Items

Letter on the Scarcity of Copper Coin in the Isle of Man
Letter on the Scarcity of Copper Coin in the Isle of Man
A letter from Richard Dawson (Governor of the Isle of Man) to the Treasury dated September 1778, detailing the acute shortage of copper coinage on the island and requesting Crown authorization to mint 300 pounds worth of Manx pence and 150 pounds of halfpence. The letter explains the historical distinction between Manx and English copper currency, notes that no coinage has been issued since 1758, and references pre-Revestment practices when the Lord Proprietor would authorize such mintage. Relevant to understanding post-Revestment governance and economic administration of the Island.
Letter on the Scarcity of Copper Coin in the Isle of Man (1778)
Letter on the Scarcity of Copper Coin in the Isle of Man (1778)
A letter from Richard Dawson (Governor of the Isle of Man) to a senior government official (addressed as 'My Lord') requesting permission to issue copper coinage to alleviate a shortage of small change affecting trade, particularly the herring fishery. The letter outlines the historical distinction between Manx and English copper currency, the 1758 date of the last coinage, and proposes a three-hundred-pound issue of pence and one-hundred-fifty-pound issue of half-pence bearing the King's head and the Island's arms.
Calendar of State Papers 42/2 (1777–1783): Isle of Man administrative correspondence
Calendar of State Papers 42/2 (1777–1783): Isle of Man administrative correspondence
A detailed calendar/finding aid listing 200+ documents from State Papers 42/2 covering the post-Revestment period 1777–1783. Documents cover defence, revenue administration, civil list arrears, Fencibles recruitment, the Tynwald Acts of 1777, disputes with the Duke of Atholl over manorial records and rights, currency issues, and correspondence between the Isle of Man governors (Smith, Dawson) and the Home Office (Suffolk, Stormont, North). This is a critical research tool for understanding the immediate aftermath of the 1765 purchase and early constitutional development.
Calendar of State Papers SP 42/2 (1777–1783): Home Office correspondence on Isle of Man
Calendar of State Papers SP 42/2 (1777–1783): Home Office correspondence on Isle of Man
A comprehensive calendar/finding aid listing the contents of State Papers 42/2, covering administrative and official correspondence between the Home Office (Secretary of State for the Northern District) and Isle of Man's Lieutenant Governor and Governor (1777–1783). Documents cover governance, defence, revenue, manorial records, constitutional disputes with the Duke of Atholl, fencibles enlistment, currency, civil officer appointments, and the status of the Island post-Revestment. Essential primary source guide for the immediate aftermath of the 1765 purchase.
Calendar of State Papers SP 42/2 (1775–1777): Isle of Man administration
Calendar of State Papers SP 42/2 (1775–1777): Isle of Man administration
A detailed calendar index of State Papers relating to Isle of Man governance, 1775–1777, covering correspondence between the Home Office (Lord Suffolk), successive Governors (Wood, Hope, Dawson), and other officials. Documents address gubernatorial transitions, local legislation, impressment warrants, appeals procedures, and administrative matters post-Revestment.
Calendar of State Papers SP 42/2, 1775–1777: Isle of Man governance and administration
Calendar of State Papers SP 42/2, 1775–1777: Isle of Man governance and administration
A calendar index of official correspondence from the State Papers (SP 42/2) covering 1775–1777, tracking administrative and political developments on the Isle of Man during the post-Revestment period. Documents detail the succession of governors (Hope, Wood, Smith), appointment of Lieutenant Governors, local legislative matters, impressment of seamen, and interaction with the Home Office under Lord Suffolk.
Treasury Papers 1764-1771 – Table of Contents
Treasury Papers 1764-1771 – Table of Contents
A table of contents page from the Manx Notebook website indexing Treasury Papers covering the critical period 1764-1771, which encompasses the lead-up to and execution of the 1765 Isle of Man Revestment. This is a finding aid and navigation page for a collection of transcribed primary documents.
Treasury Papers 1764-1771 — Table of Contents Index
Treasury Papers 1764-1771 — Table of Contents Index
A web-based index/table of contents page for a collection of Treasury Papers spanning 1764-1771, hosted on the Manx Notebook website. This is a finding aid and navigation page for historical Treasury documents relevant to the period immediately before and during the 1765 Revestment. The page notes it was designed for frames-enabled browsers and references non-frame alternatives.
Social and Economic History of Isle of Man, 1765–1866: Trade, Industry & Commerce
Social and Economic History of Isle of Man, 1765–1866: Trade, Industry & Commerce
A detailed academic chapter on Manx trade and industry following the 1765 Revestment, covering commercial restrictions, the licence system, manufacturing (linen, cotton, flax, woollen goods), shipbuilding, and the gradual liberalisation of trade. Examines how the connexion with Great Britain both restricted and occasionally benefited Manx commerce, and documents the rise of industries including printing newspapers and the impact of steam communication.
Smuggling, Quarantine and Wrecking in Eighteenth-Century Ireland
Smuggling, Quarantine and Wrecking in Eighteenth-Century Ireland
A scholarly essay examining smuggling networks, quarantine violations, and maritime crime in 18th-century Ireland, with particular emphasis on the Isle of Man's role as a smuggling entrepôt before its acquisition by the British government in 1765. The text traces specific smuggling operations, merchant networks (including the Black family based in Bordeaux), and coastal lawlessness, providing detailed case studies relevant to understanding the commercial and strategic context of the Revestment.
Smuggling in relation to the Isle of Man (Dictionary of Trade and Commerce, 1755)
Smuggling in relation to the Isle of Man (Dictionary of Trade and Commerce, 1755)
An extensive contemporary analysis of smuggling operations from the Isle of Man, extracted from Malachy Postlethwayt's Dictionary of Trade and Commerce. It details the scale of illicit trade (estimated at £700,000 annual loss), the routes, cargoes, vessels, and operational methods, while arguing for either purchasing the island from the Duke of Atholl or implementing effective enforcement measures. Includes a merchant petition from Whitehaven.
House of Commons Journal, February 1766 (Sessions 1765-1766, Vol. 30, Part 9)
House of Commons Journal, February 1766 (Sessions 1765-1766, Vol. 30, Part 9)
Official record of House of Commons proceedings from February 1766, covering Parliamentary bills, petitions, and resolutions on road improvements, land enclosure, duties, and colonial matters. Contains debate records and committee reports relevant to parliamentary procedure and fiscal policy during the period of the Revestment crisis.
House of Commons Journal, March–April 1766: Revenue, Roads, and Local Bills
House of Commons Journal, March–April 1766: Revenue, Roads, and Local Bills
Excerpt from the House of Commons Journal (Vol. XXX) covering proceedings from March–April 1766, primarily recording committee appointments, bill readings, and petitions on diverse matters including revenue collection, road repairs, canal navigation, local improvements, and comparative trade regulations from Tuscany and the Grand Duchy. Includes parliamentary debates on duties, excise management, and a curious appendix with Italian wool and silk trade restrictions (1745–1749), possibly included for comparative revenue/regulatory analysis.
House of Commons Journal, 14 February 1766 — Petitions and Bills
House of Commons Journal, 14 February 1766 — Petitions and Bills
Extract from the official House of Commons Journal for 14 February 1766, recording parliamentary proceedings including orders for colonial trade statistics (sugar colonies commodities 1757–1764), various local petitions for enclosure and road improvement bills, and testimony on smuggling of gloves and leather goods. Contains evidence from manufacturers and traders on illicit imports affecting British revenue and domestic industries.
House of Commons Journal, Vol. 30 Part 5: Testimony on River Tyne Navigation & Canal Petitions
House of Commons Journal, Vol. 30 Part 5: Testimony on River Tyne Navigation & Canal Petitions
Parliamentary Journal recording testimony before a House of Commons committee examining petitions regarding River Tyne navigation problems, ballast disposal, and sanding of Tynemouth Harbour. Witnesses include ship masters, pilots, water bailiffs, and attorneys. Also includes petitions for canal construction linking Manchester, Stockport, Macclesfield, and Knutsford.
House of Commons Journal, 20 March 1765 — Isle of Man smuggling bill amendments
House of Commons Journal, 20 March 1765 — Isle of Man smuggling bill amendments
Extract from the House of Commons Journal for 20 March 1765 (50 Geo. III), recording parliamentary proceedings including the report and passage of amendments to the Bill for preventing illicit trade to and from the Isle of Man. The opening section directly addresses the Manx smuggling bill; the remainder of the extract covers routine parliamentary business (road bills, petitions, longitude commission, and Newcastle River navigation).
House of Commons Journal, 1765–1766, Part 3, No. 2
House of Commons Journal, 1765–1766, Part 3, No. 2
Official record of House of Commons debates, committee reports, and parliamentary business from the 1765–1766 session. Covers multiple bills on road maintenance, naturalization, ecclesiastical land exchanges, Westminster paving, and military supply resolutions. Includes detailed committee testimony on road conditions in Somerset and Devon. Contains financial data on military regiment pay and Sinking Fund appropriations.
House of Commons Journal: Stamp Act resolutions and road petitions, 1765
House of Commons Journal: Stamp Act resolutions and road petitions, 1765
Extract from the House of Commons Journal for 1765-1766 containing detailed parliamentary resolutions on stamp duties for the American colonies and plantations, along with various local road and enclosure petitions. The stamp duty resolutions specify rates for land grants, legal instruments, publications, and other documents, with proceeds to be paid to the Exchequer for colonial defence. This source is crucial for understanding Westminster's fiscal policy toward the colonies and the administrative framework that would affect colonial trade and governance.
House of Commons Journal, 10 January 1765: Opening of Parliament, King's Speech, and Stamp Act Resolutions
House of Commons Journal, 10 January 1765: Opening of Parliament, King's Speech, and Stamp Act Resolutions
Official proceedings of the House of Commons for 10 January 1765, including the King's Speech from the Throne, parliamentary address, administrative business, and crucially, the Committee of the Whole House resolutions on stamp duties for the American colonies. This document captures the parliamentary framework and fiscal justifications for the Stamp Act of 1765, contemporary with planning for Isle of Man revestment.
House of Commons Journal, May-September 1766: Trade, colonial duties, and Stamp Act repeal proceedings
House of Commons Journal, May-September 1766: Trade, colonial duties, and Stamp Act repeal proceedings
Extract from the official House of Commons Journal (Volume XXX) covering proceedings from May to September 1766. Documents extensive debates and resolutions on colonial trade duties, spirit and brandy imports, hemp cordage bounties, sugar duties, and the Stamp Act repeal/indemnification. Includes instructions to bill committees and references to Isle of Man bugles importation. Concludes with Royal Speech on colonial regulation and prorogation proceedings.
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XXIV, April-June 1830
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XXIV, April-June 1830
Official record of debates and proceedings in both Houses of Parliament (Lords and Commons) during the Spring 1830 session, covering fiscal policy, colonial affairs, Irish matters, and domestic legislation. While the specific 1765 Revestment is not directly addressed, this volume documents the broader parliamentary context and legislative procedures of the era, including discussions on colonial administration (Ceylon, Mauritius, Cape of Good Hope) and revenue matters relevant to understanding later administrative precedents.
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XXIII (March-April 1830)
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XXIII (March-April 1830)
Official record of debates in the House of Lords and House of Commons from 9 March to 7 April 1830. Includes discussion of East India Company monopoly, smuggling prevention, distress relief, Irish poor laws, taxation, and administrative reform. While the 1765 Revestment is not directly addressed, this volume captures contemporary parliamentary procedure, East India Company interests, and trade regulation debates relevant to understanding the legislative environment of the period.
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XXII, Feb–Mar 1830 (George IV)
Hansard's Parliamentary Debates, Vol. XXII, Feb–Mar 1830 (George IV)
Official record of debates in both Houses of Parliament for February–March 1830, including the King's Speech, addresses, petitions, and voting lists. Contains substantial discussion of East India Company charter renewal, commercial duties, colonial administration, and parliamentary business. Provides broader Westminster context for the Revestment period.
Parliamentary Debates Vol. XIX (April–July 1828): House of Lords and Commons
Parliamentary Debates Vol. XIX (April–July 1828): House of Lords and Commons
Published compilation of Parliamentary debates from April 22 to July 28, 1828, covering House of Lords and Commons proceedings during the reign of George IV. Includes debates on Corn Laws, Corporation and Test Acts Repeal, Roman Catholic Claims, East India Company trade matters, and administrative/constitutional issues. Relevant to Revestment project as comparative context for Westminster legislative procedure and contemporary political pressures.