MRP: HCA13/71

From MarineLives
Revision as of 14:23, December 17, 2011 by Francescagreenstreet (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

HCA13/71

Editorial history

16/12/11, CSG: Created page



[Image P1090001]

[f. 167v.]

Cooke and Johnson ag:st Batson.
Smith Clements
?Ry.

The four and twentyeth day of Aorill 1656
Examined upon an accon on y:e behalfe of y:e sayd Batson
WILLIAM TICKELL of Birchen Lane London merchant aged
forty three yeares or thereabouts, a witness sworne and
examined saith and deposeth as followeth ?vizt

To the first Arle of the sayd Accon, This deponent saith that he went
as merchant in the shipp Tankervale Robert Cooke ma:r the last
voyage she made which was fron this port of London to Norway
and there to take in horses; and was from hence to have gone to y:e Barbados
and so back agayne to this port. And knowth that the sayd
Robert

[Image P1090002]

[f. 168r.]

Cooke had order from his Imployers to hire and agree with Mariners
for y:e sayd voyage to receyve their wages att y:e barbadoes in
Muscavadoe sugars att the rate of four pence p pound. And he
knoweth y:t the sayd James Cooke and Johnson were two of y:e Mariners
hired for that voyage, and he this deponent did sevearall tymes
heare them y:e sayd Cooke and Johnson say and acknowledge that they
were so hired and had so agreed, that is to say that they had
contracted and agreed that what wages should be due to them for
their service in the sayd shipp and voyage they were to receave y.e
same att y:e Barbados in Muscavadoe sugar att y:e rate of
four pence per pound. And y.e like he heard, the sayd Robert
Cooke y:e Ma:r severall tymes say and affirme, and also that the most
of the Mariners had signed to a written Agreement to that purpose
and having now veiwed and perused the paticular to y:e sayd accon
annexed he doth beleive by the names and markes of y.e Mariners
att y:e foot thereof especially by the name of William Jeffery
who was one of the mates the sayd voyage (whose handwriting he is well
acquainted with, and is well assured that he did subscribe his sayd
name thereto as now it appeareth) that y:e says schedule was and
is the originall written Agreement, touching the p:rmisses. And
otherwise hee saith he cannot depose

To y:e second arle of y.e sayd accon This deponent saith That att y:e sayd shipps
arrivall in Norway the sayd batsons and Companies facto:r here did
putt on board the sayd shipp forty five horses or thereabouts for their
use and accompt, to be carryed and transported from thence to the
Barbadoes And y:e sayd James Cooke and Maynard Johnson as matee
and Boatswayne were by their plans to looke unto and have
care of the stowage thereof, and to see that y:e stanchions in which
they were to be placed were strong and good. And they had and
were provided of such materialls for that purpose as they sayd were
good and sufficicient, and theire was enough of ither boards spanns
and materialls to have made the sayd stanchions more strong and
they might have had them if they had pleased of y:e certayne knowledge
of this deponent who was then gone as merchant of y:e sayd shipp
and had provided such materialls as were strong and sufficient
and they y:e sayd James Cooke, and maynard and y:e rest of the
Mariners concerned in y:e stowing of the sayd horses did refuse to
make use of them, saying that such as they had was sufficient. And
otherwise he cannot depose

To y:e third arle of y:e sayd accon This deponent saith that the sayd horses
being so putt on board, the sayd shipp Tankervale putt out to sea
and soone after upon the shippes working, the stanchions in which
the sayd horses were placed did breake downe in regard they
were too weake, and the sayd horses by reason of such bad stowage
fell

[Image P1090003]

[f. 168v.]

fell one upon another, and thereby one killed another and all of
them dyed except one horse and y.e sayd Cooke and Company
in stead of goeing with the sayd shipp to y.e barbadoes brought
her to Newcastle, of all which this deponent was an eye witnesse
and believeth that they so came to Newcastle without the order
of the sayd Richard Batson[1] or any other of the Owners of y:e
sayd shipp. And otherwise he cannot depose

To y:e fourth arle This deponent saith that upon y:e sayd shipps comong
to newcastle there was advertisement given to y.e sayd Batson
and Company of the sayd shipp being there and of y:e losses
of y:e sayd horses whereupon this deponent afterwards received
a lre from y:e sd Batson & Company directed to him this
deponent and y.e sayd Robert Cooke wherein they ordered y:e
sayd shipp to come about to y:e XXope in this River of Thames
there to be fitted with sich things as she needed for her
voyage to y:e Barbadoes to to that effect

To y:e fifth arle hee saith he cannot depose not being aboard y:e says
shipp when y.e sayd James Cooke and y:e s:d Maynard were imprest

To y:e sixth arle of y:e sayd accon he saith hee cannot depose, being not
well acquainted with y,e worke and duty of Mariners att sea

To y:e seventh arle of y:e sayd accon This deponent saith that for
the reasons aforesayd he knoweth it to bee true, that the onely
cause of the losse of all y.e horses was because the
stanchions were not made strong as they ought to have
bene, and as they might have bene had they when the stowage
did concerne made use of the sparrs which this deponent had
provided for that purpose, which hee saith were strong and
good: And he is well assured that in case the sayd stanchions
had bene made as they ought and might have bene the
sayd horses had been p:rserved. And further hee saith that the
care and lookeing to y:e making of y:e s:d stanchions did
proply belong to y:e sayd James Cooke and Maynard Johnson
as mate and Boatswayne, which hee knoweth by the observation
he hath made of the dutyes of Mates and Boatswaynes in y:e
like case, for many years that he hath used y:e sea as a merchant
And otherwise hee cannot depose

To y:e 8:th arle of y:e s.d accon This deponent saith that y.e sayd Batson
and Company by reason of the losse of the sayd horses have suffered
dammage to y:e balue of fifteene hundred pounds stocke att the
Least And so much the sayd horses so lost would have yeilded
and given in case they had come safe to y:e Barbadoes, which
he deposeth upon his knowledge in that trade, having used the
trade

[Image P1090004]

[f. 169r.]

y:e trade of the Barbadoes with horses and other merchandises for
this ten yeares past and having cast upp the price of y.e sayd
horses so lost with y:e usuall gayne made of like horses att y:e Barbadoes
findeth that y:e same would have yeilded att y:e usuall rate the syd
summe of fifteen hundred pounds sticke and upwards. And otherwise
he cannot depose

To y.e nynth arle hee saith that y:e sayd James Cooke att y:e tyme of his
hiring into y:e sayd shipp was but a young man about twenty yeares
of age, and in this deponents Judgment had not exoerience
and moral (Or, "merit") sufficent to be of a shipp for such a voyage as
was intended. And saith that he y:e sd James was and is by common
repute the sonne of the sd Robert Cooke Ma:r of y:e sayd shipp
and was hired by his sayd father to serve in her. And further
he cannot depose

[SIGNED] WILLIAM TICKELL

The same day Examined upon y:e sayd accon
WILLIAM LOWE a planter & inhabitant of y:e Barbados one of y:e Caribee Islands
aged forty years of thereabouts a witnesse sworne and
examined sauth as followeth. vizt.

To y:e first artle of the sayd accon and to y:e schedule therto annexed now
showne him hee saith amd deposeth That being a planter in y:e sayd Island
of Barbados whither hee was to returne from England hee putt
himselfe as a passenger on board y:e sayd shipp Tankervale Robert
Cooke Ma:r which was designed to goe from this port to Norway
and hence to take in horses and so to goe to y:e Barbadoes and
from hence to returne for England, and by this meanes came to
heare and know that all or most of y:e mariners belonging to y:e
sd shipp and pticularly the sayd James Cooke and Maynard Johnson
were to have their wages payd att y:e Barbadoes in Muscavadoes
Sugars att y:e rate of four pence p pound; to which purpose hee did
severall tymes see the foresayd schedule in y:e hands of y:e sayd
Robert Cooke and heard him read y:e same to his Mariners and heard
them acknowledge that they had subscribed it as now is to be seene
and that they had agreed and contractedas therein is conteyned. And
otherwise hee cannot depose.

To y:e second and third artes of y:e sayd accon, This deponent saith that upon
y:e arrivall of y:e sayd shipp att Norway there were putt on board her
for y:e sayd Richard Batson and Companies Accompt by their facto:r
there forty five horses to be from thence transcported to y:e Barbadoes
and the stowing of y:e sayd horses did belong to y.e Mariners of y:e sayd
shipp, and the making of y:e sanchions for that purpose as to thee
?care of the worke that they should be stronge and sufficient did belong
to y:e sayd James Cooke and Maynard Johnson as mate and Boatswayne
And

[Image P1090005]

[f. 169v.]

And there was materialls sufficient to have made y:e sayd stanchions strong
enough in case there would have made use of them. But he
saith the sayd stancheons were made too weake and insufficeint
the indeed so weake that soone after y:e sd shipp was hone to sea with
sayd horses by reason of such bad stowage fell one upon another
and so one killed another and all of them dyed one horse
onely excepted. all which hee knoweth for that he was a passenger
and heard his ?p:rcontest William Tickell offer y:e Master and
Mariners of y:e sayd shipp strong and good sparrs which hee
had provided some whereof hee brought aboard, for y:e making
saying the stanchions, but they refused the same
saying the stanchions they had made were strong enough, or to
that purpose. And saith that y:e sd master and Company did,
not proceed on to y:e Barbadoes but came to Newcastle, which
as this deponent hath heard and beleives, was without order
of his Owners. And otherwise he cannot depose.

To y:e fourth arle hee saith that y:e sd Owners being M:r Batson &
Company (as by letters which he hath seene he came to know) having
notice of y:t y:e sd horses were lost and sayd shipp XXXXXX some
such and was come to Newastle, ordered her to come into this
River of Thames neer to Gravesend there to be supplyed of what
she wanted and so to proceed on her sayd intended voyage. And
otherwise he cannot depose.

To y:e fifth artle of y:e sd accon he saith It is not usuall to impress the
mates or Boatswaynes of any shipp being upon a voyage and
in case and such be prest it is isuall upon their makeing knowne
their imployment to release them and accordingly he saw that
y:e sayd James Cooke and maynard Johnson having bene once prest
were released probably upon their making knowne their offices
on boarding y:e sd shipp. And further he cannot depose not being
on board when y:e sd persons were last pressed, and submitted XXXX
without returning to their respective imployments on board y:e
sd shipp

To y:e 6:th arle of y:e sayd accon hee saith that y:e says Maynard Johnson
did behave himselfe stubbornely and peversely on board y:e sayd
shipp not onely neglecting and refusing to obey y:e Masters Commands
but discouraging his fellows in their dutyes, and pticulaly saith
that when y:e sd shipp lay att Newcastle he hearde y:e Master
call to him y:e sd Johnson to call upp y:e Company to assist att y:e
removing of a ??playne for y:e Carpenters who were there doeing some
reparis to y:e sayd shipp, and heard y:e sd Johnson resused to
call them, and heard him allso say, that y:e Mariners were XXX
if they gave their aXX XXXXX or to that purpose. And further he
cannot depose

[Image P1090006]

[f. 170r.]

To y:e seventh arle hee saith taht y:e losse of y:e sayd horses was caused by
and through the weaknes and insufficciency of the sayd stanchions w:ch
were not made so strong and sufficient as they ought to have
beene, as this deponent for y:r reasons aforesayd knowth they
might have bene; and that y:e oversight or care of making y:e
sayde stanchions strong did proply belong to y:e sd James Cooke as
mate and sayd Johnson as Boatswayne. And hee doth verily beleive
ought and might have bene y:e sayd horses had not perished, but had
bene p:served. And otherwise he cannot depose.

To y:e 9:th arle of y;e sayd accon, This deponent saith he dothe verily
beleive by what he hath seene and observed being a planter in
the Barbadoes as aforsd that the sayd horses so lost in case they
had come safe to y:e Barbadoes would have ?reached a thousand
pounds sterling. And that y:e sayd Batson and Company over
and besisdes what might have bene made of y:e sayd horses have
sufficient losse and dammage to the meanes aforesd to a goad value, but how much in
certayne he cannott sett forth. And otherwise he cannot depose



[Image P1090061]

[f. 628r.]

"XXX hereafter reste to bee XXXXed, And further hee cannot depose

To the 5:th Article of the said Accon hee saieth That in or about the
moneth of September 1656, and upon y:e 11:th day of the said moneth
according to y.e English style, the said shipp the Xappahamarck and or
y:e XXuct of this depon:t being at sea with y:e said 53 or 54 Negroes
and the residue of her said Cargo, and sayling towards and
being in sight of the said Cape de Lopes upon her quiett and peaceable trading
was mett with by two duch shipps the one called the Mary of
Amsterdam, and the other called the XXXX of Middleburgh both
of them being commanded by the aclate John SXXoll a Duchman
and Subject of the States of the United Provinces, which did then in
a violent and hostile manner sett upon surprize and take the said
shipp y:e Xappahammarke togeather with her Tackle furniture and
Negroes and the rest of her lading, and dispoyled and utterly ?deprived
this depon:t and Companie thereof and ?converted y:e same to the use
and benefitt of the said John Scroll and Companie. The premisses hee
knoweth by sadd a psonall experiences. And further saith, That by and
according to the credible relation of the said Arthur Perkins and Comp:nie
the said two Dutch shipps in the moneth of August, immediately
precedent had alsoe in a violent and
hostile manner assaulted surprized and taken y:e said shipp y.e Sarah
and her tackle furniture and Negroes aforesaid shee being at an anchor
at or neere Cape de Lopes aforesaid, and had dispoyled and depXXXed
said Master and Companie thereof. And that indeed this depo:t being
himselfe and his said shipp shortly after surprized and taken as afores:d
did soe the said shipp Sarah in the power and possession of the said
John Scroll and of those under his Command in the said Dutch shipps
And further cannot depose

To the 6:th hee saith That the said shipps the Marye and y:e
Unicorne at the time of the surprizeall of this deponents said shipp y:e
Rappahamarrke were Dutch shipps, that is the Mary was and is a
shipp built at Amsterdam in Holland, and the said shipp y:e Unicorne
a shipp which had beene taken by the Holland:ers or Zealanders from y:e
Portugueze and had been repaired and built upon in Zeeland, and saith
That at the time aforesaid both the said shipps carried Spanish Colours
but the night immediately prceeding the said seizure, this depon:t had
seene them carry the Colours of Middleborough in Zeeland And farther
saith that the said shipps were from y:e said United Provinces sett out

[Image P1090064]

[f. 629v.]

to sea each of them with a cargo of goods to trade at Guiney [?for]
Negroes, and pticulalry that one ?Vandergoes of Zeeland XXX XXX
principall ?Owner and imployer of the said shipp the Unicorne
was alsoe interested in the other shipp y:e Mary and that the ?said
Vandergoes and others the Own:rs of the said shipps the Mary and
Unicorne were Dutchmen and Subjects of the said States of y:e
United Netherlands Provinces, ??All which the premisses of this dep:t
saith hee hath understood and beene very credibly informed of XXX
before the seizure of the said shipp the XXappahamarck and the
one Lucas ?Carrots Master of a shipp in XXXX belonging to Holland
then trading in these parts with whom this dep:t XXX at the XXX
dayes before y:e seizure of the said shipp XXappaXXXX XXXX the
depon:t asking whether there were any men of warr upon y:e XXX
answered noe, but that there were some Dutch Merchant shipps
and that hee knew where their Own:rs and Imployers lived, XXXX XX
hee know where his owne Own.rs lived, and that if hee were in
Amsterdam hee could presently goe to their or severall of their houses
habitations in that place, and moreover that therefore hee did not
feare them under any such notion, And ptly for y:t the said
Commander John Scroll and the Gunner of the said shipp y:e
Unicorne (this depo:t upon y:e said seizure being brought on bord XXX
and there continueing a prisoner for about 6 weekes after) did
sevearall times declare in the hearing of this depon:t that the said ships
were sett out, as aforesaid, by the said Vandergoes and others subject
of the States of y:e said United Provinces, and saith that XXX
said Scroll and one Claes or Nicholas ?Praine Merchant or
Supra Cargo of the said shipp Marie did aboard y:e said shipp
Unicorne declare to this depon:t that they had in and about y:e
said shipps a Cargaison for y:e procureing of two Thousand
ffive hundred Negroes to be transported to ??Carthagona in the
West Indies there to be disposed of and sold for y:e use of XXX
of such their Dutch ?Proprietors And further said That soe long as
this depo:t continued a prison:r in and aboard the said shipp Unicorne
hee well observed that all or the most pt of their shipps XXX
and provisions consisted in ?grett, ?horse ?beXxanes and other XXXX
usually employed in shipps fitted and victualled from Holland and
other united provinces, and that severall of the said shipps ?Companie
then confessed, that the provisions of beef, and sundry XXXX of
water which they then had aboard y.e said shipps had beene by XX
taken in, in the said united Netherlands, or words and expressions
to that or the like effect. Hee further saith That hee this depon:t

[Image P1090065]

[f. 630r.]

was not present at the seizure of the said shipp y:e Sarah and therefore
doeth not know, what colours y:er said Dutch shipps carried at the time
of the said seizure otherwise than that hee hath credibly understood both
by the said Captaine Perkins and by severall of his Companie, thyt y:e
said Dutch Shipps at the time of the said seizure were or carried the
Hollands or Middleborough colours as this XXXXX now remembreth
And further cannot depose

To the 7:th hee saith, That by and according to y:e confession of the said
John Scroll and severall of his companie made to this depo:t during his
said imprisonment, hee the said John Scroll was an inhabitant of or
neere ??Monnisbondam in Holland, and that this depo:t during his said
restraint well observed abnd to the pticular notice y:t the said Scroll and
the Gunner, Steeresman, Chirurgion, Boatswaine, Carpenter and
Saile-maker and many others both Officers and common men aboard
y:e said shipp were Dutchmen subjects of the said States of the United
Netherlands; and that they generally acknowledged themselves soe to
bee, and that they were sent and employed out of the said United
Provinces for Guinney aforesaid. Hee further saith, That during
such this depon:ts restraint, the said Dutch shipps giving chase to enother
English shipp, whuch had beene tradeing in thoses parts of Guinney and
was then bound thence to y:e east Indies, by name the Lion and
Providence, whereof was Captaine Timothy Craven, the said John
Scroll within this depo:ts sight and observation caused two gunns to be
fired at or against y:e said English shipp with intent to make y:e
same strike sayle to them & y:t a sword being brandished upon y:e said English
shipp in manner of Defiance, or that they would to their power defend
themselves, as is usually understood in such Casesm thereupon
the said Scroll tooke up a sword and brandishing y:e same said in Dutch
theise words or the like in effect, [Italics added by this editor] Ick hebbe mel een sweerde, ick
sal straax bÿ u comen, and soe by the said Scrolls order and direction
severall great gunns were discharged at and against the said English shipp
till such time, as shee was necessitated to submitt and surrender to y:e
said shipp the Mary then Admiral of the said Dutch shipps
which during all y:e said Conflict carried the Spanish Colors, but
when they first espyed any strange shipps, and particulalry when any of
West India shipps of the said United Netherlands came
neere them, they constantly carried the Middelborough Colo:rs and
saith that that place being beyond the Line, upon occasion of such
meeting, if the said shipps the Mary and Unicorne had beene
Spanishe, they and the said other Dutch West India shipps
would in all probability, and according to common and usuall custome

[Image P1090066]

[f. 630v.]

either have ?attacked or beene attacked by the Dutch, for y:t this XXXX
?Doth not usually tolerate any shipp or shipps of other nations ??tradeing ??in
y:e West Indies And further hee cannot depose

To the Eighth Actle hee saith, That every one of the said XX XX XX
Negroes which this depon:t had on board his said shipp y:e XXXXXX
at the time of the XXXX XXXXX, and alsoe the hundred Negroes XXXXXX
this depo:t intended to have procured with the XXX of the XXX outward
Cargoe would have given and produced in Virginia being the
place to which they were designed, thirty pounds ?ster:g at y:e
least, this depon:t before hee sett forth upon y:e voiage aforesaid
haveing here at London been offered 25:li sterling ready money ?for
?such Negroes hee should procure and deliver at Virginia XXXX
and to have the benefitt of the moneys for y:e whole voiage, XXXX
would have procured rather more than ??less benefitt than that XX
is by him preXXXed, And further saith, That hee this depo:t
verily veleeveth, That the 160 negroes or thereabouts in and on
board the said shipp Sarah at the time of her said ?surprisall by
by being designed for Virginia or the Barbadoes, would have XXXXXX
?produced to the Owners 30:li XXXX p head, or the worth thereof
in goods and ?Commodities of those Countreyes, And this dep:t
saith That about the eighteenth or 20:th day of December ?thatt this
depo:t after y:e seizure aforesaid being come to y:e Barbadoes, ?there
was credibly??informed by M:r Giles Thornbury Master of and English
Vessell then newely come in therewith Negroes from y:e XXX
of Guinney aforesaid, that hee had sold and disposed of them XXX
with another for 27 hundred weight of sugar p head, ?and a
hundred being there valewed at five and XXXX shillings, which is
more than y:e summe by him predeposed, And further cannot depose
saveing that the Negroes ?psons, which hee this depon:t had soe pcured
were all of them lusty young persons and soe hee intended to
have procured the remaining hundred of negroes, soe that they
would without any difficulty have procured the valew by him
predeposed and upwards. And further hee cannot depose

To the 9:th hee saith, hee knowing nothing of the contents of XXXX
further or otherwise than hee predeposed, for that hee this
depo:t was not at any time about y:e said shipp Sarah XXX XXX
their at the said Scroll and Companie had taken all y.e goods
and Negroes in question out of the same

To the 10:th Actle hee saith, That the said shipp y:e XXXXXXXXXXX
being a shipp of the burthen of 220 tunns or thereabouts

[Image P1090067]

[f. 631r.]

bearing eight peeces of Ordinance togeather with her tackle apparell
furniture and provisions for y.e shipps companies and negroes were
at the time of the seizure aforesaid really worth the summe of Two
Thousand seaven hundred pounds sterling money of England, which
hee knowth for that a sixteenth pt of the said shipp before shee was
soe fitted and furnished to sea upon y:e voiage aforesaid, of this depon:ts certaine knowledge was by Richard Bull the former Master and pt
Owner thereof, sold unto y:e said Jeffereys and Colclough for ine
hundred pounds at the least, soe y:t the whole shipp in the condition shee
then was did after y:t rate amount unto 1600:li or thereabouts and with
y:e addition of all necessary tackle apparrell furniture provisions and
all conveniences for such a boiage and service, this depon:t is in his Conscience
and to the best of his Judgement fully convinced and assured of the value
of the premisses as hee hath predeposed y:e same, And as to y:e said
shipp y:e Sarah, hee cannot depose anything knowlingly, as to the value
thereof, nor touching the freight or mens wages in and aboard y:e same
the voiage in question. And further or otherwise hee cannot depose

To the 11:th hee saith, That about two moneths after y:e
seizure of the said shipp ?Xappahanmark the said Scroll and Companie
redelivered unto the Companies of the said surprized shipps, and of two
other English shipps, which they had alsoe thereabouts surprized and taken,
the said shipp Sarah, they haveing taken out of the same all the provision
of Victualls, saveing two butts of beanes, two barrells of beefe, one hundred
of Stockfish and about 5. or 600. weight of bread, togeather with
some tunns of water, the Company then by them putt aboard y:e said
shipp Sarah being about 70. psons, and being strictly ordered and
enjoyned by the said seizo:rs to goe directly for England upon paine of
forfeiture of the said shipp if they deviated or tooke any other Courses or ?voiages ??20:th
would have required about three moneths time, but this depon:t and the said
Arthur Perkins & the rest of the seized shipps companie soe putt on board
the said shipp Sarah finding that such provisions were altogeather insufficient
for such a Companie and voiage, and haveing but one ?entire anchor; and one
peece ofa cable of about 50. or 60. fathom, and one suite of sailes very
thin and insufficient for such a voiage, and being unwilling to expose their
lives to such imminent and almost inevitable danger, they sailed from
Cape de Lopes aforesaid to y:e Island of S:t Thomas, where they were
necessitated to sell the said shipp y:e Sarah for Victualls to keepe them
alive and to furnish another small Vessell, which they there procured to
carry them to y:e Barbadoes, there to gett passage for England, and saith
if they had not steered y:e Course and sould the said shipp to the use and
intent aforesaid, they must in all probability have perished for want of
Victualls. The premisses hee declareth and knowth by sadd experience
to bee true And otherwise to this Acle hee cannott depose

[Image P1090068]

[f. 631v.]

This image is out of focus, uând unreadable - need to reimage this page

End of images for this deposition - go back to physical manuscript to see if there are further depositions. Also search elsewhere for any financial accounts of the voyage



Possible primary sources


Related to Cooke & Johnson vs. Batson

TNA

C 6/136/169 Short title: Watkins v Merchants of London. Plaintiffs: Mary Watkins widow. Defendants: Governor and Company of Merchants of London Trading into the East Indies [East India Company] and Richard Batson. Subject: money matters, London, Middlesex. Document type: bill, answer. 1657
C 6/140/88 Short title: Mackleir v Batson. Plaintiffs: Sir John Mackleir kt. Defendants: Richard Batson and William Chamberlayne. Subject: money matters, Middlesex. Document type: bill, answer, inventory. 1657
C 6/163/3 Short title: Batson v Bendish. Plaintiffs: Richard Batson. Defendants: Sir Thomas Bendish baronet and John Bendish. Subject: property in Haverhill, and Helions Bumpstead, Essex. Document type: bill, answer. 1663

C 10/13/142 Peter Thelwall v Richard Batson: money matters 1651
C 10/57/150 East India Co. v. Batson 1650

PROB 11/424 Carr 59-116, Will of Richard Batson, June 16th 1667
PROB 11/329 Coke 1-56 Will of Henry Batson, Merchant of London 13 May 1669
PROB 11/460 Dyer 46-88 Will of Thomas Batson of Stepney, Middlesex 23 April 1701, pp. 8

PROB 11/367 North 95-141 Will of Edward Lewin of Stepney, Middlesex 11 August 1681, pp. 6 (identical to "Edmond Lewin", a partner of Richard Batson in a Minories Glasshouse?)

Essex Record Office

Essex Record Office: D/DQ 41/39 : 2 October 1663: Deed to lead to the uses of a common recovery[2]

(i) Sir Thomas Bendish of Steeple Bumpstead Baronet, John Bendish son of Sir Thomas Bendish, his wife Martha Bendish
(ii) Richard Batson of London, merchant, Thomas Batson the younger of London, merchant
(iii) Thomas Plampin of London, silkman and and Francis Pemberton of the Inner Temple, London

In consideration of the marriage of John Bendish and Martha, daughter of Richard Batson. Recites marriage settlement of £6000 and articles of agrrement of 13 July 1663

The manors and lordships of Steeple Bumpstead, Bower Hall, Royley, Robtofts, Bendish, alias Old Hall, Bloyes [Blois] and Waltons, in the parishes of Steeple Bumpstead, Ridgewell, Hempstead, Stambourne, Helions Bumpstead and Haverhill, farms called Waltons, Old Hall, Old Parke, New Parke, an unnamed farm in the tenure of Robert Bun, Stambourne Farm, Bloyes, Smith Green, the Mill Ground, farms in the tenure of Mrs Perry, widow, Dean Farm, unnamed farms in the tenure of Richard Pepys, John Renolds, Thomas Arnett, Thomas Fitch, George Whale and all other messuages owned by Sir Thomas Bendish and John Bendish in the above parishes

Notes


Related to Cooke & Johnson vs. Batson

Richard Batson land holdings on Barbados

"Table 11: Merchants who bought land in Barbados in 1647[3]

Martin Noell, James Noell, William Seeman 67.5 acres Consideration: £800 8 March
Colleton, John 80 acres Consideration: £250 14 March
Henry Quintyne 77 acres 10 April
Martin, James, Stephen, and Thomas Noell 5 acres Consideration: £30 14 April
Thomas Walker, John Webster, Nathan Grafty, Philip Holman 10 acres 17 April
Walker, Webster, Grafty, Holman 80 acres 18 May
M.,J., and T. Noell 21 acres Consideration: £160 29 May
Laurence Chambers 300 acres Consideration: £20,000 2 June
Walker, Webster, Grafty, Holman 30 acres Consideration: £300 9 June
Richard Ellis 25 acres Consideration: £40 11 June
Thomas Mathew 184 acres Consideration: £5000 13 June
Richard Batson 40 acres 1 July
Walker, Webster, Grafty, Holman 18 acres 1 July
M., J., S., and T. Noell 20 acres Consideration: £200 July
Nathaniel Starkey 23.5 acres 7 August
M., J., S., and T. Noell 6.5 acres Consideration: £32.6 20 August
Beatrice Odiarne 60 acres 9 September"

"17 December [1660]. Declaration made by Richard Batson, merchant of London, that he had appointed his nephew Thomas Batson of Barbados, merchant, to confirm a sale made by him on 7 May 1658 through his attornies William Tickell and Nicholas Martin of Barbados, merchants, of 200 acres known as Spring Plantation to Daniel Searle, Governor of Barbados. (MCD 10)[4]

"Minories or Goodman's Yard Glass House

This glass house is known to have been in use before 1641, when it was owned by Sir Bevis Thelwell, who had been a partner in a glass making enterprise 30 years earlier. In 1651, two merchants Richard Batson and Edmond Lewin obtained a twenty-five and a half year lease on the property and later sub-let it to practical glass makers. It was the subject of a Chancery Law suit between them which dragged on from 1657 to 1663. By 1677 Batson had dropped out and Lewin was apparently making bottles (but probably elsewhere). Lewin was probably one of the four furnace masters mentioned by Alberti, the Venetian ambassador in February 1673/4 as wanting to prohibit the import of Venetian glass. On 1st April 1678, Michael Rackett 'Master of a Glasshouse...for making white and green glasses in the Minories without Aldgate' made an agreement to supply the Glass Sellers Company to regularly supply them with 'white glasses'. From 1661, this glass house supplied the newly-formed Royal Society with glassware and it was one of two glass houses mentioned by the scientist Robert Hooke in his diary. He visited it on Thursday December 4th 1673 and again on Tuesday January 1st 1677/8, but on the latter occasion the fire was out (probably due to the change over between Lewin and Rackett at the end of the lease). It is also a likely source of information for Christopher Merret in 1662 when he was compiling his notes on his translation of the Italian glass making work by Neri. In December 1680 Michael Racket was recorded as shipping glasses to Jamaica. He was last mentioned working there in 1691. In 1692 Robert Hookes and Christopher Dodsworth and their shareholders bought-out a number of London glass houses, including one "manufacturing green glass at the Minories outside Aldgate". On 16th March 1699/0, the Flying Post mentioned that this glass house was making drinking glass and all other sorts of glasses and it was then owned by "Craven Howard Esq. and other trustees". Earlier that year it had been advertised to be let."[5]
  1. See PROB 11/424 Carr 59-116, Will of Richard Batson, June 16th 1667, cited in Simon David Smith, Slavery, family, and gentry capitalism in the British Atlantic: the world of the Lascelles,1648-1834 (Cambridge, 2006), fn. 60, p. 26. See possibly related PROB 11/329 Coke 1-56 Will of Henry Batson, Merchant of London 13 May 1669
  2. http://seax.essexcc.gov.uk/%5CViewCatalogue.asp?ID=146017, viewed 17/12/11
  3. Russell R. Menard, Sweet negotiations: sugar, slavery, and plantation agriculture in early Barbados (XXXX, 2006), p. 53
  4. Peter Wilson Coldham, The complete book of emigrants, 1607-1660, vol. 1 (XXXX, 1987), p. 482
  5. http://www.cbrain.mistral.co.uk/minories.htm, viewed 17/12/11