Page 78 - British Post Office Notices 1666 to 1799
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172fJ-1729


           or any Person concerned with them as an Accomplice, shall make a Discovery of them, or either of them, or any of their
           Accomplices, so as they may be convicted, such Person or Persons so making the Discovery shall not only be intituled to the
           Rewards above-mentioned for each Person convicted, but shall also be intituled to a Pardon, as  promised in the Gazettes
           by His Majesty's special Command.



           --2 5 O 2  NEWS  (General Post-Office, March 15, 1725)  (Julian  Calendar. March 15, 1724}

               In order to prevent the future Robbing of the Mails for the sake of Bank of England Notes; it is by the Post-Master
           General,  upon  due  Consideration  had  with  the  Governor  and  Directors  of  the  Bank,  thought  proper  to  publish  this
           Advertisement.
               To recommend it to all Persons who  shall hereafter have  occasion to send any Bank Notes in their Letters, to write
           upon the Back side of every Note the Name of the Post-Town where they put in their Letters, with the Day of the Month at
           Length, and not in Figures, when they are put in; and also the Addition of these Words, viz. Per Post to __ naming the
           Town to which they are sent.
               As for Example; If from London to Chester, the Endorsement will be as follows, viz.
               London, March the third, 1724. Per Post to Chester;
               And from Chester to London,
               Chester, March the third, 1724. Per Post to London.
               So from Chester to any Town in the Neighbouring Countries, or to any Town in a remote Country, when the Letter is
           to pass through London; as from Chester to Norwich, the Endorsement will be,
               Chester, March the third, 1724. Per Post to Norwich.
               So from any Town in England, to North-Britain or Ireland; and in the like manner from any Town in North-Britain, or
           Ireland, to any Town in England.
               It is  desired, That the first Endorsement upon any Note, be wrote at the uppermost part of the Note, that there may
           be sufficient Room for other subsequent Endorsements; for it is meant that the same Note may be sent several Times, as
           occasion shall require, without any Necessity of being brought to the Bank to be paid off, or exchanged for another Note.
               And also  that Care  be taken  that no  one Endorsement  be ever  blotted out  or defaced,  though out  of Date,  by  a
           subsequent Endorsement: If this Method be punctually follow'd  by all Persons, it is not doubted but that it will  have the
           desired Effect, and the Correspondence of the Kingdom be secure and undisturbed.
               The same Method of Endorsements may be used by all Persons who have occasion to send Bankers, or other Notes in
           their Letters.
               And for  a further Cure of this Mischief of Robbing the Mails, repeated and strict Orders will be given to all Deputy
           Post-Masters in  the Country,  That upon no Account whatever,  they at any time knowingly take in Letters, that have  any
           Money or Things of Value in them, other than Paper.
               Lastly, It is desired, that a Memorandum may be kept of every Note that is sent, that immediately upon Advice of a
           Robbery (which shall constantly be sent by Express throughout the Road where it happens, with a List of the Bags of the
           several Towns that are taken away)  the Persons who have sent any Notes in those Bags may immediately send a Particular
           of them to the General Post Office in London, that by Publick Advertisement every Body, even the most unwary Persons,
           may be warned against the taking of them. And in the mean time, after any Robbery, a List shall be sent to the Bank with
           the Names of the Towns whose Bags of Letters are stolen, to prevent any possible Payment of the Notes which have been
           stolen, without a Discovery of the Thieves, or their Accomplices.
                                                                           ED. CARTERET.
                                                                           G. WALPOLE.


           --2 5 0 3  NEWS  (General Post-Office, October 7, 1725)

               Whereas upon a strict Examination of the Rider, together with the Circumstances, which are since found to agree with
           his Relation, it does appear that the Cross-Road Mail which constantly goes between Chester and Exeter, was really taken
           away from  the  Rider  upon Sunday  the  26th  of September  last,  about  Three  a-Clock  in  the  Morning,  by two  Men  on
           Horseback, near Pensford, a Village about seven Miles from Bristol, in the Road to Wells, who carried off the entire Mail,
           which  had  in  it  the  Bags  of Letters  of the  several  Towns  of Chester,  Whitchurch,  Shrewsbury,  Bridgnorth,  Bewdley,
           Kidderminster, Worcester,  Tewksbury,  Gloucester,  Wotten-Underidge, Bristol,  Wells,  Bridgwater,  Taunton, Wellington,




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