Thursday, January 8, 1835
1835
January
Thursday
8
9
35/..
11
35/..
No kiss
Fine frosty morning. F 39° at 10 20/.., at which hour breakfast –
Had 3 men (1 of them Hanson, Mrs. Sutherland’s tenant, to recommend a relation and another man from Mr. Hird’s shelf works also to recommend Hanson’s relation) about the Stump Cross Inn – Said I could only say it was to be let by ticket on the 16th, when the conditions would be made known – I heard people objected to the sort of yearly lease I let upon – I thought it right to say, I thought no reasonable objection could be made (then explained the nature of the lease) and that I knew as well as anybody how to keep a good tenant – The place to be taken as it stands, but put into good tenantable repair – For all new building, and I would do what was necessary or really wanted for a good tenant, I should want a percentage – They all agreed this was very fair –
Then
had George taking all the boxes etc. out of the North parlor passage,
ready for having the wainscot put up, and arranged them in the hall Chamber –
Then
had Charles Howarth – He wanted something to drink for himself and
others, 11 or 12 (John Bottomley and workmen and pitmen), in honor of Mr.
Wortley’s election –
Then
with my father and Marian and with my aunt and
got ninety from the two former and fifty pounds from the latter to make up for
Staups and be repaid on Monday – Ann furnished five hundred and I myself
three hundred and ten of the nine hundred and fifty I took to Mr. Parker.
Off
to Halifax at 12 40/..down the old bank – At the bottom of it, a yellow mob of
women and boys – Asked if I was yellow – They looked capable of pelting me –
‘Nay!’ said I, ‘I’m black – I’m in mourning for all the damage they have done’
– This seemed to amuse them, and I walked quietly and quickly past –
At
Mr. Parker’s office before 1 – He hardly expected me – thought I might not like
to venture out – Wondered I had not got his note to fix 1 1/2 instead of 2 – Glad
I happened to be in such good time. Had gone so early because I could only raise
950 in stead of eleven hundred pounds as I had told him, so he had to
draw on Rawson’s bank for the deficit.
Mr. Parker not in on my arrival – Had just written him a note for his clerk to take to Stead and Dyson’s, when Mr. P- returned and I therefore burnt my note –
Paid
him towards the purchase money £500 in Bank of England, £200 in country
notes, £55 in country notes + £25 in Bank of England and 170 sovereigns = £950
+ £1000, for which I signed a bond to Mr. Wainhouse
at 4 1/4 per cent + £1000 furnished for a few days till Ann’s
administration-thousand is ready + £70 furnished for a few days by the above
Mr. Wainhouse, and by Messers Parker and Adam for a few days £198.7.7 = 3218.7, being the sum paid today for me by
Mr. Parker at the Office of Messers Stead and Dyson for the Staups Estate,
bought by auction at £3500 – of which £330 deposit was paid at the time – ⸪
principal remaining to be paid = £3170 + Interest at 4 per cent on principal
since day of sale (16 April) £55.5.3 that is
3170. 0.0 Messers P- and A- also advanced me £100 to be paid to Washington 55. 5.3 on Saturday which hundred I told Mr. P- Parker I would repay him on 3225. 5.3 Monday or Tuesday 6.17.6 last 1/2 years rent received from the tenants Moore and Oates 3218.7.11 but made £3218.7.7 by Mr. Parker, who paid exactly this last summer.
By
the conditions of sale, the sellers had the power of taking the rents, or
interest at 4 per cent on the purchase money till the conclusion of the
bargain; and they chose the latter, that the rents, except those of Moore and
Oates (£6.17.6) are now due to me, and I desired Mr. P- to receive them on my
account.
Waited
at Mr. Parker’s till 2 1/4, then came a message to say the parties were at
Messers Stead and Dyson’s and begging me to go there – Declined this – Sent Mr.
Parker to conclude the business for me, and went to Whitley’s and waited there
about an hour – Mr. Henry Priestley there –
Some
time talking to him and Booth on the subject of our hard-run election and the
damage done by the mob yesterday, estimated at £10,000 – £2,000 of which said
to be done at Mr. James Norris’s Bullclose – All the furniture of the lower
rooms utterly destroyed – Pictures and books thrown about in all directions – All
the windows broken, and frames torn out –
Sad
devastation too at the The Shay, Mr. Jeremiah Rawson’s – His carriage and gig
pulled out of the Coachhouse and quite demolished – Much damage to the
furniture –
Much damage also
done at the vicarage – The 1st person who broke into the house there was
a woman – Old Mr. Briggs had been seen tearing down the state of the
poll yesterday, and his son Rawdon, being spoken to, said he could not command
his father –
Just
before the Swell mob commenced proceedings (at 3 p.m. yesterday), clubs had
been thrown out, arming them, from Mr. Protheroe’s Committee room window – Several
people had seen this – Mr. Protheroe persuaded the mob to give up their
intention of doing damage at Wellhead, saying there was an invalid there – They
then called out for ‘Jem Norris’s’ and tho’ so near Wellhead, Mr. Protheroe
contented himself with sending his servant to ask for mercy there, but did not
go himself – Report says, Mr. Rawdon Briggs, Junior was seen to laugh when the
mob went to Mr. James Norris’s –
At
all rates, none of the Whig or radical gentlemen made any effort to appease the
mob – Taken with a political article in this month’s Blackwood’s magazine and that
Booth to let me have somebody’s number, bought it and also a little Goldsmiths
almanac –
Then
at 3 1/4 back to Mr. Parker’s office – He had just returned from completing the
purchase – Said all had been done very agreeably. The ladies (Mrs. Barton and company) regretted they had
not come to his office; sorry they had not seen me – There had been some
mistake about it – what a lucky escape, thought I –
Desired
a few handbills to be put out advertising Northgate house to let – The expense
would be about 20/. –
The
town very full of people crowding about the Swan, and running about to see
where the damage was done – The old bank very quiet – Returned up it, and came
in at 3 50/..
Sat
talking to Ann – Dinner at 6 1/4 – Coffee – Marian had her company so no
going to see my father for Ann and me –
Had
Dewhirst about the Mytholm farm house and skin pits for about
10 minutes (till 8) – He said he understood his uncle Pearson was empowered to
let him room – How so, said I – Said there must be some mistake – This was not
at all the case – Pearson had the land till 2 February and the buildings till 1
May, but nothing more to do with the place – I should keep to what I had said
to Pearson, to his son Thomas Pearson, and to Mrs. Dewhirst herself – that I
had no objection to Dewhirst (her son) but his present want of respectability –
That he, in his present circumstances, was not sufficiently respectable for a
tenant of mine – He said nothing – So I then said I supposed there was nothing
more to be said and he wished me good evening and went away –
Ann
and I then sat reading the Halifax Express, and London Morning Herald – Then 50
minutes with my aunt till 10 – Then sat talking over the fire –
Very
fine, frosty day – F 37° at 10 20/.. p.m. in my study – The note I should
have had from Mr. Parker in the morning came per letter bag tonight –
WYAS Finding Numbers
SH:7/ML/E/17/0139 and SH:7/ML/E/17/0140
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