INTRODUCTION
i. The first Spanish Company, 1530–1585
The origins of the Spanish Company are to be found not in England but in
the organisation built up by English merchants in the early sixteenth century
for their own welfare and protection in the Iberian peninsula. In this there
was nothing unusual for both the Merchant Staplers and the Merchant
Adventurers had established their headquarters in their mart towns rather
than in London. The English merchants trading to Spain and Portugal did
not possess any staple towns comparable to Calais or Antwerp; but the
chief focus of English commerce was the coastline of Andalusia, the area
to which the majority of English cargoes were shipped, and it was in the
Andalusian ports of Seville, San Lucar de Barrameda, Puerto de Santa
Maria and Cadiz that the majority of English merchants and factors congregated.
San Lucar, at the mouth of the Guadalquivir, was the natural seaport
of inland Seville, where larger vessels unloaded their cargoes for shipment
up the river in barges. As an exempt seigneurial port belonging to the dukes
of Medina Sidonia, San Lucar levied its own customs duties which were far
lighter than the exactions of the crown of Spain. The duchy had for many
years pursued a policy of encouraging foreign merchants to trade and settle
in the port, and in 1517 Don Alonso Perez de Guzman, duke of Medina
Sidonia, granted to the English merchants resident in San Lucar their
earliest corporate privileges, confirming the position of their leader as the
'consul and judge', and bestowing on them 'a piece of ground in the street
down below the waterside' on which they might at their own expense erect
a chapel dedicated to St. George. (fn. 1)
This grant, usually referred to in later petitions as 'the privilege of St.
George' formed the basis on which the English community or 'brotherhood
of St. George' as it was subsequently known, proceeded to establish itself.
The complex of buildings around the chapel, which formed the main centre,
eventually grew to include eight houses for the nation to lodge in, a house
for the consul himself, and a riverside area adjacent to the chapel which
was used as a quay; in addition the brotherhood owned a local vineyard
and some other property in the nearby coastal hamlet of Chipiona. (fn. 2) With
its religious and community functions it resembled many other cofradias
maintained by foreign merchants in Spain, the largest and most famous
being that of the wealthy Flemings of Seville. (fn. 3)
In England no attempt was made to organise the merchants trading to
the peninsula until September 1530. By this time, Anglo-Spanish diplomatic relations were deteriorating rapidly, while religious changes in
England were making the merchants into objects of suspicion within Spain
itself. In response to petitions for assistance from some of the leading
traders, Henry VIII incorporated them under the title of the Andalusia
Company. (fn. 4) The powers and scope of the company were, however, very
small. It incorporated only those who traded to the south coast, in particular
to San Lucar, Seville, Cadiz and Puerto de Santa Maria. The residents of
these ports, including the Welsh and Irish, were empowered to meet annually in order to elect a consul or consuls and twelve assistants for their
own better government. The charter expressed the wish that the advice and
consent of the London merchants, together with that of two representatives
of Bristol and two of Southampton, should be sought beforehand, but no
mechanism was instituted to ensure that this was done. The company had
no organisation in England, its chief official being the consul or governor
resident in the house adjacent to the chapel in San Lucar. (fn. 5) The Andalusia
Company, in short, was not a true company in the sense in which the word
later came to be employed; it was merely an attempt to strengthen the
brotherhood of St. George by confirming in England most of the privileges
already granted to it in Spain.
By 1538 the company was internally divided, with many of the merchants
refusing to pay the imposts levied by the consul and his assistants on English
trade. At the request of the English ambassador, Charles V confirmed the
grant of 1530 in a document that was to become one of the chief safeguards
of the merchants' corporate rights and liberties in Spain itself. (fn. 6) It did not
succeed in preserving the Andalusia Company, however, and although the
election of consuls at San Lucar was sporadically maintained, by the end
of the reign of Henry VIII the company no longer had any real existence.
The following three decades were difficult ones for all branches of English
commerce. A major European depression, the collapse of the credit of the
great powers, the dislocation of the Antwerp trade and the debasement of
the English coinage combined to undermine steady trade. In addition the
merchants trading to Spain and Portugal encountered further difficulties
of their own. Between 1550 and 1559, the great transatlantic commerce of
Seville experienced a recession which affected the whole of the Spanish
economy; meanwhile the Elizabethan settlement of religion, by ranking
England alongside the protestant powers of Europe, brought Englishmen
increasingly under the scrutiny of the Inquisition. A revision of customs
duties in both England and Spain placed extra burdens upon trade, and in
1561 Philip II in his attempts to strengthen Spanish naval resources revived
earlier legislation prohibiting the loading of goods in foreign vessels if
Spanish ones were available. (fn. 7)
More problems of a political nature followed. In 1563 Spain imposed a
temporary embargo on English imports, largely as a result of the havoc
caused by English privateers who were hovering off the Spanish coastline. (fn. 8)
At the end of the same year a further embargo was instituted, arising not
from events in Spain itself but as a result of the steady deterioration of
Anglo-Netherlands relations. (fn. 9) At the same time the old Anglo-Portuguese
alliance was increasingly strained by English expansion southward into
Guinea, Barbary and other areas claimed by the Portuguese crown. (fn. 10)
Despite the failure of the incorporation of 1530, the idea of a company
remained alive throughout the troubled early years of Elizabeth's reign.
Various tentative schemes were put forward, usually based on the desire
not only to obtain additional security for the merchants themselves but
also to exclude the 'unskilful', the retailers or part-time traders who dabbled
in Anglo-Iberian commerce. One early group of anonymous petitioners
requested a new grant no longer confined to Andalusia but embracing the
whole country, including the ports within the 'Strait of Morocco'. They
claimed that such an incorporation would enable them to act in unison to
defend themselves, particularly against the new customs levied by Philip II.
They hoped to bring pressure on the king by confining all English trade to
San Lucar, thereby depriving him of revenue from other ports. Moreover
the English merchants argued that they would be in a better position to
obtain justice in the Spanish courts if they were a company, not merely a
collection of individuals. The envisaged incorporation was a modest one;
its advocates merely requested that besides the consul at San Lucar, they
might elect a consul and assistants in London 'to congregate themselves
and punish offenders, with authority to send for them wheresoever they
shall be within the queen's majesty's dominions'. (fn. 11) Another suggestion,
equally limited, was that the office of consul in Spain should be revived
and given extra powers. (fn. 12)
Nothing came of these plans, and in 1568 there occurred the worst
breakdown that had as yet taken place in Anglo-Iberian relations. The
anger of Sebastian I at English intrusions into the Portuguese sphere of
influence in Africa came to a head with the seizure of William Winter's ship
off Guinea. Portugal was closed to English merchants, and although illicit
commerce gradually grew up, the ports were not to be reopened legally
until 1576. (fn. 13) At first the dispute was more of an inconvenience than a
disaster; the trade between London and Portugal was at most only a tenth
of the total trade to the peninsula and the new contacts with Barbary were
already more valuable than the fairly static Portuguese trade. (fn. 14) Moreover,
through Spanish border ports such as Ayamonte, Bayona in Galicia and
Vigo it was still possible to reach Portuguese markets. By an unhappy
coincidence, however, the end of the year was also to see the closure of
these and all other Spanish ports, thereby sealing the whole of the peninsula
against legitimate trade with England.
The seizure of the duke of Alva's payships in December 1568 brought
England, the Netherlands and Spain into acute conflict. (fn. 15) Despite the provocation, Philip II hesitated for a while before taking retaliatory measures.
A temporary embargo was imposed in Seville and on the north coast, but
only when it became clear that Elizabeth did not intend to return the
money, nor enter into negotiations, were the embargo-orders made permanent and universal. (fn. 16) As in the case of Portugal, the growth of illicit trade
helped to lessen the impact of the stoppage, but the announcement of the
official reopening of the ports in April 1573, as the first move towards
reconciliation, was warmly welcomed in London. The proclamation not
only revived legitimate trade; it also put fresh life into the idea of forming
a new Spanish company.
During the embargo the London merchants trading to Spain and Portugal
had been forced to act in unison on several occasions. They had sought
licences to continue an irregular trade to the Isles of Bayona, either directly
or through the Channel Islands, and to St. Jean de Luz in south-west
France. Together the leading merchants had formed committees to assess
and sell off Spanish and Portuguese goods sequestered in England, and to
distribute among their fellows the money thereby recouped as compensation for their losses in the peninsula. (fn. 17) In dealing with these matters they
once again began to feel the need of some form of corporate organisation.
In comparison with the Merchant Staplers or the Merchant Adventurers,
they had no authorised representatives or standard channels of communication; transacting any sort of joint business was therefore slower, more
complex and less reliable.
In May 1573, the merchants trading to Spain and Portugal had been due
to receive a dividend of £8,000 from the sale of confiscated goods. The
collection of this sum from the commissioners and its division were causing
so much trouble that a deputation waited on the earl of Leicester at his
London house to seek his help in solving the problem. They requested him
to ask Burghley if they might nominate their own officers, as distinct from
the commissioners chosen by the crown, who would 'receive for the whole
company and make to every man payment according to his due share'.
As they pointed out, the Merchant Adventurers and the Merchant Staplers
already had such officers, which they lacked only because they were not a
recognised company. The earl, who had many carefully cultivated contacts
in the City, was broadly sympathetic to their plea. 'For my part', he wrote
to Burghley, 'I cannot perceive their request unreasonable', but he added
that he left the matter to the secretary's further consideration. Returning
from the country in July, Leicester again took up the merchants' cause and
sent Thomas Wilford, the future president of the company, over to Burghley
to discuss the problem. (fn. 18)
Friends such as the royal favourite were valuable at court, but without
support in the City the protagonists of incorporation would have made
little headway. They were extremely fortunate at this juncture to have the
active co-operation of John Mershe of the Merchant Adventurers. A former
common sergeant of the City of London, Mershe had also served several
terms as governor of the Merchant Adventurers, leading them in their
running battle against interlopers. In addition, he was a former warden and
influential member of the Mercers Company, the foremost of the livery
companies, and had friendly relations with a large number of government
servants and courtiers. On many occasions he had acted unobtrusively as
the link between the City interests and the crown. (fn. 19)
During the stoppage Mershe had had numerous dealings with the Spanish
merchants, for besides acting as a commissioner for sales he had headed the
committee authorised to oversee the regulation of the clandestine trade to
Guernsey and thence to Spain. (fn. 20) In May 1571, he and the merchant Thomas
Aldersey had submitted a report to Burghley on John Frampton's claim to
compensation for injuries received in Spain, (fn. 21) while in December of that
year he had signed the petition drawn up to urge the reopening of the
Portugal trade, 'not as a merchant trading Portugal but understanding their
minds and the necessity of the matter'. (fn. 22) These incidents brought Mershe
face to face with the inconveniences arising from the lack of incorporation
in the Spanish trade, and as a result he urged the merchants to become a
regulated company. His claim to have been the instigator of the whole
movement was perhaps a little sweeping, in view of the attempts made
earlier by at least some of the Spanish merchants themselves to raise the
issue. (fn. 23) Still, Mershe's influence, at a time when the other schemes were
fading into the background, may well have been decisive.
Another well-known City figure who gave the plan his qualified support
was Peter Osborne, one of Burghley's most trusted economic advisers and
a former merchant of wide experience who now held the post of lord
treasurer's remembrancer in the exchequer. Osborne, with remarkable
foresight, felt that the proposed company would meet with trouble unless
it made every effort to avoid conflicts with the Merchant Adventurers.
Moreover, in his opinion some guarantee was needed to prevent London
and Bristol from drawing even more of the Spanish trade to themselves, at
the expense of the smaller outports. (fn. 24)
The plan of incorporation under discussion by November 1574 was
more ambitious than anything so far. It envisaged 'a body politic by the
name of consuls, assistants and fellowship of merchants trading Spain and
Portugal', including both London and the outports, which would unite the
merchants in England and nominate a consul or governor for them in
Spain. Interlopers were to be punished, retailers and artificers excluded,
and the company would have power to make binding ordinances for the
conduct of trade. (fn. 25)
After 1573, the movement for incorporation was slowly gathering speed,
but at the same time it was generating opposition. The Iberian trade by
now was prosperous and expanding; as the memory of the stoppage faded,
the need for corporate action seemed less urgent, while the advantages of
company membership might prove inadequate to compensate for the internal
regulations and financial exactions which would inevitably be imposed.
Above all, the new company by the terms of its proposed charter intended
to restrict membership to those merchants not free of another society, who
had traded to Spain and Portugal since 1569. (fn. 26)
The chief opponents of Mershe's plans for a Spanish company were a
group of his fellow Merchant Adventurers, led by Aldermen Thomas
Pullyson, Thomas Starkey and Anthony Gamage. They protested that the
restriction clause would exclude them, as their vigorous trade between
London and Spain was composed largely of re-exports from Flanders,
Hamburg and Emden, imported into England during the course of their
commerce as Merchant Adventurers. They alleged that if they were not
permitted to trade in this way then Flemings, Spaniards and Frenchmen
would replace them, 'without bringing any of the same into this realm, to
the great hindrance of the navigation … and the great diminishing of
her majesty's customs'. (fn. 27)
The opposition continued until February 1577, but Mershe had in the
meantime persuaded the privy council that the grant of a charter would
be in the national interest. Summoning several leading Spanish merchants
such as Sir James Hawes and Alderman Edward Osborne, the council asked
them to send for the recalcitrants 'and plainly declare unto them that unless
they shall be contented to do as others do, order shall be taken that they
shall not be suffered to traffic into Spain'. Hawes and his colleagues were
also asked to certify to the council the names of the opponents and the
reasons for their actions. (fn. 28)
After further hearings the councillors delivered their verdict in April
1577. The twenty-four Merchant Adventurers who had been excluded were
each to be admitted as full members for the fee of £5. Since the two formal
documents intended to receive the royal seal had already been drawn up,
they were also to bear the cost of making out the new copies which would
include their own names. The antagonists 'acknowledged themselves contented and willing to stand to perform and observe this their lordships' order'
whereupon they were all dismissed 'and willed to behave themselves as
dutiful subjects and good friends and neighbours both in their trade into
Spain and other actions'. (fn. 29)
The council's next action was less agreeable to the Spanish merchants.
A month later the privy councillors decided that for the better government
of the company, a 'principal officer' should reside in Spain in addition to
the governor in London. (fn. 30) This would consolidate the position of the old
brotherhood of St. George as part of the new company, for the nominee
would act as consul at San Lucar and administer the property of the brotherhood. The idea was a valuable one, but the councillors' choice for the post
was disastrous. Roger Bodenham, an English catholic trader resident in
Seville with a Spanish wife and family, had acted as an informant for
Burghley for many years, and to the council he seemed the obvious candidate; but he was disliked by a large majority of the community abroad and
Mershe tried strenuously to have him removed. (fn. 31) Mershe's judgment was to
be vindicated for Bodenham proved useless as consul, and his negligence
was to be a major factor in the subsequent disintegration of the brotherhood.
The charter finally granted on 8 July 1577 was of vastly greater scope
than that of 1530 or even the most ample recommendations of 1574. The
area of jurisdiction was extended to include the whole Iberian coastline
from Fuenterrabia to Barcelona. The president of the company, together
with forty assistants, of whom at least ten were to dwell outside London,
controlled all business transacted in England. In addition the merchants
were empowered to elect a governor and six assistants in Spain, who would
in effect act within the framework of the brotherhood of St. George. The
company was granted all the usual powers of a corporate body including
that of punishing interlopers. Mershe, now knighted, was named in the
charter as the first president; among the London assistants were such influential figures as Sir James Hawes, probably the merchant trading to the
peninsula on the largest scale, (fn. 32) Edward Osborne who was already supporting
the exploration of the Levant, (fn. 33) and Richard Saltonstall. Of the thirty men
appointed by the charter, seven were past or future lord mayors of London.
Also included were Pullyson and Starkey, the protesters of 1574, together
with William Hewett, John Heydon and other Merchant Adventurers who
had been brought before the privy council in the winter of 1577. Among
the usual honorary members named at the head of the list were Walsingham,
Leicester and the pro-Spanish Sir James Crofts, along with the diplomat
Sir Henry Cobham, not long back from Madrid, Admiral William Winter,
and Sir Thomas Gresham, the most venerable member of the City hierarchy. (fn. 34)
The new company seemed to have good prospects of success. Backed
by a large number of leading merchants, with powerful support from the
privy council, it had managed to overcome and then to conciliate its
opponents. Yet events were quickly to show that this appearance of solidarity concealed serious weaknesses. Within eighteen months of the company's foundation it found itself at odds with the Merchant Adventurers,
the outports and the government itself. The renewal of conflicts with the
Merchant Adventurers would perhaps have been avoided had Sir John
Mershe lived a little longer. His death early in 1579 (fn. 35) left the company
without anyone of sufficient stature or experience to mediate in such disputes.
Thomas Wilford, Mershe's successor as president and the dominant
figure in the Spanish Company for the rest of its existence, was not an
obvious choice. The son of an obscure family, (fn. 36) he had worked earlier as a
factor in Portugal alongside his brother William, but in 1559 when returning to the continent after a visit to England he had been taken captive by
the French. His trade was never on a large scale and was conducted largely
with northern Portugal and the coast of Galicia, where he maintained an
agent named George Kerwyn. Although a member of the Merchant Tailors
Company he was not particularly active in its affairs, and he never became
an alderman. However, he served as chamberlain of the City and in this
influential office he may well have had the opportunity to amass a substantial private fortune. (fn. 37)
Wilford's position as a medium-scale trader may perhaps be compared
with that of some of the early seventeenth-century governors of the
Merchant Adventurers, who had practically retired from active commerce
but were elected mainly for their prestige with the government. (fn. 38) Wilford
had, if not prestige, a number of extremely useful contacts. He was known
to Leicester, who had used him in his negotiations with Burghley in 1574;
he had worked with Mershe in setting up the company and was rewarded
with an assistantship. Above all, Wilford had admirable connections by
marriage. Through his wife, a daughter of Sir James Hawes, he was linked
with some of the most powerful Iberian merchants including the future
privateer Sir John Watts. It seems probable that his election to the presidency was largely due to the influence of Hawes who intended Wilford to
ensure that his own extensive trade should be in no way prejudiced by any
future regulations that the company might impose. (fn. 39)
The conflict with the Merchant Adventurers in 1579, just after Wilford's
election, was essentially a recurrence in a slightly different form of the issue
which had arisen in the winter of 1577. A body of opinion within the
Merchant Adventurers now complained of the activities of various of their
brethren, who as members of both companies were shipping Hamburg
and Eastland goods directly to Spain and Portugal without unloading them
at an English port. This lessened the sale of similar goods to the Spanish
merchants in England, while the offenders could also afford to sell off their
English goods in Germany at lower prices, since they drew an additional
profit from their trade to Spain; other traders were thus undercut. These
complaints were aggravated by a narrow outlook redolent of secretiveness
and suspicious jealousy. It was feared that, 'since no man can serve two
masters', the members trading to Spain would put that branch of their
commerce first, and not vote in general courts in accordance with the
interests of the Merchant Adventurers. This would breed disruption: 'we
shall have opinions, sects, divisions, brawls and suspicions amongst us as
if it were to begin hell on earth', argued the others. Moreover, an offender
could easily evade any fine or imposition, 'for when we shall look for him
in our mart towns, he will be gone into Spain or Eastland'. Above all, the
culprits would join 'in portable dealings with unfree men, and their servants
are made partakers of the secrets of the commodities and reckonings of our
company, whilst they make their portable provisions for Spain and other
countries'. The fear that the company's carefully guarded 'secrets' would
be revealed seems to have been at the root of much of the hostility; although
these were left undefined, the reference to commodities indicates some form
of price fixing. (fn. 40)
The leaders of the Spanish Company must have been perturbed by this
revival of opposition among the Merchant Adventurers when they had
hoped that the matter had already been settled. But there was little they
could do about it, since officially at least it was an internal dispute within
another company. Meanwhile a more ominous threat had arisen. Again,
it concerned the re-export of foreign goods to the peninsula, but this time
the cause of contention lay in the nature of the goods themselves.
The export of English hides, skins, tallow and related commodities had
long been forbidden in order to conserve home supplies. Now, however,
'certain informers' were arguing that these statutes also applied to foreign
goods of a similar nature, so that once they had been imported it was
illegal to ship them out again to Spain or Portugal. In addition, they extended the list of prohibited exports to include 'shaven latten, virginall
wire, thimbles of latten and other things wrought with copper or latten,
or andirons tongs fireshovels and such like having any tipping or mixture
of brass or latten', all of which were classed as gunmetal and confined to
England. (fn. 41)
Wilford retaliated by presenting a petition to the privy council, which
argued that since Richard II's reign English merchants had re-exported
spices without paying any extra duties, a precedent subsequently invoked
by Edward IV to cover leather and metals. He therefore asked that these
time-honoured forms of the re-export trade might continue without any
hindrance. The councillores, who had no intention of allowing a lucrative
branch of commerce to be obstructed, especially as they had just openly
lent their support to the company in charge of it, obligingly required the
attorney-general and the solicitor-general to join together 'to devise such
articles as they shall think meet for a grant to be passed from her majesty
for the better authorising of the same unto them'. (fn. 42)
During the course of this dispute the hostility between the Spanish
Company and the Merchant Adventurers had withered away with the rise
of a new object of joint suspicion. Three months after they had been at odds
they found themselves acting in concert to block the foundation of the
proposed new Eastland Company, led by Alderman Thomas Pullyson, a
member of both the older incorporations. (fn. 43)
The details of this incident are unclear, but it apparently concerned the
exclusion of the Adventurers and Iberian merchants alike from the new
company on the grounds that they were not 'mere merchants' within the
definition of the term. At first it looked as if the dispute might be settled
quickly, for the privy council was informed of a rapprochement in July
1579, (fn. 44) but these hopes proved illusory and the quarrel dragged on for over
a year despite the close links between all the merchants concerned. The
master of the rolls and the attorney-general were instructed to hold hearings
on the issue, and in July 1580 their letters were submitted to the councillors.
The council then ruled that the Eastland Company's definition of a 'mere
merchant' was 'rather a cavil in effect than of moment to debar any merchant
of the said companies of Merchant Adventurers and Spanish merchants
from being admitted in their said company, paying the ordinary fine
appointed'. (fn. 45) The Eastland Company would not accept this verdict but
continued to argue that any member of another regulated trading company
was not a 'mere merchant' within the meaning of their charter. Angered by
this, the privy council again summoned the combatants in August, and
informed the Eastland Company that when their plea for a charter had
been granted, the council had only intended the words 'mere merchants'
to debar those who were also artificers or retailers. The verdict of July was
reiterated: those Merchant Adventurers or members of the Spanish Company who had traded to the east country since 1568 were to be admitted
into the Eastland Company on payment of £10. Moreover, the dispute had
taken so long that the time originally allowed in the charter for submitting
requests for membership had by now nearly expired. The council therefore
extended it from 17 August to 10 October. (fn. 46)
These differences with the Merchant Adventurers and the Eastland
Company were not in themselves insoluble, although they illustrate the
importance attached by the London merchants to the re-export trade with
Spain. The dispute with the outports, which was in progress at the same
time, was of much greater importance in that it brought to the fore a
problem that was to dog the Spanish Company throughout the years of its
brief existence.
The move towards the foundation of a regulated company had been the
work of the Londoners, who of course handled the bulk of the trade.
Nevertheless the interests of the outports had been taken into account to
a far greater extent than in 1530. Two assistants each were appointed for
Bristol, Exeter, Southampton and Hull, along with the well-known merchant John Barker who became assistant for Ipswich although like many
other Ipswich men he did much of his trade through London. Besides the
assistants, four large contingents of outport merchants were listed among
the founder-members; seventy-four from Bristol, twenty-nine from Exeter,
twenty-six from Southampton and fourteen from Hull, making a total of
173 members out of the overall number of 389. (fn. 47)
The outports named in the charter were not the only ones which traded
to Spain and Portugal. Nearly every harbour in the west country sent at
least one ship a year to the peninsula, for few of the major trade routes
were as diffuse as that between England and Spain. In an attempt to cope
with the problem, the company gradually recognised other towns as
members, and by the outbreak of war the 'privileged ports' included Barnstaple, King's Lynn, Newcastle, Plymouth and Chester. The number of
outport assistants also increased; by 1585 Exeter had sixteen, Plymouth
twelve and Barnstaple six. (fn. 48) Despite this expansion, however, it seems likely
that in many of the outports the recognised freemen of the company were
in a minority. Yarmouth immediately protested against the incorporation
of the company in 1577, (fn. 49) and thereafter Yarmouth men continued their
trade to the peninsula without troubling to apply for membership. They
traded to most of the other monopoly areas with an equal lack of concern, (fn. 50)
and although they appear to have been the only outport merchants to make
a formal protest, they cannot have been the only ones to adopt this casual
approach.
Yarmouth's attitude was not encouraging, but it could be disregarded
provided that the major outports acknowledged the new incorporation. It
was fortunate for the Spanish Company that the merchants of both Bristol
and Exeter already possessed some degree of monopoly organisation within
their respective ports. The Merchant Adventurers of Exeter were chiefly
concerned with France but in 1566 they had also reserved to themselves
all trade to Spain and Portugal. Some time before August 1577 they received
an invitation to join the company. After sending a deputation of two members up to London to discuss the question, they accepted, and from then
on the Exeter branch of the Spanish Company met in the same hall as the
Merchant Adventurers of Exeter since for all practical purposes they were
the same group of people. A copy of the charter also seems to have been
kept on permanent display there. (fn. 51) In Bristol the situation was rather different for the attempt to establish the Merchant Venturers in the first decade
of Elizabeth's reign had proved abortive. (fn. 52) There are no traces of negotiations parallel to those at Exeter, and although a large number of Bristol
men became members, at least one of them continued to retail goods as
well as to trade. (fn. 53) Wilford appealed to the privy council to punish such a
violation of the charter, but long-distance control of this type cannot have
been very satisfactory. Although evidence is scanty, it is possible that a
number of incidents such as this one preceded the open break between
Bristol and the company that was to occur in 1605.
The city which was to give the Spanish Company most trouble, however,
was the relatively remote and unimportant town of Chester. In 1554 the
Chester Merchant Venturers had been granted a charter by Queen Mary
which gave them a monopoly of all trade to the continent, besides excluding
retailers and all followers of manual occupations. The latter provision
seems to have been disregarded almost from the beginning; the Chester
Merchant Adventurers became a fairly comprehensive body despite some
early disputes with the town corporation, and the charter was confirmed
in 1559. (fn. 54) Shortly after the incorporation of the Spanish Company, president Mershe asked the Merchant Venturers to confer with him over the
question of membership. Like their fellows in Exeter they were then established as an outport branch, with a deputy and assistants chosen from among
the leading merchants of the town. (fn. 55)
The Iberian merchants of Chester soon made themselves unpopular
at home by insisting that all those who traded to Spain and Portugal should
join the company, on the grounds that the charter of 1554 allowing them to
trade without restrictions had been superseded by the new charter of the
Spanish Company. At the same time they tried to prevent those Merchant
Adventurers who both traded abroad and retailed goods from doing so,
ordering them to choose one activity and abandon the other. (fn. 56) Although
technically the dispute lay between the Spanish Company and the Chester
Merchant Venturers it soon degenerated into a faction fight among the
latter who were divided into the 'mere merchants' and the merchant
retailers. More accurately the first group comprised the large-scale merchants whose prosperity was based entirely on commerce, the second the
smaller traders whose less ample resources forced them to supplement their
income by practising an additional craft or occupation. To add to the confusion, Eric Massey, the Spanish Company deputy in Chester, had meanwhile been attempting without much success to enforce the company
monopoly over the merchants of Liverpool, one of the subsidiary havens
of Chester. (fn. 57) The Liverpool merchants, angered by this interference, sided
with the 'merchant retailers' in Chester, and invoked the assistance of a
powerful local magnate, the earl of Derby, who took the matter up in
London.
At last in November 1581 the privy council intervened, ordering the
lord chief justice and the master of the rolls to hear the conflicting arguments put forward by Wilford, acting for the company, and some of the
merchants of Chester and Liverpool. (fn. 58) The law lords concluded that the
Spanish Company had acted beyond its powers in attempting to prevent
the retailers from trading, since in the small outports there were not enough
mere merchants to maintain the trade. (fn. 59) The privy council thereupon permitted the merchant retailers to continue their commerce and informed the
earl of Derby of its decision. (fn. 60)
This was not the end of the matter, for in September 1582 the privy
council was forced to repeat the whole process as the quarrel had not
abated. It summoned the Chester merchants to London and reiterated its
orders that the branch of the Spanish Company within the town should
not stop the retailers from trading. (fn. 61) Again the settlement was short-lived
for in 1584 the 'mere merchants being members of the Spanish Company'
obtained from the queen a licence to export 10,000 dickers of calfskins a
year. The retailers complained that this was another ploy to monopolise the
trade, while the mere merchants argued that as the grant had been awarded
'in respect of their losses sustained by the French' as a result of privateering,
the retailers who had suffered no such injuries were not entitled to participate. If they were to share in the transport of calfskins, the mere merchants
asked that they in compensation should be allowed to retail. (fn. 62) Finally in
July 1589 the councillors adopted the mere merchants' suggestion and in
an attempt to obtain a lasting solution they ordered that henceforth all
retailers might trade freely and take advantage of the licence, provided that
the merchants could retail goods if they wished. (fn. 63) By now the cessation of
commerce following the outbreak of war had rendered the conflict pointless, and at last it ended.
The altercation over the powers of the Spanish Company in Chester
was not a headlong clash between the Londoners and the outport merchants
of the type that was to occur in 1605. Moreover, its continuation into 1589,
after the company had ceased to hold its courts, reinforces the impression
that it was essentially a conflict between two groups within Chester. Then,
too, Massey by his bullying arrogance had needlessly inflamed the situation.
Nevertheless the privy council by its decision not to enforce the company
monopoly had grievously weakened the chances of any effective control
over the outports when the war came to an end. The significance of the
affair must have made an impact in many places other than Chester itself.
However, conflicts between the company and the outports were not so
widespread as to preclude all co-operation between them. Each provincial
deputy and treasurer was expected to make an annual visit to the capital
to render the accounts of membership fees and fines; they also attended the
annual elections which took place in the general court on Ascension day or
shortly after. (fn. 64) Besides being responsible to the central administration for
its own affairs, each major outport controlled the smaller havens of its
division or stretch of coastline allotted to it, which roughly followed the
divisions of the customs system. The details of Chester's intervention at
Liverpool suggest that at least some of the head ports made a genuine
effort to organise the smaller ones. Similar contacts are apparent later at
Exeter where in 1587 and 1588 the merchants on receipt of instructions
from Wilford sent out letters to the towns of their division asking them to
list the goods and property they had lost in Spain and Portugal on the outbreak of war. They were requested to return the lists to the merchants of
Exeter, who would forward them all to London where a general register
was being compiled in order to press for compensation. (fn. 65)
The degree of control exercised by the company over its most distant
branch, the former brotherhood of St. George, is hard to estimate. The
London merchants were apparently eager to maintain those good relations
with the dukes of Medina Sidonia which had contributed so much to the
emergence of the company itself, and there survive some sketchy indications
of financial matters transacted between the company and the duke through
John Barker of Ipswich. (fn. 66) If the duke was friendly, however, other Spanish
authorities were not. In later years the merchants asserted that they had
sent over to Andalusia a copy of the letters patent of 1577, 'fair limmed and
set forth in the best sort we could devise' in order to strengthen the position
of the merchant community there. They had subsequently learned that 'they
of the Inquisition got it and in despiteful manner did burn it'; if the story
is true, it seems likely that this was another of those formal English documents to which the Inquisition objected on the grounds that it named
Elizabeth as 'defender of the faith'. (fn. 67)
The consulate at San Lucar had had a precarious existence since the
demise of the Andalusia Company, but its memory was by no means
extinguished, for the last consul to serve had only left Spain in 1570. (fn. 68)
Bodenham as the new consul-governor could easily have transformed the
post into a valuable agency for the protection of merchants within the
peninsula and the transmission of news and advice to London. To assist
him in this he had a number of useful contacts in England and Spain as
well as his own lengthy personal experience in the Iberian and other trades. (fn. 69)
All this went for nothing as a result partly of his own prickly character,
partly of the circumstances of his appointment, and above all of his own
attitude to his commission. Throughout the years of his consulate, until
he returned to England in 1586, he regarded himself as responsible to the
privy council, not the company; he disliked the merchants and was in turn
disliked by them, for he seems to have performed no useful services for the
trading community. He informed on those merchants who shipped prohibited goods such as corn and ordnance, whilst participating in these trades
himself; and both he and his family steered an ambiguous course through
the muddy waters of Anglo-Spanish intelligence and espionage. (fn. 70)
Although Bodenham was not a good choice, allowance must be made
for the additional difficulties that arose in the contacts between the new
company in London and the older brotherhood at San Lucar. The years
after 1577 saw rising diplomatic tension; as a result English residents in
many Spanish ports both north and south experienced harassment and
unpopularity. Moreover the brotherhood itself was in an increasingly
anomalous position. Openly catholic at its foundation in 1517, it now
comprised not one religious group but two or three, for among the English
community in Andalusia there were those who had spent most of their
lives in Spain, who wished to continue in the old ways; those who had
come out more recently from England, who desired to express their reformed convictions; and those, perhaps a majority, who adopted a position
of judicious conformity, catholic in Spain and protestant in England. (fn. 71) In
this delicate situation the chapel with its usual services posed a real dilemma
as the community tried to conciliate its own members and to maintain
amicable relations with the local authorities. Not surprisingly, the major
feast of the year, the festivities of St. George's day, fell into disuse although
the chapel itself seems to have been maintained. (fn. 72) With all these problems
to beset him any consul would have found himself in difficulties, and
although Bodenham aggravated the situation he cannot be held wholly
responsible for it. At no time, however, was his presence in Andalusia of
any help to the merchants in London.
By its charter, the company had been granted a monopoly which was
legally enforceable, and in the early stages at least of the company's
existence the privy council upheld the incorporation which it had granted.
In its turn, the council found the company a convenient organisation through
which to do business. Pleas for preferential treatment or special concessions
made by merchants and shipowners were passed on to the president as
were commands to bestow charitable benefactions on mariners' widows or
those who had fallen foul of civil or religious authority in Spain. (fn. 73) Similarly,
mercantile disputes which came before the council could be delegated to
the company for hearing and settlement if one or both of the participants
were freemen. (fn. 74) By this means the councillors lessened the burden of the
endless private requests made to them and at the same time increased the
company's control over business connected with the Iberian trade.
One aspect of that business which needed frequent attention from council
and company alike was the general problem of safeguarding English
interests in Spain and Portugal. With the situation in the Netherlands growing daily more intractable, a direct conflict between England and Spain
appeared more and more likely. A few months after the foundation of the
Spanish Company Don John of Austria was urging Philip II to embark on
a war of commercial attrition against England and the rebels. (fn. 75) At the same
time the king himself was once more trying to revive the Spanish navigation
laws, although their operation was suspended for two years to allow time
for building the much-needed extra tonnage. Letters from Elizabeth,
reminding him of the compromise which had eventually been reached in
1561 whereby the English had been exempted, persuaded Philip to delay
until 1580 (fn. 76) but by that year Anglo-Spanish relations had deteriorated further; the loading restrictions, the uneasy state of Ireland and above all
the great fleet that was gathering in Spanish harbours all made the council
anxious to ensure that English vessels should not be caught in a surprise
embargo of the type occasionally used to replenish Spanish naval strength.
Early in the year a licensing system was imposed on voyages to unsafe
areas; this was then lifted for all regions except the peninsula, and the company was left to handle much of the day-to-day administration of the
revised scheme. (fn. 77) Fresh orders were sent out in April, disregarding the
merchants' complaints, for the air was thick with unconfirmed rumours
about the impending invasion of Portugal. (fn. 78) The stoppages continued until
the autumn when it gradually became clear that the need for foodstuffs in
Andalusia, together with the absence of Spanish shipping to take off exports, had made the implementation of the threats a practical impossibility. (fn. 79)
Nevertheless the council had decided on a mild measure of retaliation
and the company received notice that henceforth all Spanish goods should
come out of Spain in English bottoms. (fn. 80) In all these manoeuvres the company, willingly or otherwise, found itself increasingly being used as a political
tool by the English government. Its vulnerability was to prove two-sided,
for in the crisis that arose over Drake the delicate position of the Spanish
Company was to be exploited by a master hand.
In November 1577, Drake had slipped away to sea almost unnoticed,
and it was not until he began to make his presence felt on the shores of
the Pacific late in 1578 that the Spaniards started to watch his movements. (fn. 81)
The reports and rumours of his activities were at first confused; it was not
clear if the venture was merely an instance of individual freebooting or a
portent of something more sinister, perhaps even an organised English
attack on Spanish possessions in the New World. By August 1579 Mendoza,
the Spanish ambassador in England, was receiving orders to keep alert for
Drake's return. In September, news arrived from Seville of his raids on
Spanish goods and territory. The Spanish Company, full of anxiety at the
situation that was developing, waited on the privy councillors to impress
upon them the real probability of retaliation by Philip II through the
seizure of English property in Spain at a time of year when many ships
were in the ports of Andalusia loading the annual vintage. The merchants
were already paying high insurance premiums to guard their property
against sequestration. (fn. 82)
The council returned a soothing but ambiguous answer. Many of its
members were themselves shareholders in Drake's venture, as was the queen
herself, and there was little hope that his deeds would be disavowed on his
return. By February 1580, the company had realised that the councillors'
vested interests were obstructing a fair hearing of the case. Vigorous protests were lodged but to little effect although the government was now
restricting trade for rather different motives. Mendoza, advocating the
issue of Spanish letters of mark to Drake's victims in the New World trade,
reported with satisfaction that 'the merchants themselves make the greatest
outcry over it, saying that because two or three of the principal courtiers
send ships out to plunder in this way, their prosperity must be thus imperilled and the country ruined'. (fn. 83) In this situation, anxious to keep open
some lines of communication that might enable them to stave off an embargo, the merchants cultivated the ambassador's favour and indicated
their willingness to purvey information about the plunder. Mendoza was
far too skilled a diplomat to let such a chance slip. Playing on their fears
of confiscation he began to use them as a pressure group, and in August,
just before Drake's return, he urged the company to press the council on
the whole subject of English piracy, which had been an irritant to his
master for years. (fn. 84) The arrival of the Golden Hind in Plymouth in September
1580, ballasted with silver taken from the Cacafuego, brought the clash
between the merchants and the privy council into the open. Any hopes
which the company had entertained of lessening the growing governmental
animosity towards Spain were dashed by the news that in the same month
800 papal troops had with Philip II's permission sailed from La Coruna to
the aid of the Irish rebels in Munster.
The Spanish merchants were not alone in their hostility to Drake, for
there was a solid body of opinion in the City which held that such exploits
did little except harm the numerous established trades which depended on
the maintenance of good diplomatic relations between England and Spain.
Stowe noted that 'many disliked it', while at court those who also opposed
the belligerent protestantism of Walsingham and his circle argued earnestly
for a restoration of the plunder to its rightful owners. Mendoza encouraged
the fears that Spain would go to war over the affair but as long as Drake
continued in the queen's favour the ambassador could do little to recover
the pillaged goods.
The brunt of the losses had been borne by the members of the powerful
consulado of Seville, which organised the New World trades from its headquarters in the great port. The Seville merchants soon concluded that
Mendoza was powerless to help them, and in August 1581 they decided to
send over their own agent. They chose Pedro de Zubiaur, a native of
Biscay who had traded with England for some twenty years and possessed
a wide network of contacts. (fn. 85) The members of the consulado wrote to the
English merchants requesting their co-operation in Zubiaur's mission with
the implicit threat that if no compensation was forthcoming they must of
necessity ask Philip to reimburse them out of English goods in Spain. (fn. 86) The
ambassador was displeased when he heard the news; far from giving Zubiaur
any help he insisted that all negotiations should still be carried on through
the embassy. (fn. 87) Instead of being reinforced, Spanish pressure was thus
divided.
Meanwhile Mendoza continued to use the Spanish Company to petition
the privy council. In June he had agitated the merchants even further by
telling them that any English aid to Dom Antonio, the Portuguese pretender
who was now trying to raise support in London, would inevitably lead to
war with Spain since the king was already incensed over the retention of
Drake's plunder. They went first of all to Walsingham, but meeting with
little response they hastily contacted their sympathisers on the privy council,
thereby managing to delay the outfitting of the pretender's ships. (fn. 88) The
ambassador again used these tactics to put pressure on the English government over Drake in November 1581, and in the following January he was
able to extend his influence further afield by warning the Bristol merchants
of the risk they ran in allowing Dom Antonio to fit out his vessels there. (fn. 89)
By now, however, Mendoza's hold over the company was beginning to
weaken. No steps had been taken against English property in Spain although
Drake's loot was still in English hands. The Spanish loading prohibitions
had proved ineffective against English trade and were widely disregarded
by the Spaniards themselves. Above all, in the developing conflict between
the ambassador and Pedro de Zubiaur, the Spanish Company was wholeheartedly behind the latter. The two Spanish representatives were deeply
at odds over the question of Drake. Zubiaur hoped only for some reasonable composition over the losses of the consulado, whereas Mendoza,
anxious to salvage Spanish honour, insisted on the return of the whole of
the booty, a political impossibility. Moreover, he hindered Zubiaur in his
attempts to reach a settlement, and was suspected of having prevented any
grant of assistance to the Seville merchant Pedro de Martinez, which might
have staved off his bankruptcy. As several members of the London company
had themselves broken when Martinez defaulted on his debts, feeling was
running high. All in all, the merchants had become uniformly hostile to
the ambassador, 'whose malice and deceiving mind', they informed Burghley,
'they have just occasion to fear'. (fn. 90) In future Mendoza would not be able to
use them as a channel of Spanish diplomacy.
In addition to these problems the company also had to cope with the
irritating activities of a professional monopolist named William Tipper.
In the spring of 1578 Tipper had managed to drum up some influential
support in the City for his petition for the grant of a patent for the hosting
of strangers. How he had intended to put this into operation was not disclosed, for the impracticability of the project was quickly made apparent
by the floods of protests that prevented him from doing anything at all. (fn. 91)
The opposition included the Merchant Adventurers and the Archduke
Matthias, acting as spokesman for the merchant strangers, but in the end
it was the Spanish Company which managed to buy Tipper off, in order to
stop him from molesting the small number of Spanish and Portuguese
merchants resident in London. (fn. 92) Foolishly the company failed to keep its
half of the bargain, thereby laying up trouble for the future, for Tipper's
next attempt to enrich himself through a patent was a direct attack on the
merchants' trade. He requested the grant of a short-term monopoly on the
import of cochineal.
Cochineal had been little used outside Spain until the mid-sixteenth
century when its production in the New World greatly increased. Its
superiority over the older kermes and lichen dyes was soon appreciated and
by 1575 substantial amounts were being imported into England. (fn. 93) The merchants had no wish to lose this expanding trade and the company at once
took the matter to the council, as it was of far more consequence than the
hosting patent had been. Wilford meanwhile made some devious moves to
bring pressure on Tipper through one of his debtors named Munslow; (fn. 94)
Tipper for his part drew up a lengthy reply to the objections raised against
his proposal by the company. His chief argument was that under his handling the commerce in cochineal would be as well organised as the alum
trade had been under the Pallavicini. (fn. 95) These protestations failed to convince
the council. The plan to monopolise cochineal was stopped and its importation continued freely until the grant of a patent to Essex on his return from
the Islands voyage in 1597. (fn. 96)
The members of the company at this time also came into conflict with
the court. As leading importers of the immensely popular sherry-sack,
many of them had dealings with the royal household which was a largescale purchaser. The official in charge of such matters was the pro-Spanish
Sir James Crofts who had been appointed controller in January 1570. At
some point, perhaps shortly before Crofts proposed his reform of the household in December 1586, the leaders of the company entered into negotiations
'touching the service of her majesty's house with sack', during which they
protested against the royal debts of at least £400 which were owed to fellowmembers. If the money was repaid promptly, they offered to sell tuns of the
best-quality sack to Crofts at £3 sterling below the market price. They also
suggested an honorarium of £100 a year to any officer of the household
who would agree 'to serve and to content the merchants' so that they might
'be free and not constrained to serve'. (fn. 97) Matters such as provision for the
household were probably an irritant to busy City men, but despite their
generous offer the matter was not settled, and it arose again in the reign of
James I. (fn. 98)
One issue that concerned all the members of the company and not just
the importers of sack was that of the facilities and organisation of the port
of London. In 1564, in order to prevent fraud, a royal regulation had decreed that all cloth shipped outwards should go by water from Custom
House quay to the vessels waiting to load, while all fine or haberdashery
wares unloaded inwards should be brought to the same quay by lighter. (fn. 99)
Early in 1582 George Needham, the queen's farmer of the quay, had
informed the privy council that the regulations were being disregarded.
When the councillors re-enforced them several of the London companies,
particularly the Merchant Adventurers, the Eastland Company and the
Spanish Company, pleaded that the whole system of restricted quays should
be abolished, enabling any merchant to load or unload at any quay within
the port. (fn. 100) They argued that the present arrangements were not only an
impediment to commerce, but that Needham himself was also opposed to
any improvement merely from personal malice, for 'he hath said that he
will bridle the merchants before he hath done with them'. The Spanish
and Eastland Companies further complained that the number of lighters
Needham supplied was insufficient for ferrying their goods between the
quay and the ships. The vessels, which 'do lie at Deptford or at Limehouse,
or often times nearer, or most commonly at Blackwall' were kept waiting
while the goods themselves were often spoilt by the weather as they lay
piled on the quayside. (fn. 101)
Needham was at great pains to rebut their charges, and eventually
Burghley appointed various of the officers of the customs, including Robert
Dow and John Robinson, to hear the matter. In July 1582 they reported
back, outlining the misunderstandings that had arisen and suggesting a
compromise. They proposed that broadcloths and kerseys should be restricted to Custom House quay as before, but that all other wares including
cottons, frizes, bays, lead and tin could be shipped from any quay at the
merchants' pleasure. With regard to imports 'all manner of wares whatsoever to be brought in might be landed and taken up at all other quays at
the appointment of the queen's majesty's farmer of her subsidies and
customs inwards'. The arrangement could be tried until Christmas when
any inconveniences in its operation should be reviewed and redressed. (fn. 102) As
the issue did not revive, the plan presumably worked smoothly.
During the course of all these disputes the company continued to meet
privately to deal with its internal business. The members gathered together
in Pewterers' Hall in Lime Street, a fifteenth-century building to which was
attached the pewterers' bowling-alley and a pleasant garden with a vine.
They paid £6 a year for the use of the hall which was also hired out for
dinners and weddings. (fn. 103) There is no complete record of the dates of their
meetings but from the information which can be gleaned elsewhere it seems
that a general court was held at least once a month. The court of assistants
probably convened separately between each major gathering.
Of the many trade-regulations which the company must have enacted in
its eight years of active life only two survive. One concerns the buying of
fruit in Andalusia, the other the restraint on corn-ships' return cargoes, a
rule which aroused the irritation of the company's old patron, the earl of
Leicester, who feared it would affect the value of his sweet wine farm. (fn. 104)
Both, apparently by coincidence, date from August 1580. On 17 August
the company ruled that if any member should load fruit at Rota or Jerez,
'it should be lawful for them to do it, so that it were laden by any one of
the commissioners elected for the buying of fruit'. (fn. 105) This reference may
indicate some scheme whereby a company representative bought fruit in
bulk, which he then sold off to other members and at the same time supervised its loading; it is unfortunate that no other information survives concerning it.
In many respects 1580 had been the crucial year in Anglo-Spanish relations and thereafter it could be argued that a war was ultimately inevitable.
Cardinal Granvelle, who could recall more imperial days and who was now
the chief architect of that return to an aggressive foreign policy which marked
the Spanish outlook on Europe after 1580, was urging the strict enforcement of the navigation laws and the seizure of all English ships in Iberian
ports. (fn. 106) The following two years however were surprisingly peaceful, and
it was not until the crushing defeat of the French Terceira project that the
deterioration of the political situation was once more apparent. Dom
Antonio's commissions served only as a thin disguise for an increasing
number of piratical ventures against peninsular shipping. In addition commercial groups in the City, including some members of the Spanish Company, were by now intent on opening up a direct trade to Brazil. (fn. 107) The early
voyages, which were disastrous, did little to achieve this but succeeded in
aggravating tension even further. More and more private merchants and
shipowners were prepared for their part to take individual action for injuries
sustained in the Spanish dominions; as privateering was the easiest method
to hand, the high seas became increasingly dangerous. (fn. 108)
Ordinary trade meanwhile continued, but uneasily, and in dwindling
volume. Several merchants prudently began to withdraw their factors and
goods from the peninsula. Finally in the spring of 1585 events moved
towards a climax. By March, news was reaching Stafford, the ambassador
in Paris, that English and French ships were being impounded in Spain
and Portugal for use in the growing armada. On 29 May, orders came down
to the corregidor of Biscay to arrest all the larger ships of any nation which
were then to join the fleet in Lisbon or Seville. (fn. 109) A fortnight later English
ships on the Guadalquivir were stayed; some of them were attempting to
take off such English goods as remained in Andalusia. Factors and sailors
caught in the embargo were imprisoned, some of them later being handed
over to the Inquisition. (fn. 110)
Arrests such as these were not technically a declaration of war, although
they had made peaceful commerce impossible. Elizabeth reacted by ordering the issue of letters of mark and reprisal to all those merchants who could
prove their losses, but it was still possible to hope for an early peace as talk
of negotiations was common. The company did not immediately dissolve;
it began to amass details of its members' sequestered property, and the
secretary, Richard May, continued to receive letters from factors caught in
Spain, apparently passing them on to the government since many of them
contained naval and military information. May also noted the names of
those who claimed the freedom after the discontinuation of general courts,
which ceased sometime before February 1589. (fn. 111) But as the war wore on, the
company inevitably broke up, apparently without any formal attempt to
complete its business or settle its affairs. Neither the last treasurer, George
Hanger, nor his immediate predecessor Sir John Watts, bothered to present
any accounts. Already in May 1586 the privy council was complaining of
the company's lethargy, for it had made no response to letters urging
financial assistance for the wives of mariners imprisoned in Spain. (fn. 112) By the
spring of armada year, it had ceased to function. Wilford took home with
him the common seal and the court book, to wait for the return of peace.