Dr Chris
Grant is a British scientist now living in California. He has a great
interest in postal history and owns a rare letter dated Feb 2nd 1724/3. It is
from Lady Anastasia Moore of Fawley, near Wantage, and was sent from
that
town to her sister Mrs Howard in London. The images below show the
letter text and the letter cover - folded and unfolded.
In February 2006, Chris wrote: "On the cover reverse you will see a
straight-line unframed WANTAGE receiving strike with the W on one edge
of the folded paper and the ANTAGE on the other side (obviously the
letter was folded and sealed for posting). One dealer I have shared
this letter with says the WANTAGE strike is quite rare and use was only
recorded for a 3 year period."
"The red wax seal on back is not of high image quality but does show a
rooster design - something I find mildly incongruous with the letter
content. Also on reverse is an excellent 16mm Bishopmark 3/FE struck
when the letter reached London. The charge for carriage of the letter
is the handwritten 7 (pence) on the cover front - this amount was (of
course) charged to the recipient (Mrs Howard). The charge is twice the
usual rate for the time and implies the letter contained an enclosure.
Obviously the letter would have travelled by horseback to Abingdon and
from there via Maidenhead and Hounslow. Abingdon was recorded
as a
horse mail by-post in 1677."
In my book Thames
Valley Papists,
the full text of which is on this website, you can read about Lady
Anastasia and the stormy relationship she had with her husband, the Sir Richard to whom she refers.
The bath which she mentions is the then highly fashionable spa city of
Bath and 'parris' is, of course, Paris, where many English Catholics
lived - and near which was the exiled Jacobite court. Fawley is near
the old London to Bath coaching road, now the A4. Notice some archaic spellings, such as 'att' and 'goe'.
My thanks to Chris
for allowing us to share this rare example of recusant correspondence.
Tony Hadland

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