Top Sources

By Region


Classifieds

State Papers Domestic
Calendar of State Papers, Domestic 1537-1714, plus Scotland and Ireland for £30 pa - subscribe now
british-history.ac.uk
Explore England’s Past
Access free local history resources including images, audio files and historical documents
exploreenglandspast.org.uk

Latest questions

dates What does the date 2d of Richard III mean and is...
Ebenezer Chapel Colchester There is an old chapel in Nunns Road in...
medieval law I am reading the rolls of the London Eyre 1244...

Declared Accounts
Mint

Sponsor

Institute of Historical Research

Publication

Author

William A. Shaw (editor)

Year published

1952

Page

Annotate

Comment on this article
Double click anywhere on the text to add an annotation in-line

Citation Show another format:

'Declared Accounts: Mint', Calendar of Treasury Books, Volume 21: 1706-1707 (1952), pp. CCCVII. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=90430 Date accessed: 23 May 2013. Add to my bookshelf


Highlight

(Min 3 characters)

Contents

Mint

Declared Accounts: Mint.
AUDIT OFFICE, BUNDLE 1634, ROLL 268.
Sir Isaac Newton, Kt., Master and Worker of the Mint.
31 Dec. 1705 to 1 January 1706–7 (exclusive).
Charge. l. s. d. l. s. d.
Arrears: remaining at the determination of the last Accompt 14,128 13 1
Receipts:
money had out of the Exchequer:
Michaelmas term 4 and 5 Anne (in full of 10,000l. under Royal Warrant of 17 July 3 Anne) 210 9 0
ditto (in part of 10,000l. under Royal Warrant of 9 Nov. 4 Anne) 1,236 11
Easter term 5 Anne (in further part of the same) 3,142 8 1
Michaelmas term 5 and 6 Anne (ditto) 2,372 3 11½
6,961 12 5
The produce of gold received from on board the Guernsey from New England (Capt. Huntington commander) taken from Capt. Quelch and company, convicted of felony and piracy 3,164 19 8
total charge and receipts £24,255 5 2
Discharge.
fees and salaries 850 0 0
salaries by particular Warrants 380 0 0
to John Braint, provost of the moneyers, for himself and the rest of the moneyers 400 0 0
charges of coining the gold and silver money 242 9 8
money put into the pyx box 39 14 0
sundry necessary and incident charges 91 6 1 (fn. 1)
exchequer fees, etc. 148 11 3
2,152 1 0
money paid into the Exchequer 3,142 2 2
money imprested by the Warden of the Mint for which he has accompted 1,950 18 10
total payments and allowances £7,245 2 0
and so the accomptant is indebted 17,010 3 2
Declared 13 Nov. 1707.

Footnotes

1 Corrected from Pipe Office Roll 2112: the Audit Office Roll has 91l. 6s. 8d.