Verlag: Printed by D.N. Shury; for J. Ginger. 1803, 1803
Anbieter: Jarndyce, The 19th Century Booksellers, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 39,29
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbAd. leaf. Disbound. Renier signature. 22, (2)pp. No. 1 of Ginger's Patriotic publications. Priced 3 pence each, or 'two shillings and six-pence per doz. for distribution'. 'Britons, be prepared! If you suppose that Buonaparte will not attempt invasion, you are deceived!'.
Verlag: London, [s.n.], 1732., 1732
Anbieter: Bernard Quaritch Ltd ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 535,76
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In den WarenkorbFolio, pp.8; a few small tears and losses to margins, central horizontal crease, some cockling, foxing, and light soiling; bound in modern marbled paper boards.An extremely rare pamphlet of economic and political interest, relating to fraudulent activity in the Charitable Corporation and to one of the chief culprits' rumoured links to the Old Pretender.The Charitable Corporation was established in 1707 to provide low interest loans to the 'industrious poor', with money being raised through the sale of shares to stockholders. A Parliamentary investigation into the Corporation in the early 1730s revealed a massive fraud perpetrated chiefly by its warehouse keeper, John Thomson, who promptly fled the country. A staggering £500,000 was discovered to be missing, only a decade on from the South Sea Bubble disaster. What happened next is revealed in this pamphlet. Giovanni Angelo Belloni, a Bolognese nobleman with links to the Old Pretender (James Francis Edward Stuart), wrote a letter to the Parliamentary Committee investigating the Corporation claiming that Thomson had been apprehended in Rome with his books and papers, which Belloni would hand over if certain conditions were met. Thomson claimed to have discovered £26,000 among his own effects and that his papers would reveal more. The letter so outraged Parliament that it was publicly burnt to 'loud huzzas'. For 'Publicola', the anonymous author of this tract, Belloni's letter hid a Jacobite plot 'for the publick ruin' and Thomson's claim to have important information was mere bluff. Parliament's snubbing of Belloni and Thomson was, therefore, entirely justified.Thomson negotiated his return to England in 1733 to testify before Parliament, and a lottery was organised to help those ruined by the fraud, although this only recovered 15% of the losses.ESTC T225828 (recording only one copy, at the British Library). Not in Goldsmiths'. For more on the Charitable Corporation see Lemire, The Business of Everyday Life (2005), p.5672. Language: English.