Declared Accounts: Army

Calendar of Treasury Books, Volume 26, 1712. Originally published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1954.

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Citation:

'Declared Accounts: Army', in Calendar of Treasury Books, Volume 26, 1712, ed. William A Shaw( London, 1954), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/cal-treasury-books/vol26/cvii-clxxx [accessed 24 November 2024].

'Declared Accounts: Army', in Calendar of Treasury Books, Volume 26, 1712. Edited by William A Shaw( London, 1954), British History Online, accessed November 24, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/cal-treasury-books/vol26/cvii-clxxx.

"Declared Accounts: Army". Calendar of Treasury Books, Volume 26, 1712. Ed. William A Shaw(London, 1954), , British History Online. Web. 24 November 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/cal-treasury-books/vol26/cvii-clxxx.

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Army

DECLARED ACCOUNTS: ARMY: GUARDS AND GARRISONS.
PIPE OFFICE: ROLL 99 [E351/99].
AUDIT OFFICE: BUNDLE 58, ROLL 62 [A.O.1/58/62].
JOHN How, Paymaster General of the Guards and Garrisons.
23 December 1711 to 21 December 1712, both inclusive.
Charge. £ s. d. £ s. d.
Arrears: remaining in the Accomptant's hands upon the end of the last Accompt 43,865 2
depending upon sundry persons particularly named at the foot of the said Accompt 31,268 6 3
Receipts: money had out of the Exchequer: Michaelmas term 10 & 11 Anne, in part of 200,000l. for the year 1712 by privy seal 13 March 1701–2 and Royal Sign Manual 22 Dec. 1711, 10 Anne 132,819 16 9
ditto, in further part of the same 60,000 0 0
Easter term, 11 Anne, in full of the same 7,180 3 3
ditto, in part of 314,141l. 14s. 5¾d. by privy seal 25 April 11 Anne (which with the 200,000l. above is for the following: for Horse, Foot and Dragoons in Great Britain 468,830l. 15s. 10d., for the General Officers of the Guards 14,410l. 18s. 7¾d., for Contingencies 7,500l., for Garrisons 23,400l., in all 514,141l. 14s. 5¾d.) 236,233 0 2
Michaelmas term 11 & 12 Anne, in full of the same 77,908 14
ditto, in part of 134,936l. 19s. 4d. for the same year by privy seal 30 Oct. 11 Anne 25,199 6
Easter term 11 Anne, in further part of 600,000l. for the year 1711 by privy seal 16 Dec., 9 Anne 6,430 7 0
Michaelmas term 11 & 12 Anne, in further part of the same 22,704 15 10¼
568,476 3
Deductions for Transport Charges:
the First Regiment of Guards 224 14 8
the Coldstream Regiment 21 11 6
the Third Regiment of Guards 122 19 0
Major-Gen. Hill's Regiment 62 18 6
Col. Disney's Regiment 58 5 0
Col. Cane's Regiment 44 6 11
Col. Alexander's Regiment 88 15 4
623 10 11
Money received from the Earl of Carnarvon on accompt of the pay of the Officers of the Companies of Invalids doing duty at the Tower of London 807 2 0
Money received for Interest on South Sea Stock 4,957 12 5
Voluntary charge: interest received on tallies remaining in the Accomptants' hands, viz. on Malt 1711, 47l. 4s. 4d.; on Malt 1712, 3,875l. 6s. 11d.; on the Fifteenth 4s. Aid, 2,805l. 14s. 7d.; on Hops, 24l.; on Candles, 731l. 5s. 2d. 7,483 11 0
£657,481 8 8
Discharge.
Pay and entertainment of the General Officers:
John, Duke of Marlborough, as Captain General, with three Aides de Camp, Secretary, Physician, Chirurgeon and Chaplain, 23 to 31 December (nine days) 120 0 0
James, Duke of Ormond, succeeding him from 1 Jan. 1711–12, with his three Aides de Camp and other Officers as above 4,746 13 4
Thomas Erle, as Lieut.-Gen. in South Britain; for himself and his Secretary 1,642 10 0
the Earl of Leven, as Lieut.-Gen. in North Britain; the same 1,642 10 0
this Accomptant 365 0 0
the Lord Lansdowne, as Secretary at War 365 0 0
Michael Hyde, as Commissary General of the Musters 319 7 6
David Crawford, as Deputy Commissary General, and ten other Commissaries General and two Clerks 2,040 19 2
Col. Metcalfe Grahme, Adjutant General 182 10 0
Lieut.-Gen. Cadogan, Quartermaster-General 182 10 0
Col. John Armstrong, Deputy Quarter-master General 91 5 0
Thomas Byde, Judge Advocate General, for himself, his Deputy, and two Clerks 365 0 0
Sir Philip Meadowes, jun., and James Bruce, as Comptrollers of the Army Accompts 1,500 0 0
Gregory King, their Secretary (to 29 Aug. 1712) 206 5
Dr. Thomas Lawrence, Physician to the Forces 182 10 0
Dr. Alexander Inglis, Chirurgeon to the Forces 182 10 0
Benjamin Teal, Apothecary to the Forces 182 10 0
Col. Jonas Watson, Firemaster General to the Grenadiers 54 15 0
Hugh Warren, Surveyor of the Guards 45 12 6
Charles Pinkney, Marshall to the Horse 127 15 0
Capt. John Mawgridge, Drum Major General 30 0 0
Capt. Kennedy, Provost Master General 146 0 0
two Messengers, one to the Accomptant and one to the Secretary at War 60 0 0
14,781 3
pay of the Regiments, etc., on the Estabment of the Guards:
Henry, Earl of Portland, for the First Troop of Horse Guards; Officers, etc., and 156 private gentlemen 16,546 13 4
the Duke of Northumberland for the Second Troop of Horse Guards; the same 16,546 13 4
Charles, Earl of Arran, for the Third Troop of Horse Guards; the same 16,546 13 4
the Duke of Argyle for the Fourth Troop of Horse Guards; the same 16,546 13 4
Lieut.-Gen. Cholmondely for the First Troop of Grenadier Guards; Officers, etc., and 145 private men 10,743 3 4
the Earl of Crawford for the Second Troop of Grenadier Guards; the same (less 53l. 7s. 6d. for respits) 10,689 15 10
the Earl of Rivers and the Earl of Peterborough successively for the Royal Regiment of Horse Guards; Officers, etc., and 513 private men (less 700l. 14s. for respits) 32,307 9 4
Lieut.-Gen. Carpenter for the Queen's Royal Regiment of Dragoons; Officers, etc., and 360 private men (less 261l. for respits) 15,464 8 4
Sir Richard Temple for another Regiment of Dragoons; the same (less 261l. for men reduced) 15,464 8 4
the Earl of Hyndford for another Regiment of Dragoons; Officers, etc., and 288 Dragoons (less 34l. 13s. for respits) to 24 Aug. 1712 9,235 9 0
the Earl of Strafford for another Regiment of Dragoons; Officers, etc., and 179 Dragoons from 25 Aug. 1712 together with two Troops from Gen. Echlin's Regiment for 58 days (less 610l. 17s. 4d. for respits) 3,596 12 6
Col. Kerr's Regiment of Dragoons; Officers, etc., and 324 private Dragoons (less 270l. for respits) 15,455 8 4
Lieut.-Gen. Echlin's Regiment of Dragoons; Officers, etc., and 480 Dragoons (abating 1,044l. for men reduced and respits) 19,608 18 4
the Duke of Ormond for the First Regiment of Foot Guards; Officers, etc., and 1,680 private men in 24 Companies with four Companies of Grenadiers consisting of Officers, etc., and 280 private men (less 846l. 9s. 8d. for respits and men reduced) 48,976 0 4
Gen. Charles Churchill for the Cold-stream Regiment of Foot Guards; 14 Companies, Officers, etc., and 980 private men (less 328l. 11s. 8d. for respits and reduced men) 25,026 15 0
The Marquis of Lothian for Nine Companies of the Third Regiment of Foot Guards; Officers, etc., and 630 private men (less 217l. 10s. for men reduced) 16,420 8 4
Lieut.-Gen. Mordaunt for his Regiment of Foot; twelve companies, Officers, etc., and 708 private men (less 437l. 6s. 6d. for respits and men reduced) 14,083 11 10
Brig.-Gen. Breton for his Regiment of Foot; twelve Companies, Officers, etc., and 672 private men (less 703l. 8s. 2d. for respits and men reduced) 13,817 10 2
Major-Gen. Wightman for his Regiment of Foot, formerly Gen. Farrington's; Officers, etc., and 728 private men (less 760l. 12s. 2d. for several men reduced) 14,751 17 10
Brig. Windsor for his Regiment of Foot; Officers, etc., and 672 private men (less 194l. 5s. for respits); from 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Aug. 1712 8,688 8 0
Col. Henry Desney for his Regiment of Foot, formerly the Earl of Isla's; Officers, etc., and 728 private men; from 25 Aug. to 21 Dec. 1712 5,057 10 0
Sir Charles Hotham for his Regiment of Foot, formerly the lord Mark Kerr's; Officers, etc., and 600 private men (less 14l. 9s. 4d. for respits and 1,610l. 0s. 0¾d. not yet paid); from 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Aug. 1712 7,258 8
Major-Gen. Hill for his Regiment of Foot; Officers, etc., and 728 private men; from 25 Aug. to 21 Dec. 1712 5,057 10 0
Lieut.-Gen. William Seymour for his Regiment of Foot, formerly Col. Churchill's; Officers, etc., and 728 private men (less 1,064l. 11s. 10d. for respits and a company reduced for four months) 14,447 18 2
Col. Roger Handasyde for his Regiment of Foot; Officers, etc., and 951 private men (less 1,527l. 12s. 8d. for respits); from 23 Dec. 1710 to 22 Dec. 1711 and from 23 Dec. 1711 to 21 Dec. 1712 (less 2,286l. 6s. 6d. for respits and men reduced) 28,439 17 6
The Marquis of Montandre for his Regiment of Foot; Officers, etc., and 600 private men; from 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Aug. 1712 (less 245l. for respits) 9,003 1 3
Col. Kane for his Regiment of Foot; Officers, etc., and 728 private men; from 25 Aug. to 21 Dec. 1712 5,057 10 0
Col. Francis Alexander for his Regiment of Foot in the Leeward Islands, formerly Col. Jones's; Officers, etc., and 708 private soldiers (less 580l. 7s. 10d. for respits); also for Capt. Rookeby's Company of the said Regiment from 20 Sept. 1709 to 22 March 1709–10, for Maj. Aldey's Company from 21 Jan. to 22 March 1709–10, for Capt. Jorren's Company from 21 Jan. 1709–10 to 20 Nov. 1710, for Capt. Buor's Company from 21 Jan. to 21 March 1709–10, for Capt. Marshall's Company from 31 Jan. 1709–10 to 20 Nov. 1710 and from 23 July 1711 to 21 Jan. 1711–12 7,325 4 6
Col. Robert Hunter for four Companies of Foot at New York; Officers, etc., and 400 private men (less 498l. 6s. for respits) 6,594 17 4
Col. William Grant for an Independent Company of Foot in North Britain; Officers, etc., and 50 private men 991 11 8
Col. Alexander Campbell for another Independent Company there; Officers, etc. and 80 private men, 1,420 9 2
Col. Duncan Mackenzie for another Independent Company there; as Col. Grant's Company above; from 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Oct. 1712 834 0 4
John Thurston for the Company of Foot late at Newfoundland 469 5 2
pay of the Garrisons:
Edinburgh Castle 3,749 9 4
Sterling Castle 3,513 17 10
Dunbarton Castle 1,784 7 8
Blackness Castle 1,402 9 0
Fort William 1,074 10 0
Berwick and Holy Island 623 10 10
Calshott Castle 136 17 6
Carlisle 346 15 0
Chester 273 15 0
Clifford's Fort and Tinmouth 494 11 0
Cinque Ports 1,113 0 0
Gravesend and Tilbury Fort 817 4 6
Guernsey 328 10 0
Hull and the Blockhouse 747 2 6
Hurst Castle 136 17 6
Jersey 401 10 0
Languard Fort 255 10 0
Pendennis 295 10 0
St. Maws 191 12 6
Plymouth and St. Nicholas Island 2,100 13 4
Portland 100 7 6
Portsmouth 1,331 2 4
Sheerness 911 7 6
Scilly 365 0 0
Scarborough 52 10 0
Tower of London 2,344 9 2
Upnor 489 13 0
Windsor 328 10 0
North Yarmouth 73 0 0
Isle of Wight 1,385 2 6
St. James's Park 136 17 6
Dartmouth (from 23 Dec. 1709) 109 10 0
Annapolis Royal (four months subsistence from 25 Aug. 1712) 1,401 5 4
28,816 6 4
allowance to the Guards and Garrisons for fire and candle, detailed 2,761 10 4
payments out of Contingencies:
Lord Lansdowne, as Secretary at War; for his allowance and for office contingencies, to 27 June 1712 735 14
Sir William Wyndham, bt., succeeding him; for the same, from 28 June 1712 719 5
Sir Philip Meadowes, jun., and James Bruce; for contingent expenses of their office of Comptrollers of the Army Accompts 900 0 0
Col. Salisbury; for his pension 200 0 0
Capt. Borrett; for the like 200 0 0
Major Cecill; for the like 200 0 0
Mrs. Babington; for the like 100 0 0
Mrs. Harris; for the like 100 0 0
Sir William Douglass; for his allowance, to 24 June 1712 277 10 0
Capt. Browne; for his pension 100 0 0
Mr. Stanley; for Capt. Tichburne's children 100 0 0
Mr. Abington; for his allowance as Deputy Commissary 91 5 0
Mr. Aldecroft; for the like 91 5 0
Maj. Rose; for the like 40 0 0
Lieut. Linderott; for the like 50 0 0
Lieut. Meels; for the like 36 10 0
Aron Derby; for the like 36 10 0
Robert Cornelius; for the like 36 10 0
Anne Morley; for the like for her husband 27 7 6
John Shaw; for his house-rent allowance 20 0 0
Mr. Taylor; for liveries for the kettle-drummers and trumpets of Lieut. General Lumley's Regiment 543 4 10
Maj. Gen. Braddock; for his service and charges in going to Portsmouth to disband the Regiments of the Marquis de Montandre and Brig. Windsor 174 0 0
Maj. Gen. Wightman; for the like in going to New Castle and Berwick to disband the Regiments of Sir Charles Hotham and Col. Clayton 344 10 0
Col. King; for the like in repairing to Deal to disband a detachment of the Marquis of Montandre's and of Brig. Windsor's Regiments 22 5 0
Mr. Lynn; for disbursements for the Secretary at War's Office 935 8 9
Capt. Parsons; for several contingent disbursements for the Coldstream Regiment of Guards, including repairs of Guardhouses at St. James's and the Tiltyard 43 16 6
The Marquis of Lothian; for fire and candle for the Third Regiment of Foot Guards at Edinburgh, to 3 April 1712 33 16 0
David Crawford; for postage of letters, packets and muster rolls; and to John Thurston for contingent disbursements of the Judge Advocate's Office and for his expenses at Edinburgh to hold Courts Martial 389 1 0
Samuel English; for fire and candle for the Invalid Guards at Hampton Court; 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 31 Dec. 1712 44 8
Maj. Gen. Whetham; for services and expenses in repairing to disband Brig. Grant's Regiment and in reducing the Regiments of Maj. Gen. Wightman and Brig. Bretton 169 15 0
Maj. Gen. Holmes; for providing new furniture for the Guardrooms at St. James's, Windsor and the Tiltyard 93 7 6
Col. Kirke; for the disbursements of his Regiment in their marches and quarters; 16 Oct. 1711 to 12 Aug. 1712 413 13 0
Brig. Windsor; for the like of his Regiment; 5 to 13 Aug. 1712 70 3 9
The Marquis of Lothian; for the like of the Third Regiment of Foot Guards, 19 Feb. 1710–11 to 17 Sept. 1712; and John King, ferriman, for ferrying over the Guards at Richmond 214 14 7
Lieut. Gen. Withers, Governor of Sheerness; for the contingent disbursements of the garrison; 1 Jan. 1706–7 to 31 Dec. 1712 68 12 0
Col. James Watson; for fuzees for the Grenadier Guards; 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 31 Dec. 1712 116 11 1
William Skelton; for ferrying over the Horse and Foot Guards at Lambeth and Fulham for the year 1711 30 0 0
the Earl of Hyndford; for the contingent disbursements of his Regiment in their marches, etc.; 1 Jan. 1708–9 to 24 Dec. 1711 134 18 0
and this Accomptant, for fees in passing his Accompts for 1710 and 1711 123 3 8
8,027 6
payments to Officers, out of respits, for raising recruits:
the First Regiment of Foot Guards (25 men); the Coldstream Regiment of Guards (9 men); Maj. Gen. Wightman's Regiment (29 men); Brig. Windsor's Regiment (52 men); the Marquis of Montandre's Regiment (103 men); Sir Charles Hotham's Regiment (8 men); Col. Alexander's Regiment (5 men); Col. Kirk's Regiment (2 men); at 2l. a man 466 0 0
the Marquis of Montandre's Regiment, for the respited pay of Ensign Dashwood; 24 Feb. to 24 Aug., 1712 33 11 0
John Oastley, Gunner of Tynmouth Castle, for his respited pay; 25 April 1710 to 24 April 1712 36 11 0
the Earl of Peterborough, for his respited pay as Colonel and Captain of the Royal Regiment of Horse; 25 Aug. to 21 Dec. 1712 243 19 0
John Acton, Solicitor to the Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards, for his respited pay; 25 June to 24 Aug. 1709 12 4 0
the agent of the Royal Regiment of Dragoons for the pay of the Officers of two Troops; 25 Aug. to 24 Oct. 1712 231 16 0
Maj. Gen. Handasyde, to make good the sum charged to his Regiment for arms delivered on the augmentation of each Company and to Gen. Livesay, the same 568 0 0
the agent of the Earl of Hyndford's late Regiment, for Sir Robert Denham's pay as Captain Lieutenant; 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Feb. 1711–12 28 7 0
the Officers of the disbanded Regiments for six days full pay for each Non-Commissioned Officer and soldier; the Marquis of Montandre's Regiment (322l. 16s.); Sir Charles Hotham's (322l. 16s.); Brig. Windsor's (322l. 16s.); Lt. Gen. Carpenter's (27l.); Lieut. Gen. Ecklin's (36l. 18s.); Sir Richard Temple's (27l.); the Royal Regiment of Horse (54l.); twelve Companies of the First Regiment of Guards in England (66l.); sixteen companies of the same in Holland (88l.); eight Companies of the Cold-stream Regiment of Guards in England (44l.); six Companies of the same in Holland (33l.); the Third Regiment of Guards (57l. 15s.); Maj. Gen. Wightman's (74l. 11s. 8d.); Brig. Bretton's (54l. 14s.); Col. Kirk's (47l. 18s. 8d.); Col. Alexander's (54l.); Lieut. Gen. Seymour's (4l. 18s.); a Company in the Garrison at Edinburgh (45l. 8s.); the like of Sterling (55l. 8s.); the like of Dunbarton (28l.); the like of Blackness (41l.); Col. Handasyde's Regiment (9l. 2s.) 1,817 1 4
Col. Boys, Capt. Ballantin and Ensign Lawrie, three Officers reduced out of the Third Regiment of Guards, for their pay (as Captain, Lieutenant and Ensign respectively), 25 Oct. to 21 Dec. 1712 87 9 8
3,524 19 0
payments for intended Expeditions and for other extraordinary charges of the War:
Lieut.-Gen. Carpenter, for forage for his Dragoons, 15 Oct. 1711 to 14 May 1712 349 13 6
Sir Richard Temple, for the like 348 15 9
Lieut.-Gen. Ecklin, for the like 486 19 5
the Earl of Hyndford, for the like 290 4 3
Brig. Francis Nicholson as Commander in Chief of an Expedition, 23 Dec. 1711 to 31 May 1712, and Col. Samuel Vetch as Adjutant General 322 0 0
Brig. Nicholson and the Officers under his command, for their pay, 1 June 1712 to 21 Dec. 1712, viz., Brig. Nicholson and his Aide de Camp; Capt. Abercromby; Capt. Handy; Capt. Bartlett; Lieut. Campbell 659 12 0
Maj. Abbot, for his pay in North America, 1 June to 21 Dec. 1712 153 0 0
the Officers of the three Companies of Invalids lately at the Tower, for their pay from the date of their Commissions to 21 Dec. 1712 1,116 0
the Officers of the four Invalid Companies at Hammersmith, Brentford, etc., for the like 1,547 13 2
Maj. Browne, for his pay and expenses on his voyage to France with the French garrison of Annapolis Royal, and Capt. Handy, for expenses in coming express from Plymouth 71 6 6
Brig. Nicholson and other Officers, for divers times detailed, viz. Brig. Nicholson as Commander in Chief with his Aide de Camp and Col. Vetch as Adjutant General, 30 Sept. 1710 to 22 Dec. 1711, Capt. Handie, Capt. Roberton and Lieut. Lee 30 Nov. 1710 to 31 May 1711 1,123 14 0
the Earl of Carnarvon, on accompt of the pay of thirty Lieutenants sent to New York under Brig. Nicholson, to be paid to the wives of the said Officers 274 10 0
6,743 8
the pay of the twelve Companies of Invalids (establishments detailed): one at Chester (998l. 6s. 8d.), one at Hampton Court (994l. 19s. 7d.), one at Tinmouth (1,000l. 18s. 4d.), one at Windsor (994l. 19s. 7d.), one at Upnor (1,029l. 4s. 7d.), two at Sheerness (812l. 2s. 6d. each), two at Tilbury (the same), one at Dover (809l. 16s. 9d.), one at Landguard Fort (803l. 11s. 7d.) and one at Greenwich (999l. 3s. 8d.) 10,879 10 9
(total for pay, fire and candle, contingencies, levy money, respits, removed and bounty money, extraordinary charges and pay of the invalids; as detailed above, 518,008l. 8s. 8d.)
money paid for interest on money advanced by the Bank of England 3,237 6 7
the Auditor's fee; to Thomas Foley 282 10 0
money applicable to the support of Chelsea Hospital 47,286 17 6
total pay and allowances £568,815 2 9
and so remains 88,666l. 5s. 11d.
against which depending:
for the service of the Guards and Garrisons:
on Capt. Thomas Lloyd and on Charles Cæsar, late Treasurer of the Navy, for the Company of Foot at Newfoundland 1,979 0 0
for the service of the Forces sent to Spain:
on Henry Vincent, late Deputy Paymaster of the Forces in Spain, detailed 14,929 17 9
for the extraordinary service of the War in the year 1709:
on Col. Samuel Vetch and on Capt. Robert Gardiner, for the intended Expedition to the West Indies, detailed 6,955 16 9
for extraordinary charges of the War in the year 1710:
on Col. Samuel Vetch and on Col. Francis Nicholson, for the Expedition to America, etc.; also on Maj. Richard Mullins and on Harry Mordaunt, Treasurer of the Ordnance, detailed 7,403 11 9
for extraordinary charges of the War within the time of this Accompt:
on Col. Samuel Vetch, for the Garrison of Annapolis Royal and other services, detailed 18,771 5 1
50,039 11 4
and so this Accomptant is Indebted 38,626 14 7
Auditor's Memorandum. The following sums having been paid by the Accomptant upon Accompt for the service of the Forces are either to be accompted for or repaid out of the moneys appointed for the Guards and Garrisons.
in the time of preceding Accompts: £ s. d.
the Commissioners of Victualling for Beer for the Company at Newfoundland short provided by them in the year 1705 92 3 8
Col. Wynn's and Col. Lepell's Regiments of Foot (each 2,200l.) for subsistence in 1705 4,400 0 0
the Forces appointed for the intended Expedition under Brig. Gen. George Macartney and Brig. Thomas Whetham for money paid them on accompt in 1709 (details as in previous Account, see Vol. XXV, p. clxii) 8,207 1 0
payments to Regiments abroad paid by this Accomptant in lieu of Regiments of less numbers on the Establishment of the Guards and Garrisons 3,110 9 2
the Officers appointed to serve in the Intended Expedition under Col. Nicholson, the Lord Shannon and Maj. Gen. Whetham (as in the previous Account ibidem) 5,750 0 8
There is also to be received and made good to the Public by the sale of the next vacant Colours in the Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards the sum of 430l. paid to Brig. Andrew Bisset (as detailed ibidem, p. clxiii) 430 0 0
Further Memorandum that this Accomptant be charged in his succeeding Accompts with what further sums shall be deducted from the Regiments in his care (for subsistence to prisoners in France) when Col. Arnot's accompts are adjusted.
Certificate by Auditor Foley.
Declared 8 May 1716.
DECLARED ACCOUNTS: ARMY: FORCES IN THE LOW COUNTRIES.
PIPE OFFICE: ROLL 389 [E351/389].
AUDIT OFFICE: BUNDLE 323, ROLL 1280 [A.O.1/323/1280].
JAMES [BRYDGES], EARL OF CARNARVON, Receiver and Paymaster General of the Armies acting in conjunction with the Allies in the Low Countries.
23 December 1711 to 22 December 1712.
Charge. £ s. d. £ s. d.
Arrears: remaining in the Accomptant's hands upon the end of his last Accompt 2,566 7
depending upon several persons particularly named at the foot of the said Accompt 323,735 11 10¾
326,301 19
Receipts: Money had out of the Exchequer: Michaelmas term 10 & 11 Anne, in part of 1,000,000l. by privy seal of 13 March 1701–2 and royal warrant of 2 April 11 Anne 357,060 15
Easter term, 11 Anne, in full of the same 642,939 4
Michaelmas term, 11 & 12 Anne, in further part of 845,367l. 4s. 3¾d. by the same privy seal and warrant of 19 Aug., 11 Anne 268,808 11
1,268,808 11
Deductions:
poundage deducted from the pay of the British Forces at 12d. in the 1l. 2,113 19 5
deduction of one day's pay in a year from the pay of the British Forces for the use of Chelsea Hospital 71 14
poundage deducted at the rate of 2½ per cent. from the payments to the Foreign Forces 9,845 5 6
Voluntary charge:
for Interest of several Tallies on the Land Tax and the Duties on Malt and Candles 1710 and the Duty on Hops 1711 7,355 17 7
for Interest of Exchequer Bills 267 14 8
for money advanced to Sir Solomon de Medina, contractor for supplying the Army with bread and bread waggons in 1709; afterwards stopped, and repaid to Benjamin Sweet, the Accomptant's Deputy at Amsterdam 10,000 0 0
for money stopped from the British Forces for bread delivered them by the said Sir Solomon in 1710 22,325 11 8
ditto by the said Sir Solomon in 1711 13,678 2
ditto by Adrianus Vanderkaa and Joshua Castanho, contractors for that service in 1712 7,607 5
for money deducted from Col. Kane's Regiment of Foot for arms delivered by the Ordnance 347 4 5
for part of the sum of 248,500l. in Annuities at 5 per cent. for the year 1715 issued to him by Henry, Earl of Lincoln, Paymaster General of the Guards and Garrisons, for satisfying subsidies, arrears and other debts (by royal warrant of 20 Jan. 1715–16) 160,000 0 0
221,581 15 9
Profit by exchange of money remitted abroad for the service of the war:
monies remitted to Portugal or taken up there, computed at 6s. for each Mill-Ree 69,407 12
monies remitted or drawn for the Forces in Spain, issued at 4s. 9d. for each dollar 16,122 13
profit of 3d. per dollar on money sent from Portugal to Spain by Thomas Morrice, Deputy Paymaster of the Forces in Portugal, taken up at 4s. 6d. a dollar and issued at 4s. 9d. a dollar 36,295 3
profit on exchange of money remitted to the Low Countries as issued to the Foreign Forces at 10 guilders 10 stivers to the 1l. sterling and to the British Troops at 10 guilders 15 stivers: total profit 31,092l. 13s. 6¾d., of which 7,051l. 17s. 3¾d. is charged in the Accompt for 1708, leaving 24,040 16 3
(total of the above 145,866l. 4s. 8½d.)
profit on the coining of Genoines sent into Spain in 1708 into Barcelona money as by the accompt of the Deputy Paymaster 693 14 6
profit on recoining 800,000 dollars sent by the Genoese in 1711 as by ditto 9,590 7 11½
further profit on the same received at 4s. 6d. a dollar and issued at 4s. 9d. 10,000 0 0
166,150 7 2
total charge and receipts £1,994,873 13 9
Discharge.
Pay of the General and Staff Officers:
James, late Duke of Ormond, as Commander in Chief at 10l. per diem; for 356 days from 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 21 Dec. 1712 3,560 0 0
Francis Wright for four Aides de Camp to the Commander in Chief at 10s. per diem each; 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 22 Dec. 1712 714 0 0
Henry Lumley as General of the Horse at 6l. per diem with two Aides de Camp at 10s. per diem each; for 365 days to 22 Dec. 1712 2,555 0 0
the Earl of Orkney as General of the Foot and two Aides de Camp; same time 2,555 0 0
Henry Withers, Charles Ross and William Cadogan (now Lord Cadogan) as Lieut. Generals at 4l. per diem each with one Aide de Camp at 10s. per diem to each of them; same time 4,927 10 0
the Earl of Stair as Major General at 40s. per diem from 24 Dec. 1711 to 17 May 1712 and as Lieut. General from 18 May to 22 Dec. 1712 with one Aide de Camp at 10s. per diem from 24 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712 1,350 10 0
the Lord North and Grey, Gilbert Primrose and Joseph Sabine as Majors General, at 40s. per diem each, with one Aide de Camp at 10s. per diem to each; for one year to 22 Dec. 1712 2,737 10 0
William Evans as Brigadier at 30s. per diem, from 24 Dec. 1711 to 17 May 1712 and as Major-General at 40s. per diem with an Aide de Camp at 10s. per diem from 18 May to 22 Dec. 1712 766 10 0
George Kellum and Charles Sybourgh, the Earl of Orrery, Richard Sutton and Henry Durell as Brigadiers at 30s. per diem each; 24 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712 2,737 10 0
Richard Russell as Brigadier, same rate, 18 May to 22 Dec. 1712 328 10 0
William Congreve, Thomas Whitney, Claudius Titefolle, George Grove, Charles Legg and George Skeene, six Majors of Brigade at 10s. per diem each; for 365 days to 22 Dec. 1712 1,095 0 0
William Cadogan (now Lord Cadogan) as Quarter-Master General at 10s. per diem; same time 182 10 0
Col. John Armstrong, Deputy Quarter-Master General, at 5s. per diem; same time 91 5 0
Col. Metcalfe Grahme, Adjutant General, at 10s. per diem; same time 182 10 0
Henry Watkins, Secretary to the Commander in Chief, and Dr. John Friend, Physician to the same, at 10s. per diem each; same time 365 0 0
the Lord Ikerrin, Chaplain to the Commander in Chief, at 6s. 8d. per diem; same time 121 13 4
John Brown, Surgeon to the Commander in Chief, at 10s. per diem; from 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 21 Dec. 1712 178 0 0
Henry Watkins, Deputy Judge Advocate, at 10s. per diem; 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712 182 10 0
Hugh Pudsey, Waggon Master General, for himself and assistant at 7s. 1½d. per diem; same time 130 0 0
John Fury, Provost Marshal, for himself and his two men at 12s. per diem; same time 219 0 0
24,979 8 4
pay of the Regiments; payments made on accompt of pay, subsistence and clothing of the British Regiments in Flanders in 1712 (23 Dec. 1711 to 21 Dec. 1712 unless otherwise stated), allowed by warrant of 6 July 1716:
on the Establishment of the 40,000 men:
Lieut. Gen. Lumley's Regiment of Horse 29,200 18
Lieut. Gen. Wood's (since Lord Windsor's) Regiment of Horse 18,616 5
Lieut. Gen. Cadogan's (since Maj. Gen. Kellum's) Regiment of Horse 19,762 9
Lieut. Gen. Palmes's (since Col. Backwell's) Regiment of Horse 19,181 14
the Marquis of Harwich's Regiment of Horse 19,916 5
the Earl of Stair's Regiment of Dragoons 20,652 8
Lieut. Gen. Ross's Regiment of Dragoons 20,008 15 11¼
Earl of Orkney's Regiment of Foot 29,385 18
the Lord Forfar's Regiment of Foot (formerly Col. Selwyn's) 14,294 5
Lieut. Gen. Webb's Regiment of Foot 14,738 16
the Lord North and Grey's Regiment of Foot 13,271 6
the Marquis of Hertford's Regiment of Foot 15,163 17
Brig. Durell's Regiment of Foot 14,871 1
Brig. Sterne's Regiment of Foot 14,844 4
the Earl of Orrery's Regiment of Foot 14,891 13
Maj. Gen. Sabine's Regiment of Foot 14,664 15
Maj. Gen. Primrose's Regiment of Foot 14,617 18
Brig. Preston's Regiment of Foot 14,204 9 2
Col. Newton's Regiment of Foot 15,386 14
Brig. Sutton's Regiment of Foot 15,273 19 6
Maj. Gen. Evans's Regiment of Foot 14,651 5
Col. Wyndress's Regiment of Foot; to 22 Dec. 1711 923l. 10s. 11d. and from 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Aug. 1712, 8,950l. 9,873 10 11
(total on the Establishment of the 40,000 men 377,472 16s. 0¼d.)
on the Establishment of the 20,000 men:
Maj. Gen. Sybourgh's Regiment of Foot 13,774 1
Maj. Gen. Wynn's Regiment of Foot 14,648 19 10
Col. Leigh's Regiment of Foot 14,579 13 4
Brig. Hans Hamilton's Regiment of Foot 14,688 18
435,164 9
(total on the Establishment of the 20,000 men 57,691l. 13s. 1d.)
pay of the Foreign Forces, being the proportion borne by Great Britain of those Forces on the Establishments of the Forty thousand men and of the Twenty thousand men augmentation or on the several Establishments of Additional Forces; paid on the full Establishments without Muster Rolls and allowed by privy seal 7 July 2 Geo. I:
for the pay of the Foreign Forces on the Establishment of the 40,000 men.
the Sieur William Schnell, Commissary of the Danish Forces, and Baron Sohlenthall, Envoy from the King of Denmark, for the moiety of the pay of 12,000 Danes (detailed as in former years); 23 Dec 1711 to 7 July 1712; as by Treaty 15 June 1701 62,441 17 0
Monsieur Daniel Meynertzhagen, Commissary of the Prussian troops, detailed, for the moiety of their pay from 23 Dec. 1711; as by Treaty of 28 Nov. 1704 14,037 4 6 5/7
Monsieur Henry Schirmer, Commissary of the Hessian troops, detailed, from 23 Dec. 1711; as by the Convention Act of 13 Feb. 1701–2 18,281 19 6 2/7
the Sieur de Klingraff and the Baron de Bothmar for the ordinary pay of the Forces of Hannover and Zell, detailed, from 23 Dec. to 7 July 1712; as by a Treaty made by John, Duke of Marlborough, pursuant to the Queen's directions 116,900 3 11
(total on the Establishment of the 40,000 men 211,661l. 5s. 0d.)
for the pay of the Foreign Forces on the Establishment of the 20,000 men:
John Adolph Thomson, agent for the troops of Holstein Gottorp, detailed, as by the Treaty of Repartition 30 Aug. 1703 and the Convention of 15 March 1703; 365 days to 22 Dec. 1712; part of 50,245l. 6s. 2 3/7d. from 23 Dec. 1711 to 4 Aug. 1713 25,041 11 4
John Hallungius, Agent for the troops of Saxe Gotha, detailed, 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Aug. 1712 and for arrears 23 Aug. to 22 Dec. 1712; part of 28,939l. 2s. 2 3/7d. allowed for their pay from 22 Dec. 1711 to 3 April 1713 and for their march money 19,638 9 8 3/7
the Sieur Henry Schirmer, Commissary of the Hessian Forces, detailed, for 62 days 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Feb. 1711–12; pursuant to a Convention Act 31 March 1703 1,843 17 5 1/7
the same for the Regiment of Dragoons of Liege, commanded by the Baron de Waleff (afterwards by the Baron de Borlé), detailed, from 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712; part of 25,027l. 6s. 8 5/7d. from 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Aug. 1713; pursuant to a Convention with M. Waleff 24 Feb. 1703–4 14,654 5 5 3/7
and to Monsr. William Schnell, Commissary of the Danish Forces, and the Baron de Sohlenthall, Envoy from his Danish Majesty, for the moiety of the pay of 520 men transferred to the Establishment of the 20,000 men as super-numeraries on the Establishment of the 40,000 men 4,468 6 10
(total on the Establishment of the 20,000 men 65,646l. 10s. 9d.)
on the several Establishments of Additional Forces:
Monsieur de la Faille and Monsieur Daniel Steinghens, agents for the 3,000 men of the Elector Palatine's Forces, detailed, being the proportion payable by Great Britain for 365 days from 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712; part of 51,379l. 2s. 8 6/7d. from 23 Dec. 1711 to 23 May. 1713 and for their march money; pursuant to Treaty of 26 May 1706 34,208 7 2 6/7
Monsieur Klingraaff, Commissary of the troops of Hanover, for the moiety of the pay of a Regiment of Dragoons, commanded by the Baron de Bothmar, from 23 Dec. 1711 to 7 July 1712 and for their march money 669 16 1
the Baron de Gersdorff, Maj. Gen. Seckendorff and Capt. Richter, for the proportion payable by Great Britain of the pay of 4,639 Saxons and of three additional Battalions of Saxons and the two Battalions commanded by Maj. Gen. Seckendorff from 23 Dec. 1711 to 7 July 1712 and for march money; pursuant to two Treaties 72,263 3 5
Monsieur Keysersfield, for the pay of a Battalion of the Elector of Treves; according to the Treaty of 7 Nov. 1709 2,832 7 7 3/7
Baron de Leutrum on accompt of the pay of the Battalion of Ottinghen under his command, from 1 Nov. 1711, 980l. 19s. 0 4/7d.; more in full of all pretensions 2,890l. 3s. 0d. 3,871 2 0 4/7
Maj. Gen. Seissau, Col. of a Regiment of Foot formed out of Deserters, to complete the Queen's proportion of the pay to 31 Oct. 1711 236 19 10
396,789 12 0
(total on the Additional Establishments 119,481l. 16s. 3d.)
money paid to several British General Officers to make up their pay according to the Commissions and Posts in which they served:
the Earl of Stair for an allowance to make up his pay of Maj. General to that of Lieut. General, 24 Dec. 1711 to 17 May 1712, and for his Aide de Camp, for 365 days to 22 Dec. 1712; more to complete his forage allowance as Lieut. General 513 11
the Lord North and Grey, to complete his pay and forage allowance as Lieut. General, for 365 days to 22 Dec. 1712 763 9 10
1,277 1
to sundry Officers for money respited on the Muster Rolls 24 Dec. 1707 to 22 Dec. 1708, allowed by the Duke of Marl-borough's warrant of 8 Dec. 1711 to enable them to recruit their Regiments and put them in a condition of service:
Col. Sybourgh for the pay of a Lieut. in his Regiment (formerly the Duke of Schonberg's) 90 15 0
Alexander Gordon for the pay of two Lieuts. and two Ensigns in the Earl of Orkney's Regiment 50 16 8
John Merrill for the pay of two Captains of Sir Richard Temple's Regiment 60 0 0
Robert Gardner for the pay of an Ensign of Col. Pendergrast's Regiment 22 7 4
Robert Gardner for the pay of an Ensign and sundry private soldiers of Col. Farrington's Regiment 116 18 4
(total for 1708 by the above Warrant, 240l. 17s. 4d.)
the like for money respited on the Muster Rolls 23 Dec. 1708 to 22 Dec. 1709, allowed by the same Warrant:
Col. Sybourgh for the pay of a Lieut. of his Regiment of Horse 228 0 0
Alexander Gordon for the pay of a Captain and his servants and of a private soldier of the Earl of Orkney's Regiment 32 9 4
Thomas Southerne for the pay of a Captain and his servants of the Earl of Orrery's Regiment 91 10 0
John Merrill for the pay of several Commissioned Officers and a private soldier of Sir William Temple's Regiment 147 10 4
Robert Gardner for the pay of two Lieutenants of Sir Thomas Pendergrast's Regiment 71 3 4
Robert Mitchener for the pay of an Ensign of Maj. Gen. Wynn's Regiment 33 11 0
(total for 1709 by the above warrant 604l. 4s. 0d.)
the like for money respited on the Muster Rolls 1710 and 1711 and allowed by special warrants:
Lieut. Col. John Fane, Captain of a Troop in Lieut. Gen. Cadogan's Regiment of Horse, for his pay 23 June to 22 Oct. 1710, allowed by royal warrant 28 June 1712 131 3 0
George Read, agent of the Lord North and Grey's Regiment, for the pay of Captain Lieutenant Giles Peacock 23 Oct. 1710 to 23 Feb. 1710–11, allowed by like warrant 13 Jan. 1712–13 28 14 0
1,104 18
allowance to the General Officers and Colonels of the several British Regiments serving in the Low Countries in 1712 for their allowance for forage during winter quarters:
to the General of the Horse, the General of the Foot, four Lieuts. General, four Majors General and twelve Aides de Camp, six Brigadiers General, six Majors of Brigade, the Quarter Master General, the Deputy Paymaster, the Judge Advocate, the Provost Marshal and the Waggon Master General; for 200 days 2,449 17 0
to Francis Wright for the four Aides de Camp to the Commander in Chief; same time 89 6 0
to the Earl of Stair and Lieut. Gen. Ross for their Regiments of Dragoons; same time 4,018 12 0
to Col. William Kerr for his Regiment of Dragoons; same time 1,292 13 0
to the two Battalions of Foot commanded by the Earl of Orkney and fourteen other Battalions of Foot (Col. Selwyn's, Lieut. Gen. Webb's, Lord North and Grey's, the Earl of Hertford's, Brig. Durell's, Brig. Sterne's, the Earl of Orrery's, Maj. Gen. Sabine's, Maj. Gen. Primrose's, Brig. Preston's, Col. Newton's, Brig. Sutton's, Maj. Gen. Evans's and Col. Pocock's) 5,358 2 8
to the Battalion of the First Regiment of Foot Guards, six Companies of the Second ditto commanded by Brig. Morrison, and four other Battalions under Maj. Gen. Sybourgh, Brig. Hans Hamilton, Maj. Gen. Wynn and Col. Leigh; for 100 days 1,004 13 0
to the Battalion of the First Regiment of Foot Guards, to the six Companies of the second ditto, to the two Battalions of the Royal Regiment of Foot and to eighteen other Battalions as above for waggon money for the year 1712 4,400 0 0
18,613 3 8
payments for the contingent uses of the Forces in Flanders:
Lieut. John Calder of the Royal Regiment of Foot (the Earl of Orkney's) to defray the charge of raising recruits who mutinied and deserted and in consideration of wounds he received in pursuit of them 100 0 0
Hester Walker for her losses sustained by the Army in Flanders 10 0 0
Francis Wright for special services relating to the Forces 100 0 0
Henry Watkins for disbursements for the contingent uses of the Forces 9,700 0 0
Robert Hazlefoot for the charge of caring for disabled soldiers discharged in Flanders and landed at Harwich and for their conduct money to London 30 Sept. 1711 to 25 March 1712 and for his salary of 25l. per an. 53 8 8
9,963 8 8
extraordinary payments for the Forces:
The late Duke of Ormond, Captain General of the Queen's Land Forces, towards the charge of providing an equipage as Commander in Chief 5,000 0 0
the Baron de Waleff for money paid him as the Queen's Bounty for his services in the campaign of 1712 2,000 0 0
Lieut. Col. Cornelius Swan for the Queen's Bounty for his long and faithful services at and ever since the War of Ireland, the losses and expense sustained during two years confinement in France after the Battle of Almanza and other services 200 0 0
Lieut. Gen. Webb to defray the charges of providing the drummers of his Regiment of Foot with clothing and colours with the Queen's Arms for two years to 24 March 1712–13 160 0 0
Lieut. Gen. Ross to buy three horses in the room of others killed and lost upon service in 1709 45 0 0
Col. Leigh Backwell for part of 1,940l. to make good the loss of 97 horses killed or taken by the French near Doway [Douai] in 1711 1,642 0 0
Edward Harley, an Auditor of the Imprests, for examining and stating the accompts of Jacob Vander Esch as Paymaster of the Dutch, Danes and Saxe Gotha troops in the war in the reign of William III and those of Sir Henry Furnesse of remittances of money for the Forces in the Low Countries, 25 May, 1705 to 11 Aug. 1710 1,353 0 0
10,400 0 0
payments to the agents of the Foreign Forces for the Queen's proportion of the extraordinary allowances of the said Forces pursuant to Treaties, for extraordinary pay and waggon money, for forage money in winter quarters and waggon money during the campaign, for douceurs for recruiting, etc., for the years 1709, 1710, 1711 and 1712 according to accompts extracted by Monsr. Slingelandt, Secretary to the Council of the States General:
£ s. d.
the Danish troops 20,240 9 7 2/7
the Prussian troops 1,929 0 6 6/7
the Hannover troops 6,157 12 10 2/7
the Hessian troops 847 12 4 4/7
the Holstein troops 3,473 1 2 6/7
the Saxon troops 4,784 3 7 3/7
the two Battalions of Seckendorff 582 17 1 5/7
the Palatine troops 1,553 4 1 3/7
the troops of Saxe Gotha 686 14 7 2/7
the Regiment of Foot of Osnaburgh 98 11 5 1/7
the like of Oost Frieze 145 14 3 3/7
the Baron de Waleff's Regiment of Dragoons 298 19 0 4/7
Col. Cariss's Regiment of Foot 154 5 8 4/7
the troops of Treves 114 5 8 4/7
41,066 12 4
Monsieur Kreienbergh for the Queen's moiety for the Regiment of Dragoons of Hannover commanded by the Baron de Bothmar in 1710 and 1711 3,867 6 11
the Baron de Bothmar for arrears of extraordinaries to the Hannover troops to 7 July 1712, part of 65,022l. 8s. 8d. to clear the said troops 2,098 2 2
Monsr. Anthony Bout, agent for the Palatine troops, for a moiety of the like allowances for 1709 and 1710 2,145 4 9 1/7
Messieurs La Faille and Van Katts, Paymaster of the Palatine troops, for the Queen's proportion of bread and forage for four Battalions in Maestricht in 1711 1,009 10 5 5/7
the agents for the several Corps of Foreign Troops for the proportion payable by Great Britain of the allowances for extraordinaries as well for preceding years as for the current year:
£ s. d.
the Danish troops 16,772 18 0
the Hessian troops 10,597 17 1
the Prussian troops 6,431 0 11
the Palatine troops 5,806 13 0
the Saxon troops 2,385 18 7 1/7
the troops of Saxe Gotha 971 8 6 6/7
the Battalion of Osnabrugh 240 0 11 1/7
the Regiment of Foot of Oost Friezland 535 11 6
the Baron de Waleff's Regiment 1,437 6 5 4/7
the Regiment of Col. Cariss 488 0 0
45,666 15 0 5/7
Monsieur Daniel Steinghens, Envoy from the Elector Palatine, of the Queen's proportion of two third parts of the Extraordinaries of the Palatine troops serving in Catalonia but borne on the Flanders Establishment, viz. a douceur of 2 stivers a day each for 805 horses and 1 stiver a day for 2,307 men from 6 May 1709 to 31 Dec. 1711 and for the agio of the pay of the said troops being 9 per cent. 20,529 6 8
116,382 18 4 4/7
Sir Solomon de Medina, contractor for furnishing bread and bread waggons for the Forces in the Low Countries for 1710, for bread delivered to the Prussian Corp of Augmentation and for the balance of his Accompt for 1710; in both 26,799 12 6
Adrian Vanderkaa and Joshua Castanho, contractors for the like services in 1712, for bread delivered to the British Forces in the campaign of 1712 and to the Foreign Forces in the joint pay of the Queen and of the States General to the time of their separating from the Queen's troops, and for proviandt geldt to all the said Forces and other contingent charges and for the pay of 432 bread waggons attending the Army 49,835 15 11
76,635 8 5
Martin Brouwers for the Queen's proportion of two-fifth parts of the cost of 40,000 rations of forage furnished to four Saxon Battalions of Foot in the Queen's pay during their winter quarters 1709 and for 15,172 rations of forage delivered to several detachments from the Army at Port Oby and Douay in the campaign of 1710, there being no forage on the ground in those parts 3,307 19 7
The Sieurs Heymans and Dieriex for forage furnished to nine squadrons of British Horse and some Hannover Dragoons upon their taking the field in the spring of 1711 954 15 0
the same for the part payable by the Queen of the price of spring forage delivered to the British Horse 14 April to 28 May 1712, for the same reason 1,602 17 1 3/7
5,865 11 8 3/7
(total for Extraordinaries, etc., as well for the British as for the Foreign Forces in the Low Countries 240,242l. 10s. 4½d.)
total for the British and Foreign troops borne on the Flanders Establishment 1,097,175 19
Subsidies to Foreign Princes:
to the King of Prussia; to Monsieur Krandt, his Treasurer at War, for a body of 6,205 men, Troops of Augmentation in the Queen's sole pay, for six months to 4 June 1712, 34,285l. 14s. 3 3/?d.; to Monsieur Abraham Romswinkel, his Resident at the Hague, for the Queen's proportion of the subsidy for a body of 8,000 men who served in Italy for nine months to 4/15 Oct. 1712, 37,500l.; Monsieur Krandt for agio, bread and forage of the Corp of Augmentation during winter quarters 1710–11, 20,386l. 3s. 9 4/7d.; Monsieur James Meynertzhagen for the Queen's proportion of forage to the Old Corp of 12,000 Prussians serving in their own King's pay for winter quarters 1709–10, 1710–11 and 1711–12, for agio, bread and forage and to Matthew Du Bien for forage, straw and faggots to several Prussian troops upon passing the Maes to join the Grand Army in 1711, and to a detachment of the said troops in garrison at Liege (in part of 16,438l. 6s. 10d. for extraordinaries), 10,305l. 10s. 6d.; to William Burroughs and Monsieur G. Lambrecht, agents for the provinces of Guelderland, Limbourg, the States of Liege and County of Looz, for the Queen's proportion of the charge of forage delivered by the inhabitants of those countries to the Old Corps of 12,000 Prussians in the joint pay of Great Britain and Holland for winter quarters 1710–11 and 1711–12, 14,029l. 5s. 5d. 116,506 14 0
to the Elector Palatine, for money paid to Monsieur Steinghens, his Minister, on accompt of the Queen's moiety of the subsidy of 100,000 guilders for maintaining four Battalions of his troops in the service of Great Britain and Holland for the year 1712, 900l.; more in full of the same for a year to Xmas 1712 (part of 8,333l. 6s. 6d. to clear the same to 23 Sept. 1713) 3,861l. 18s. 6d. 4,761 18 6
to the Landgrave of Hesse Cassell for money paid to the Baron de Dalwigh, his Minister, for his subsidy for maintaining two Regiments of Horse in Italy from 23 Dec. 1711 4,784 2 11
to the Duke of Savoy (now King of Sicily) for the money paid the said Duke's Minister for the Queen's proportion of his ordinary subsidy for eight months 3 April to 3 Dec. 1712 105,777 15 4
231,830 10 9
Interest of money lent by several persons for the use of the Forces and for the discompt on Tallies:
to the Bank of England for interest of sums advanced 20 May 1710 to 20 Feb. 1710–11 5,681 10 4
to Sir John Lambert, Sir Richard Hoar and Edmund Gibbons, remitters, for interest of several sums for which they gave their Bills of Exchange at Amsterdam and Antwerp 2,063 0 3
to the Bank of England for interest upon Loans made in 1712 22,390 17 11
the aforesaid Sir John Lambert and other remitters for discompt at 12s. 6d. per cent. for 90,000l. paid them in Tallies for Bills of Exchange drawn by them in Jan. and Feb. 1711–12 and for interest of 150,000l. from the date of their Bills to 4 April 1712 at 6 per cent. per an. 2,140 11 7
32,276 0 1
Money paid out of the Deductions of Poundage and One Day's Pay in a Year:
to the Officers of the Standing Hospitals in the Low Countries during the campaign of 1712 and to the breaking up of the said Hospitals; two Physicians at 20s. per diem each, a Chaplain at 6s. 8d. per diem, the Director for himself and two clerks at 20s. per diem, the Comptroller at 10s. per diem, four Master Surgeons at 15s. per diem each, 12 Surgeon's Mates at 5s. per diem each, two Master Apothecaries at 10s. per diem each and three Apothecaries' Mates at 5s. per diem each 2,316 13 4
to sundry officers attending the Field Hospital during the Campaign of 1712 etc.; to two Physicians at 20s. per diem each, a Chaplain at 6s. 8d. per diem, the Director and his Clerk at 15s. per diem, the Comptroller at 10s. per diem, three Master Surgeons at 15s. per diem each, eleven Surgeon's Mates at 5s. per diem each, one Master Apothecary at 10s. per diem, three Apothecaries' Mates at 5s. per diem each, one Master Apothecary at 10s. per diem, three Apothecaries' Mates at 5s. per diem each and a conductor to the Waggons at 5s. per diem; for 200 days 2,016 13 4
Dr. Edward Coatesworth for thirty chests of medicines for the Forces 626 17 0
for fees to the Officers of the Receipt of the Exchequer, detailed 11,815 3 0
to the Accomptant for the salary of himself, his under officers and the incidents of his office, viz. his own salary of 2,000l. per an., under officers, clerks and office rent 1,130l. per an., incident charges 500l. per an., New Year's gifts 582l. 18s. 6d. per an. 4,212 18 6
for the salaries and allowances to the Deputy Paymaster in the Low Countries, viz. to Ben Sweet at Amsterdam for his salary at 60s. per diem, from 24 June 1705 to 22 Dec. 1709 (besides 798l. 2s. allowed in preceding accompts) 4,130l. 18s.; more to him and Humphrey Walcott succeeding him for salary and other charges, 24 Dec. 1710 to 23 Dec. 1712 (besides 228l. 2s. 6d. allowed in the preceding accompt) 2,695l. 17s. 6d.; and to Henry Cartwright at Antwerp for his like salary, 1 Nov. 1706 to 23 Dec. 1709, 3,447l. and for salary and other charges, 24 Dec. 1710 to 23 Dec. 1712, 2,924l. 13,197 15 6
to Edward Harley, an Auditor of the Imprests, for his fee 509 4 0
to Robert Hazlefoot, Surgeon, for the care of sick and disabled soldiers that landed at Harwich and for their conduct money to London, Michaelmas and Xmas quarters 1710 and 1712, and for salary at 25l. per an. 272 7 0
to Philip Deane, late Mayor of Harwich, for his expense in relieving sick and disabled soldiers discharged in Flanders and for conveying them to the next town, 1 Jan. 1709–10 to 8 April 1710 9 17 2
to Major Gen. John Hill for money expended in the marches and quarters of his Regiment of Foot, 20 Oct. 1711, when they arrived at Portsmouth from Canada, to 14 June 1712, when they were ordered to march and embark for Dunkirk 268 6 3
35,245 15 1
Money paid to John Howe, late Paymaster General of the Guards and Garrisons, to be paid over to the Officers commanding the three companies of Invalids at the Tower of London from the dates of their respective Commissions to 8 July 1712 807 2 0
Money paid over to Charles Eversfield, late Treasurer of the Ordnance, for arms delivered to the Forces 310 8 10
Additional levy money paid to several Officers of the following Regiments of Foot, at the rate of 40s. for every Volunteer, for the year 1708:
Lieut. Gen. Faringdon's Regiment, for 88 men 176 0 0
the Earl of Orrery's Regiment, for 97 men 194 0 0
the Earl of Orkney's Regiment, for 109 men 218 0 0
the Duke of Argyle's Regiment, for 11 men 22 0 0
Maj. Gen. Tatton's Regiment, for 24 men 48 0 0
Brig. Hans Hamilton's Regiment, for 149 men 298 0 0
Lieut. Gen. Ingoldsby's Regiment, for 4 men 8 0 0
Lieut. Gen. Webb's Regiment, for 23 men 46 0 0
Col. Lalo's Regiment, for 108 men 216 0 0
Brig. Preston's Regiment, for 40 men 80 0 0
Maj. Gen. Sabine's Regiment, for 21 men 42 0 0
1,348 0 0
Money paid into the Exchequer to reimburse several Receivers of the Land Tax for sums paid for Recruits raised in England in 1710, 1711 and 1712 for Regiments on the Establishment of Ireland, to be made good by the Treasury of Ireland:
Col. Tidcombe's Regiment of Foot 110 0 0
Col. Delauney's Regiment of Foot 72 11 0
Col. Brazier's Regiment of Foot 4 0 0
186 11 0
Loss by exchange of monies remitted abroad, for the Forces in Spain and Portugal as well as in the Low Countries, being the difference between the prime cost and the produce there-of, 25 June 1705 to 24 Aug. 1713; as also for the charges of discompting Bills of Exchange in Holland before the said Bills became payable:
loss or difference by exchange of money remitted to Portugal and issued at 6s. per mill rea 15,013 10
ditto of money remitted to Spain and issued at 4s. 9d. per dollar 4,882 16
ditto of money remitted to France and Spain for the subsistence of the prisoners taken at Almanza and issued at 13 lires 5 sols to the 1l. 1,419 9
money lost on shipboard, part of the remittances sent in specie to Spain in the Queen's ships of war:
money lost on board the Resolution having been taken up at Genoa, 142l. 17s. 1½d.; ditto on board the Royal Anne in carriage from Lisbon to Spain, 307l. 19s. 9¾d. 450 16 11¼
loss upon 2,000 pistolls lent by the Earl of Peterborough to the bank at Barcelona 33 19 3
loss by coining at the Tower of London 65,000 moidores of gold brought from Lisbon in 1710 6,514 11 1
allowance to Thomas Morrice [Deputy Paymaster in Portugal], for his charges in shipping of 3,153,051 dollars from Lisbon to Spain, viz. at 4s. per cent., for use of a house to lodge the money near the waterside and again at 4s. per cent. to four persons employed to carry the same on shipboard contrary to the laws of Portugal 2,837 12 0
loss by exchange on money remitted for the Forces in the Low Countries and issued at 10 guilders 10 stivers to 1l. for the Foreign Forces and at 10 guilders 15 stivers for the British Forces 127,073 17 10
(total loss on exchange etc. 158,226l. 13s. 1¾d.)
charging of discompting several Bills of Exchange and taking up money in Holland in 1710, 1711 and 1712 before the Bills became due 32,364 0 10¾
190,590 14
total payments and allowances 1,589,771 1
and so remains 405,102l. 12s. 1¾d.
against which depending on sundry persons for money imprested to them, for which they are to render their accompts:
money imprested in the year 1703:
Samuel Atkinson and Nicholas Roop for transporting Forces from England since 23 Dec. 1703 and for the Holland transport service 24 Dec. 1703 to 26 May 1703 and for 243 recruits shipped to Holland 15 June 1703 3,926 10 8
money imprested in the year 1704:
John Nuttin, Paymaster of the Transports, for shipping provisions and other accommodations supplied in April and March 1703–4 for 3,467 men and 1,024 horses transported to Holland, part of the 40,000 men 5,537 7 5
ditto for 2,405 men, part of the 20,000 men 1,800 0 10
Charles Bertie, Treasurer of the Ordnance, for the Queen's Bounty allowed several Officers of the Train of Artillery that served in Germany 1,608 10 0
ditto for Josias Sandby, chaplain, and Samuel Forster, clerk to the said train 50 0 0
John Hudson, Director of the Hospitals in the Low Countries, for the Queen's Royal Bounty to several Officers of the said Hospital that attended the Army in Germany 435 0 0
9,430 18 3
money imprested for the Hospitals in the Low Countries:
John Hudson, Director of the Hospitals in the Low Countries; in the year 1703 3,939 11
ditto; in the year 1704 9,254 11 3
ditto; in the year 1705 9,261 5 11
ditto; in the year 1706 9,010 14 0
ditto; in the year 1707 10,895 4 0
42,361 6
money imprested in the year 1708:
John Hudson for the charges of the said Hospitals 3 May 1708 to 12 March 1708–9 25,359 14 0
money imprested in the year 1709:
John Hudson for the same in the year 1709 19,342 1 2
money imprested in the year 1710:
John Hudson for the same in the year 1710 21,579 3 2
John Hudson and partners in full satisfaction for the extraordinary forage provided for the troops in the Low Countries from the beginning of winter quarters 1708–9 to the end of the Campaign of 1710 48,056 1 9 2/7
Frances Beaumont for money paid on accompt and in advance of his contract for furnishing forage to the troops in the Queen's pay upon the Maes during winter quarters 1710–11 582 17 1 5/7
70,218 2 1
money imprested in the year 1711:
Messieurs Goris and Pangaert upon accompt etc. of their contract for furnishing the troops in the Queen's pay with forage upon their passage and entering into the Field in 1711 19,880 19
John Hudson for forage delivered to the Hannover troops Nov. 1710 to 23 April 1711 1,631 10 6
Francis Haymans upon accompt, etc. of his contract for furnishing forage to the English Horse upon their taking the Field in 1711 1,650 0 0
the same for ditto to the Hannover troops 2,569 2 6
John Hudson for the charge of the Hospitals in 1711 17,344 18 4
Martin Brower upon accompt, etc., of his contract for furnishing forage to the Hessian and Saxon troops and Waleff's Dragoons in winter quarters 1710 5,714 5
the same for ditto to the Danish troops in garrison at Bruges during winter quarters 1710 3,333 6 8
Francis Beaumont upon accompt, etc., of his contracts for furnishing forage to the troops in the Low Countries in winter quarters 1711 2,732 19 0
more by a later warrant 19,612 11 9
John Beaumont in advance of his contract for furnishing forage to the Queen's Forces and to those in her pay in the Low Countries in the same year 23,877 2 10¼
Francis Beaumont for the like in their winter quarters 1711 and the spring following 54,750 2 9
153,096 19
money imprested within the time of this Accompt:
Francis Beaumont, contractor for furnishing forage to the Queen's Forces in the Low Countries, for money paid on accompt and in advance for furnishing a magazine of 1,200,000 rations of forage at Douay against the opening of the campaign 1712 10,980 0 0
the same in further part of his contract for furnishing the Forces with forage in the winter of 1711 and the spring following 4,761 18 1
Francis Beaumont and partners for money paid upon accompt, etc., of their contract for forage for the Queen's Forces in winter quarters 1711–12 20,000 0 0
Peter Pangaart and the Sieurs Goris, Robyns and Brouwers, contractors for furnishing forage in the years 1710 and 1711, for money paid for forage for the troops in the Queen's pay to the end of the campaign 1711 18,119 10 6
John Elbo and George Boele, contractors for furnishing forage to the said Forces, for money paid in advance etc. for furnishing forage during winter quarters 1712 and the ensuing spring 3,137 17 9
Judas Henriquez and Joshua Castanho, contractors for furnishing of bread to the Forces in the Low Countries, for money paid upon accompt of the Queen's proportion of the advance payable according to the contract made with them by the States General 7,428 11 5
John Hudson, Director of the Hospitals in the Low Countries, for money paid him for stores etc. of the Field Hospital for the campaign 1712 2,305 10 10½
the same, for money paid him in advance of his contract for furnishing forage to the Hannover troops on the Demer during winter quarters 1710–11 3,809 10 5
the same, for money paid him on accompt of the expense of the Hospitals in the Low Countries for the year 1712, being part of 156,118 gilders 6½ stivers 10,255 9 5
more, for money paid Dr. Edward Coatsworth in further part of the same for the expense of drugs and medicines furnished to the Hospitals in 1712 3,403 13 0
and upon Sir Henry Furnesse, bt., decd., for money paid him to balance his accompts of remittances for the Forces in the Low Countries numbered 1, 2, 3 871 17 1
85,073 18
total depending 408,809 10
and so the Accomptant is in surplusage 3,706 18
Declared 27 December 1716.
[Auditor's] Memorandum. Whereas 435,164l. 9s. 1¼d. has been allowed the Accomptant by the King's Warrant 6 July 1716 for payments on accompt of subsistence, pay and clothing of several British Regiments on the Flanders Establishment, which sum is to be charged to the respective Regiments upon their being cleared, if the Colonels of the said Regiments or their agents shall make it appear that any part ought not to be so charged then the same is to be surcharged on the Accomptant.
The sum of 186l. 11s. allowed for recruits raised in England and delivered over to several Regiments on the Establishment of Ireland is to be repaid by the Treasury of that Kingdom.
The value of bread delivered to the foreign troops by Adrian Vanderkaa and Joshua Castanho, contractors, is to be charged upon the said Forces when their pretensions come to be satisfied, viz.:
31,398 loaves to the Holstein troops, 638l. 18s. 1½d.;
5,293 loaves to the Baron de Waleff's Walloon Regiment, 107l. 14s. 0½d.:
63,788½ loaves to the Danes, 1,298l. 0s. 4¼d.;
73,687 loaves to the Saxons, 1,499l. 8s. 10d.;
4,777 loaves to the Palatines, 97l. 4s. 1d.;
195,078½ loaves to the Hannovers, 3,969l. 12s. 4¼d.;
105,157 loaves to the Hessians, 2,139l. 16s. 4¼d.
The above amounts have been certified by Henry Watkins, Inspector of the Extraordinaries of the war in Flanders, by which accompt it appears that Proviandt gelt payable by such of the troops as did not take their bread from these contractors, viz. by the British troops, 1,237l. 19s. 1d. and by the Foreign troops above-mentioned, 1,288l. 7s. 5d., has been allowed the contractors pursuant to their contract; which sums appear to be chargeable on the pay of the said Forces, the same having been deducted from them in preceding years.
The Foreign troops are further chargeable under the Queen's warrant of 10 March 1710–11 with the 2½ per cent. deduction for all monies paid or to be paid to them for pay, subsidies or other allowances for 1712 as also from the times to which the said deduction was last paid or deducted from them besides 9,845l. 5s. 6d. wherewith the Accomptant has charged himself in this accompt.
This Accomptant is to be charged in his subsequent accompt with all such sums as have come to his hands for Interest on Tallies and Exchequer Bills as well as for money received for Dividends upon the South Sea stock from time to time in his hands which have not been already charged.
From the preceding Accompt it appears that 40,000l. was lent by the Queen in 1704 to the present Emperor of Germany as King of Spain of which care is to be taken when the accompt is settled with him.
There is due from the States General a moiety of the yearly allowance of 800l. for waggon money to the four English Battalions on the Establishment of the 20,000 men as well as a moiety of their allowance for forage from Xmas 1707 to Xmas 1712.
Of 2,721l. 12s. 9d. appearing as undeducted at the foot of Charles Fox's Accompt for 1704 for charges of transportation, there has been deducted in the Accompt for 1706 5l. 14s. 6d. from Lieut. Gen. Ingoldsby's Regiment, leaving to be charged 2,715l. 18s. 1d.
It also appears from Mr. Fox's Accompt for the half year to 24 June 1705 that there is undeducted for provisions for the Forces in transportation 150l. 8s. 2d.
There is also undeducted of the charges given in by the Commissioners for Transportation for 1706 72l. 3s. 8d. and for 1707 22l. 3s. 3d.; care is to be taken that the Regiments be charged for the certified charges of transportation when the said Regiments come to be cleared.
Sums received by Benjamin Sweet, late Deputy Paymaster at Amsterdam, by the Deduction of 1 per cent. upon payments made to the contractors for furnishing bread etc. are chargeable upon Mr. Sweet by Resolution of the House of Commons as Public Money as are like sums received by any other Deputy Paymaster [see p. xxii supra].
[The above Memoranda are by Auditor Edward Harley.]
DECLARED ACCOUNTS: ARMY FORCES IN SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.
PIPE OFFICE: ROLL 398 [E351/398]. AUDIT OFFICE: BUNDLE 319, ROLL 1268 [A.O.1/319/1268].
JAMES [BRYDGES], EARL OF CARNARVON, Receiver and Paymaster General of the Army acting in conjunction with the Forces of the Allies.
23 December 1711 to 23 December 1712.
Charge. £ s. d.
Arrears: remaining upon the end of the last Accompt 1,368 3
depending on sundry persons named at the foot of the said last Accompt 530,128 11 11¼
Receipts: money had out of the Exchequer: £ s. d.
Michaelmas term 10 and 11 Anne, in full of 1,000,000l. by privy seal of 13 March 1701–2 and royal warrant of 22 Dec. 10 Anne 730,000 0 0
Easter term 11 Anne, in part of 845,367l. 4s. 3¾d. by the same privy seal and royal warrant of 19 Aug. 11 Anne 215,758 11
945,758 11
poundage deducted at 12d. in the 1l. 3,597 4 7
deduction of one day's pay for the Royal Hospital, Chelsea 195 3 0
money voluntarily charged as received by this Accomptant on several occasions:
for the value of stores delivered by Theophilus Blyke as deputy to James Craggs, Commissary of Stores, viz.:
to the Portuguese troops 1,515l. 19s. 3d. and to the British Forces 4,006l. 7s. 2½d. 5,522 6
for the Dividend on 296,856l. 11s. 5d. in South Sea stock for the half-year to Midsummer 1712 8,905 13 11
from the Treasury of Ireland for reimbursing an advance for the subsistence of several regiments transferred to the Establishment of the United Kingdom 18,453 11
in further part of 248,500l. in annuities transferred by the Earl of Lincoln, Paymaster General of the Forces, for satisfying arrears of subsidies, etc. 14,000 0 0
46,881 12
total charge and receipts 1,527,929 6
Discharge.
pay of the General and Staff Officers serving in Spain:
the Duke of Argyll as Commander in Chief for himself at 10l. a day and for his three Aides de Camp, Physician and Surgeon each at 10s. a day to 25 March 1712 and thereafter for himself and his three Aides de Camp 1,454 17
the Earl of Barrymore as Lieutenant General for himself at 4l. a day and for his two Aides de Camp each at 10s. a day to 23 June 1712 915 0 0
Thomas Whetham as Major General for himself at 40s. a day and for his Aide de Camp at 10s. a day to 4 June 1712 410 0 0
Nicholas Price and Lord Mark Kerr as Brigadiers General at 30s. a day each (whole year) 1,095 0 0
Andrew Bissett, the like to 23 June 1712 274 10 0
Humphrey Gore, the like from 24 June 1710 to 23 Dec. 1710 274 10 0
Thomas Lambert, John Blechynden and Archibald Hamilton, three Majors of Brigade, each at 10s. a day to 23 Dec. 1712 (366 days) 549 0 0
Elizeus Burges, the like to 22 Dec. 1712 (365 days); same rate 182 10 0
John Campbell, the like for 164 days to 4 June 1712; ditto 82 0 0
Col. Thomas Howard, the like from 23 Dec. 1710 to 22 Feb. 1711–12 (426 days); ditto 213 0 0
Humphrey Bland, the like from 23 Dec. 1710 to 23 April 1712 (486 days); ditto 243 0 0
J. Wyvell, the like from 23 Dec. 1710 to 23 Dec. 1712 (731 days); ditto 365 10 0
Col. James Moyser as Aide de Camp to Gen. Stanhope, from 23 Dec. 1711 to 23 Aug. 1712 (245 days); ditto 122 10 0
Henry Ligoniere as Adjutant General to 22 Dec. 1712 (365 days); ditto 182 10 0
James Cockburn as Judge Advocate to 4 June 1712 (164 days); ditto 82 0 0
Patrick Paterson appointed to act as Deputy Judge Advocate at 5s. a day from 12 March 1711–12 to 30 Nov. 1712 (264 days) 66 0 0
Anthony Westcombe as Secretary to the Commander in Chief at 10s. a day to 23 June 1712 (183 days) 91 10 0
John Harris, Chaplain to the Commander in Chief, at 6s. 8d. a day to 22 Dec. 1712 (365 days) 121 13 4
Peter Geneste, Chirurgeon to Gen. Stanhope, to complete his pay from 6s. 6d. to 10s. a day from 24 Dec. 1710 to 23 April 1711 21 3 6
Richard White as Provost Marshal for himself and three men at 17s. a day to 14 Nov. 1712 (327 days) 277 19 0
Colin Campbell as Waggon Master at 3s. a day to 23 June 1712 (183 days) 27 9 0
Giles Earl, Commissary of Provisions, for himself and two clerks at 30s. a day to 22 Dec. 1712 (272 days) 408 0 0
Officers of the Hospital; Dr. John Smallbones at 20s. a day as Physician to 23 June 1712 (183 days), 183l.; Francis Arbonin, Director, at 25s. a day for himself and clerk, James Penman and Peter Laponge, two Master Surgeons, at 10s. a day each, 4 Mates at 5s. a day each and William Squire, Apothecary, at 5s. a day, all for 327 days to 14 Nov. 1712, 1,144l. 10s.; Alexander Innes, Chaplain, at 6s. 8d. a day to 23 June 1712 (183 days), 61l. 1,388 10 0
8,848 2
payments on accompt for subsistence, pay and clothing of the British Regiments serving in Spain:
General Stanhope's Regiment of Dragoons; to 5 Aug. 1712 1,463 2 5
Brig. Nicholas Lepell's ditto; to 2 Dec. 1712 14,502 2 1
Brig. Richard Munden's Regiment of Foot; to 6 Aug. 1712 1,704 17 0
Brig. Humphrey Gore's ditto; to 4 Aug. 1712 1,551 0 6
Brig. Robert Dalzell's ditto; to 6 Aug. 1712 and from 24 Oct. 1712 to 22 Dec. 1712 2,381 12
Col. Charles Dubourgay's ditto; to 14 Nov. 1712 11,241 13
Col. William Stanhope's ditto; same time 10,195 13
Col. Edward Stanhope's ditto; same time 11,824 2 11½
Col. Philips's ditto; to 21 Dec. 1712 12,373 13
Lord Mark Kerr's ditto; to 14 Nov. 1712 10,881 8
Sir Robert Rich's ditto; same time 9,280 9 6
Maj. Gen. Roger Elliott's ditto; to 21 Dec. 1712 12,842 11
Maj. Gen. Hayman Rook's ditto; to 5 Aug. 1712 5,431 3 3
Lord Slane's ditto; same time 5,549 8
Brig. Nicholas Price's ditto; same time 6,237 16
Col. Richard Molesworth's ditto; from 23 Dec. 1709 to 22 Dec. 1710 and from 22 Dec. 1711 to 21 Oct. 1712 14,705 11
Charles, Lord Tirawley's ditto; from 23 Dec. 1711 to 21 Dec. 1712 11,823 12
Maj. Gen. Thomas Whetham's ditto; same time 12,261 14
Col. Henry Disney's ditto; same time 9,030 13 3
Maj. Gen. John Hill's ditto; same time 9,974 6
Brig. Grant's ditto; to 24 Aug. 1712 8,908 5
Col. John Pocock's ditto; to 21 Dec. 1712 13,340 3
Col. Jasper Clayton's ditto; to 10 Sept. 1712 10,810 12
Col. Richard Kane's ditto; to 24 Aug. 1712 10,246 5 10¾
Maj. Gen. Gorge's ditto; for money paid by Mr. Arther for 28 days subsistence of men made prisoners at Ballecas near Madrid in Oct. 1707 10 5 4
William, Lord Viscount Mount joy's ditto; for the like and for 60 days' subsistence of several Officers to bear their charges to England in 1708 73 10 0
Charles, late Lord Mohun's ditto; for Recruits delivered on their embarking for Spain in 1706 396 13 1
Lord Dungannon's, since the Marquis de Montandre's, ditto; on the same accompt and for 28 days subsistence to several more prisoners at Ballecas as above 283 6 9
Col. Toby Caulfield's ditto; for Recruits delivered on their embarking for Spain in 1706 and to complete the levy money of 645 men for recruiting this Regiment after the reduction in Spain in 1706–7 706 4 7
David, Earl of Portmore, for 28 days' subsistence for men made prisoners at Ballecas as above and for subsistence in 1707 573 15 8
Lieut. Gen. Steward for 28 day's subsistence of men made prisoners as above 0 14 0
Maj. Gen. Macartney for the like 0 14 0
220,607 2 11¾
money paid for Recruits drafted from the Marquis de Montandre's and from Col. Alexander Grant's Regiments for several British Regiments, detailed, which is to be charged to the said Regiments; at 4l. a Recruit 664 0 0
pay of the Foreign Forces serving in Spain:
the Sieur Pareides, Commissary of Imperial troops, for three Regiments of Horse (Col. Vanbourne's, Col. Patté's and Col. Jorger's) and one Troop of Hussars; also for eight Regiments of Infantry under Colonels Stackembourg, Gschwind, Bagin, Raventlau, Osnabrugg, Trann, Taaf and Fabre for three months to 31 March, 1712 62,716 0
Monsieur Daniel Steinghens, Count Efferen and others, for the Palatine troops serving in Spain in 1712 20,728 11 11
Count Atalaya, General of the Portuguese troops, serving in Catalonia, taken into the Queen's pay from 1 Jan. 1709–10 by a Treaty signed by Gen. Carpenter and Count Atalaya 46,533 10 8
Count Jorger upon accompt for the Regiment of German Horse under his command 2,380 0 0
132,358 3
money paid on accompt of the subsidy allowed the King of Spain:
Thomas Martin of Lisbon on accompt of the mezados or monthly payments for subsisting such Spaniards as came over from the enemy 4,000 0 0
the Baron de Wetzell for money paid him in Genoa in the year 1708 by John Chetwynd and charged upon the Accomptant in the preceding Accompt; being for the use of the Imperial Regiments going to Spain; to be charged to the accompt of his Imperial Majesty's subsidy 2,422 10 0
Brig. James Crofts, as Adjutant General to his Imperial Majesty, 1 May 1710 to 14 April 1712 655 10 0
7,078 0 0
sundry extraordinary payments for the service of the War:
Don Antonio Belvitghes and Joseph Larissa contractors for supplying the Army in Spain with draft and mule carriages for bread and for the train of artillery, on accompt for the year 1711 14,250 0 0
Pablo Ferrer for the hire of ten galeras to transport the sick and wounded from Iqualada to Terragona, Feb. and March, 1711–12 95 0 0
William Okey, Surgeon, for money disburst for medicines for the sick of the Royal Fuziliers 12 13
Col. John Fermor and others for subsisting unmounted dragoons sent from Great Britain as Recruits in 1711 but not incorporated in any Regiment; detailed 1,915 11 0
Capt. James Long as Judge Advocate and Commissary of the Musters of the Forces under Lieut. Gen. Thomas Whetham, for two months from 23 Dec. 1710 30 0 0
Brig. Peter Durand for his allowance of 20s. a day as Engineer for the Fortifications at Port Mahon in Minorca (two years) 630 0 0
Theophilus Blyke, Deputy Commissary of Stores in Spain, for his allowance for a year to Xmas 1709 100 0 0
John, Lord Mordaunt, in part repayment of 107l. 5s. 4d. expended by him in the several marches, etc., of his Regiment of Foot, 24 Dec. 1707 to 2 July 1708 25 0 0
Sir Lambert Blackwell for a gratification on his negotiating an advantageous loan with the Marquis Sauli and Marquis Balbi 900 0 0
the Rt. Hon. James Stanhope, Commander in Chief in Spain, for disbursements in 1709 2,000 0 0
19,958 4
payments for forage, waggon and baggage money allowed the British Forces:
Maj. Gen. Thomas Whetham; 18 mules for three months 54 0 0
Lieut. Gen. the Earl of Barrymore; 28 mules for six months 168 0 0
Brig. Gen. Nicholas Price; 12 mules for the same time 72 0 0
Brig. Gen. the Lord Mark Kerr; ditto 72 0 0
John Blechynden, Archibald Hamilton, Thomas Lambert and Elizeus Burges, Majors of Brigade; two mules each for the same time 48 0 0
Henry Ligonier as Adjutant General; four mules for the same time 24 0 0
Anthony Westcombe as Secretary to the General; six mules for the same time 36 0 0
sundry Officers of the Hospitals, detailed; for the same time 60 0 0
Paul Margarett, another Surgeon to the Hospital; for three months 3 0 0
Anthony Hammond, Deputy Paymaster; six mules for the same time 36 0 0
Richard White, Provost Marshall; one mule for the same time 6 0 0
the several Regiments, viz. the Royal Regiment of Fuziliers, 52 mules; Lord Mark Kerr's Regiment, 73 mules; Maj. Gen. Elliott's Regiment, 58 mules; Sir Robert Rich's Regiment, 61 mules; Count Nassau's Regiment, 74 mules; Col. William Stanhope's Regiment, 63 mules; Brig. Lepell's Regiment of Dragoons, 52 mules; all for six months 2,598 0 0
Lieut. Col. Elizeus Burges as Captain in Brig. Lepell's Dragoons; two mules for the same time 12 0 0
Maj. Gen. Thomas Whetham as Colonel and Captain; 7 mules for three months to 24 March 1711–12 21 0 0
Brig. Humphrey Gore; 12 mules for six months to 23 Dec. 1710 72 0 0
3,282 0 0
sundry contingent payments for the service in Spain:
Maj. Gen. Thomas Whetham for his extraordinary charges as Commander in Chief during the Duke of Argyll's absence Jan. to March 1711–12 200 0 0
Mr. Westcombe as Secretary to the Commander in Chief for stationery 8 0 0
ditto for extraordinary expenses during the said Duke's absence 18 Jan. 1711–12 to 31 Oct. 1712 72 0 0
Nicholas Price for his extraordinary charges in commanding the Forces during the said Duke's absence July, Aug. and Sept. 1712 200 0 0
Patrick Paterson for contingencies; allowed by Lord Barrymore's warrant 1,000 0 0
Capt. Griffith White for money laid out by order of Brig. Nicholas Price 536 4 5
John Harris, Chaplain to the General, for extraordinary expenses during the Duke of Argyll's absence 85 0 0
Lord George Forbes as Commanding Officer of the Unmounted Dragoons at 20s. a day, 24 Dec. 1711 to 25 March 1712 92 0 0
Capt. Robert Barry the like at 6s. a day, 23 June to 23 Oct. 1712 36 12 0
Domingo Rocca for hire of boats for the embarking at Barcelona 12 7 0
Maj. Gen. Richard Gorges for the contingent expenses of his Regiment from their raising after the Battle of Almanza to their arrival at Liverpool to embark for Ireland 178 8 0
Col. Thomas Moore, the like for his Regiment of Foot from 24 Dec. 1708 to their embarkation at Hull in June 1710 296 10 0
2,717 1 5
pay of the Officers of the Garrison of Minorca:
Capt. Henry Cope, Paymaster, for the pay of Brig. Lewis Petit and Col. Fermor succeeding him as Lieut. Governor (20s. per diem), of Dennis Cavenagh, Captain of the Ports (5s. per diem), James Auchmooty, Chaplain (6s. 8d. per diem), Robert Hard-wick, Surgeon (5s. per diem), Mr. Famonge, Surgeon's Mate (2s. 6d. per diem), Colin Campbell, Deputy Commissary (5s. per diem), Henry Barratt, Assistant Commissary (3s. per diem), David Dumont, Deputy Judge Advocate and Commissary of the Musters (4s. per diem), Peter Darquier and Anthony Bessier, Adjutants (at 3s. per diem each), Michael Pannedas, Spanish Clerk (4s. per diem), Thomas Toft, Provost Marshal and Turnkey (4s. per diem) and John Aledo, Signalman (12d. per diem); 24 Dec. 1711 to 23 June 1712 605 8 6
Maj. William Cannock as Major of Fort St. Philip (5s. per diem) 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 Jan. 1711–12 8 15 0
the Duke of Argyll as Governor and Commander in Chief of the Garrison (4l. per diem); 7 June to 21 Dec. 1712 792 0 0
Col. Richard Kane as Lieut. Governor (40s. per diem); 7 June to 24 Dec. 1712 402 0 0
Giles Erle, Commissary General, for himself and clerks; the same 402 0 0
James Auchmooty as Chaplain to the Governor (6s. 8d. per diem); 24 June to 24 Dec. 1712 61 6 8
Anthony Westcombe. Secretary to the Governor (10s. per diem); 7 June to 24 Dec. 1712 100 10 0
the same as Judge Advocate etc. (10s. per diem); same time 100 10 0
Dennis Cavenagh, Captain of the Ports (5s. per diem); 24 June to 24 Dec. 1712 46 0 0
Richard White, Provost Marshal (4s. per diem); 15 Nov. to 24 Dec. 1712 8 0 0
Antonio Alodo, Signalman (12d. per diem); 24 June to 24 Dec. 1712 9 4 0
Archibald Hamilton as Fort Major at Fort St. Anne (5s. per diem); 7 June to 23 Dec. 1712 50 0 0
William Campbell, Adjutant at the said Fort (3s. per diem); same time 27 12 0
James Campbell, Surgeon at the said Fort (5s. per diem); 7 June to 24 Dec. 1712 50 5 0
Robert Napier, as Surgeon's Mate there (2s. 6d. per diem); same time 25 2 6
Col. John Fermor, Lieut. Governor of Fort St. Philips, to complete his pay 7 to 24 June 1712 and for his pay at 40s. per diem to 24 Dec. 1712 385 0 0
Stanhope Cotton, Major of the said Fort (5s. per diem); 24 June to 24 Dec. 1712 46 0 0
Anthony Bessière, Adjutant of the said Fort (3s. per diem); same time 27 12 0
John Campbell, Surgeon's Mate (2s. 6d. per diem); 7 June to 24 Dec. 1712 25 2 6
3,172 8 2
pay of the Officers of the Garrison of Gibraltar:
Brig. Thomas Stanwix as Governor (30s. per diem); 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712 549 0 0
Col. George Watkins as Lieut. Governor (10s. per diem); 24 June 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712 274 0 0
Capt. Edward Bucknall, Town Major (5s. per diem); year to 22 Dec. 1712 91 10 0
Hugh Montgomery, Town Adjutant (3s. per diem); same time 54 18 0
William Beauvoir, Chaplain (6s. per diem); same time 109 16 0
John Hudson, Postmaster and Secretary to the Governor; ditto 109 16 0
Peyton Fox, Deputy Judge Advocate (4s. per diem); same time 73 4 0
Marsh Hollingworth, Surgeon Major (10s. per diem); same time 183 0 0
Bartholomew Blake and Alexander Gordon, Surgeon's Mates (5s. per diem each); same time 183 0 0
John Hudson, Commissary of the Stores (10s. per diem); same time 183 0 0
the Turnkey, Signalman and Provost (12d. each); same time 54 18 0
1,866 2 0
expenses of the Garrison of Gibraltar:
Thomas Bradyll in part of a greater sum for coal at 6l. per chaldron 150 0 0
Alonzo Vere for coal furnished by Capt. Halifax of the London galley at 5l. 10s. per chaldron 130 0 0
William Jack for coal at 6l. per chaldron 130 0 0
Maj. Edward Bucknell for contingent charges 146 5 0
William Beauvoir, Chaplain, for extraordinary service as Chaplain to the Hospitals 30 0 0
Brig. Thomas Stanwix for contingent disbursements while Governor 1711, 1712 and 1713 1,194 6 0
Thomas Bradyll for coal at 5l. 10s. per chaldron, and John Sherman, merchant of Lisbon, for coal 1,487 5 0
3,267 10 6
payments as of the Royal Bounty:
to Capt. James Long, Commissary Giles Erle, Anthony Richard, Capt. James Price and Brig. Robert Dalzell for extraordinary charges of going express (detailed); reimbursement for horse hire, etc. to several Officers (named) attending the Justices of Peace in the execution of the Recruiting Act in North Britain 21 Feb. 1708–9 to 19 April 1709; to Col. Robert Dalzell's agent for disbursements on the disbanding of his Regiment of Foot; in all 1,134 17 0
total for the Forces in Spain 405,247l. 12s. 5¾.
pay of the General and Staff Officers serving in Portugal:
David, Earl of Portmore, as Commander in Chief for himself at 10l. a day and for his three Aides de Camp, each at 10s. a day; 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Oct. 1712 3,507 10 0
Thomas Pearce as Major General for himself at 40s. a day and for his Aide de Camp at 10s. a day; 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 Dec. 1712 915 0 0
John Newton as Major General, same rates; 23 Dec. 1711 to 24 June 1712 462 10 0
John Stewart, Hunt Withers and John Hogan, three Brigadiers General, each at 30s. a day; to 22 June 1712 823 10 0
Edward Jones, another Brigadier General same rate; 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 June 1712 417 0 0
the Majors [of Brigade] Peter de la Fontaine and William English at 10s. each; to 22 Dec. 1712 366 0 0
Maj. Thomas Morrice and Maj. Richard Manning, two other Majors of Brigade, each at same rate; to 22 June 1712 183 0 0
Col. John la Pradele, Quarter Master General; ditto 91 10 0
Col. Andrew de Boismorell, Adjutant General, upon accompt; from 23 Dec. 1711 86 10 0
John Conduit, Deputy Judge Advocate, same rate to 22 March 1711–12 and Mordaunt Crachrode succeeding him from 25 March to 22 June 1712 90 10 0
Charles Medlicott as Commissary of Provisions, for himself and two clerks at 30s. a day and as Commissary of Stores of War at 20s. a day; to 22 Dec. 1712 915 0 0
Ralph Bucknall, Commissary of the Musters, at 10s. a day; to 22 June 1712 91 10 0
the said John Conduit and Mordaunt Crachrode succeeding him as Secretary to the Commander in Chief at 10s. a day; times as above 90 10 0
Anthony de Laussac, Chaplain to the General, at 6s. 8d. a day; to 22 June 1712 61 0 0
Michael Keating as Physician to the General, at 10s. a day, same time, and as Surgeon to the General; ditto 183 0 0
the same as a Master Surgeon to the Hospital at 10s. a day; same time 91 10 0
William Neilson, Director of the Hospitals, for himself and clerk at 25s. a day, Doctor John Patterson, Physician to the Hospitals at 20s. a day, James Vashou, the other Master Surgeon at 10s. a day, four Surgeon's Mates and William Scott, Apothecary, at 5s. a day each and Mr. Lesieur as Chaplain at 6s. 8d.; all to 22 June 1712 793 0 0
John Conduit, Provost Marshal, for himself and four men at 17s. a day, and Capt. Mordaunt Crachrode succeeding him; times as above 153 17 0
Peter Beaver as Waggon Master at 3s. a day; to 22 June 1712 27 9 0
9,349 16 0
pay of several General Officers serving with the King of Portugal's Forces:
Brig. Theodore Vesey, as Brigadier General at 20s. a day; 23 Dec. 1711 to 20 Nov. 1712 334 0 0
Lieut. Gen. Peter Carle, the same; 23 Dec. 1711 to 23 Aug. 1712 245 0 0
579 0 0
payments on accompt of the subsistence, pay and clothing of the Regiments serving in Portugal:
Col. la Bouchetière's Regiment of Dragoons; to 7 Sept. 1712 10,318 5
Brig. Hunt Withers's ditto; same time 6,912 18 11¼
Col. Desbordes's ditto; to 27 Aug. 1712 6,421 19 4
Col. Gualy's ditto; to 29 Aug. 1712 6,541 16 4
Col. Foissac's ditto; to 26 Aug. 1712 6,468 5 6
Col. Magny's ditto; to 20 Feb. 1711–12 651 0 0
Col. Sarlande's ditto; same time 503 0 0
Maj. Gen. Thomas Pearce's Regiment of Foot; to 21 Dec. 1712 (deducting 286l. 13s. 4d. placed to this Regiment but chargeable to Brig. Price's Regiment) 11,489 12
Maj. Gen. John Newton's ditto; same time 11,935 6
the Earl of Barrymore's ditto; same time 11,239 1 4
Lieut. Gen. Nicholas Sankey's ditto; same time 11,519 10
Brig. Theodore Vesey's ditto; to 26 Aug. 1712 9,865 9 11¾
Col. Edward Jones's ditto; to 21 Dec. 1712 8,759 11 8
Lieut. Gen. Thomas Farrington's ditto; same time 13,224 10 8
Col. James Butler's ditto; to 24 Sept. 1712 8,977 0
Lord Paston's ditto (since Col. Richard Franks's); to 8 Aug. 1712 3,049 7
Col. James Tyrrell's ditto; to 7 Aug. 1712 3,866 13
Col. Edmund Fielding's ditto; same time 2,709 9
Brig. Thomas Stanwix's ditto; to 6 Aug. 1712 1,946 4
136,399 3
payments on accompt of the subsistence and pay of the two Spanish Regiments of Horse, commanded by the Marquis d'Assa and Sir Daniel Carroll, which served in Portugal:
the Marquis d'Assa's; to 1 Sept. 1712 7,125 14
Sir Daniel Carroll's (reduced); to 23 April, 1712 1,292 14 9
Maj. Martin Purcell, Lieut. Carey and Cornet Purcell for their pay: to 23 April 1712 352 16 4
8,771 5
contingent charges of the Forces in Portugal:
paid to John Beaver, secretary to the Commander in Chief, for special services and for money expended for secret services 4,443 6
forage and waggon money for the Forces in Portugal:
Arthur Stert and partners, Assientistas of Alentejo, for the extraordinary charge of bread, barley and straw furnished for the Forces in Portugal (bread being at 52 rees a loaf between Feb. and Sept. and at 37 rees in Sept. 1712 in lieu of 30 rees which was the agreed price) 5,192 6 10
Peter Redmond, Assientista at Abrantes, for the like Nov. 1711 to April 1712 907 19
John Goddard for the extraordinary charge (7 rees a loaf) of bread delivered by the Assientistas of Alentejo Sept. 1712 to Feb. 1712–13 386 4
Lieut. George Walsh, Paymaster of Col. Edward Jones's Regiment for the like in June 1711 (8 rees a loaf) 20 1
5,192 6 10
extraordinary expenses of the War in Portugal:
Lieut. Col. Charles Percivall for subsistence of non-commissioned Officers and men from Brig. Hunt Withers's Regiment of Dragoons 462 2 0
Lieut. Abel Pelissière, Paymaster of Col. Charles de la Bouchetière's Dragoons, for the like from the same Regiment 751 0 4
Lieut. George Walsh for the like from Brig. Vesey's Regiment of Foot 692 18 0
Lieut. Col. John Johnson of Col. Constantine de Magny's Dragoons to complete his pay as Lieut. Col. 21 Feb. to 31 Oct. 1712 while he was detained in Portugal to adjust his Regimental accompts 183 8 6
Col. Edward Jones to make good the loss of clothing in the passage of his Regiment from Ireland to Portugal 762 0 0
Maj. Gen. Thomas Pearce for Hospital charges and other contingent expenses during the time of his commanding the Forces in Portugal 2,510 6 10
5,361 15 8
the Queen's proportion of the King of Portugal's subsidy:
Don Joseph De Cunha Brochado, Envoy Extraordinary from the King of Portugal, for money paid him on accompt for the year 1712 12,500 0 0
to several other persons for the same 27,710 12 0
40,210 12 0
total for the Forces in Portugal 211,621l. 11s. 3d.
allowance for payments to Officers en Second for their half pay and other allowances after their being superseded by premier Officers returned from imprisonment:
the Earl of Portmore's Foot (Captains at 5s. a day, Lieutenants at 2s. 4d. a day and Ensigns at 1s. 10d. a day) 2,684 8 4
Brig. Pearce's Dragoons (a Lieut. Colonel at 8s. 3d. a day, Captains at 5s. a day, Lieutenants at 3s. a day and a Cornet at 2s. 6d. a day) 366 3 0
Lieut. Gen. Stuart's Regiment of Foot (Captains at 5s. a day, Lieutenants at 2s. 4d. a day, Ensigns at 1s. 10d. a day) 1,650 12 2
Brig. Wightman's Regiment (same rates) 2,302 10 4
Lord Mountjoy's Regiment (same rates) 1,770 11 4
Maj. Gen. Gorges's Regiment (two Lieut. Colonels at 8s. 6d. a day, Captains, Lieutenants and Ensigns as above) 2,980 19 2
Lord Mark Kerr's Regiment (one Lieut. Colonel at 7s. a day, Captains, Lieutenants and Ensigns as above) 2,484 1 0
Maj. Gen. Hill's Regiment (a Lieut. Colonel at 8s. 3d. a day, Captains at 5s. a day and a Surgeon at 3s. a day) 1,783 0 9
Brig. Bowles's Regiment (Captains at 5s. a day, Lieutenants at 2s. 4d. a day and Ensigns at 1s. 10d. a day) 1,122 0 8
Maj. Gen. Macartney's Regiment (Captains at 10s. a day, Lieutenants at 4s. 8d. and 2s. 4d. a day, Ensigns at 3s. 8d. and 1s. 10d. a day) 3,304 12 4
Col. Toby Caulfield's Regiment (Col. David Creighton at 7s. a day to make up his allowance to that of a Colonel). 87 10 0
Gen. Carpenter's Regiment of Dragoons (a Captain at 15s. 6d. a day) 538 12 6
Lord Ilay's Regiment (Lieutenants at 4s. 8d. a day, Ensigns at 3s. 8d. a day) 1,105 11 8
Lord Mordaunt's Regiment (a Captain at 7s. 6d. a day) 247 17 6
Maj. Gen. Wynn's Regiment (a Captain at 7s. 6d. a day, a Lieutenant at 3s. 6d. a day and an Ensign at 3s. a day) 239 12 6
Brig. Withers's Dragoons (a Captain at 10s. a day and a Cornet at 3s. 6d. a day) 337 17 6
Col. Desbordes's Regiment of Dragoons (Captains at 10s. a day) 541 6 1
Lieut. Col. Foisac's Regiment (Captains at 10s. a day, a Lieutenant at 4s. 8d. a day) 417 2 6
Brig. Stanwix's Regiment (two Captains to complete their pay at 10s. a day each and a Lieutenant at 4s. 8d. a day) 305 18 4
Col. Edward Stanhope's Regiment (two Lieutenants at 3s. 6d. a day) 21 7 0
Col. Desney's Regiment (three Ensigns at 3s. 8d. a day) 200 13 0
Col. Vesey's Regiment (a Captain at 7s. 6d. a day) 34 2 6
the Earl of Barrymore's Regiment (a Captain at 7s. 6d. a day) 75 7 6
Col. Gualy's Regiment of Dragoons (a Captain at 10s. and a Cornet at 3s. 6d. a day) 185 4 0
Bouchetier's Regiment of Dragoons (a Captain at 10s. a day and to complete his pay to the same rate) 235 5 0
the Spanish Regiment of Foot (a Captain at 10s. a day and two Cornets at 3s. 6d. a day) 100 0 0
Brig. Gore's Regiment (a Lieutenant at 4s. 6d. a day and to complete his pay to 4s. 8d. a day) 205 13 8
Col. Preston's Regiment (a Lieut. Colonel to complete his pay to 17s. a day) 206 2 6
Col. Magney's Regiment (a Lieutenant at 3s. a day) 40 0 0
Sir Charles Hotham's Regiment (four Captains at 5s. a day, four Lieutenants at 2s. 4d. a day and four Ensigns at 1s. 10d. a day) 55 0 0
the Marquis de Montandre's Regiment (three Captains, three Lieutenants and three Ensigns, same rates) 41 5 0
Brig. Grant's Regiment (four Captains, four Lieutenants and four Ensigns, same rates) 55 0 0
Brig. Windsor's Regiment (three Captains, three Lieutenants and three Ensigns, same rates) 41 5 0
Sir Daniel Carroll's Regiment (a Major at 8s. 6d. a day) 50 0 0
Col. Butler's Regiment (a Lieutenant to complete his pay to 2s. 4d. a day) 3 11 3
Col. William Stanhope's Regiment (an Ensign at 1s. 10d. a day) 55 1 10
Officers in America (Major Abbot at 15s. a day) 182 5 0
Officers under Col. Vetch (six Lieutenants at 4s. 8d. a day, three Ensigns at 3s. 8d. and a fourth at 3s. a day) 772 19 0
Officers employed on the Expedition under Gen. Wills (Lieutenants at 3s. 6d. and 2s. 4d. a day, Ensigns at 1s. 10d. and 3s. a day and to a Captain, a Lieutenant and four Ensigns for subsistence to enable them to recruit) 512 10 0
Officers serving en second in different Regiments (detailed with names, rates and periods) 680 11 10
27,342 19 11
subsistence of other Officers en second who were posted to and served in the British Regiments in Spain and Portugal:
the Officers serving in Spain 12,251 11 9
the Officers serving in Portugal 19,648 14 6
31,900 6 3
subsistence of the non-commissioned Officers and soldiers belonging to Regiments reduced in Minorca 1,003 4 7
total for half pay etc. 60,927l. 2s. 7d.
money paid to the wives of the thirty serjeants sent to New England with Lieutenants' Commissions upon Ensigns' pay, for the subsistence of their families and upon accompt of their husbands' pay 358 15 0
money paid to several Regiments removed to the Establishment of Ireland 23 Dec. 1711; repaid by the Treasury of Ireland 18,453 11
money paid to Sir Henry Bellasyse, Edward Stawell and Andrew Archer, the Commissioners appointed to inspect the affairs relating to the War in Spain, Portugal and Italy, and to George Murray, their Secretary 8,169 13 0
money paid to the Clerks who attended the Commissioners for recruiting the Forces in 1712 (for 2,837 men at 5s. for each recruit listed) 709 5 0
for discount of Tallies and Exchequer Bills, for interest due on Bills of Exchange and on money borrowed for the Forces 37,680 11 2
money paid out of the deductions of poundage and one day's pay:
to John Shadwell on his removal from employment as Director of the Hospital in Portugal; 23 Dec. 1711 to 22 June 1712 91 10 0
to John Leaves for his charges etc. in going to Lisbon upon the decease of Thomas Morrice, late Deputy Paymaster, to examine his accompts, etc. 200 0 0
to Robert Hardwick, Director of the Hospital at Port Mahon, for the Queen's allowance of 10d. a day for each sick soldier (above the 5d. a day per man paid by the Regiments); 14 Oct. 1708 to 31 March 1712 1,449 14 1
to Lord Lansdowne, late Secretary at War, for his additional allowance of 1,000l. per an. in consideration of the increase of business; Xmas 1711 to 27 June 1712 508 4
Sir William Wyndham, bt., succeeding him; 28 June 1712 to Xmas 1712 491 15
John Mead and Anthony Hammond, successively Deputy Paymaster of the Forces in Spain, 60s. a day for their salary and 20s. a day for clerks and contingent charges 1,464 0 0
Thomas Morrice and Charles Medlycott, successively Paymasters of the Forces in Portugal, for their salaries; same rates 1,464 0 0
Edward Harley, for the Auditors' fee 393 7 6
James Love and Rowland Seys, Supernumerary Surgeons of the Hospital in Spain, each at 5s. a day; to 23 March, 1711–12 45 10 0
William Squire, Apothecary to the Hospitals in Spain, for medicines for the British Hospitals at Terragona; 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 30 June 1712 85 12 10
Lieut. Adam de Huisseau for subsisting several supernumerary men of the Broken Regiments, being invalids from the Hospital of Terragona brought to Port Mahon; 15 Nov. to 20 Dec. 1712 40 17 3
Capt. William Knypos for the subsistence of invalids in Garrison at Gibraltar; 25 Sept. to 22 Dec. 1712 66 0 8
6,300 12 2
total payments and allowances [viz. Spain 405,247l. 12s. 5¾d., Portugal 211,621l. 11s. 3d., Officers en second etc. 60,927l. 2s. 7d., Lieutenants sent to New England 358l. 15s. 0d., Regiments on the Irish Establishment 18,453l. 11s. 7¾d., money paid the Commissioners 8,169l. 13s. 0d., payment to the clerks for recruits 709l. 5s. 0d., discount and interest 37,680l. 11s. 2d., poundage money 6,300l. 12s. 2d.] 749,468 14
and so remains 778,460l. 12s. 1¾d.
against which depending on sundry persons for money paid and imprested to them for the service of the Forces by Charles Fox, the preceding Paymaster:
Imprests in 1703:
Samuel Atkinson and Nicholas Roope, for shipping etc. for the transport of Forces to Portugal 22,444 7 6
Imprests in 1704:
the same, for refitting transport ships damaged in the great storm, for hiring other ships in lieu of those disabled and for provisions for the soldiers 6,300 0 0
the same, paid Martin Tucker, agent for Transports in Ireland; on his two Bills of Exchange from Dublin 1,000 0 0
John Nuttin, Paymaster of the Transports, for charges of 1,500 recruits from Ireland to Portugal 3,600 0 0
the same, for the charge of transporting a Battalion of Foot Guards to Portugal 3,089 8 2
the same, for a Bill of Exchange from Ireland, for transporting the Forces ordered thence to Portugal 3,600 0 0
Dr. Peter Amyot, Physician to the Hospital in Portugal, for cordials, etc. 50 0 0
the same, for a Bill of Exchange from Ireland for transport to Portugal 3,000 0 0
20,639 8 2
Imprests in the half year to 23 June 1705:
John Nuttin, Treasurer of the Transports, for the carriage of gunpowder and saltpetre to Portugal for the Duke of Savoy 600 0 0
by this Accountant:
Imprests in the half year to 23 Dec. 1705:
John Nuttin, Paymaster of the Transports, for necessary charges 9,010 10 6
Imprests in 1706 for the War in Portugal:
Charles Medlycott, Commissary of Provisions 31 10 0
Philip Durell, the value of 500 moydores for extraordinary charges 720 0 0
John Whitten, for special service 100 0 0
Robert Smith, for expresses, bounty-money and secret service 235 9 6
the same, for secret and special service 151 5 0
1,238 4 6
Imprests for the Expedition under Earl Rivers in 1706:
Edward Douglas, Commissary of the Forces, for Edward Southwell's Bill for contingencies 25 0 0
John James Debadie, Secretary to Earl Rivers, for contingent uses 500 0 0
Charles Le Bass, for special service 45 0 0
Peter Capon, for the like 41 4 0
Edward Castle, for the like 30 5 0
the Earl of Rivers, for contingent uses 400 0 0
1,040 9 0
for the Forces in Spain in 1706:
Charles, Earl of Peterborough, upon Bills of Exchange for the War in Catalonia 16,877 14 10
Richard Langhorne, for sundry Bills drawn from Genoa for the Forces in Catalonia 5,182 13 2
Henry Vincent, late Deputy Paymaster of the Forces, for the Expedition under the Earl of Peterborough, on Bills of Exchange drawn by Richard Hill 31,790 15 0
53,851 3 0
Imprests in 1707:
Col. Joseph Bennett, for the value of three Bills drawn for the Works at Gibraltar 820 0 0
Col. Elliot and Col. Joseph Bennett, for the value of seven Bills of Exchange for the Garrison at Gibraltar 1,405 11 0
Capt. John Webb, for the value of seven Bills of Exchange for the fortifications at Gibraltar 3,550 0 0
Maj. James Allen, for his pay as Commissary of Provisions 200 0 0
Joseph Cortiso, for the service of the Garrison of Alicante 297 13 3
Brig. Gorge, for the same service 475 0 0
Don Joseph Cortiso, for the Train of Artillery 8,207 10 6
John Norridge, for two Bills of Exchange drawn for the Hospital at Gibraltar 145 0 0
Vincent Chabannes, Commissary of Provisions, for corn delivered by Mr. Sherman 12,030 19 2
John Sherman, on his contract for soft bread for the Garrison of Gibraltar 3,600 0 0
Ralph Bucknall, for contingencies 2,398 2 5
Messrs. Scudamore and Henshaw 95 0 0
William Salter, for contingencies 950 0 0
Henry, Earl of Galway, for ditto 1,200 0 0
Richard, Earl Rivers, for ditto 500 0 0
Frederick Mark[s], Director of the Hospital in Spain, for the pay of the Officers of the Hospital 3,132 18 4
Dr. Peter Amiott, for Medicines for the Hospital in Spain 300 0 0
Charles, Earl of Peterborough, for 560 mules bought for the Troops (no accompt produced) 2,380 4 6
the same, per Mr. Furley 2,137 10 0
the same, for horses bought for the public service 4,000 0 0
more received of Mr. Methuen 1,575 0 0
Henry, Earl of Galway, for so much received of Earl Rivers and in part of 7,759l. 15s. 0d. 397 5 0
49,797 14 2
Imprests in 1708:
Col. Elliot, for the value of six Bills of Exchange drawn for Works etc. at Gibraltar 3,316 10 0
Capt. John Webb, for the value of five ditto for the fortifications at Gibraltar 937 9 6
John Sherman, on his contract for soft bread for the Garrison there (four payments) 3,914 14
Jervice Read, for materials for two windmills at Gibraltar 90 0 0
Col. Albert Bourguard, for necessaries for an expedition 400 0 0
Hugh Pierson, for an Expedition 95 0 0
Henry Vincent, for the value of 1,597 corn sacks delivered him by Mr. Mead 203 3
Capt. John Evans, commander of the Burford, for the value of five bags of silver (8,000 crusadoes) which he promised to deliver to William East 1,200 0 0
Isaac Teale, for medicines for the Hospital 1,127 10 0
Nicholas Diran, for sick and wounded set on shore by the Sorlings and Falcon pink 23 May to 22 Dec. 1708 335 9
Joseph Chilcott, for the balance of his disbursements for the Hospital in Spain 80 1 0
Gen. Carpenter, for expenses, intelligence, subsisting poor English etc 200 0 0
Mr. Le Fever, for the Spanish prisoners in Terragona 498 0 9
12,397 18
Imprests in 1709:
Col. Richards, commanding her Majesty's train, towards building ten tin boats 593 15 0
Vincent Chabannes, Commissary of Provisions, for purchasing 1,140 sacks 67 13 9
the same, for 1,730 quintals of fish 2,612 10 0
the same, for buying bisquet 142 10 0
Mr. Crisp, agent of Transports, for building, stabling and fitting transport ships 800 0 0
Col. Durand, for necessaries for the fortifications at Port Mahone 285 0 0
John Jeffreys, for contingencies for the pontoons and Spanish guns 475 0 0
Arent Furley, for contingencies 475 0 0
Mr. Douglas, Commissary of Stores and Clothing in Spain, for pay and expenses of his commission 150 0 0
Arent Furley, more for contingencies 1,372 3 11¼
Ralph Bucknall, for forage and waggon money 9,000 0 0
John Sherman, for soft bread for the Garrison at Gibraltar 1,522 14 0
Seignior Joseph Friere, for the extraordinary expense of the fortifications 18 12 0
Maj. Bladen, for the like 51 12 0
Seignor Joseph Friere, for the like 34 19 0
Brig. Elliot, by Bill to Thomas Martin, for coals at Gibraltar 210 0 0
the same, by Bill to Messrs. Bulteel and Baudovin, for horses, etc. bought of deserters there 225 0 0
the same, by like Bill, for coal delivered by Messrs. Hampton & Co. for the garrison there 70 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to William East, for disbursements for the Works there 2,500 15 2
the same, by like Bill payable to Messrs. Ayres and Watts, for coal for the garrison there 294 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to Nicholas Holloway, for coal and deal boards, ditto 437 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to Messrs. Bulteel and Baudovin, for coals, ditto 38 10 0
the same, by like Bill payable to the same for horses, ditto 500 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to William East, to buy flour, ditto 700 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to the same, for the Works at Gibraltar 351 0 10
the same, by like Bill payable to Capt. Trevanion, for so much advanced for building of mills, repair of fortifications, buying of corn, etc. 2,067 13 10¼
the same, by like Bill payable to Capt. Abraham Winter, for the freight of 339 barrels of flour and 26 iron mills 60 15 0
the same, by like Bill payable to Samuel Pitt, for coals bought of Col. Bennett at 7l. per chaldron and for carrying on the fortifications 168 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to Thomas Bradyl, for 451 faneys of wheat and 258 faneys of barley 652 10 0
the same, by like Bill payable to William East, for keeping up and repairing the Works 600 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to Thomas Bradyl, for 1,000 faneys of wheat 1,125 0 0
the same, by like Bill payable to Bulteel and Baudovin, for the extraordinary expense of Gibraltar 431 14 0
the same, by like Bill, for 2,027 faneys of wheat 2,052 6 9
the same, per Bulteel and Baudovin, for his service at Gibraltar 500 0 0
the same, by a Bill of Exchange payable to Thomas Braddyl, for 962 faneys of barley 541 2 6
John Sherman, for bread and corn for the garrison 813 9
the same, for the freight of a ship laden with corn for Gibraltar and for his losses in 1708 and 1709 when he supplied the garrison with bread 600 0 0
the same, on his contract for supplying the garrison with soft bread 3,000 0 0
Thomas Le Fever, for the subsistence and embarkation of workmen and materials to build a windmill at Gibraltar 72 0 0
James Holland, for saddles, bridles and accoutrements for the Horse levied at Gibraltar 112 10 0
John Sherman, to buy corn for Gibraltar 1,200 0 0
Col. Breams, for the balance of an accompt due to masons at Gibraltar for work done in the fortifications 233 14 0
Dr. John Norridge, by a Bill of Exchange payable to Mr. Ellis, for medicines delivered the Hospital at Gibraltar 52 18 10
Thomas Martin, for a cargo of coals shipped off for the garrison there 300 0 0
Dr. John Norridge, by Bill of Exchange payable to Bulteel and Baudovin, for contingent charges of the Hospital 256 13 3
Jonathan Keate, to buy medicines 90 0 0
the same, for necessaries for the Hospitals 180 0 0
the same, for necessaries for the Hospital in Portugal 180 0 0
the same, for the expense of ditto 600 0 0
the same, for the extraordinary expense of ditto 150 0 0
Ralph Bucknall, for the use of ditto 300 0 0
the same, for the contingent expenses of ditto 200 13
John Norridge, for contingent charges of ditto 241 14 5
the same, for the expense of ditto 280 8 5
Frederick Marx, Director of the Hospital, for six months expense of ditto 525 1 6
the same, for contingencies of ditto 73 15 0
Mr. Vincent, for shoes and stockings, etc. for the Invalids 22 4 0
Dr. Gibson, for medicines for the Forces in Spain 150 3 4
Dr. Le Caan, to make good the contingent charges of the Hospital 1 July to 24 Dec. 1709 605 5 0
the same, for subsistence of invalids, widows and children within the same time 56 15 11
Maj. Gen. Charles Wills, towards the contingencies of the Expedition under his command 1,000 0 0
the same, by Bill of Exchange payable to Sir Alexander Cairne, for the Officers en second going on the Expedition under his command 547 12 6
Mr. Le Fever, for the Spaniards and masons working at Gibraltar 198 0 0
Lieut. Col. Thomas St. Leger de Bacalan, of the Earl of Galway's Regiment of Foot, for the subsistence of Officers and soldiers taken prisoners in Portugal 2,687 4 11
45,857 1 7
Imprests in 1710:
Brig. Richard Gorges, for public money deposited in his hands in 1706 by the Earl of Peterborough to be paid over to John Mead, this Accomptant's Deputy in Spain, but stopped to pay for provisions bought and work done in the Castle of Alicante 1,396 7 6
John Roope, for the use of the garrison at Alicante 22 10 0
Brig. Roger Elliot, late Governor of the Garrison at Gibraltar, for money paid Messrs. Bulteel and Baudovin, merchants in Lisbon, on his Bill of Exchange, having been expended by William East, for keeping up and repairing the works 1,200 0 0
the same, for money paid Messrs. Bulteel and Baudovin as the balance of William East's accompt to 24 Dec. 1709 138 11
the same, for money consigned him by Thomas Morrice, [t]his Accomptant's Deputy in Portugal, 8 May 1710 by the Rye (Capt. John Shales, Commander) for carrying on the fortifications 471 4 0
Capt. Gilbert de Paget, an Engineer of the said garrison, for money to pay necessaries for the fortifications at Gibraltar 28 16 0
Brig. Roger Elliott, for money paid to the order of Thomas Braddyl on two Bills of Exchange for barley bought for the garrison 705 7 6
more, for money paid to Messrs. Bulteel and Baudovin, in discharge of the said Brig. Elliot's contingent bill 400 0 0
more, on his Bill of Exchange to the order of Col. John Monger as so much expended to the stablemen of the said garrison 150 3 7
more for money paid to Thomas Martin, merchant of Lisbon, as the balance of his accompt for a cargo of coals 547 7 7
ditto for 4,782 bushels of coals delivered for the garrison 627 18 0
more for money paid on his Bill of Exchange to the order of Samuel Pill for coals and for landing the same 92 13 0
more for money paid to John and Thomas Batt for coals 421 1 0
more for money paid to John Sherman for coals 143 8 9
Dr. John Norridge, Surgeon to the Hospital in Gibraltar, for money paid on his Bill of Exchange for contingencies 292 0 11
Dr. John le Caan, Physician to the Hospitals in Spain, for money paid him for subsisting of invalids, men, women and children in the Hospital at Terragona, 24 Dec. 1709 to 20 Jan. 1709–10 51 13 6
ditto for twelve days provisions for the said invalids 57 2 1
ditto for the payment of several Extraordinary Officers of the Hospital, 24 Dec. 1709 to 31 March 1710 96 4 4
ditto for 200 pair of sheets for the Hospitals 75 0 0
ditto as the amount of 10d. each man for the extraordinary expense of the men entertained in the Hospitals at Terragona (over and above the 5d. per diem paid by the Regiments), 24 Dec. 1709 to 30 June 1710 (monthly amounts shown) 667 13 0
ditto for sundry small necessaries for the Hospitals, 1 July 1709 to 30 June 1710 219 17
ditto for the extraordinary expense of the Hospital at St. Columba, May and June 1710 131 4 10
Vincent Chabannes, the Director of the Hospitals in Spain, for money paid to him for the extraordinary charge of the Hospitals under his care, 1 July to 31 Dec. 1710 (over and above 1,779l. 17s. 5d. paid by the Regiments at 5d. per man per diem) 9,491 16 7
Dr. John Roviere for the extraordinary charge of the Hospitals at Saragossa in the year 1710 (over and above 429l. 11s. paid as above by the Regiments) 289 9
Dr. Charles Shadwell, Director of the Hospitals in Portugal, for money paid on his Bills of Exchange for the use of the said Hospitals (three items) 669 12 0
the same for money paid him by John Whitton for ditto 187 4 0
the same, for money paid him for ditto (two items) 800 0 0
ditto for the English Hospital at Extremos in Portugal 206 4 7
Jonathan Keate, Physician to the Hospitals in Portugal, for money paid him for the said Hospitals 562 7 5
Mr. Sandoz, Subdirector of the said Hospitals, for money paid to Charles Medlycot for the charges of the Hospital at Abiera in Portugal 17 5
Ralph Bucknall, for money paid him out of the forage and waggon money for 1710 (part of 1,734l. 8s. 1½d.) 1,066 16
John Kelley, for ditto out of the same to discharge a Bill of Exchange in favour of Messrs. John and Thomas Batt 240 0 0
Brig. Lewis Petit, late Lieut. Governor of the Castle of Fort St. Philip, Port Mahon, Minorca, for money imprested to him in 1710 for the building of fortifications and for the pay and contingent charges of the garrison 18,007 19
39,471 0
Imprests in 1711:
Brig. Lewis Petit, late Lieut. Governor of Fort St. Philip, for money paid him in 1711 for the building of fortifications there 6,342 18 0
Roger Elliot, late Governor of the Garrison at Gibraltar, for money paid to John and Thomas Batt for coals delivered 50 3 11¼
Thomas Stanwix, late Governor of the said Garrison, for money paid Thomas Martin for coals 400 0 0
the same, for money paid William Morrice for coals 52 10 0
Peter Laponge, late Director of the British Hospital in Spain, for contingent charges of the Hospitals at Terragona and Igualada, 1 July to 31 Oct. 1711 1,919 0 0
the same for the said Hospitals, over and above 776l. 10s. 0d. stopped from the Regiments 1,424 10 0
Dr. Charles Shadwell, late Director of the British Hospital at Estremos in Portugal, for money paid him for the said Hospital 230 11 4
the same, for the balance of his accompt to 23 March 1710–11 60 4 11
Dr. William Neilson, late Director of the British Hospitals in Portugal, for money paid him for the use of the said Hospitals and for buying necessaries for the same (five items) 1,606 1 11
Lieut. Col. John Arnott, late Deputy Paymaster of the Forces on the Expedition to Canada under Brig. John Hill, for money imprested to him for the subsistence, contingencies and other uses of the said Forces and for 84 days' full pay from 1 March 1710–11 to be paid over to the General and Staff Officers of the Expedition 8,574 0 0
the same, to complete the subsistence of the said Forces to 22 Oct. 1711 1,183 10 0
John Netmaker, late Commissary of the Stores of War and Provisions for the Forces employed on the aforesaid Expedition, for the value of small arms, accoutrements, clothing etc. furnished by James Blake, merchant 28,036 5 0
Sir Lambert Blackwell, Sir William Hodges, Sir Theodore Janssen and Dominico Maria Viceti, Trustees for a loan of 180,000l. made by the owners of two Genoese ships taken into Port Mahon, for the value of 413 tallies and orders struck 13 April 1710 upon several duties granted for the service of the said year, amounting in principal money to the sum of 223,900l. deposited in their hands for security for the repayment of the said loan with interest at 5 per cent. per an. in pursuance of Articles of Agreement 6 July 1711 between Robert, Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer, late Lord High Treasurer, as Proprietor of the said ships and the before named Trustees, whereby the Trustees have covenanted to subscribe the said tallies and orders into South Sea Company stock, etc. 223,900 0 0
273,779 15
Imprests in 1712:
Lieut. Col. Clemont Nevill, late Paymaster of the Prisoners in Spain, for the money issued him upon Bills of Exchange for their subsistence 178,500 0 0
Lieut. Col. John Arnott, appointed Deputy Paymaster of the Forces on the Expedition to Canada under Brig. John Hill in 1711, for money paid on several Bills of Exchange drawn by him from Boston in New England, being two third parts of the value of the said Bills 15,763 2
Col. Joseph Dudley, Capt. General and Commander in Chief of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, New England, and Brig. Francis Nicholson, for money paid upon their Bills of Exchange to several merchants and others, viz. John Borland, John Jeffries, Thomas Sandford and Edward Westcombe, for the contingent charges of the Expedition to Port Royal and Canada in 1711, detailed, including 1,022l. 17s. 10d. to John Jeffries for hire of the Dispatch to transport to France the French garrison of Port Royal 1,928 3
Brig. Robert Hunter, for money paid on his Bill of Exchange for 800l. payable to the Earl of Orkney for value received of Alexander Spots-wood, Governor of Virginia, for subsistence of the Regiments that went on the Expedition to Canada 800 0 0
the same, for ditto on several Bills of Exchange drawn from New York in America for the pay of the thirty Sergeants sent thither with Lieutenants' Commissions upon Ensigns' pay to 22 Dec. 1712 2,267 9 0
John Sherman, merchant of Lisbon in Portugal, and Alexander Stevenson of London, for money paid them on their contract with the Earl of Galway for furnishing soft bread for the Garrison at Gibraltar 20 June 1711 to 20 Nov. 1712 10,969 19
John Hudson, for money paid him to buy wheelbarrows, etc. for the measuring of coals 13 15 0
Thomas Musgrave, for money paid him for several additions Col. Bennet was ordered to make to the fortifications at Gibraltar 650 8 3
Col. Richard Kane, late Lieut. Governor of Minorca, for money received by him and taken from the Deputy Paymaster of the Forces for contingencies there 1,000 0 0
Col. John Fermor, Lieut. Governor of Fort St. Philip, Port Mahon, for money paid him for the fortifications 1,000 0 0
the same, for ditto to be laid out in wood for the Garrison 95 0 0
John Baptiste and Joseph Baptiste Gianini, for money paid them by Order of the Commissioners for Inspecting the affairs of the War in Spain in part of a greater sum due for work at the fortifications of Port Mahon 237 10 0
Francis Arbonin, Director of the British Hospital at Tarragona, for money paid him for subsisting the sick men there 1 Jan. 1711–12 to 23 June 1712 811 12 6
the same, for ditto 24 June to 31 Oct. 1712 214 2 6
Dr. William Neilson, Director of the British Hospitals in Portugal, for money paid him for necessaries bought for the said Hospitals in 1712 1,400 15
Henry, Earl of Galway, for money paid upon two Bills of Exchange for 30,000 florins paid by the Deputy Paymaster at Amsterdam 2,632 10 0
Nicholas Phillpot and William Morgan, appointed Receivers and Paymasters of the money issued for the half-pay of Officers of the Army reduced or disbanded to Xmas 1712 24,938 9 11
John Mead, late Deputy Paymaster of the Forces in Spain, for money not yet accompted for in respect of remittances made by John Chetwynd 2,745 0 0
245,967 18
total depending 776,096 10
and so this Accomptant is indebted 2,364 1 9
Declared 19 January 1716.
Memorandum. Whereas 357,006l. 6s. 7¼d. is here allowed for subsistence, pay and clothing of several British Regiments in Spain and Portugal and for subsistence and pay of British prisoners of war in Spain, if it shall appear that any part thereof ought not to be charged to the Regiments, then the same is to be surcharged on the Accomptant.
The money paid for the subsistence and pay of the British Regiments in Spain and Portugal which is allowed in the accompts for 1707, 1708 and 1710 and the sum of 6,992l. 11s. 6¾d. for subsistence to the Earl of Barrymore's Regiment for 1705 are also charged on the respective Regiments, etc.
The sum of 1,718l. allowed for additional levy-money in 1710 is likewise to be placed to the accompt of the respective Regiments and set against their claim for levy money; as also in preceding years.
Several other sums have been issued by the Accomptant which appear to be chargeable to the Regiments, viz.:
764l. 13s. 3¼d. paid Messrs. Man and Macculock for the clothing of Lord Barrymore's Regiment, which was formed into a Regiment of Dragoons under Col. Pearce.
40l. paid for medicines for the Earl of Donegall's Regiment.
119l. 14s. paid the Earl of Donegal as a Maj. General in 1706.
23l. 3s. 4d. paid Col. Cardellon as Engineer at Denia in 1709.
20l. paid Capt. Carlton for like pay and 150l. to Mr. Douglass as Commissary of Stores.
5,242l. 13s. 6¼d. paid to the Contractors for providing bread for the Garrison at Gibraltar in 1710 and 3,345l. 18s. 4½d. paid them for bread in 1711 and 10,969l. 19s. 3½d. paid by the Accomptant for bread delivered for the said Garrison 20 June 1711 to 20 Nov. 1712 are to be placed as an extraordinary expense of the Garrison; the Accomptants' agents allege that bread was allowed the Garrison over and above their pay on account of the excessive dearness of all necessaries but no warrant to authorise such allowance has been produced in these or the preceding years.
2,365l. 15s. 5½d. paid in 1710 as a bounty to the Foot and Train of Artillery that were at the Battle of Saragossa at 15s. to each serjeant and 10d. to each corporal and private man in consideration of the loss of their knapsacks etc. was to be referred to the Queen's approbation, but it does not appear that directions have been given.
Memorandum. It appears that 6,558l. was paid in 1705 for 499 horses delivered in Portugal for Maj. Gen. Harvey's Regiment of Horse and Lord Raby's Regiment of Dragoons. The Accomptants' agents allege that their former horses were taken from them by the Duke of Marlborough's order at their going to Portugal and that these horses were given them in lieu but it does not appear how the horses taken away from them were disposed of.
129l. 17s. 8d. expended by Mr. Johnson and Mr. Luellin on the Recruit horses sent from Ireland in 1705 still remains to be adjusted.
26,712l. was paid in 1710 to the agents of the six Regiments of Dragoons raised in Portugal to enable them to purchase 247 horses for each Regiment; it appears from the Muster Rolls 1710 and 1711 that these Regiments were not complete. The Colonels or their agents are to render an accompt of the horses actually bought and the balance of the said sum is to be charged on their pay and accompted for.
As to the sum of 2,036l. 2s. 11¼d. paid in 1710 to Admiral Somelsdike and other Commanders of Dutch ships for freight and provisions for 1,582 men of the German Regiment of Horse commanded by Lieut. Gen. Eck transported from Italy to Catalonia at a quarter of a dollar per diem for each man, a part proportionable to the allowance included in the said rate for provisions is to be charged to the accompt of his Imperial Majesty.
The several Commissaries appointed to receive and issue the clothing, accoutrements and other stores bought for the Forces in Spain and Portugal remain accountable for the quantities respectively received by them.
The payments made by this Accomptant for clothing and accoutrements provided for the British Forces 25 June 1705 to 23 Dec. 1711 amount to 158,831l. 11s. 7½d. whereof 78,073l. 17s. 5d. has been stopped from the Forces and accompted for; there remains therefore for reimbursing the first cost of the said stores to the Public 80,757l. 14s. 2½d. to be accompted for by the Commissaries or deducted from the pay of the Regiments out of the 6d. per man per week allowed to be stopped for that use; the Commissaries ought forthwith to render their accompts.
Clothing provided in 1709 by John Robins to the value of 31,663l. 12s. 9d. for the King of Spain's Forces has hitherto been charged to that King's subsidy but, having been consigned to Henry Vincent, then Commissary, is to be charged in his accompt.
The Accomptant has paid for corn bought for the Forces by the Commissaries, viz.:
to James Allen, late Commissary in Spain, for wheat bought in 1707, 5,130l. 10s. 10½d. of which only 4,817l. 17s. 5d. is accompted for;
to Vincent Chabanes, ditto, for corn bought in 1708 and 1709, 12,030l. 19s. 2d. whereof 11,784l. 13s. 2¾d. is accompted for;
to Charles Medlycot, Commissary of Provisions in Portugal in 1707, 1,939l. 3s. 8d. for barley and straw for which no deduction appears to have been made.
According to an accompt signed by the Principal Officers of the Ordnance, arms, tents, etc. have been delivered to the British Regiments from 8 March 1701–2 to 9 Oct. 1712 to the value of 39,127l. 14s. 6d. whereof there remains to be deducted 26,605l. 16s. 7d.
The sums paid within the time of preceding accompts to Antonio Belvitches and Joseph Larissa, contractors for furnishing mules to the Army in Spain, as also 109,321l. 13s. 9¾d. paid in 1710, 33,250l. in 1711 and 14,250l. in 1712, are to be deducted on clearing their demands as also 5,018l. 9s. paid them upon their contract for bread and bread waggons in 1708.
According to a memorandum at the foot of the Accompt for 1709, of 7,887l. 13s. 7½d. paid Ralph Bucknall for the prisoners taken at Almanza, allowed in the Accompt for 1707 no more than 7,660l. 18s. 2d. has been answered by him.
According to the same Accompt 8,750l. was paid Brig. Lillemaris for the Dutch Forces sent on the Expedition under Earl Rivers for provisions during their detention at Tor Bay; this sum should be repaid by the States General of the United Provinces.
In these Accompts for 1710 and 1711 several sums have been paid upon warrants of the Commanders in Chief for contingent services; these services not being expressed in the warrant and no accompts being received of the application of the said sums, the persons who received the money are accomptable for the same unless it appear that the respective Commanders in Chief who directed the payments were empowered to dispose of such contingent money without particularly accompting for the same.
Memorandum. Whereas great quantities of corn have been bought for the Forces by William Chetwynd at Genoa and consigned to the Commissaries in Spain, the Commissaries are to render accompts and the corn is to be charged on those who received the same.
This Accomptant is to be charged on his subsequent Accompt with all sums that have come into his hands for interest on Tallies and Exchequer Bills, as also with the amount of South Sea stock made over to him and with the money received by him upon Dividends of South Sea stock.
This Accomptant is to be likewise charged with all such sums from the Treasury of Ireland received on accompt of payments made here for the Forces on the Establishment of that Kingdom as have not been charged by him in this or preceding Accompts.
He is also to be charged with 67,165l. 14s. 5d. which appears to have been repaid him out of the produce of certain Tallies by the Trustees for the repayment of the loan of 180,000l. made by the owners of two Genoese ships.
Memorandum. The Accomptant has never been surcharged with the deduction of 2½ per cent. from the pay, subsidies or other allowances for the Foreign Forces in the Queen's service in Spain and Portugal; he affirms that no such deduction was made in the former years nor could be in 1712.
It appears by a writing under the hand of Monsr. Pareides, the Imperial Commissary General of War, dated 30 Dec. 1712, that his Imperial Majesty is to be charged for tents, habiliaments, bread and other provisions delivered to his Officers to the value of 185,420 pieces of Eight 14 sous 4 deniers which he therein promises shall be allowed by the Emperor when the accompts between him and the Queen come to be adjusted.
[The above Memoranda are by Auditor E. Harley.]
DECLARED ACCOUNTS: ARMY: MINORCA: FORTIFICATION OF PORT MAHON.
PIPE OFFICE: ROLL 3615 [E351/3615]. AUDIT OFFICE: BUNDLE 2521, ROLL 620 [A.O.1/2521/620].
Brig. LEWIS PETIT, late Lieutenant Governor of Port Mahon.
23 September 1708 to 26 January 1711–12.
Charge. £ s. d.
Arrears: none, this being his first and only Accompt.
Receipts: moneys imprested to him or his agents as shown in the Accompts of the Paymaster General of the Forces in Spain and Portugal 24 Dec. 1707 to 23 Dec. 1708, 24 Dec. 1708 to 23 Dec. 1709 and 22 Dec. 1712 to 24 Aug. 1713, detailed 46,921 19 0
ditto in the Accompt of the Paymaster General of the Guards and Garrisons 25 Dec. 1718 to 24 Dec. 1719 1,000 0 0
money produced by the sale of corn received from Genoa of William Chetwynd and of other stores, detailed 3,805 2 11¾
money voluntarily owned to have been received by the Accomptant, detailed 92 9 6
money borrowed and corn received from private persons for carrying on the fortifications at Port Mahon etc., detailed 14,337 6
money stopped from the pay of the Garrison at Port Mahon for Chelsea Hospital etc. 122 7 7
money received by the Accomptant to satisfy the Balance due on this accompt 3,221 19 3
total charge and receipts 69,501 5
dollars ryals dobleros
Discharge.
money issued to contractors and undertakers for building fortifications and works for defence of the harbour, viz., for erecting a battery of 32 guns to defend the entrance; for digging the ditch of a detached bastion; towards building a fort on the west side of the harbour intended to be named St. Anne; for fortifying of St. Philip's Castle; for the charge of buildings such as a mill, a bakehouse and storehouse for the use of the Garrison; detailed 127,001 7 2
cost of lime and other materials and necessaries and for sundry contingent expenses; detailed 103,958 7 4
pay of the Officers of the Garrison of Castle St. Philip and contingent charges of the said Garrison; detailed 37,696 1 11
the charge of the Train of the Garrison; detailed 4,347 6 0
cost of provisions bought up for several Expeditions and other disbursements; detailed 15,878 0 12
288,882 6 12
which at 4s. 9d. per dollar as settled by Royal Warrant of 8 Dec. 1706 is equivalent to 68,609 13
money allowed this Accomptant for his services and for passing this accompt 886 11 8
total payments and allowances 69,501 5
and so this Accomptant is even and Quit.
Auditors' Memorandum. In pursuance of the Royal Warrant for passing this Accompt 5 Sept. 1717, there is to be charged to the Emperor of Germany 213l. 6s. 2¼d. allowed for provisions to several Officers made prisoners by his Imperial Majesty. A further sum of 15,142 dollars, 4 dobleros or 3,596l. 4s. 8d. appears to be due and payable to several persons for materials and work, which sum is to be satisfied in debentures by the Paymaster of Debentures for satisfying the Debts due to the Army.
Declared 27 July 1726.
[This account might more properly have appeared in earlier volumes; it is inserted here for completeness and as being of some interest.]
DECLARED ACCOUNTS: ARMY: CHELSEA HOSPITAL.
PIPE OFFICE: ROLL 1780. [E.351/1780]. AUDIT OFFICE: BUNDLE 1468, ROLL 19 [A.O.1/1468/19].
JOHN HOWE, Paymaster of the Royal Hospital near Chelsea.
24 December 1711 to 24 December 1712.
Charge. £ s. d.
Arrears: none, the Accomptant being in surplusage.
Receipts: money received and detained by the Accomptant for the deduction of 1s. in the 1l. 24,325 1
ditto for the deduction of one day's pay in the year 1,321 16
money voted for the support of Chelsea Hospital by the House of Commons 30 June 1713 47,286 17 6
total charge and receipts 72,933 15 11
Discharge.
Surplusage on the determination of the preceding Accompt 38,650 2 11
salaries: Sir John Hales, Governor, at 500l. per annum; David Crauford, Lieutenant Governor at 200l. per annum; Richard Bettesworth, Major, at 150l. per annum; Dr. Emanuel Langford and Dr. Robert Cannon, Chaplains, at 100l. per annum each; Sir Theodore Colladon, Physician, at 100l. per annum; James Fraser, Secretary, and Benedict Ithell, Deputy Treasurer, at 100l. per annum each; Robert Stapleton, Second Major, and Robert Inglis, Comptroller, at 50l. per annum each; Hugh Warren, Surveyor of the Works, at 20l. per annum; Alexander Inglis, Surgeon, at 73l. per annum; Isaac Garnier, Apothecary, at 50l. per annum; Silvanus Tomkins, Adjutant, at 20l. per annum; surgeon's mate, wardrobekeeper, master-cook, second cook, three under-cooks, master butler, scullery woman, sexton, usher of the hall, yeoman of the coalyard, porter, sweepers, housekeeper, 24 matrons, barber, canal keeper, gardener, engine-keeper, lamp-keeper, two organists, clock-keeper, named with salaries; the Rectors of Chelsea and of Kensington for tithe; a superannuated matron for ¾ year; in all 2,612 14 0
provisions (7,629l. 8s. 11d.), clothing (1,173l. 12s. 11d.), linen (532l. 1s. 2d.), medicines, internal and external (814l. 8s. 4d.) and other necessaries, detailed with names of tradesmen 12,758 12
sundry annual allowances, detailed, paid out of the deductions of 12d. in the 1l. and of one day's pay 7,752 5
pensions and rewards to outpensioners, including the Companies of Invalids at the Tower and at Portsmouth, and funeral charges, etc. 54,715 1 8
total payments and allowances 116,488 16 11¾
and so the said Accomptant is in Surplusage 43,555l. 1s. 0¾d.
Declared 8 May 1716.
DECLARED ACCOUNTS: ARMY: TRANSPORT SERVICE.
PIPE OFFICE: ROLL 2986 [E351/2986].
AUDIT OFFICE: BUNDLE 2307, ROLL 18 [A.O.1/2307/18].
THOMAS MICKLETHWAITE, Receiver and Paymaster for the Transport Service
29 September 1711 to 29 September 1712.
Charge. £ s. d.
Arrears: remaining in the Accomptant's hands at the end of his last Accompt 83,084 9
depending upon sundry other persons particularly named at the foot of the said Accompt 55,487 11
Receipts: money subscribed in the books of the South Sea Company amounting to 90,124l. 18s. 6d. and South Sea Stock transferred to him by Charles Cæsar, Treasurer of the Navy, to pay Transport bills that were registered in course 165,375 1 7
the value of a Navy bill received by this Accomptant for the freight of the Rosenburgh, with interest thereupon 11 June 1708 to 25 Dec. 1711 677 7 3
money received of divers persons for the service of the Transport Office: £ s. d.
Philip Browne for 473 qrs. 3 bushels of oats sold him at 14s. 1d. a quarter less ½d. a quarter allowed for measuring 332 7 0
Adam Delsey for old bed cases at 4s. a cwt. 2 8 0
George Willis, master of the William transport hired at Chatham, for money supplied him by John Hone to transport Forces from North Britain to Flanders 18 2 6
the Duke of Montague for transporting 22 horses from Harwich to Williamstadt in March, 1709 67 9 2
Nicholas Roope for freight and provisions for three men and three horses transported from Harwich to Holland 7 8 6
John Howe, Paymaster of the Guards and Garrisons, for deductions made by him for Transportation charges from the following Regiments: in the year 1705 from the First Troop of Horse Guards and the Battalion of the First Regiment of Foot Guards 219l. 6s. 8d.; in the year 1706 from the same Battalion 39l. 0s. 4d.; in the year 1707 from the First Regiment of Foot Guards and from Gen. Earles's (now Brig. Freek's) Regiment of Foot 59l. 17s. 10d., in the year 1708 from the Battalion of the First and Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards in Holland 198l. 15s. 4d.; in the year 1709 from the Battalion of the First Regiment of Foot Guards, the Battalion of the Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards and from Col. James Jones's (now Col. Alexander's) Regiment of Foot 193l. 13s. 11d. and in the year 1710 from the Battalion of the First Regiment of Foot Guards in Holland and the Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards 38l. 14s. 2d. 749 8 3
1,177 3 5
money received of the Bank of England in exchange for tallies delivered over to the said Bank 14,000 0 0
Surcharge: money formerly allowed the Accomptant by the Commissioners' Orders for the Auditor's fee which being under Incidents could not be distinguished by the Auditors who allowed him their fees in course by which he had double credit and is now surcharged 346 6 0
total charge and receipts 320,147 19 4
Discharge.
Money paid within the time of this Accompt to sundry masters of ships hired into the Transport Service for freight and interest at 6 per cent. per annum:
for freight of ships hired to transport Forces etc. to Spain and Portugal:
the Thomas and Anne (Thomas Jenkins, master) in full of 337l. 7s. 2d. with interest 7l. 9s., less payments on account; 7 Sept. 1710 to 5 Jan. 1710–11 174 14 2
the Charles (William Catlett, master) in full of 2,062l. 16s. 3d. with interest 15l. 11s. 6d., less payments on account; 9 May 1708 to 14 Oct. 1710 388 4 9
the Anna (John Thompson, owner) in full of 316l. 10s. 9d. with interest 5l. 12s. 10d., less payments on account; 13 Oct. 1710 to 1 March 1710–11 182 10 7
the Anne Arundell (Daniel Watts, master) in full of 3,971l. 15s. 10d. with interest 15l. 10s. 6d., less payments on account; 11 May 1708 to 10 April 1710 511 13 4
the Buck (Benjamin Spanton, master), in full of 411l. 8s. with interest 12l. 0s. 8d., deducting 7s. 6d. for stores short returned; 13 Feb. 1710–11 to 8 May 1711 423 1 2
the Amity (Christopher Spanton, master) in full of 432l. 14s. 8d. with interest 12l. 12s. 4d., deducting for stores short returned, etc. 1l. 10s.; 14 Feb. 1710–11 to 8 May 1711 443 17 0
the Mary frigate (George Gibson, master) in full of 710l. 17s. 4d. with interest 5l. 18s. 4d., less payments on account 152 4 8
the Potuxon Merchant (William Lax, master) in full of 3,903l. 1s. 7d. with interest 15l. 2s. 10d., less payments on account; 11 May 1708 to 19 April 1710 496 5 11
the Hastwell (John Millison, owner) in full of 3,022l. 19s. 7d. with interest 3l. 5s. 2d., less payments on account and 31s. for stores short returned; 2 April 1709 to 8 April 1711 125 13 9
the Nathaniell (Richard Browne, master) in full of 547l. 12s. 7d. with interest 15l. 16s. 9d., less 6l. 16s. 4d. for stores short returned; 15 Feb. 1710–11 to 16 May 1711 556 13 0
the Two Sheriffs (John Frost, master) in full of 5,493l. 3s. 4d. with interest 11l. 2s. 3d., less payments on accompt and 8l. 2s. for stores short returned; 15 April 1708 to 27 Nov. 1710 297 2 3
the Susanna and Mary (Cheesman Piercy, master) in full of 316l. 8s. 10d. with interest 3l. 14s. 7d., less payments on account; 9 Sept. 1710 to 8 Feb. 1710–11 92 15 5
the Anne frigate (John Jesse, owner) in full of 1,726l. 3s. 2d. with interest 5l. 17s. 1d., less payments on account and 20s. for stores short returned; 17 March 1708–9 to 27 Sept. 1710 189 9 5
the Portsmouth frigate (Robert Stephens, owner) in full of 631l. 9s. 5d. with interest 7l. 19s. 7d., less payments on account; 29 Sept. 1710 to 11 Jan. 1710–11 271 12 0
the Levett (Sir Robert Dunckley, owner) in full of 5,296l. 1s. 10d. with interest 76l. 10s. 7d., less payments on account 558 7 5
the Mary (Joseph Tatem, owner) in full of 6,505l. 13s. 3d. with interest 113l. 17s. 3d., less payments on account; 2 Feb 1708–9 to 23 Oct. 1711 3,436 6 6
the Prosperity (John Robert, master) in full of 289l. 15s. 8d. with interest 8l. 9s. 4d.; 16 Feb. 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 298 5 0
the Yarmouth (Thomas Davy, master) in full of 503l. 16s. 8d. with interest 13l. 8s. 4d., less 2s. 6d. for stores short returned; 13 Feb. 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 517 2 6
the William (George Wills, master) in full of 133l. 2s. 11d. with interest 2l. 8s. 4d., less 3l. 19s. 1d. for stores short returned; 17 March 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 131 12 2
the John and Sarah (John Lawrence, master) in full of 397l. 6s. 4d. with interest 6l. 18s. 3d., less payments on account; 14 Oct. 1710 to 26 Feb. 1710–11 223 12 7
the Expedition (Charles Smithson, owner) in full of 1,090l. 16s. 7d. with interest 5l. 5s. 1d., less payments on account and 17s. for stores short returned; 1 May to 4 Nov. 1709 179 18 8
the Agreement (John Hammond, master) in full of 516l. 2s. 8d. with interest 15l. 2s. 3d., less 12d. for an iron hoop short returned; 23 Feb. 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 531 3 11
the Edward and Humphrey (Peter Hammond, master) in full of 697l. 7s. 7d. with interest 5l. 18s., less payments on account; 24 May 1709 to 16 June 1710 375 6 1
the Charles (John Waggett, master) in full of 258l. 5s., less 43l. 0s. 10d. in consideration of discharge 1 May 1712 before expiry of the agreed time; 3 April to 3 June 1712 215 4 2
the Union (William Tibbington, master) in full of 298l. 10s., less 49l. 15s. for discharge 1 May 1712 before expiry of the agreed time; 2 April to 2 June 1712 248 15 0
the Willing Mind (John Mackmath, master) in full of 235l. 10s., less 39l. 5s. for discharge 1 May 1712 before expiry of the agreed time; 3 April to 3 June 1712 196 5 0
the Resolution (Matthew Gelien, master) in full of 315l. 15s., less 52l. 12s. 6d. for discharge 1 May 1712 before expiry of the agreed time; 3 Aug. [1711] to 3 June 1712 263 2 6
the Elizabeth and Mary (William Seagoe, master) in full of 362l. 14s. with interest 10l. 12s. 1d., less 2s. 6d. for stores short returned; 13 Feb. 1710–11 to 8 May 1711 373 3 7
the Sarah (Thomas Hurrey, master) in full of 345l. 2s. 6d. with interest 9l. 19s. 10d., less 3l. 9s. 10d. for stores short returned; 23 Feb. 1710–11 to 8 May 1711 351 12 6
the Prosperous Ann (John Pine, master) in full of 454l. 16s. 9d. with interest 13l. 5s. 5d., less 1l. 8s. 11d. for stores short issued; 16 Feb. 1710–11 to 13 June 1711 466 13 3
the Nightingale (Samuell Sharpe, master) in full of 409l. 5s. with interest 11l. 18s. 5d., less 1l. 5s. for damage on cask and 16s. 6d. for stores short returned; 14 Feb. 1710–11 to 8 May 1711 419 1 11
the Rebecca and Betty (Nicholas Forster, master) in full of 485l. 12s. 10d. with interest 14l. 4s. 6d., less 8s. 4d. for stores short returned; 13 Feb. 1710–11 to 24 May 1711 499 8 7
the William (Hugh Piercey, master) in full of 390l. 17s. 7d. with interest 4l. 1s. 2d., less payments on account; 6 June to 13 Sept. 1707 158 12 3
the Mary Anne (Samuel Deane, master) in full of 133l. 14s. with interest 4l. 0s. 10d.; 22 June to 22 Aug. 1711 137 14 10
the Upton (Matthew Scott, master) in full of 985l. 1s. 6d. with interest 9l. 18s. 11d., less payments on account and 2l. 5s. for stores short returned; 16 Aug. 1705 to 29 Oct. 1706 448 5 5
the Mutuall Consent (John Waggett, master) in full of 2,798l. 8s. 1d. with interest 35l. 4s. 11d., less payments on account; 3 May 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 1,064 1 0
the Friends Goodwill (Thomas Merriman, master) in full of 1,567l. 12s. 10d. with interest 6l. 10s. 9d., less payments on account; 22 May 1710 to 24 Oct. 1711 239 6 11
the Marlborough (James Taylor, master) in full of 1,107l. 12s. 1d. with interest 15l. 16s. 5d., less payments on account; 15 Jan. 1710–11 to 22 Aug. 1711 510 18 6
the John (Benjamin Dobson, master) in full of 1,624l. 9s. 5d. with interest 8l. 9s., less payments on account; 9 May 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 288 17 9
the Chatham (John Alexander, master) in full of 721l. with interest 3l. 9s. 10d., less payments on account; 27 Jan. 1710–11 to 22 Aug. 1711 175 2 4
the Friends Adventure (William Coatsworth, owner) in full of 2,331l. 1s. 10d. with interest 9l. 17s., less payments on account and 5s. for stores short returned; 15 May 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 358 11 2
the Benjamin (William Hook, master) in full of 2,054l. 13s. with interest 10l. 19s. 1d., less payments on account; 2 Sept. 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 565 15 1
the Southwould (Aldred Liell, master) in full of 1,153l. 18s. 6d. with interest 4l. 19s. and for building cabins for the men shipped on board 12l. 15s. 3d., less payments on account and 6l. 18s. 4d. for stores short returned; 28 March 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 261 19 2
the Queen Anne (George Tucker, master) in full of 1,736l. 8s. with interest 6l. 2s. 1d., less payments on account and 10s. for stores short returned; 28 March 1710–11 to 22 Oct. 1711 373 16 1
the Recovery (Peter Renew, owner; John Lewis, master) in full of 1,660l. 3s. 1d. with interest 13l. 18s. 10d., less payments on account and 10s. for a protest at Portsmouth; 11 Jan. 1710–11 to 1 Nov. 1711 988 19 11
the George (Peter Renew, owner; Isaac Dow, master) in full of 2,253l. 19s. 1d. with interest 18l. 16s. 7d., less payments on account and 20s. for stores short returned; 15 Jan. 1710–11 to 3 Nov. 1711 1,335 17 8
the Hedworth (Francis Robinson, master) in full of 1,497l. 1s. 4d. with interest 16l. 3s. 7d., less payments on account; 11 Sept. 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 591 4 11
the John (William Barnes, master) in full of 1,127l. 6s. 6d. with interest 6l. 7s. 11d., less payments on account; 7 Sept. 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 233 18 5
the Reward (John King, master) in full of 1,443l. 8s. 2d. with interest 5l. 11s. 6d., less payments on account; 6 Sept. 1710 to 19 Oct. 1711 204 5 8
the Mary ship (John Robinson, master) in full of 1,955l. 9s. with interest 11l. 5s. 9d., less payments on account, 12 Oct. 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 415 3 9
the Marlborough (Richard Jennys, master) in full of 1,777l. 18s. 10d. with interest 10l. 17s. 6d., less payments on account and 21l. 3s. 4d. for one copper furness; 3 Jan. 1710–11 to 23 Oct. 1711 431 19 0
the Hannah (Jonathan Wickar, master) in full of 2,231l. 11s. 3d. with interest 4l. 3s. 5d., less payments on account and 2s. 6d. for stores short returned; 9 Sept. 1710 to 20 Oct. 1711 173 18 2
the Rebecca (Thomas Grange, master) in full of 1,801l. 3s. 2d. with interest 14l. 11s. 6d., less payments on account and 2l. 3s. for stores short returned; 11 Sept. 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 605 1 8
the Blenheim (Thomas Simmons, master) in full of 1,512l. 3s. 3d. with interest 5l. 4s. 2d., less payments on account; 23 Jan. 1710–11 to 5 Nov. 1711 276 3 5
the William and Mary (Isaac Cooper, master) in full of 1,443l. 8s. 2d. with interest 14l. 11s. 10d., less payments on account and 5s. for stores short returned; 9 Sept. 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 813 1 0
the Blessing (John Nicholson, master) in full of 1,736l. 16s. 1d. with interest 17s. 3d., less payments on account and one day's pay for not sailing when agreed (7l. 5s. 11d.); 9 March 1710–11 to 6 Nov. 1711 54 13 5
the Lisle (Gregory Shipton, master) in full of 765l. 2s. 5d. with interest 3l. 5s. 4d., less payments on account; 31 Jan. 1710–11 to 16 Nov. 1711 229 11 9
the Samuell (Thomas Leman, owner) in full of 1,535l. 18s. 9d. with interest 12l. 13s. 7d., less payments on account and 10s. for a protest at Portsmouth; 30 Jan. 1710–11 to 5 Nov. 1711 880 6 4
the John and Katherine (Richard Hoe, master) in full of 1,899l. 19s. 4d. with interest 16l. 19s. 1d., less payments on account and 2l. for stores short returned; 15 May 1710 to 24 Oct. 1711 1,036 6 5
the Mary and Francis (Thomas Coalthurst, owner) in full of 1,465l. 8s. 3d. with interest 4l. 1s. 5d., less payments on account; 8 Jan. 1710 to 19 Oct. 1711 113 13 6
the Susannah (Joseph Brapple, master) in full of 1,087l. 6s. 8d. with interest 10l. 4s. 11d., less payments on account and 3s. for stores short returned; 9 Sept. 1710 to 19 Oct. 1711 308 1 7
the Phoenix (Thomas Missing, owner; William Cock, master) in full of 2,104l. 18s. with interest 4l. 3s. 8d., less payments on account; 30 Sept. 1710 to 12 Oct. 1711 221 9 8
the Adventure (Richard Leman, master) in full of 1,590l. 13s. 7d. with interest 5l. 0s. 11d., less payments on account and 2l. 19s. for stores short returned; 6 April 1710 to 12 Oct. 1711 354 14 8
the Smirna Merchant (Henry Vernon, master) in full of 1,632l. 11s. 6d. with interest 14l. 10s. 11d., less payments on account; 12 Feb. 1710–11 to 22 Aug. 1711 616 0 5
the Union (William Tibbington, master) in full of 2,005l. 18s. 4d. with interest 13l. 13s. 11d., less payments on account; 4 Jan. 1710–11 to 22 Oct. 1711 583 16 3
the John and Thomas (William Brock, master) in full of 1,015l. 3s. 10d. with interest 8l. 19s. 10d., less payments on account and 9l. 7s. 2d. for two days' pay for not sailing according to order; 15 March 1710–11 to 22 Oct. 1711 453 8 6
the Willing Mind (John Mackmath, master) in full of 1,604l. 10s. 9d. with interest 18l. 13s. 5d., less payments on account; 10 Jan. 1710–11 to 1 Nov. 1711 963 16 2
the Pheasant (John Mason, master) in full of 1,627l. 7s. 8d. with interest 9l. 6s. 2d., less payments on account and 10s. for a protest at Portsmouth; 14 Feb. 1710–11 to 3 Nov. 1711 485 1 10
the Resolution (Matthew Gelien, master) in full of 2,195l. 10s. 3d. with interest 3l. 12s. 1d., less payments on account and 10s. for a protest at Portsmouth; 6 Jan. 1710–11 to 3 Nov. 1711 214 10 4
the Fortune (John Jones, master) in full of 1,694l. 1s. 2d. with interest 4l. 15s. 6d., less payments on account and 7s. for stores short returned; 17 Feb. 1710–11 to 3 Nov. 1711 306 19 8
the Sarah (George Storey, master) in full of 1,424l. 17s. with interest 10l. 13s. 5d., less payments on account and 5s. for cabin stuffs short returned; 14 Mar. 1710–11 to 3 Nov. 1711 685 13 6
the Globe (Michael King, master) in full of 1,612l. 18s. 9d. with interest 5l. 2s. 1d., less payments on account; 23 Jan. 1710–11 to 3 Nov. 1711 328 14 10
the Industry (John Millison, owner) in full of 571l. 0s. 9d. with interest 13l. 2s. 10d., less payments on account; 9 Sept. 1710 to 7 Feb. 1710–11 354 4 7
the Margarett (William Ingledew, owner) in full of 1,235l. 8s. 9d. with interest 27l. 10s. 1d., less payments on account and 10l. 16s. 6d. for returned provisions; 5 May 1710 to 27 Feb. 1710–11 744 8 0
the Samuel (Samuel Ferrier, master) in full of 611l. 15s. 7d. with interest 4l. 5s. 5d., less payments on account and 10s. for a protest at Portsmouth; 31 Jan. 1710–11 to 1 Nov. 1711 244 13 0
the Colchester (Sir William Phippard, owner; Joseph Hinning, master) in full of 2,563l. 10s. 5d. with interest 17l. 0s. 1d., less payments on account; 26 Jan. 1710–11 to 22 Aug. 1711 594 8 6
the Martha (Sir William Phippard, owner; John Northover, master) in full of 4,854l. 17s. 0d. with interest 23l. 11s. 4d., less payments on account and 19l. 18s. 8d. for provisions from the Redhouse at Deptford; 3 Jan. 1710–11 to 24 Oct. 1711 856 9 8
the Anne (Lewis Frost, master) in full of 3,594l. 6s. 6d. with 83l. for building cabins on board and 9l. 4s. for a Swedish pass purchased by the master and with interest 3l. 1s., less payments on account and 45l. 17s. 4d. for stores short returned; 28 March 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 119 6 2
the Mary ship (Sir William Phippard, owner) in full of 4,945l. 10s. 9d. with interest 20l. 10s. 4d., less payments on account; 24 June 1710 to 1 Nov. 1711 1,033 16 5
the Cœsar (ditto) in full of 3,969l. with interest 31l. 6s. 6d., less payments on account and 2s. 6d. for stores short returned; 8 Sept. 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 1,236 4 0
the Margarett (Peregrine Browne, owner) in full of 2,143l. 6s. 3d. with interest 13l. 17s. 6d., less payments on account and 5s. for cabin stuff short returned; 6 June 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 521 18 9
the Mary (Ambrose Wade, master) in full of 595l. 9s. with interest 6l. 11s. 1d., less payments on account and 5l. 11s. 4d. for not sailing within the time agreed; 12 March 1710–11 to 16 Oct. 1711 262 8 3
the Eagle (Robert Atwood, owner) in full of 1,934l. 10s. 4d. with interest 6l. 13s. 10d., less payments on account, 10s. for a protest at Portsmouth and 10s. for stores short returned; 24 Jan. 1710–11 to 5 Nov. 1711 417 0 2
the Sarah (John Davie, master) in full of 1,319l. 6s. 6d. with interest 7l. 8s. 5d., less payments on account; 6 June 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 289 12 11
the Samuell and Anne (William Orton, owner) in full of 1,097l. 8s. 4d. with interest 7l. 15s. 4d., less payments on account; 23 Jan. 1710–11 to 22 Aug. 1711 475 3 8
the Rebecca (John Nicholson, owner) in full of 929l. 11s. 2d. with interest 6l. 12s. 8d., less payments on account and 3l. 19s. 5d. for one day's pay for not sailing to order; 8 Mar. 1710–11 to 1 Nov. 1711 455 10 5
the Martha (Nehemiah Wotton, master) in full of 1,345l. 13s. 1d. with interest 11l. 2s. 2d., less payments on account and 28l. 5s. 6d. for freight of goods carried contrary to the charter-party; 9 Sept. 1710 to 23 Oct. 1711 728 18 9
the Two Sheriffs (John Frost, master) in full of 1,654l. 2s. 1d. with interest 8l. 19s. 10d., less payments on account and 2s. 6d. for stores short returned; 14 March 1710–11 to 6 Nov. 1711 802 11 11
the John (Thomas Tibbington, master) in full of 1,237l. 8s. 4d. with interest 17l. 3s. 3d., less payments on account; 11 Sept. 1710 to 22 Oct. 1711 699 2 7
the Kent ship (Robert Wise, owner) in full of 3,311l. 4s. 11d. with interest 16l. 7s. 6d., less payments on account; 24 May 1710 to 24 Oct. 1711 569 7 9
the Johanna (Thomas Morrice, master) in full of 285l. 11s. 5d. with interest 1l. 13s. 8d., less payments on account; 22 March 1709–10 to 8 June 1710 64 14 7
the Unity (Daniel Grover, master) in full of 668l. 1s. 2d. with interest 5l. 17s. 8d., less payments on account; 10 April to 9 Nov. 1710 190 8 6
Sir Thomas Frankland and John Evelyn, Postmasters General, for freight of 1,602 soldiers of sundry Regiments transported in the Queen's pacquet-boats at 10s. a head; 29 September 1709 to 31 May 1711; and Zacharias Rogers, their agent at Falmouth, for victualling them at 10s. a head 1,602 0 0
for freight of Forces from Italy to Barcelona:
the Adventure (Thomas Montgomery, master) in full of 471l. 10s. with interest 10l. 3s. 9d., less payments on account; 1 April to 15 Sept. 1708 309 3 9
for the freight of Corn from Barbary to Catalonia:
the Jenny pink (George Wimple, master) in full of 1,084l. 11s. 6d. with interest 81l. 5s. 8d.; 28 Aug. 1709 to 2 May 1710 1,165 17 2
freight of Forces from Ireland to Spain and Portugal:
the Marcelia galley (Thomas Wilkes, master) in full of 801l. 1s. with interest 7l. 18s. 10d., less payments on account and 5l. 2s. 8d. for stores short returned; 16 Aug. 1705 to 29 Oct. 1706 360 17 4
the Donegall (William Wilson, master) in full of 900l. 12s. 9d. with interest 9l. 0s. 10d., less payments on account and 17s. for stores short returned; 16 Aug. 1705 to 29 Oct. 1706 410 8 7
the America Merchant (Francis Jackson, master) in full of 1,040l. 11s. 10d. with interest 19l. 8s. 4d., less payments on account and 4l. 10s. for 180 deals short returned; 25 Aug. 1703 to 6 Oct. 1704 589 2 2
the Judith and Anne (James Ramsey, master) in full of 528l. 4s. 9d. with interest 9l. 15s. 10d., less payments on account and 1l. 16s. for 72 deals short returned; 30 Aug. 1703 to 6 Oct. 1704 297 8 7
the Agreement (Edward Barrow, master) in full of 709l. 15s. 4d. with interest 13l. 2s., less payments on account and 6l. 12s. 6d. for stores short returned; 25 Aug. 1703 to 6 Oct. 1704 397 16 10
[for the] freight of Forces from North Britain to Holland:
the Success (John Fisher, master) in full of 613l. 18s. 5d. with interest 17l. 19s. 1d., less 15s. 1d. for stores short returned; 13 Feb. 1710–11 to 14 June 1711 631 2 5
the Anthony (Thomas Redford, master) in full of 357l. 18s. 3d. with interest 10l. 9s. 3d., less 8s. 4d. for stores short returned; 22 Feb. 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 367 19 2
the Rawston (Edward Wall, master) in full of 419l. 7s. 10d. with interest 12l. 10s. 10d., less 3l. 5s. 1d. for stores short returned; 1 March 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 428 13 7
the Hope ship (Nurse Hereford, master) in full of 384l. 15s. 5d. with interest 11l. 1s. 11d., less 5l. 14s. 9d. for stores short returned; 21 Feb. 1710–11 to 15 June 1711 390 2 7
the Henry and Martha (James Peck, master) in full of 623l. 12s. 5d. with interest 12l. 7s. 1d., less payments on account and 1l. 10s. 4d. for stores short returned; 14 Feb. 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 434 9 2
the Paul ship (Thomas Allen, master) in full of 435l. 12s. 6d. with interest 12l. 14s. 3d., less 19s. 4d. for stores short returned; 24 Feb. 1710–11 to 27 May 1711 447 7 5
the Tygar (James Barman, master) in full of 559l. 17s. 3d. with interest 16l. 6s. 4d., less 2l. 11s. 8d. for stores short returned; 23 Feb. 1710–11 to 15 June 1711 573 11 11
for the freight of ships hired to transport Forces from England to Holland and Flanders:
the Martha and Susannah (James Logan, master) for transporting 66 horses at 2l. a horse and 31 recruits at 5s. a head, less 1l. 5s. 11d. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 0s. 8d. 142 4 9
the Purplett (Bartholomew Cole, master) for transporting 68 horses at 2l. a horse and for 30 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem, less 2l. 19s. 6d. for stores short returned; with interest 6l. 2s. 6d. 215 13 0
the Colman (Thomas Raffe, master) for transporting 60 horses and for 30 days' demurrage, same rates, less 1l. 16s. 5d. for stores short returned; with interest 5l. 8s. 6d. 191 2 1
the Judith (John Hillam, master) for transporting 52 horses and 20 recruits, rates as above, less 17s. 8d. for stores short returned; with interest 3l. 17s. 2d. 111 19 6
the Richard and James (Benjamin Hammond, master) for transporting 66 horses at 1l. 15s. each with two men at 4s. each and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem, less 3s. 6d. for stores short returned 132 4 6
the Friendshipp (John Margerum, master) for transporting 66 horses and for 10 days' demurrage, same rates 132 0 0
the Lisle (Gregory Shipton, master) for transporting 42 horses and for 36 days' demurrage, same rates, with 3l. 1s. for cask brought from Ireland and for ship's stabling 110 15 0
the Mons (James Dawson, master) for transporting clothing, computed at 2l. per horse for 56 horses, the number the said ship is by measurement able to carry; with interest 3l. 5s. 6d. 115 5 6
the Friends' Adventure (John Wallis, master) for transporting clothing, computed at the same rate for 56 horses and for 23 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem; with interest 4l. 13s. 10d. 164 19 10
the Charity (Joseph Martin, owner) for transporting 66 horses at 2l. each and for 30 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem with 44l. 0s. 4d. for provisions and stores brought from Harwich, less 3l. 13s. 2d. for stores short returned; with interest 7l. 4s. 2d. 253 16 4
the John's Adventure (John Hayward, master) for transporting 58 horses, same rate, less 4l. 12s. 11d. for stores short returned; with interest 3l. 5s. 1d. 114 12 2
the Mouse ship (Richard Hansell, master) for transporting 62 horses, same rate, and for 30 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem, less 2l. for stores short returned; with interest 5l. 11s. 11d. 197 6 11
the Richard (James Hartley, master) for transporting 68 horses, same rate, and 77 men at 5s. each, less 3l. 10s. 5d. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 8s. 6d. 156 3 1
the Unity (Thomas Bowell, master) for transporting 70 horses and 40 men, same rates, less 5s. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 15s. 5d. 154 10 5
the Elizabeth (John Munds, master) for transporting clothing, computed at 2l. per horse for 56 horses; with interest 3l. 11s. 5d. 115 11 5
the Richard and James (Benjamin Hammond, master) for transporting 64 horses at 2l. each with 52 men at 5s. each, and for provisions for ten days victualling of the said men (1l. 7s. 6d.), less 11s. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 10s. 5d. 146 6 11
the Prosperous (Richard Bowell, master) for transporting 66 horses at the same rate and for 30 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem, less 1l. 9s. for oats and stabling short returned; with interest 5l. 19s. 9d. 210 15 9
the Faulcon (Nicholas Loft, master) for transporting 60 horses and for 30 days' demurrage, same rates, less 2l. for stores short returned; with interest 5l. 8s. 6d. 190 18 6
the Anne and Elizabeth (Mark Coates, master) for transporting 66 horses and for 30 days' demurrage, same rates, less 1l. 12s. 6d. for stores short returned; with interest 5l. 19s. 7d. 210 12 1
the Castelton (William Cole, master) for transporting 56 horses with 30 days' demurrage, same rates, and for freight of provisions and stores brought from Harwich to Deptford, less 14s. for stores short returned and 3l. 6s. 8d. for ten days' provisions for ten men overcharged last voyage at 8d. per man per day; with interest 6l. 0s. 3d. 211 8 4
the Acton (John Hammond, master) for transporting 64 horses at the same rate and 29 recruits at 5s. each, less 3s. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 6s. 3d. 139 8 3
the Prosperous Anne (John Pine, master) for transporting 52 horses at 1l. 15s. per horse and 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem, less 12s. 3d. for stores short returned 103 7 9
the Prosperous Mary (Samuel Parker, master) for transporting 66 horses at 2l. each, with 62 men at 5s. per head, and for provisions supplied to make up 10 days victualling (2l. 8s. 1d.), less 10s. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 15s. 3d. 154 3 4
the John and Mary (John Hammond, master) for transporting 64 horses, same rate, and 61 men at 5s. each; with interest 4l. 11s. 4d. 147 16 4
the Oldner (Robert Hammond, master) for transporting 58 horses, same rate, and for 30 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem, less 3l. 13s. 3d. for stores short returned; with interest 5l. 3s. 10d. 182 15 7
the Resolution (Edward Hammond, master) for transporting 54 horses and for 30 days' demurrage, same rates, less 1l. 6s. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 17s. 11d. 172 6 11
the Oldner (Robert Hammond, master) for transporting 60 horses, at 1l. 15s. per horse, with two men at 4s. each and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem, less 14s. 6d. for stores short returned 119 13 6
the Rebecca and Betty (Nicholas Foster, master) for transporting 60 horses, same rate, with 19 recruits at 4s. each and 10 days demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem, less 2s. 6d. for stores short returned 123 13 6
the Olive Branch (William Lever, master) for transporting 56 horses with 15 men and 10 days' demurrage, same rates 115 0 0
the Unity (Nathaniel Bowell, master) for transporting 70 horses and 10 days' demurrage, same rates, and for provisions for the horses at Brewershaven, less 2l. 13s. for stores short returned 142 7 0
the Felton (Samuel Goldsbury, master) for transporting 68 horses and 10 days' demurrage, same rates 136 0 0
the Reformation (James Jackson, master) for transporting 46 horses at 2l. per horse, with 26 recruits at 5s. each, and 3s. 1d. for provisions for the recruits, less 5s. for stabling short returned; with interest 3l. 2s. 8d. 101 10 9
the Olive Branch (William Lever, master) for transporting 56 horses, same rate, and 30 days' demurrage at 9d. per horse per diem, and for provisions and stores brought from Harwich to Deptford 45l. 5s. 3d.; less 2l. 3s. 5d. for stores short returned; with interest 6l. 7s. 7d. 224 9 5
the Wright ship (Robert Cole, master) for transporting 69 horses, same rate, with 85 men at 5s. each, and for provisions supplied, and for cask and clothing brought back from Holland 87l. 16s. 10d.; less 18s. 6d. for stores short returned; with interest 8l. 11s. 10d. 254 15 2
the Richard and Joseph (Nathaniel Bowell, master) for transporting 60 horses and 41 men, same rates, and for provisions 11s., less 3l. 4s. 6d. for stabling and stores short returned; with interest 4l. 1s. 4d. 131 12 10
the Rebecca (John Cullum, master) for transporting 66 horses at 1l. 15s. per horse and 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem with 1l. 2s. 6d. for 108 gallons of beer at 2½d. per gallon, less 7s. for stores short returned 132 15 6
the Benjamin (John Margerum, master) for transporting 66 horses at 2l. each, with 58 men at 5s. each and for 65 gallons of beer expended, less 1l. 19s. 8d. for stores short returned; with interest 4l. 12s. 11d. 150 6 9
the Langley (Richard Horner, master) for transporting 66 horses at 1l. 15s. each with 2 men at 4s. each and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem 132 8 0
the John's Goodwill (Robert Potter, master) for transporting 66 horses, same rate, and for 10 days' demurrage (15l.) with 1l. 16s. 6d. for 106 1b. of cheese supplied the soldiers at 3d. per 1b., less 9s. 10d. for bread short returned 131 6 8
the Wright ship (Robert Cole, master) for transporting 68 horses, same rate, with 12 men at 4s. each and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem, with 56l. 3s. 3d. for cask and stabling, etc. brought from Holland, less 5s. for stabling short returned 194 6 3
the Thomas and Anne (Thomas Jenkins, master) for transporting clothing, computed at 1l. 15s. per horse for 36 horses, and for freight of cask and ship's stabling brought back from Williamstadt to Deptford 4l. 10s. 67 10 0
the Prosperous (Richard Bowell, master) for transporting of clothing, computed at the same rate for 66 horses, and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem. 132 0 0
the Southwould (Aldred Liell, master) for transporting clothing, same rate for 40 horses, and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem. 80 0 0
the Elizabeth (John Munds, master) for transporting clothing, computed at 1l. 15s. per horse for 56 horses, and for 10 days' demurrage as above. 112 0 0
the Gravesend yacht (Samuell Taylor, master) for transporting the Equipage for the Duke of Ormond and clothing for the First Regiment of Guards 55 0 0
the Aurenzeb (Malachy Pine) for transporting 26 tunns 17 ft. of clothing at 4l. per tunn, computing 40 ft. square to one tunn 105 14 0
the Crowne (William Pitt, owner) for transporting 9 tunns 20 ft. ditto at 3l. per tunn, computed as above 28 10 0
the Globe (Michael King, master) for transporting 64 horses at 1l. 15s. each and for 43 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem for 60 horses and 9l. 18s. 3d. for clothing, cask, etc., less 1l. 4s. 7d. for stores short returned 185 3 8
the Castleton (William Cole, master) for transporting 56 horses, same rate, with 13 men at 4s. each, and for 10 days' demurrage at 6d. per horse per diem with 12s. 6d. for provisions supplied, less 10s. for stabling short returned 114 14 6
the Sarah and Hannah (William Fowler, master) for transporting 252 men, computed at 1l. 15s. a horse for 58 horses, less 12d. for an iron hoop short returned. 101 9 0
the Woodhouse (Joshua Sollett, master) for transporting 160 men, computed at the same rate for 46 horses, less 2s. 6d. for stores short returned. 80 7 6
the Tyger (Michael Sadler, master) for transporting 219 men, computed at the same rate for 58 horses, less 2s. for 2 bread bags short returned 101 8 0
the Blessing (Henry Peirson, master) for transporting 300 men, computed at the same rate for 62 horses, less 2s. 6d. for stores short returned 108 7 6
the Mary (John Wiely, master) for transporting 220 men, computed at the same rate for 56 horses 98 0 0
the Charles (John Waggett, master) for transporting 220 men, computed at the same rate for 62 horses 108 10 0
the Langley (Richard Horne, master) for transporting 256 men, computed at the same rate for 68 horses, less 5s. for deals, baulks and "stantions" short returned 118 15 0
the Southwould (Aldred Liell, master) for transporting clothing, computed at 1l. 15s. per horse for 42 horses, less 2s. 6d. for stores short returned 73 7 9
the Elianor (Robert Christian, master) for transporting the coaches, equipage and baggage as also the Officers' servants and necessaries of the Lord Privy Seal, a Plenipotentiary of the Queen at Utrecht 80 0 0
for freight of men and clothing transported to Her Majesty's Foreign Plantations, etc.:
Edmund Dummer, owner of the pacquett boats, for the latter payment of transporting to Antegoa 38 men of Col. James Jones's Regiment, shipped 13 June 1711 on the Resolution, at 2l. 7s. 6d. each, less 10l. 11s. 10d. for two men said to be shipped but who by the Captain's certificate did not appear so to be 79 13 2
Edward Saunderson, owner of the Hampton galley, (Richard Perrott, commander) for the first payment for transporting to Antegoa 109 men of Col. Francis Alexander's Regiment, shipped 21 Dec. 1711, at 5l. 9s. 3d. a head 595 8 3
the same for the latter payment at 2l. 10s. 9d. a head 276 11 9
John Hunt, master of the Marlborough, in full for transporting to Boston in New England 250 marines at 2l. 10s. a head and for 1 month 22 days' demurrage, less 312l. 10s. paid by bill of 9 March 1709–10 and 10s. for stores short returned; with interest 49l. 16s. 664 5 9
60,782 6 2
money paid in part and upon account of the hire of several transport ships; with interest: £ s. d.
the ship Mary (Thomas Lewis, master) 217 10 4
the William (Nicholas Clare, master) 306 10 0
the Happy Union (Henry Foster, master) 293 14 5
the Anna (John Nicholson, master) 146 6 9
the Canada (Charles Lovell, master) 487 10 0
the Queen Anne (George Tucker, master) 378 13 5
the Mountfort (Henry Towart, master) 258 18 1
the same, further payments 761 16 1
the Charles (William Catlett, master) 52 1 10
the same, further payment 104 3 8
the Margarett (Peregrine Browne, owner; William Batchdell, master) 269 17 0
the John and Sarah (John Lawrence, master) 373 2 9
the Margarett (William Ingledew, owner; John Dun, master) 323 16 4
the John (Thomas Tibbington, master) 193 17 5
the Martha (Nehemiah Wotton, master) 209 6 6
the Ann Arundell (Daniel Watts, master) 1,134 8 9
the Levett (Sir Robert Dunkley, owner) 2,514 1 11
the Marlborough (Richard Jennys, master) 378 6 3
the Nathaniell and Elizabeth (Magnus Howson, master) 426 18 6
the John and Elizabeth (John Cobb, master) 274 14 9
the John and Sarah (Richard Peartree, master) 140 19 2
the Kent (Robert Wise, owner, John Lowbridge, master) 399 5 10
the same for further payments 1,235 11 0
the Rose (Henry Foster, master) 313 7 8
the Mary frigate (George Gibson, master) 208 2 0
the Adventure (William Curling, master) 759 17 0
the ship Margarett (William Ingeldew, owner; John Dunn, master) 314 10 11
the Reward (John King, master) 446 1 11
the Willing Mind (John Mackmath, master) 338 13 10
the Samuell (Thomas Lemmon, owner; John Bluck, master) 341 18 2
the Mary and Margarett (Thomas Whales, master) 141 4 4
the Mary (John Robinson, master) 324 0 9
the same for a further payment 330 8 2
the Samuel (Samuel Terrier, master) 138 13 5
the Susanna (Joseph Brapple, master) 167 11 4
the Potuxon Merchant (William Lax, master) 1,444 1 3
the Blessing (John Nicholson, owner; Thomas Clarke, master) 445 9 8
the Rebecca (same owner) 242 10 10
the Anna (same owner; Edward Rutherford, master) 142 2 11
the Mary (Sir William Phippard, owner; Edward Whitaker, master) 620 3 5
the same for a further payment 632 7 9
the Colchester (same owner; Joseph Hinning, master) 761 7 10
the Loyall Merchant (same owner; Thomas Farles, master) 669 10 10
the Martha (same owner; John North-over, master) 3,086 2 5
the Hidworth (Francis Robinson, master) 225 1 6
the Rebecca (Thomas Granger, master) 276 16 2
the Hastwell (John Millison, owner) 263 4 0
the same, for further payments 1,437 6 8
the Two Sheriffs (John Frost, master) 2,493 5 9
the Charles (William Catlett, master) 573 0 2
the ship Ann (Lewis Frost, master) 783 6 1
the same, for further payments 1,601 1 9
the John and Thomas (William Brook, master) 293 14 10
the Thomas and Elizabeth (Thomas Ridge, owner; John Scott, master) 330 19 7
the ship Mary and Francis (Thomas Coal-hurst, owner; James Kirk, master) 321 10 10
the same, for further payments 757 3 4
the Crown (Francis Rogers, master) 473 7 6
the Union (William Tibbington, master) 429 14 4
the Lisbon Factor (Samuel Ingram, master) 2,053 6 8
the Phœnix (Thomas Missing, owner; William Cock, master) 702 2 4
the same, for further payments 885 16 6
the Seaford's Adventure (Richard Lemmon, master) 347 17 8
the same, for further payments 405 15 8
the Lisle (Gregory Shipton, master) 173 8 8
the same, for a further payment 202 17 10
the Martha (Nehemiah Wootton, master) 205 6 6
the Blenheim (Thomas Simmons, master) 328 13 3
the same, for further payments 611 11 2
the Margarett (Peregrine Browne, master) 264 13 0
the Delight (Robert Spelman, master) 336 10 4
the ship Fortune (John Jones, master) 403 16 6
the same, for further payments 406 6 6
the Joseph (Francis Carter, owner; William Malthus, master) 301 10 10
the John (Benjamin Dobson, master) 191 2 2
the Friends' Adventure (William Coats-worth, master) 560 15 11
the same, for further payments 925 9 6
the Henry and Martha (James Peck, master) 205 17 2
the Expedition (Charles Smithson, owner; John Thomas, master) 403 13 4
the ship Tygar (Robert Atwood, owner; Thomas Jackson, master) 191 13 8
the same, for further payments 383 6 4
the ship Mary (Joseph Tatem, owner; John Field, master) 415 4 11
the same for a further payment 407 5 1
the John and Anne (Richard Hales, master) 1,384 14 8
the Anne Arundell (Daniel Watts, master) 309 7 10
the William and Mary (Isaac Cooper, master) 220 15 9
the Marlborough (James Taylor, master) 314 7 1
the Eagle (Robert Atwood, owner; Thomas Clifton, master) 421 17 9
the ship John (William Barnes, master) 171 4 4
the same for further payments 411 5 2
the Reward (Andrew Broughton, owner; Matthew South, master) 583 18 2
the Pheasant (John Mason, master) 383 12 9
the Friends' Goodwill (Thomas Merriman, master) 380 7 5
the same, for further payments 616 17 7
the Robert (William Nuccoll, master) 270 10 8
the Three Martins (Joseph Martin, owner; Robert Thompson, master) 480 18 0
the Recovery (Peter Renew, owner; John Lewis, master) 351 11 8
the Smerna Factor (Jacob Saunders, owner; Robert Saunders, master) 1,328 11 7
the ship John (Thomas Tibbington, master) 190 3 4
the Mary and Margarett (Thomas Whales, master) 138 10 4
the Isabella Ann Catherine (Richard Diamond, owner; Richard Bayley, master) 466 17 4
the Smerna Merchant (Henry Vernon, master) 526 16 7
the George (Peter Renew, owner) 480 6 9
the ship Mary (Sir William Phippard, owner; Edward Whitaker, master) 1,530 7 9
the ship Mary (John Robinson, master) 616 15 10
the Mary and Elizabeth (Samuel Coot, master) 1,286 6 3
the Southwould (Aldred Liell, master) 282 13 9
the William and Mathew (Thomas Green, master) 473 7 6
the Anne frigate (John Jesse, owner; William Jesse, master) 619 3 6
the Three Pilgrims (Richard Newman, master) 1,445 9 6
the Sarah (John Davie, master) 329 0 3
the same, for further payments 410 10 8
the John and Sarah (William Ingeldew, master) 431 14 0
the Chatham (John Alexander, master) 215 2 11
the Robert (William Nuccoll, master) 275 15 11
the John and Anne (Richard Hales, master) 470 13 9
the John and Thomas (Thomas Mustard, master) 1,311 3 5
the Susannah (Joseph Brapple, master) 170 16 8
the Susannah and Mary (Cheesman Peircy, master) 104 4 0
the Prudent Hannah (Jonathan Wickar, master) 343 1 2
the same, for further payments 983 13 11
the Kent (Robert Wise, master) 407 1 8
the Union (Richard Narle, master) 635 11 1
the Rebecca (John Nicholson, owner) 249 13 10
the Blessing (John Nicholson, owner; Thomas Clarke, master) 458 12 4
the Sarah (George Storey, master) 766 17 11
the Two Sheriffs (John Frost, master) 445 16 0
the Benjamin (William Hook, master) 308 10 5
the Mutual Consent (John Wagget, master) 326 8 7
the Prudent Hannah (Jonathan Wicker, master) 349 14 8
the John and Thomas (Thomas Mustard, master) 730 18 3
the Marlborough (Richard Jennys, master) 615 10 2
the Margarett (Peregrine Browne, owner; William Ratchdell, master) 616 7 11
the Reward (John King, master) 616 17 9
the Two Sheriffs (John Frost, master) 433 0 5
the ship Rose (Henry Foster, master) 819 2 0
the ship Mary (Ambrose Wade, master) 344 10 10
the Globe (Michael King, master) 962 11 0
the ship Thomas and Mary (Thomas Frampton, owner) 807 19 4
the Resolution (Matthew Gelien, master) 1,118 16 11
the Eagle (Robert Atwood, master) 711 8 4
the William and Mathew (Thomas Green, master) 932 19 11
the ship John (Benjamin Dobson, master) 618 1 10
the John and Elizabeth (John Cobb, master) 549 8 0
the Cœsar (Sir William Phipard, owner) 1,630 5 4
the Blessing (John Nicholson, owner; Thomas Clarke, master) 609 15 9
the Crowne (Francis Rogers, master) 932 19 11
the John and Sarah (Richard Peartree, master) 281 17 8
the Neptune (Thomas Coalthurst) 244 4 0
the Colchester (Sir William Phipard, owner) 514 14 7
the Joseph (Francis Carter, owner; William Malthus, master) 304 9 1
the Rebecca (Thomas Grange, master) 409 17 7
the Anna (John Nicholson, owner; Edward Rutherford, master) 143 10 2
the Samuell (Samuell Terrier, master) 101 15 7
the Samuell and Ann (William Orton, master) 322 18 7
the John and Catherine (Richard Hoe, master) 225 9 1
the Mutuall Consent (John Waggett, master) 517 2 8
the Thomas (Thomas Blakely, owner; Josias Nicholson, master) 168 3 4
the Susanna (Joseph Brapple, master) 310 5 7
the Unity (Daniell Grover, owner; Edward Arnold, master) 103 3 11
the Three Pilgrims (Richard Newman, master) 477 2 8
the Delight (Robert Spelman, master) 304 19 10
the Hedworth (Francis Robinson, master) 257 0 8
the ship Reward (Andrew Braughton, owner) 567 2 11
the Southwould (Aldred Liell, master) 203 17 1
the Benjamin (William Hooke, master) 611 17 2
the Expedition (Charles Smithson, master) 206 0 7
the ship Robert (William Nuccoll, master) 59 16 11
the Fortune (John Jones, master) 203 3 3
the Chatham (John Alexander, master) 102 0 10
the Resolution (Mathew Gelien, master) 454 8 3
the Pheasant (John Mason, master) 407 16 9
the Union (Richard Harle, master) 316 3 11
the Union (William Tibbington, master) 614 8 5
90,493 17 11
money paid to the masters of the ships hereafter named which were taken by the enemy while in Her Majesty's service:
the Industry (John Millison, owner) taken by the enemy 7 Feb. 1710–11 in full of 1,187l. 3s. 9d., less 75l. for wear and tear and 51l. for provisions and stores; with interest 40l. 18s. 1,102 1 9
the Charles (William Catlett, master) taken 14 Oct. 1710 in full of 725l. 12s. 9d., less 226l. 14s. 7d. for wear and tear and 110l. 3s. 6d. for provisions, etc.; with interest 9l. 10s. 5d. 398 5 1
the Mary (George Gibson, master) taken 5 Jan. 1710–11 in full of 1,507l. 14s. 6d., less 117l. 10s. for wear and tear and 162l. 7s. 3d. for provisions, etc.; with interest 47l. 10s. 3d. 1,275 7 6
the Susannah and Mary (Cheesman Peircy, master) taken 8 Feb. 1710–11 in full of 859l. 19s. 6d., less 85l. 4s. 7d. for wear and tear; with interest 32l. 10s. 5d. 807 5 4
the Levett (Sir Robert Dunkley, owner) taken 30 Jan. 1709–10 in full of 4,516l. 9s., less 1,563l. 7s. 9d. for wear and tear, etc.; with interest 469l. 3s. 3,422 4 3
the Thomas and Anne (Thomas Jenkins, master) taken 5 Jan. 1710–11 in full of 1,010l. 7s. 1d., less 153l. for wear and tear, etc.; with interest 38l. 2s. 3d. 895 9 4
7,900 13 3
total for freight of transports, etc. as above 159,176l. 17s. 4d.
money paid for provisions and necessaries bought up for the service of the transportation (details given):
Phillip Browne, for provisions bought 9 Feb. 1711–12 to 28 June 1712, for Forces going to Holland 275 5 6
more to the said Phillip Browne and Company, for bisquet, oats, etc., 28 June 1712, for the Forces being transported to Dunkirk 52 13 6
William Lea, for cheese 6 Feb. 1711–12, for the Forces going to Holland 66 0 0
ditto, 28 June 1712, for the Forces going to Dunkirk 63 19 0
Nicholas Roope, a manager of the Transport Service, for provisions bought 14 March 1711–12 to 19 May 1712, for the Forces going to Holland; also for 200l. paid Charles Bardoe; less Bills of Exchange drawn by him 68 4 0
Charles Berdoe, in full of 373l. 13s. 10d. for provisions delivered at Harwich 21 March 1711–12 to 12 April 1712, less a payment by Nicholas Roope and the value of stores returned 41 7 4
Mathias Wallraven and Company, for beer for the Forces going to Holland 55 1 9
John Cook and Thomas Moseley, for beds, etc. 20 March 1710–11 554 19 7
ditto in March and April 1711 172 17 2
ditto on the William 24 April 1711 20 3 10
Messrs. James and John Arnold, for remaking old beds, etc. 280 5 0
the same, for new beds, etc. in July and December 1710 147 10 11
ditto in Dec. 1710 and Jan. 1710–11 174 9 5
the same, for new and old beds, etc. in April and June 1711 321 14 2
John Towars, for building cabins, etc. 12 Jan. to 12 March 1710–11 607 0 11
the same for stables, etc. 8 Feb. to 9 March 1710–11 174 3 8
John Hone, for building stalls, etc. 103 2 10
the same, for building stables for the Forces going to Dunkirk 10 19 8
the same, for building cabins, etc. on board transport ships in the Thames 78 12 6
ditto 29 Sept. 1710 to 2 Jan. 1710–11 406 4 4
Thomas Allan and Richard Spooner, for cask at the Red House, Deptford, 22 Jan. to 15 March 1710–11 288 16 6
the same, for new Hamborough pipe-staves 3 18 0
the same, for cask at the Red House 8 March 1710–11 to 2 July 1712 150 14 7
Richard Wright, for building stalls for horses, etc. to be transported from North Britain and Harwich to Holland 1 Feb. 1710–11 to 10 April 1711 400 16 2
the same, for building stables, etc. at Harwich 15 Feb. 1711–12 to 22 May 1712 118 18 2
Anthony Tournay, for iron hoops 24 Feb. 1710–11 247 16 5
4,885 14 11
Sundry charges in buying provisions, etc. and other expenses of the Transport Service (Thomas Westbrowne for hire of a yacht etc.; William Charlton for the like; John and Avis Walpoole for washing bedding, etc.; Abraham Armitage for labourer's work; Adam Deesey for repairing sacks, etc.; Capt. William Keech for appraising ships; Jacob Finch for measuring cask of clothing, etc.; Anthony Phillips for warehouse rent at Deptford; Richard Wragg for his charges at Gravesend; Joseph Lane for attending the Agent for Transports in the Mediterranean; Mathew Spray for carriage of cask; Edward Hammond for rowing the Agent for Transport in the River of Lisbon; Adam Eadrop for lighterage; Nicholas Roope for travelling charges to Gravesend, etc., and William Warrington and Joseph Zigenhorne attending him 590 2 10
interest of money payable on Bills of Exchange drawn by Agents in Foreign Parts (detailed) 37 19 0
total for provisions bought, fitting up ships, and incidental expenses, etc. as above 5,475l. 17s. 9d.
salaries of the Officers employed in the affairs of Transportation (Samuel Atkinson, Nicholas Roope and Thomas Colby, the three Managers, 1,200l.; Thomas Micklethwaite, this Accomptant, 500l.; chief clerk, accomptant, clerks, storekeepers, messenger, housekeeper and watchmen, named and detailed, 836l. 3s. 1d.; Peter Crisp, agent attending the Fleet, 300l.) 2,836 3 1
contingent charges and disbursements (William Thornburgh for Office-rent, James Rea for smith's work, Jacob Hinde for stationery, Thomas Woolhead for candles, John Hone for joiner's work, John Crooke for postage, etc., Robert Cole for coals, clerks for extraordinary service, this Accomptant for Exchequer fees etc., Auditor's fee of 100l. to Thomas Foley) 1,007 9 5
total for salaries and incident charges 3,843l. 12s. 6d.
tallies and orders delivered over to the Bank of England 14,000 0 0
value of a Navy Bill subscribed into the South Sea Stock 555 7 1
total payments and allowances £183,051 14 8
and so remains 137,096l. 4s. 8d.
against which depending on sundry correspondents, agents and others for money paid them by way of imprest or on accompt:
within the time of the Accompt 14 April, 1708 to 30 Sept. 1709.
Samuell Atkinson, a manager, for so much paid on his Bills of Exchange, detailed 577 13
James Arnold and John Arnold, correspondents at Portsmouth, for the like 20,996 0 0
Thomas Tyrer and George Tyrer, correspondents at Leverpoole, for the like 696 5 11
Peter Hill, correspondent at Falmouth, for the like 650 0 0
John Addis, correspondent at Plymouth, for the like 59 14 1
Thomas Coates, correspondent at Whitehaven, for the like 785 4 4
Messrs. Stepney and Goddard, Agents at Lisbon, for the like 3,037 1 8
Gilbert Wardlow, Agent attending the Grand Fleet, for the like 11,794 4 0
Peter Crisp, in Wardlow's room, for the like 150 0 0
Capt. Henry Cartwright, for the like sum paid James Brydges, Paymaster General of the Forces, in repayment of three Bills of Exchange drawn for the charge of transports at Ostend taken up upon the late intended invasion by the French 14,000 0 0
for the year to Michaelmas 1710
Aldred Liell, master of the Southwould, in full of a Bill of Exchange 12 15 3
Thomas and George Tyrer, at Leverpoole, for the like 475 0 0
John Addis, at Plymouth, for the like 44 12 8
Lewis Frost, Francis Rogers and Thomas Green, masters respectively of the Anne, the Crowne and the William and Mathew, for the like 83 0 0
Nicholas Roope, a Commissioner of Transports, for the like 260 19 9
Thomas and George Tyrer, at Leverpoole, for the like 600 0 0
Gilbert Wardlaw, Agent in the Mediterranean, for money imprested 100 0 0
for the year to Michaelmas 1711
Gilbert Wardlaw, as above, for money imprested 100 0 0
Peter Crisp, Agent in the Mediterranean, on two Bills of Exchange 475 0 0
William Streeks, for money imprested to buy hay 300 0 0
Abraham Babington, storekeeper at the Redhouse, for disbursements 20 0 0
John Crooke, messenger, for money imprested 130 0 0
Thomas Bedall, Accomptant, for disbursements 50 0 0
Culverwell Needler, for a law suit v. the owners of the William and Shepherd (Henry Hornigold, master) and for other suits 180 0 0
within the time of this Accompt
Nicholas Roope, a manager of the Transport Service for so much paid on his Bills of Exchange (several items) 462 11 3
Messrs. Thomas and George Tyrer, correspondents at Leverpoole, for so much paid on their Bill of Exchange 55 13 6
John Addis, correspondent at Plymouth, for the like 45 0 9
William Streek, for money imprested to him 110 0 0
Gilbert Wardlow, late Agent for Transports, on account of what he claims to balance his Account 200 0 0
John Crook, messenger, for money imprested to him 70 0 0
Richard Heath, storekeeper at Deptford, for contingent disbursements 20 0 0
£56,450 16 11¼
and so the said Accomptant is Indebted 80,645 7
[Auditors'] Memorandum. Whereas the payments allowed the Accomptant have been made by him under the warrants or orders of the Commissioners for Transportation ... the said Commissioners remain Accomptable for the disposal and expenditure of the provisions ... and for the money issued by their Orders:
£ s. d.
in the First Accompt to Michaelmas 1709 197,221 10
in the Second Accompt to Michaelmas 1710 179,101 0 3
in the Third Accompt to Michaelmas 1711 31,537 3 10
and in the present Accompt to Michaelmas, 1712 165,616 0 7
The said Commissioners are likewise to accompt for the disposal and expenditure of the stores, as well as for the payments made by their orders by John Nuting and Charles Mason, the preceding Paymasters.
[Further] Memorandum. There is allowed in this Accompt 487l. 10s. advanced to Capt. Thomas Lowell for three months freight of the ship Canada, hired for six months to carry men, provisions and stores from the Thames to the coast of Africa, which, with the like sum, for the second three months' hire, is to be repaid by the African Company.
Declared 21 January 1713–14.