzzle how the British economy managed to achieve such continued growth without currency to pay wages and make small transactions, while at the same time relying less on informal credit. However, changes were happening in credit networks below the radar of the very well established history of the financial revolution. Informal written bills and notes were taking the place of unwritten obligations. Although bills for goods sold or work done commonly appear as debts in inventories in the early seventeenth century, it is difficult to know when they became commonly transferable. Certainly transferred bills had no separate legal status in the common law. Fortunately, now, with the publication of the Chronicles of John Cannon, a poor Somerset husbandman’s son who became scrivener for the less wealthy of the small town of Glastonbury, we have an excellent source to trace the transformation of a very rural credit market far away from the stocks and shares of metropolitan finance.

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Fußnoten
1
For English undervaluation of silver to gold compared to their prices in the rest of Europe, see Sargent and Velde (2003: 296–8).
 
2
Because of the great length of the manuscript, this edition has had to summarize some of the material. Here all references to the Chronicles are to Cannon’s original pagination. Where quotations are given they have been taken from Money’s transcription where available, and from the original manuscript where Money has only been able to provide a summary. The manuscript is in the Somerset Record Office DD/SAS/1193/4: John Cannon’s Chronicles.
 
3
For a full description of the diary, see Money (2010b: cxxiii ff.).
 
4
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 134, 150.
 
5
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 41–7.
 
6
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 157–8, 185, 197–8, 215.
 
7
Unfortunately, it is impossible from the Chronicles to work out how much Cannon was earning and spending because the version which has come down to us is the third transcription which Cannon made from rougher versions. It is clear from an incident while he was working as a bailiff for William Peirs in 1726, when he was asked by Peir’s wife to produce his accounts that they were kept with his journal—which was examined and helped to lead to his dismissal. Cannon, Chronicles, p. 175.
 
8
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 152.
 
9
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 152, 154–6.
 
10
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 156.
 
11
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 158.
 
12
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 157–61, 172–4, 181.
 
13
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 182.
 
14
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 186–7.
 
15
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 188.
 
16
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 239.
 
17
This was the subject of my book The Economy of Obligation.
 
18
‘Thus far was the design of the foregoing work bought and began about half a year before it was entered in the method as is carried on in this book, being only taken down by me on loose paper and thus hitherto have transcribed the same being the most material and what by strength of Memory I have discovered without partiality or favour, and if anything further that I could not remember which might be anyway offensive to my Creator or to Mankind, my fellow Creature or Creatures, I herein most humblewise ask pardon.’ Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 214–5.
 
19
On Pepy’s accounting and rapid financial success see the discussion in Muldrew (1998: 167–71). Pepys, Diary, VII, pp. 65–6, 70, 74, 85–6, 89; VIII, pp. 51, 87, 444. Pepys only gave up writing the diary after worrying that he was losing his eyesight from spending so much time writing by candlelight, but before doing so even experimented with a set of glasses with tubes on to protect his eyes from the candlelight. Pepys, Diary, X, ‘Companion’, pp. 135, 174–5.
 
20
Pepys, Diary, I, ‘Introduction’, pp. xxviii, xliv–xlv, xcviii–ciii, cix, cxii.
 
21
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 1.
 
22
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 277.
 
23
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 196–97.
 
24
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 174.
 
25
The very extensive use of bills of exchange drawn on London and other north-east towns by the wealthy mercer, Joseph Symson of Kendal between 1711 and 1720, including 33.9% of local bills with endorsements, has been well documented and discussed by S.D. Smith (2001: lxvi–lxxii, 787–8).
 
26
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 469, 479.
 
27
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 588. Bell was a mercer or tailor.
 
28
Index to the Chronicles of John Cannon in Money (2010a: 699–700).
 
29
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 557. Cannon also accused him of making up a mortgage ‘full of gross blunders and erasures’ in 1729. Cannon, Chronicles, p. 618.
 
30
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 259, 673, 682.
 
31
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 189.
 
32
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 615, 650, 665.
 
33
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 216. For another example, see p. 468.
 
34
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 211, 464.
 
35
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 577.
 
36
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 289–90.
 
37
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 237.
 
38
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 237.
 
39
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 260.
 
40
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 263.
 
41
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 266.
 
42
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 278.
 
43
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 277.
 
44
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 395.
 
45
Cannon, Chronicles, p. 94.
 
46
Cannon, Chronicles, pp. 289, 667.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
The Social Acceptance of Paper Credit as Currency in Eighteenth-Century England: A Case Study of Glastonbury c. 1720–1742
verfasst von
Craig Muldrew
Copyright-Jahr
2018
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58493-5_6