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  • Dec. 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1796: Page 33

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    Article ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF PROMISSORY NOTES AND PAPER CREDIT. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 33

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Origin And History Of Promissory Notes And Paper Credit.

locked upon them as bills of exchange , and that they had been used for a matter of thirty years ; and that not only notes , but bonds for money , were transferred frequently , and indorsed as bills of exchange . ' He nevertheless continued firm in the conscientious discharge of his duty against the Law-merchant ; and the merchants were foiled in all their attempts . Nothing therefore remained , but that resourcewhich Malines tells us was the wish of good '

, many Lawyers , as ' well as merchants , in his days- — 'An Act of Parliament to establish this course in England . ' Accordingly , in the fourth year of Queen Anne , a law passed making all promissory notes recoverable by action ' in the same mianner as inland bills of exchange drawn according to the custom of merchants . ' In consequencebills obligatory under the seal of the Bank of Englandand

, , under the seals of individuals , disappeared together ; all men substituted notes of band , which were of rather more accurate spelling and terser phraseology : and ' I promise . to pay' universally succeeded to ' memorandum that I owe . ' But the time of future pajmient continued to keep its station for many years in . the body of the note ; and placing it in the beginning of the sentencein the

, present form , seems to be of very late date . On looking back there is much in this little historical outline to arrest and occupy a contemplative mind . What was recommended in vain as . a public benefit to the Grandfather ( for to King James wad the work or Ma / ines dedicated ) was at last the lucky consequence of an arbitrary act , to which the Grandson was driven by his

prodigality : and the system of Paper-credit , which thus bad its ori gin in the bad faith of the last Protestant King of the House of Stuart ; when after the revolution it had acquired strength , solidity , and body , from the establishment of the Bank of England , became amain prop and p iliarof the settlement by which the immediate heirs of the House of Stuart were excluded for ever from the throne . Much ability and talent have been employed to point out the

disadvantages resulting from the extension of the system of Paper-credit . But without entering into a controversy on the subject , it cannot be denied that we have witnessed , and still witness , the most happy effects in the public prosperity . The whole real and imaginary opulence of the nation is brought to bear effectively on commerce , like the capital t f one firm . Even vices , the most selfish , are made to

co-operate for the good of the Commonwealth . Avarice itself becomes liberal in parsimony and accumulation ; and while , by trusting the custody of its hoards to the Banker , it escapes half the torments which are its immediate and natural punishment in the eternal order of things , it furnishes funds for the advances of the manufacturer , the adventures of the merchantand the vast operations of the statesman to maintain or

, extend the happiness , power , and glory , of his country . Perhaps the pre-eminence of England among the States of Europe at this hour , corrlpared with her subordinate rank then , even after the glorious reign of Elizabeth , is more to be attributed to the force of her public credit under this system , which commands the great military powers on the Continent , than to the native strength of her own arms ,

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-12-01, Page 33” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121796/page/33/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE, Article 4
ON COURTSHIP AND COQUETRY. Article 7
COPY OF THE INSCRPITION ON THE FOUNDATION STONE OF WEARMOUTH BRIDGE. Article 9
A SERMON, Article 10
ON DEATH. Article 14
PREDILECTION OF THE TURKS FOR THE GAME OF CHESS. Article 17
ESSAYS ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH HISTORY AND CLASSICAL LEARNING. Article 18
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF EDWARD KELLY, THE ALCHEMIST. Article 24
ON THE MUSIC OF THE ANCIENTS. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 29
ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF PROMISSORY NOTES AND PAPER CREDIT. Article 31
EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA. Article 34
FATAL PESTILENCE IN THE AIR, IN THE REIGN OF HENRY III. Article 35
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 38
POETRY. Article 48
WINTER, AN ODE. Article 49
SONNET, ON SEEING JULIA GATHERING ROSES IN THE DEW. Article 50
EPITAPH, ON AN OLD FAVOURITE DOG. Article 50
A SONG. Article 51
A SONG. Article 51
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 52
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 52
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 58
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 60
INTELLIGENCE OF IMPORTANCE FROM THE LONDON GAZETTES. Article 60
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Article 64
OBITUARY. Article 69
L1ST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
INDEX TO THE SEVENTH VOLUME. Article 74
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Page 33

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Origin And History Of Promissory Notes And Paper Credit.

locked upon them as bills of exchange , and that they had been used for a matter of thirty years ; and that not only notes , but bonds for money , were transferred frequently , and indorsed as bills of exchange . ' He nevertheless continued firm in the conscientious discharge of his duty against the Law-merchant ; and the merchants were foiled in all their attempts . Nothing therefore remained , but that resourcewhich Malines tells us was the wish of good '

, many Lawyers , as ' well as merchants , in his days- — 'An Act of Parliament to establish this course in England . ' Accordingly , in the fourth year of Queen Anne , a law passed making all promissory notes recoverable by action ' in the same mianner as inland bills of exchange drawn according to the custom of merchants . ' In consequencebills obligatory under the seal of the Bank of Englandand

, , under the seals of individuals , disappeared together ; all men substituted notes of band , which were of rather more accurate spelling and terser phraseology : and ' I promise . to pay' universally succeeded to ' memorandum that I owe . ' But the time of future pajmient continued to keep its station for many years in . the body of the note ; and placing it in the beginning of the sentencein the

, present form , seems to be of very late date . On looking back there is much in this little historical outline to arrest and occupy a contemplative mind . What was recommended in vain as . a public benefit to the Grandfather ( for to King James wad the work or Ma / ines dedicated ) was at last the lucky consequence of an arbitrary act , to which the Grandson was driven by his

prodigality : and the system of Paper-credit , which thus bad its ori gin in the bad faith of the last Protestant King of the House of Stuart ; when after the revolution it had acquired strength , solidity , and body , from the establishment of the Bank of England , became amain prop and p iliarof the settlement by which the immediate heirs of the House of Stuart were excluded for ever from the throne . Much ability and talent have been employed to point out the

disadvantages resulting from the extension of the system of Paper-credit . But without entering into a controversy on the subject , it cannot be denied that we have witnessed , and still witness , the most happy effects in the public prosperity . The whole real and imaginary opulence of the nation is brought to bear effectively on commerce , like the capital t f one firm . Even vices , the most selfish , are made to

co-operate for the good of the Commonwealth . Avarice itself becomes liberal in parsimony and accumulation ; and while , by trusting the custody of its hoards to the Banker , it escapes half the torments which are its immediate and natural punishment in the eternal order of things , it furnishes funds for the advances of the manufacturer , the adventures of the merchantand the vast operations of the statesman to maintain or

, extend the happiness , power , and glory , of his country . Perhaps the pre-eminence of England among the States of Europe at this hour , corrlpared with her subordinate rank then , even after the glorious reign of Elizabeth , is more to be attributed to the force of her public credit under this system , which commands the great military powers on the Continent , than to the native strength of her own arms ,

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